1800 New Hampshire's at-large congressional district special election
A special election was held in New Hampshire's at-large congressional district on August 25, 1800 to fill a vacancy left by William Gordon (F) resigning to accept an appointment as New Hampshire Attorney General on June 12, 1800.
Election results[]
New Hampshire electoral law required a majority for election, which was not met on the first ballot, requiring a run-off election on October 27, 1800
Candidate | Party | First ballot[1] | Runoff[2] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | Percent | Votes | Percent | ||
Samuel Tenney | Federalist | 2,921 | 45.6% | 1,818 | 70.8% |
George Upham | Federalist | 1,377 | 21.5% | 750 | 29.2% |
John Goddard | Democratic-Republican | 835 | 13.0% | ||
Joseph Badger | Democratic-Republican | 699 | 10.9% | ||
Thomas Cogswell | Democratic-Republican | 296 | 4.6% | ||
Joseph Peirce | Federalist | 278 | 4.3% |
Tenney took his seat on December 8, 1800.
See also[]
- List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
- United States House of Representatives election in New Hampshire, 1800
- United States House of Representatives elections, 1800 and 1801
References[]
Categories:
- Special elections to the 6th United States Congress
- United States House of Representatives special elections
- United States House of Representatives elections in New Hampshire
- 1800 United States House of Representatives elections
- 1800 New Hampshire elections
- New Hampshire special elections
- New Hampshire election stubs