Home / Full timeline / Eighty Southern Blacks are elected into office, bringing the total number of Black elected officeholders in the eleven states that made up the Old Confederacy to nearly four hundred.
Eighty Southern Blacks are elected into office, bringing the total number of Black elected officeholders in the eleven states that made up the Old Confederacy to nearly four hundred.
1968 (Nov 5)
Eighty Blacks were elected to political offices in the South, bringing the total number of Black elected officeholders in the eleven states that made up the Old Confederacy to nearly four hundred. Three years earlier, only seventeen Blacks held political offices in these states. Most of the successful Black candidates ran in districts with predominately Black constituencies. In primaries as well as general elections, most Black candidates lost when they challenged whites in predominately white districts. To Black Southerners, the highlight of the November general elections was the election, for the first time in the century, of Blacks to the legislatures in North Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee. Greensboro lawyer Henry Frye won a seat in the North Carolina House, and Miami teacher Joe Lang Kershaw won a seat in the Florida House. James O. Patterson, Jr., of Memphis, Tennessee, and Avon Williams of Nashville, Tennessee, were elected to their state's senate. One hundred and twenty-six Blacks were serving the South as city councilmen, the most in any single type of office. Seventy-five Blacks were school board members. According to figures from the Voter Educational Project of the Southern Regional Council, Alabama led the South with seventy-two Black elected officials. Behind Alabama were: Arkansas with forty-five, Louisiana and Mississippi each with forty-three, Georgia with thirty-eight, Texas and North Carolina each with nineteen, and Florida with seventeen. More than three million southern Blacks were eligible to vote in these November elections.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.