The American Presidential Election of 1872

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 259

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat  4 роки тому +81

    _The Ultimate American Presidential Election Book: Every Presidential Election in American History (1788-2020)_ is now available! amzn.to/3aYiqwI

    • @lierxagerate
      @lierxagerate 4 роки тому +14

      Just bought a paperback copy, thanks for putting that together!

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  4 роки тому +19

      @@lierxagerate Thanks for buying it!

    • @davidroddin738
      @davidroddin738 3 роки тому +1

      A photo of John Russell exists upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/90/John_Russell_%28prohibitionist%29.png

    • @draildandfriends2243
      @draildandfriends2243 2 роки тому +2

      @@iammrbeat a picture of Russell does exist en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:John_Russell_(prohibitionist).png

    • @renacommetary4607
      @renacommetary4607 2 роки тому +2

      @@draildandfriends2243 yes

  • @ryanfriedman4329
    @ryanfriedman4329 4 роки тому +624

    Imagine if Ulysses Grant lost his re-election bid to Horace Greeley, only for Horace Greeley to pass away before inauguration.

    • @ryanfriedman4329
      @ryanfriedman4329 4 роки тому +48

      Glennandrews I would think they could unite behind Horace, and his vice presidential pick Benjamin Gratz Brown would probably succeed him since that’s how Andrew Johnson became president after Abe Lincoln was assassinated.

    • @akorn9943
      @akorn9943 3 роки тому +59

      There's actually a very good chance that Greeley never would have died had he not lost the election. He dealt with the death of his wife, the election loss, and, as a consequence for the souring of his public image through his campaign and defeat, several high ranking members of his newspaper launched a coup against him, all in very quick succession. Because of this, he fell into a deep depression that dramatically worsened his health. It is also speculated that the medicine given to him by the doctors at the time to help him actually made his physical condition even worse. It's not really known what exactly his cause of death was, but there is a very good chance that every voter who chose Grant in this election indirectly voted to kill a man.

    • @deiansalazar140
      @deiansalazar140 2 роки тому +7

      @@akorn9943 damn man. Well... Do you think that Grant should have been reelected?

    • @lmperlum
      @lmperlum 2 роки тому +10

      @@deiansalazar140 Yes

    • @IsaaacWithThreeA
      @IsaaacWithThreeA 2 роки тому +8

      “Okay, uhh...”
      *Whispers to person next to him* “Do I really have to swear in a corpse?”

  • @jacobadams4559
    @jacobadams4559 4 роки тому +249

    "But... he died"
    Jeeez I did not see that coming. Literally sat up in my seat and felt my stomach stop lol

  • @georgewashington673
    @georgewashington673 4 роки тому +337

    Fun fact: Benjamin Gratz Brown, Horace Greeley's running mate, was the grandfather of Margaret Wise Brown, the author of the famous children's book "Goodnight Moon."

  • @andysorensen1737
    @andysorensen1737 5 років тому +357

    A sad note about Schuyler Colfax: He died of a heart attack in a train station in Mankato, Minnesota. No one in the train station recognized him, so he had to be identified by the papers he carried with him.
    A park and memorial to Colfax now stand on the site today.

    • @BobbyHernandez
      @BobbyHernandez 3 роки тому +28

      That had to be the most Vice Presidential anecdote I’ve ever heard

    • @bonghunezhou5051
      @bonghunezhou5051 3 роки тому +7

      How many ordinary people (who are not political junkies, et al) would recognize the CURRENT VP in such a situation?

    • @DarkScorpionPete98
      @DarkScorpionPete98 2 роки тому +8

      @@bonghunezhou5051 Kamala Harris is not hard to distinguish, though.

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому +4

      @@DarkScorpionPete98 Maybe because she is the first woman of color as VP

    • @jack101starZ
      @jack101starZ 11 місяців тому +1

      @@jrowletand the first woman vice president!

  • @kauffner
    @kauffner 4 роки тому +419

    The Republicans got the nickname "Grand Old Party" from this election. In earlier elections, this phrase meant the Democratic Party since they are the older of the two major parties. In 1872, it was Grant's Republicans versus Greeley's newly created Liberal Republicans. So Grant's supporters could claim the GOP title.

