Rutherford B. Hayes
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Rutherford Birchard Hayes | |
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In office March 4, 1877 – March 4, 1881 |
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Vice President(s) | William A. Wheeler |
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Preceded by | Ulysses S. Grant |
Succeeded by | James A. Garfield |
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Born | October 4, 1822 Delaware, Ohio |
Died | January 17, 1893 (aged 70) Fremont, Ohio |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Lucy Webb Hayes |
Religion | no affiliation[1] |
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Rutherford Birchard Hayes (October 4, 1822 – January 17, 1893) was an American politician, lawyer, military leader and the 19th President of the United States (1877–1881).
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[edit] Early life
Hayes was born in Delaware, Ohio, on October 4, 1822. His parents were Rutherford Hayes (January 4, 1787 Brattleboro, Vermont–July 20, 1822 Delaware, Ohio) and Sophia Birchard (April 15, 1792 Wilmington, Vermont–October 30, 1866 Columbus, Ohio) and was the youngest of four children, however two of them, Lorenzo Hayes (1815–1825) and Sarah Sophia Hayes (1817–1821) died young. Hayes's father died before Hayes was born and an uncle, Sardis Birchard, lived with the family and served as Hayes's guardian. Hayes attended the common schools and the Methodist Academy in Norwalk. He graduated from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio in August 1842 and from Harvard Law School in January 1845. He was admitted to the bar on May 10, 1845, and commenced practice in Lower Sandusky (now Fremont). He moved to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1849 and resumed the practice of law. He was city solicitor from 1857 to 1859.
He was close to his sister Fanny Arabella Hayes (1820–1856) as can be seen in this diary entry:
- July, 1856. —My dear only sister, my beloved Fanny, is dead! The dearest friend of childhood, the affectionate adviser, the confidante of all my life, the one I loved best, is gone; alas! never again to be seen on earth.
[edit] Family
On December 30, 1852, Hayes married Lucy Ware Webb. They had the following children:
- Birchard Austin Hayes (1853-1926)
- James Webb Cook Hayes (1856-1934)
- Rutherford Platt Hayes (1858-1927)
- Joseph Thompson Hayes (1861-1863)
- George Crook Hayes (1864-1866)
- Fanny Hayes (1867-1950)
- Scott Russell Hayes (1871-1923)
- Manning Force Hayes (1873-1874)
[edit] Political service
While still in the Shenandoah in 1864, Hayes received the Republican nomination to Congress from Cincinnati. Refusing to campaign on the grounds that "an officer fit for duty who at this crisis would abandon his post to electioneer for a seat in Congress ought to be scalped," Hayes was elected and served in the Thirty-ninth and again to the Fortieth Congresses and served from March 4, 1865, to July 20, 1867, when he resigned, having been nominated for Governor of Ohio. Through the powerful voice of his friend and Civil War subordinate James M. Comly's Ohio State Journal (one of the state's most influential newspapers), Hayes won the election and served as governor from 1868 to 1872. He was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the Forty-third Congress. He was again elected governor and served from January 1876 to March 2, 1877.
[edit] Election of 1876
Hayes became president after the tumultuous, scandal-ridden years of the Grant administration. He had a reputation for honesty dating back to his Civil War years. Hayes was quite famous for his ability not to offend anyone. Henry Adams, a prominent politician at the time, asserted that Hayes was "a third rate nonentity, whose only recommendation is that he is obnoxious to no one." Nevertheless, his opponent in the presidential election, Democrat Samuel J. Tilden, was the favorite to win the presidential election and, in fact, won the popular vote by about 250,000 votes (with about 8.5 million voters in total).
Four states' electoral college votes were contested. In order to win, the candidates had to muster 185 votes: Tilden was short just one, with 184 votes, Hayes had 165, with 20 votes representing the four states which were contested. To make matters worse, three of these states (Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina) were in the South, which was still under military occupation (the fourth was Oregon). Additionally, historians note, the election was not fair because of the improper fraud and intimidation perpetrated from both sides. A popular phrase of the day called it an election without "a free ballot and a fair count." For the next four years, Democrats would refer to Hayes as "Rutherfraud B. Hayes" for his allegedly illegitimate election, as he had lost the popular vote by roughly 250,000 votes.
To peacefully decide the results of the election, the two houses of Congress set up the Electoral Commission to investigate and decide upon the actual winner. The commission constituted 15 members: five from the House, five from the Senate and five from the Supreme Court. Additionally, the Commission was bi-partisan consisting of 7 Democrats, 7 Republicans and a "swing" vote in Joseph P. Bradley, a Supreme Court Justice. Bradley, however, was a Republican at heart and thus the ruling followed party lines: 8 to 7 voted for Hayes winning in all of the contested 20 electoral votes.
