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Collection Reference Number GLC00544
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1865-1929 
Title Lafayette Sabine Foster to Mr. Wakeman discussing his views on reconstruction
Date 5 October 1866
Author Foster, Lafayette Sabine (1806-1880)  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Foster, a U.S. senator from Connecticut, discusses his views on reconstruction with Wakeman, a lawyer. Foster says that he would restrict the right to vote to those with "capacity and virtue," but that it would be "arbitrary, unjust, and tyrannical to make any discriminations…on account of color…" Writing extensively about the rights, especially voting rights, of the "negro," he states "There is no more sense in talking of a man's natural right to vote, than there is in talking of his natural right to be the Chief Justice, or the President of the United States…It is dangerous to commit so important a power to any who have not both capacity and virtue - I would restrict the right of suffrage to those who had both - to such I would give it, no matter about their color, the ignorant and vicious I would exclude…"
Subjects Reconstruction  Congress  African American History  Suffrage  Civil Rights  Education  
People Foster, Lafayette Sabine (1806-1880)  Wakeman, Mr. (fl. 1866)  Johnson, Andrew (1808-1875)  
Place written Norwich, Connecticut
Theme Reconstruction; African Americans; Education
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
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