1868 United States presidential election

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1868 United States presidential election
Flag of the United States (1867-1877).svg
  1864 November 3, 1868 1872  

294 members of the Electoral College
148 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout80.9% [1] Increase2.svg 4.6 pp
  Ulysses S Grant by Brady c1870-restored (3x4 crop).jpg Hon. Horatio Seymour, N.Y - NARA - 528568 (cropped).jpg
Nominee Ulysses S. Grant Horatio Seymour
Party Republican Democratic
Home state Illinois New York
Running mate Schuyler Colfax Francis Preston Blair Jr.
Electoral vote21480
States carried268
Popular vote3,013,4212,706,829
Percentage52.7%47.3%

ElectoralCollege1868.svg
Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Grant/Colfax, blue denotes those won by Seymour/Blair, and green denotes those states that had not yet been restored to the Union and which were therefore ineligible to vote. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Andrew Johnson
National Union

Elected President

Ulysses S. Grant
Republican

The 1868 United States presidential election was the 21st quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 3, 1868. In the first election of the Reconstruction Era, Republican nominee Ulysses S. Grant defeated Horatio Seymour of the Democratic Party. It was the first presidential election to take place after the conclusion of the American Civil War and the abolition of slavery. It was the first election in which African Americans could vote in the reconstructed Southern states, in accordance with the First Reconstruction Act.

Contents

Incumbent president Andrew Johnson had succeeded to the presidency in 1865 following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, a Republican. Johnson, a War Democrat from Tennessee, had served as Lincoln's running mate in 1864 on the National Union ticket, which was designed to attract Republicans and War Democrats. Upon accession to office, Johnson clashed with the Republican Congress over Reconstruction policies and was impeached and nearly removed from office. Johnson received some support for another term at the 1868 Democratic National Convention, but, after several ballots, the convention nominated Seymour, who had formerly served as Governor of New York. The 1868 Republican National Convention unanimously nominated Grant, who had been the highest-ranking Union general at the end of the Civil War. The Democrats criticized the Republican Reconstruction policies, and "campaigned explicitly on an anti-black, pro-white platform," [2] while Republicans campaigned on Grant's popularity and the Union victory in the Civil War.

Grant decisively won the electoral vote, but his margin was narrower in the popular vote. In addition to his appeal in the North, Grant benefited from votes among the newly enfranchised freedmen in the South, while the temporary political disfranchisement of many Southern whites helped Republican margins. As three of the former Confederate states (Texas, Mississippi, and Virginia) were not yet restored to the Union, their electors could not vote in the election. This was the last time that Missouri supported the Republican candidate until 1904. This was also the last time until 1912 that the Democrats carried more electoral votes from the North (46) than from the South (34), though this was partly due to extremely exceptional circumstances involving the Reconstruction, and in 1912 the reversal occurred due to the better Democratic performance nationwide as well as the higher population of the North. This was also the last time the Republicans did better in the popular vote in the South than in the North until 1964, again due to very large majorities in reconstruction states like South Carolina and Tennessee.

Background

In the wake of the Civil War, the civil rights of former slaves was a hotly debated issue in the Union. Grant supported the Reconstruction plans of the Radical Republicans in Congress, which favored the 14th Amendment, with full citizenship and civil rights for freedmen, including suffrage (the right to vote) for former slaves. The Democratic platform denigrated such rights as "Negro supremacy," and demanded a restoration of states' rights, including the right of southern states to determine for themselves whether to allow suffrage for adult freedmen. The former Confederate States were determined to limit the civil rights of emancipated slaves, and supported the Democratic candidate.

Nominations

Republican Party nomination

Grant/Colfax campaign poster GrantColfax1868.png
Grant/Colfax campaign poster
1868 Republican Party ticket
Ulysses S. Grant Schuyler Colfax
for Presidentfor Vice President
Ulysses S Grant by Brady c1870-restored (cropped).jpg
Representative Schuyler Colfax.jpg
6th
Commanding General of the U.S. Army
(1864–1869)
25th
Speaker of the House
(1863–1869)
Grant-Colfax.png

By 1868, the Republicans felt strong enough to drop the Union Party label, but wanted to nominate a popular hero for their presidential candidate. General Ulysses S. Grant announced he was a Republican and was unanimously nominated on the first ballot as the party's standard-bearer at the Republican convention in Chicago, held on May 20–21, 1868. House Speaker Schuyler Colfax, a Radical Republican from Indiana, was nominated for vice president on the sixth ballot, beating out early favorite, Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio.

