Mapping the Voting Rights
Act of 1965
Today marks the 50th
anniversary of the passage of the Voting Rights Act. On August 6, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson
signed the Act into law in order to end legal and other restrictions to voting
by minorities at the state and local levels.
These barriers prevented African-Americans from practicing their right
to vote under the 15th Amendment and the 19th Amendment
for women.
The
Atlas of African-American History and Politics by Arwin D. Smallwood published maps
related to voting rights especially in southern states. The first map (above, click to enlarge) shows
states in light green with the dates they allowed women the right to vote—some before
the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920. The dark green states never ratified the 19th
Amendment giving women the right to vote.
This coupled with the discriminatory barriers to minorities voting—poll taxes,
literacy tests, property requirements, and violence and actions of the Ku Klux
Klan—kept African-American women from voting.
The map shows states with a white outline where there was “little or no
voting by Black women until the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”
The second map shows the
percentage of registered voters in the African-American voting-age population
in 1960. The final map shows the
percentage of registered voters in the African-American voting-age population
after the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1971. Mississippi's percentage jumped from 5% in 1960 to 59% in 1971; Alabama's grew from 14% to 55%.
According to the atlas, the
Voting Rights Act “mandated that federal observers be present at polling
stations to ensure that Blacks were properly registered and not turned away on
Election Day. As a result of the Voting
Rights Act, millions of Blacks in the south were enfranchised.”
The
Atlas of African-American History and Politics is available from the Ball State
University Libraries’ Atlas Collection on the second floor of Bracken Library. Atlases circulate for 28 days or longer.
For more information about
cartographic resources related to elections, review the GIS Research and Map
Collection (GRMC) subject guide to political science or contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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