1788 and 1789 United States House of Representatives elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1788 and 1789 United States House of Representatives elections

November 24, 1788 – March 5, 1789[a] 1790 & 1791 →

All 59 seats in the United States House of Representatives[a]
30 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
  Frederick Muhlenberg.jpg James Madison by Gilbert Stuart 1804.jpeg
Leader Frederick Muhlenberg James Madison
Party Pro-Administration Anti-Administration
Leader's seat Pennsylvania at-large Virginia 5th
Seats won 37[b] 28[b]

First Congressional Election 1788.svg
Results:[b]
     Pro-Administration gain      Anti-Administration gain
     Undistricted

Speaker before election

None (This was the first U.S. House of Representatives election)

Elected Speaker

Frederick Muhlenberg
Pro-Administration

Elections to the United States House of Representatives for the 1st Congress were held in 1788 and 1789, coinciding with the election of George Washington as first President of the United States. The dates and methods of election were set by the states. Actual political parties did not yet exist, but new members of Congress were informally categorized as either "pro-Administration" (i.e., pro-Washington and pro-Hamilton) or "anti-Administration".

The first session of the first House of Representatives came to order in Federal Hall, New York City on March 4, 1789, with only thirteen members present. The requisite quorum (thirty members out of fifty-nine) was not present until April 1, 1789. The first order of business was the election of a Speaker of the House. On the first ballot, Frederick Muhlenberg was elected Speaker by a majority of votes. The business of the first session was largely devoted to legislative procedure rather than policy.

Election summaries[]

In the 18th and much of the 19th century, each state set its own date for elections. In many years, elections were even held after the legal start of the Congress, although typically before the start of the first session. In the elections for the 1st Congress, five states held elections in 1788, electing a total of 29 Representatives, and six held elections in 1789, electing a total of 30 Representatives. Two states, North Carolina and Rhode Island, did not ratify the Constitution until November 21, 1789 and May 29, 1790 respectively, well after the Congress had met for the first time, and, consequently, elected representatives late, in 1790, leaving North Carolina unrepresented in the 1st session and Rhode Island in the 1st and 2nd sessions of a total of 3 sessions.

State Type Date ↑ Total
seats
Anti-
Administration
Pro-
Administration
General elections
South Carolina Districts November 24–25, 1788 5 3 2
Pennsylvania At-large November 26, 1788 8 2 6
New Hampshire At-large December 15, 1788[c] 3 1 2
Massachusetts Districts December 18, 1788[d] 8 2 6
Connecticut At-large December 22, 1788 5 0 5
Delaware At-large January 7, 1789 1 0 1
Maryland At-large / Districts[e] January 7–11, 1789 6 4 2
Virginia Districts February 2, 1789 10 7 3
Georgia At-large / Districts[f] February 9, 1789 3 3 0
New Jersey At-large February 11, 1789 4 0 4
New York Districts March 3–5, 1789 6 3 3
Late elections
North Carolina Districts February 1790 5 2 3
Rhode Island At-large August 31, 1790 1 0 1
Total[b] 65 27
41.5%
38
58.5%
House seats
Pro-Admin
56.92%
Anti-Admin
43.08%

House composition[]

Beginning of the 1st Congress[]

     
  A A A A A A A A A
A A A A A A A A A A
A A A A A A P P P P
Majority → P
P P P P P P P P P P
P P P P P P P P P P
  P P P P P P P P P
     

End of the 1st Congress (1791)[]

Six seats were filled late because North Carolina and Rhode Island ratified the Constitution late. One pro-Administration representative resigned and the seat remained open at the end of the Congress.

