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August 6, 2025 26 mins

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Setting the Record Straight: American History in Black and White

The tangled relationship between race and politics in America contains shocking truths that have been systematically erased from our collective memory. When Texas Democrats recently fled the state to break quorum on redistricting legislation, they unknowingly echoed tactics used by their political ancestors in the 1870s—though the historical context reveals a dramatically different motivation.

Did you know the Republican Party of Texas was founded on July 4, 1867, by 150 Black Americans and only 20 white Americans? Or that census records from the 1870s documented just one Black Democrat in the entire state of Mississippi? These aren't fringe theories or alternative facts—they're documented historical truths that challenge everything most Americans believe about race and political affiliation.

The electoral record speaks volumes: the first 42 Black elected officials in Texas history were all Republicans. This pattern repeats across the South—the first 99 in Alabama, 127 in Louisiana, 41 in Georgia, and 112 in Mississippi were Republicans without exception. Even more surprising, the Ku Klux Klan's founding documents explicitly stated they were created to "regain power from Republicans," not primarily to target Black Americans. Between 1882-1964, approximately 4,700 Americans were lynched—about 3,500 Black and 1,300 white—revealing the KKK's violence was politically motivated, targeting Republicans of both races.

The gradual transition of Black voters from Republican to Democratic support throughout the 20th century is a complex story often mischaracterized as a sudden "party switch." In reality, most Black Americans still supported Republican Eisenhower in the 1950s, with major shifts occurring gradually through FDR's Depression-era programs and later civil rights legislation.

We also spotlight forgotten heroes like Matthew Gaines, a Black Republican state senator who created one of America's first faith-based healing programs after the Civil War. These stories remind us that understanding American history requires examining the biographical accounts systematically excluded from modern narratives.

Want to discover more hidden history? Visit wallbuilders.com and search "Black History" for resources that will transform your understanding of America's complex past. Share this episode with someone who believes they know American history—they're in for an eye-opening experience.

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