The Republican platform supported black suffrage as part of the 14th Amendment's promise of full citizenship for former slaves. It opposed using greenbacks to redeem U.S. bonds, encouraged immigration, endorsed full rights for naturalized citizens, and favored Radical Reconstruction as distinct from the more lenient policies of President Andrew Johnson. [3]

Democratic Party nomination

Seymour/Blair campaign poster Seymour-Blair.png
Seymour/Blair campaign poster
1868 Democratic Party ticket
Horatio Seymour Francis Preston Blair Jr.
for Presidentfor Vice President
Hon. Horatio Seymour, N.Y - NARA - 528568 (cropped).jpg
Francis P. Blair, Jr.png
18th
Governor of New York
(1853–1854 & 1863–1864)
U.S. Representative
for Missouri's 1st
(1857–1859, 1860, 1861–1862, & 1863–1864)
Campaign
SeymourBlair.png
Andrew Johnson, the incumbent president in 1868, whose term expired on March 4, 1869 President Andrew Johnson.jpg
Andrew Johnson, the incumbent president in 1868, whose term expired on March 4, 1869
Democratic candidates:

The Democratic National Convention was held in New York City on July 4–9, 1868. The front-runner in the early balloting was George H. Pendleton (1864 Democratic vice presidential nominee), who led on the first 15 ballots, followed in varying order by President Johnson, Winfield Scott Hancock, Sanford Church, Asa Packer, Joel Parker, James E. English, James Rood Doolittle, and Thomas A. Hendricks. The unpopular Johnson, having narrowly survived impeachment, won 65 votes on the first ballot, less than one-third of the total necessary for nomination, and thus lost his bid for election as president in his own right.

Meanwhile, the convention chairman Horatio Seymour, former governor of New York, received nine votes on the fourth ballot from the state of North Carolina. This unexpected move caused "loud and enthusiastic cheering," but Seymour refused, saying,

I must not be nominated by this Convention, as I could not accept the nomination if tendered. My own inclination prompted me to decline at the outset; my honor compels me to do so now. It is impossible, consistently with my position, to allow my name to be mentioned in this Convention against my protest. The clerk will proceed with the call. [4]

By the seventh ballot Pendleton and Hendricks had emerged as the two front-runners, with Hancock the only other candidate with much support by this point. After numerous indecisive ballots, the names of John T. Hoffman, Francis P. Blair, and Stephen Johnson Field were placed in nomination, but none of these candidates gained substantial support.

For 21 ballots, the opposing candidates battled it out: the East battling the West for control, the conservatives battling the radicals. Pendleton's support collapsed after the 15th ballot, but went to Hancock rather than Hendricks, leaving the convention still deadlocked. The two leading candidates were determined that the other should not receive the presidential nomination; because of the two-thirds rule of the convention, a compromise candidate was needed. Seymour still hoped it would be Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, but on the 22nd ballot, the chairman of the Ohio delegation announced, "at the unanimous request and demand of the delegation I place Horatio Seymour in nomination with 21 votes—against his inclination, but no longer against his honor."

Seymour had to wait for the rousing cheers to die down before he could address the delegates and decline.

I have no terms in which to tell of my regret that my name has been brought before this convention. God knows that my life and all that I value most in life I would give for the good of my country, which I believe to be identified with that of the Democratic party …

"Take the nomination, then!" cried someone from the floor.

... but when I said that I could not be a candidate, I mean it! I could not receive the nomination without placing not only myself but the Democratic party in a false position. God bless you for your kindness to me, but your candidate I cannot be. [5]

Seymour left the platform to cool off and rest. No sooner had he left the hall than the Ohio chairman cried that his delegation would not accept Seymour's declination; Utah's chairman rose to say that Seymour was the man they had to have. While Seymour was waiting in the vestibule, the convention nominated him for president unanimously.

