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Hayes's ride: in 1876, a Democratic candidate won the presidency, but, through a lack of nerve lost the recount. Sound familiar?


FRAUD OF THE CENTURY: Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden, and the Stolen Election of 1876 by Roy Morris Jr. Simon & Schuster Simon & Schuster

U.S. publishing company. It was founded in 1924 by Richard L. Simon (1899–1960) and M. Lincoln Schuster (1897–1970), whose initial project, the original crossword-puzzle book, was a best-seller.
, $27.00

THROUGHOUT THOSE REMARKABLE 37 days that followed Election Day, 2000, as the struggle for the presidency moved from the polling booths to the streets of Palm Beach to the courthouses of Florida and Washington, as we media types spoke of Constitutional crises and enough uncharted waters to re-launch Gilligan's Minnow minnow, common name for the Cyprinidae, a large family of freshwater fish which includes the carp (Cyprinus carpio), and of which there are some 300 American species. The European minnow is Phoxinus phoxinus. , the voice of the American people seemed to be saying: "Um, excuse us, but could you figure out who the president is and let us know as soon as possible? Either one's more or less okay with us, but hey--Christmas is coming up, the NFL NFL
abbr.
National Football League

NFL (US) n abbr (= National Football League) → Fußball-Nationalliga
 playoffs are around the corner, so could you wrap this up quick?"

In those days Of peace and prosperity, America was in the words of one observer, "a hotbed hotbed, low, glass-covered frame structure for starting tender plants. It differs from a cold frame only in that the soil is heated—either artificially as by underground electric wiring or steampipes, or naturally with partially fermented stable manure, which  of rest" But what, I kept wondering, if we were in a different climate? What if the United States had been divided by an unpopular war, or by intense racial and cultural divisions? What if great numbers of Americans were prepared--literally--to take up arms Verb 1. take up arms - commence hostilities
go to war, take arms

war - make or wage war
 if Gore or Bush had emerged the victor?

Is such a scenario unimaginable? The fact is, it happened--not in 2000, but in 1876, when New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Gov. Samuel Tilden, the Democratic nominee, went to bed on Election Night with a solid 250,000 plurality over Ohio Gov. Rutherford B. Hayes, only to see Hayes win the White House after a two-month battle where bribery, blackmail, extortion, voter fraud, and murder, were freely employed by partisans of both candidates. It may seem like the stuff of fiction--in fact, Gore Vidal's novel 1876 puts the contest at the center of its plot--but the real story, set down by author and onetime political correspondent Roy Morris Jr, has enough drama, melodrama, farce, and tragedy to power a dozen such books. Morris's blend of research, narrative skill, and historical perspective renders Fraud of the Century a compelling tale for anyone even remotely interested in American political history.

Morris begins with a brisk account of how the election came to be contested in the first place. While Hayes himself and most of his supporters believed that Tilden had won--the pro-Republican Chicago Tribune headline read: "Lost. The Country Given Over to Democratic Greed and Plunder TO PLUNDER. The capture of personal property on land by a public enemy, with a view of making it his own. The property so captured is called plunder. See Booty; Prize. "--a trio of Hayes supporters began to stoke the fires of resistance that night. (One of them was a New York Times editor named John C. Reid.) With telegrams sent to Republicans in key states, and with newspaper headlines proclaiming "A Doubtful Election," they enabled Republicans to argue that in three Southern states--South Carolina, Louisiana, and (historical precedent alert!) Florida, Hayes had in fact been the victor, which would have given him a one-vote electoral majority and thus the presidency.

Morris then steps back and provides the historical backdrop for the emerging post-election contest. In its centennial year, the United States was a nation still wounded by the Civil War that had ended barely a decade earlier. Republicans had held the White House for 16 years, in part by stoking resentment against the Democrats for being the party of rebellion. "Vote as you shot," the slogan went, and Republicans encouraged each other to "wave the bloody shirt." (This was no metaphor--in 1868, GOP Rep. Benjamin Butler took to the House floor to display the bloody shirt of an IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  tax collector who had been whipped by the Ku Klux Klan Ku Klux Klan (k' klŭks klăn), designation mainly given to two distinct secret societies that played a part in American history, although other less important groups have also used  in Mississippi.) But the corruption that had flourished under the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant--corruption blatant enough to make an Enron executive blush with shame or envy--had given Democrats real hope that they could take the White House back.

Their candidate, Samuel Tilden, seemed the perfect choice. A civic leader, as well as a lawyer whose railroad work brought him enormous personal wealth, Tilden had taken on the notorious Tweed Ring that dominated New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 politics and had ridden that achievement into the New York governor's mansion in 1874. Two years later, under the battle cry "Tilden and Reform," he had become the consensus presidential choice of his party. (Well, not entirely: One Tweed loyalist, Honest John Kelly, repeatedly interrupted convention proceedings to denounce Tilden.) But, Morris notes, there was a weakness to Tilden that went beyond his physical frailty and congenital hypochondria hypochondria (hī'pəkŏn`drēə), in psychology, a disorder characterized by an exaggeration of imagined or negligible physical ailment. . He was more cerebral than visceral, a man who believed in process and following the rules. In the post-election war that would be waged for the presidency, Tilden lacked the gifts of decisive command.

"His appeal was intellectual, not personal, and his tendency to aloof self-containment would cause him to be strangely passive at the most inopportune in·op·por·tune  
adj.
Inappropriate or ill-timed; not opportune.



in·oppor·tune
 time--when the presidency itself was hanging in the balance," Morris writes. (Al Gore historical allusion, anyone?)

