Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dorr Rebellion takes place in Rhode Island because men who did not own land could not vote. [16] 1843. Rhode Island drafts a new constitution extending voting rights to any free men regardless of whether they own property, provided they pay a $1 poll tax. Naturalized citizens are still not eligible to vote unless they own property. [16] 1848
The District of Columbia Suffrage Act was an 1867 federal law that granted voting rights to all males over the age of 21 in the District of Columbia, United States.The franchise was withheld from "welfare or charity cases, those under guardianship, those convicted of major crimes and those who had voluntarily sheltered Confederate troops or spies during the Civil War", but there were no race ...
U.S. presidential election popular vote totals as a percentage of the total U.S. population. Note the surge in 1828 (extension of suffrage to non-property-owning white men), the drop from 1890 to 1910 (when Southern states disenfranchised most African Americans and many poor whites), and another surge in 1920 (extension of suffrage to women).
1867: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Lucy Stone address a subcommittee of the New York State Constitutional Convention requesting that the revised constitution include woman suffrage. Their efforts fail. [citation needed] 1867: Kansas holds a state referendum on whether to enfranchise women and/or black men. Lucy Stone, Susan B ...
The Great Reform Bill of 1832 widened the franchise (immediately before this, only a small number of men, and even fewer women, could vote), although it would be 1918 before all men could vote (women would wait until 1928 in Great Britain, and until the 1970s in Northern Ireland).
Texas, with 40 electoral votes and a population of 29.53 million, has only one vote per 738,250 citizens. But Vermont, with three electoral votes and a population of 645,570, has one vote per ...
1867 state legislature elections in the United States (1 P) U. 1867 United States House of Representatives elections ... This page was last edited on 2 September 2020
January 8 – African-American men are granted the right to vote in the District of Columbia. February 7 West Virginia University is established in Morgantown, West Virginia. Laura Ingalls Wilder is born near Pepin, Wisconsin; March – The University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign is established (it opens for classes on March 2, 1868).