Source
Grolier Online
Discover the content connection—the definitive, fully integrated database collection and online research portal. It includes seven encyclopedia databases: Encyclopedia America, Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia, The New Book of Knowledge, La Nueva Enciclopedia Cumbre, America the Beautiful, Lands and Peoples, and The New Book of Popular Science.

15th Amendment

The 15th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, ratified in 1870, prohibits federal or state governments from infringing on a citizen's right to vote "on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." This amendment is the last of three so-called Reconstruction amendments ratified in the aftermath of the Civil War to abolish slavery and firmly establish minority civil rights. The 15th Amendment allowed the federal government to legislate qualifications for voting, a right formerly left to the states. Its ratification, however, had little impact for almost a century and had virtually no effect in the South where various methods from terrorism to the poll tax and grandfather clause were employed to keep blacks from voting. Various actions of Congress and the Supreme Court eventually struck down voting restrictions. In Smith v. Allwright (1944), for example, the Court held voting-rights discrimination in primaries to be unconstitutional on the basis of the 15th Amendment. Other cases blocked the discriminatory use of reapportionment and property and residence requirements. Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1957, establishing a commission to investigate voting discrimination, and in 1965 the Voting Rights Act (extended in 1970, 1975, and 1982) was passed to increase black voter registration by empowering the Justice Department to closely monitor voting qualifications.

  • Teacher Store
  • The Teacher Store  
    If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution

    If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution

    by Elizabeth Levy and Richard Rosenblum

    Vivid full-color illustrations and a question-and-answer text bring to life traditional life, customs, and everyday worlds in this series covering a rich range of historical events, eras, and peoples. Meticulous research, accuracy of detail, and facts told from a child's perspective convey what it was like to live in another time. Basic concepts of history are made meaningful through details of daily life, putting young readers into the middle of the action.

    This unique presentation of A

    $6.99
    Paperback Book | Grades 3-5
    Add To Cart
    Educators Only
    If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution
    Grades 3-5 $6.99
    Add To Cart
  • Teacher Store
  • The Teacher Store  
    The Liberty Bell

    The Liberty Bell

    Describes the history of the Smithsonian Institution, its current collections and challenges.

    $5.95
    Paperback Book | Grades 3-5
    Add To Cart
    Educators Only
    The Liberty Bell
    Grades 3-5 $5.95
    Add To Cart
Help | Privacy Policy
EMAIL THIS

* YOUR FIRST NAME ONLY

* FRIEND'S FIRST NAME ONLY

* FRIEND'S EMAIL ADDRESS

MESSAGE
Here's something interesting from Scholastic.com


Scholastic respects your privacy. We do not retain or distribute lists of email addresses.