Key Ohio Republicans like James A. Garfield and the Democrats, however, agreed at a Washington hotel on the Wormley House Agreement. Southern Democrats were given assurances, in the Compromise of 1877, that if Hayes became president, he would pull federal troops out of the South and end Reconstruction. An agreement was made between them and the Republicans: if Hayes's cabinet consisted of at least one Southerner and he withdrew all Union troops from the South, then he would become President.
[edit] Presidency 1877–1881
Because March 4, 1877 was a Sunday, Hayes took the oath of office in the Red Room of the White House on March 3. This ceremony was held in secret, because the previous year's election had been so bitterly divisive that outgoing President Grant feared an insurrection by Tilden's supporters and wanted to ensure that any Democratic attempt to hijack the public inauguration ceremony would be for naught (since Hayes had already been sworn in privately). The second of the Ohio presidents, Hayes took the oath again publicly on March 5 on the East Portico of the United States Capitol, and served until March 4, 1881.
[edit] Domestic policy
In domestic affairs, aside from reconciliation with the South, his administration was noteworthy for two policies: resumption of specie (mainly gold) backing of the paper currency and bonds that financed the war, and the beginning of civil service reform. Hayes' first step in civil service reform was to issue an executive order in June 1877 forbidding federal civil servants to take an active part in politics. This order brought him into fateful collision with congressional spoilsmen. In this mainly victorious test, Hayes removed not only a subordinate, Alonzo B. Cornell, from the New York customhouse but also the port collector, Chester A. Arthur, both Republicans. (When Arthur himself became president, he backed major civil service reform legislation, so that the sequel to this explosive episode was another irony.)
Hayes also won a significant duel with Congress (after Southern Democrats won control in 1878) over riders attached to army appropriation bills to keep him from protecting blacks' rights to vote in line with the 15th Amendment. When Congress sent him the bills complete with amendments overturning civil rights enforcement, Hayes vetoed them four times before finally signing one that satisfied his requirement for black rights. However, his subsequent attempts to reconcile with his Southern Democrat opposition by handing them prestigious civil service appointments both alienated fellow Republicans and undermined his own previous attempts at civil service reform.
Hayes' most controversial domestic act apart from ending Reconstruction came with his response to the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, in which employees of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad walked off the job and were joined across the country by thousands of workers in their own and sympathetic industries. When the labor disputes exploded into riots in several cities, Hayes called in federal troops, who, for the first time in U.S. history, fired on the striking workers, killing over 70. Although the troops did ultimately restore the peace, both the working class and the industrialists were displeased with their intervention. Workers feared that the Federal government had turned permanently against them, while industrialists feared that such brutal action would spark revolution, along the lines of the European Revolutions of 1848.
[edit] Foreign policy
In 1878, Hayes was asked by Argentina to act as arbitrator following the War of the Triple Alliance between Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay against Paraguay. The Argentines hoped that Hayes would give the Chaco region to them; however, he decided in favor of the Paraguayans. His decision made him a hero in Paraguay, and a city (Villa Hayes) and a department (Presidente Hayes) were named in his honor.
But for the most part, Hayes was not very involved in foreign policy. The bulk of his problems during his presidency were small and domestically related.
[edit] Notable legislation
During his presidency, Hayes signed a number of bills including one signed on February 15, 1879 which, for the first time, allowed female attorneys to argue cases before the Supreme Court of the United States.
Other acts include:
- Compromise of 1877
- Desert Land Act (1877)
- Bland-Allison Act (1878)
- Timber and Stone Act (1878)
- Tidewater Act (1879)
[edit] Significant events during his presidency
- Munn v. Illinois (1876)
- Great Railroad Strike (1877)
[edit] Administration and Cabinet
OFFICE | NAME | TERM |
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President | Rutherford B. Hayes | 1877–1881 |
Vice President | William A. Wheeler | 1877–1881 |
Secretary of State | William M. Evarts | 1877–1881 |
Secretary of the Treasury | John Sherman | 1877–1881 |
Secretary of War | George W. McCrary | 1877–1879 |
Alexander Ramsey | 1879–1881 | |
Attorney General | Charles Devens | 1877–1881 |
Postmaster General | David M. Key | 1877–1880 |
Horace Maynard | 1880–1881 | |
Secretary of the Navy | Richard W. Thompson | 1877–1880 |
Nathan Goff, Jr. | 1881 | |
Secretary of the Interior | Carl Schurz | 1877–1881 |
[edit] Supreme Court appointments
Hayes appointed two Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States:
[edit] States admitted to the Union
None
[edit] Post-Presidency
Hayes did not seek re-election in 1880, keeping his pledge that he would not run for a second term. He had, in his inaugural address, proposed a one-term limit for the presidency combined with an increase in the term length to six years.