    • @Matty8282
      @Matty8282 4 роки тому +22

      So that’s where the GOP name came from

    • @joshuajoe1419
      @joshuajoe1419 3 роки тому +12

      I’ve always wondered that?

    • @BabySonicGT
      @BabySonicGT 3 роки тому +5

      i always wondered what gop meant

    • @kluge1245
      @kluge1245 3 роки тому +3

      I don't think that is true. The term "Grand Old Party" or "Gallant Old Party" was beginning to be used as a nickname for the Republican party in the mid-1870s. "Gallant Old Party", in particular, was used in reference to the successful defense of the Union by a Republican leader during the civil war. There is no record of this term being used in reference to the democratic party. The first record of the "GOP" abbreviation is from 1884.

    • @kauffner
      @kauffner 3 роки тому +1

      Here is an 1862 speech by Congressman Vallandigham (D-Ohio): "If they meant that I am a Democrat, devoted to the principles and policy, and faithful to the organization of that grand old party.." You can find hundreds of 19th century references in the online newspaper collection at the Library of Congress. I found a reference to the Democrats as the grand old party dated January 24, 1867. As far as "Gallant Old Party" goes, that was once a reference to the Democrats as well. In 1851, the Dems were using it to refer to themselves at the Ohio state convention.

  • @montengro234
    @montengro234 6 років тому +190

    Easily one of the wildest elections, love it

  • @BigSleepyOx
    @BigSleepyOx 6 років тому +113

    A additional tidbit on Frederick Douglass, who was nominated for VP by the Equal Rights Party, though did not acknowledge that:
    For this election he served as one of Grant's electors for the state of New York.

    • @OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions
      @OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions 5 років тому +4

      What?! How do you know that?

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому

      Back when blacks voted for Rs in overwhelming numbers (before Ds started buying their votes with welfare and CRT and wokeness and reverse racism).

  • @georgewashington673
    @georgewashington673 5 років тому +127

    Had Greeley won but still died before taking office, Grant would likely have been re-elected instead. Since the Constitution didn't specify what would happen in this scenario, the Democratic electors would have split their votes for president like they did in real life, and then the House, which was controlled by the Republicans in 1872, would have voted for Grant. It would have been the election of 1824 all over again.

    • @noahjackl2240
      @noahjackl2240 Рік тому +5

      Very interesting alt-history scenario even though it would have ended the same way

    • @AlisonOSC
      @AlisonOSC 2 місяці тому

      it says in the constitution that if the president-elect dies before inauguration day (which was march 4th in 1872), the vice-president-elect would become the president-elect instead.

  • @TheFranchiseCA
    @TheFranchiseCA 4 роки тому +57

    Correction:
    By 1872, women had full suffrage in Utah as well as Wyoming.

  • @eelsemaj99
    @eelsemaj99 7 років тому +273

    Didn't realise the Brexit secretary was that old

  • @HVACSoldier
    @HVACSoldier 4 роки тому +116

    David Davis is NOT an awesome name. I was made fun of, because of my name when I was growing up.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  4 роки тому +80

      You have an awesome name.

    • @hangukhiphop
      @hangukhiphop 4 роки тому +11

      Smart move to switching it up to _Dave_ Davis ;)

    • @evo5dave
      @evo5dave 4 роки тому +14

      That was nothing compared to what your sister, Mavis, had to put up with

    • @HVACSoldier
      @HVACSoldier 4 роки тому +21

      @@evo5dave Believe it or NOT I had a half aunt named Mavis.

    • @evo5dave
      @evo5dave 4 роки тому +4

      @@HVACSoldier Haha!

  • @brobb00
    @brobb00 3 роки тому +26

    My dad grew up in Greeley's barn that his daughter had converted into a home!

