Rutherford Hayes
The Life of Rutherford Hayes
Rutherford Hayes was a good man, a decent man. He was a loving husband and father, a loyal and respected battlefield commander, and a rare politician who engendered few personal enemies. Hayes’s well-intentioned approach to life and politics, however, did have one unmistakable black mark that casts an everlasting shadow over his legacy. The 19th President of the United States cannot be solely blamed for the controversial manner in which he captured the election of 1876. The Republican political class fought that battle on his behalf. That said, while he wasn’t present in the room at the Wormley Hotel where the Compromise of 1877 was ironed out, he made it clear that the Ohioans who were there accurately represented his views and interests. Hayes was content to end Federal Reconstruction by removing the U.S. military and return home rule to the remaining Southern states in return for the Democrats calling a halt to trying to delay the contested election past Inauguration Day. As President, Hayes followed through, and within a couple of months of him taking office, Reconstruction was over.
Hayes would never agree that he abandoned Southern Blacks with this decision. The kind-hearted man in the White House did not believe he was creating any setbacks for the Black community because he insisted on several occasions that the White Democratic governments of the South honor the post-war Constitutional Amendments that were designed to protect civil and voting rights regardless of race. But the assurances he received were completely hollow, and Hayes should have expected as such. In this instance, his well-meaning spirit cost the Black citizens of the South nearly a century of depredations, consigned to a class status that was disadvantaged in almost every aspect of life. The fact that the end of Federal Reconstruction was favored by a majority of the American people at the time cannot dismiss the fact that Hayes was the man in the seat, the catalyst who pulled the trigger to remove Federal oversight of Black rights in the South. Rutherford Hayes was a good man. He led a lifetime of good works on behalf of his community and his country. But his exceptionally naive decision to place the defense of liberty for Southern Black citizens directly into the hands of their former masters proved to be a disaster of immense proportions – one with ramifications that persisted for generations.
Volume IV: War and its Aftermath
Full Volume
The fourth volume of Presidential Chronicles tells the life stories of the following five American Presidents who saw the country through Civil War and beyond in the second half of the 19th Century:
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Ulysses Grant
Rutherford Hayes
James Garfield
Fisher delves deeply into a nation divided over slavery and states’ rights, beginning with the most extensive contribution of the biographical series with his focus on the nation’s 16th President, Abraham Lincoln. Fisher makes extensive use of Lincoln’s own words to understand the growth of his political ideology, the endless string of difficult choices he faced, his unwavering commitment to preserving the Union, and his transition from slavery opponent to outright abolitionist – all in the context of a Constitutional interpretation that stretched the bounds of the founding document. The Civil War is explored from the view of a President, a wartime Governor, a Commanding General, and a pair of colonels/brigadiers who fought the battles that helped preserve the Union. War and Its Aftermath further gives life to the nation’s struggles in the Reconstruction era as these leaders tried to balance the competing sectional interests on how to reunify despite the inherent divides that continued to persist.
The Life of Rutherford Hayes
Video
The following Hayes videos have been released (10 of 10)
Hayes #1: Family, School, and the Law (1822-1849)
Hayes #2: Lucy, and a Cause (1849-1861)
Hayes #3: The Ohio 23rd (1861-1862)
Hayes #4: One of the Good Colonels (1862-1865)
Hayes #5: Politician (1865-1872)
Hayes #6: The Republican Nominee (1872-1876)
Hayes #7: The Most Controversial Election, and a Fateful Compromise (1876-1877)
Hayes #8: Abandoning Southern Blacks (1877-1879)
Hayes #9: Reform Efforts (1877-1881)
Hayes #10: A Good Man with a Tarnished Legacy (1881-1893)