, surrounded by top officials, on March 4, 1873 The
second inauguration of Ulysses Grant's presidency was held on Tuesday, March 4, 1873, commencing the second four-year term of his presidency. Departing from the White House, a parade escorted Grant down the newly paved Pennsylvania Avenue, which was all decorated with banners and flags, to the swearing-in ceremony in front of the Capitol building. Chief Justice
Salmon P. Chase administered the presidential oath of office. There were approximately 12,000 marchers who participated in the parade, including several units of African American soldiers. At the inaugural ball, there were some 6,000 people in attendance. Vice President
Henry Wilson died in office on November 22, 1875. Senator
Thomas Ferry, pro tempore of the Senate, served as "Acting Vice President", and was next in the line of presidential succession.
Reconstruction continued Grant was vigorous in his enforcement of the 14th and 15th amendments and prosecuted thousands of persons who violated African American civil rights; he used military force to put down political insurrections in Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. He proactively used military and
Justice Department enforcement of civil rights laws and the protection of African Americans more than any other 19th-century president. He used his full powers to weaken the
Ku Klux Klan, reducing violence and intimidation in the South. He appointed
James Milton Turner as the first African American minister to a foreign nation. Grant's relationship with
Charles Sumner, the leader in promoting civil rights, was shattered by the Senator's opposition to Grant's plan to acquire Santo Domingo by treaty. Grant retaliated, firing men Sumner had recommended and having allies strip Sumner of his chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee. Sumner joined the Liberal Republican movement in 1872 to fight Grant's reelection. Conservative resistance to Republican state governments grew after the 1872 elections. With the destruction of the Klan in 1872, new secret paramilitary organizations arose in the Deep South. In Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Louisiana, the
Red Shirts and
White League operated openly and were better organized than the Ku Klux Klan. Their goals were to oust the Republicans, return Conservative whites to power, and use whatever illegal methods were needed to achieve them. Being loyal to his veterans, Grant remained determined that African Americans would receive protection.
Colfax Massacre After the November 4, 1872, election,
Louisiana was a split state. In a controversial election, two candidates were claiming victory as governor. Violence was used to intimidate black Republicans. The fusionist party of Liberal Republicans and Democrats claimed
John McEnery as the victor, while the Republicans claimed U.S. Senator
William P. Kellogg. Two months later, each candidate was sworn in as governor on January 13, 1873. A federal judge ruled that Kellogg was the rightful winner of the election and ordered him and the Republican-based majority to be seated. The White League supported McEnery and prepared to use military force to remove Kellogg from office. Grant ordered troops to enforce the court order and protect Kellogg. On March 4, Federal troops under a flag of truce and Kellogg's state militia defeated McEnery's fusionist party's insurrection. A dispute arose over who would be installed as judge and sheriff at the
Colfax courthouse in
Grant Parish. Kellogg's two appointees had seized control of the courthouse on March 25 with the aid and protection of black state militia troops. Then, on April 13, White League forces attacked the courthouse and massacred 50 black militiamen who had been captured. A total of 105 blacks were killed trying to defend the Colfax courthouse for Governor Kellogg. On April 21, Grant sent in the U.S.
19th Infantry Regiment to restore order. On May 22, Grant issued a new proclamation to restore order in Louisiana. On May 31, McEnery finally told his followers to obey "peremptory orders" of the President. The orders brought a brief peace to New Orleans and most of Louisiana, except, ironically,
Grant Parish.