  • @hanndonfield91
    @hanndonfield91 5 років тому +111

    Weve got a politician called david davis ........great name lol

    • @K.C.-Games
      @K.C.-Games 5 років тому +22

      How about John St. John

    • @Gage_Brumley
      @Gage_Brumley Рік тому +2

      @@K.C.-Gamesand his mustache

  • @michaelheeheejackson7255
    @michaelheeheejackson7255 7 років тому +49

    David Davis is also the brexit secretary

  • @maxwellweiss9849
    @maxwellweiss9849 4 роки тому +24

    My AP US History had us take an assignment for our AMSCO book to review this election. There was one problem... there was no description of the 1872 election.... but let;s just say I knew someone who could help me with that ;)

  • @siamiam
    @siamiam 8 років тому +52

    that was quite the election O_O

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  8 років тому +14

      +siamiam Pretty crazy. Pretty, pretty crazy.

  • @josiahpike
    @josiahpike 4 роки тому +29

    Both of Grant's opponents had interesting hair

  • @The_-_-
    @The_-_- 3 роки тому +29

    I love how when Mr.Beat can’t find a picture of a dude, he just uses a stickman figure

    • @SarahElisabethJoyal
      @SarahElisabethJoyal 2 роки тому +3

      This isn't even the last time he had to do that in this series, which is weird to think about somehow

  • @wolfman-nz6or
    @wolfman-nz6or 4 роки тому +24

    Why did grants opponent look a lot Iike Ben Franklin LMAO 😂😂

    • @YlO414
      @YlO414 3 роки тому +6

      That's what I always thought of his opponent always look like Benjamin Franklin

  • @koukkoufos2000
    @koukkoufos2000 8 років тому +32

    Great work man :D

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  8 років тому +9

      +Harry Christofi Thanks Harry!

  • @emptank
    @emptank 4 роки тому +21

    "President Grant, your cabinet is corrupt, you ignore talented men in favor of your friends. You have had several scandals attached to your name and your vice president is a radical crazy old man. Why shouls people vote for you?"
    "I defeated Lee and ended the civil war."
    ....
    "Shit that's a good point though."

    • @sneddypie
      @sneddypie 3 роки тому +2

      grant was nice ideologically, but as president, he struggled tbh

  • @williamcfox
    @williamcfox 8 років тому +90

    Gratz Brown looks like a mountain man.

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  8 років тому +16

      +Political Junkie News A lot of dudes did at this time!

  • @drugstoredilemmas7962
    @drugstoredilemmas7962 4 роки тому +13

    Not only is Woodhull the first woman to run for President, she just may be the best looking as well

  • @8sins236
    @8sins236 5 років тому +78

    Greely has a very nice neckbeard.

  • @Fadzi2342
    @Fadzi2342 Рік тому +3

    Imagine voting for, God forbid, a vegetarian.

  • @s4gr_n0s3y
    @s4gr_n0s3y 3 роки тому +11

    Imagine if Greeley was elected, it would’ve been hilarious to see Greeley’s corpse become president

    • @TheLostStars
      @TheLostStars 3 роки тому +3

      They would have United under one person if he won

  • @fighterofthenightman1057
    @fighterofthenightman1057 4 роки тому +23

    Both parties have changed in significant ways over the years, but the GOP and big business have had a love affair from the beginning.

    • @denisebetteridge-johnson647
      @denisebetteridge-johnson647 3 роки тому

      This was the period where the two party ideologies began to switch identities. If you are interested in the change, start researching from Grant's Presidency. Interesting.

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому

      Ds actually control big business now (corporations have gone woke and controlled by woke corporate executives who do woke marketing and support the liberals on social issues like Disney in Florida), and Ds control Big Media, Big Tech, Hollywood, and entertainment.

    • @schroederscurrentevents3844
      @schroederscurrentevents3844 Рік тому +4

      Except for Teddy Roosevelt and Taft

    • @fighterofthenightman1057
      @fighterofthenightman1057 Рік тому +1

      @@schroederscurrentevents3844 Even then, Wilson wanted more regulation than both, and Roosevelt was accused by Democrats of stealing their issues.

