Thomas W. Gregory, United States Attorney General 1914-1918
Gregory began by detailing the nature and
consequences of a “Civil Rights” bill in 1866 and three Reconstruction
bills in 1867, all passed over the veto of President Andrew Johnson. The
“Freedman’s Bureau Bill,” first introduced in February 1866 and finally
passed in July 1866, created the Freedman’s Bureau and made it an arm
of the War Department. Under this bill, every county in the South was
placed under the rule of Army officers and appointed Freedman’s Bureau
agents exercising the authority of military judges. This was done to
assure the rights of former slaves, especially their registration as
voters, but in so doing, it abolished the ordinary rules of procedure by
law and denied the right of trial by jury and appeal to the vast
majority of white Southerners. Thus Federal agents ruled the South with
tyrannical and unconstitutional powers.
More @ The Tribune
No comments:
Post a Comment