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1848 United States presidential election

The 1848 United States presidential election was the 16th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 7, 1848. In the aftermath of the Mexican–American War, General Zachary Taylor of the Whig Party defeated Senator Lewis Cass of the Democratic Party.[2]

1848 United States presidential election

← 1844 November 7, 1848 1852 →

290 members of the Electoral College
146 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout72.8%[1] 6.4 pp
 
Nominee Zachary Taylor Lewis Cass Martin Van Buren
Party Whig Democratic Free Soil
Alliance Native American
Home state Louisiana Michigan New York
Running mate Millard Fillmore William O. Butler Charles F. Adams
Electoral vote 163 127 0
States carried 15 15 0
Popular vote 1,361,396 1,223,460 291,501
Percentage 47.3% 42.5% 10.1%

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Presidential election results map. Buff denotes states won by Taylor/Fillmore and blue by Cass/Butler. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes cast by each state.

President before election

James K. Polk
Democratic

Elected President

Zachary Taylor
Whig

Despite Taylor's unclear political affiliations and beliefs, and the Whig opposition to the Mexican–American War, the 1848 Whig National Convention nominated the popular general over party stalwarts such as Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. For vice president, the Whigs nominated Millard Fillmore, a New York Whig known for his moderate views on slavery. Incumbent President James K. Polk, a Democrat, honored his promise not to seek re-election, leaving his party's nomination open. The 1848 Democratic National Convention nominated Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan after former President Martin Van Buren withdrew his bid for a second term over a platform dispute. Van Buren broke from his party to lead the ticket of the Free Soil Party, which opposed the extension of slavery into the territories.

The Whig choice of Zachary Taylor was made almost out of desperation; he was not clearly committed to Whig principles, but he was popular for leading the war effort. The Democrats had a record of prosperity and had acquired the Mexican cession and parts of Oregon country. It appeared almost certain that they would win unless the Whigs picked Taylor. Taylor won a plurality of the popular vote and a majority of the electoral vote, while Van Buren won 10.1% of the popular vote, a strong showing for a third party candidate.

Taylor's victory made him the second of two Whigs to win a presidential election, following William Henry Harrison's victory in the 1840 presidential election. Like Harrison, Taylor died during his term, and he was succeeded by Fillmore.

Nominations edit

Whig Party nomination edit

1848 Whig Party ticket
Zachary Taylor Millard Fillmore
for President for Vice President
 
 
Major general
of the U.S. Army
(1846–1849)
14th
New York State Comptroller
(1848–1849)
 
Grand National Whig banner

The Whig Party held its national convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with delegates from every state except for Texas although the Texas Whigs had selected to make the Louisiana delegates their proxies. Henry Clay, Winfield Scott, Zachary Taylor, and Daniel Webster sought the presidential nomination and Taylor led on every ballot before winning on the fourth ballot. After Webster turned down the vice presidential candidacy, Millard Fillmore received the party's vice-presidential nomination on the second ballot after defeating Abbott Lawrence, a Massachusetts politician whose mild opposition to slavery led him to be dubbed a "Cotton Whig". An attempt was made to make both nominations unanimous, but it was unsuccessful due to Taylor's support for the Whig Party being seen as dubious.[3][4]

Democratic Party nomination edit

1848 Democratic Party ticket
Lewis Cass William O. Butler
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Senator from Michigan
(1845–1848)
U.S. Representative
for Kentucky's 13th
(1839–1843)
 
James K. Polk, the incumbent president in 1848, whose term expired on March 4, 1849
 
Cass/Butler campaign poster

The Democratic Party held its national convention in Baltimore, Maryland. There was a credentials dispute over the New York delegation between the Barnburners and Hunkers factions with the Barnburners being anti-slavery. The delegates voted 126 to 125 to seat both delegations and share their control of New York's votes, but the Barnburners left the convention in disagreement with the compromise while the Hunkers refused to vote. The withdrawal of the Barnburners effectively removed former President Martin Van Buren, who had already become unenthusiastic about trying to win the party's nomination after the convention had voted to endorse a platform supporting popular sovereignty, from contention.[4]

As a result of Van Buren's withdrawal, U.S. Senator Lewis Cass and Secretary of State James Buchanan were seen as the only serious contenders for the presidential nomination, with a draft effort also focusing on Supreme Court associate justice Levi Woodbury. In stark contrast to the highly contested and protracted convention at the previous election, Cass held a wide lead on all four ballots, only being denied victory on the third due to the convention rules requiring a two-thirds majority, before the Buchanan and Woodbury campaigns quietly released enough delegates to allow Cass victory on the fourth ballot. William Orlando Butler won the vice-presidential nomination on the second ballot against John A. Quitman.[5][4]

Free Soil Party nomination edit

1848 Free Soil Party ticket
Martin Van Buren Charles F. Adams
for President for Vice President
 
 
8th
President of the United States
(1837–1841)
Massachusetts State Senator
(1844–1845)
 
Van Buren/Adams

Members of the Whig Party who opposed slavery, New York Barnburners, and members of the Liberty Party met in August 1848 in Buffalo, New York, to found a new political party. The Barnburners made a call for the formation of an anti-slavery party at their conclave in June, and by the People's Convention of Friends of Free Territory, which was organized by Salmon P. Chase, in Columbus, Ohio. The convention was attended by 165 delegates from eight states to form the Free Soil Party.[4]

Van Buren won the party's presidential nomination against John P. Hale on the first ballot with 244 votes against Hale's 181 votes. Hale had been nominated by the Liberty Party in October 1847, but withdrew from the election after the Free Soil Party gave its presidential nomination to Van Buren. Charles F. Adams won the party's vice-presidential nomination.[4]

Van Buren knew that the Free Soilers had not the slightest chance of winning, rather that his candidacy would split the Democratic vote and throw the election to the Whigs. Bitter and aging, Van Buren did not care despite the fact that his life had been built upon the rock of party solidarity and party regularity. He loathed Lewis Cass and the principle of popular sovereignty with equal intensity.[6]

Liberty Party nomination edit

Despite their significant showing in the prior presidential election, certain events would conspire to remove the Liberty Party from political significance.

