1810 United States gubernatorial elections

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1810 United States gubernatorial elections
Flag of the United States (1795-1818).svg
 1809March 13, 1810 – December 8, 18101811 

13 state governorships
 Majority partyMinority party
 
Party Democratic-Republican Federalist
Last election13 governorships4 governorships
Seats before134
Seats won121
Seats after161
Seat changeIncrease2.svg3Decrease2.svg3
Seats up94

United States gubernatorial elections were held in 1810, in 13 states, concurrent with the House and Senate elections.

Contents

Eight governors were elected by popular vote and five were elected by state legislatures.

Results

StateElection dateIncumbentPartyStatusOpposing candidates
Connecticut 9 April 1810 [1] [2] [lower-alpha 1] John Treadwell (acting)FederalistRe-elected after legislative election, 10,265 (49.50%) [lower-alpha 2] Asa Spalding (Democratic-Republican), 7,185 (34.65%)
Roger Griswold (Federalist), 3,110 (15.00%)
Scattering 177 (0.85%)
[3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
(Legislative election)
(held, 11 May 1810) [9] [10]
John Treadwell, 121 votes
Asa Spalding, 42 votes
Roger Griswold, 29 votes
[7] [11] [12]
Delaware 2 October 1810 George Truitt FederalistTerm-limited, Democratic-Republican victory Joseph Haslet (Democratic-Republican) 3,664 (50.49%)
Daniel Rodney (Federalist), 3,593 (49.51%)
[13] [14] [15] [6] [16] [17]
Maryland
(election by legislature)
19 November 1810 Edward Lloyd Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 55 votes John Eager Howard (Federalist), 3 votes
Levin Winder (Federalist), 3 votes
Charles Carroll of Carrollton (Federalist), 1 vote
[18] [19] [20] [21]
Massachusetts 5 April 1810 Christopher Gore FederalistDefeated, 44,079 (48.54%) Elbridge Gerry (Democratic-Republican), 46,541 (51.25%)
Scattering 193 (0.21%)
[22] [23] [24] [6] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29]
New Hampshire 13 March 1810 Jeremiah Smith FederalistDefeated, 15,166 (48.03%) John Langdon (Democratic-Republican), 16,325 (51.70%)
Scattering 84 (0.27%)
[30] [31] [32] [6] [33] [34] [35] [36]
New Jersey
(election by legislature)
26 October 1810 Joseph Bloomfield Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, unopposed William Sanford Pennington (Democratic-Republican), withdrew
William Rossell (Democratic-Republican), withdrew
[37] [38] [39] [40]
New York 24-26 April 1810 [lower-alpha 3] Daniel D. Tompkins Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 43,094 (54.09%) Jonas Platt (Federalist) [lower-alpha 4] , 36,484 (45.80%)
Scattering 86 (0.11%)
[41] [42] [43] [6] [44] [45] [46]
North Carolina
(election by legislature)
1 December 1810 [47] David Stone Democratic-RepublicanDefeated, Democratic-Republican victory(Fourth ballot)
Benjamin Smith (Democratic-Republican), 97 votes
David Stone (Democratic-Republican), 84 votes
Blank, 6 votes
[48] [49] [50] [51] [52] [53]
Ohio 9 October 1810 Samuel Huntington Democratic-RepublicanRetired, Democratic-Republican victory Return J. Meigs Jr. (Democratic-Republican), [lower-alpha 5] 9,924 (56.21%) [lower-alpha 6]
Thomas Worthington (Democratic-Republican), 7,731 (43.79%)
[56] [57] [58] [6] [59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] [67]
Rhode Island 18 April 1810 [68] [69] James Fenner Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected. Returns lost.
[70] [71] [72] [6] [73] [74]
South Carolina
(election by legislature)
8 December 1810 [75] [76] John Drayton Democratic-RepublicanTerm-limited, Democratic-Republican victory Henry Middleton (Democratic-Republican), 102 votes
Joseph Alston (Democratic-Republican), 53 votes
[77] [78] [79]
Vermont 4 September 1810 Jonas Galusha Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 13,810 (57.33%) Isaac Tichenor (Federalist), 9,918 (41.17%) [lower-alpha 7]
Scattering 361 (1.50%)
[80] [81] [82] [6] [83] [84] [85] [86] [87]
Virginia
(election by legislature)
7 December 1810 [88] John Tyler Sr. Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, without opposition
[89] [90] [91]

See also

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References

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Notes

  1. Glashan records this election as taking place on 12 April.
  2. Since no candidate received a majority of the vote, the state legislature decided the election.
  3. Glashan records this election as taking place on 23-25 April.
  4. Congressional Quarterly and Kallenbach and Kallenbach describe Platt as an Anti-Clintonian.
  5. Meigs had the support of the Federalist Party. [54] [55]
  6. A New Nation Votes records that the official certified vote was Meigs 9,596, Worthington 7,702, but no other source agrees with this.
  7. Some sources give Tichenor's total as 9,912.

Bibliography