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1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections

The 1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between August 27, 1792, and September 6, 1793. Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 3rd United States Congress convened on December 2, 1793. With the addition of the new state of Kentucky's representatives, and the congressional reapportionment based on the 1790 United States census, the size of the House increased to 105 seats.

1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections

← 1790 & 1791 August 27, 1792 – September 6, 1793 1794 & 1795 →

All 105 seats in the United States House of Representatives
53 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Frederick Muhlenberg[1] Theodore Sedgwick
Party Anti-Administration Pro-Administration
Leader's seat Pennsylvania at-large Massachusetts 2nd
Last election 30 seats 39 seats
Seats won 54 51
Seat change 24 12

Results:
     Pro-Administration hold      Pro-Administration gain
     Anti-Administration hold      Anti-Administration gain
     Undistricted

They coincided with the re-election of President George Washington. While Washington ran for president as an independent, his followers (more specifically, the supporters of Alexander Hamilton) formed the nation's first organized political party, the Federalist Party, whose members and sympathizers are identified as pro-Administration on this page. In response, followers of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison created the opposition Democratic-Republican Party, who are identified as anti-Administration on this page. The Federalists promoted urbanization, industrialization, mercantilism, centralized government, and a broad interpretation of the United States Constitution. In contrast, Democratic-Republicans supported the ideal of an agrarian republic made up of self-sufficient farmers and small, localized governments with limited power.

Despite nearly unanimous support for Washington as a presidential candidate, Jeffersonian ideas edged out Hamiltonian principles at the ballot box for congressional candidates, with the Democratic-Republicans taking 24 seats more than they had prior to the organization of their political movement. Most of the increase was due to the addition of new seats in Western regions as a result of the 1790 census. Dominated by agrarian culture, these Western territories offered strong support to Democratic-Republican congressional candidates. As a result, they secured a thin majority in the legislature.

Election summaries edit

In this period, each state fixed its own date for its congressional election as early as August 1792 (in New Hampshire and Rhode Island) and as late as September 1793 (in Kentucky). In some states, the congressional delegation was not elected until after the legal start of the Congress (on the 4th day of March in the odd-numbered year), but as the first session of Congress typically began in November or December, the elections took place before Congress actually met. The 3rd Congress first met on December 2, 1793.

These were the first elections held after reapportionment following the first census. Thirty-six new seats were added,[2] with 1 state losing 1 seat, 3 states having no change, and the remaining 11 states gaining between 1 and 9 seats. This was the first apportionment based on actual census data, the apportionment for the 1st and 2nd Congresses being set by the Constitution using estimated populations.

 
54 51
Anti-Administration Pro-Administration
State Type Date Total
seats
Anti-
Administration
Pro-Administration
Seats Change Seats Change Seats Change
General elections
New Hampshire At-large August 27, 1792 4  1 1  1 3  
Rhode Island At-large August 28, 1792 2  1 0  1 2  
Connecticut At-large September 17, 1792 7  2 0   7  2
Georgia At-large October 1, 1792 2  1 2  1 0  
Maryland Districts October 1, 1792 8  2 4  1 4  1
Delaware At-large October 2, 1792 1   1  1 0  1
New Jersey At-large October 9, 1792 5  1 0   5  1
Pennsylvania At-large October 9, 1792 13  5 8  4 5  1
Massachusetts Mixed November 2, 1792[a] 14  6 3  2 11  4
New York Districts January 2, 1793 10  4 3  1 7  3
Vermont Districts January 7, 1793[b] 2   2   0  
South Carolina Districts February 5, 1793 6  1 5  3 1  2
North Carolina Districts February 15, 1793 10  5 9  6 1  1
Late elections (after the March 4, 1793 beginning of the 3rd Congress)
Virginia Districts March 18, 1793 19  9 15  7 4  2
Kentucky Districts September 6, 1793 2   2   0  
Total 105   36 54
51.4%
  24 51
48.6%
  12
House seats
Anti-Admin
51.43%
Pro-Admin
48.57%

Change in composition edit

End of the 2nd Congress edit

With new seats, due to reapportionment, outlined.

 
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 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 P P P P
 

Result of the elections edit

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 A A A A
A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
Majority → A
P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P A A
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 elections edit

There were special elections in 1792 and 1793 during the 2nd and 3rd United States Congresses.

Elections are sorted here by state then district.

2nd Congress edit

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Kentucky 1
"Southern District"
Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792. New member elected September 7, 1792.
Anti-Administration gain.
Winner seated November 9, 1792.[3]
Winner was later re-elected to the next term, see below.
Kentucky 2
"Northern District"
Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792. New member elected September 7, 1792.
Anti-Administration gain.
Winner seated November 8, 1792.[3]
Winner was later re-elected to the next term, see below.
Georgia 1 Anthony Wayne Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent disqualified March 21, 1792.
New member elected July 9, 1792.
Anti-Administration hold.
Winner later lost re-election to the next term, see below.
  •  Y John Milledge (Anti-Administration) 55.2%
  • Matthew MacAllister (Pro-Administration) 44.8%
  • John Glen (Unknown) 0.2%[4]
Maryland 2 Joshua Seney Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent resigned December 6, 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland's 3rd Judicial District.
New member elected January 7–10, 1793.
Pro-Administration gain.
Winner was already elected to the next term, see below.
  •  Y William Hindman (Pro-Administration) 63.2%
  • Thomas Whittington (Unknown) 36.8%[5]

3rd Congress edit

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Connecticut at-large Jonathan Sturges Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent resigned to become Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court.
New member elected April 8, 1793.[d]
Pro-Administration hold.
Connecticut at-large Benjamin Huntington Pro-Administration 1788 Representative-elect resigned.
New member elected September 16, 1793.
Pro-Administration hold.
Connecticut at-large Jonathan Ingersoll Pro-Administration 1793 (Special) Representative-elect Ingersoll declined the seat and Representative-elect Mitchell resigned to become U.S. Senator.
Two new members elected on a general ticket November 11, 1793.
Two Pro-Administration holds.
Connecticut at-large Stephen M. Mitchell Pro-Administration 1792

Connecticut edit

Connecticut gained two seats in reapportionment following the 1790 census.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Connecticut at-large
7 seats on a general ticket
James Hillhouse Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
Amasa Learned Pro-Administration 1791 (Special) Incumbent re-elected.
Jonathan Sturges Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
Jonathan Trumbull Jr. Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
Jeremiah Wadsworth Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

Three special elections followed the 1792 elections in Connecticut after Representatives-elect Sturges and Huntington resigned before the start of Congress and Mitchell was elected to the Senate.

