| |||||||||
In the United States, a grandfather clause is an exception which allows something pre-existing to remain as it is, despite a change to the contrary in the rules applied to newer situations. It is often used as the verb "to grandfather" or "grandfather in," alternatively, as "grandfather clause." Often, such a provision is used as a compromise, to effect new rules without upsetting a well-established physical or political situation.
Some examples:
The source of the term grandfather clause was the laws used from 1895 to 1910 in seven of the southern U.S. states as a Jim Crow law, in order to prevent blacks from voting. In 1870 when the Fifteenth Amendment, granting former slaves the right to vote, was ratified. In response, the states passed laws providing that all persons allowed to vote before the American Civil War, and any of their descendants, were exempt from poll taxes levied and/or supposed "literacy" tests required at the time. These laws had the effect of disenfranchising blacks, but not whites, until the ratification of the Twenty-fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, and a 1966 Supreme Court ruling eliminated most legal barriers to black voting.