By contrast, Rutherford B. Hayes was a man with an instinct for battle; an instinct revealed by a remarkable record of Civil War heroism--he was wounded four times during the war, and repeatedly escaped death by the narrowest of margins. He went from the battlefield to Congress to the Ohio governor's mansion The Ohio Governor's Residence and Heritage Garden is the official residence of the Governor of Ohio and his or her family. It has served as the Governor's official residence since 1957. The mansion is located in Bexley, Ohio, a suburb of the state capital, Columbus. , and won the presidential nomination because the front-runner, Maine's James G. Blaine James Gillespie Blaine (January 31, 1830 – January 27, 1893) was a U.S. Representative, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, U.S. Senator from Maine and a two-time United States Secretary of State. , Was too burdened by charges of corruption to be an effective candidate. (One of the many diverting accounts in the book is the story of Blaine taking to the floor of the House to read highly distorted excerpts from letters that in fact proved his corruption--thus anticipating President Nixon's bowdlerized tape excerpts by nearly a century.)

Morris's account of the election itself takes up much of the book, but it is a story critical to understanding what happened after the votes were cast. In several Southern states, the clashes went far beyond peaceful politics. Black Republicans, who held power thanks to Reconstruction laws and the presence of federal troops, fought sometimes murderous battles with whites. Charges of intimidation and violence were exchanged across lines of race and party. These charges set the stage for what would happen after the election, when Republican-controlled election boards in Florida, South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, and Louisiana essentially took the most serious GOP charges at face value and threw out enough Democratic votes to swing the states to Hayes--some 13,000 of them in Louisiana, where the officials in charge of the vote count had themselves committed enough crimes to fill a season's worth of "America's Most Wanted For the professional wrestling tag team, see .

For the United States FBI list of fugitives, see .
America's Most Wanted is a long-running TV show produced by 20th Century Fox.
."

The scene then shifted to Washington, and a divided Congress--the House was held by Democrats, the Senate by Republicans. Tilden's hope was that the votes of the three Southern states would simply be set aside, throwing the election into the House. Instead--to his dismay--Congress slapped together a 15-man Electoral Commission, with five House members, five Senate members, and five Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court--two Democrats, two Republicans, and one independent. But, in a last-minute twist no screenwriter would dare concoct con·coct  
tr.v. con·coct·ed, con·coct·ing, con·cocts
1. To prepare by mixing ingredients, as in cooking.

2.
, David Davis, the independent justice, was elected senator from Illinois, and promptly resigned--to be replaced by a loyal Republican justice who cast every vote along party lines. The Electoral Commission gave every contested electoral vote to Hayes. Tilden, who had resisted his followers' urgings to dispatch supporters to Washington, or to contest the process in the streets--"Tilden or Blood!" went the cry--chose not to plunge the country into chaos.

"We have just emerged from one Civil War," he said. "It will never do to engage in another; it would end in the destruction of free government."

In fact, the cost of Hayes's victory was dear. While Morris notes that the country had wearied of Reconstruction before the election, Hayes's triumph--due in some part to the willingness of Southern Democrats to accept it in return for a lighter federal hand--led "to the infamous Jim Crow laws Jim Crow laws, in U.S. history, statutes enacted by Southern states and municipalities, beginning in the 1880s, that legalized segregation between blacks and whites. The name is believed to be derived from a character in a popular minstrel song.  that officially sanctioned the social, and political disenfranchisement dis·en·fran·chise  
tr.v. dis·en·fran·chised, dis·en·fran·chis·ing, dis·en·fran·chis·es
To disfranchise.



dis
 of millions of Southern blacks: Whether a reform-minded Tilden, taking office without the cloud of fraud that hung over Hayes, could or would have changed this bleak history is one of those tantalizing tan·ta·lize  
tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es
To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach.
 "what-ifs." As for Hayes--dubbed "His Fraudulency" by his opponents-he had already pledged not to seek a second term before the votes were counted, although his administration was successful enough that one Democratic partisan quipped, "he has done so well that I sometimes almost wish he had been elected."

The one story Morris does not tell is what Congress tried to do to ensure that there would never be another "stolen election." In 1887, it passed the "Electoral Tally Act," which tried to push the final authority over the votes back to the states. Had the Supreme Court in 2000 not stopped the Florida recount, we might well have been treated to a textbook case of The Law of Unintended Consequences--with the Florida legislature asserting its power, to award the electoral votes to Bush, a state Supreme Court ordering the votes awarded to Gore, and two competing slates of electors electors, in the history of the Holy Roman Empire, the princes who had the right to elect the German kings or, more exactly, the kings of the Romans (Holy Roman emperors).  heading toward an evenly divided Congress as the Inaugural date drew ever closer.

Should we ever be faced with that political drama, I hope there is a historian as gifted and perceptive as Roy Morris to chronicle it.

JEFF GREENFIELD is a CNN CNN
 or Cable News Network

Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world.
 senior analyst. His books include The People's Choice and Oh, Waiter! One Order of Crow! Inside the Strangest Presidential Election Finish in American History.
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Title Annotation:FRAUD OF THE CENTURY: Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden, and the Stolen Election of 1876 by Roy Morris Jr. Simon & Schuster
Author:Greenfield, Jeff
Publication:Washington Monthly
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:1547
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