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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives wish to recognize David A. Strother's legacy | ||||||
4 | on voting rights in the State of Illinois and the United | ||||||
5 | States; and
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6 | WHEREAS, David A. Strother, once widely believed to have | ||||||
7 | been the first Black man to vote in the United States as a | ||||||
8 | result of the addition of the Fifteenth Amendment to the | ||||||
9 | Constitution, was certainly the first to vote in Illinois on | ||||||
10 | April 4, 1870; and
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11 | WHEREAS, David Strother was born to Henry and Leah in | ||||||
12 | Lexington, Missouri on August 18, 1843, the son of slaves who | ||||||
13 | bought their freedom; he worked as a cook's assistant on a | ||||||
14 | Mississippi steamer; he served as a civilian cook with Company | ||||||
15 | G, 17th Illinois Infantry, of the Union Army during the Civil | ||||||
16 | War; at the urging of 44 local area men of Troop G, he settled | ||||||
17 | in El Paso; he became a barber and set up a chair in the corner | ||||||
18 | of an insurance and justice of the peace's office in January | ||||||
19 | 1864; he was soon reunited with his mother and his brother, | ||||||
20 | Charles, who joined him at his new barber shop; and
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21 | WHEREAS, El Paso then operated under a special charter | ||||||
22 | approved by Governor Richard Oglesby in 1867; Article XV of |
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1 | the U.S. Constitution was declared in effect on March 30, | ||||||
2 | 1870, stating that the right of citizens to vote shall not be | ||||||
3 | denied on account of race, color, or previous condition of | ||||||
4 | servitude; the following Monday, April 4, was El Paso's city | ||||||
5 | election, held one day prior to almost all others; and
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6 | WHEREAS, David Strother, accompanied to the polls by Mayor | ||||||
7 | James Wathen, was initially rebuffed by election officials | ||||||
8 | unaware of the new law; after election judges were shown a copy | ||||||
9 | of the amendment, he returned to the polls at the judges' | ||||||
10 | behest, where apologies were made; he proceeded to cast his | ||||||
11 | vote, and his brother voted soon after; and
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12 | WHEREAS, News of David Strother's historic vote was spread | ||||||
13 | by Gersh Martin, El Paso's newspaper editor, who telegraphed | ||||||
14 | the news to the Associated Press, and soon people all over the | ||||||
15 | United States were reading about the barber who had cast the | ||||||
16 | then believed first Black vote; and
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17 | WHEREAS, David Strother continued to live in El Paso for | ||||||
18 | the remainder of his life, passing shortly after suffering a | ||||||
19 | heart attack on March 12, 1905; his loss was keenly felt by the | ||||||
20 | El Paso community, who remembered him for his generosity and | ||||||
21 | gentlemanly conduct; and
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22 | WHEREAS, David Strother's vote on April 4, 1870 marked him |
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1 | as not only one of the first Black men to vote in the United | ||||||
2 | States but also marked a milestone on the path to equality for | ||||||
3 | our State and the country; therefore, be it
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4 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
5 | HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
6 | we recognize David Strother's legacy on voting rights in the | ||||||
7 | State of Illinois and the United States.
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