[The Facts of Reconstruction by John R. Lynch]@TWC D-Link bookThe Facts of Reconstruction CHAPTER XI 6/25
If the State and Congressional elections of 1874 had been a repetition of those of 1872 or if they had resulted in a Republican victory, Republican success in the Presidential election of 1876 would have been a reasonably assured fact.
By that time the party at the South would have included in its membership from forty to fifty per cent of the white men of their respective States and as a result thereof it would have been strong enough to stand on its own feet and maintain its own independent existence, regardless of reverses which the parent organization might have sustained in other sections.
But at that time the party in that section was in its infancy.
It was young, weak, and comparatively helpless.
It still needed the fostering care and the protecting hand of the paternal source of its existence. When the smoke of the political battle that was fought in the early part of November, 1874, had cleared away, it was found that this strong, vigorous and healthy parent had been carried from the battle-field seriously wounded and unable to administer to the wants of its Southern offspring.
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