The Remembrance: Virginia Racial Integrity Act of 1924
MAY 28, 202613 MIN
The Remembrance: Virginia Racial Integrity Act of 1924
MAY 28, 202613 MIN
Description
<p>In this episode, Morgan reads The Virginia Racial Integrity Act of 1924, a crucial primary source that exposes how race was formally reclassified in Virginia during the early 20th century. The document reveals the legal push to relabel Aboriginal and Black people native to America under the category of “Negro,” while enforcing a rigid racial hierarchy that shaped identity, law, and social status.</p><p><br></p><p>The reading also highlights how Virginians of the time were aware of racial mixing and the changing labels being imposed on people of color, and how these classifications were often treated with judgment and contempt. The document specifically shows the use of racial categories such as “mulatto” and “octoroon,” illustrating how the law attempted to control and define Black and mixed-race identity through language, blood quantum, and social separation.</p><p><br></p><p>This episode invites listeners to examine the history of racial classification, the legal erasure of Aboriginal identity, and the long-lasting impact of these systems on Black and Indigenous descendants in America. <strong>Leaving Americans to wonder: what have they forgotten, and what do they remember?</strong></p>