Exhausted, the delegates unanimously nominated General Francis Preston Blair, Jr., for vice president on the first ballot after John A. McClernand, Augustus C. Dodge, and Thomas Ewing, Jr., withdrew their names from consideration. Blair's nomination reflected a desire to balance the ticket east and west as well as north and south. [6]

Blair had worked hard for the Democratic vice presidential nomination and accepted second place on the ticket, finding himself in controversy. [7] He had gained attention for an inflammatory letter addressed to Colonel James O. Broadhead, dated a few days before the convention met, in which he wrote that the "real and only issue in this contest was the overthrow of Reconstruction, as the radical Republicans had forced it in the South." [8]

General election

Campaign

Republican campaign poster, created by superimposing a portrait of Grant onto the platform of the Republican Party Let Us Have Peace.jpg
Republican campaign poster, created by superimposing a portrait of Grant onto the platform of the Republican Party

The 1868 campaign of Horatio Seymour versus Ulysses S. Grant was conducted vigorously, being fought out largely on the question of how Reconstruction should be conducted.

Seymour's campaign was marked by pronounced appeals to racism with repeated attempts to brand General Grant as the "Nigger" candidate and Seymour as the "White Man's" candidate. [9] Grant's antisemitic General Order No. 11 during the Civil War became a campaign issue. He apologized in a letter for the controversial order, stating "I have no prejudice against sect or race, but want each individual to be judged by his own merit. Order No. 11 does not sustain this statement, I admit, but then I do not sustain that order. It would never have been issued if it had not been telegraphed the moment it was penned and without reflection." In his army days he had traded at a local store operated by the Seligman brothers, two Jewish merchants who became Grant's lifelong friends. They became wealthy bankers who donated substantially to Grant's presidential campaign. [10]

Grant/Colfax humorous campaign card Card1868USElectionGrantAndColfaxTanners.jpg
Grant/Colfax humorous campaign card

Grant took no part in the campaign and made no promises. The Republican campaign theme, "Let us have peace," was taken from his letter of acceptance. After four years of civil war, three years of wrangling over Reconstruction, and the attempted impeachment of a president, the nation craved the peace Grant pledged to achieve.

Seymour/Blair campaign photograph SeymourBlair1868.png
Seymour/Blair campaign photograph

Seymour answered none of the charges made against him, but made a few key speeches. Some newspapers exaggerated his faults. As governor, Seymour had sent troops to Gettysburg, but some press tried to portray him as disloyal to the Union. The New York Tribune led the cartoon campaign with the picture of Seymour standing on the steps of the City Hall calling a mob of New York draft rioters "my friends." The Hartford Post called him "almost as much of a corpse" as ex-President James Buchanan, who had just died. Additionally, Republicans alleged that insanity ran through the Seymour family, citing as evidence the suicide of his father.

Blair went on a national speaking tour in which he framed the contest with Ulysses S. Grant and the pro-Reconstruction Republicans in stark racial terms, warning of the rule of "a semi-barbarous race of blacks who are worshipers of fetishes and poligamists" and wanted to "subject the white women to their unbridled lust." Republicans advised Americans not to vote for Seymour, as Blair might succeed him. [11]

Northern and Southern Democratic Sheet Music

Blair had a reputation for outspokenness and his campaign speeches in 1868 attacked Radical Republicans. [12] Samuel J. Tilden, a member of the national committee, asked Blair to confine his campaigning to Missouri and Illinois for fear he "would hurt the ticket" because of his stance on Reconstruction. [13]

Seymour, who had not taken an active role in the campaign to this point, went into the canvass, seeking to steer the campaign away from the harshness of Blair's attacks on Radical Reconstruction. Seymour emphasized his idea that change in the South should be accomplished at the state level, without national interference. The Democrats campaigned for immediate restoration of all states, the "regulation of the elective franchise in the states by their citizens", and amnesty for past political offenses, [14] while State civil authority should take precedence over military action. The president and the Supreme Court should be respected rather than attacked, as he claimed the Republicans had done. The Democrats would be careful to reorder national priorities. [15]

Results

Horatio Seymour polled 2,708,744 votes and Grant 3,013,650.

