Showing posts with label Rutherford B. Hayes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rutherford B. Hayes. Show all posts
Sunday, September 8, 2013
The Rutherford B. Hayes Song
His friends, they called him "Ruddy"
But he got his hands all muddy
When he stole the election from Tilden
And we almost had Civil War 2 instead of nation buildin'
But Ruddy Hayes
You weren't so bad
You were the best President from Ohio that we had
Now I realize that's not sayin' a lot
But sometimes you've got to work with what you've got
He promised to serve only one term
Healing the nation's epiderm
He didn't drink booze, he had a big beard
And his relationship with his sister was kinda weird
But Ruddy Hayes
You weren't so bad
You were the best President from Ohio that we had
Now I realize that's not sayin' a lot
But sometimes you've got to work with what you've got
He had progressive views on race
As an ex-president he was not a waste of space
He helped the disadvantaged, what do you think of that?
If he were here today he'd be a Democrat
But Ruddy Hayes
You weren't so bad
You were the best President from Ohio that we had
Now I realize that's not sayin' a lot
But sometimes you've got to work with what you've got
Labels:
Elections,
Ohio,
Rutherford B. Hayes,
Samuel Tilden
Monday, June 6, 2011
Bezango: Rutherford B. Hayes Slept Here, Oct. 1880
Olympia Power & Light, sometime in October, 2010
It's a big deal whenever a President visits the Oly area. The last sitting President to come to these parts was Harry Truman, although Gerald Ford visited Lacey when he was Vice-President in 1974.
The only President to visit McCleary was Franklin Roosevelt. He drove slowly through here waving at citizens in an open car while passing through to visit the Coast. All the schoolchildren lined up to cheer, but anti-union Henry McCleary ordered his workers to stay away.
Labels:
Bezango column,
Franklin Roosevelt,
Gerald Ford,
Harry S Truman,
Henry McCleary,
Lacey,
McCleary,
Olympia,
Olympia Power and Light,
Rutherford B. Hayes,
William T. Sherman
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Phone photo 407
Originally known as the Barnes Bank Building when it was built in 1869, this is possibly the oldest commercial structure in downtown Olympia, Washington. It was constructed with bricks produced by the factory of colorful local pioneer William Billings. This is probably the only remaining business building in Oly that was around when President Hayes paid a visit here in 1880. In fact, the President and his crew (including General Sherman) lodged a stone's throw from this spot in what is now an ugly parking lot.
To the left of the photo is the Joseph Wohleb designed HQ for the Daily Olympian in 1930. That paper moved to the Eastside ca. 1970. At about that same time, the furniture store that stood on the right of the photo (now a parking lot) burned in a spectacular fire. I remember watching it from the vantage point of my Grandmother's home on the Eastside ridge.
Labels:
Barnes Bank Building,
Daily Olympian,
Joseph Wohleb,
Olympia,
Phone photo,
Rutherford B. Hayes,
William Billings,
William T. Sherman
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