Initially, the party's presidential nomination was to be decided in the fall of 1847 at a Convention in Buffalo, New York. There, Senator John P. Hale was nominated for president over Gerrit Smith, brother-in-law to the party's previous presidential nominee James G. Birney. Leicester King, a former judge and state senator in Ohio, was nominated for vice president. Anti-slavery Democrats and Whigs, disappointed with their respective nominees, would form a new movement in conjunction with members of the Liberty Party such as John Hale and Salmon Chase to form the Free Soil Party that summer. At this point, both Hale and King withdrew in favor of a Free Soil ticket led by former President Martin Van Buren, and the great majority of members of the Liberty Party followed them into the new political party.

National Liberty Party nomination edit

A small faction refused to support Van Buren for the presidency, however. They held another convention in June 1848 as the "National Liberty Party." Gerrit Smith was nominated for president with Charles C. Foote, a Presbyterian minister from Michigan, as his vice presidential running mate.[7]

Convention vote
Presidential vote Vice presidential vote
Gerrit Smith 99 Charles C. Foote 44
Beriah Green 2 George Bradburn 12
Frederick Douglass 1 Samuel Ringgold Ward 12
Charles C. Foote 1 Lucretia Mott 5
Amos A. Sampson 1 John Curtis 3
Beriah Green 3
Charles O. Shepard 3
Frederick Douglass 1
Edward Smith 1

Other nominations edit

The Native American Party, a precursor to the Know Nothings, which had split from the Whig Party in 1845, met in September 1847 in Philadelphia, where they nominated Zachary Taylor for president and Henry A. S. Dearborn of Massachusetts for vice president. However, when the Whig Party nominated Taylor for the presidency with Millard Fillmore as his running mate the following year, this rendered his previous nomination moot and the Native American Party failed to make an alternate nomination.

The Industrial Congress held in Philadelphia on June 13, 1848, nominating Gerrit Smith (nominee of the National Liberty Party) for president, and William S. Wait of Illinois for vice president.[8]: 23  This meeting, inspired by the National Reform Association, was primarily focused on workers rights. It established a platform that included planks on land limitation, the reduction of public official's salaries, abolition of the standing army, tariff reduction, and a reduced work week.[9]

General election edit

Campaign edit

The campaign was fought without much enthusiasm, and practically without an issue. Neither of the two great parties made an effort to rally the people to the defense of any important principle.

Whig campaigners, who included Abraham Lincoln and Rutherford B. Hayes, talked up Taylor's "antiparty" opposition to the Jacksonian commitment to the spoils system and yellow-dog partisanship. In the South, they stressed that he was a Louisiana slaveholder, while in the North they highlighted his Whiggish willingness to defer to Congress on major issues (which he subsequently did not do).

Democrats repeated, as they had for many years, their opposition to a national bank, high tariffs, and federal subsidies for local improvements. The Free Soilers branded both major parties lackeys of the Slave Power, arguing that the rich planters controlled the agenda of both parties, leaving the ordinary white man out of the picture. They had to work around Van Buren's well-known reputation for compromising with slavery.

The Whigs had the advantage of highlighting Taylor's military glories. With Taylor remaining vague on the issues, the campaign was dominated by personalities and personal attacks, with the Democrats calling Taylor vulgar, uneducated, cruel and greedy, and the Whigs attacking Cass for graft and dishonesty. The division of the Democrats over slavery allowed Taylor to dominate the Northeast.[10]

The Free Soilers were on the ballots in only 17 of the 29 states with the popular vote, making it mathematically possible for Van Buren to win the presidency, but he had no real chance. Still, the party campaigned vigorously, particularly in the traditional Democratic strongholds in the northeast.

While some Free Soilers were hopeful of taking enough states to throw the election into the House of Representatives, Van Buren himself knew this was a long shot and that the best that his party could do was lay the groundwork for a hopefully improved showing in 1852.

1848 campaign artwork edit

Records edit

This was the first time in the Second Party System in which the victorious party failed to gain at least a plurality of the counties as well as of the popular vote.

This was the last election in which Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island voted for the Whigs. It was also the last time that Georgia voted against the Democrats until 1964, the last time Delaware and Louisiana did so until 1872, and the last time Florida and North Carolina did so until 1868.

Discounting Republican Abraham Lincoln's 1864 re-election on the National Union ticket, Taylor is the most recent individual who was not a member of either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party to win a presidential election. The contest was the first presidential election that took place on the same day in every state, and it was the first time that Election Day was statutorily a Tuesday.[12] It is also the first election in which the two candidates that received electoral votes carried the same number of states and the only time that it happened between Democrat and Whig candidates. This would only happen again twice, in 1880 and 2020.[13]

Results edit

 
Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage of the winning candidate in each county. Shades of yellow are for Taylor (Whig), shades of blue are for Cass (Democrat), and shades of green are for Van Buren (Free Soil).
 
"Cock of the walk" - Zachary Taylor as victor

With Taylor as their candidate, the Whigs won their second and last victory in a Presidential election. Taylor won the electoral college by capturing 163 of the 290 electoral votes. Taylor out-polled Cass in the popular vote by 138,000 votes, winning 47% of the popular vote, and was elected president.

A shift of less than 6000 votes to Cass in Georgia and Maryland would have left the electoral college in a 145–145 tie, while a shift of less than 27,000 votes to Van Buren in Connecticut, Maine and Massachusetts would have left both Taylor and Cass short of the 146 electoral votes required to win, forcing a contingent election in the House of Representatives.

A study of the county returns reveals that Free Soil strength drawn at the expense of the major parties differed by region. In the East North Central States, it appears at least the majority of the Free Soil strength was drawn from the Whig Party.

