Black Codes, in U.S. history, the numerous laws adopted in the states of the former Confederacy after the American Civil War that were intended to maintain white supremacy in those places. Enacted in 1865 and 1866, the Black Codes were designed to replace the social controls previously exerted over Black Americans by slavery, which was ended through the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution.
The Black Codes had their roots in the so-called slave codes that had formerly been in effect in Southern states. The premise behind chattel slavery in America was that enslaved people were property and, as such, had few or no legal rights. The slave codes, in their many loosely defined forms, were seen as effective tools against rebellions and other efforts by enslaved people to gain freedom. Enforcement of slave codes varied across the South, but corporal punishment and other forms of physical violence were widely and harshly employed.
The Black Codes enacted immediately after the Civil War, though varying from state to state, were all intended to secure a steady supply of cheap labor, and all continued to assume the racial and social inferiority of formerly enslaved people. There were vagrancy laws that declared a Black person to be vagrant if unemployed and without permanent residence; a person so defined could be arrested, fined, and bound out for a term of labor if unable to pay the fine. Portions of a vagrancy law enacted by the state legislature of Mississippi in 1865 provide an example:
Section 2. Be it further enacted, that all freedmen, free Negroes, and mulattoes in this state over the age of eighteen years found on the second Monday in January 1866, or thereafter, with no lawful employment or business, or found unlawfully assembling themselves together either in the day- or nighttime, and all white persons so assembling with freedmen, free Negroes, or mulattoes, or usually associating with freedmen, free Negroes, or mulattoes on terms of equality, or living in adultery or fornication with a freedwoman, free Negro, or mulatto, shall be deemed vagrants; and, on conviction thereof, shall be fined in the sum of not exceeding, in the case of a freedman, free Negro, or mulatto, $150, and a white man, $200, and imprisoned at the discretion of the court, the free Negro not exceeding ten days, and the white man not exceeding six months.
Section 5. Be it further enacted, that all fines and forfeitures collected under the provisions of this act shall be paid into the county treasury for general county purposes; and in case any freedman, free Negro, or mulatto shall fail for five days after the imposition of any fine or forfeiture upon him or her for violation of any of the provisions of this act to pay the same, that it shall be, and is hereby made, the duty of the sheriff of the proper county to hire out said freedman, free Negro, or mulatto to any person who will, for the shortest period of service, pay said fine or forfeiture and all costs.
Apprentice laws provided for the “hiring out” of Black orphans and other young dependents to white people, who sometimes had previously been their enslavers. Some states limited the type of property African Americans could own, and in other states Black people were excluded from certain businesses or from skilled trades. Formerly enslaved people were forbidden to carry firearms, and they were not allowed to testify in court, except in cases concerning other Black people. Legal marriage between African Americans was provided for, but interracial marriage was prohibited.
It was Northern reaction to the Black Codes—as well as to the Memphis massacre and the New Orleans massacre, both of which were attacks by white mobs on Black residents of those cities in 1866—that helped produce Radical Reconstruction (1867–77) and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution. The Freedmen’s Bureau, created in 1865, was another effort by the federal government to help formerly enslaved people.
Reconstruction did away with the Black Codes, but, after Reconstruction ended in 1877, many of their provisions were reenacted by Southern states through Jim Crow laws, which were not finally done away with until passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.