Amending America: the 14th Amendment

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Joint Resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States, proposed June 13, 1866 (National Archives Identifier 1408913)

Join one of the “Amending America” exhibit curators Christine Blackerby for a Facebook Live video on the  Huffington Post Politics page.

On July 9, 1868, the Fourteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution became law. It is arguably the most important of the 27 amendments.

The amendment originated after the Civil War when Congress attempted to pass legislation securing civil rights for the recently freed slaves. President Andrew Johnson repeatedly vetoed these bills because he believed individual states had the right to determine the status of freedmen without interference from the Federal government.

In order to take the issue out of Johnson’s reach, Congress chose to address civil rights with a constitutional amendment, and June 13, 1866, Congress approved a joint resolution proposing a five-part amendment to the Constitution.

Section one includes its most vital components.

First, the Citizenship Clause ensures that anyone born in the United States—regardless of race, color, or familial status—was automatically a U.S. citizen. The clause made citizenship a fixed condition, taking the issue out of the realm of politics where laws could be overturned and rights revoked.

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Departure Statement of Wong Kim Ark, 11/5/1894. (National Archives Identifier 2641490)

The Citizenship Clause safeguarded the citizenship status of African Americans after the Civil War and after the landmark Wong Kim Ark decision (1898), which affirmed the birthright citizenship of an American-born Chinese man and set the precedent for the clause to be applied to all races, became a means for other immigrant groups to stake their claims for U.S. citizenship.

Second, the Due Process Clause forbids states from taking away “life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” The clause extends the protection of the Bill of Rights to states’ actions—previously it only applied only to the Federal government.

This meant that state governments could not deprive people access to basic legal rights, and it provided a means to challenge state laws that deprived individuals of their constitutional rights.

The Due Process Clause was at the heart of many defining 20th-century Supreme Court decisions, such as Loving v. Virginia (1967), which deemed laws against interracial marriage unconstitutional in part because they denied liberty without due process, and Roe v. Wade (1973), which upheld a women’s right to an abortion under the right to privacy encompassed by the Due Process Clause.

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Telegram to Bernard Cohen Announcing the Verdict of Loving v. Virginia, 6/12/1967. (National Archives Identifier 7873521)

Third, the Equal Protection Clause requires states to apply the law equally and prohibits them from discrimination on the basis of race, religion, national origin, or other arbitrary factors. Although it was initially a response to the Southern Black Codes, which severely restricted former slaves’ basic rights and subjected them to harsh punishments, the Equal Protection Clause was ultimately ineffective in securing rights for African Americans in the years following the Civil War.

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Complaint in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, 6/19/1951. (National Archives Identifier 6997520)

In the 20th century the Equal Protection Clause became an instrument for challenging discriminatory laws and expanding rights for all citizens. It provided the rationale for a myriad of civil rights decisions, including the landmark Brown v. Board of Education (1954) which ended state-sponsored school segregation, and the Supreme Court’s argument for striking down the Defense of Marriage Act in 2013.

While less essential than section one, the rest of 14th Amendment is not trivial.

Section two eliminated the three-fifth rule, which counted slaves as three-fifths of a person for the purpose of congressional apportionment. It also guaranteed that all male citizens over the age of 21, regardless of their race, had a right to vote.

The third and fourth sections provided terms for repayment of Civil War debts and rules for federal service by ex-Confederates, addressing issues that may have hindered southern states’ re-entry to the Union. The final section gave Congress the authority to enforce the amendment.

The 14th Amendment redefined American citizenship and fundamentally altered the relationship between the states and the Federal government. It continues to be at the center of national discussions about the role of government and rights of individuals.

You can learn more about the 14th—and all the amendments—in the National Archives exhibit, “Amending America,” which is open in Lawrence F. O’Brien Gallery in Washington, DC. The exhibition runs through September 4, 2017.

2 thoughts on “Amending America: the 14th Amendment

  1. This is quite incomplete. Amendment 14 does many more wonderful things. First it does make All Americans equal under the Constitution… unless you attack it. There was a trap placed in the 14th which reanimates during times of rebellion in order to prevent another civil war.

    Section 2 strips voting rights and the ability to be counted towards the census for those involved in rebellion. Hence, if a rebellion gets large enough a State could stand to lose Congressional seats.

    Section 3 removes immediately from their position anyone that has ever taken an oath to the Constitution and supported the rebellion in any way(show comfort). Active since June 5th 2020.

    Section 4 Provides for the payment of bounties against those still involved in rebellion. It also states the Federal government doesn’t have to pay for damages caused by rebellion.

    If Americans knew this as they should we could have immediately enforced this amendment and all this stupidity would cease to exist.

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