Brooks-Baxter war in Arkansas In the fall of 1872, the Republican party split in Arkansas and ran two candidates for governor,
Elisha Baxter and
Joseph Brooks. Massive fraud characterized the election, but Baxter was declared the winner and took office. Brooks never gave up; finally, in 1874, a local judge ruled Brooks was entitled to the office and swore him in. Both sides mobilized militia units, and rioting and fighting bloodied the streets. Speculation swirled as to who President Grant would side with – either Baxter or Brooks. Grant delayed, requesting a joint session of the Arkansas government to figure out peacefully who would be the Governor, but Baxter refused to participate. On May 15, 1874, Grant issued a proclamation declaring Baxter the legitimate Governor of Arkansas, and hostilities ceased. In the fall of 1874, the people of Arkansas voted out Baxter, and Republicans and the
Redeemers came to power. A few months later, in early 1875, Grant announced that Brooks had been legitimately elected back in 1872. Grant did not send in troops, and Brooks never regained office. Instead, Grant appointed him to the high-paying patronage job of US postmaster in Little Rock. Grant's legalistic approach did resolve the conflict peacefully, but it left the Republican Party in Arkansas in total disarray and further discredited Grant's reputation.
Vicksburg riots In August 1874, the
Vicksburg city government elected White reform party candidates consisting of Republicans and Democrats. They promised to lower city spending and taxes. Despite such intentions, the reform movement turned racist when the new White city officials went after the county government, which had a majority of African Americans. The White League threatened the life of and expelled Crosby, the black
Warren County Sheriff and tax collector. Crosby sought help from Republican Governor
Adelbert Ames to regain his position as sheriff. Governor Ames told him to take other African Americans and use force to retain his lawful position. At that time, Vicksburg had a population of 12,443, more than half of whom were African American. On December 7, 1874, Crosby and an African American militia approached Vicksburg. He had said that the Whites were "ruffians, barbarians, and political
banditti". Grant had been careful to watch the elections and secretly sent
Phil Sheridan in to keep law and order in the state. Sheridan had arrived in New Orleans a few days before the January 4, 1875, legislature opening meeting. At the convention, the Democrats, again with military force, took control of the state building out of Republican hands. Initially, the Democrats were protected by federal troops under Colonel
Régis de Trobriand, and the escaped Republicans were removed from the hallways of the state building. However, Governor Kellogg then requested that Trobriand reseat the Republicans. Trobriand returned to the Statehouse and used bayonets to force the Democrats out of the building. The Republicans then organized their own house with their own speakers, all being protected by the Federal Army. Sheridan, who had annexed the Department of the Gulf to his command at 9:00 p.m., claimed that the federal troops were neutral since they had also protected the Democrats earlier. Grant had no role in writing the Civil Rights Act of 1875, but he did sign it a few days before the Republicans lost control of Congress. The new law was designed to allow everyone access to public eating establishments, hotels, and places of entertainment. This was done particularly to protect African Americans who were discriminated against across the United States. The bill was also passed in honor of Senator
Charles Sumner, who had previously attempted to pass a civil rights bill in 1872. In his sixth message to Congress, he summed up his own views, "While I remain Executive all the laws of Congress and the provisions of the Constitution ... will be enforced with rigor .... Treat the Negro as a citizen and a voter,
as he is and must remain .... Then we shall have no complaint of sectional interference." The Civil Rights Act of 1875 proved to be a very little value to Blacks. The Justice Department and the federal judges generally refused to enforce it, and the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 1883. Historian William Gillette calls it "an insignificant victory."
South Carolina 1876 was supported by the terrorist group
Red Shirts in the 1876 Governor's election in South Carolina. During the election year of 1876, South Carolina was in a state of rebellion against Republican governor
Daniel H. Chamberlain. Conservatives were determined to win the election for ex-Confederate
Wade Hampton through violence and intimidation. The Republicans went on to nominate Chamberlain for a second term. Hampton supporters, donning red shirts, disrupted Republican meetings with gunshots and yelling. Tensions became violent on July 8, 1876, when five African Americans were murdered at
Hamburg. The rifle clubs, wearing their
Red Shirts, were better armed than the blacks. South Carolina was ruled more by "mobocracy and bloodshed" than by Chamberlain's government. Black militia fought back in
Charleston on September 6, 1876, in what was known as the "King Street riot". The white militia assumed defensive positions out of concern over possible intervention from federal troops. Then, on September 19, the Red Shirts took offensive action by openly killing between 30 and 50 African Americans outside
Ellenton. During the massacre, state representative Simon Coker was killed. On October 7, Governor Chamberlain declared martial law and told all the "rifle club" members to put down their weapons. In the meantime, Wade Hampton never ceased to remind Chamberlain that he did not rule South Carolina. Out of desperation, Chamberlain wrote to Grant and asked for federal intervention. The "Cainhoy riot" took place on October 15 when Republicans held a rally at "Brick Church" outside
Cainhoy. Blacks and whites both opened fire; six whites and one black were killed. Grant, upset over the Ellenton and Cainhoy riots, finally declared a Presidential Proclamation on October 17, 1876, and ordered all persons, within 3 days, to cease their lawless activities and disperse to their homes. A total of 1,144 federal infantrymen were sent into South Carolina, and the violence stopped; election day was quiet. Both Hampton and Chamberlain claimed victory, and for a while, both acted as governor; Hampton took the office in 1877 after President
Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew federal troops and after Chamberlain left the state.