    • @johnweber4577
      @johnweber4577 7 місяців тому

      @@denisebetteridge-johnson647I would say it is more that the Democrats finally settled back into their original role while the Republicans ultimately filled the void left behind by the Whigs as the realignment over the issues around the Civil War Era stated to break down due to those debates effectively being resolved. The old dynamic is unambiguously reasserting itself by the 1896 presidential electron between William McKinley and William Jennings Bryan at least but the process is arguably not fully completed until the rise of the New Deal Coalition.

  • @Mr.Turano
    @Mr.Turano 5 років тому +15

    Thanks for showing maps and political cartoons, the say the thousands of words you don't hve time to say.

  • @hucklebucklin
    @hucklebucklin 2 роки тому +3

    The John Russell picture just killed me!!!

  • @jrowlet
    @jrowlet Рік тому +3

    This is the last election where the Ds and Rs did not face off for President. The Rs nominated Grant, but the Ds just advanced no candidate and got behind Liberal Rs. Every election since 1872 has been Rs against Ds (and of course third parties that never win).

  • @harrytruman5700
    @harrytruman5700 4 роки тому +7

    Grant VS Greeley in 72. Grant and Greeley in a Debate. Grant: I know I have corruption In my Cabinet But I cool. Greeley: I want to Be The First journalist To became President how About That Grant.

  • @hordiypowers
    @hordiypowers 4 роки тому +87

    "These presidential elections remains the only one, in which candidate died during electoral process"
    2020: yet

    • @runnethdown
      @runnethdown 4 роки тому +11

      It's not only possible, but likely, considering the youngest frontrunner (Trump) is *73*

    • @Dirtrock-or3ry
      @Dirtrock-or3ry 4 роки тому +11

      Yeah, Biden will be in his 80s by the end of his term (if he even wins)

    • @everettduncan7543
      @everettduncan7543 4 роки тому +3

      @@Dirtrock-or3ry I still would not be surprised if Trump is dead by the end of Biden's first term

    • @rtasvadum3531
      @rtasvadum3531 4 роки тому +7

      @Mouth Eater What about Biden? He is 4 years older than trump with dementia...

    • @ThePooper3000
      @ThePooper3000 4 роки тому +3

      Biden and Trump are old as dust. I hope that 2024 will have significantly younger candidates, maybe someone in their 40s.

  • @alextheflagguy4032
    @alextheflagguy4032 8 років тому +6

    I think this is cool especially how ends what if something like that happens again? History does have a tendency to repeat itself.

  • @mattthesilent777RED
    @mattthesilent777RED 2 роки тому +5

    America somehow had women and black men as candidates for government leaders before Britain???

    • @Talisguy
      @Talisguy Рік тому +4

      It's honestly not that surprising. America has had a long history as a birthplace of radical new ideas and philosophies. Around the time of the Revolutionary War, the Society of Universal Friends was founded: a Quaker offshoot quasi-socialist religious commune led by a non-binary preacher who claimed to have died as a woman and become the genderless reincarnation of Jesus Christ. The Friends were very egalitarian, women held prominent positions of power, it was particularly attractive to single women - again, this was in 1776. And while this was very notable, it wasn't entirely out of keeping with the culture of the US at the time. There were a fair few new religious denominations at the time that re-examined the role of (almost always white, admittedly) women in society in pretty radical ways.
      Also, this is a bit of a nitpick, but the UK doesn't choose its government leaders the way the US does - you vote for the party, not a candidate for the head of government, and the head of the main party that forms the government (who is elected by the party, not the people) becomes the new head of government. So whether the UK elects a black Prime Minister or not isn't entirely up to the voters.

    • @mattthesilent777RED
      @mattthesilent777RED Рік тому

      @@Talisguy That last bit is something I hate about my nation's government. As far as I know, we Brits ended slavery at least 30 years before America did. We are also radical in our own ways, we actually have a popular socialist political party and we have had three female PMs, (Don't judge me but when it came to how effective they were, only the second one seemed mildly good)