A A
A A A A A A A A A A
A A A A A A A A A A
A A A A A A V P P P
Majority → P
P P P P P P P P P P
P P P P P P P P P P
P P P P P P P P P P
P P
Key:
A = Anti-Administration
P = Pro-Administration
V = Vacant

Special election[]

This was the first special election to the United States House of Representatives.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
New Hampshire at-large Benjamin West Pro-Administration 1788/89 Member-elect (see below) chose not to serve.
New member elected June 22, 1789.
Pro-Administration hold.
  • Green tickY Abiel Foster (Pro-Administration) 1,804 votes 58.3%
  • John Samuel Sherburne (Anti-Administration) 538 votes 17.4%
  • James Sheate[g] 190 votes 6.1%
  • Elisha Payne [g] 139 votes 4.5%
  • Joshua Atherton[g] 112 votes 3.6%
  • Nathaniel Peabody[g] 86 votes 2.9%
  • Simeon Olcott (Pro-Administration) 76 votes 2.5%[1]

Connecticut[]

District Result Candidates
Connecticut at-large
5 seats on a general ticket
Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Benjamin Huntington[h] (Pro-Administration)
  • Green tickY Roger Sherman (Pro-Administration)
  • Green tickY Jonathan Sturges (Pro-Administration)
  • Green tickY Jonathan Trumbull Jr. (Pro-Administration)
  • Green tickY Jeremiah Wadsworth (Pro-Administration)
  • John Chester
  • Jesse Root
  • Jedediah Strong
  • Erastus Wolcott
  • James Hillhouse (Pro-Administration)
  • John Treadwell
  • Stephen Mix Mitchell (Pro-Administration)
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win

Delaware[]

Delaware had a single representative. The election was held January 7, 1789.[2] Under the law at the time, each voter cast two votes for representative, at least one of whom had to be from a different county.[2]

District Result Candidates
Delaware at-large Pro-Administration win.
  • Green tickY John Vining (Pro-Administration) 898 votes (43.6%)
  • (Anti-Administration) 491 votes (23.9%)
  • Gunning Bedford Jr. 308 votes (15.0%)
  • Joshua Clayton (Pro-Administration) 272 votes (13.2%)
  • 90 votes (4.4%)[2]

Georgia[]

Georgia had a mixed at-large/district system for the 1st Congress. Representatives were elected at-large, but for three district-based seats.

District Result Candidates
Georgia 1
"Lower district"
Anti-Administration win
Georgia 2
"Middle district"
Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Abraham Baldwin (Anti-Administration) 69.0%
  • Henry Osborne 15.2%
  • 10.4%
  • Isaac Briggs 2.7%
  • William Houstoun 1.5%
  • James Jackson 0.6%
  • Others 0.5%
Georgia 3
"Upper district"
Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY George Mathews (Anti-Administration) 96.5%
  • Henry Osborne 2.0%
  • Anthony Wayne 0.7%
  • 0.4%
  • Others 0.7%

Maryland[]

Maryland had a mixed district/at-large system similar to Georgia's. Under Maryland law, "candidates were elected at-large but had to be residents of a specific district with the statewide vote determining winners from each district."[3]

District Result Candidates
Maryland 1 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Michael J. Stone (Anti-Administration) 65.4%
  • George Dent (Pro-Administration) 34.6%
Maryland 2 Anti-Administration win
Maryland 3 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Benjamin Contee (Anti-Administration) 70.1%
  • John F. Mercer (Anti-Administration) 29.9%
Maryland 4 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY William Smith (Anti-Administration) 69.1%
  • Samuel Sterett (Anti-Administration) 30.9%
Maryland 5 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY George Gale (Pro-Administration) 70.7%
  • John Done 23.8%
  • William V. Murray (Pro-Administration) 5.5%
Maryland 6 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Daniel Carroll (Pro-Administration) 74.8%
  • 25.2%

Massachusetts[]

Massachusetts House Elections, December 18, 1788 – May 11, 1789
Party Candidate Votes %
Pro-Administration 6 elected 6,232 54.4
Anti-Administration 2 elected 5,228 45.6

Massachusetts required a majority vote, necessitating additional votes if no one won a majority. This was necessary in 4 of the districts.

