Mississippi Black Codes
Mississippi Black Codes, 1865: An Act to Confer Civil Rights on Freedmen, and for other Purposes
SECTION 1. All freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes may sue and be sued, implead and be impleaded, in all the courts of law and equity of this State, and may acquire personal property, and choses in action, by descent or purchase, and may dispose of the same in the same manner and to the same extent that white persons may: Provided, That the provisions of this section shall not be so construed as to allow any freedman, free negro or mulatto to rent or lease any lands or tenements except in incorporated cities or towns, in which places the corporate authorities shall control the same.
SECTION 2. All freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes may intermarry with each other, in the same manner and under the same regulations that are provided by law for white persons: Provided, that the clerk of probate shall keep separate records of the same.
SECTION 3. All freedmen, free negroes or mulattoes who do now and have heretofore lived and cohabited together as husband and wife shall be taken and held in law as legally married, and the issue shall be taken and held as legitimate for all purposes; and it shall not be lawful for any freedman, free negro or mulatto to intermarry with any white person; nor for any person to intermarry with any freedman, free negro or mulatto; and any person who shall so intermarry shall be deemed guilty of felony, and on conviction thereof shall be confined in the State penitentiary for life; and those shall be deemed freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes who are of pure negro blood, and those descended from a negro to the third generation, inclusive, though one ancestor in each generation may have been a white person.
Black Codes, such as the 1865 Mississippi laws excerpted above,
reflected the desires of African Americans for a racially separate society to preserve their cultural traditions
demonstrated that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments also applied at the state level
were supported by the Supreme Court, even though they were specific to the state of Mississippi
were often ignored by Whites and African Americans alike because the penalties were inconsequential
reflected the desires of Southern Whites to accept laws passed by Northerners and African Americans