217k views
1 vote
How did poll taxes place limits on African Americans?

2 Answers

5 votes
Many African Americans were poor, and couldn't pay the tax, causing them to not be allowed to vote
User Chris Vest
by
8.1k points
7 votes

Repayment of a poll tax was a requirement to the certification for polling in a number of kingdoms until 1966. The tax developed in some nations of the United States in the late 19th century acts as a component of the Jim Crow legislation. After the freedom to determine was continued to all families by the statute of the 15th Clause to the Constitution of United States, a number of kingdoms established poll tax laws as a mechanism for limiting polling rights.

The authorities often introduced a grandfather clause, which provided any grown-up male whose patriarch or ancestor had voted in a particular age earlier to the eradication of servitude to vote externally paying the tax. These ordinances, along with irregularly achieved knowledge tests accomplished the aspired outcome of disenfranchising African-American and Indigenous American citizens, as well as needy whites.

User Arka Prava Basu
by
8.1k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.