Conversely, in the Middle Atlantic region, Free Soil bases of strength lay in the areas which had hitherto been Democratic, particularly in New York and northern Pennsylvania. The Free Soil Democrats nomination of Van Buren made the victory of Taylor nearly certain in New York. On election day, enough Democratic votes were drawn away by Van Buren to give the Whig ticket all but two Democratic counties, thus enabling it to carry hitherto impregnable parts of upper New York state. The Democrats, confronted with an irreparable schism in New York, lost the election.

In New England, the Democratic vote declined by 33,000 from its 1844 level, while the Whig vote likewise declined by 15,000 votes. The third-party vote tripled, and the total vote remained nearly stationary: a partial indication, perhaps, of the derivation of the Free Soil strength in this section. For the first time since the existence of the Whig Party, the Whigs failed to gain an absolute majority of the vote in Massachusetts and Vermont. In addition, the Democrats failed to retain their usual majority in Maine; thus only New Hampshire (Democratic) and Rhode Island (Whig) of the states in this section gave their respective victorious parties clear-cut majorities.

Of the 1,464 counties/independent cities making returns, Cass placed first in 753 (51.43%), Taylor in 676 (46.17%), and Van Buren in 31 (2.12%). Four counties (0.27%) in the West split evenly between Taylor and Cass.

The election has sometimes been described as "a contest without an issue," as both major candidates sought to steer clear of divisive subjects. The historian George Pierce Garrison famously quipped that "practically the only thing it decided was that a Whig general should be made President because he had done effective work in carrying on a Democratic war."[14]

 

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote(a) Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Zachary Taylor Whig Louisiana 1,361,393 47.28% 163 Millard Fillmore New York 163
Lewis Cass Democratic Michigan 1,223,460 42.49% 127 William Orlando Butler Kentucky 127
Martin Van Buren Free Soil New York 291,501 10.12% 0 Charles Francis Adams Sr. Massachusetts 0
Gerrit Smith Liberty New York 2,545 0.09% 0 Charles C. Foote Michigan 0
Other 285 0.01% Other
Total 2,879,184 100% 290 290
Needed to win 146 146

Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1848 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 27, 2005. Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 31, 2005. (a) The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.

Popular vote
Taylor
47.28%
Cass
42.49%
Van Buren
10.12%
Others
0.11%
Electoral vote
Taylor
56.21%
Cass
43.79%

Geography of results edit

Cartographic gallery edit

Results by state edit

States/districts won by Cass/Butler
States/districts won by Taylor/Fillmore
Zachary Taylor
Whig
Lewis Cass
Democratic
Martin Van Buren
Free Soil
Margin State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % #
Alabama 9 0001361830,482 49.44 - 0004866931,173 50.56 9 no ballots -691 -1.12 61,655 AL
Arkansas 3 7,587 44.93 - 9,301 55.07 3 no ballots -1,714 -10.14 16,888 AR
Connecticut 6 30,318 48.59 6 27,051 43.35 - 5,005 8.02 - 3,267 5.24 62,398 CT
Delaware 3 6,440 51.80 3 5,910 47.54 - 82 0.66 - 530 4.26 12,423 DE
Florida 3 4,120 57.20 3 3,083 42.80 - no ballots 1,037 14.40 7,203 FL
Georgia 10 47,532 51.49 10 44,785 48.51 - no ballots 2,747 2.98 92,317 GA
Illinois 9 52,853 42.42 - 55,952 44.91 9 15,702 12.60 - -3,099 -2.49 124,596 IL
Indiana 12 69,907 45.77 - 74,745 48.93 12 8,100 5.30 - -4,838 -3.16 152,752 IN
Iowa 4 9,930 44.59 - 11,238 50.46 4 1,103 4.95 - -1,308 -5.87 22,271 IA
Kentucky 12 67,145 57.46 12 49,720 42.54 - no ballots 17,425 14.92 116,865 KY
Louisiana 6 18,487 54.59 6 15,379 45.41 - no ballots 3,108 9.18 33,866 LA
Maine 9 35,273 40.25 - 40,195 45.87 9 12,157 13.87 - -4,922 -5.62 87,625 ME
Maryland 8 37,702 52.10 8 34,528 47.72 - 129 0.18 - 3,174 4.38 72,359 MD
Massachusetts 12 61,072 45.32 12 35,281 26.18 - 38,333 28.45 - 22,739 16.87 134,748 MA
Michigan 5 23,947 36.80 - 30,742 47.24 5 10,393 15.97 - -6,795 -10.44 65,082 MI
Mississippi 6 25,911 49.40 - 26,545 50.60 6 no ballots -634 -1.20 52,456 MS
Missouri 7 32,671 44.91 - 40,077 55.09 7 no ballots -7,406 -10.18 72,748 MO
New Hampshire 6 14,781 29.50 - 27,763 55.41 6 7,560 15.09 - -12,982 -25.91 50,104 NH
New Jersey 7 40,015 51.48 7 36,901 47.47 - 819 1.05 - 3,114 4.01 77,735 NJ
New York 36 218,583 47.94 36 114,319 25.07 - 120,497 26.43 - 98,086 21.51 455,944 NY
North Carolina 11 44,054 55.17 11 35,772 44.80 - no ballots 8,282 10.37 79,826 NC
Ohio 23 138,359 42.12 - 154,773 47.12 23 35,347 10.76 - -16,414 -5.00 328,479 OH
Pennsylvania 26 185,313 50.28 26 171,976 46.66 - 11,263 3.06 - 13,337 3.62 368,552 PA
Rhode Island 4 6,779 60.77 4 3,646 32.68 - 730 6.54 - 3,133 28.09 11,155 RI
South Carolina 9 no popular vote no popular vote 9 no popular vote - - - SC
Tennessee 13 64,321 52.52 13 58,142 47.48 - no ballots 6,179 5.04 122,463 TN
Texas 4 4,509 29.71 - 10,668 70.29 4 no ballots -6,159 -40.58 15,177 TX
Vermont 6 23,132 48.27 6 10,948 22.85 - 13,837 28.87 - 9,295 19.40 47,922 VT
Virginia 17 45,265 49.20 - 46,739 50.80 17 no ballots -1,474 -1.60 92,004 VA
Wisconsin 4 13,747 35.10 - 15,001 38.30 4 10,418 26.60 - -1,254 -3.20 39,166 WI
TOTALS: 290 1,360,235 47.28 163 1,222,353 42.49 127 291,475 10.13 - 2,876,818 US
TO WIN: 146