Delaware edit

Delaware's apportionment did not change following the 1790 census. As in the 1st and 2nd Congresses, each voter cast votes for two separate candidates, at least one of whom had to be from a different county as the voter.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Delaware at-large John M. Vining Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration hold.
Election was later challenged and overturned.[1]
  •  Y John Patten (Anti-Administration) 38.8%
  • Henry Latimer (Pro-Administration) 38.3%
  • Francis Many (Unknown) 11.7%
  • Edward Roche (Unknown) 7.9%
  • Andrew Barrett (Unknown) 3.3%

Georgia edit

Following the 1790 census, Georgia's apportionment was decreased from 3 seats to 2 (the only state whose representation decreased after the census). Georgia switched from separate districts to at-large seats.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Georgia at-large
2 seats on a general ticket
Abraham Baldwin
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
John Milledge
Redistricted from the 1st district
Anti-Administration 1792 (Special) Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration hold.
Francis Willis
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration loss.

Kentucky edit

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Kentucky 1
"Southern District"
Christopher Greenup Anti-Administration 1792 (New state) Incumbent re-elected.
Kentucky 2
"Northern district"
Alexander D. Orr Anti-Administration 1792 (New state) Incumbent re-elected.

Maryland edit

Maryland increased from 6 to 8 representatives after the 1790 census. The previous mixed district/at-large system was replaced with a conventional district system.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Maryland 1 Philip Key Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration hold.
  •  Y George Dent (Pro-Administration) 44.7%
  • John Parnham (Pro-Administration) 29.8%
  • Philip Key (Pro-Administration) 25.5%
Maryland 2 John Francis Mercer
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Anti-Administration 1791 (Special) Incumbent re-elected.
Maryland 3 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y Uriah Forrest (Pro-Administration) 71.8%
  • William Dorsey (Anti-Administration) 28.1%
  • Others 0.1%
Maryland 4 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Maryland 5 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Samuel Smith (Anti-Administration) 61.1%
  • Charles Ridgely (Anti-Administration) 38.9%
Maryland 6 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Maryland 7 Joshua Seney
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration gain.
Incumbent then resigned December 6, 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland's 3rd Judicial District.
Winner was then also elected to finish the term, see above.
  •  Y William Hindman (Pro-Administration) 51.7%
  • James Tilghman (Anti-Administration) 48.3%[7]
Maryland 8 William V. Murray
Redistricted from the 5th district
Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
  •  Y William V. Murray (Pro-Administration) 93.8%
  • Littleton Dennis (Pro-Administration) 5.4%
  • Others 0.9%

Massachusetts edit

Following the 1790 census, Massachusetts's representation increased from eight to fourteen Representatives and was redistricted into four plural districts, plus a single at-large district. The 4th district covered the District of Maine (the modern-day State of Maine). The plural districts were concurrent tickets rather than a single general ticket, though the 1st and 2nd districts appeared to have also had a general ticket alongside the more specific tickets.

As before, a majority was required for election, in those districts where a majority was not achieved, additional ballots were required.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Massachusetts 1 (4 seats)
Seat A: At-large
None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
First ballot (November 2, 1792):

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):

Third ballot (April 1, 1793):
  •  Y Samuel Holten (Anti-Administration) 69.9%
  • Benjamin Austin (Unknown) 30.1%
Massachusetts 1 (4 seats)
Seat B: Essex County
Benjamin Goodhue
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Massachusetts 1 (4 seats)
Seat C: Middlesex County
Elbridge Gerry
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration gain.
Massachusetts 1 (4 seats)
Seat D: Suffolk County
Fisher Ames Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
  •  Y Fisher Ames (Pro-Administration) 62.4%
  • Benjamin Austin (Unknown) 37.6%
Massachusetts 2 (4 seats)
Seat A: At-large
None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
First ballot (November 2, 1792):

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):

Third ballot (April 1, 1793):
Massachusetts 2 (4 seats)
Seat B: Berkshire County
Theodore Sedgwick
Redistricted from the 4th district
Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Massachusetts 2 (4 seats)
Seat C: Hampshire County
None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
First ballot (November 2, 1792):

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):

Third ballot (April 1, 1793):
Massachusetts 2 (4 seats)
Seat D: Worcester County
Artemas Ward
Redistricted from the 7th district
Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
Massachusetts 3 (2 seats)
Seat A: Barnstable, Dukes, & Nantucket Counties
George Leonard
Redistricted from the 6th district
Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration hold.
Massachusetts 3 (2 seats)
Seat B: Bristol & Plymouth Counties
Shearjashub Bourne
Redistricted from the 5th district
Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected. First ballot (November 2, 1792):

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):
Massachusetts 4 (3 seats)
District of Maine Seat A: Cumberland County
None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
First ballot (November 2, 1792):
  • Daniel Davis (Unknown) 40.0%
  • Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Administration) 38.6%
  • Robert Southgate (Unknown) 11.7%
  • Josiah Thacker (Unknown) 9.8%

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):
  • Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Administration) 48.4%
  • Daniel Davis (Unknown) 42.2%
  • Robert Southgate (Unknown) 9.4%

Third ballot (April 1, 1793):
  •  Y Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Administration) 58.0%
  • Daniel Davis (Unknown) 42.0%
Massachusetts 4 (3 seats)
District of Maine Seat B: Lincoln, Hancock, & Washington Counties
None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
First ballot (November 2, 1792):
  • William Lithgow (Unknown) 49.98%
  • Henry Dearborn (Anti-Administration) 32.2%
  • Daniel Coney (Unknown) 11.8%
  • Alan Campbell (Unknown) 6.0%

Second ballot (January 14, 1793):
Massachusetts 4 (3 seats)
District of Maine Seat C: York County
George Thatcher
Redistricted from the 8th district
Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
  •  Y George Thatcher (Pro-Administration) 57.7%
  • Nathaniel Wells (Unknown) 35.4%
  • Tristan Jordan (Unknown) 6.9%
Massachusetts at-large None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

New Hampshire edit

New Hampshire increased from 3 seats to 4 seats after the 1790 census.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
New Hampshire at-large
4 seats on a general ticket
Jeremiah Smith Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
Samuel Livermore Pro-Administration 1789 Retired
Anti-Administration gain.
Nicholas Gilman Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

New Jersey edit

Following the 1790 census, New Jersey's apportionment increased from 4 to 5 seats.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates[f]
New Jersey at-large
5 seats on a general ticket
Elias Boudinot Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Abraham Clark Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
Jonathan Dayton Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
Aaron Kitchell Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration hold.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

