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Disputed government of South Carolina of 1876–77

Dispute: December 6, 1876 – April 11, 1877
Claim Claim
Daniel H. Chamberlain Wade Hampton III
Republican Democratic
91,127 votes 92,261 votes
Claim: Democrats' voter fraud Claim: Won majority of votes
Outcome: Resigned Outcome: Declared sole governor

From December 1876 to April 1877, the Republican and Democratic parties in South Carolina each claimed to be the legitimate government. Both parties declared that the other had lost the election and that they controlled the governorship, the state legislature, and most state offices. Each government debated and passed laws, raised militias, collected taxes, and conducted other business as if the other did not exist. After four months of contested government, Daniel Henry Chamberlain, who claimed the governorship as a Republican, conceded to Democrat Wade Hampton III on April 11, 1877. This came after President Rutherford Hayes withdrew federal troops from the South.

Background edit

Before the Civil War and until the Great Migration in the early twentieth century, African Americans outnumbered whites in South Carolina.[1] According to the official U.S. Census of 1870, there were 705,606 people living in South Carolina,[2] 465,814 (58.9%) of whom were African Americans.[3] Furthermore, the majority of African Americans who voted during the Reconstruction era voted for the Republican Party.[4] In the mid-1870s, the Democratic Party in South Carolina attempted to return the state to its antebellum status by electing former Confederates to political office and preventing African Americans from voting through the Black Codes, literacy tests, poll taxes, and intimidation. The emergence of these white supremacist governments was referred to by white Southerners as the "Redeemer governments" or "saviors of the South."[5] In the late 19th century, Democrats in South Carolina used aggressive tactics to gain political power, including breaking up Republican meetings and intimidating Republican voters. This included the involvement of groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Red Shirts, particularly in 1875 and 1876, resulting in a reign of terror against African Americans and Republicans. In response, President Ulysses S. Grant sent federal troops into the state to protect these groups.[6]

In 1876, the Democratic Party nominated Wade Hampton III, a former Confederate lieutenant general, to run for governor.[7] Hampton was born into the wealthy and respected Hampton family of Charleston, and his family made millions from the use of slave labor on cotton plantations. South Carolina's incumbent Republican governor, Daniel Henry Chamberlain, a Massachusetts-born lawyer, was running for re-election against Hampton. Hampton and white Democrats sought to remove the "Radical Republicans" from office and establish an unopposed Democratic ticket.[5] On election day, the vote count indicated that Wade Hampton III had won the election. However, allegations of voter fraud immediately arose, and some Democrats later admitted to allowing Georgians to vote, intentionally not counting or prohibiting African American voters from voting, and allowing some individuals to vote multiple times.[8]

Results of the election of 1876 edit

Immediately after the results were announced, both the Republican and Democratic parties accused each other of fraud. Hampton received 92,261 votes to Chamberlain's 91,127. However, the State Board of Canvassers,[a] which was composed of five Republicans, declared that the elections in Edgefield County and Laurens County were so tainted by fraud that their results would be excluded from the final tally. This changed the Republican tally from a 1,134-vote loss to a 3,145-vote victory.[9][10] Both parties claimed the governorship, the General Assembly, and most state offices.

1876 Election Results[9]
Chamberlain Hampton
Actual votes counted 91,127 92,261
Board of Canvassers count 86,216 83,078

Both the Republican and Democratic parties refused to acknowledge that the other party had won the election. The Democrats claimed that they had won the majority of votes and were therefore the legitimate government. The Republicans, on the other hand, claimed that the Democrats had committed voter fraud through intimidation of African Americans, black codes, ballot stuffing, and by having more votes cast than registered voters. The Republican Party issued a statement saying "that if the canvass[b] in the State had been free from violence and fraud the Republican majority would have been sufficient [to elect] all the candidates [from the Republican Party.]"[9][10]

