Virginia Constitution, 1868
Dublin Core
Title
Virginia Constitution, 1868
Subject
Virginia Constitution
Description
As required by federal law to be readmitted to the United States, a convention met to write a new state constitution. It reformed local government on the more democratic model of the New England township; it required the General Assembly to create a statewide system of free public schools for all children; it granted the governor the right to veto bills that the assembly had passed; and it granted the vote to "Every male citizen of the United States, twenty-one years old," except some supporters of the Confederacy. The constitution as approved by the convention in April 1868 disfranchised some former Confederates, which resulted in a delay in holding a ratification referendum. When the referendum was held in July 1869, voters ratified the constitution by a vote of 210,585 to 9,136, and they rejected the clauses disfranchising former Confederates.
Source
Constitutional Convention (1867-1868), Accession 23877, State Government Records Collection, Library of Virginia.
Date
1868 (ratified 1869)
Contributor
Library of Virginia
Rights
CC BY-SA
Format
JPG
Type
Manuscript on vellum
Identifier
15_0163_001 Constitution
Coverage
Virginia
Citation
“Virginia Constitution, 1868,” Remaking Virginia: Transformation Through Emancipation, accessed November 22, 2024, https://virginiamemory.com/online-exhibitions/items/show/604.