    • @Talisguy
      @Talisguy Рік тому

      @@mattthesilent777RED I thought you might be American, my bad. I'm not American either, for the record, I'm Scottish.
      Also...yeah, the UK did end slavery (at least at home, not in its colonies) sixty or so years ahead of the US, but the political class (and thus access to elected office) was so much more stratified by class in the UK at the time than it was in the US that a black man could never have been a contender for Prime Minister in 19th-century Britain. Several POTUSes were literally born in log cabins, dirt poor, and I could never imagine that happening in Britain because the political establishment is so dominated by upper class Eton dipshits (not that I could imagine someone becoming President after being born dirt poor in the modern US, either,) and that tends to mean people who come from money, and that just... wasn't the case for many black British people at the time. You did get one or two cases of the biracial sons of slave-owning aristocrats becoming MPs, but that was basically it.
      Whereas in the US, you had former slaves serving in Congress and the Senate around this time (they all represented the South, to add to the unexpected). A black man actually becoming president at this time would have been highly unlikely, but a black presidential nominee during Reconstruction? More likely than you'd think. ...Certainly much more likely than the idea would become between the end of Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Act, sadly.

  • @McIntosh1581
    @McIntosh1581 7 років тому +15

    What if scenario: Lets say if Greeley won or it were the other way around and Grant died before the electoral college met. What would happen then? I know the Constitution states, "If a winning Presidential candidate dies or becomes incapacitated between the counting of electoral votes in Congress and the inauguration, the Vice President elect will become President," but what would happen if the winning candidate dies before the counting of electoral votes like Greeley did? Would the electoral votes that the winning candidate received go to his running mate or would the electors cast their votes for a candidate or person of their choice? I know it seems weird that I'm asking this, but this election had a very unusual occurrence with what happened to Greeley.

    • @dugroz
      @dugroz 6 років тому +2

      I wondered the same thing.

    • @matheuspenteado8174
      @matheuspenteado8174 6 років тому +3

      Colfax would finish Grant's first term as president but the question is about the second term, for which he was elected in 1872. Would the votes go for Wilson? Interesting enough is that Henry Wilson died in office as VP, so he would never complete all four years as president anyway...

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 7 місяців тому

      The electoral college would have voted anyway, but the voters for Grant would have been free to vote for whomever they want. If no candidate gets a majority of the electoral college, it goes to the house.
      It would have been more complicated if Grant died between the electoral college vote and inauguration since I don't think the Vice-President elected would have become President automatically until the twentieth Amendment. Maybe they would have inaugurated the Vice-President then immediately inaugurated him as President.

  • @mrlarry271
    @mrlarry271 3 роки тому +7

    Those darn liberal Republicans. Not a phrase you hear a whole lot nowadays.

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому +1

      Now you hear a different term for liberal Republicans: RINOs.

  • @itsmealex8959
    @itsmealex8959 4 роки тому +22

    4:25 Everyone cheering for Grants reelection except Grant himself.

  • @ampersandrue
    @ampersandrue 2 роки тому +2

    David Davis, Awesome Name

  • @divusgaiusjuliuscaesar4657
    @divusgaiusjuliuscaesar4657 4 роки тому +3

    This is one of the few where the opposition was just so damn HOT!

  • @novatheredwitch1573
    @novatheredwitch1573 5 років тому +8

    I wonder if there is a special playlist of alternate presidents?

  • @EricE549
    @EricE549 2 роки тому +2

    DAVID DAVIS
    AWESOME NAME
    DAVID DAVIS
    DAVID DAVIS
    ILLINOIS
    DAVID DAVIS

  • @MRB16th
    @MRB16th 4 роки тому +6

    I will note that Greeley had minimal political experience and couldn't campaign to save himself, while Brown was an ineffectual Governor and raging alcoholic: the whole 1872 Democrat/Liberal Republican ticket was, quite simply, a complete shambles.
    The three electors who cast their vote for the late Horace Greeley as President had their votes rejected (their VP votes for Brown were accepted), along with all 14 electoral votes from Louisiana and Arkansas (these were due to various irregularities, including allegations of electoral fraud: these states voted for Grant).

  • @zacharymohammadi
    @zacharymohammadi 4 роки тому +4

    This election was certainly a weird one.

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому

      Indeed, it was the last election where we did not get Rs and Ds facing off. Ds sat out and got behind Liberal Rs and Rs nominated Grant. We have had Ds and Rs in presidential elections without fail ever since (and some third parties that never win).