Close states edit

States where the margin of victory was under 5%:

  1. Alabama 1.12% (691 votes)
  2. Mississippi 1.20% (634 votes)
  3. Virginia 1.60% (1,474 votes)
  4. Illinois 2.49% (3,099 votes)
  5. Georgia 2.98% (2,747 votes)
  6. Indiana 3.16% (4,838 votes)
  7. Wisconsin 3.20% (1,254 votes)
  8. Pennsylvania 3.62% (13,337 votes) (tipping point state)
  9. New Jersey 4.01% (3,114 votes)
  10. Delaware 4.26% (530 votes)
  11. Maryland 4.38% (3,174 votes)

States where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. Ohio 5.00% (16,414 votes)
  2. Tennessee 5.04% (6,179 votes)
  3. Connecticut 5.24% (3,267 votes)
  4. Maine 5.62% (4,922 votes)
  5. Iowa 5.87% (1,308 votes)
  6. Louisiana 9.18% (3,108 votes)

Electoral college selection edit

Method of choosing electors State(s)
Each Elector appointed by state legislature South Carolina
Each Elector chosen by voters statewide (all other States) *

* Massachusetts law provided that the state legislature would choose the Electors if no slate of Electors could command a majority of voters statewide. In 1848, this provision was triggered, although the legislature ultimately chose the electors of the plurality vote winner, Taylor.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ Allan Nevins, Ordeal of the Union: Volume I. Fruits of Manifest Destiny, 1847–1852 (1947).
  3. ^ Luthin, Richard H. (December 1941). "Abraham Lincoln and the Massachusetts Whigs in 1848". The New England Quarterly. 14 (4): 621–622. doi:10.2307/360598. JSTOR 360598.
  4. ^ a b c d e National Party Conventions, 1831-1976. Congressional Quarterly. 1979.
  5. ^ Stone, Irving (1966). They Also Ran: The Story of the Men who were Defeated for the Presidency. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. p. 262.
  6. ^ They Also Ran, Irving Stone, pg. 263
  7. ^ Proceedings of the National Liberty Convention. Utica, NY: S.W. Green. 1848. pp. 4–5.
  8. ^ Havel, James T. (1996). U.S. Presidential Elections and the Candidates: A Biographical and Historical Guide. Vol. 2: The Elections, 1789–1992. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-02-864623-1.
  9. ^ Commons, John R. (1918). History of labour in the United States. New York: Macmillan. pp. 547–550. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  10. ^ Silbey (2009)
  11. ^ weber, balmer and; h., weber, c. "Image 1 of Fort Harrison march". Archived from the original on July 10, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ , archived from the original on August 11, 2017, retrieved September 17, 2017
  13. ^ Source: Data from Walter Dean Burnham, Presidential ballots, 1836–1892 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1955) pp 247–57.
  14. ^ Garrison, George Pierce (1906). Westward Extension, 1841-1850. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 284.

Bibliography edit

  • Blue, Frederick J. The Free Soilers: Third Party Politics, 1848–54 (1973).
  • Boritt, G. S. "Lincoln's Opposition to the Mexican War," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol. 67, No. 1, Abraham Lincoln Issue (Feb. 1974), pp. 79–100 online
  • Campbell, Randolph. "The Whig Party of Texas in the Elections of 1848 and 1852." Southwestern Historical Quarterly 73.1 (1969): 17–34. online
  • Earle, Jonathan H. Jacksonian Antislavery and the Politics of Free Soil, 1828–1854 (2004).
  • Eyal, Yonatan. "The 'Party Period' Framework and the Election of 1848", Reviews in American History Volume 38, Number 1, March 2010, in Project MUSE
  • Graebner, Norman A. "Thomas Corwin and the Election of 1848: A Study in Conservative Politics." Journal of Southern History, 17 (1951), 162–79. in JSTOR
  • Hamilton, Holman. Zachary Taylor: Soldier in the White House (1951)
  • Holt; Michael F. The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. (1999). online edition
  • Mieczkowski, Yanek. "The Election of 1848." in The Routledge Historical Atlas of Presidential Elections (Routledge, 2013) pp. 45–46.
  • Morrison, Michael A. "New Territory versus No Territory": The Whig Party and the Politics of Western Expansion, 1846–1848," Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 1 (Feb. 1992), pp. 25–51 in JSTOR
  • Nevins, Allan. Ordeal of the Union: Volume I. Fruits of Manifest Destiny, 1847–1852 (1947).
  • Quist, John W. "The Election of 1848." in American Presidential Campaigns and Elections (Routledge, 2020) pp. 328–348.
  • Rayback, Joseph G. Free Soil: The Election of 1848. (1970).
  • Silbey, Joel H. Party Over Section: The Rough and Ready Presidential Election of 1848 (2009). 205 pp.

