After the war, Gary resumed his law practice in Edgefield and pursued a number of other business ventures. Fed up with the
Radical Republican government which obeyed the constitutional amendments and allowed the African-American majority in the South Carolina population to have a say in the government, he became an outspoken racist. On one occasion he said "that the negro shall not become a part of the body politic, or from any qualification either as to education or property, be allowed to vote in this country." Gary worked with white
paramilitary groups, rifle clubs and the
Red Shirts, who organized in 1874 to suppress black voting in the state. A manuscript of his "Plan of the Campaign of 1876" shows the level of detail and attention he gave to this project. Hampton expressed himself as a moderate with paternalistic interest in blacks and won their trust and votes in several areas. and Confederate officers, 1869. In Edgefield and Laurens counties, the total votes for Hampton exceeded the total number of registered voters. The election returns from these two counties were challenged by the state board of returns. Their contribution was critical, as Hampton had a victory margin of only 1,100 votes statewide. Hampton's victory was secured as part of a deal between South Carolina Democratic leaders and the national Republican Party. In April 1877 Republican candidate
Rutherford B. Hayes received the hitherto contested votes of South Carolina electors and was finally declared the winner of the contested United States presidential race. Hayes ordered the withdrawal of Federal troops from South Carolina and Louisiana, ending the formal Reconstruction era. Gary was elected to the state senate from
Edgefield County in 1876, defeating
Lawrence Cain, and was reelected in 1878. During his time in the State Senate, he became a vocal opponent of Governor Hampton because Hampton blocked his appointment to a
U.S. Senate seat in 1877 and 1879. Hampton and his allies prevented Gary's candidacy in the gubernatorial election of 1880. Upon leaving the South Carolina Senate in 1881, Gary returned to his family home in Cokesbury. He died there on April 9, and was buried in
Tabernacle Cemetery in Cokesbury. ==See also==