  • @time4history584
    @time4history584 8 років тому +6

    great video

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  8 років тому +1

      +Time 4 history Thanks! :D

  • @cheydinal5401
    @cheydinal5401 4 роки тому +7

    I mean, doesn't Bobby Kennedy dying also count as "dying during the electoral process"?

    • @johnlouisgood
      @johnlouisgood 4 роки тому +6

      Probably not because he wasn't the nominee of the democratic party, he was running for it.

    • @daggerhell99
      @daggerhell99 3 роки тому +4

      At the convention most of Robert Kennedy's delegates went to George McGovern, while the rest voted for Eugene McCarthy.

    • @carolinemason9584
      @carolinemason9584 9 місяців тому

      Technically not because they were finishing the primaries, and he wasn’t nominated

  • @brucetelfeyan
    @brucetelfeyan 3 роки тому +2

    This leaves out that Charles O'Conor was the Straight Out Democrats nominee even though he declined the nomination.

  • @johnbro67
    @johnbro67 4 роки тому +1

    If you Search up Horace Greenely on google He died November 29,1872 and if you go to his wife she died October 29, 1872

  • @jameswhite4382
    @jameswhite4382 3 роки тому +4

    3:44 148 years later, a white man and black woman (& south Asian descent) would win the presidency, this is still a good reference though

  • @matheus2020a
    @matheus2020a 2 роки тому +2

    In a Scenario That Greeley Wins,It Looks Like Some Real Scenario In Brazil.
    In 1985,Tancredo Neves Wins The Elections Against Paulo Maluf,Tancredo Died Before he Turned President.

    • @jrowlet
      @jrowlet Рік тому

      That has happened when people get elected to Congress but die before the new Congress convenes. Luke Letlow died of COVID after his election but before his inauguration (his wife Julia got elected in a special election to fill his US House seat).

  • @thundrr27
    @thundrr27 2 роки тому +4

    David Davis looks like Walmart Ulysses Grant lol

  • @manassesnascimento4483
    @manassesnascimento4483 Місяць тому +1

    Teodoro was very lively

  • @TeeGee3
    @TeeGee3 Рік тому +1

    Jornal 22; Horace greegy died and made me cry

  • @newvgaming1008
    @newvgaming1008 3 роки тому +1

    0:41 Well guess what? His name is Ulysses S. Grant! He GRANTs everything for his friends!

  • @KingBueno619
    @KingBueno619 9 місяців тому +1

    “He…Died” yeah “died”
    End of the video

  • @ashleighstratmann7783
    @ashleighstratmann7783 2 роки тому +1

    Victoria Woodhull was actually brought up in Mysteries of the Museum. Don't ask which one as I been benge watching episode after episode on Discovery Plus during the day (using night to catch up on youtube) and often loss track whereI am in the show

    • @ashleighstratmann7783
      @ashleighstratmann7783 2 роки тому +1

      I don't think I'm at the end though despite how many episodes I have seen.

  • @Gage_Brumley
    @Gage_Brumley 3 роки тому +4

    4:53 Is it just me or does Thomas Hendricks look like Horace Slughorn from Harry Potter

    • @ghyuty17
      @ghyuty17 2 роки тому +1

      You got a point

  • @BatailleRapTishort
    @BatailleRapTishort 17 днів тому

    4:00 absolutely based mr greely

  • @mattthesilent777RED
    @mattthesilent777RED Рік тому +2

    Grant is my most underrated president

  • @tonecot8932
    @tonecot8932 8 місяців тому

    Not only did David Davis have an awesome name, but he was considered one of the heaviest men in America at the time. He weighed over 400 lbs when he was on the court and supposedly weighed close to 600 in his final years.

  • @somebodyiguess5969
    @somebodyiguess5969 3 роки тому +3

    Fun Fact: This election had the most faithless electors in U.S history

    • @iammrbeat
      @iammrbeat  3 роки тому +8

      Nope. That was 2016.