New York edit

Due to re-apportionment following the 1790 census, New York's congressional delegation grew from 6 to 10. Three incumbents ran for re-election, two of whom won, and the other three incumbents retired. With the increase following re-apportionment, this left seven open seats.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
New York 1 Thomas Tredwell Anti-Administration 1791 (Special) Incumbent re-elected.
  •  Y Thomas Tredwell (Anti-Administration) 50.1%
  • Joshua Sands (Pro-Administration) 26.6%
  • Harry Peters (Pro-Administration) 23.3%
New York 2 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y John Watts (Pro-Administration) 72.6%
  • William S. Livingston (Anti-Administration) 27.3%
New York 3 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Philip Van Cortlandt (Anti-Administration) 55.5%
  • Richard Hatfield (Pro-Administration) 44.5%
New York 4 Cornelius C. Schoonmaker Anti-Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y Peter Van Gaasbeck (Pro-Administration) 47.3%
  • John Hathorn (Anti-Administration) 46.8%
  • John Carpenter (Anti-Administration) 2.3%
  • Cornelius C. Schoonmaker (Anti-Administration) 1.7%
  • William Thompson (Anti-Administration) 1.3%
  • Jesse Woodhull (Anti-Administration) 0.6%
New York 5 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
New York 6 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
New York 7 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y John Evert Van Alen (Pro-Administration) 56.9%
  • Henry K. Van Rensselaer (Anti-Administration) 42.5%
  • Thomas Sickles (Anti-Administration) 0.6%
New York 8 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
New York 9 James Gordon
Redistricted from the 6th district
Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
New York 10 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y Silas Talbot (Pro-Administration) 34.1%
  • William Cooper (Pro-Administration) 26.6%
  • John Winn (Anti-Administration) 25.7%
  • Andrew Fink (Anti-Administration) 11.3%
  • Josiah Crane (Anti-Administration) 2.4%

North Carolina edit

Following the 1790 census, North Carolina's apportionment increased from 5 to 10 seats.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
North Carolina 1 None (District created) New seat.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration gain.
North Carolina 2 None (District created) New seat.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Matthew Locke (Anti-Administration)[c]
  • Alexander[g] (Pro-Administration)
  • Montford Stokes (Unknown)
North Carolina 3 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Joseph Winston (Anti-Administration)[c]
  • Jesse Franklin (Anti-Administration)
  • John Williams (Anti-Administration)
  • James Martin (Unknown)
  • Clarke[g] (Unknown)
North Carolina 4 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Alexander Mebane (Anti-Administration) 44.8%
  • Stephen Moore (Pro-Administration) 39.0%
  • Ambrose Ramsay (Unknown) 16.2%
North Carolina 5 Nathaniel Macon
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
North Carolina 6 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
North Carolina 7 William B. Grove
Redistricted from the 5th district
Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
North Carolina 8 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
North Carolina 9 John B. Ashe
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Anti-Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration hold.
North Carolina 10 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

Pennsylvania edit

Pennsylvania switched from using districts to electing its representatives on an at-large basis for the 3rd Congress, just as it had done for the 1st Congress. This would be the last time that Pennsylvania would elect all of its Representatives at-large. Due to re-apportionment following the 1790 census, Pennsylvania's delegation increased from 8 representatives to 13.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates[8]
Pennsylvania at-large
13 seats on a general ticket
Thomas Fitzsimons
Redistricted from the 1st district
Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
Frederick Muhlenberg
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Anti-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
Israel Jacobs
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Pro-Administration hold.
Daniel Hiester
Redistricted from the 4th district
Anti-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
John W. Kittera
Redistricted from the 5th district
Pro-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
Andrew Gregg
Redistricted from the 6th district
Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
Thomas Hartley
Redistricted from the 7th district
Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
William Findley
Redistricted from the 8th district
Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

Rhode Island edit

Rhode Island gained a second representative from the results of the 1790 census. Rhode Island did not divide itself into districts, but elected two at-large representatives.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Rhode Island at-large
2 seats elected at-large on a general ticket
Benjamin Bourne Pro-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
None (Seat created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

South Carolina edit

South Carolina gained one representative as a result of the 1790 census, increasing from 5 to 6.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
South Carolina 1 William L. Smith Pro-Administration 1788 Incumbent re-elected.
Thomas Tudor Tucker
Redistricted from the 5th district
Anti-Administration 1788 Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration loss.
South Carolina 2 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
South Carolina 3 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
South Carolina 4 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
South Carolina 5 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
South Carolina 6 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

Vermont edit

Vermont had no apportionment in the House of Representatives before 1790 census because it was not admitted to the Union until 1791. Vermont's election laws at the time required a majority to win election to the House of Representatives. If no candidate won a majority, a runoff election was held, which happened in the 1st district.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates[f]
Vermont 1
"Western district"
Israel Smith Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected. First ballot (January 7, 1793):

Second ballot (March 20, 1793):
Vermont 2
"Eastern district"
Nathaniel Niles Anti-Administration 1791 Incumbent re-elected.

Virginia edit

Virginia gained nine representatives from the 1790 census, and in addition, the old 2nd district was lost after its territory became the new State of Kentucky. There were, therefore, ten new districts created for the 3rd Congress.

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
Virginia 1 Alexander White Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re-election.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 2 Andrew Moore
Redistricted from the 3rd district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Virginia 3 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 4 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Results subsequently challenged but upheld.
Virginia 5 None (District created) New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.
  •  Y George Hancock (Pro-Administration) 60.5%
  • Charles Clay (Unknown) 34.0%
  • Calohill Minnis (Unknown) 5.5%
Virginia 6 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 7 Abraham B. Venable
Redistricted from the 6th district
Anti-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
  •  Y Abraham B. Venable (Anti-Administration)[c]
  • Joseph Wyatt (Unknown)
  • Thomas Scott (Pro-Administration)
  • Tarlton Woodson (Pro-Administration)
Virginia 8 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
  •  Y Thomas Claiborne (Anti-Administration)[c]
  • Richard Kennon (Unknown)
  • Jesse Brown (Unknown)
  • J. Nicholson (Unknown)
Virginia 9 William B. Giles Anti-Administration 1790 Incumbent re-elected.
Virginia 10 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 11 Josiah Parker
Redistricted from the 8th district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected as Pro-Administration.
Pro-Administration gain.
Virginia 12 John Page
Redistricted from the 7th district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Virginia 13 Samuel Griffin
Redistricted from the 10th district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected as Pro-Administration.
Pro-Administration gain.
Virginia 14 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 15 James Madison Jr.
Redistricted from the 5th district
Anti-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Virginia 16 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 17 Richard Bland Lee
Redistricted from the 4th district
Pro-Administration 1789 Incumbent re-elected.
Virginia 18 None (District created) New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Virginia 19 None (District created) New seat.
New member elected.
Anti-Administration gain.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Massachusetts required a majority for election, which led to additional ballots on January 14, 1793 and April 1, 1793.
  2. ^ Vermont required a majority for election, which led to an additional ballot on March 20, 1793.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Source does not give numbers of votes or has incomplete data.
  4. ^ Date given for the start of the term, of the person elected at the special election.[6] In some cases this is clearly wrong as the date of the legal start of the Congress is given, even though the member was elected at a later date.
  5. ^ a b Party affiliation not given in source
  6. ^ a b Only candidates with at least 1% of the vote listed.
  7. ^ a b Source does not give full name.
  8. ^ Numbers of votes missing or incomplete in source.
  9. ^ Four individuals received 1 vote each.
  10. ^ a b Had been Anti-Administration in the previous election.