In the fourth district,

The first election in the district was in part a reflection of the rivalry between Hampshire and Berkshire counties. Berkshire was the less populous county, but four of the six candidates who received the most votes - Theodore Sedgwick, William Whiting, Thompson J. Skinner, and William Williams - were residents of the county. The two Hampshire candidates were Samuel Lyman and John Worthington. The first election did not reflect the fact that the two counties were centers of agrarian discontent and of support for Shays's Rebellion. Nor did it reflect the fact that in the state Convention the Hampshire delegates voted 32 to 19 and the Berkshire delegates voted 16 to 6 against ratification of the Constitution. Only Whiting was regarded as a Shaysite and an Anti-Federalist, while the other five men were Federalists - and two of these - Worthington and Williams - had been virtual if not actual Loyalists during the Revolution. The issue of amendments to the Constitution was not raised during the first election in the district, but it became so important in the ensuing elections that Theodore Sedgwick, who opposed amendments, publicly promised to support them before the fifth election, which he won.

— The Documentary History of the First Federal Elections: 1788-1790. I. p. 603.

In the fifth district,

The only problem was whether Partridge could retain his post of sheriff of Plymouth County and accept a seat in Congress, as he had done in 1779-1782 and 1783-1785. He received a certificate from Governor Hancock on 10 January notifying him of his election. Partridge wrote three letters to the Governor. In the first, which he apparently did not send, he refused the appointment. He accepted in the two following letters but explained that he would not take the seat if he had to give up his post as sheriff (12, 20 January, 23 February). The issue of whether or not a state officeholder could retain a state post and still serve in Congress had been and would be raised in other states. On 12 February Governor Hancock asked his Council for advice about Partridge and about George Leonard, judge of probate in Bristol County, who had been elected to Congress from the Bristol-Dukes-Nantucket District. The Council replied in writing the same day that it was 'inexpedient' for a man to hold the office of judge of probate and a seat in Congress, but that it did not find anything in the state constitution which prevented a sheriff from also being a member of Congress. The Council advised, however, that it would be inexpedient to introduce the practice of sheriffs being absent for long periods although Partridge 'may at present be indulged' and take a seat in Congress 'consistently with the safety of that county' (Council Proceedings, Thursday 12 February, M-Ar). The next day Governor Hancock sent the Council's written reply to the legislature and asked for its advice (13 February, Miscellaneous Legislative Documents, House Files, M-Ar). The two houses appointed a joint committee which wrote a report that was approved and sent to the Governor on Monday, 16 February. The legislature declared that if George Leonard continued to hold the office of judge of probate and also took a seat on Congress, any future legislature would address the Governor authorizing him and the Council to appoint another person judge of probate in Bristol County. But the legislature refused to give advice about George Partridge. It pointed out that sheriffs served during the pleasure of the governor, and (with the advice of his Council) were removable by him at any time. Sheriffs were not removable in any other way except through impeachment by the House and a trial before and conviction by the Senate. Therefore the House and Senate declared that intervention by the legislature was 'neither necessary or proper; and from the conduct and advice of your Council, they see no reason to doubt the wisdom of that constitutional provision' (House and Senate Proceedings, 13, 14, 16 February).

— The Documentary History of the First Federal Elections: 1788-1790. I. pp. 575–76.

