
Woman's Rights to the Suffrage Speech (1873)
Speech to the U.S. Senate https://web.archive.org/web/20160228073733/http://emancipation.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/emancipation/publication/attachments/A_Republican_Text-Book_for_Colored_Voters.pdf (23 March 1900)
1900s, 1900
Woman's Rights to the Suffrage Speech (1873)
1960s, Special message to Congress on the right to vote (1965)
Describing the people who participated in the Freedom Rides to end segregation in Albany, Georgia. in You Can't Be Neutral on A Moving Train http://www.zmag.org/zmag/articles/oldzinn.htm (1994) Ch. 4: "My Name is Freedom": Albany, Georgia
1870s, Message to the Senate and House of Representatives (1870)
"The Deal," http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2013/tle747-20131201-02.html 1 December 2013.
1960s, Special message to Congress on the right to vote (1965)
1870s, Message to the Senate and House of Representatives (1870)
Context: In his first annual message to Congress the same views are forcibly presented, and are again urged in his eighth message. I repeat that the adoption of the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution completes the greatest civil change and constitutes the most important event that has occurred since the nation came into life. The change will be beneficial in proportion to the heed that is given to the urgent recommendations of Washington. If these recommendations were important then, with a population of but a few millions, how much more important now, with a population of 40,000,000, and increasing in a rapid ratio.
“The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment stands, in my opinion, on its own bottom.”
Concurring in Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965).