Dual government edit

 
SC Statehouse

Both Chamberlain and Hampton refused to accept the other's claim to the governorship. As the incumbent governor, Chamberlain secretly ordered troops to occupy the South Carolina Statehouse on November 27 to prevent the Democrats from taking control. The next morning, the Democrats established their government in the Choral Union Hall instead of entering the Statehouse to avoid a confrontation.[11] The next day, the Democrats, led by former Independent Governor James L. Orr, marched on the Statehouse. This time, when Republican lawmakers noticed the Democrats entering, they rushed into the House chamber. William Wallace, who had been elected Speaker of the House by the Democratic legislature, and E.W.M. Mackey, who had been elected Speaker by the Republican legislature, fought for possession of the Speaker's chair. For four days, members of both the Republican and Democratic parties occupied the chamber and conducted business, including debating bills, passing laws, and recognizing speakers.[11] On December 4, Chamberlain threatened to use military force to remove the Democratic legislators, causing them to leave the chamber to avoid possible violence.

 
Statue of Wade Hampton (lawn of the South Carolina Statehouse)

A provision in the South Carolina Constitution of 1868 required the General Assembly to elect the governor in the event of a disputed election. On December 6, the Republican General Assembly, claiming a majority because the votes of Edgefield and Laurens counties had been excluded, elected Chamberlain to a second term. He began his new term the following day, declaring in his inaugural address, "I regard the present hour in South Carolina as a crisis at which no patriotic citizen should shrink from any post to which public duty may call him. If we fail now our Government the Government of South Carolina will no longer rest up on the consent of the governed."[10][12]

In December 1876, some Democrats in the General Assembly declared themselves a quorum, even though some of their offices had been declared vacant due to allegations of election fraud. They claimed to be the legitimate government and elected Hampton governor. Their inauguration was held at Carolina Hall, now the Longstreet Theatre, instead of the Statehouse.[13] From December 1876 to April 1877, the Republican and Democratic factions conducted business as if the other did not exist.[8][14][10] Historian Ronald F. King argues that neither faction had legitimacy, although they continued to debate and pass legislation.[9] On December 6, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled that the Democratic legislature was the legitimate government. Federal troops, however, remained loyal to Chamberlain and the Republican government and continued to bar Democrats from the statehouse.[11]

 
Governor Chamberlain

Hampton asked South Carolinians to refuse to pay taxes to the Chamberlain government. To support the Hampton government, each taxpayer was asked to pay only 10% of the previous year's tax bill.[15] Both white and black South Carolinians paid taxes to the Hampton government and refused to pay taxes to the Chamberlain government, thereby denying the Chamberlain government its last legitimacy and authority apart from the U.S. Army.[16]

Tensions increased when it was announced that Rutherford B. Hayes, a Republican, had won the 1876 presidential election in South Carolina, while Hampton, a Democrat, had won the gubernatorial race. Hampton proceeded to appoint judges, commission militia units, and issue executive orders. On December 20, Governor Chamberlain pardoned Peter Smith from the state penitentiary. However, the state supreme court ruled that the pardon was invalid because Chamberlain was not the legitimate governor. On February 9, 1877, Governor Hampton pardoned Tilda Norris. However, the warden of the state penitentiary refused to release her because he did not recognize Hampton as governor. The state supreme court sided with Hampton and forced the release of Tilda Norris.[17]

Federal involvement edit

In December 1876, Senator John Brown Gordon of Georgia introduced a resolution in the U.S. Senate declaring that Wade Hampton III was the rightful governor of South Carolina. However, in January 1877, Senator John J. Patterson, a Republican from South Carolina, responded to Senator Gordon's resolution by filing papers declaring that Governor Chamberlain was the legally elected governor.[citation needed]