In the eighth district,

It was evident before the elections were completed in Worcester District that a candidate who did not support amendments to the Constitution had no chance of winning. The three leading candidates in the three Worcester District elections were Jonathan Grout, Timothy Paine, and Artemas Ward. Grout, a local leader during the Revolution, had voted against ratification of the Constitution and in 1788 was a member of the legislature. Paine, a prominent officeholder in the county for two decades before the Revolution, had been appointed to the Royal Council in 1774. Unlike most 'mandamus councillors,' he did not become a Loyalist. By 1788 he had regained much of his influence in the town of Worcester. Ward had been appointed commanding general of Massachusetts troops after Lexington and Concord, he remained in charge until George Washington was appointed commander-in-chief of the Continental Army in July 1775. The popular Ward resigned his commission in April 1776 and returned to state politics. The past records of these three men did not become a public issue until shortly before the third and final election.
...
AS in the two previous election, the two Worcester newspapers, with one exception, printed nothing until their last issues before the election on 2 March. The exception consisted of two items (one of which supported Timothy Paine) in the Massachusetts Spy on 19 February. Then on 26 February the Massachusetts Spy published five articles. Two of them supported Jonathan Grout, one supported Artemas Ward, one backed Timothy Paine, and the fifth did not mention any names. On the same day the American Herald published four items. One supported Grout, one opposed Paine because he had been a mandamus councillor, and the other two items urged that he be elected. The issue of Paine's appointment as a mandamus councillor by the British government in 1774 had been brought up for the first time by the Boston Independent Chronicle, 12 February, and not by the Worcester newspapers. Despite the ambivalence of the newspapers, there was a considerable increase of interest, for the vote almost doubled over the first election on 18 December 1788: from 1,886 to 3,484. Grout was elected Representative by a decisive majority. Artemas Ward, who ran a poor third in each of the three elections, finally defeated Grout in the election to the second Congress in 1791. Paine was elected to the state House of Representatives in 1789.

— The Documentary History of the First Federal Elections: 1788-1790. I. pp. 601, 676.
District Result Candidates[i]
Massachusetts 1 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Fisher Ames (Pro-Administration) 818 votes (50.7%)
  • Samuel Adams (Anti-Administration) 521 votes (32.3%)
  • Samuel A. Otis 70 votes (4.3%)
  • 45 votes (2.8%)
  • 43 votes (2.7%)
  • John Adams (Pro-Administration) 30 votes (1.9%)
  • Others 86 votes (5.3%)
Massachusetts 2 Pro-Administration win First ballot (December 18, 1788):
  • Benjamin Goodhue (Pro-Administration) 567 votes (38.6%)
  • Jonathan Jackson (Pro-Administration) 392 votes (26.6%)
  • 295 votes (20.1%)
  • Samuel Holten 202 votes (13.8%)
  • Scattering: 13 votes

Second ballot (January 29, 1789):
  • Green tickY Benjamin Goodhue (Pro-Administration) 1,491 votes (67.0%)
  • Jonathan Jackson (Pro-Administration) 724 votes (33.0%)
  • Scattering 7 votes
Massachusetts 3 Anti-Administration win First ballot (December 18, 1788):
  • Nathaniel Gorham 536 votes (36.4%)
  • Elbridge Gerry (Anti-Administration) 384 votes (26.1%)
  • Joseph Bradley Varnum (Anti-Administration) 254 votes (17.2%)
  • John Brooks (Pro-Administration) 106 votes (7.2%)
  • James Winthrop 50 votes (3.4%)
  • Loammi Baldwin 43 votes (2.9%)
  • Scattering 100 votes (4.4%)

Second ballot (January 29, 1789):
  • Green tickY Elbridge Gerry (Anti-Administration) 1,140 votes (61.1%)
  • Joseph Bradley Varnum (Anti-Administration) 366 votes (19.6%)
  • 205 votes (11.0%)
  • James Winthrop (Anti-Administration) 82 votes (4.4%)
  • 52 votes (2.8%)
  • Others 22 votes (1.2%)
Massachusetts 4 Pro-Administration win First ballot (December 18, 1788):
  • Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration) 835 votes (35.6%)
  • Samuel Lyman (Pro-Administration) 330 votes (14.7%)
  • 302 votes (13.4%)
  • Thomson J. Skinner (Anti-Administration) 256 votes (10.4%)
  • William Williams 181 votes (8.7%)
  • 178 votes (7.3%)
  • John Bacon 93 votes (4.1%)

