Presidents of the United States 2022

Page 20

Rutherford B. Hayes

The 19th President of the United States Born: 1822 Died: 1893 Served: 1877 to 1881

ant Republicans due to his antislavery sentiments and incredible work ethic.

Before He Was President

The future 19th president was born to a single mother in 1822. Rutherford Birchard Hayes’ father passed away a mere two months before his birth. With the lessons he learned from being raised by his mother, he would serve distinguished legal and military careers before winning one of the most contested elections in American history. After graduating as valedictorian from Kenyon College in 1842, Hayes would pursue a law degree from Harvard Law School. He achieved his goals three years later and eventually began his own practice in Lower Sandusky, Ohio.

Hayes put aside his law career to fight during the Civil War, where he would rise to the rank of major general. Republicans soon approached him to run for a seat in the House of Representatives while still in the army. He was easily victorious in his campaign and entered Congress in 1865, where he would serve for two years before resigning and accepting the role as governor in Ohio, which lasted three years. In 1876, Hayes was selected to run for the presidency against Democrat opponent, Samuel Tilden. Initially, the vote showed Rutherford Hayes lost by a mere 250,000 votes. However, controversy soon arose with contested electoral-college votes from Florida, Louisiana and South Carolina. In 1877, Congress held a commission and put the election in the hands of eight Republicans and seven Democrats. Hayes emerged the victor and quietly took the oath of office in March 1877 in the Red Room of the White House.

Major Policy

With the victory, came the Compromise of 1877. It gave Southern Democrats at least one Cabinet post and a withdrawal of federal troops who oversaw the Reconstruction era in Louisiana and South Carolina. While this was considered a step back in the strides for equal rights, Hayes remained vigilant in creating laws to protect black Americans. Another challenge he faced was the Railroad Strike of 1877. Workers were walking from their posts to protest pay cuts. Riots ensued, and Hayes was tasked with deploying federal troops to calm the situation. After his presidency, he advocated for children’s literacy, equal rights and prison reform until his death in 1893.

He saw the need to build his business and moved to a much busier area in Cincinnati. This move linked him with import20 | FEBRUARY 16, 2022 | ANACORTES AMERICAN

go ana c or te s .c om


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Presidential Trivia

4min
pages 46-48

Joe Biden

3min
page 45

Barack Obama

2min
page 43

Donald Trump

3min
page 44

Bill Clinton

3min
page 41

George W. Bush

3min
page 42

George H.W. Bush

2min
page 40

Ronald Reagan

2min
page 39

Jimmy Carter

2min
page 38

Gerald Ford

2min
page 37

Richard Nixon

2min
page 36

Lyndon B. Johnson

1min
page 35

Dwight D. Eisenhower

2min
page 33

Harry S. Truman

2min
page 32

John F. Kennedy

2min
page 34

Franklin D. Roosevelt

2min
page 31

Herbert Hoover

3min
page 30

Woodrow Wilson

2min
page 27

Calvin Coolidge

2min
page 29

Warren G. Harding

3min
page 28

Theodore Roosevelt

2min
page 25

Grover Cleveland

2min
page 23

William Howard Taft

3min
page 26

Chester Arthur

2min
page 22

Rutherford B. Hayes

2min
page 20

Ulysses S. Grant

2min
page 19

James Garfield

3min
page 21

Andrew Johnson

2min
page 18

Franklin Pierce

3min
page 15

James Buchanan

2min
page 16

Abraham Lincoln

2min
page 17

Millard Filmore

2min
page 14

James Monroe

2min
page 7

Andrew Jackson

2min
page 8

William Henry Harrison

2min
page 10

James K. Polk

2min
page 12

Zachary Taylor

3min
page 13

George Washington

2min
page 4

John Tyler

2min
page 11

Martin Van Buren

2min
page 9
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.