Hayes served on the Board of Trustees of the Ohio State University, the school he helped found during his time as governor of Ohio, from the end of his Presidency until his death.
Rutherford Birchard Hayes died of complications of a heart attack in Fremont, Sandusky County, Ohio, at 12:00 p.m. on Tuesday January 17, 1893. His last words were "I know that I'm going where Lucy is." Interment was in Riverwood Cemetery. Following the gift of his home to the state of Ohio for the Spiegel Grove State Park, he was reinterred there in 1915.
[edit] Trivia
- Ten facts about Rutherford B. Hayes from the archives of the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center Library[1]
- Hayes was the first president to take the oath of office in the White House.
- Hayes was the only president whose election was decided by a congressional commission.
- Hayes was the first president to travel to the U.S. West Coast during his term as president.
- Hayes was the first president to have a telephone in the White House.
- Hayes was the first president to have a typewriter in the White House.
- Though other presidents served in the United States Civil War, Hayes was the only one to have been wounded. He was wounded four times.
- Hayes began the "Easter Egg Roll" for children on the White House Lawn in 1878.
- Lucy Webb Hayes was the first wife of a president to graduate from college,
- Lucy Webb Hayes was the first wife of a president to be called "First Lady."
- Hayes' best known quotation, "He serves his party best who serves his country best," is from his 1877 Inaugural Address.
- Hayes was the last U.S. President born before the Monroe Doctrine came into effect.
- Hayes is also reputed to be the first President to have had his voice recorded by Thomas Edison in 1877 with his newly-invented phonograph. Unfortunately, the tin it was recorded on has been lost. As the recording cannot be located, some say that it never existed, and that therefore the first President to have his voice recorded was Benjamin Harrison in the 1890s.
- Hayes had no say over the nomination of his running mate for Vice President. When party bosses at the 1876 Republican Convention decided to give the spot to the little-known New York representative William A. Wheeler, Hayes only heard about it next morning and reportedly said, "I am ashamed to say, Who is Wheeler?"
- Hayes lends his name to the math and physics building at Kenyon College, where he graduated in 1842.
- Hayes also lends his name to the College of the Arts building at the Ohio State University, which he helped found as Governor of Ohio. Hayes Hall, built in 1893, is the oldest building still standing on the Ohio State campus.
- Hayes had the longest beard of all the past U.S. Presidents.
- The Paraguayan department of Presidente Hayes, with the capitol city Villa Hayes is named after him.
- Hayes' Civil War horse was named Whitey. He is buried at Spiegel Grove with a gravemarker reading "Old Whitey A Hero of Nineteen Battles 1861-1865."
- The USS Spiegel Grove, launched in 1955, was named after his home Spiegel Grove. It was sunk intentionally off Key Largo to form an artificial reef in 2002.
- While Hayes was President, dancing, card-playing and alcoholic beverages were banned from the White House. This rule was also enforced during James K. Polk's presidency. First Lady Lucy Hayes earned the nicknamed "Lemonade Lucy".
[edit] External links
- Extensive essay on Rutherford Hayes and shorter essays on each member of his cabinet and First Lady from the Miller Center of Public Affairs
- Inaugural Address
- The Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center Fremont, Ohio
- White House Biography
- http://www.ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/hayes/chapterxii.html
- Works by Rutherford B. Hayes at Project Gutenberg
- Rutherford Hayes' Gravesite
Preceded by Alexander Long |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Ohio's 2nd congressional district 1865 – 1867 |
Succeeded by Samuel F. Cary |
Preceded by Jacob D. Cox |
Governor of Ohio 1868 – 1872 |
Succeeded by Edward F. Noyes |
Preceded by William Allen |
Governor of Ohio 1876 – 1877 |
Succeeded by Thomas L. Young |
Preceded by Ulysses S. Grant |
Republican Party presidential candidate 1876 (won) |
Succeeded by James A. Garfield |
President of the United States March 4, 1877 – March 4, 1881 |
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Oldest U.S. President still living July 23, 1885 – January 17, 1893 |
Succeeded by Benjamin Harrison |
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Persondata | |
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NAME | Hayes, Rutherford B. |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Rutherford Birchard Hayes |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | 19th President of the United States |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 4, 1822 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Delaware, Ohio |
DATE OF DEATH | January 17, 1893 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Fremont, Ohio |
Categories: Union Army generals | People of Ohio in the American Civil War | Deaths from cardiovascular disease | Case Western Reserve University alumni | Governors of Ohio | Kenyon College alumni | Harvard Law School alumni | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Ohio | People from Ohio | Presidents of the United States | Republican Party (United States) presidential nominees | United States Army generals | 1822 births | 1893 deaths | History of the United States (1865–1918)