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- 153651 accessdate "2015-08-02".
- 153651 authorlink1 "James W. Loewen".
- 153651 date "2015-07-19".
- 153651 first1 "James W.".
- 153651 isCitedBy Constitution_of_Mississippi.
- 153651 last1 "Loewen".
- 153651 quote "Confederates — we should say neo-Confederates because they were mostly a new generation by 1890 — won the Civil War in 1890. They won it in several ways. First, in that year they won what it was about: white supremacy. The state of Mississippi passed its new constitution. There had been nothing wrong with its 1868 constitution except that it let African Americans vote. In 1890, at their constitutional convention, white Mississippians were clear. As one delegate put it, 'Let's tell the truth if it bursts the bottom of the Universe. We came here to exclude the Negro. Nothing short of this will answer.' The key provision to do so was Section 244, requiring that voters must be able to give a 'reasonable interpretation' of any section of the state constitution. White registrars would judge 'reasonable.' Other states across the South copied what came to be called 'the Mississippi Plan,' including Oklahoma by 1907.".
- 153651 title "What Does Rockville, Maryland's Confederate Monument Tell Us About the Civil War? About the Nadir? About the Present?".
- 153651 url "https://web.archive.org/web/20150802065340/http://historynewsnetwork.org/blog/153651".
- 153651 work "History News Network".