Meeting with President Hayes edit

 
President Rutherford Hayes 1870 - 1880

On March 31, 1877, Chamberlain and Hampton traveled to Washington, D.C., to meet with the newly elected Republican president, Rutherford Hayes. Both men made their cases to be governor. Hayes had narrowly won his election by one electoral vote and had been accused of voter fraud. Once elected, Hayes adopted a "hands-off" policy toward the South as part of the Compromise of 1877. Hayes did not believe that the use of federal troops to decide a local election was justified.[18] Hayes informed the two governors of his plan to withdraw federal troops from the South, which he did on April 3.[6][10] The Republican administration under Chamberlain struggled to maintain power due to lack of support and was at a disadvantage to the Democratic administration under Hampton. The imposition of the Black Codes and other voter restrictions on African Americans led to a rapid loss of electoral support for the Republicans.

Chamberlain's concession edit

On April 10, federal troops withdrew from the Statehouse. Governor Chamberlain, realizing that he could not continue in his role without the support of federal troops, resigned on April 11.[8] After conceding the governorship to Hampton, Chamberlain stated, "If a majority of people in a State are unable by physical force to maintain their rights, they must be left to political servitude."[9] After Chamberlain's concession, Hampton was declared the sole governor of South Carolina. Chamberlain fled the state and resumed his law practice. Hampton was re-elected in 1878. However, he resigned in February 1879 to succeed Republican John J. Patterson as United States Senator from South Carolina. South Carolina would not elect another Republican governor until 1974, nearly 100 years later. The Democratic Party controlled the General Assembly until the 1990s. Until the 1970s, the Democratic Party faced little opposition in most gubernatorial elections and often ran unopposed.

Notes edit

  1. ^ A board established to certify election results.
  2. ^ Polling and voting locations.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Statistics on Slavery". Weber State University. n.d. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  2. ^ "Statistics for South Carolina" (PDF). U.S. Department of Commerce and Labor. 1913. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  3. ^ Rogers Jr., George C. and C. James Taylor (1994). A South Carolina Chronology 1497–1992. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 0-87249-971-5.
  4. ^ Richardson, Heather (16 March 2018). "South Carolina's Remarkable Democratic Experiment of 1868". We're History. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  5. ^ a b Rubin III, Hyman S. (2007). "Election of 1876". University of South Carolina Publications. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  6. ^ a b "The Result in South Carolina: A Southerner describes mounting racial tensions in the aftermath of Reconstruction". The South Carolinian. January 1878. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  7. ^ Hamer, Fritz (17 May 2016). "Wade Hampton: Conflicted Leader of the Conservative Democracy". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b c Rubin III, Hyman S. (17 May 2016). "Election of 1876". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e King, Ronald (2001). "Counting the Votes: South Carolina's Stolen Election of 1876". The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 32 (2). Cambridge: MIT Press: 169–191. doi:10.1162/002219501750442369. JSTOR 3656976. S2CID 145297405.
  10. ^ a b c d e "South Carolina Gubernatorial Election of 1876". The University of Richmond. n.d. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  11. ^ a b c John Morrill, Bryan (1998). Creating the South Carolina State House. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 85–87. ISBN 1570032912.
  12. ^ Journal of the Senate of the State of South Carolina. Columbia: South Carolina Statehouse. 1876. pp. 42–45.
  13. ^ "The Most Corrupt Election in SC History". SCIWAY. n.d. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  14. ^ Schouler, James. History of the Reconstruction Period, 1865-1877. Cambridge: Kessinger Publishing. p. 354. ISBN 978-0548640395.
  15. ^ Walter Brian Cisco, "Wade Hampton: Confederate Warrior, Conservative Statesman," Potomac Books, Inc., Washington, D.C., 2004, p. 259
  16. ^ Walter Edgar, South Carolina: A History p 405
  17. ^ Rod, Andrew (19 May 2008). Wade Hampton: Confederate Warrior to Southern Redeemer. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 408–410. ISBN 978-0807831939.
  18. ^ Tosh, Ted Rockwell (28 December 2015). The Life and Times of Benjamin Helm Bristow. Page Publishing Inc. ISBN 978-1682135501.

