News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Aycock legacy gets reappraisal

Published: Oct 06, 2007 12:00 AM
Modified: Oct 06, 2007 03:14 AM

Aycock legacy gets reappraisal

As Democrats gather for the annual Vance-Aycock fundraiser, some are calling for a reckoning with a namesake's white supremacy past

Story Tools

SOME PLACES WHERE AYCOCK IS HONORED

* Union Square at the state Capitol, where a monument stands.

* His birthplace in Wayne County. The site is designated a North Carolina Historic Site.

* The state Education Building, where his words are etched in stone.

* UNC-Greensboro. An auditorium is named for him.

* Duke University, where a dormitory is named for him.

* The U.S. Capitol, which has a statue.

Advertisements
For the past century, former Gov. Charles Brantley Aycock has been revered. His birthplace is preserved as a state historical site. His statues grace the state and U.S. capitols. Schools, college buildings and even an entire neighborhood is named for him.

But Aycock's legacy in the violent white supremacy campaigns of 1898 and 1900 -- once sugar-coated in history books -- is now being debated for the first time in North Carolina's highest political circles.

This week, Aycock became an issue in the governor's race when State Treasurer Richard Moore, a Democratic candidate for governor, proposed stripping the former governor's name from the Democrats' annual Vance-Aycock fundraising dinner scheduled for today in Asheville.

In a letter to the state Democratic Party, Moore made his case: "Aycock's victory fostered Jim Crow laws throughout the South that silenced the voice of millions of African-American voters for decades."

Some African-Americans such as Irving Joyner, a law professor at N.C. Central University in Durham, agree with Moore.

"By his actions," Joyner said, "Aycock was a 'rogue' governor and his racially divisive actions should not be honored by anyone in this state, especially the alleged 'new' Democratic Party, which now holds the political allegiances of the vast majority of African-American votes in this state."

He urged blacks to boycott the dinner if Aycock's name is not removed.

Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue, Moore's chief rival, issued a statement saying, "It's appropriate to reconsider the legacy of Charles Aycock. But the issue of equality is one that North Carolina must continue to deal with on a much broader level." She went on to say the focus should be on fixing current inequities in several areas including education, health care and health insurance.

State Democratic Chairman Jerry Meek said the party's executive committee would review the Vance-Aycock name question at their meeting in January.

Removing his name from the event would signal a major shift in the way Aycock has been portrayed. Through much of North Carolina history, he was accorded political sainthood.

Aycock, who was governor from 1901-1905, has been honored as the state's "education governor." He led a statewide crusade at the beginning of the 20th century to improve North Carolina's schools, which were then among the worst in the nation.

By the end of his term, there were 690 new schoolhouses erected, including 599 for whites and 91 for blacks.

Aycock became an iconic figure among Democrats. Gov. Terry Sanford hung Aycock's portrait in the governor's office in 1961. Gov. Jim Hunt quoted Aycock on education during the last State of the State address of the 20th century in 1999. Aycock's words are etched on the outside of the state Education Building.

Often overlooked was Aycock's role as a leading spokesman in the white supremacy campaigns of 1898 and 1900, which historians say were marked by widespread violence, voter intimidation, voter fraud and even a coup d'etat of the government of Wilmington.

The violence was sparked by a political revolt in the 1890s that resulted in a biracial coalition of Republicans and Populists taking control of North Carolina government.

But with racist campaigns designed to lure whites, the Democrats won back the state legislature in 1898 and retook the governor's office in 1900.

The campaigns had far-reaching consequences: Blacks were removed from the voter rolls based on literacy tests, Jim Crow customs were encoded into law, and the Democratic Party controlled Tar Heel politics for two-thirds of the 20th century.


Next page >

Print Ads View all ads from past 7 days »

Hosting Partners of
newsobserver.com

Member of the
Real Cities Network

A subsidiary of The McClatchy Company