Local Black Support for Col. William M. Lowe's 1880 Alabama Congressional Election Campaign.

Florence (AL) Gazette reports of local Black voter support for William M. Lowe's campaign for the Eighth Congressional District of Alabama. Though an avowed Democrat, Huntsville, Alabama native and Confederate veteran Col. William Manning Lowe (1842-1882), after being passed over for two Dem...

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Format: Electronic
Published: Project Say Something: The Shoals Black History Collection
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Online Access:https://shoalsblackhistory.omeka.net/items/show/1299
format Electronic
collection Politics Collection
building Project Say Something: The Shoals Black History Collection
publisher Project Say Something: The Shoals Black History Collection
topic Photographs, documents, and clippings
spellingShingle Photographs, documents, and clippings
Local Black Support for Col. William M. Lowe's 1880 Alabama Congressional Election Campaign.
fulltopic Photographs, documents, and clippings
Politics
description Florence (AL) Gazette reports of local Black voter support for William M. Lowe's campaign for the Eighth Congressional District of Alabama. Though an avowed Democrat, Huntsville, Alabama native and Confederate veteran Col. William Manning Lowe (1842-1882), after being passed over for two Democratic Party nominations in the late 1870s campaigned as an independent and by 1880 was a member of the Greenback Party, which was was a short-lived coalition of farmers and laborers--white and Black--that arose in the mid-1870s to protest a variety of federal monetary policies and which took its name from its support for the continued printing of paper money by the government. In Alabama the national Greenback-Labor Party (GLP) served as the chief vehicle for challenging the Democratic Party from 1878 to 1882. in 1880 Gen. Joseph Wheeler defeated Lowe by a slim margin, but state election officials disqualified more than 600 pro-Lowe ballots. Wheeler took office in 1881 however Lowe challenged the election results, was vindicated, and finally, in June of 1882, at the end of his appeal, Lowe was able to take his congressional seat but became ill with tuberculosis and died that October; Wheeler won the special election to fill out the remainder of Lowe's term.
spelling Local Black Support for Col. William M. Lowe's 1880 Alabama Congressional Election Campaign.PoliticsFlorence (AL) Gazette reports of local Black voter support for William M. Lowe's campaign for the Eighth Congressional District of Alabama. Though an avowed Democrat, Huntsville, Alabama native and Confederate veteran Col. William Manning Lowe (1842-1882), after being passed over for two Democratic Party nominations in the late 1870s campaigned as an independent and by 1880 was a member of the Greenback Party, which was was a short-lived coalition of farmers and laborers--white and Black--that arose in the mid-1870s to protest a variety of federal monetary policies and which took its name from its support for the continued printing of paper money by the government. In Alabama the national Greenback-Labor Party (GLP) served as the chief vehicle for challenging the Democratic Party from 1878 to 1882. in 1880 Gen. Joseph Wheeler defeated Lowe by a slim margin, but state election officials disqualified more than 600 pro-Lowe ballots. Wheeler took office in 1881 however Lowe challenged the election results, was vindicated, and finally, in June of 1882, at the end of his appeal, Lowe was able to take his congressional seat but became ill with tuberculosis and died that October; Wheeler won the special election to fill out the remainder of Lowe's term.Newspapers.comLee Freeman1. 1880-10-022. 1880-10-16Still ImageJpeghttps://shoalsblackhistory.omeka.net/items/show/1299https://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/36745/archive/files/72468f9701cea2923474f8132908a3b4.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAI3ATG3OSQLO5HGKA&Expires=1672272000&Signature=Nuo5CM93KDNsc%2F%2FFzXDrkoveL6A%3Dhttps://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/36745/archive/files/2d676b0d3288184df47362aa25a5eec7.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAI3ATG3OSQLO5HGKA&Expires=1672272000&Signature=QQdm2zE7w73aUMM1UvODroHePH0%3DFlorence (AL) GazetteEnglishImages are available for educational and research purposes. This image may not be reproduced for commercial purposes without the express written consent of the copyright holder. It is the responsibility of the interested party to identify the copyright holder and receive permission.
title Local Black Support for Col. William M. Lowe's 1880 Alabama Congressional Election Campaign.
titleStr Local Black Support for Col. William M. Lowe's 1880 Alabama Congressional Election Campaign.
id PSSpolitics1299
url https://shoalsblackhistory.omeka.net/items/show/1299
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