    • @somebodyiguess5969
      @somebodyiguess5969 3 роки тому

      @@iammrbeat oh

    • @JFMV763
      @JFMV763 2 роки тому

      @@iammrbeat I'm pretty sure this one had more, 2016 had 10 and this one had 63 (the electors were pledged to vote for Greeley even if he was dead, only 3 of them actually did even though said votes were rejected for doing so)

  • @maddiemae73
    @maddiemae73 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact: I’m related to Horace Greeley

  • @yashtherider9755
    @yashtherider9755 3 роки тому +1

    Ulyess S. Grant was so powerfull
    6 candidates for president election is weird thing in american history

  • @huanlecongquoc957
    @huanlecongquoc957 4 роки тому +2

    1:26 says the guy who got canned by a slave owner

  • @lightningbolt4419
    @lightningbolt4419 3 роки тому +3

    I would vote grant this election

  • @mykellayne
    @mykellayne Рік тому

    I can't count on how many facts I didn't know.

  • @robkunkel8833
    @robkunkel8833 Рік тому

    1:31 Where is this hall? It looks enormous. There has to be 150,000 people there.

  • @josestarks8892
    @josestarks8892 6 років тому +2

    What if Greeley had won? Who would've been President.

    • @scottaznavourian5791
      @scottaznavourian5791 5 років тому +6

      Even with the 25th amendment in place theres still no answer to this question. I guess the electoral college would just vote the way they wanted (like they did with greely electoral votes anyways) but im guesssing the pressure would be on to elect the vice president elect

    • @coolcricketfan9926
      @coolcricketfan9926 4 роки тому +1

      Maybe the Greeley vice president would have been president or Thomas Hendricks because Greeley votes shifted to him.

  • @robbied2113
    @robbied2113 4 роки тому +2

    How do you getc71 percent of the population voting but no female voters?

  • @hellodude7008
    @hellodude7008 Рік тому

    a picture of John Russell does exist

  • @ashtoncollins868
    @ashtoncollins868 2 роки тому +1

    Look I’m just gonna skip this one
    (Nope I made a comment now)

  • @markgrant3465
    @markgrant3465 3 роки тому +3

    I'm related to grant

  • @FMmffmFM
    @FMmffmFM 8 місяців тому

    "it remains the only election in which one xandidate died"
    *Hold my breath in 2024*

  • @matthewmiranda3557
    @matthewmiranda3557 3 роки тому +1

    Horace Greeley was an eccentric guy, huh? With a neckbeard like that I'd be surprised if he weren't.

  • @AnnoyingAllie3
    @AnnoyingAllie3 Рік тому +2

    This is my favorite election, really wish Horace Greeley won, then the Liberal Republicans might've taken up space, we might've ended up being the multiparty state we can be

  • @jesusparedones
    @jesusparedones 3 роки тому

    I voted for Horace Greeley in that election

  • @harvestedvoltage4324
    @harvestedvoltage4324 Рік тому

    Henry Wilson looks like Gregg Turkington

  • @degozaru9196
    @degozaru9196 4 роки тому +2

    The election of eccentric facial hair

  • @Cerracrossing
    @Cerracrossing 4 роки тому

    Is this the only election in which a deceased person got any electoral votes?

    • @WTMNNJR
      @WTMNNJR 4 роки тому +2

      One of the recent ones did too I think.

  • @librosdejoaquine.brotonsbr7753
    @librosdejoaquine.brotonsbr7753 4 роки тому +2

    Liberal republicans or adams' right is the silly branch of republican party. In 1964 Reagan supported goldwater, not rockefeller, the liberal republican of the day.

  • @gado184
    @gado184 4 роки тому

    Economics is the failed effort to extrapolate and surmise what future human expectations will be.

  • @coreymakesmusic9691
    @coreymakesmusic9691 2 роки тому +1

    Who is Jenkins?

  • @playz4816
    @playz4816 3 роки тому

    DAVID FRICKIN DAVIZ

  • @kingify6180
    @kingify6180 3 роки тому +1

    Nice

  • @chrise8275
    @chrise8275 4 роки тому

    Grant was the first president born in Ohio.