disputed, government, south, carolina, 1876, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, october, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, message, dispute, december, 1876, april, 1877, claim, claim, daniel, chambe. This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Dispute December 6 1876 April 11 1877 Claim Claim Daniel H Chamberlain Wade Hampton III Republican Democratic 91 127 votes 92 261 votes Claim Democrats voter fraud Claim Won majority of votes Outcome Resigned Outcome Declared sole governor From December 1876 to April 1877 the Republican and Democratic parties in South Carolina each claimed to be the legitimate government Both parties declared that the other had lost the election and that they controlled the governorship the state legislature and most state offices Each government debated and passed laws raised militias collected taxes and conducted other business as if the other did not exist After four months of contested government Daniel Henry Chamberlain who claimed the governorship as a Republican conceded to Democrat Wade Hampton III on April 11 1877 This came after President Rutherford Hayes withdrew federal troops from the South Contents 1 Background 1 1 Results of the election of 1876 2 Dual government 2 1 Federal involvement 2 2 Meeting with President Hayes 2 3 Chamberlain s concession 3 Notes 4 See also 5 ReferencesBackground editMain article 1876 South Carolina gubernatorial election See also South Carolina civil disturbances of 1876 Before the Civil War and until the Great Migration in the early twentieth century African Americans outnumbered whites in South Carolina 1 According to the official U S Census of 1870 there were 705 606 people living in South Carolina 2 465 814 58 9 of whom were African Americans 3 Furthermore the majority of African Americans who voted during the Reconstruction era voted for the Republican Party 4 In the mid 1870s the Democratic Party in South Carolina attempted to return the state to its antebellum status by electing former Confederates to political office and preventing African Americans from voting through the Black Codes literacy tests poll taxes and intimidation The emergence of these white supremacist governments was referred to by white Southerners as the Redeemer governments or saviors of the South 5 In the late 19th century Democrats in South Carolina used aggressive tactics to gain political power including breaking up Republican meetings and intimidating Republican voters This included the involvement of groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Red Shirts particularly in 1875 and 1876 resulting in a reign of terror against African Americans and Republicans In response President Ulysses S Grant sent federal troops into the state to protect these groups 6 In 1876 the Democratic Party nominated Wade Hampton III a former Confederate lieutenant general to run for governor 7 Hampton was born into the wealthy and respected Hampton family of Charleston and his family made millions from the use of slave labor on cotton plantations South Carolina s incumbent Republican governor Daniel Henry Chamberlain a Massachusetts born lawyer was running for re election against Hampton Hampton and white Democrats sought to remove the Radical Republicans from office and establish an unopposed Democratic ticket 5 On election day the vote count indicated that Wade Hampton III had won the election However allegations of voter fraud immediately arose and some Democrats later admitted to allowing Georgians to vote intentionally not counting or prohibiting African American voters from voting and allowing some individuals to vote multiple times 8 Results of the election of 1876 edit Immediately after the results were announced both the Republican and Democratic parties accused each other of fraud Hampton received 92 261 votes to Chamberlain s 91 127 However the State Board of Canvassers a which was composed of five Republicans declared that the elections in Edgefield County and Laurens County were so tainted by fraud that their results would be excluded from the final tally This changed the Republican tally from a 1 134 vote loss to a 3 145 vote victory 9 10 Both parties claimed the governorship the General Assembly and most state offices 1876 Election Results 9 Chamberlain Hampton Actual votes counted 91 127 92 261 Board of Canvassers count 86 216 83 078 Both the Republican and Democratic parties refused to acknowledge that the other party had won the election The Democrats claimed that they had won the majority of votes and were therefore the legitimate government The Republicans on the other hand claimed that the Democrats had committed voter fraud through intimidation