1805 United States gubernatorial elections

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1805 United States gubernatorial elections
Flag of the United States (1795-1818).svg
  1804 March 12, 1805 – December 7, 1805 1806  

13 state governorships
 Majority partyMinority partyThird party
 
Party Democratic-Republican Federalist Independent
Last election12 governorships5 governorships0 governorships
Seats before1250
Seats won931
Seats after1241
Seat changeSteady2.svgDecrease2.svg1Increase2.svg1
Seats up940

USgubernatorial1805.png
     Democratic-Republican gain     Democratic-Republican hold
     Federalist gain     Federalist hold
     Independent gain

United States gubernatorial elections were held in 1805, in 13 states.

Contents

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

Results

StateElection dateIncumbentPartyStatusOpposing candidates
Connecticut 11 April 1805 [lower-alpha 1] Jonathan Trumbull Jr. FederalistRe-elected, 12,700 (61.47%) [lower-alpha 2] William Hart (Democratic-Republican), 7,810 (37.80%)
Scattering 151 (0.73%)
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
Georgia
(election by legislature)
7 November 1805? [lower-alpha 3] John Milledge Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 61 votes
[10]
Maryland
(election by legislature)
11 November 1805 Robert Bowie Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, unknown number of votes
[11] [12] [13] [14]
Massachusetts 1 April 1805 Caleb Strong FederalistRe-elected, 32,988 (51.45%) [lower-alpha 4] James Sullivan (Democratic-Republican), 31,125 (48.55%) [lower-alpha 5]
[15] [16] [17] [4] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25]
New Hampshire 12 March 1805 John Taylor Gilman FederalistDefeated, 12,287 (43.20%) John Langdon (Democratic-Republican), 16,097 (56.59%)
Scattering 59 (0.21%)
[26] [27] [28] [4] [29] [30] [31] [32]
New Jersey
(election by legislature)
25 October 1805 Joseph Bloomfield Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, unanimously
[33] [34] [35] [36]
North Carolina
(election by legislature)
25 November 1805 [37] [38] James Turner Democratic-RepublicanTerm-limited, Democratic-Republican victory Nathaniel Alexander (Democratic-Republican), 108 votes
Benjamin Williams (Federalist), 66 votes [lower-alpha 6]
Joseph Taylor (Democratic-Republican), 3 votes
Little, 1 vote
More, 1 vote
Whitfield, 1 vote
[39] [40] [41] [42]
Ohio 8 October 1805 Edward Tiffin Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 4,783 (100.00%) [lower-alpha 7] [lower-alpha 8]
[51] [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66]
Pennsylvania 8 October 1805 Thomas McKean Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected as an Independent Republican, 43,644 (52.89%) Simon Snyder (Democratic-Republican), 38,483 (46.63%) [lower-alpha 9]
Scattering 395 (0.48%) [lower-alpha 10]
[67] [68] [69] [4] [70] [71] [72] [73] [74]
Rhode Island 3 April 1805 [lower-alpha 11] Arthur Fenner Democratic-Republican/Country Re-elected. Returns lost.Seth Wheaton (Federalist)
[75] [76] [77] [4] [78] [79] [80]
Tennessee 1-2 August 1805 John Sevier Democratic-RepublicanRe-elected, 10,293 (63.74%) [lower-alpha 12] Archibald Roane (Democratic-Republican), 5,855 (36.26%) [lower-alpha 13]
[81] [82] [83] [4] [84] [85] [86] [87]
Vermont 3 September 1805 Isaac Tichenor FederalistRe-elected, 8,683 (60.87%) [lower-alpha 14] Jonathan Robinson (Democratic-Republican), 5,054 (35.43%)
Scattering 527 (3.69%)
[88] [89] [90] [4] [91] [92] [93] [94] [95] [96]
Virginia
(election by legislature)
7 December 1805 [97] [lower-alpha 15] John Page Democratic-RepublicanTerm-limited, Democratic-Republican victory William H. Cabell (Democratic-Republican), 99 votes
Alexander MacRae, 90 votes
[99] [100] [101] [102]

See also

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References

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Notes

  1. Glashan records this election as taking place on 8 April.
  2. Some sources record the result as Trumbull 13,689, Hart 8,223; this includes 989 votes for Trumbull and 413 for Hart from six towns rejected by the General Assembly.
  3. Two contemporary newspapers quote a letter dated November 4 which states the election took place the previous Thursday, which would place the election on October 31. [7] [8] However, another newspaper states that the legislature did not meet until 5 November, which would suggest a date a week later. [9] An election in the first week of November would be in line with other gubernatorial elections in Georgia in the 1800s.
  4. Many sources give the result as Strong 35,204, Sullivan 33,518, Scattering 264, but these are the results given before the canvass of votes by the state legislature which rejected the votes of 62 towns. Glashan gives Sullivan's total as 33,543, and scattering votes as 239. This discrepancy depends on the allocation of 25 votes given for "James Solvan."
  5. Includes scattering votes.
  6. Some sources give Williams' total as 65. The result given here is that given in the North Carolina Legislative Papers.
  7. Most sources agree on this result, and one source states that this is the result declared in the General Assembly. [43] This result can be achieved by taking the results from Belmont, Butler, Columbiana, Fairfield, Franklin, Highland, and Ross, Greene, Jefferson, Scioto, Warren, and Washington, Gallia, and Muskingum counties only. A New Nation Votes includes returns from Adams, Athens, Clermont, Hamilton, and Montgomery counties, and records the result as Tiffin 6,321, Nathaniel Massie 171, Scattering 27. [44] It is further recorded that Tiffin received 379 votes in Trumbull County. [45]
  8. Some sources give Tiffin's total as 4,788, which is the sum of the county breakdown for the counties included in the official total. [4] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50]
  9. Some sources give Snyder's total as 38,833. This discrepancy appears to come from the transposition of the last two digits of Snyder's total, plus the scattering votes. 38,483 is the figure given in the Pennsylvania Senate Journal.
  10. The scattering votes were cast for "Samuel Snyder" in Bucks County.
  11. Glashan records this election as taking place on 17 April.
  12. A New Nation Votes states that the result per the Tennessee Senate Journal was Sevier 10,393, Roane 5,909.
  13. Dubin and OurCampaigns give Roane's total as 5,795.
  14. Various sources give slightly different results for this election. The result given here is that described by A New Nation Votes as "the officially recorded votes".
  15. Encyclopedia Virginia records this election as taking place on 6 December. [98]

Bibliography