Second ballot (January 29, 1789):
  • Samuel Lyman (Pro-Administration) 718 votes (31.0%)
  • Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration) 736 votes (31.7%)
  • 578 votes (24.9%)
  • Thomson J. Skinner (Anti-Administration) 248 votes (10.7%)
  • John Bacon (Anti-Administration) 39 votes (1.7%)

Third ballot: (March 2, 1789)
  • Samuel Lyman (Pro-Administration) 1,847 votes (32.9%)
  • Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration) 1,523 votes (30.6%)
  • 1,109 votes (22.9%)
  • Thomson J. Skinner (Anti-Administration) 648 votes (12.8%)

Fourth ballot (March 30, 1789):
  • Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration) 1,649 votes (47.0%)
  • Samuel Lyman (Pro-Administration) 1,382 votes (39.3%)
  • 468 votes (11.7%)
  • Scattering: 64 votes

Fifth ballot (May 11, 1789):
  • Green tickY Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration) 2,155 votes (50.2%)
  • Samuel Lyman (Pro-Administration) 2,138 votes (47.8%)
  • John Bacon 67 votes (1.3%)
  • Scattering: 27 votes
Massachusetts 5 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY George Partridge (Pro-Administration) 501 votes (90.4%)
  • Others 53 votes (9.6%)
Massachusetts 6 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY George Thatcher (Pro-Administration) 588 votes (62.1%)
  • 182 votes (19.2%)
  • 73 votes (7.7%)
  • Scattering 105 votes
Massachusetts 7 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY George Leonard (Pro-Administration) 710 votes (54.0%)
  • Phanuel Bishop (Anti-Administration) 342 votes (26.0%)
  • David Cobb (Pro-Administration) 241 votes (18.3%)
  • Scattering 23 votes
Massachusetts 8 Anti-Administration win First ballot (December 18, 1788):
  • Jonathan Grout (Anti-Administration) 665 votes (35.3%)
  • Tim Paine 561 votes (29.8%)
  • Artemas Ward (Pro-Administration) 284 votes (15.1%)
  • Moses Gill 110 votes (5.8%)
  • 71 votes (3.8%)
  • 63 votes (3.3%)
  • Others 132 votes (4.9%)

Second ballot (January 29, 1789):
  • Tim Paine (Pro-Administration) 1,040 votes (45.4%)
  • Jonathan Grout 990 votes (42.1%)
  • Artemas Ward (Pro-Administration) 258 votes (11.3%)
  • Others 27 votes (1.2%)

Third ballot (March 2, 1789):
  • Green tickY Jonathan Grout (Anti-Administration) 1,968 votes (55.7%)
  • Tim Paine 1,312 votes (37.1%)
  • Artemas Ward (Pro-Administration) 256 votes (7.2%)
  • Scattering 18 votes

New Hampshire[]

New Hampshire law required a winning candidate to receive votes from a majority of voters (16.7% of votes). No candidate won such a majority on the first ballot, so a second ballot was held February 2, 1789.

District Result Candidates
New Hampshire at-large
3 seats on a general ticket
Pro-Administration win.
First place winner chose not to serve before the start of the Congress.
A special election was held June 22, 1789, see above.
First ballot (December 15, 1788):
  • Benjamin West (Pro-Administration) 15.4%
  • Samuel Livermore (Anti-Administration) 14.6%
  • Paine Wingate (Pro-Administration) 13.4%
  • Abiel Foster (Pro-Administration) 8.0%
  • John Sullivan 7.1%
  • Nicholas Gilman (Pro-Administration) 5.6%
  • Joshua Atherton 5.2%
  • Nathaniel Peabody 5.1%
  • 4.4%
  • 3.4%
  • Others 17.9%

Second ballot (February 2, 1789):
  • Green tickY Benjamin West (Pro-Administration) 33.0%
  • Green tickY Samuel Livermore (Anti-Administration) 26.2%
  • Green tickY Nicholas Gilman (Pro-Administration) 19.5%
  • Abiel Foster (Pro-Administration) 19.5%
  • John Sullivan 1.9%
Anti-Administration win.
Pro-Administration win.