Primary sources edit

  • Chester, Edward W A guide to political platforms (1977) online
  • Porter, Kirk H. and Donald Bruce Johnson, eds. National party platforms, 1840-1964 (1965) online 1840-1956
  • Serio, Anne Marie. Political cartoons in the 1848 election campaign (1972) online

External links edit

  • Presidential Election of 1848: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • 1848 popular vote by counties
  • 1848 Election State-by-State popular results September 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  • Election of 1848 in Counting the Votes December 3, 2017, at the Wayback Machine

1848, united, states, presidential, election, 16th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1848, aftermath, mexican, american, general, zachary, taylor, whig, party, defeated, senator, lewis, cass, democratic, party, 1844, november, 1848. The 1848 United States presidential election was the 16th quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 7 1848 In the aftermath of the Mexican American War General Zachary Taylor of the Whig Party defeated Senator Lewis Cass of the Democratic Party 2 1848 United States presidential election 1844 November 7 1848 1852 290 members of the Electoral College146 electoral votes needed to winTurnout72 8 1 6 4 pp Nominee Zachary Taylor Lewis Cass Martin Van BurenParty Whig Democratic Free SoilAlliance Native AmericanHome state Louisiana Michigan New YorkRunning mate Millard Fillmore William O Butler Charles F AdamsElectoral vote 163 127 0States carried 15 15 0Popular vote 1 361 396 1 223 460 291 501Percentage 47 3 42 5 10 1 Presidential election results map Buff denotes states won by Taylor Fillmore and blue by Cass Butler Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes cast by each state President before electionJames K PolkDemocratic Elected President Zachary TaylorWhigDespite Taylor s unclear political affiliations and beliefs and the Whig opposition to the Mexican American War the 1848 Whig National Convention nominated the popular general over party stalwarts such as Henry Clay and Daniel Webster For vice president the Whigs nominated Millard Fillmore a New York Whig known for his moderate views on slavery Incumbent President James K Polk a Democrat honored his promise not to seek re election leaving his party s nomination open The 1848 Democratic National Convention nominated Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan after former President Martin Van Buren withdrew his bid for a second term over a platform dispute Van Buren broke from his party to lead the ticket of the Free Soil Party which opposed the extension of slavery into the territories The Whig choice of Zachary Taylor was made almost out of desperation he was not clearly committed to Whig principles but he was popular for leading the war effort The Democrats had a record of prosperity and had acquired the Mexican cession and parts of Oregon country It appeared almost certain that they would win unless the Whigs picked Taylor Taylor won a plurality of the popular vote and a majority of the electoral vote while Van Buren won 10 1 of the popular vote a strong showing for a third party candidate Taylor s victory made him the second of two Whigs to win a presidential election following William Henry Harrison s victory in the 1840 presidential election Like Harrison Taylor died during his term and he was succeeded by Fillmore Contents 1 Nominations 1 1 Whig Party nomination 1 2 Democratic Party nomination 1 3 Free Soil Party nomination 1 4 Liberty Party nomination 1 4 1 National Liberty Party nomination 1 5 Other nominations 2 General election 2 1 Campaign 2 1 1 1848 campaign artwork 2 2 Records 2 3 Results 2 4 Geography of results 2 4 1 Cartographic gallery 3 Results by state 3 1 Close states 4 Electoral college selection 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 Primary sources 8 External linksNominations editWhig Party nomination edit Main article 1848 Whig National Convention 1848 Whig Party ticketZachary Taylor Millard Fillmorefor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp Major generalof the U S Army 1846 1849 14thNew York State Comptroller 1848 1849 nbsp Grand National Whig bannerThe Whig Party held its national convention in Philadelphia Pennsylvania with delegates from every state except for Texas although the Texas Whigs had selected to make the Louisiana delegates their proxies Henry Clay Winfield Scott Zachary Taylor and Daniel Webster sought the presidential nomination and Taylor led on every ballot before winning on the fourth ballot After Webster turned down the vice presidential candidacy Millard Fillmore received the party s vice presidential nomination on the second ballot after defeating Abbott Lawrence a Massachusetts politician whose mild opposition to slavery led him to be dubbed a Cotton Whig An attempt was made to make both nominations unanimous but it was unsuccessful due to Taylor s support for the Whig Party being seen as dubious 3 4 Democratic Party nomination edit Main article 1848 Democratic National Convention 1848 Democratic Party ticketLewis Cass William O Butlerfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp U S Senator from Michigan 1845 1848 U S Representativefor Kentucky s 13th 1839 1843 nbsp James K Polk the incumbent president in 1848 whose term expired on March 4 1849 nbsp Cass Butler campaign posterThe Democratic Party held its national convention in Baltimore Maryland There was a credentials dispute over the New York delegation between the Barnburners and Hunkers factions with the Barnburners being anti slavery The delegates voted 126 to 125 to seat both delegations and share their control of New York s votes but the Barnburners left the convention in disagreement with the compromise while the Hunkers refused to vote The withdrawal of the Barnburners effectively removed former President Martin Van Buren who had already become unenthusiastic about trying to win the party s nomination after the convention had voted to endorse a platform supporting popular sovereignty from contention 4 As a result of Van Buren s withdrawal U S Senator Lewis Cass and Secretary of State James Buchanan were seen as the only serious contenders for the presidential nomination with a draft effort also focusing on Supreme Court associate justice Levi Woodbury In stark contrast to the highly contested and protracted convention at the previous election Cass held a wide lead on all four ballots only being denied victory on the third due to the convention rules requiring a two thirds majority before the Buchanan and Woodbury campaigns quietly released enough delegates to allow