Julia Shih

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The Ohio Constitution’s declaration of rights reinforced this idea, promising fundamental rights to “all men,” while mentioning “citizens” only in connection with the rights to vote and hold office. A person did not have to be a citizen to claim the right to be free of racial discrimination, so the organizers of the petition claimed rights based not on citizenship but on personhood and their residency in Ohio.
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction
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