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Chapter 23
Election of 1876, Compromise of
1877
Election of 1876
"Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and
some are born in Ohio..."
–Trying to gain the swing votes from Ohio (Rutherford Hayes)
•Candidates:
–Republicans: Rutherford B. Hayes
–Democrats: Samuel J. Tilden
Problem with Election
•Election was extremely close, with Tilden one electoral vote
away from winning, had won popular vote
•There 20 questionable votes that could go either way, Tilden
needed only one to win
•Both sides went to the questionable states (LA, SC, FL, OR) to
gain votes
–Required a recount; depending on which branch of congress
counted, would determine which side won the election
(Democratic House, Republican Senate)
•Election was at a stalemate
Compromise of 1877
•Passed Electoral Count Act
–15 men (from House, Senate & Supreme Court); 7
Democrats, 8 Republicans
•Democrats angry b/c Republicans had an advantage and were
heading towards victory
•The Compromise was made
–North/Republicans: Rutherford B. Hayes elected
–South/Democrats: removal of military occupation in south (end
of reconstruction)
•Freed blacks left without protection, Civil Rights Act was
ignored
–Money would be spent on Texas and Pacific railroad
Jim Crow Laws
Also known as the black codes these were
harsh rules that were established to restict
blacks rights.
Civil Rights Act
-Strongly ignored after reconstruction ended
-Advocated in the North
-Black were in favor
-Southerners hated it
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