Virginus incident Spanish Republic president (1873–1874) On October 31, 1873, a steamer
Virginius, flying the American flag, carrying war materials and men to aid the Cuban insurrection (in violation of American and Spanish law), was intercepted and taken to Cuba. After a hasty trial, the local Spanish officials executed 53 would-be insurgents, eight of whom were United States citizens; orders from Madrid to delay the executions arrived too late. War scares erupted in both the U.S. and Spain, heightened by the bellicose dispatches from the American minister in Madrid, retired general
Daniel Sickles. Secretary of State Fish kept a cool demeanor in the crisis, and through investigation discovered there was a question over whether the
Virginius ship had the right to bear the United States flag. The Spanish Republic's president
Emilio Castelar expressed profound regret for the tragedy and was willing to make reparations through arbitration. Fish negotiated reparations with the Spanish minister Senor Polo de Barnabé. With Grant's approval, Spain was to surrender
Virginius, pay an indemnity to the surviving families of the Americans executed, and salute the American flag; the episode ended quietly. Grant also played a pivotal role in the affair. Grant sent American warships off of Florida and discussed Cuban invasion plans with General Sherman and the War Department. The bluff worked, and the Spanish government accepted Grant's negotiated peace terms. Grant messaged Congress that the incident was closed and national honor was restored. However, the salute of the American flag by the Spanish Navy was a stickler. When the Spanish returned the
Virginus the Spanish Navy did not salute the American flag, disputing that the
Virginius was not an American-owned ship. The next day, Grant's Attorney General
George H. Williams ruled that the
Virginus U.S. ownership was fraudulent, but the Spanish had no right to capture the ship.
Hawaiian free trade treaty In December 1874, Grant held a state dinner at the White House for the King of Hawaii,
David Kalakaua, who was seeking the importation of Hawaiian sugar duty-free to the United States. Grant and Fish were able to produce a successful
free trade treaty in 1875 with the
Kingdom of Hawaii, incorporating the Pacific islands' sugar industry into the United States's economic sphere.
Liberian-Grebo war The U.S. settled the war between
Liberia and the native
Grebo people in 1876 by dispatching the to Liberia.
James Milton Turner, the first African American ambassador from the United States, requested that a warship be sent to protect American property in Liberia, a former American colony. After
Alaska arrived, Turner negotiated the incorporation of the Grebo people into Liberian society and the ousting of foreign traders from Liberia. In his second term of presidential office, Grant's fragile
Peace policy came apart. Major General
Edward Canby was killed in the
Modoc War. Indian wars per year jumped up to 32 in 1876 and remained at 43 in 1877. One of the highest casualty Indian battles that took place in American history was at the
Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876. Indian war casualties in Montana went from 5 in 1875, to 613 in 1876, and 436 in 1877.
Modoc War In January 1873, Grant's Native American peace policy was challenged. Two weeks after Grant was elected for a second term, fighting broke out between the
Modocs and settlers near the California-Oregon border. The Modocs, led by
Captain Jack, killed 18 white settlers and then found a strong defensive position. Grant ordered General Sherman not to attack the Indians but to settle matters peacefully with a commission. Sherman then sent Major General
Edward Canby, but Captain Jack killed him. Reverend Eleazar Thomas, a Methodist minister, was also killed.
