Posted on Monday, November 3, 2025
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by The Association of Mature American Citizens
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1 Comments
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On November 3, 1868, the presidential election marked more than a mere transfer of power—it was a pivotal moment in the nation’s journey from civil war toward reconstruction and inclusion. Emerging just three years after the end of the American Civil War, the contest offered America a chance to decide: would the Union heal and extend rights to its newly freed citizens, or retreat into the pre-war patterns of exclusion and sectional division?
On the Republican side stood Ulysses S. Grant, the former Union general whose wartime leadership and national reputation had made him a household name. Grant’s campaign slogan—“Let us have peace”—spoke to a yearning for unity after years of national strife. His platform embraced the continuation of Reconstruction: guaranteeing equal male suffrage, reducing debt and taxes, encouraging immigration, and strengthening federal oversight of the South.
Opposing him was Horatio Seymour, former governor of New York and the Democratic nominee. Seymour stood as a representative of the antebellum status quo: opposing the wartime draft and emancipation policies of Abraham Lincoln, and advocating for state control over voting rights, opposition to expansive federal agencies such as the Freedmen’s Bureau, and restoration of white-southern political power.
The voter rolls themselves highlighted the stakes of the election: for the first time, many newly freed African American men in the South were able to participate in a presidential vote—and several states that had not yet been fully “reconstructed” were barred from the process entirely. Grant’s victory was decisive in the Electoral College: he captured 214 votes to Seymour’s 80. In the popular tally, the margin was tighter—3,013,421 to 2,706,829—suggesting a nation still split in outlook.
Once in office, Grant moved quickly. His inaugural address called for calm, dispassionate approaches to national questions and appealed beyond sectional or partisan pride. He worked toward ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which would enshrine voting rights regardless of race, and deployed federal power to suppress the domestic terrorism of the Ku Klux Klan in the Southern states. At the same time, his administration oversaw the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad and nurtured improved foreign relations with Great Britain.
The election of 1868 thus stands as a cornerstone in the enduring struggle for American citizenship and democracy. It reaffirmed the country’s commitment to the Union and moved the dial toward racial equality, even as deep resistance remained. The outcome gave Reconstruction a chance to continue and reasserted that the post-war republic would include, not exclude, its newly freed people. In doing so, it set the tone for a transformed American political landscape.
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