|
by D.G. MARTIN
Chapel Hill ó The North Carolina Democratic Party has sent me back to the books to study my stateís history.
The history question raised among Democrats is whether the name of Charles Aycock, the Democratic governor from 1901 to 1905 should continue to be a part of the title of their annual Vance-Aycock celebration in Asheville. Old-time Democrats just say, ìSee you at Vance-Aycock.î
Democrats, and other North Carolinians, have long found lots to reasons to be proud of Aycock. My eighth grade teacher, Miss Currie, taught us that Aycock was our education governor. He was responsible for expanding and improving public education in our state and for the construction of hundreds of new school buildings.
As Democrats try to claim the education issue for their own, they have
proudly (or Republicans might say, shamelessly) exploited the
connection.
Aycock explained his loyalty to his party in terms that most modern
Democrats would endorse: ìWhat is a Democrat? He is an individualist.
He believes in the right of every man to be and to make of himself what
God has put into him. He is a man who believes and practises the
doctrine of equal rights and the duty and obligation of seeing to it as
far as he can that no man shall be denied the chances in life which God
intended for him to have. He is a man who believes in the Declaration
of Independence, and who is filled with that spirit of equality which
has made this country of ours the refuge of the oppressed of all the
world and the hope of this age and of all ages to come ... Equal! That
is the word. On that word I plant myself and my party ó the equal right
of every child born on earth to have the opportunity ëto burgeon out
all that there is within him.íî
Back in 1960 when Vance-Aycock got started, some Democrats remembered
with partisan appreciation Aycockís decisive political victory in 1900,
the beginning of a long period of uninterrupted Democratic dominance of
North Carolina government.
Why would anyone suggest that Democrats abandon Aycock now?
The problem has to do with the way Aycock won that 1900 election. He
ran on a ìgood governmentî platform, but his idea of good government
was to remove blacks from participating.
During the 1900 election he championed a constitutional amendment that
added a literacy requirement for voter registration.† It was, he
explained without apology, ìdrawn with the deliberate purpose of
depriving the negro of the right to vote, and of allowing every white
man to retain that right. ... (It)s passage will mean peace to the
land, it will mean an end to an era of crime and lawlessness, security
to property and purity of politics. There will be no more dead negroes
on the streets of Wilmington, no more rule of the incompetent and
corrupt.î
Illiterate whites were protected by a ìgrandfather clause.î But
Aycockís grandfather clause did not apply to voters who would first
register in or after 1908. So, everyone, white or black, who registered
after that date would have to pass a literacy test. Many whites
objected, but Aycock held firm, insisting that with the increased
educational opportunities he would provide, every child could grow up
to be an educated and literate voter. There would be other advantages:
ì ... (A)fter 1908 there will be no State in the Union with a larger
percentage of boys and girls who can read and write and no State will
rush forward with more celerity or certainty than conservative old
North Carolina. The miserable demagogue who seeks to perpetuate
illiteracy in the State will then have happily passed forever.î
For his commitment to public education that ultimately gave a boost to
all North Carolinians, Aycock still deserves the gratitude of all of
us. His inspiring words about equality reflect core values that would
have made him comfortable today in a political party that has rejected
ìwhite supremacy,î in a party that includes many descendants of people
he fought to exclude from political life, and in a party that may
decide to erase his name from an honored place in an important party
event.
ï
D.G. Martin is the host of North Carolina Bookwatch, UNC-TVís weekly local literary series.
|