New Jersey[]

District Result Candidates[i]
New Jersey at-large
4 seats on a general ticket
Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY James Schureman (Pro-Administration) 19.9%
  • Green tickY Elias Boudinot (Pro-Administration) 13.0%
  • Green tickY Lambert Cadwalader (Pro-Administration) 12.5%
  • Green tickY Thomas Sinnickson (Pro-Administration) 12.0%
  • Abraham Clark (Pro-Administration) 10.5%
  • Jonathan Dayton (Pro-Administration) 9.9%
  • 3.7%
  • 3.4%
  • Benjamin Van Cleve 2.9%
  • James Parker 2.5%
  • John Witherspoon 2.5%
  • Thomas Henderson (Pro-Administration) 1.7%
  • 1.4%
  • Josiah Hornblower 1.0%
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win

The election of all four representatives was contested, but the records that explained the precise grounds on which the election was contested have been lost due to the burning of Washington in the War of 1812. It is known to have related to questions of regularity and procedure. All four representatives' elections were ruled valid.[4]

New York[]

New York held elections to the 1st Congress on March 3 and 4, 1789. At the time, districts were unnumbered. They are retroactively numbered in this section.

District Result Candidates
New York 1 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY William Floyd (Anti-Administration) 100%
New York 2 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY John Laurance (Pro-Administration) 85.7%
  • John Broome (Anti-Administration) 13.2%
  • Philip Pell (Anti-Administration) 1.2%
New York 3 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Egbert Benson (Pro-Administration) 50.4%
  • Theodorus Bailey (Anti-Administration) 49.6%
New York 4 Anti-Administration win
New York 5 Pro-Administration win
New York 6 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (Anti-Administration) 1,456 (54.5%)
  • Abraham Ten Broeck (Pro-Administration) 1,215 (45.5%)[5]

North Carolina[]

North Carolina ratified the Constitution late and thus elected representatives to the 1st Congress in 1790.

Pennsylvania[]

Pennsylvania held elections to the 1st Congress on November 26, 1788. For this first election (and again in 1792 election for the 3rd Congress), Pennsylvania chose to elect all of its representatives on a single statewide general ticket, an attempt by the pro-Administration-majority legislature to prevent anti-Administration candidates from winning seats.

District Result Candidates[6]
Pennsylvania at-large
8 seats on a general ticket
Pro-Administration win nowrap |
  • Green tickY Frederick Muhlenberg (Pro-Administration) 7.49%
  • Green tickY Henry Wynkoop (Pro-Administration) 7.09%
  • Green tickY Thomas Hartley (Pro-Administration) 7.02%
  • Green tickY George Clymer (Pro-Administration) 6.96%
  • Green tickY Thomas Fitzsimons (Pro-Administration) 6.95%
  • Green tickY Thomas Scott (Pro-Administration) 6.94%
  • Green tickY Peter Muhlenberg (Anti-Administration) 6.38%
  • Green tickY Daniel Hiester (Anti-Administration) 6.37%
  • John Allison (Pro-Administration) 6.08%
  • Stephen Chambers (Pro-Administration) 6.06%
  • William Findley (Anti-Administration) 5.66%
  • William Irvine (Anti-Administration) 5.58%
  • Charles Pettit (Anti-Administration) 5.57%
  • William Montgomery (Anti-Administration) 5.46%
  • Blair McClenachan (Anti-Administration) 5.35%
  • (Anti-Administration) 5.03%
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Pro-Administration win
Anti-Administration win
Anti-Administration win

Rhode Island[]

Rhode Island ratified the Constitution late and thus elected representatives to the 1st Congress in 1790.