References edit

  1. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 6, 2014. Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  2. ^ Stat. 253
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 6, 2013. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  5. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  6. ^ See Congressional Biographical Directory.
  7. ^ . elections.lib.tufts.edu. Archived from the original on April 12, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  8. ^ "Wilkes University Elections Statistics Project" (PDF).
  9. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved September 23, 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • "A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825". Tufts Digital Library, Tufts University. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  • Dubin, Michael J. (March 1, 1998). 1788 United States Congressional Elections-1997: The Official Results of the Elections of the 1st Through 105th Congresses. McFarland and Company. ISBN 978-0786402830.
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (January 1, 1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, 1789-1989. Macmillan Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0029201701.
  • "Party Divisions of the House of Representatives* 1789–Present". Office of the Historian, United States House of Representatives. Retrieved January 21, 2015.

External links edit

  • Office of the Historian (Office of Art & Archives, Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives)

1792, united, states, house, representatives, elections, were, held, various, dates, various, states, between, august, 1792, september, 1793, each, state, date, elections, house, representatives, before, first, session, united, states, congress, convened, dece. The 1792 93 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between August 27 1792 and September 6 1793 Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 3rd United States Congress convened on December 2 1793 With the addition of the new state of Kentucky s representatives and the congressional reapportionment based on the 1790 United States census the size of the House increased to 105 seats 1792 93 United States House of Representatives elections 1790 amp 1791 August 27 1792 September 6 1793 1794 amp 1795 All 105 seats in the United States House of Representatives53 seats needed for a majority Majority party Minority party Leader Frederick Muhlenberg 1 Theodore Sedgwick Party Anti Administration Pro Administration Leader s seat Pennsylvania at large Massachusetts 2nd Last election 30 seats 39 seats Seats won 54 51 Seat change 24 12Results Pro Administration hold Pro Administration gain Anti Administration hold Anti Administration gain UndistrictedSpeaker before election Jonathan Trumbull Pro Administration Elected Speaker Frederick Muhlenberg Anti Administration They coincided with the re election of President George Washington While Washington ran for president as an independent his followers more specifically the supporters of Alexander Hamilton formed the nation s first organized political party the Federalist Party whose members and sympathizers are identified as pro Administration on this page In response followers of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison created the opposition Democratic Republican Party who are identified as anti Administration on this page The Federalists promoted urbanization industrialization mercantilism centralized government and a broad interpretation of the United States Constitution In contrast Democratic Republicans supported the ideal of an agrarian republic made up of self sufficient farmers and small localized governments with limited power Despite nearly unanimous support for Washington as a presidential candidate Jeffersonian ideas edged out Hamiltonian principles at the ballot box for congressional candidates with the Democratic Republicans taking 24 seats more than they had prior to the organization of their political movement Most of the increase was due to the addition of new seats in Western regions as a result of the 1790 census Dominated by agrarian culture these Western territories offered strong support to Democratic Republican congressional candidates As a result they secured a thin majority in the legislature Contents 1 Election summaries 2 Change in composition 2 1 End of the 2nd Congress 2 2 Result of the elections 3 Special elections 3 1 2nd Congress 3 2 3rd Congress 4 Connecticut 5 Delaware 6 Georgia 7 Kentucky 8 Maryland 9 Massachusetts 10 New Hampshire 11 New Jersey 12 New York 13 North Carolina 14 Pennsylvania 15 Rhode Island 16 South Carolina 17 Vermont 18 Virginia 19 See also 20 Notes 21 References 22 Bibliography 23 External linksElection summaries editIn this period each state fixed its own date for its congressional election as early as August 1792 in New Hampshire and Rhode Island and as late as September 1793 in Kentucky In some states the congressional delegation was not elected until after the legal start of the Congress on the 4th day of March in the odd numbered year but as the first session of Congress typically began in November or December the elections took place before Congress actually met The 3rd Congress first met on December 2 1793 These were the first elections held after reapportionment following the first census Thirty six new seats were added 2 with 1 state losing 1 seat 3 states having no change and the remaining 11 states gaining between 1 and 9 seats This was the first apportionment based on actual census data the apportionment for the 1st and 2nd Congresses being set by the Constitution using estimated populations nbsp 54 51 Anti Administration Pro Administration State Type Date Totalseats Anti Administration Pro Administration Seats Change Seats Change Seats Change General elections New Hampshire At large August 27 1792 4 nbsp 1 1 nbsp 1 3 nbsp Rhode Island At large August 28 1792 2 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 1 2 nbsp Connecticut At large September 17 1792 7 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 7 nbsp 2 Georgia At large October 1 1792 2 nbsp 1 2 nbsp 1 0 nbsp Maryland Districts October 1 1792 8 nbsp 2 4 nbsp 1 4 nbsp 1 Delaware At large October 2 1792 1 nbsp 1 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 1 New Jersey At large October 9 1792 5 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 5 nbsp 1 Pennsylvania At large October 9 1792 13 nbsp 5 8 nbsp 4 5 nbsp 1 Massachusetts Mixed November 2 1792 a 14 nbsp 6 3 nbsp 2 11 nbsp 4 New York Districts January 2 1793 10 nbsp 4 3 nbsp 1 7 nbsp 3 Vermont Districts January 7 1793 b 2 nbsp 2 nbsp 0 nbsp South Carolina Districts February 5 1793 6 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 3 1 nbsp 2 North Carolina Districts February 15 1793 10 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 6 1 nbsp 1 Late elections after the March 4 1793 beginning of the 3rd Congress Virginia Districts March 18 1793 19 nbsp 9 15 nbsp 7 4 nbsp 2 Kentucky Districts September 6 1793 2 nbsp 2 nbsp 0 nbsp Total 105 nbsp 36 5451 4 nbsp 24 5148 6 nbsp 12 House seats Anti Admin 51 43 Pro Admin 48 57 Change in composition editEnd of the 2nd Congress edit With new seats due to reapportionment outlined 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 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 P P P P Result of the elections edit 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 A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A Majority A P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P P A A 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 VacantSpecial elections editSee also List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives There were special elections in 1792 and 1793 during the 2nd and 3rd United States Congresses Elections are sorted here by state then district 2nd Congress edit District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Kentucky 1 Southern District Kentucky admitted June 1 1792 New member elected September 7 1792 Anti Administration gain Winner seated November 9 1792 3 Winner was later re elected to the next term see below nbsp Y Christopher Greenup Anti Administration c Robert Brackenridge Unknown Kentucky 2 Northern