Historical Facts

Black and Tan Republicans

“Black and Tan Republicans” were African Americans in the Reconstruction-era South who were loyal to the Republican Party. When the Republican Party was founded in 1854, few African Americans joined. By the time of the election of Abraham Lincoln, the Party began to attract support from Northern blacks including, Frederick Douglass. That support grew in the late 1860s as some Southern blacks, now voting, cast ballots for the Republicans.

After the 15th Amendment was passed in 1870 allowing most of the black males in the former Confederate states to vote, the Republican Party (also known as the Grand Old Party or GOP) commanded the loyalty of an overwhelming majority of African Americans, prompting Frederick Douglass to remark that for them, “The Republican Party was the ship and all else was the sea.”

Many of the newly enfranchised Southern black men now formed “Black and Tan” clubs, which along with similar organizations like the Union League, helped to institutionally tie these voters to the Republican Party.

Black Republican votes were also driven by white terror. Beginning with the founding of the Ku Klux Klan in 1866 and escalating through the late 1860s and 1870s, southern whites used violence to intimidate black would-be voters which at first helped solidify their allegiance to the GOP. Thousands of black voters were murdered in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina.

White terrorists also intimidated and ostracized southern whites who supported the Republican Party. They harassed the children of white Republicans in schools and isolated the wives of prominent white Republicans in churches and social clubs. On many occasions direct violence, usually reserved for African American Republican voters, was used on white Party activists as well.

The violence and intimidation of black and white voters, often called the “shotgun policy” or the “Mississippi Plan,” destroyed the effectiveness of the Republican Party in most areas of the South as an alternative to one-party (Democratic) rule. Whites left the GOP and rejoined the Democrats or quit politics. Blacks who continued to vote did so at the risk of being killed.

White Republicans who remained in the Party were increasingly convinced that they could survive politically only by removing black GOP officeholders and leaders and in some instances by jettisoning black voters altogether. These Republicans, known as the “Lilly Whites,” fought the Black and Tan Republicans for control of the Party. They remained warring factions until the 1930s when African Americans deserted the GOP to support the policies and administration of Democratic President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Sources for this article.

Republican Party of Texas origins

In case you were unaware, the Republican Party of Texas didn’t start a few years ago. Instead, it was founded on July 4, 1867, in Houston, Texas, by 150 Colored Men and 20 white men.

Its first chairman was the Honorable Norris Wright Curney, a colored man and, at the time, one of the most influential leaders in Galveston, Texas. Hence, all Republicans in Texas are political descendants of those 170 men.

They were determined to learn how to read and write as well as to create and run HBCU’s. These courageous individuals had the audacity to be elected to the US Congress and sign into law institutions such as Texas A&M and Prairie View A&M. Texas was the first state in the nation where a Black Sheriff was elected.

Juneteenth is about freedom and hope. It is not about slavery and victimhood. Frederick Douglass was right, “You shall not be judged by the heights you have risen, but from the depths you have climbed.”

Today, we are all challenged to emulate those words from a man who knew the whips of slavery, but embraced the opportunities of freedom.