The Okie Legacy: 1876 Presidential Election Controversy

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Volume 18 , Issue 40

2016

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1876 Presidential Election Controversy

The election of 1876 was perhaps the most contested of the three elections. It pitted Republican Rutherford B. Hayes against Democrat Henry Tilden.

Found on Newspapers.com
[The Cincinnati Enquirer, dated 6 March 1877, Tuesday, page 1. Anti-Hayes inauguration headlines.]

Tilden won the popular vote but was one electoral vote short of a majority, with 20 electoral votes yet to be tallied due to various controversies. Congress appointed a commission to award the remaining votes, and all 20 were given to Hayes, which gave him the majority. When Democrats threatened to contest the results, the matter was settled with a behind-the-scenes agreement that made Hayes president but essentially ended Reconstruction in the South.
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