District Kentucky admitted June 1 1792 New member elected September 7 1792 Anti Administration gain Winner seated November 8 1792 3 Winner was later re elected to the next term see below nbsp Y Alexander D Orr Anti Administration c Hubbard Taylor Unknown Georgia 1 Anthony Wayne Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent disqualified March 21 1792 New member elected July 9 1792 Anti Administration hold Winner later lost re election to the next term see below nbsp Y John Milledge Anti Administration 55 2 Matthew MacAllister Pro Administration 44 8 John Glen Unknown 0 2 4 Maryland 2 Joshua Seney Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent resigned December 6 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland s 3rd Judicial District New member elected January 7 10 1793 Pro Administration gain Winner was already elected to the next term see below nbsp Y William Hindman Pro Administration 63 2 Thomas Whittington Unknown 36 8 5 3rd Congress edit District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Connecticut at large Jonathan Sturges Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent resigned to become Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court New member elected April 8 1793 d Pro Administration hold nbsp Y Uriah Tracy Pro Administration 49 8 Zephaniah Swift Pro Administration 18 5 Asher Miller Unknown e 16 1 Jonathan Ingersoll Pro Administration 9 9 Tapping Reeve Unknown e 5 7 Connecticut at large Benjamin Huntington Pro Administration 1788 Representative elect resigned New member elected September 16 1793 Pro Administration hold nbsp Y Jonathan Ingersoll Pro Administration data missing Connecticut at large Jonathan Ingersoll Pro Administration 1793 Special Representative elect Ingersoll declined the seat and Representative elect Mitchell resigned to become U S Senator Two new members elected on a general ticket November 11 1793 Two Pro Administration holds nbsp Y Joshua Coit Pro Administration 35 7 nbsp Y Zephaniah Swift Pro Administration 24 2 James Davenport Pro Administration 17 2 Roger Griswold Pro Administration 12 6 Chauncey Goodrich Pro Administration 5 1 Nathaniel Smith Pro Administration 3 1 Samuel W Dana Pro Administration 2 1 Connecticut at large Stephen M Mitchell Pro Administration 1792Connecticut editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in Connecticut See also List of United States representatives from Connecticut Connecticut gained two seats in reapportionment following the 1790 census District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Connecticut at large 7 seats on a general ticket James Hillhouse Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Jonathan Trumbull Jr Pro Administration 14 1 nbsp Y James Hillhouse Pro Administration 13 0 nbsp Y Jonathan Sturges Pro Administration 11 5 nbsp Y Benjamin Huntington Pro Administration 10 6 nbsp Y Jeremiah Wadsworth Pro Administration 10 4 nbsp Y Amasa Learned Pro Administration 9 5 nbsp Y Stephen Mix Mitchell Pro Administration 7 8 Uriah Tracy Pro Administration 6 3 Jonathan Ingersoll Unknown 5 4 Asher Miller Unknown 4 3 Zephaniah Swift Pro Administration 4 3 Tapping Reeve Unknown 3 0 Amasa Learned Pro Administration 1791 Special Incumbent re elected Jonathan Sturges Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected Jonathan Trumbull Jr Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected Jeremiah Wadsworth Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain Three special elections followed the 1792 elections in Connecticut after Representatives elect Sturges and Huntington resigned before the start of Congress and Mitchell was elected to the Senate Delaware editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in Delaware See also List of United States representatives from Delaware Delaware s apportionment did not change following the 1790 census As in the 1st and 2nd Congresses each voter cast votes for two separate candidates at least one of whom had to be from a different county as the voter District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Delaware at large John M Vining Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Anti Administration hold Election was later challenged and overturned 1 nbsp Y John Patten Anti Administration 38 8 Henry Latimer Pro Administration 38 3 Francis Many Unknown 11 7 Edward Roche Unknown 7 9 Andrew Barrett Unknown 3 3 Georgia editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in Georgia See also List of United States representatives from Georgia Following the 1790 census Georgia s apportionment was decreased from 3 seats to 2 the only state whose representation decreased after the census Georgia switched from separate districts to at large seats District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Georgia at large 2 seats on a general ticket Abraham BaldwinRedistricted from the 2nd district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Abraham Baldwin Anti Administration 44 5 nbsp Y Thomas P Carnes Anti Administration 29 5 George Mathews Unknown 10 8 John Milledge Anti Administration 8 1 Scattering 7 0 Francis Willis Anti Administration 0 3 John MilledgeRedistricted from the 1st district Anti Administration 1792 Special Incumbent lost re election New member elected Anti Administration hold Francis WillisRedistricted from the 3rd district Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Anti Administration loss Kentucky editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky See also List of United States representatives from Kentucky District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Kentucky 1 Southern District Christopher Greenup Anti Administration 1792 New state Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Christopher Greenup c Anti Administration Kentucky 2 Northern district Alexander D Orr Anti Administration 1792 New state Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Alexander D Orr c Anti Administration Maryland editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives elections in Maryland See also List of United States representatives from Maryland Maryland increased from 6 to 8 representatives after the 1790 census The previous mixed district at large system was replaced with a conventional district system District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Maryland 1 Philip Key Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration hold nbsp Y George Dent Pro Administration 44 7 John Parnham Pro Administration 29 8 Philip Key Pro Administration 25 5 Maryland 2 John Francis MercerRedistricted from the 3rd district Anti Administration 1791 Special Incumbent re elected nbsp Y John Francis Mercer Anti Administration 57 0 John Thomas Pro Administration 42 1 Richard A Contee Unknown 0 9 Maryland 3 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Uriah Forrest Pro Administration 71 8 William Dorsey Anti Administration 28 1 Others 0 1 Maryland 4 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Thomas Sprigg Anti Administration 100 Maryland 5 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Samuel Smith Anti Administration 61 1 Charles Ridgely Anti Administration 38 9 Maryland 6 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Gabriel Christie Anti Administration 63 6 William Matthews Pro Administration 36 4 Maryland 7 Joshua SeneyRedistricted from the 2nd district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent retired New member elected Pro Administration gain Incumbent then resigned December 6 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland s 3rd Judicial District Winner was then also elected to finish the term see above nbsp Y William Hindman Pro Administration 51 7 James Tilghman Anti Administration 48 3 7 Maryland 8 William V Murray Redistricted from the 5th district Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y William V Murray Pro Administration 93 8 Littleton Dennis Pro Administration 5 4 Others 0 9 Massachusetts editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts See also List of United States representatives from Massachusetts Following the 1790 census Massachusetts s representation increased from eight to fourteen Representatives and was redistricted into four plural districts plus a single at large district The 4th district covered