The presidential election of 1876 saw some regions of the country leaning republican and others leaning democrat. which statements correctly describe the geographic voting patterns?
Question: The presidential election of 1876 saw some regions of the country leaning republican and others leaning democrat. which statements correctly describe the geographic voting patterns?
The presidential election of 1876 was one of the most disputed and controversial in American history. The outcome hinged on the electoral votes of four states: Florida, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Oregon. In each of these states, there were competing claims of who had won the popular vote and the electoral vote. The candidates were Rutherford B. Hayes, a Republican, and Samuel J. Tilden, a Democrat.
The geographic voting patterns of the election reflected the divisions that had emerged after the Civil War and Reconstruction. In general, the states that had been part of the Confederacy supported Tilden, while the states that had remained loyal to the Union supported Hayes. The exceptions were Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina, where Republican governments had been established during Reconstruction with the help of federal troops. These states were contested by the Democrats, who claimed that there had been fraud and intimidation by the Republicans.
The only state that was not part of the former Confederacy or the Union that supported Tilden was New York, his home state. He also won most of the border states, such as Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, that had been slave states but had not seceded from the Union. Hayes won most of the states in the Northeast, Midwest, and West, where industrialization and immigration had increased the Republican base.
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