A special election was held in New Jersey's at-large congressional district October 10–11, 1814 to fill a vacancy left by the death of Jacob Hufty (F) on May 20, 1814. Hufty had been elected to the short-lived 3rd district, but, as New Jersey had already switched back to an at-large district, the special election was held at-large as well.
Beginning from its inception into statehood, New Jersey elected its representatives At-large instead of from individual districts. This continued for most years until 1843, with the exception of the years 1799-1801, and 1813-1815 when they were elected in districts. After 1843, New Jersey returned to district representation. 4 at-large representatives were elected in 1789 until 1793 when a 5th representative was added. 6 seats were allocated beginning in 1803, continuing until At-large representation ceased in 1843.
Jacob Hufty was a U.S. Representative from New Jersey.
New Jersey's Third Congressional District is represented by Democrat Andy Kim.
Candidate | Party | Votes [1] | Percent |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas Bines | Democratic-Republican | 17,357 | 51.3% |
William Ewing | Federalist | 16,501 | 48.7% |
Bines took his seat on November 2, 1814 [2]
This New Jersey elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |