1792 United States House of Representatives election in Pennsylvania

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United States House of Representatives election in Pennsylvania, 1792
Flag of Pennsylvania.svg
  1791 October 9, 1792 1794  

All 13 [1] Pennsylvania seats to the United States House of Representatives
 Majority partyMinority party
 
Party Anti-Administration Pro-Administration
Last election44
Seats won85
Seat changeIncrease2.svg 4Increase2.svg 1
Popular vote246,466157,338
Percentage61.0%39.0%

An election to the United States House of Representatives was held in Pennsylvania on October 9, 1792, for the 3rd Congress.

Contents

Background

Eight representatives, 4 Pro-Administration and 4 Anti-Administration, had been elected in the previous election. In the previous election, Pennsylvania had been divided into 8 districts. Five additional seats had been apportioned to Pennsylvania after the 1790 census. All 13 seats were elected at-large, an attempt by the Pro-Administration-majority legislature of Pennsylvania to prevent the election of Anti-Administration Representatives. This backfired and an 8-5 Anti-Administration majority was elected.

Election results

All 8 incumbents ran for re-election. Seven were re-elected. There were a total of 20 candidates running for the 13 seats, 11 Anti-Administration and 9 Pro-Administration (two of the Anti-Administration candidates ran on a dual ticket but are listed here as Anti-Administration)

1792 United States House election results
Anti-Administration Pro-Administration
William Findley [2] (I)33,1588.21% John W. Kittera (I)29,8357.39%
Frederick Muhlenberg [2] (I)32,3418.01% Thomas Hartley (I)28,4937.06%
Daniel Hiester (I)32,1477.96% Thomas Fitzsimons (I)17,9974.46%
William Irvine 30,9687.67% James Armstrong 17,3124.29%
Peter Muhlenberg 21,7845.40% Thomas Scott 16,6574.13%
Andrew Gregg (I)17,3724.30% Samuel Sitgreaves 15,5883.86%
William Montgomery 17,0194.22% William Bingham 14,4823.59%
John Smilie 16,7544.15% Henry Wynkoop 14,3483.55%
Jonathan D. Sergeant 15,0963.74% Israel Jacobs (I)2,6260.65%
John Barclay 14,9533.70%
Charles Thomson 14,8743.68%

This was the last year in which Pennsylvania would elect all of its representatives at-large. In the following election, Pennsylvania would be divided up into 12 districts (including one plural district). At various times between 1873 and 1945, between 1 and 4 of Pennsylvania's Representatives were elected at-large, with the rest being elected from single-member districts.

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References

  1. 5 new seats gained in reapportionment
  2. 1 2 Also on Pro-Administration ticket