Cass victory on the fourth ballot William Orlando Butler won the vice presidential nomination on the second ballot against John A Quitman 5 4 Free Soil Party nomination edit Main article 1848 Free Soil amp Liberty national conventions 1848 Free Soil Party ticketMartin Van Buren Charles F Adamsfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 8thPresident of the United States 1837 1841 Massachusetts State Senator 1844 1845 nbsp Van Buren AdamsMembers of the Whig Party who opposed slavery New York Barnburners and members of the Liberty Party met in August 1848 in Buffalo New York to found a new political party The Barnburners made a call for the formation of an anti slavery party at their conclave in June and by the People s Convention of Friends of Free Territory which was organized by Salmon P Chase in Columbus Ohio The convention was attended by 165 delegates from eight states to form the Free Soil Party 4 Van Buren won the party s presidential nomination against John P Hale on the first ballot with 244 votes against Hale s 181 votes Hale had been nominated by the Liberty Party in October 1847 but withdrew from the election after the Free Soil Party gave its presidential nomination to Van Buren Charles F Adams won the party s vice presidential nomination 4 Van Buren knew that the Free Soilers had not the slightest chance of winning rather that his candidacy would split the Democratic vote and throw the election to the Whigs Bitter and aging Van Buren did not care despite the fact that his life had been built upon the rock of party solidarity and party regularity He loathed Lewis Cass and the principle of popular sovereignty with equal intensity 6 Liberty Party nomination edit Main article 1848 Free Soil amp Liberty national conventions Despite their significant showing in the prior presidential election certain events would conspire to remove the Liberty Party from political significance Initially the party s presidential nomination was to be decided in the fall of 1847 at a Convention in Buffalo New York There Senator John P Hale was nominated for president over Gerrit Smith brother in law to the party s previous presidential nominee James G Birney Leicester King a former judge and state senator in Ohio was nominated for vice president Anti slavery Democrats and Whigs disappointed with their respective nominees would form a new movement in conjunction with members of the Liberty Party such as John Hale and Salmon Chase to form the Free Soil Party that summer At this point both Hale and King withdrew in favor of a Free Soil ticket led by former President Martin Van Buren and the great majority of members of the Liberty Party followed them into the new political party National Liberty Party nomination edit A small faction refused to support Van Buren for the presidency however They held another convention in June 1848 as the National Liberty Party Gerrit Smith was nominated for president with Charles C Foote a Presbyterian minister from Michigan as his vice presidential running mate 7 Convention vote Presidential vote Vice presidential voteGerrit Smith 99 Charles C Foote 44Beriah Green 2 George Bradburn 12Frederick Douglass 1 Samuel Ringgold Ward 12Charles C Foote 1 Lucretia Mott 5Amos A Sampson 1 John Curtis 3Beriah Green 3Charles O Shepard 3Frederick Douglass 1Edward Smith 1Other nominations edit The Native American Party a precursor to the Know Nothings which had split from the Whig Party in 1845 met in September 1847 in Philadelphia where they nominated Zachary Taylor for president and Henry A S Dearborn of Massachusetts for vice president However when the Whig Party nominated Taylor for the presidency with Millard Fillmore as his running mate the following year this rendered his previous nomination moot and the Native American Party failed to make an alternate nomination The Industrial Congress held in Philadelphia on June 13 1848 nominating Gerrit Smith nominee of the National Liberty Party for president and William S Wait of Illinois for vice president 8 23 This meeting inspired by the National Reform Association was primarily focused on workers rights It established a platform that included planks on land limitation the reduction of public official s salaries abolition of the standing army tariff reduction and a reduced work week 9 General election editCampaign edit The campaign was fought without much enthusiasm and practically without an issue Neither of the two great parties made an effort to rally the people to the defense of any important principle Whig campaigners who included Abraham Lincoln and Rutherford B Hayes talked up Taylor s antiparty opposition to the Jacksonian commitment to the spoils system and yellow dog partisanship In the South they stressed that he was a Louisiana slaveholder while in the North they highlighted his Whiggish willingness to defer to Congress on major issues which he subsequently did not do Democrats repeated as they had for many years their opposition to a national bank high tariffs and federal subsidies for local improvements The Free Soilers branded both major parties lackeys of the Slave Power arguing that the rich planters controlled the agenda of both parties leaving the ordinary white man out of the picture They had to work around Van Buren s well known reputation for compromising with slavery The Whigs had the advantage of highlighting Taylor s military glories With Taylor remaining vague on the issues the campaign was dominated by personalities and personal attacks with the Democrats calling Taylor vulgar uneducated cruel and greedy and the Whigs attacking Cass for graft and dishonesty The division of the Democrats over slavery allowed Taylor to dominate the Northeast 10 The Free Soilers were on the ballots in only 17 of the 29 states with the popular vote making it mathematically possible for Van Buren to win the presidency but he had no real chance Still the party campaigned vigorously particularly in the traditional Democratic strongholds in the northeast While some Free Soilers were hopeful of taking enough states to throw the election into the House of Representatives Van Buren himself knew this was a long shot and that the best that his party could do was lay the groundwork for a hopefully improved showing in 1852 1848 campaign artwork edit nbsp Artwork for Fort Harrison March a campaign song for Zachary Taylor s presidential campaign which recalled his triumph at the Siege of Fort Harrison in 1812 11 nbsp Political cartoon about the election campaign titled Shooting the Christmas Turkey nbsp Grand Presidential sweep stakes political cartoon of the three main candidates Records edit This was the