The closeness of the popular vote surprised the political elite at the time. [16] Republican Representative James G. Blaine called the slender popular majority for Grant "a very startling fact." [17] Blaine, an acute judge of popular sentiment, was at a loss to explain the size of the Democratic vote. [18] Ethnic Irish Catholic and other immigrants had been settling in New York for nearly a quarter century. The narrow margins by which Seymour lost several of the northern states like Indiana, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania, and the effects of new black votes in the South provoked the suspicion that a majority of white men voted for Seymour. [19]

Democrats did not fare well in most of the South, where newly freed African Americans voted in large numbers for Grant. Republicans carried every southern state except Georgia and Louisiana, where violence by the Ku Klux Klan and Knights of the White Camelia and fraud delivered Democratic majorities. [20]

Along the border, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware went overwhelmingly Democratic; in Kentucky's case influenced by hostility toward the Radical Reconstructionists, which had led to the state's first postwar government being almost entirely composed of former Confederates. [21] No Democratic presidential candidate before or since has attained a higher percentage of the vote in Kentucky [22] or Maryland, [23] where hostility toward black suffrage was very widespread. [24] As for Delaware, [25] only the Democratic tickets of Johnson/Humphrey in 1964 (which was elected with the largest percentage of the popular vote since 1824) and Obama/Biden in 2008 (which had the first Delawarean on a national ticket) carried the state with a larger percentage of the vote.

Two border states, Missouri and West Virginia, both under Republican control, gave their electoral votes to Grant. [26] Seymour narrowly carried his home state of New York, but Blair, largely because of the Radicals' registry system, failed to carry Missouri. The Missouri Democrat exulted: "General Blair is beaten in his ward, his city, his county and his State." [27] In West Virginia, former Confederates were temporarily forbidden from voting or holding public office. About 15,000 to 25,000 white residents were disfranchised as a result. [28]

Of the 1,708 counties making returns, Grant won 991 (58.02%) and Seymour 713 (41.74%). Four counties (0.23%) split evenly between Grant and Seymour. Hence the Democrats, even with all the burdens of the war, still carried only 278 fewer counties than the Republicans. That cemented a solid party comeback at the grassroots level that had begun in local elections in 1867. [29] 7% of counties in northern states voted for a different party from the 1864 election. [30]

The 1868 election is the only election since the Civil War in which the two major party candidates won over 99.9% of the vote. [31] Out of a total of over 5.7 million votes, just 46 ballots were cast for anyone other than Grant and Seymour. [32]

That was the last election in which the Republicans won Tennessee until 1920, the last in which the Democrats won Oregon until 1912, and the last in which the Republicans won Missouri until 1904.

That Grant lost New York to Seymour by 10,000 votes was a source of shame and anger to Republicans. Seymour's victory in New York was made the subject of a federal investigation. On November 4, Horace Greeley spoke at the Union League Club. The ULC promptly petitioned Congress to look into the state vote. The petition was presented to the House of Representatives on December 14 and accepted by a vote of 134–35 (52 abstained). Speaker of the House Schuyler Colfax, the Republican candidate for vice president, appointed a committee of seven: five Republicans and two Democrats. The committee was most likely created because the Republicans could not lose New York without a protest. It reported to the House of Representatives on February 23, 1869. [33] The committee decided to take no action, and Seymour retained New York's 33 electoral votes. He was willing to return to the subject as long as he lived. [17]

According to Seymour's biographer, Stewart Mitchell, the Republican Party claimed credit for saving the Union and was bound, bent, and determined to continue to rule it. [34] The margin of Grant's popular majority resulted largely from winning a high percentage of the half-million newly enfranchised men or color. [35] This strategy contrasted strongly with later years, when Republicans could not stop black disfranchisement in the former Confederate states, since they had many new and secure votes in new states in the Western United States. [36]

Popular vote
Grant
52.66%
Seymour
47.34%
Others
0.00%
Electoral vote
Grant
72.79%
Seymour
27.21%

United States Electoral College 1868.svg

Electoral results
Presidential candidatePartyHome statePopular vote(a)Electoral
vote(a)
Running mate
CountPercentageVice-presidential candidateHome stateElectoral vote(a)
Ulysses S. Grant Republican Illinois 3,013,65052.66%214 Schuyler Colfax Indiana 214
Horatio Seymour Democratic New York 2,708,74447.34%80 Francis Preston Blair Jr. Missouri 80
Other46<0.01%Other
Total5,722,440100%294294
Needed to win148148

Source (Popular Vote):Leip, David. "1868 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 27, 2005.Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration . Retrieved July 31, 2005.(a) Mississippi, Texas, and Virginia did not participate in the election of 1868 due to Reconstruction. In Florida, the state legislature cast its electoral vote for Grant by a vote of 40 to 9.