the District of Maine the modern day State of Maine The plural districts were concurrent tickets rather than a single general ticket though the 1st and 2nd districts appeared to have also had a general ticket alongside the more specific tickets As before a majority was required for election in those districts where a majority was not achieved additional ballots were required District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Massachusetts 1 4 seats Seat A At large None District created New seat Anti Administration gain First ballot November 2 1792 Jonathan Jones Unknown 39 8 William Heath Unknown 31 0 James Bowdoin Unknown 23 2 Theophilus Parsons Unknown 6 0 Second ballot January 14 1793 Jonathan Jones Unknown 29 3 Samuel Holten Anti Administration 25 6 James Bowdoin Unknown 17 1 Samuel Sewall Pro Administration 13 1 William Heath Unknown 8 3 Joseph Bradley Varnum Anti Administration 3 8 Elbridge Gerry Anti Administration 2 8 Third ballot April 1 1793 nbsp Y Samuel Holten Anti Administration 69 9 Benjamin Austin Unknown 30 1 Massachusetts 1 4 seats Seat B Essex County Benjamin GoodhueRedistricted from the 2nd district Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Benjamin Goodhue Pro Administration 100 Massachusetts 1 4 seats Seat C Middlesex County Elbridge GerryRedistricted from the 3rd district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Samuel Dexter Pro Administration 61 4 Joseph Bradley Varnum Anti Administration 26 2 Elbridge Gerry Anti Administration 12 4 Massachusetts 1 4 seats Seat D Suffolk County Fisher Ames Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Fisher Ames Pro Administration 62 4 Benjamin Austin Unknown 37 6 Massachusetts 2 4 seats Seat A At large None District created New seat Pro Administration gain First ballot November 2 1792 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 41 3 Theodore Sedgwick Pro Administration 37 9 William Lyman Anti Administration 6 7 Samuel Moorhaus Unknown 6 2 Simson Strong Unknown 4 0 Dwight Foster Pro Administration 3 5 Second ballot January 14 1793 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 35 4 Dwight Foster Pro Administration 25 1 Thomson J Skinner Anti Administration 19 6 William Lyman Anti Administration 12 1 Jonathan Grout Anti Administration 4 0 William Shepard Pro Administration 3 8 Third ballot April 1 1793 nbsp Y Dwight Foster Pro Administration 55 3 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 44 7 Massachusetts 2 4 seats Seat B Berkshire County Theodore SedgwickRedistricted from the 4th district Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Theodore Sedgwick Pro Administration 63 8 Thomson J Skinner Anti Administration 29 1 John Bacon Anti Administration 7 1 Massachusetts 2 4 seats Seat C Hampshire County None District created New seat Anti Administration gain First ballot November 2 1792 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 37 4 William Lyman Anti Administration 32 3 Thomas Dwight Pro Administration 16 8 Samuel Hinshaur Unknown 6 7 John Williams Unknown 3 6 Dwight Foster Pro Administration 3 1 Second ballot January 14 1793 William Lyman Anti Administration 38 0 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 31 3 William Shepard Pro Administration 18 0 Thomas Dwight Pro Administration 12 7 Third ballot April 1 1793 nbsp Y William Lyman Anti Administration 53 1 Samuel Lyman Pro Administration 46 9 Massachusetts 2 4 seats Seat D Worcester County Artemas WardRedistricted from the 7th district Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Artemas Ward Pro Administration 59 5 Jonathan Grout Anti Administration 36 8 Dwight Foster Pro Administration 3 8 Massachusetts 3 2 seats Seat A Barnstable Dukes amp Nantucket Counties George LeonardRedistricted from the 6th district Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration hold nbsp Y Peleg Coffin Jr Pro Administration 52 6 George Leonard Pro Administration 34 3 Phanuel Bishop Anti Administration 13 1 Massachusetts 3 2 seats Seat B Bristol amp Plymouth Counties Shearjashub BourneRedistricted from the 5th district Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected First ballot November 2 1792 John Davis Unknown 49 2 Shearjashub Bourne Pro Administration 26 1 James Warren Unknown 24 8 Second ballot January 14 1793 nbsp Y Shearjashub Bourne Pro Administration 53 0 John Davis Unknown 40 6 James Warren Unknown 6 4 Massachusetts 4 3 seats District of Maine Seat A Cumberland County None District created New seat Pro Administration gain First ballot November 2 1792 Daniel Davis Unknown 40 0 Peleg Wadsworth Pro Administration 38 6 Robert Southgate Unknown 11 7 Josiah Thacker Unknown 9 8 Second ballot January 14 1793 Peleg Wadsworth Pro Administration 48 4 Daniel Davis Unknown 42 2 Robert Southgate Unknown 9 4 Third ballot April 1 1793 nbsp Y Peleg Wadsworth Pro Administration 58 0 Daniel Davis Unknown 42 0 Massachusetts 4 3 seats District of Maine Seat B Lincoln Hancock amp Washington Counties None District created New seat Anti Administration gain First ballot November 2 1792 William Lithgow Unknown 49 98 Henry Dearborn Anti Administration 32 2 Daniel Coney Unknown 11 8 Alan Campbell Unknown 6 0 Second ballot January 14 1793 nbsp Y Henry Dearborn Anti Administration 60 9 William Lithgow Unknown 39 1 Massachusetts 4 3 seats District of Maine Seat C York County George ThatcherRedistricted from the 8th district Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y George Thatcher Pro Administration 57 7 Nathaniel Wells Unknown 35 4 Tristan Jordan Unknown 6 9 Massachusetts at large None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y David Cobb Pro Administration 52 6 Charles Jarvis Unknown 9 6 William Heath Unknown 6 9 Theodore Sedgwick Pro Administration 4 9 Elbridge Gerry Anti Administration 2 1 Jonathan Jones Unknown 1 9 Fisher Ames Pro Administration 1 7 James Sullivan Anti Administration 1 5 Samuel Horton Unknown 1 3 Scattering 17 4 New Hampshire editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in New Hampshire See also List of United States representatives from New Hampshire New Hampshire increased from 3 seats to 4 seats after the 1790 census District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates New Hampshire at large 4 seats on a general ticket Jeremiah Smith Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Jeremiah Smith Pro Administration 24 1 nbsp Y Nicholas Gilman Pro Administration 16 3 nbsp Y John Samuel Sherburne Anti Administration 14 2 nbsp Y Paine Wingate Pro Administration 12 2 Abiel Foster Pro Administration 8 9 James Sheafe Pro Administration 8 2 Nathaniel Peabody Unknown 7 7 Timothy Walker Unknown 4 0 William Page Unknown 2 3 Joshua Atherton Unknown 2 3 Samuel Livermore Pro Administration 1789 RetiredAnti Administration gain Nicholas Gilman Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain New Jersey editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in New Jersey See also List of United States representatives from New Jersey Following the 1790 census New Jersey s apportionment increased from 4 to 5 seats District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates f New Jersey at large 5 seats on a general ticket Elias Boudinot Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y John Beatty Pro Administration 16 4 nbsp Y Jonathan Dayton Pro Administration 13 4 nbsp Y Abraham Clark Pro Administration 11 8 nbsp Y Elias Boudinot Pro Administration 10 8 nbsp Y Lambert Cadwalader Pro Administration 10 1 Thomas Sinnickson Pro Administration 48 7 Aaron Kitchell Pro Administration 8 6 James Linn Unknown 5 2 Jonathan Elmer Pro Administration 4 4 Samuel Dick Unknown 4 1 Thomas Henderson Unknown 2 9 Abraham Clark Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected Jonathan Dayton Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected Aaron Kitchell Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration hold None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain New York editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in New York See also List of United States representatives from New York Due to re apportionment following the 1790 census New York s congressional delegation grew from 6 to 10 Three incumbents ran for re election two of whom won and the other three incumbents retired With the