APPENDICES
259
1856 | James Buchanan*[1] | Pa. | Dem. | 1,838,169 | 496,905 | 174 | J. C. Breckinridge*[1] | Ky. | Dem. | 174 |
John C. Fremont | Cal. | Rep. | 1,341,264 | 114 | William L. Dayton | N. J. | Rep. | 114 | ||
Millard Fillmore | N. Y. | Amer. | 874,538 | 8 | A. J. Donelson | Tenn. | Amer. | 8 | ||
1860 | Abraham Lincoln*[1] | Ill. | Rep. | 1,866,352 | 491,195 | 180 | Hannibal Hamlin*[1] | Me. | Rep. | 180 |
Stephen A. Douglas | Ill. | Dem. | 1,375,157 | 12 | H. V. Johnson | Ga. | Dem. | 12 | ||
J. C. Breckinridge | Ky. | Dem. | 845,763 | 72 | Joseph Lane | Ore. | Dem. | 72 | ||
John Bell | Tenn. | Union | 589,581 | 39 | Edward Everett | Mass. | Union | 39 | ||
1864 | Abraham Lincoln*[1] | Ill. | Rep. | 2,216,067 | 407,342 | [2]212 | Andrew Johnson*[1] | Tenn. | Rep. | 212 |
George B. McClellan | N. J. | Dem. | 1,808,725 | 21 | George H. Pendleton | O. | Dem. | 21 | ||
1868 | Ulysses S Grant*[1] | Ill. | Rep. | 3,015,071 | 305,456 | [3]214 | Schuyler Colfax*[1] | Ind. | Rep. | 214 |
Horatio Seymour | N. Y. | Dem. | 2,709,615 | 80 | F. P. Blair, Jr. | Mo. | Dem. | 80 | ||
1872 | Ulysses S Grant*[1] | Ill. | Rep. | 3,597,070 | 762,991 | 286 | Henry Wilson*[1] | Mass. | Rep. | 286 |
Horace Greeley | N. Y. | D. & L. | 2,834,079 | [4] | B. Gratz Brown | Mo. | D. & L. | 47 | ||
Charles O'Conor | N. Y. | Dem. | 29,408 | John Q. Adams | Mass. | Dem. | ||||
James Black | Pa. | Temp. | 5,608 | John Russell | Mich. | Temp. | ||||
Thomas A. Hendricks | Ind. | Dem. | 42 | George W. Julian | Ind. | Lib. | 5 | |||
B. Gratz Brown | Mo. | Dem. | 18 | A. H. Colquitt | Ga. | Dem. | 5 | |||
Charles J. Jenkins | Ga. | Dem. | 2 | John M. Palmer | Ill. | Dem. | 3 | |||
David Davis | Ill. | Ind. | 1 | T. E. Bramlette | Ky. | Dem. | 3 | |||
W. S. Groesbeck | O. | Dem. | 1 | |||||||
Willis B. Machen | Ky. | Dem. | 1 | |||||||
N. P. Banks | Mass. | Lib. | 1 | |||||||
1876 | Samuel J. Tilden | N. Y. | Dem. | 4,284,885 | 250,935 | 184 | T. A. Hendricks | Ind. | Dem. | 184 |
Rutherford B. Hayes*[1] | O. | Rep. | 4,033,950 | [5]185 | William A. Wheeler*[1] | N. Y. | Rep. | 185 | ||
Peter Cooper | N. Y. | Gre'nb. | 81,740 | Samuel F. Cary | O. | Gre'nb. | ||||
Green Clay Smith | Ky. | Proh. | 9,522 | Gideon T. Stewart | O. | Proh. | ||||
James B. Walker | Ill. | Amer. | 2,636 | D. Kirkpatrick | N. Y. | Amer. | ||||
1880 | James A. Garfield*[1] | O. | Rep. | 4,449,053 | 7,018 | 214 | Chester A. Arthur*[1] | N. Y. | Rep. | 214 |
W. S. Hancock | Pa. | Dem. | 4,442,035 | 155 | William H. English | Ind. | Dem. | 155 | ||
James B. Weaver | Iowa | Gre'nb. | 307,306 | B. J. Chambers | Tex. | Gre'nb. | ||||
Neal Dow | Me. | Proh. | 10,305 | H. A. Thompson | O. | Proh. | ||||
John W. Phelps | Vt. | Amer. | 707 | S. C. Pomeroy | Kan. | Amer. | ||||
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 The candidates starred were elected.
- ↑ Eleven Southern States, being within the belligerent territory, did not vote.
- ↑ Three Southern States disfranchised.
- ↑ Horace Greeley died after election, and Democratic electors scattered their votes.
- ↑ There being a dispute over the electoral vote of Florida, Louisiana, Oregon, and South Carolina, they were referred by Congress to an electoral commission composed of eight Republicans and seven Democrats, which, by a strict party vote, awarded 185 electoral votes to Hayes and 184 to Tilden.