Geography of results

Results by state

Source: Data from Walter Dean Burnham, Presidential ballots, 1836–1892 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1955) pp 247–57. [37]

States/districts won by Seymour/Blair
States/districts won by Grant/Colfax
Ulysses S. Grant
Republican
Horatio Seymour
Democratic
MarginState Total
Stateelectoral
votes
# %electoral
votes
# %electoral
votes
# %#
Alabama 876,66751.25872,92148.753,7462.50149,594AL
Arkansas 522,11253.68519,07846.323,0347.3641,190AR
California 554,58850.24554,06849.765200.48108,656CA
Connecticut 650,78851.49647,84448.512,9442.9898,632CT
Delaware 37,61441.0010,95759.003−3,343−18.0018,571DE
Florida 33 [note 1] FL
Georgia 957,10935.73102,70764.279−45,598−28.54159,816GA
Illinois 16250,30455.6916199,11644.3151,18811.38449,420IL
Indiana 13176,55251.3913166,98048.619,5722.78343,532IN
Iowa 8120,39961.92874,04038.0846,35923.84194,439IA
Kansas 330,02768.82313,60031.1716,42737.6543,630KS
Kentucky 1139,56625.45115,88974.5511−76,323−49.10155,455KY
Louisiana 733,26329.3180,22570.697−46,962−41.38113,488LA
Maine 770,50262.41742,46037.5928,04224.82112,962ME
Maryland 730,43832.8062,35767.207−31,919−34.4092,795MD
Massachusetts 12136,37969.761259,10330.2377,27639.53195,508MA
Michigan 8128,56056.98897,06043.0231,50013.96225,620MI
Minnesota 443,72260.88428,09639.1215,62621.7671,818MN
Missouri 1186,86056.961165,62843.0421,23213.92152,488MO
Nebraska 39,77263.9135,51936.094,25327.8215,291NE
Nevada 36,48055.3935,21844.611,26210.7811,698NV
New Hampshire 537,71855.22530,57544.767,14310.4668,304NH
New Jersey 780,13149.1283,00150.887−2,870−1.76163,132NJ
New York 33419,88849.41429,88350.5933−9,995−1.18849,771NY
North Carolina 996,93953.41984,55946.5912,3806.82181,498NC
Ohio 21280,16754.0021238,62146.0041,5468.00518,788OH
Oregon 310,96149.6311,12550.373−164−0.7422,086OR
Pennsylvania 26342,28052.2026313,38247.8028,8984.40655,662PA
Rhode Island 412,99366.4946,54833.516,44532.9819,541RI
South Carolina 662,30157.93645,23742.0717,06415.86107,538SC
Tennessee 1056,62868.431026,12931.5730,49936.8682,757TN
Vermont 544,16778.57512,04521.4332,12257.1456,212VT
West Virginia 529,01558.83520,30641.178,70917.6649,321WV
Wisconsin 8108,90056.25884,70343.7524,19712.50193,603WI
TOTALS:2943,013,79052.662142,708,98047.3480304,8105.325,722,440US

States that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Close states

Red font color denotes states won by Republican Ulysses S. Grant; blue denotes those won by Democrat Horatio Seymour.

States where the margin of victory was under 1% (8 electoral votes)

  1. California 0.48% (520 votes)
  2. Oregon 0.74% (164 votes)

States where the margin of victory was under 5% (93 electoral votes)

  1. New York 1.18% (9,995 votes)
  2. New Jersey 1.76% (2,870 votes)
  3. Alabama 2.50% (3,746 votes)
  4. Indiana 2.79% (9,572 votes)
  5. Connecticut 2.98% (2,944 votes)
  6. Pennsylvania 4.41% (28,898 votes)

States where the margin of victory was under 10% (35 electoral votes)

  1. North Carolina 6.82% (12,380 votes) (tipping point state for a Grant victory)
  2. Arkansas 7.37% (3,034 votes) (tipping point state for a Seymour victory)
  3. Ohio 8.01% (41,546 votes)

Statistics

Counties with highest percent of vote (Republican)

  1. Hancock County, Tennessee 100.00%
  2. Monona County, Iowa 100.00%
  3. Ottawa County, Kansas 100.00%
  4. Jefferson County, Nebraska 100.00%
  5. McDowell County, West Virginia 100.00%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Democratic)