first time in the Second Party System in which the victorious party failed to gain at least a plurality of the counties as well as of the popular vote This was the last election in which Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Louisiana Maryland New Jersey New York North Carolina Pennsylvania and Rhode Island voted for the Whigs It was also the last time that Georgia voted against the Democrats until 1964 the last time Delaware and Louisiana did so until 1872 and the last time Florida and North Carolina did so until 1868 Discounting Republican Abraham Lincoln s 1864 re election on the National Union ticket Taylor is the most recent individual who was not a member of either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party to win a presidential election The contest was the first presidential election that took place on the same day in every state and it was the first time that Election Day was statutorily a Tuesday 12 It is also the first election in which the two candidates that received electoral votes carried the same number of states and the only time that it happened between Democrat and Whig candidates This would only happen again twice in 1880 and 2020 13 Results edit nbsp Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage of the winning candidate in each county Shades of yellow are for Taylor Whig shades of blue are for Cass Democrat and shades of green are for Van Buren Free Soil nbsp Cock of the walk Zachary Taylor as victorWith Taylor as their candidate the Whigs won their second and last victory in a Presidential election Taylor won the electoral college by capturing 163 of the 290 electoral votes Taylor out polled Cass in the popular vote by 138 000 votes winning 47 of the popular vote and was elected president A shift of less than 6000 votes to Cass in Georgia and Maryland would have left the electoral college in a 145 145 tie while a shift of less than 27 000 votes to Van Buren in Connecticut Maine and Massachusetts would have left both Taylor and Cass short of the 146 electoral votes required to win forcing a contingent election in the House of Representatives A study of the county returns reveals that Free Soil strength drawn at the expense of the major parties differed by region In the East North Central States it appears at least the majority of the Free Soil strength was drawn from the Whig Party Conversely in the Middle Atlantic region Free Soil bases of strength lay in the areas which had hitherto been Democratic particularly in New York and northern Pennsylvania The Free Soil Democrats nomination of Van Buren made the victory of Taylor nearly certain in New York On election day enough Democratic votes were drawn away by Van Buren to give the Whig ticket all but two Democratic counties thus enabling it to carry hitherto impregnable parts of upper New York state The Democrats confronted with an irreparable schism in New York lost the election In New England the Democratic vote declined by 33 000 from its 1844 level while the Whig vote likewise declined by 15 000 votes The third party vote tripled and the total vote remained nearly stationary a partial indication perhaps of the derivation of the Free Soil strength in this section For the first time since the existence of the Whig Party the Whigs failed to gain an absolute majority of the vote in Massachusetts and Vermont In addition the Democrats failed to retain their usual majority in Maine thus only New Hampshire Democratic and Rhode Island Whig of the states in this section gave their respective victorious parties clear cut majorities Of the 1 464 counties independent cities making returns Cass placed first in 753 51 43 Taylor in 676 46 17 and Van Buren in 31 2 12 Four counties 0 27 in the West split evenly between Taylor and Cass The election has sometimes been described as a contest without an issue as both major candidates sought to steer clear of divisive subjects The historian George Pierce Garrison famously quipped that practically the only thing it decided was that a Whig general should be made President because he had done effective work in carrying on a Democratic war 14 nbsp Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote a Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteZachary Taylor Whig Louisiana 1 361 393 47 28 163 Millard Fillmore New York 163Lewis Cass Democratic Michigan 1 223 460 42 49 127 William Orlando Butler Kentucky 127Martin Van Buren Free Soil New York 291 501 10 12 0 Charles Francis Adams Sr Massachusetts 0Gerrit Smith Liberty New York 2 545 0 09 0 Charles C Foote Michigan 0Other 285 0 01 Other Total 2 879 184 100 290 290Needed to win 146 146Source Popular Vote Leip David 1848 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved July 27 2005 Source Electoral Vote Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved July 31 2005 a The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote Popular voteTaylor 47 28 Cass 42 49 Van Buren 10 12 Others 0 11 Electoral voteTaylor 56 21 Cass 43 79 Geography of results edit Cartographic gallery edit nbsp Map of presidential election results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the vote nbsp Map of Whig presidential election results by county nbsp Map of Democratic presidential election results by county nbsp Map of Free Soil presidential election results by county nbsp Map of Liberty presidential election results by county nbsp Map of Other presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Whig presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Democratic presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Free Soil presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Liberty presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Other presidential election results by countyResults by state editStates districts won by Cass ButlerStates districts won by Taylor FillmoreZachary TaylorWhig Lewis CassDemocratic Martin Van BurenFree Soil Margin State TotalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes Alabama 9 00013618 30 482 49 44 00048669 31 173 50 56 9 no ballots 691 1 12 61 655 ALArkansas 3 7 587 44 93 9 301 55 07 3 no ballots 1 714 10 14 16 888 ARConnecticut 6 30 318 48 59 6 27 051 43 35 5 005 8 02 3 267 5 24 62 398 CTDelaware 3 6 440 51 80 3 5 910 47 54 82 0 66 530 4 26 12 423 DEFlorida 3 4 120 57 20 3 3 083 42 80 no ballots 1 037 14 40 7 203 FLGeorgia 10 47 532 51 49 10 44 785 48 51 no ballots 2 747 2 98 92 317 GAIllinois 9 52 853 42 42 55 952 44 91 9 15 702 12 60 3 099 2 49 124 596 ILIndiana 12 69 907 45 77 74 745 48 93 12 8 100 5 30 4 838 3 16 152 752 INIowa 4 9 930 44 59 11 238 50 46 4 1 103 4 95 1 308 5 87 22 271 IAKentucky 