  • @insertaliashere1379
    @insertaliashere1379 4 роки тому

    Ahhhhhhhh. AAAAHHHHHHHH. GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

  • @aradicalkiwi806
    @aradicalkiwi806 4 роки тому

    Ok, listen, I have no idea if this will be responded to by you or someone cause this video is old, but I have a question. On Wikipedia it says the liberal republicans were classical liberals, and created to oppose the corruption of Grant, but also his radical reconstruction, and his radical republican supporters. However, it is also the case that Greeley was a socialist, fairly radical, and that radical republicans like Charles Sumner supported the liberal republicans. This confuses me? Which description of the liberal republicans is more correct?

    • @moontruther7519
      @moontruther7519 2 роки тому

      Socialist was not as Radical of an idea back then, in fact Moderate Republican savior Abraham Lincoln was pen pals with Karl Marx.
      The Liberal Republican party was grasping at straws with Greeley, really. I doubt they actually adhered to Liberalism considering their closeness to the Democratic Party, which was itself an amalgimation of Libertarianism, Liberalism, Social Democracy and Social Conservatism.
      Idk though, Greeley could've just been a Social Democrat and not an actual Socialist, Socialism and Liberalism do not exactly go well together..

    • @aradicalkiwi806
      @aradicalkiwi806 2 роки тому

      @@moontruther7519 When I asked this I knew a lot less about the history of socialism. One of the most popular brands of socialism especially in the US was individualist socialism, and that distinctly adhered to the classical liberal idea. So did Proudhons socialism, and in certain aspects, Marx’s socialism. Lincoln never personally wrote to Marx but the Marx wrote to his office on behalf of the First International and his office sent a favorable reply. Marx was a protesting hero of the movement to keep Britain from joining the confederacy, and gathering support for the Unions. Marx and Engels were also editors of the Republican party’s main newspapers first international publishing office in London. And the Labor theory of value, which was seen as common sense morality, and the moral credit of liberalism, since Smith created it as a benefit of the market system under his belief Liberalism entailed perfect freedom, which would naturally by human nature cause perfect equality through the equitable skills and capacity of humans given equitable means. Of course the capitalist critique is pointing out the system that came about following mercantilism was not Smiths liberalism, and the labor theory of value is not fulfilled for that reason.

  • @robloxianroventures164
    @robloxianroventures164 4 роки тому

    i just typed in a random number

  • @lavaknight3682
    @lavaknight3682 4 роки тому

    A journalist as leader of a nation? *looks at Kaiserreich Jack Reed* it’s more likely than you think!

  • @ryanheister6802
    @ryanheister6802 3 роки тому +1

    Charles O'Connor looks like Joe Biden after 8 years as President

  • @swxr06
    @swxr06 2 роки тому +2

    3:09

  • @bayernmunchenkeepersunion4350
    @bayernmunchenkeepersunion4350 4 роки тому

    Does my guy have a neck beard??

  • @carlosiiideespana3712
    @carlosiiideespana3712 4 роки тому +2

    4:02 Um, they judged him for being vegetarian? .

    • @michaelweiske702
      @michaelweiske702 4 роки тому +5

      Yes. Vegetarianism was uncommon and continued to be until the 70s. It was viewed as strange back then.

    • @carlosiiideespana3712
      @carlosiiideespana3712 4 роки тому

      Michael Weiske I understand your point and I knew that before, I just didn’t think they would judge someone in politics back then for being vegetarian. I’m vegan myself anyway.

  • @rupeshsarthi6797
    @rupeshsarthi6797 3 роки тому

    Best

  • @TPChatter
    @TPChatter 3 роки тому

    Mr. Beat please respond to me.

  • @IS34PreteristForce
    @IS34PreteristForce Рік тому

    ❤❤

  • @leoscar999
    @leoscar999 4 роки тому

    It might happen again after trump got covid 19

  • @MetabolicMouth
    @MetabolicMouth Місяць тому

    4:36 in b4 this happens to trump this year

  • @deleted-something
    @deleted-something Рік тому +1

    noice

  • @WilliamFlickinger-y8f
    @WilliamFlickinger-y8f 7 місяців тому

    He had a lot crooks in his.adminstatoon he was a bad candidate