  1. St. Landry Parish, Louisiana 100.00%
  2. Lafayette Parish, Louisiana 100.00%
  3. Jackson Parish, Louisiana 100.00%
  4. De Soto Parish, Louisiana 100.00%
  5. Franklin Parish, Louisiana 100.00%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Other)

  1. DeKalb County, Alabama 0.70%
  2. Sullivan County, New Hampshire 0.11%
  3. Strafford County, New Hampshire 0.09%
  4. Carroll County, New Hampshire 0.02%

See also

Footnotes

  1. "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789–Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. Tali Mendelberg (2001), The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality, Princeton University Press, pg. 45–46
  3. William DeGregorio, The Complete Book of U.S. Presidents, Gramercy, 1997
  4. Irving Stone (1943), They Also Ran: The Story of the Men Who Were Defeated for the Presidency , Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Doran, pg. 280
  5. Official proceedings of the National Democratic convention, held at New York, July 4–9, 1868 (Pg. 153)
  6. William E. Parrish (1998), Frank Blair: Lincoln's Conservative, Missouri Biography Series, University of Missouri Press, pg. 254
  7. Frank Blair: Lincoln's Conservative, William E. Parrish, pg. 260
  8. Stewart Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York, Harvard University Press, 1938, p. 448
  9. NY Public Library, Schomberg Collection, badge produced in 1868, digitized 2013
  10. Jonathan D. Sarna (2012). When General Grant Expelled the Jews. Knopf Doubleday Publishing. p. 62. ISBN   9780805212334.
  11. Stewart Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York, Harvard University Press, 1938, pg. 23
  12. Mitchell (1938), Horatio Seymour, pp. 448–449
  13. William E. Parrish, Frank Blair: Lincoln's Conservative, p. 255–256
  14. Henry, Robert Selph; The Story of Reconstuction; p. 330-332 ISBN   9781568522548
  15. William E. Parrish, Frank Blair: Lincoln's Conservative, pg. 258–259
  16. Irving Stone (1943), They Also Ran, pg. 282
  17. 1 2 Stewart Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York, pg. 483
  18. Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York, pg. 443
  19. Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York, pg. 474
  20. Leonard, Elizabeth D.; Lincoln's Avengers: Justice, Revenge and Reunion after the Civil War, p. 286 ISBN   0393048683
  21. Henry; The Story of Reconstruction, pp. 250–253
  22. Counting the Votes; Kentucky Archived November 20, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  23. Counting the Votes; Maryland Archived November 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  24. Bergeron, Paul H.; Andrew Johnson's Civil War and Reconstruction; pp. 105–111 ISBN   1572337486
  25. Counting the Votes; Delaware Archived November 11, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  26. Henry; The Story of Reconstruction; p.
  27. Frank Blair: Lincoln's Conservative, William E. Parrish, pg. 259–260
  28. "A Brief History of African Americans in West Virginia," West Virginia Culture "African-Americans in West Virginia". Archived from the original on December 31, 2013. Retrieved December 7, 2015.
  29. Bergeron; Andrew Johnson's Civil War and Reconstruction; pp. 175–177
  30. Abbott 1986, p. 202.
  31. Kondik, Kyle; Coleman, J. Miles (November 12, 2020). "Notes on the State of the 2020 Election". University of Virginia.
  32. "1868 Presidential General Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.
  33. Horatio Seymour of New York, Stewart Mitchell, pg. 474–475
  34. Horatio Seymour of New York, Stewart Mitchell, pg. 484
  35. Henry, The Story of Reconstruction; pp. 345–346
  36. Valelly, Richard M.; The Two Reconstructions: The Struggle for Black Enfranchisement University of Chicago Press, 2009, pp. 134–139 ISBN   9780226845302
  37. "1868 Presidential General Election Data – National" . Retrieved May 7, 2013.

Notes

  1. Due to the status of Reconstruction, no election was held; the three electoral votes were allocated by the Florida State Legislature to Grant.