Alfred B. Meacham, an Indian Agent, was severely wounded. The murders shocked the nation, and Sherman wired to have the Modocs exterminated. Grant overruled Sherman; Captain Jack was executed, and the remaining 155 Modocs were relocated to the
Quapaw Agency in the
Indian Territory. This episode and the
Great Sioux War undermined public confidence in Grant's peace policy, according to historian
Robert M. Utley. During the peace negotiations between Brig. Gen.
Edward Canby and the Modoc tribal leaders, there were more Indians in the tent than had been agreed upon. As the Indians grew more hostile, Captain Jack said, "I talk no more," and shouted, "All ready." Captain Jack drew his revolver and fired directly into the head of Gen Canby. Brig. Gen Canby was the highest-ranking officer to be killed during the Indian Wars that took place from 1850 to 1890. Alfred Meacham, who survived the massacre, defended the Modocs who were put on trial.
Red River War In 1874, war erupted on the southern Plains when
Quanah Parker, leader of the
Comanche, led 700 tribal warriors and attacked the buffalo hunter supply base on the Canadian River, at
Adobe Walls, Texas. The Army under General
Phil Sheridan launched a military campaign, and, with few casualties on either side, forced the Indians back to their reservations by destroying their horses and winter food supplies. Grant, who agreed to the Army plan advocated by Generals
William T. Sherman and Phil Sheridan, imprisoned 74 insurgents in Florida.
Great Sioux War In 1874, gold had been discovered in the
Black Hills in the
Dakota Territory. White speculators and settlers rushed in droves seeking riches, mining gold on land reserved for the
Sioux tribe by the
Treaty of Fort Laramie of 1868. These prospectors treated the natives unfairly when they moved into the area. In 1875, to avoid conflict, Grant met with
Red Cloud, chief of the Sioux, and offered $25,000 from the government to purchase the land. The offer was declined. On November 3, 1875, at a White House meeting,
Phil Sheridan told the President that the Army was overstretched and could not defend the Sioux tribe from the settlers; Grant ordered Sheridan to round up the Sioux and put them on the reservation. Sheridan used a strategy of convergence, using Army columns to force the Sioux onto the reservation. On June 25, 1876, one of these columns, led by Colonel
George A. Custer, met the Sioux at the Battle of Little Big Horn and part of his command was slaughtered. Approximately 253 federal soldiers and civilians were killed compared to 40 Indians. Custer's death and the Battle of Little Big Horn shocked the nation. Sheridan avenged Custer, pacified the northern Plains, and put the defeated Sioux on the reservation. On August 15, 1876, President Grant signed a proviso giving the Sioux nation $1,000,000 in rations, while the Sioux relinquished all rights to the Black Hills, except for a 40-mile land tract west of the 103rd meridian. On August 28, a seven-man committee appointed by Grant gave additional harsh stipulations for the Sioux to receive government assistance.
Halfbreeds and "squaw men" (A white man with an Indian wife) were banished from the Sioux reservation. To receive the government rations, the Indians had to work the land. Reluctantly, on September 20, the Indian leaders, whose people were starving, agreed to the committee's demands and signed the agreement. During the Great Sioux War, Grant came into conflict with Col.
George Armstrong Custer after he testified in 1876 about corruption in the War Department under Secretary
William W. Belknap (see below). Grant had Custer arrested for breach of military protocol in Chicago and barred him from leading an upcoming campaign against the Sioux. Grant finally relented and let Custer fight under Brig. Gen.
Alfred Terry. Two months after Custer's death, Grant publicly blamed Custer for the disaster, saying, "I regard Custer's massacre as a sacrifice of troops, brought on by Custer himself, that was wholly unnecessary – wholly unnecessary." As the nation was shocked by the death of Custer, Grant's peace policy became militaristic; Congress appropriated funds for 2,500 more troops, two more forts were constructed, the army took over the Indian agencies, and Indians were barred from purchasing rifles and ammunition.
