in pursuance thereof, should in good faith be enforced,
rigidly and impartially, in letter and spirit, to
the end that the humblest citizen, without distinction
of race or color, should under them receive full and
equal protection in person and property and in political
rights and privileges. By these constitutional
amendments the southern section of the Union obtained
a large increase of political power in Congress and
in the electoral college, and the country justly expected
that elections would proceed, as to the enfranchised
race, upon the same circumstances of legal and constitutional
freedom and protection which obtained in all the other
States of the Union. The friends of law and order
looked forward to the conduct of these elections as
offering to the general judgment of the country an
important opportunity to measure the degree in which
the right of suffrage could be exercised by the colored
people and would be respected by their fellow-citizens;
but a more general enjoyment of freedom of suffrage
by the colored people and a more just and generous
protection of that freedom by the communities of which
they form a part were generally anticipated than the
record of the elections discloses. In some of
those States in which the colored people have been
unable to make their opinions felt in the elections
the result is mainly due to influences not easily measured
or remedied by legal protection; but in the States
of Louisiana and South Carolina at large, and in some
particular Congressional districts outside of those
States, the records of the elections seem to compel
the conclusion that the rights of the colored voters
have been overridden and their participation in the
elections not permitted to be either general or free.
It will be for the Congress for which these elections
were held to make such examinations into their conduct
as may be appropriate to determine the validity of
the claims of members to their seats. In the
meanwhile it becomes the duty of the executive and
judicial departments of the Government, each in its
province, to inquire into and punish violations of
the laws of the United States which have occurred.
I can but repeat what I said in this connection in
my last message, that whatever authority rests with
me to this end I shall not hesitate to put forth;
and I am unwilling to forego a renewed appeal to the
legislatures, the courts, the executive authorities,
and the people of the States where these wrongs have
been perpetrated to give their assistance toward bringing
to justice the offenders and preventing a repetition
of the crimes. No means within my power will
be spared to obtain a full and fair investigation of
the alleged crimes and to secure the conviction and
just punishment of the guilty.
It is to be observed that the principal appropriation
made for the Department of Justice at the last session
contained the following clause: