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       The 
        Ending of Reconstruction 
      In the 1870's, 
        violent opposition in the South and the North's retreat from its commitment 
        to equality, resulted in the end of Reconstruction. By 1876, the nation 
        was prepared to abandon its commitment to equality for all citizens regardless 
        of race. 
      As soon as 
        blacks gained the right to vote, secret societies sprang up in the South, 
        devoted to restoring white supremacy in politics and social life. Most 
        notorious was the Ku Klux Klan, an organization of violent criminals that 
        established a reign of terror in some parts of the South, assaulting and 
        murdering local Republican leaders. 
      In 1871 and 
        1872, federal marshals, assisted by U. S. troops, brought to trial scores 
        of Klansmen, crushing the organization. But the North's commitment to 
        Reconstruction soon waned. Many Republicans came to believe that the South 
        should solve its own problems without further interference from Washington. 
        Reports of Reconstruction corruption led many Northerners to conclude 
        that black suffrage had been a mistake. When anti-Reconstruction violence 
        erupted again in Mississippi and South Carolina, the Grant administration 
        refused to intervene. 
      The election 
        of 1876 hinged on disputed returns from Florida, Louisiana, and South 
        Carolina, where Republican governments still survived. After intense negotiations 
        involving leaders of both parties, the Republican candidate, Rutherford 
        B. Hayes, became president, while Democrats assumed control of the disputed 
        Southern states. Reconstruction had come to an end. 
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