Rutherford B. Hayes
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Words: 3277
Pages: 12
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 12
(approximately 235 words/page)
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"Hideous things happened in the decades after the Civil War. Freed slaves who
tried to vote were beaten, jailed, lynched. Jim Crow laws and the Ku Klux Klan
stopped thousands from registering." That is how Associated Press reporter
Katherine Rizzo opened a recent column about Rutherford B. Hayes and the
abortive efforts by the Hayes Presidential Library to secure federal funding.
Taking her cue from the opposition of a St. Louis Congressman (Democrat William
Clay),
showed first 75 words of 3277 total
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showed first 75 words of 3277 total
showed last 75 words of 3277 total
education. The national government should, by "appropriations from the Treasury of the United States," support local public education. In an 1880 letter to Frank Hatton of Burlington, Iowa, Hayes admitted "there is still in our country a dangerous practical denial of the equal rights with respect to voting secured to colored citizens by the fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution.." Again the answer was education. Hayes continued to hold these views to the end of his life.
education. The national government should, by "appropriations from the Treasury of the United States," support local public education. In an 1880 letter to Frank Hatton of Burlington, Iowa, Hayes admitted "there is still in our country a dangerous practical denial of the equal rights with respect to voting secured to colored citizens by the fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution.." Again the answer was education. Hayes continued to hold these views to the end of his life.