Title: Politics in the Gilded Age 1869-1889
1Politics in the Gilded Age1869-1889
2The Bloody Shirt Elects Grant
- At the end of the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant
accepted gifts, houses, and money. - Grant owed the election of 1868 to the former
slaves who voted.
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4continued
- After the Civil War, some political candidates
would wave a bloody shirt to remind the voters
of the treason of the Confederate Democrats
during the Civil War.
5The Era of Good Stealing
- Gold Market Scandal
- Jim Fisk and Jay Gould plotted with
Grants brother-in-law to corner the gold
market. - Black Friday Stock Market crash on
September 24, 1869
6continued
- Credit Mobilier Scandal
- involved railroad construction
- profits from the construction of the Union
Pacific Railroad went to the roads promoters. - In an attempt to avoid prosecution for their
corrupt dealings, the owners distributed shares
of the companys valuable stock to key
congressmen.
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8Continued
- Whiskey Ring Scandal
- bribing of the Secretary of War by corrupt
Indian agents - robbed the Treasury of millions of dollars in
excise-tax revenues.
9Continued
- Tweed Ring
- New Yorks Tammany Hall was a political
machine headed by William M. Tweed. - Through graft and corruption, machines were
also vehicles for making money.
10The Liberal Republican Revolt of 1872
- Republicans nominated Grant for a second term
- Democrats nominated Horace Greeley
- Greeley was also a candidate for the Liberal
Republicans (who had bolted over the issue of
political corruption). - Grant was reelected because his opponents chose a
poor candidate to run for the presidency.
11Election of 1872
12Depression and Demands for Inflation
- The Panic of 1873 began a six-year depression.
- One cause of the panic was the erection of more
factories than existing markets could bear. - Some debtors suggested inflationary policies as a
possible solution. - The Redemption Act of 1875 provided for payment
for greenbacks in gold.
13Continued
- Because of the Republican hard money policies
the Greenback Labor Party was formed.
14Pallid Politics in the Gilded Age
- Those who enjoyed a successful political career
in the post-Civil War decades were usually party
loyalists. - During the Gilded Age, the Democrats and the
Republicans had few significant economic
differences. - The presidential elections of the 1870s and 1880s
aroused great interest among voters.
15Continued
- One reason for the extremely high voter turnouts
and partisan fervor of the Gilded Age was sharp
ethnic and cultural differences in the membership
of the two parties. - The lifeblood of both the Democratic and the
Republican parties was political patronage. - Spoilsmen was the label attached to those who
expected government jobs from their partys
elected officeholders.
16Continued
- Stalwarts term first used by a group of
Republicans who supported Grant for a third term
against Garfield. - leader Roscoe Conkling (New York
- Senator)
- Half-breeds term (used mostly after the
election of Rutherford B. Hayes) referring to a
section of the Republican party. - supported civil service reform and opposed
corruption in government. - leader James G. Blaine.
17The Hayes-Tilden Standoff, 1876
- Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio became the Republican
candidate. - Republicans waved the bloody shirt and gained
some votes because the party was hurt by the
corruption in Grants administration.
18Continued
- Samuel J. Tilden, a reform governor from New
York, was the Democrat Candidate. - He helped to smash the Tweed Ring.
19continued
- The major problem with the election of 1876 two
sets of election returns were submitted by the
southern states. - 20 votes in 3 states were in dispute (Louisiana,
South Carolina, Florida) - Tilden, with a popular majority, was one
electoral vote short (184 and he needed 185) - A special electoral commission voted 8 7 along
party lines for Hayes, who would win by 185-184. - With control of the two houses of Congress split,
a constitutional crisis loomed.
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21The Compromise of 1877 and the End of
Reconstruction
- A bargain was struck between the two parties.
- The last federal troops would leave South
Carolina and Louisiana. - Republicans would pledge financial aid and
patronage to Southern states. - The election of Hayes would be certified.
22continued
- Redemption
- Return to home rule in the South
- Occupation of federal troops ended in the South
- Conservative Democratic control returned (Solid
South) - Jim Crow segregation laws began to be passed
throughout the South. (legal codes that
established the system of segregation) - Southern whites disenfranchised African Americans
with literacy requirements, poll taxes, and
economic intimidation.
23continued
- Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
- Plessy (1/8th African American) attempted to sit
in the white section of a train. - He was ordered to move, but refused
- He was forcefully removed from the train.
- First person of color to challenge racial
segregation laws in court.
John Marshall Harlan
24Continued
- Plessy appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court on the
grounds that the Louisianas statue violated the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. - The Supreme Court ruled 7-1 in favor of the state
statue. (one justice dissented) - Justice John Marshall Harlan was the only justice
on Plessys side. - The Court ruled separate but equal facilities
were constitutional.
25Class Conflict and Ethnic Clashes
- The Railroad Strike of 1877
- started when the four largest railroads cut
salaries by ten percent. - First major strike
- Began against BO Railroad Company and spread to
other lines. - Railroad workers went back to work at lower wages
set by the railroads.
26Continued
- Labor unrest during the Hayes administration
stemmed from long years of depression and
deflation. - Labor unrest resulted in the use of federal
troops during strikes. - In the wake of anti-Chinese violence in
California, the U.S. Congress passed a law
prohibiting the immigration of Chinese laborers
to America (Chinese Immigration Act)
27The Chinese
- The seizure of farmland by landlords, the
disintegration of the Chinese Empire, and the
intrusion of European powers were all internal
developments in China that resulted in Chinese
Immigration to the United States. - Chinese came to the U.S. to dig for gold.
28Election of 1880
29The Garfield Interlude
- Supported civil service reform
- James A Garfield, was the second president to be
assassinated while in office. - He was assassinated by a deranged, disappointed
office seeker. (Charles J. Guiteau)
30Chester Arthur Takes Command
- Arthur was Vice president under Garfield.
- Before he was a supporter of Roscoe Conkling and
of the traditional spoils system. - As president he urged Congress to enact the Civil
Service law (Pendleton Act)
31Continued
- Pendleton Act
- Required appointees to public office to take a
competitive examination. - After the passage, politicians now sought money
from big corporations.
32The Blaine-Cleveland Mudslingers of 1884
- The election was noted for its personal attacks
on the two candidates. - James G. Blaine was the Republican candidate
- Grover Cleveland was the Democrat candidate
- Mugwumps a group of Republicans that withdrew
from the party in protest of Blaine and gave
their support to Cleveland.
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34Old Grover Takes Over
- The only Gilded Age president that was a
Democrat. - As president, his hands-off approach to
government gained the support of businesspeople.
35Cleveland Battles for a Lower Tariff
- Cleveland supported civil service reform and a
lower tariff but was not successful in getting
Congress to lower tariffs in 1887. - The tariff would be a real issue for dividing the
two parties and dominating the election of 1888.
36Election of 1888
37Harrison Ousts Cleveland in 1888
- The major issue was the tariff policy.
- Harrison was a Republican from Indiana
- Cleveland the Democrat
- Harrison is the Grandson of William Henry
Harrison (9th President) - Congress was the locus of political power in the
latter nineteenth century.
38Forgettable Presidents of the Gilded Age
- Rutherford B. Hayes
- James A. Garfield
- Chester A. Arthur
- Benjamin Harrison