Domestic policy Religion and schools Grant believed strongly in the separation of church and state and championed complete
secularization in public schools. In a September 1875 speech, Grant advocated "security of
free thought,
free speech, and
free press, pure morals, unfettered religious sentiments, and of equal rights and privileges to all men, irrespective of nationality, color, or religion." In regard to public education, Grant endorsed that every child should receive "the opportunity of a good common school education, unmixed with sectarian, pagan, or atheist tenets. Leave the matter of religion to the family altar, the church, and the private schools.... Keep the church and the state forever separate." Grant laid out his agenda for "good common school education". He attacked government support for "sectarian schools" run by religious organizations and called for the defense of public education "unmixed with sectarian, pagan or atheistical dogmas." Grant declared that "Church and State" should be "forever separate." Religion, he said, should be left to families, churches, and private schools devoid of public funds. After Grant's speech Republican Congressman
James G. Blaine proposed the amendment to the federal Constitution. Blaine believed that possibility of hurtful agitation on the school question should be ended. In 1875, the proposed amendment passed by a vote of 180 to 7 in the House of Representatives, but failed by four votes to achieve the necessary two-thirds vote in the Senate. Nothing like it ever became federal legislation. However, many states did adopt similar amendments to their state constitution.
Polygamy and Chinese prostitution In October 1875, Grant traveled to Utah and was surprised that the Mormons treated him kindly. He told the Utah territorial governor,
George W. Emery, that he had been deceived concerning the Mormons. Grant believed that polygamy negatively affected children and women. Grant advocated that a second law, stronger than the Morrill Act, be passed to "punish so flagrant a crime against
decency and
morality." Grant also denounced the immigration of Chinese women into the United States for the purposes of
prostitution, saying that it was "no less an evil" than polygamy. After the wartime order, however, the Jewish community was angry with Grant. While running for president, in 1868, Grant publicly apologized for the expulsion order, and once elected, he took actions intended to make amends. He appointed several Jewish leaders to office, including
Simon Wolf recorder of deeds in Washington, D.C., and
Edward S. Salomon Governor of the
Washington Territory.
Midterm election 1874 As the 1874 midterm elections approached, three scandals, the
Crédit Mobilier, the
Salary Grab, and the
Sanborn incident caused the public to view the Republican Party as mired in corruption. The Democratic Party held the Republican Party responsible for the
Long Depression. The Republicans were divided on the currency issue. Grant, who with hard money Northeastern Republicans, vetoed an inflation bill. Grant was blamed for the nation's problems, while he was accused of wanting a third term. Grant never officially campaigned, but traveled West, to emphasize his relatively popular Indian policy. The October elections swept the Republicans from office and was a reputation of Grant's veto. In Indiana and Ohio, the Republicans suffered losses, caused by the money issue and the
temperance movement. The Democratic Party won the New York governorship for
Samuel Tilden. The Democrats won the U.S. House, gaining 182 seats, while the Republicans retained 103 seats. The Republicans retained control of the Senate, but the new class included 14 Democrats and 11 Republicans. The Democratic Party also had strong victories in New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Missouri, and Illinois. In the South, the 1874 election campaign was violent. Six Republican office holders were murdered in
Coushatta, Louisiana. On September 14, General Longstreet, police, and black militia fought 3,500 White Leaguers who attempted to capture the statehouse in New Orleans, that ended with 32 people killed. Grant issued a dispersal proclamation, the next day, and sent 5,000 troops and 5 gunboats to
New Orleans. The
White League resistance collapsed. The North disapproved of Grant's federal intervention into the election. Republican representation dropped by 60 percent. Racism in both the North and South caused the rejection of Reconstruction. In his December 1874 annual message to Congress, Grant condemned violence against blacks in the South.