increase following re apportionment this left seven open seats District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates New York 1 Thomas Tredwell Anti Administration 1791 Special Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Thomas Tredwell Anti Administration 50 1 Joshua Sands Pro Administration 26 6 Harry Peters Pro Administration 23 3 New York 2 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y John Watts Pro Administration 72 6 William S Livingston Anti Administration 27 3 New York 3 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Philip Van Cortlandt Anti Administration 55 5 Richard Hatfield Pro Administration 44 5 New York 4 Cornelius C Schoonmaker Anti Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Peter Van Gaasbeck Pro Administration 47 3 John Hathorn Anti Administration 46 8 John Carpenter Anti Administration 2 3 Cornelius C Schoonmaker Anti Administration 1 7 William Thompson Anti Administration 1 3 Jesse Woodhull Anti Administration 0 6 New York 5 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Theodorus Bailey Anti Administration 53 6 James Kent Pro Administration 46 4 New York 6 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Ezekiel Gilbert Pro Administration 35 1 Peter R Livingston Anti Administration 34 1 Peter Van Ness Anti Administration 30 8 New York 7 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y John Evert Van Alen Pro Administration 56 9 Henry K Van Rensselaer Anti Administration 42 5 Thomas Sickles Anti Administration 0 6 New York 8 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Henry Glen Pro Administration 63 8 Jeremiah Van Rensselaer Anti Administration 36 2 New York 9 James GordonRedistricted from the 6th district Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y James Gordon Pro Administration 46 0 John Williams Anti Administration 41 2 John M Thompson Anti Administration 12 8 New York 10 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Silas Talbot Pro Administration 34 1 William Cooper Pro Administration 26 6 John Winn Anti Administration 25 7 Andrew Fink Anti Administration 11 3 Josiah Crane Anti Administration 2 4 North Carolina editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina See also List of United States representatives from North Carolina Following the 1790 census North Carolina s apportionment increased from 5 to 10 seats District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates North Carolina 1 None District created New seat New member elected Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Joseph McDowell Anti Administration c North Carolina 2 None District created New seat New member elected Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Matthew Locke Anti Administration c Alexander g Pro Administration Montford Stokes Unknown North Carolina 3 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Joseph Winston Anti Administration c Jesse Franklin Anti Administration John Williams Anti Administration James Martin Unknown Clarke g Unknown North Carolina 4 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Alexander Mebane Anti Administration 44 8 Stephen Moore Pro Administration 39 0 Ambrose Ramsay Unknown 16 2 North Carolina 5 Nathaniel MaconRedistricted from the 2nd district Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Nathaniel Macon Anti Administration c North Carolina 6 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y James Gillespie Anti Administration c William Henry Hill Pro Administration Benjamin Smith Unknown North Carolina 7 William B GroveRedistricted from the 5th district Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y William B Grove Pro Administration 100 c North Carolina 8 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y William J Dawson Anti Administration 63 8 Stephen Cabarrus Anti Administration 36 1 William Cumming Unknown 0 2 North Carolina 9 John B AsheRedistricted from the 3rd district Anti Administration 1790 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Anti Administration hold nbsp Y Thomas Blount Anti Administration c John B Ashe Anti Administration John Leigh Pro Administration North Carolina 10 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Benjamin Williams Anti Administration c William Maclure Anti Administration Pennsylvania editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in Pennsylvania See also List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania Pennsylvania switched from using districts to electing its representatives on an at large basis for the 3rd Congress just as it had done for the 1st Congress This would be the last time that Pennsylvania would elect all of its Representatives at large Due to re apportionment following the 1790 census Pennsylvania s delegation increased from 8 representatives to 13 District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates 8 Pennsylvania at large 13 seats on a general ticket Thomas FitzsimonsRedistricted from the 1st district Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y William Findley Anti Administration 8 21 nbsp Y Frederick Muhlenberg Anti Administration 8 01 nbsp Y Daniel Hiester Anti Administration 7 96 nbsp Y William Irvine Anti Administration 7 67 nbsp Y John W Kittera Pro Administration 7 39 nbsp Y Thomas Hartley Pro Administration 7 06 nbsp Y Peter Muhlenberg Anti Administration 5 40 nbsp Y Thomas Fitzsimons Pro Administration 4 46 nbsp Y Andrew Gregg Anti Administration 4 30 nbsp Y James Armstrong Pro Administration 4 29 nbsp Y William Montgomery Anti Administration 4 22 nbsp Y John Smilie Anti Administration 4 15 nbsp Y Thomas Scott Pro Administration 4 13 Samuel Sitgreaves Pro Administration 3 86 Jonathan D Sergeant Anti Administration 3 74 John Barclay Anti Administration 3 70 Charles Thomson Anti Administration 3 68 William Bingham Pro Administration 3 59 Henry Wynkoop Pro Administration 3 55 Israel Jacobs Pro Administration 0 65 Frederick MuhlenbergRedistricted from the 2nd district Anti Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected Israel JacobsRedistricted from the 3rd district Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Pro Administration hold Daniel HiesterRedistricted from the 4th district Anti Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected John W KitteraRedistricted from the 5th district Pro Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected Andrew GreggRedistricted from the 6th district Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected Thomas HartleyRedistricted from the 7th district Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected William FindleyRedistricted from the 8th district Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain None Seat created New seat Anti Administration gain None Seat created New seat Anti Administration gain None Seat created New seat Anti Administration gain None Seat created New seat Anti Administration gain Rhode Island editMain article 1792 United States House of Representatives election in Rhode Island See also List of United States representatives from Rhode Island Rhode Island gained a second representative from the results of the 1790 census Rhode Island did not divide itself into districts but elected two at large representatives District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Rhode Island at large 2 seats elected at large on a general ticket Benjamin Bourne Pro Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Benjamin Bourne Pro Administration 100 nbsp Y Francis Malbone Pro Administration h Paul Mumford Unknown 9 None Seat created New seat Pro Administration gain South Carolina editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina See also List of United States representatives from South Carolina South Carolina gained one representative as a result of the 1790 census increasing from 5 to 6 District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates South Carolina 1 William L Smith Pro Administration 1788 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y William L Smith Pro Administration 61 5 Thomas Tudor Tucker Anti Administration 22 2 Jacob Read Pro Administration 16 4 Thomas Tudor TuckerRedistricted from the 5th district Anti Administration 1788 Incumbent lost re election Anti Administration loss South Carolina 2 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y