of African Americans black codes ballot stuffing and by having more votes cast than registered voters The Republican Party issued a statement saying that if the canvass b in the State had been free from violence and fraud the Republican majority would have been sufficient to elect all the candidates from the Republican Party 9 10 Dual government edit nbsp SC Statehouse Both Chamberlain and Hampton refused to accept the other s claim to the governorship As the incumbent governor Chamberlain secretly ordered troops to occupy the South Carolina Statehouse on November 27 to prevent the Democrats from taking control The next morning the Democrats established their government in the Choral Union Hall instead of entering the Statehouse to avoid a confrontation 11 The next day the Democrats led by former Independent Governor James L Orr marched on the Statehouse This time when Republican lawmakers noticed the Democrats entering they rushed into the House chamber William Wallace who had been elected Speaker of the House by the Democratic legislature and E W M Mackey who had been elected Speaker by the Republican legislature fought for possession of the Speaker s chair For four days members of both the Republican and Democratic parties occupied the chamber and conducted business including debating bills passing laws and recognizing speakers 11 On December 4 Chamberlain threatened to use military force to remove the Democratic legislators causing them to leave the chamber to avoid possible violence nbsp Statue of Wade Hampton lawn of the South Carolina Statehouse A provision in the South Carolina Constitution of 1868 required the General Assembly to elect the governor in the event of a disputed election On December 6 the Republican General Assembly claiming a majority because the votes of Edgefield and Laurens counties had been excluded elected Chamberlain to a second term He began his new term the following day declaring in his inaugural address I regard the present hour in South Carolina as a crisis at which no patriotic citizen should shrink from any post to which public duty may call him If we fail now our Government the Government of South Carolina will no longer rest up on the consent of the governed 10 12 In December 1876 some Democrats in the General Assembly declared themselves a quorum even though some of their offices had been declared vacant due to allegations of election fraud They claimed to be the legitimate government and elected Hampton governor Their inauguration was held at Carolina Hall now the Longstreet Theatre instead of the Statehouse 13 From December 1876 to April 1877 the Republican and Democratic factions conducted business as if the other did not exist 8 14 10 Historian Ronald F King argues that neither faction had legitimacy although they continued to debate and pass legislation 9 On December 6 the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled that the Democratic legislature was the legitimate government Federal troops however remained loyal to Chamberlain and the Republican government and continued to bar Democrats from the statehouse 11 nbsp Governor Chamberlain Hampton asked South Carolinians to refuse to pay taxes to the Chamberlain government To support the Hampton government each taxpayer was asked to pay only 10 of the previous year s tax bill 15 Both white and black South Carolinians paid taxes to the Hampton government and refused to pay taxes to the Chamberlain government thereby denying the Chamberlain government its last legitimacy and authority apart from the U S Army 16 Tensions increased when it was announced that Rutherford B Hayes a Republican had won the 1876 presidential election in South Carolina while Hampton a Democrat had won the gubernatorial race Hampton proceeded to appoint judges commission militia units and issue executive orders On December 20 Governor Chamberlain pardoned Peter Smith from the state penitentiary However the state supreme court ruled that the pardon was invalid because Chamberlain was not the legitimate governor On February 9 1877 Governor Hampton pardoned Tilda Norris However the warden of the state penitentiary refused to release her because he did not recognize Hampton as governor The state supreme court sided with Hampton and forced the release of Tilda Norris 17 Federal involvement edit In December 1876 Senator John Brown Gordon of Georgia introduced a resolution in the U S Senate declaring that Wade Hampton III was the rightful governor of South Carolina However in January 1877 Senator John J Patterson a Republican from South Carolina responded to Senator Gordon s resolution by filing papers declaring that Governor Chamberlain was the legally elected governor citation