Reforms and scandals Scandals and frauds continued to be exposed during Grant's second term in office, although Grant's appointments of reformers to his cabinet temporarily helped his presidential reputation, cleaned up federal departments, and defeated the notorious
Whiskey Ring. Grant, however, often remained loyal to cabinet members or appointees involved in corruption or mismanagement, refusing to believe in their guilt. The Democrats along with the Liberal Republicans had gained control of the House of Representatives and held many Committee meetings to stop political graft. The Emma Silver mine was a minor embarrassment associated with American Ambassador to Britain,
Robert C. Schenck, using his name to promote a worked out silver mine. The Crédit Mobilier scandal's origins were during the presidential Administrations of Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson; however, political congressional infighting during the Grant Administration exposed the scandal.
Sanborn contracts In June 1874, Treasury Secretary
William A. Richardson gave private contracts to one John D. Sanborn who in turn collected illegally withheld taxes for fees at inflated commissions. The profits from the commissions were allegedly split with Richardson and Senator
Benjamin Butler, while Sanborn claimed these payments were "expenses". Senator Butler had written a loophole in the law that allowed Sanborn to collect the commissions, but Sanborn would not reveal whom he split the profits with.
Pratt & Boyd In April 1875, it was discovered that Attorney General
George H. Williams allegedly received a bribe through a $30,000 gift to his wife from a Merchant house company, Pratt & Boyd, to drop the case for fraudulent customs entries. Williams was forced to resign by Grant in 1875.
Delano's Department of Interior By 1875, the Department of the Interior under Secretary of the Interior
Columbus Delano was in serious disrepair with corruption and fraud. Profiteering prevailed in the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, controlled by corrupt clerks and bogus agents. This proved to be the most serious detriment to Grant's Indian peace policy. Many agents who worked for the department made unscrupulous fortunes and retired with more money than their pay would allow at the expense and exploitation of
Native Americans. Delano had allowed "Indian Attorneys" who tricked Native Americans into paying $8 a day for fraudulent representation in Washington. Delano's son, John Delano, and Ulysses S. Grant's own brother, Orvil Grant, were discovered to have been awarded lucrative, corrupt cartographical contracts by Surveyor General Silas Reed. Neither John Delano nor Orvil Grant performed any work, nor were they qualified to hold such surveying positions. Massive fraud was also found in the Patent Office with corrupt clerks who embezzled from the government payroll. Under increasing pressure by the press and Indian reformers, Delano resigned from office on October 15, 1875. Grant appointed
Zachariah Chandler as Secretary of the Interior, who replaced Delano. Chandler vigorously uncovered and cleaned up the fraud in the department by firing all the clerks and banning the phony "Indian Attorneys" access to Washington. Grant's "Quaker" or church appointments partially made up for the lack of food staples and housing from the government. Chandler cleaned up the Patent Office by firing all the corrupt clerks.
Centennial Exposition On the morning of May 10, 1876, the
Centennial Exposition opened at Philadelphia's Fairmont Park. Thousands were in attendance on the Philadelphia streets. Grant rose to speak, saying the Exposition would "show in the direction of rivaling older and more advanced nations in law, medicine, and theology --- in science literature, philosophy, and the fine arts."
Election of 1876 In the
presidential election of 1876, the Republicans nominated the fiscally conservative
Rutherford B. Hayes and the Democrats nominated reformer
Samuel Tilden. Results were split. Tilden received 51% of the popular vote; Hayes 48%; many black Republicans were not allowed to vote, however. Twenty key electoral votes remained undecided and in dispute. Both Republicans and Democrats claimed victory, and the threat of a second civil war was imminent. Grant was watchful, encouraged Congress to settle the election by commission, and determined to keep a
peaceful transfer of power. On January 29, 1877, Grant signed the
Electoral Commission Act that gave a 15-member bipartisan commission the power to determine electoral votes. The commission gave Hayes 185 electoral votes; Tilden received 184. Grant's personal honesty, firmness, and even-handedness reassured the nation, and a second civil war was averted. ==Historical evaluations==