The biracial Readjuster Party gained control of the Virginia General Assembly in 1879 and of Danville’s city council in 1882. In October 1883, White citizens distributed the Danville Circular denouncing African American political power. A local Readjuster official publicly condemned the circular on 2 November. The next day, an argument between a White man and two Black men escalated into a fight outside the Opera House. White men fired guns, and at least one White and four Black men were killed. Democrats, blaming the violence on African Americans, won control of the General Assembly days later, leading to the demise of the Readjuster Party and an end to Black political power in Virginia until the 1960s.