Rutherford B. Hayes

Posse Comitatus Act Restricts Federal Military from Domestic Law Enforcement

| Importance: 8/10

President Rutherford B. Hayes signs the Posse Comitatus Act into law on June 18, 1878, restricting the use of federal military personnel to enforce domestic law. Passed as an amendment to an army appropriations bill following the end of Reconstruction, the Act prohibits using the Army, Navy, Marine …

Rutherford B. Hayes U.S. Congress reconstruction-sabotage military-policy civil-rights-destruction institutional-capture
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Bland-Allison Act Overrides Presidential Veto, Restores Silver Coinage

| Importance: 7/10

Congress overrides President Rutherford B. Hayes’s veto on February 28, 1878, to enact the Bland-Allison Act, requiring the U.S. Treasury to purchase between $2 million and $4 million of silver bullion each month and mint it into legal tender silver dollars. The Act represents a partial …

Richard P. Bland William B. Allison Rutherford B. Hayes U.S. Congress monetary-policy corporate-influence financial-system-capture gilded-age
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Great Railroad Strike of 1877 Erupts Across Nation, Federal Troops Deployed Against Workers

| Importance: 9/10

The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 begins when Baltimore & Ohio Railroad workers walk off the job in response to a 10% wage cut—the second reduction in eight months during the severe economic depression following the Panic of 1873. The strike spreads rapidly across the nation’s rail …

Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Rutherford B. Hayes U.S. Army Railroad workers State militias labor-suppression gilded-age railroad-strike federal-intervention military-force +1 more
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