Compromise Of 1877 Dbq Essay

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The Compromise of 1877 was an unwritten deal that settled the intensely disputed 1876 election. It resulted with the United States pulling the last of the troops from the south, ending the Reconstruction Era and giving the south power over their land. Both Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel J. Tilden had great political talent, but of course, they saw being president as something else in their own eye. With Hayes coming from the North and Tilden coming from the South, their goals were going to be pretty different. The Civil War ended not too many years before hand, so the election was going to be very rough. Yet, it wasn’t what happened at the start that changed history. Yes, every candidate who wins makes and will make history, but this year …show more content…

They accused him of bribing and using his physical intimidation to get African Americans not to vote in the South. The outcome of this election hung under the results from four different states: Florida, Louisiana, Oregon, and South Carolina. Republicans accused the democrats of refusing to count African American votes and other republican votes in Florida, South Carolina, and Louisiana. In return the Democrats accused the Republicans of refusing to count votes for Tilden. EARLY LIFE Rutherford Birchard Hayes was born on October 4th, 1822 in Delaware, Ohio. His mother and father had it rough before he was born, with moving to Ohio and his father dying about two months before he was born. Left with just his mother and his sister, Fanny, he went to a variety of schools before he graduated at Kenyon College in 1842. In 1849, with a law degree from Harvard Law School, he moved to Cincinnati, where he met his wife, Lucy Webb. He also developed a great interest in the Republican Party. ________________________________________ 2 MAJOR FIGHTS, ONE …show more content…

Tilden went to Yale Collage and The university of the city New York, where he studied Law, in 1841 in New York City that's when Tilden began to practice law. He then became a corporation and railroad lawyer and had leadership and great skill in Democratic politics. He was the 25th Governor of New York and the Democratic candidate for president in the 1876 election. Later on in 1846, Tilden became a member of the New York Assembly and was a member of the state constitutional convention. Tilden was elected governor in 1874, he won national recognition for his efficient administration and for exposing the Canal