12 67 145 57 46 12 49 720 42 54 no ballots 17 425 14 92 116 865 KYLouisiana 6 18 487 54 59 6 15 379 45 41 no ballots 3 108 9 18 33 866 LAMaine 9 35 273 40 25 40 195 45 87 9 12 157 13 87 4 922 5 62 87 625 MEMaryland 8 37 702 52 10 8 34 528 47 72 129 0 18 3 174 4 38 72 359 MDMassachusetts 12 61 072 45 32 12 35 281 26 18 38 333 28 45 22 739 16 87 134 748 MAMichigan 5 23 947 36 80 30 742 47 24 5 10 393 15 97 6 795 10 44 65 082 MIMississippi 6 25 911 49 40 26 545 50 60 6 no ballots 634 1 20 52 456 MSMissouri 7 32 671 44 91 40 077 55 09 7 no ballots 7 406 10 18 72 748 MONew Hampshire 6 14 781 29 50 27 763 55 41 6 7 560 15 09 12 982 25 91 50 104 NHNew Jersey 7 40 015 51 48 7 36 901 47 47 819 1 05 3 114 4 01 77 735 NJNew York 36 218 583 47 94 36 114 319 25 07 120 497 26 43 98 086 21 51 455 944 NYNorth Carolina 11 44 054 55 17 11 35 772 44 80 no ballots 8 282 10 37 79 826 NCOhio 23 138 359 42 12 154 773 47 12 23 35 347 10 76 16 414 5 00 328 479 OHPennsylvania 26 185 313 50 28 26 171 976 46 66 11 263 3 06 13 337 3 62 368 552 PARhode Island 4 6 779 60 77 4 3 646 32 68 730 6 54 3 133 28 09 11 155 RISouth Carolina 9 no popular vote no popular vote 9 no popular vote SCTennessee 13 64 321 52 52 13 58 142 47 48 no ballots 6 179 5 04 122 463 TNTexas 4 4 509 29 71 10 668 70 29 4 no ballots 6 159 40 58 15 177 TXVermont 6 23 132 48 27 6 10 948 22 85 13 837 28 87 9 295 19 40 47 922 VTVirginia 17 45 265 49 20 46 739 50 80 17 no ballots 1 474 1 60 92 004 VAWisconsin 4 13 747 35 10 15 001 38 30 4 10 418 26 60 1 254 3 20 39 166 WITOTALS 290 1 360 235 47 28 163 1 222 353 42 49 127 291 475 10 13 2 876 818 USTO WIN 146 Close states edit States where the margin of victory was under 5 Alabama 1 12 691 votes Mississippi 1 20 634 votes Virginia 1 60 1 474 votes Illinois 2 49 3 099 votes Georgia 2 98 2 747 votes Indiana 3 16 4 838 votes Wisconsin 3 20 1 254 votes Pennsylvania 3 62 13 337 votes tipping point state New Jersey 4 01 3 114 votes Delaware 4 26 530 votes Maryland 4 38 3 174 votes States where the margin of victory was under 10 Ohio 5 00 16 414 votes Tennessee 5 04 6 179 votes Connecticut 5 24 3 267 votes Maine 5 62 4 922 votes Iowa 5 87 1 308 votes Louisiana 9 18 3 108 votes Electoral college selection editMethod of choosing electors State s Each Elector appointed by state legislature South CarolinaEach Elector chosen by voters statewide all other States Massachusetts law provided that the state legislature would choose the Electors if no slate of Electors could command a majority of voters statewide In 1848 this provision was triggered although the legislature ultimately chose the electors of the plurality vote winner Taylor See also edit1848 49 United States House of Representatives elections 1848 49 United States Senate elections American election campaigns in the 19th century History of the United States 1789 1849 Inauguration of Zachary TaylorReferences edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press Allan Nevins Ordeal of the Union Volume I Fruits of Manifest Destiny 1847 1852 1947 Luthin Richard H December 1941 Abraham Lincoln and the Massachusetts Whigs in 1848 The New England Quarterly 14 4 621 622 doi 10 2307 360598 JSTOR 360598 a b c d e National Party Conventions 1831 1976 Congressional Quarterly 1979 Stone Irving 1966 They Also Ran The Story of the Men who were Defeated for the Presidency Garden City NY Doubleday p 262 They Also Ran Irving Stone pg 263 Proceedings of the National Liberty Convention Utica NY S W Green 1848 pp 4 5 Havel James T 1996 U S Presidential Elections and the Candidates A Biographical and Historical Guide Vol 2 The Elections 1789 1992 New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 02 864623 1 Commons John R 1918 History of labour in the United States New York Macmillan pp 547 550 Retrieved June 8 2022 Silbey 2009 weber balmer and h weber c Image 1 of Fort Harrison march Archived from the original on July 10 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link President Elect Previous Trivia Of The Week archived from the original on August 11 2017 retrieved September 17 2017 Source Data from Walter Dean Burnham Presidential ballots 1836 1892 Johns Hopkins University Press 1955 pp 247 57 Garrison George Pierce 1906 Westward Extension 1841 1850 New York Harper amp Brothers p 284 Bibliography editBlue Frederick J The Free Soilers Third Party Politics 1848 54 1973 Boritt G S Lincoln s Opposition to the Mexican War Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Vol 67 No 1 Abraham Lincoln Issue Feb 1974 pp 79 100 online Campbell Randolph The Whig Party of Texas in the Elections of 1848 and 1852 Southwestern Historical Quarterly 73 1 1969 17 34 online Earle Jonathan H Jacksonian Antislavery and the Politics of Free Soil 1828 1854 2004 Eyal Yonatan The Party Period Framework and the Election of 1848 Reviews in American History Volume 38 Number 1 March 2010 in Project MUSE Graebner Norman A Thomas Corwin and the Election of 1848 A Study in Conservative Politics Journal of Southern History 17 1951 162 79 in JSTOR Hamilton Holman Zachary Taylor Soldier in the White House 1951 Holt Michael F The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War 1999 online edition Mieczkowski Yanek The Election of 1848 in The Routledge Historical Atlas of Presidential Elections Routledge 2013 pp 45 46 Morrison Michael A New Territory versus No Territory The Whig Party and the Politics of Western Expansion 1846 1848 Western Historical Quarterly Vol 23 No 1 Feb 1992 pp 25 51 in JSTOR Nevins Allan Ordeal of the Union Volume I Fruits of Manifest Destiny 1847 1852 1947 Quist John W The Election of 1848 in American Presidential Campaigns and Elections Routledge 2020 pp 328 348 Rayback Joseph G Free Soil The Election of 1848 1970 Silbey Joel H Party Over Section The Rough and Ready Presidential Election of 1848 2009 205 pp Primary sources edit Chester Edward W A guide to political platforms 1977 online Porter Kirk H and Donald Bruce Johnson eds National party platforms 1840 1964 1965 online 1840 1956 Serio Anne Marie Political cartoons in the 1848 election campaign 1972 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States presidential election 1848 Presidential Election of 1848 A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress 1848 popular vote by counties 1848 Election State by State popular results Archived September 30 2007 at the Wayback Machine Election of 1848 in Counting the Votes Archived December 3 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1848 United States presidential election amp oldid 1207732971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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