John Hunter Anti Administration c South Carolina 3 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Lemuel Benton Anti Administration c South Carolina 4 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Richard Winn Anti Administration c South Carolina 5 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Alexander Gillon Anti Administration c South Carolina 6 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Andrew Pickens Anti Administration c Vermont editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Vermont See also List of United States representatives from Vermont Vermont had no apportionment in the House of Representatives before 1790 census because it was not admitted to the Union until 1791 Vermont s election laws at the time required a majority to win election to the House of Representatives If no candidate won a majority a runoff election was held which happened in the 1st district District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates f Vermont 1 Western district Israel Smith Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected First ballot January 7 1793 Israel Smith Anti Administration 44 2 Matthew Lyon Anti Administration 33 8 Isaac Tichenor Pro Administration 17 8 Samuel Hitchcock Unknown 4 2 Second ballot March 20 1793 nbsp Y Israel Smith Anti Administration 51 0 Matthew Lyon Anti Administration 44 0 Isaac Tichenor Pro Administration 4 3 Samuel Hitchcock Unknown 0 6 Others i 0 1 Vermont 2 Eastern district Nathaniel Niles Anti Administration 1791 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Nathaniel Niles Anti Administration 60 3 Elijah Paine Pro Administration 14 0 Stephen Jacob Unknown 7 7 Paul Brigham Anti Administration 4 4 Samuel Cutler Unknown 3 9 Daniel Buck Pro Administration 3 5 Isaac Tichenor Pro Administration 2 2 Others 4 0 Virginia editMain article 1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia See also List of United States representatives from Virginia Virginia gained nine representatives from the 1790 census and in addition the old 2nd district was lost after its territory became the new State of Kentucky There were therefore ten new districts created for the 3rd Congress District Incumbent This race Member Party First elected Results Candidates Virginia 1 Alexander White Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent lost re election New member elected Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Robert Rutherford Anti Administration 56 6 John Smith Anti Administration 25 8 Alexander White Pro Administration 17 6 Virginia 2 Andrew MooreRedistricted from the 3rd district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Andrew Moore Anti Administration c Virginia 3 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Joseph Neville Anti Administration c George Jackson Anti Administration Jeremiah Jacobs Unknown William MacCleery Unknown Virginia 4 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain Results subsequently challenged but upheld nbsp Y Francis Preston Anti Administration Abraham Trigg Unknown Virginia 5 None District created New seat Pro Administration gain nbsp Y George Hancock Pro Administration 60 5 Charles Clay Unknown 34 0 Calohill Minnis Unknown 5 5 Virginia 6 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Isaac Coles Anti Administration c Virginia 7 Abraham B VenableRedistricted from the 6th district Anti Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Abraham B Venable Anti Administration c Joseph Wyatt Unknown Thomas Scott Pro Administration Tarlton Woodson Pro Administration Virginia 8 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Thomas Claiborne Anti Administration c Richard Kennon Unknown Jesse Brown Unknown J Nicholson Unknown Virginia 9 William B Giles Anti Administration 1790 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y William B Giles Anti Administration c Robert Bolling Unknown Virginia 10 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Carter B Harrison Anti Administration c John H Briggs Unknown Virginia 11 Josiah ParkerRedistricted from the 8th district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected as Pro Administration Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Josiah Parker Pro Administration j c John Neirson Unknown Virginia 12 John PageRedistricted from the 7th district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y John Page Anti Administration c Virginia 13 Samuel GriffinRedistricted from the 10th district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected as Pro Administration Pro Administration gain nbsp Y Samuel Griffin Pro Administration j c Virginia 14 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Francis Walker Anti Administration c Virginia 15 James Madison Jr Redistricted from the 5th district Anti Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y James Madison Jr Anti Administration c Virginia 16 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y Anthony New Anti Administration c John Roane Anti Administration Francis Corbin Unknown Virginia 17 Richard Bland LeeRedistricted from the 4th district Pro Administration 1789 Incumbent re elected nbsp Y Richard Bland Lee Pro Administration c Virginia 18 None District created New seat Anti Administration gain nbsp Y John Nicholas Anti Administration c William Pickett Unknown Virginia 19 None District created New seat New member elected Anti Administration gain nbsp Y John Heath Anti Administration c Walter Jones Anti Administration Francis L Lee Unknown See also edit1792 United States elections List of United States House of Representatives elections 1789 1822 1792 93 United States Senate elections 1792 United States presidential election 2nd United States Congress 3rd United States CongressNotes edit Massachusetts required a majority for election which led to additional ballots on January 14 1793 and April 1 1793 Vermont required a majority for election which led to an additional ballot on March 20 1793 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Source does not give numbers of votes or has incomplete data Date given for the start of the term of the person elected at the special election 6 In some cases this is clearly wrong as the date of the legal start of the Congress is given even though the member was elected at a later date a b Party affiliation not given in source a b Only candidates with at least 1 of the vote listed a b Source does not give full name Numbers of votes missing or incomplete in source Four individuals received 1 vote each a b Had been Anti Administration in the previous election References edit a b Third Congress membership roster PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 6 2014 Retrieved February 1 2015 1 Stat 253 a b Second Congress membership roster see footnotes 12 and 13 PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 6 2013 Retrieved March 8 2013 A New Nation Votes elections lib tufts edu Retrieved September 23 2020 A New Nation Votes elections lib tufts edu Retrieved September 23 2020 See Congressional Biographical Directory A New Nation Votes elections lib tufts edu Archived from the original on April 12 2020 Retrieved September 23 2020 Wilkes University Elections Statistics Project PDF A New Nation Votes elections lib tufts edu Retrieved September 23 2020 Bibliography edit A New Nation Votes American Election Returns 1787 1825 Tufts Digital Library Tufts University Retrieved January 17 2015 Dubin Michael J March 1 1998 1788 United States Congressional Elections 1997 The Official Results of the Elections of the 1st Through 105th Congresses McFarland and Company ISBN 978 0786402830 Martis Kenneth C January 1 1989 The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress 1789 1989 Macmillan Publishing Company ISBN 978 0029201701 Party Divisions of the House of Representatives 1789 Present Office of the Historian United States House of Representatives Retrieved January 21 2015 External links editOffice of the Historian Office of Art amp Archives Office of the Clerk U S House of Representatives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1792 93 United States House of Representatives elections amp oldid 1208624026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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