needed Meeting with President Hayes edit See also Compromise of 1877 nbsp President Rutherford Hayes 1870 1880 On March 31 1877 Chamberlain and Hampton traveled to Washington D C to meet with the newly elected Republican president Rutherford Hayes Both men made their cases to be governor Hayes had narrowly won his election by one electoral vote and had been accused of voter fraud Once elected Hayes adopted a hands off policy toward the South as part of the Compromise of 1877 Hayes did not believe that the use of federal troops to decide a local election was justified 18 Hayes informed the two governors of his plan to withdraw federal troops from the South which he did on April 3 6 10 The Republican administration under Chamberlain struggled to maintain power due to lack of support and was at a disadvantage to the Democratic administration under Hampton The imposition of the Black Codes and other voter restrictions on African Americans led to a rapid loss of electoral support for the Republicans Chamberlain s concession edit On April 10 federal troops withdrew from the Statehouse Governor Chamberlain realizing that he could not continue in his role without the support of federal troops resigned on April 11 8 After conceding the governorship to Hampton Chamberlain stated If a majority of people in a State are unable by physical force to maintain their rights they must be left to political servitude 9 After Chamberlain s concession Hampton was declared the sole governor of South Carolina Chamberlain fled the state and resumed his law practice Hampton was re elected in 1878 However he resigned in February 1879 to succeed Republican John J Patterson as United States Senator from South Carolina South Carolina would not elect another Republican governor until 1974 nearly 100 years later The Democratic Party controlled the General Assembly until the 1990s Until the 1970s the Democratic Party faced little opposition in most gubernatorial elections and often ran unopposed Notes edit A board established to certify election results Polling and voting locations See also editHistory of South Carolina 1876 South Carolina gubernatorial election 1876 United States presidential election African Americans in South Carolina Compromise of 1877 List of governors of South CarolinaReferences edit Statistics on Slavery Weber State University n d Retrieved 28 May 2020 Statistics for South Carolina PDF U S Department of Commerce and Labor 1913 Retrieved 15 June 2020 Rogers Jr George C and C James Taylor 1994 A South Carolina Chronology 1497 1992 University of South Carolina Press ISBN 0 87249 971 5 Richardson Heather 16 March 2018 South Carolina s Remarkable Democratic Experiment of 1868 We re History Retrieved 26 May 2020 a b Rubin III Hyman S 2007 Election of 1876 University of South Carolina Publications Retrieved 15 June 2020 a b The Result in South Carolina A Southerner describes mounting racial tensions in the aftermath of Reconstruction The South Carolinian January 1878 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Hamer Fritz 17 May 2016 Wade Hampton Conflicted Leader of the Conservative Democracy South Carolina Encyclopedia Retrieved 13 June 2020 a b c Rubin III Hyman S 17 May 2016 Election of 1876 South Carolina Encyclopedia Retrieved 13 June 2020 a b c d e King Ronald 2001 Counting the Votes South Carolina s Stolen Election of 1876 The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 32 2 Cambridge MIT Press 169 191 doi 10 1162 002219501750442369 JSTOR 3656976 S2CID 145297405 a b c d e South Carolina Gubernatorial Election of 1876 The University of Richmond n d Retrieved 13 June 2020 a b c John Morrill Bryan 1998 Creating the South Carolina State House Columbia University of South Carolina Press pp 85 87 ISBN 1570032912 Journal of the Senate of the State of South Carolina Columbia South Carolina Statehouse 1876 pp 42 45 The Most Corrupt Election in SC History SCIWAY n d Retrieved 13 June 2020 Schouler James History of the Reconstruction Period 1865 1877 Cambridge Kessinger Publishing p 354 ISBN 978 0548640395 Walter Brian Cisco Wade Hampton Confederate Warrior Conservative Statesman Potomac Books Inc Washington D C 2004 p 259 Walter Edgar South Carolina A History p 405 Rod Andrew 19 May 2008 Wade Hampton Confederate Warrior to Southern Redeemer University of North Carolina Press pp 408 410 ISBN 978 0807831939 Tosh Ted Rockwell 28 December 2015 The Life and Times of Benjamin Helm Bristow Page Publishing Inc ISBN 978 1682135501 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disputed government of South Carolina of 1876 77 amp oldid 1197047006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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