Dr. Lawrence Nixon and Drusilla Tandy Porter
Dr. Lawrence Nixon and Drusilla Tandy Porter

Dr. Lawrence Nixon and Drusilla Tandy Porter

You are at Historias: El Paso's Black History, Site # 3: Site of Dr. Nixon’s landmark 1924 vote at 2317 Texas Avenue.

On Saturday, July 26, 1924, Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon presented his poll tax receipt at 2317 Texas Avenue, the site of the Democratic Primary. The year before, the Texas State Legislature had passed a bill expressly forbidding Black Texans from voting in the Democratic Primary—an effort by the Republican Party to weaken the Democratic Party’s power in the state. As the site of the state’s first chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), El Paso was seen as the ideal Texas city in which in which to challenge the restrictions of the new bill due to its small but politically engaged Black population. With his high standing in the community, Dr. Nixon was chosen to be the one in whose name the suit would be filed. After he was inevitably turned away from voting on July 26, 1924, Dr. Nixon filed a suit that would eventually reach the Supreme Court. Though the Supreme Court decided unanimously in Dr. Nixon’s favor, the court’s opinion left open legal loopholes that allowed Texas to continue to prevent Black Texans from voting. In 1928, Dr. Nixon filed another suit that also went before the Supreme Court and despite a second favorable ruling from the nation’s highest court, Texas continued to use loopholes to restrict voting rights. Dr. Nixon would not vote in an El Paso primary until 1944 when the Supreme Court case Smith v. Allwright fully prohibited the exclusion of Black Texans from primaries.

Sources: Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon and the White Primary (Southwestern Studies) by Conrey Bryson

Support for this project is provided by Art Bridges as part of DelArt’s Black Survival Guide, or How to Live Through a Police Riot exhibit on display at the El Paso Museum of History through July 22, 2022. The Museum of History is located at 510 N Santa Fe Street, is free admission, and is open Wednesday through Saturday from 10 AM to 6 PM.

Commissioned from conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas, Black Survival Guide is an innovative, participatory exhibition that draws attention to the "holes" in narrative history through the melding of words and pictures. To complement this exhibit, the El Paso Museum of History has installed six QR codes throughout downtown and central El Paso to recognize sites of local Black history.


Image Description: This photo shows Dr. Lawrence Nixon and Drusilla Tandy Porter standing together in front of the desert backdrop. Dr. Nixon is standing with his hands behind his back, looking at the camera with a small smile, and Ms. Porter has her arm through Dr. Nixon's arm, she is extending one leg slightly more than the other, and she is smiling at the camera.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Texas State Historical Association

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Pridefest 2015

The Biggest Pride celebration in West Texas!

Pride Week Events

Events happening during Pride week.

Sun Carnival Cornation

Theme Williamsburg ; year 1961-62 Queen Edith White ; theme and ...

Game day EP Chihuahuas

Another splendid day for baseball May 19,2015 against the Fresno ...

Downtown El Paso

Downtown El Paso nights

Prospect Street By The Museum

Photo by Dave Quintana circa 2015 shows improvements to Prospect ...

Parade Downtown

Vietnam Veterans marching in the parade Downtown.

Parade Downtown

Vietnam Veterans marching to the El Paso Museum of History .

La Raza Unida National Convention, El Paso, Texas 1972

Partido Nacional de La Raza Unida (National United Peoples Party ...

La Raza Unida National Convention, El Paso, Texas 1972

Partido Nacional de La Raza Unida (National United Peoples Party ...

La Raza Unida National Convention, El Paso 1972

Partido Nacional de La Raza Unida (National United Peoples Party ...

UTEP Centennial Video -2014 # 3

The UTEP Centennial at the EL Paso Museum of History. The ...

Sixth Wall of Giants

People sitting outside, during the celebration for Fort Bliss; ...

Todos somos uno: Omar Villalobos at TEDxElPaso 2013

Omar Villalobos is about counterculture. He is a native of ...

Nah, nah, nah ... It's going to be cool: Jim Ward at TEDxElPaso

Jim Ward is a fifth-generation El Pasoan. He recorded and toured ...

Graphics

This lanyard, worn by all TEDx El Paso participants and ...

Graphics

This lanyard, worn by all TEDx El Paso participants and ...

The other side: Monica Lozano at TEDxElPaso

Monica Lozano is a Mexican American photographer born in El ...

2015 TEDx El Paso Speaker Line-Up (Part 1)

Photos and Bios of the first six speakers lined up for the 2015 ...

Putting it all together

The Inaugural TEDx El Paso event could not have come together ...

TEDx El Paso Volunteers

With the tireless efforts of Jeanne Foskett, Chris Kohlbrenner, ...

2015 TEDx El Paso Speaker Line-up (Part 2)

Six more speakers at the 2015 TEDx El Paso Conference

The bridge as public space: Carlos Gallinar at TEDxElPaso, Texas

Carlos Gallinar, AICP, CNU-A, serves as the planning director ...

home.search_collection