South Carolina[]

District Result Candidates[i]
South Carolina 1
Also known as the Charleston Division
Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY William L. Smith (Pro-Administration) 53.1%
  • Alexander Gillon (Anti-Administration) 31.4%
  • David Ramsay (Pro-Administration) 15.5%
South Carolina 2
Also known as the Beaufort Division
Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Aedanus Burke (Anti-Administration) 99.3%
South Carolina 3
Also known as the Georgetown Division
Pro-Administration win
South Carolina 4
Also known as the Camden Division
Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Thomas Sumter (Anti-Administration) 100.0%
South Carolina 5
Also known as the Ninety-Six Division
Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Thomas Tudor Tucker (Anti-Administration) 100%

In the 1st district, William L. Smith (Pro-Administration)'s election was contested by David Ramsay (Pro-Administration) who claimed that Smith had not been a citizen for the required 7 years at the time of his election, the House Committee on Elections ruled in Smith's favor [4]

Virginia[]

District Result Candidates
Virginia 1 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Alexander White (Pro-Administration) 100%
Virginia 2 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY John Brown (Anti-Administration)[h]
Virginia 3 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Andrew Moore (Anti-Administration)[h]
  • George Hancock (Pro-Administration)
Virginia 4 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Richard Bland Lee (Pro-Administration)[h]
Virginia 5 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY James Madison (Anti-Administration) 57.4%
  • James Monroe (Anti-Administration) 42.6%.
Virginia 6 Anti-Administration win
Virginia 7 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY John Page (Anti-Administration)[h]
  • Spencer Roane
  • Meriwether Smith
  • Arthur Lee
Virginia 8 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Josiah Parker (Anti-Administration) 48.1%
  • Thomas Mathews 39.7%
  • Isaac Avery 12.1%
Virginia 9 Anti-Administration win
  • Green tickY Theodorick Bland (Anti-Administration)[h]
  • Edward Carrington
  • Thomas Rivers
  • Thomas Stith
  • Creed Taylor
  • William Ronald
Virginia 10 Pro-Administration win
  • Green tickY Samuel Griffin (Pro-Administration)[h]
  • Benjamin Harrison

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b Not including the six seats were added by North Carolina and Rhode Island after the start of this Congress.
  2. ^ a b c d Includes late elections: North Carolina and Rhode Island ratified the United States Constitution after the 1st Congress had started to meet, and did not hold their elections for U.S. Representatives until February and August 1790, respectively.
  3. ^ New Hampshire had a majority vote requirement for election. No representatives were elected in the general election and three were returned at a subsequent trial held February 2, 1789.
  4. ^ Massachusetts had a majority vote requirement for election. Four representatives were elected in the general election and four in subsequent trials, a total of 5 trials had to be held between January 29, 1789 and May 11, 1789.
  5. ^ Maryland had six representatives elected by the whole state electorate, who had to choose one candidate from each district.
  6. ^ Georgia had three representatives elected by the whole state electorate, who had to choose one candidate from each district.
  7. ^ a b c d Party affiliation not available
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Source does not give numbers of votes.
  9. ^ a b c Only candidates with at least 1% of the vote listed.

References[]

  1. ^ "Our Campaigns - NH At-Large - Special Race - Jun 22, 1789". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c "A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825 - Delaware 1789 U.S. House of Representatives". Tufts Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  3. ^ "A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825 - Maryland 1789 U.S. House of Representatives". Tufts Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  4. ^ a b "First Congress March 4, 1789, to March 3, 1791 [membership roster]" (PDF). artandhistory.house.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 5, 2014. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  5. ^ DenBoer, Gordon, ed. (1986). The Documentary History of the First Federal Elections, 1788-1790. III. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 512. ISBN 9780299106508.
  6. ^ "1st Congress 1789-1791 At Large Election" (PDF). Wilkes University Elections Statistics Project. January 16, 2007. Retrieved January 17, 2015.

Bibliography[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""