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Dates of addresses by Rutherford B. Hayes in this eBook:
December 3, 1877
December 2, 1878
December 1, 1879
December 6, 1880
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State of the Union Address
Rutherford B. Hayes
December 3, 1877
Fellow-Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives:
With devout gratitude to the bountiful Giver of All Good, I congratulate
you that at the beginning of your first regular session you find our
country blessed with health and peace and abundant harvests, and with
encouraging prospects of an early return of general prosperity.
To complete and make permanent the pacification of the country continues to
be, and until it is fully accomplished must remain, the most important of
all our national interests. The earnest purpose of good citizens generally
to unite their efforts in this endeavor is evident. It found decided
expression in the resolutions announced in 1876 by the national conventions
of the leading political parties of the country. There was a widespread
apprehension that the momentous results in our progress as a nation marked
by the recent amendments to the Constitution were in imminent jeopardy;
that the good understanding which prompted their adoption, in the interest
of a loyal devotion to the general welfare, might prove a barren truce, and
that the two sections of the country, once engaged in civil strife, might
be again almost as widely severed and disunited as they were when arrayed
in arms against each other.
The course to be pursued, which, in my judgment, seemed wisest in the
presence of this emergency, was plainly indicated in my inaugural address.
It pointed to the time, which all our people desire to see, when a genuine
love of our whole country and of all that concerns its true welfare shall
supplant the destructive forces of the mutual animosity of races and of
sectional hostility. Opinions have differed widely as to the measures best
calculated to secure this great end. This was to be expected. The measures
adopted by the Administration have been subjected to severe and varied
criticism. Any course whatever which might have been entered upon would
certainly have encountered distrust and opposition. These measures were, in
my judgment, such as were most in harmony with the Constitution and with
the genius of our people, and best adapted, under all the circumstances, to
attain the end in view. Beneficent results, already apparent, prove that
these endeavors are not to be regarded as a mere experiment, and should
sustain and encourage us in our efforts. Already, in the brief period which
has elapsed, the immediate effectiveness, no less than the justice, of the
course pursued is demonstrated, and I have an abiding faith that time will
furnish its ample vindication in the minds of the great majority of my
fellow-citizens. The discontinuance of the use of the Army for the purpose
of upholding local governments in two States of the Union was no less a
constitutional duty and requirement, under the circumstances existing at
the time, than it was a much-needed measure for the restoration of local
self-government and the promotion of national harmony. The withdrawal of
the troops from such employment was effected deliberately, and with
solicitous care for the peace and good order of society and the protection
of the property and persons and every right of all classes of citizens.
The results that have followed are indeed significant and encouraging. All
apprehension of danger from remitting those States to local self-government
is dispelled, and a most salutary change in the minds of the people has
begun and is in progress in every part of that section of the country once
the theater of unhappy civil strife, substituting for suspicion, distrust,
and aversion, concord, friendship, and patriotic attachment to the Union.
No unprejudiced mind will deny that the terrible and often fatal collisions
which for several years have been of frequent occurrence and have agitated
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