Home / Full timeline / The Voter Education Project (VEP) reports on the political progress of Blacks in the 1974 general elections. Executive Director John Lewis states that the progress is small, but important.
The Voter Education Project (VEP) reports on the political progress of Blacks in the 1974 general elections. Executive Director John Lewis states that the progress is small, but important.
1975 (Jan 22)
The Voter Education Project (VEP) rendered an assessment of the political progress of Blacks in the 1974 general elections. Georgia, according to the VEP, led the South in the number of Blacks elected and reelected to public office. In elections from coroner to congressman, Georgia had 101 Blacks elected out of the 525 successful Black candidates in the region. Among the new Black officeholders in Georgia were John White, the first Black American to represent Dougherty County in the state legislature, and Henry Dodson and J. O. Wyatt, the first Black commissioners of Fulton County (of which Atlanta is the county seat). Elsewhere, Harold Ford was elected to the U.S. Congress from Memphis, Tennessee; forty-six Blacks were elected to state legislatures in Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina; and Blacks were elected to 226 city councils and commissions. In the end, however, VEP Executive Director John Lewis said “the election of 525 Blacks in a single year is a small but important step in the long march toward equity of representation in Southern politics."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.