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Segregation in the Galleries: A Reconsideration
Author(s) -
Richard A. Primus
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.36644/mlr.online.118.segregation
Subject(s) - ninth , interpretation (philosophy) , argument (complex analysis) , meaning (existential) , race (biology) , law , strengths and weaknesses , original meaning , political science , sociology , epistemology , gender studies , philosophy , linguistics , biochemistry , physics , chemistry , acoustics
When constitutional lawyers talk about the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied to questions of race, they often mention that the spectators’ galleries in Congress were racially segregated when Congress debated the Amendment.1 If the Thirty-Ninth Congress practiced racial segregation, the thinking goes, then it probably did not mean to prohibit racial segregation.2 As an argument about constitutional interpretation, this line of thinking has both strengths and weaknesses. But this brief Essay is not about the interpretive consequences, if any, of segregation in the congressional galleries during the 1860s. It is about the factual claim that the galleries were segregated.

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