Radical rule in the South ended when Rutherford B. Hayes was elected in 1876. President Hayes helped with the last efforts of the Reconstruction after the Civil War ended.
No 5 cent coins were struck in 1876.
Ulysses S. Grant (born April 27, 1822 in Point Pleasant, Ohio; died July 23, 1885 in Mount McGregor, New York) succeeded Andrew Johnson as the eighteenth President of the United States, serving between March 4, 1869 and March 4, 1877, including the whole of the year 1873.
No Trade Dollars were struck in 1876. First year of issue was 1878
I don't believe there is a 1876 Morgan silver dollar. I believe in 1876 it was a For the silver content: ~$9 (12/30/08) Depending on condition: $500-$3000
1876 was the Centennial, the 100th anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence.
Because it became a state in 1876, the centennial, or 100th birthday of America (1776-1876)
It was America`s 100th birthday.
Yes- Colorado became a state in 1876.
Because Colorado became a state when America was celebrating the centennial (100th birthday) in 1876
Because Colorado officially became a state in 1876, the year of America's 100th birthday, more known as "centennial."
Colorado is nicknamed "The Centennial State" for it became an official state in 1876, when America celebrated its 100th birthday (a.k.a. centennial) and Colorado is one of only three US states with no natural borders (the other 2 are Colorado's neighbors: Wyoming and Utah)
Colorado is nicknamed "The Centennial State"because Colorado became a state in 1876, when America was celebrating the centennial, or its 100th birthday
August 1, 1876, the year when America was celebrating its centennial, or 100th birthday (hence Colorado's nickname being The Centennial State)
Ulysses Grant was the President in 1876 when the centennial of the Declaration of Independence was celebrated. Grover Cleveland was President in 1887 when they celebrated the ratification of the US Constitution.
Type your answer here... The 100 birthday of the United States of America was on July 4, 1876; one hundred years after July 4, 1776. The date the Declaration of Independence was made official by the Constitutional Congress in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Colorado joined the Union (and became a state) on August 1, 1876