Bibliography

Primary sources

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The 1880 United States presidential election was the 24th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 1880, in which Republican nominee James A. Garfield defeated Winfield Scott Hancock of the Democratic Party. The voter turnout rate was one of the highest in the nation's history. Garfield was assassinated during his first year in office, and he was succeeded by his vice president, Chester A. Arthur.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samuel J. Tilden</span> Governor of New York from 1875 to 1876

Samuel Jones Tilden was an American politician who served as the 25th governor of New York and was the Democratic nominee in the disputed 1876 United States presidential election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liberal Republican Party (United States)</span> Political party in the United States

The Liberal Republican Party was an American political party that was organized in May 1872 to oppose the reelection of President Ulysses S. Grant and his Radical Republican supporters in the presidential election of 1872. The party emerged in Missouri under the leadership of Senator Carl Schurz and soon attracted other opponents of Grant; Liberal Republicans decried the scandals of the Grant administration and sought civil service reform. The party opposed Grant's Reconstruction policies, particularly the Enforcement Acts that destroyed the Ku Klux Klan. It lost in a landslide, and disappeared from the national stage after the 1872 election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 Republican National Convention</span> Political convention

The 1868 Republican National Convention of the Republican Party of the United States was held in Crosby's Opera House, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, on May 20 to May 21, 1868. Ulysses S. Grant won the election and became the 18th president of the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Horatio Seymour</span> 18th and 22nd Governor of New York

Horatio Seymour was an American politician. He served as Governor of New York from 1853 to 1854 and from 1863 to 1864. He was the Democratic Party nominee for president in the 1868 United States presidential election, losing to Republican Ulysses S. Grant.

The 1868 Democratic National Convention was held at the Tammany Hall headquarters building in New York City between July 4, and July 9, 1868. The first Democratic convention after the conclusion of the American Civil War, the convention was notable for the return of Democratic Party politicians from the Southern United States.

The 1864 Democratic National Convention was held at The Amphitheatre in Chicago, Illinois, United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Union Party (United States)</span> 1864–1868 Republican and Unionist political alliance

The National Union Party was the name used by the Republican Party and elements of other parties for the national ticket in the 1864 presidential election during the Civil War. Most state Republican parties did not change their name. The name was used to attract War Democrats, border state voters, and Unconditional Unionist, and Unionist Party members who might otherwise have not voted for Republicans. The National Union Party nominated incumbent Republican President Abraham Lincoln of Illinois and Democrat Andrew Johnson of Tennessee for Vice President. They won the Electoral College 212–21.

War Democrats in American politics of the 1860s were members of the Democratic Party who supported the Union and rejected the policies of the Copperheads. The War Democrats demanded a more aggressive policy toward the Confederacy and supported the policies of Republican President Abraham Lincoln when the American Civil War broke out a few months after his victory in the 1860 presidential election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 United States elections</span>

The 1868 United States elections was held on November 3, electing the members of the 41st United States Congress. The election took place during the Reconstruction Era, and many Southerners were barred from voting. However, Congress's various Reconstruction Acts required southern states to allow Black men to vote, and their voting power was significant to the elections results.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 United States presidential election in New York</span>

The 1868 United States presidential election in New York took place on November 3, 1868, as part of the 1868 United States presidential election. Voters chose 33 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samuel Tilden 1876 presidential campaign</span> Presidential campaign

The 1876 U.S. presidential election occurred at the twilight of Reconstruction and was between Republican Rutherford B. Hayes and Democrat Samuel J. Tilden. After an extremely heated election dispute, a compromise was eventually reached where Hayes would become U.S. President in exchange for the end of Reconstruction and a withdrawal of U.S. federal troops from the South.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 United States presidential election in Missouri</span> Election in Missouri

The 1868 United States presidential election in Missouri took place on November 3, 1868, as part of the 1868 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Horatio Seymour 1868 presidential campaign</span>

In 1868, the Democrats nominated former New York Governor Horatio Seymour for President and Francis Preston Blair Jr. for Vice President. The Seymour-Blair ticket ran on a platform which supported national reconciliation and states' rights, opposed Reconstruction, and opposed both Black equality and Black suffrage. Meanwhile, the Republican presidential ticket led by General Ulysses S. Grant benefited from Grant's status as a war hero and ran on a pro-Reconstruction platform. Ultimately, the Seymour-Blair ticket ended up losing to the Republican ticket of General Ulysses S. Grant and House Speaker Schuyler Colfax in the 1868 U.S. presidential election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 United States presidential election in Arkansas</span> Election in Arkansas

The 1868 United States presidential election in Arkansas took place on November 3, 1868, as part of the 1868 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1868 United States presidential election in Oregon</span> Election in Oregon

The 1868 United States presidential election in Oregon took place on November 3, 1868, as part of the 1868 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.