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1880 United States presidential election

The 1880 United States presidential election was the 24th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 1880, in which Republican nominee James A. Garfield defeated Winfield Scott Hancock of the Democratic Party. The voter turnout rate was one of the highest in the nation's history. Garfield would be assassinated 6 months after his inauguration.

1880 United States presidential election

← 1876 November 2, 1880 1884 →

369 members of the Electoral College
185 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout78%[1] 4.6 pp
 
Nominee James A. Garfield Winfield Scott Hancock
Party Republican Democratic
Home state Ohio Pennsylvania
Running mate Chester A. Arthur William H. English
Electoral vote 214 155
States carried 19 19
Popular vote 4,446,158[a] 4,444,260[a]
Percentage 48.32% 48.21%

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Presidential election results map. Red denotes those won by Garfield/Arthur, blue denotes states won by Hancock/English. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Rutherford B. Hayes
Republican

Elected President

James A. Garfield
Republican

Incumbent President Rutherford B. Hayes did not seek re-election. After the longest convention in the party's history, the factionalized Republicans chose Representative Garfield of Ohio as their standard-bearer. The Democratic Party chose General Winfield Scott Hancock of Pennsylvania as their nominee. The dominance of the two major parties began to fray as an upstart left-wing party, the Greenback Party, nominated another Civil War general for president, Iowa Congressman James B. Weaver. In a campaign fought mainly over issues of Civil War loyalties, tariffs, and Chinese immigration, Garfield narrowly won both the electoral and popular vote. He and Hancock each took just over 48 percent of the popular vote, while Weaver and two other minor candidates, Neal Dow and John W. Phelps, together made up the remainder. The election of 1880 was the sixth and final consecutive presidential election won by the Republicans, the second longest winning streak in American history after the Democratic-Republican Party during the period 1800–1824.

In the end, the popular vote totals of the two main candidates were separated by 1,898 votes (0.11%), the smallest victory in the national popular vote ever recorded. In the electoral college, however, Garfield's victory was much larger; he won the decisive state of New York by 21,033 votes (1.91%). Hancock's sweep of the Southern states was not enough for victory, but it cemented his party's dominance of the region for generations. This was the first presidential election in which people in every state were able to vote directly for presidential electors.[b]

Background

The two major parties were the Republicans and the Democrats, and after the end of the Reconstruction Era in 1877, the national electorate was closely divided between them.[9] Party membership was only partly based on ideology; party identification often reflected ethnic and religious background, as well as Civil War loyalties that were still keenly felt by many voters.[10] Most Northern Protestants voted Republican, as did black Southerners. On the other hand, white Southerners and Northern Catholics generally voted Democratic.[c][11]

Issues

The gold standard and the tariff tax on imports divided the major parties.[12] The monetary debate was over the basis for the value of the United States dollar. Nothing but gold and silver coin had ever been legal tender in the United States until the Civil War, when the mounting costs of the war forced the United States Congress to issue "greenbacks" (dollar bills backed by government bonds).[13] Greenbacks helped pay for the war, but resulted in severe inflation .[13] After the war, bondholders and other creditors (based in the North) wanted to return to a gold standard. At the same time, debtors (especially in the South and West) benefited from the way inflation reduced the real value of their debts, and workers and some businessmen liked the way inflation made for easy credit.[14] The issue cut across parties, producing dissension among Republicans and Democrats alike and spawning a third party, the Greenback Party, in 1876, when both major parties nominated "hard money" candidates (i.e., candidates who favored the gold-backed currency instead of "soft money" greenbacks that generated inflation). Monetary debate intensified as Congress effectively demonetized silver in 1873 and began redeeming greenbacks in gold by 1879, while limiting their circulation.[15] As the 1880 election season began, the nation's money was backed by gold alone, but the issue was far from settled.[16]

Tariff policy was a major source of party conflict in late 19th-century and early 20th century. During the Civil War, Congress raised protective tariffs to new heights. This was done partly to pay for the war, but partly because high tariffs were popular in the North. A high tariff meant that foreign goods were more expensive, which made it easier for American businesses to sell goods domestically.[17] Republicans supported high tariffs as a way to protect American jobs and increase prosperity.[18] Democrats condemned them as a source of higher prices for goods, whereas the higher revenues that they generated for the federal government were not needed after the conclusion of the Civil War.[17] However Northern Democrats from manufacturing districts, especially in Pennsylvania, also supported high tariffs. In the interest of party unity, the leaders of each party often sought to avoid the question as much as possible.[18]

1876 election

In the election of 1876, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio defeated Democrat Samuel J. Tilden of New York in one of the most hotly contested presidential elections in the nation's history.[19] The early results indicated a Democratic victory, but the electoral votes of several Southern states were disputed bitterly. Both parties in Congress agreed to convene a bipartisan Electoral Commission, which ultimately decided the race for Hayes.[19]

For Democrats, the "stolen election" became a rallying cry, and the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives spent much of 1878 investigating it, although they failed to turn up any new evidence against their Republican foes.[20] At first, Tilden was seen as the front-runner for the 1880 nomination.[20] For leading Republicans, Hayes's inauguration in 1877 signaled the start of backroom maneuverings for the nomination in 1880.[21] Even before his election, Hayes had pledged not to run for a second term, leaving the path to the White House open in 1880.[22] His cabinet selections alienated many party leaders as well, deepening the growing divide within the Republican party between forces loyal to New York Senator Roscoe Conkling and those loyal to Maine Senator James G. Blaine.[21]

Conventions

The parties agreed on their respective platforms and nominees at conventions, which met in the summer before the election.

Republicans

1880 Republican Party ticket
James A. Garfield Chester A. Arthur
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Ohio's 19th congressional district
(1863–1880)
10th
Chairman of the New York Republican Party
(1879–1881)
 
 
Rutherford B. Hayes, the incumbent president in 1880, whose term expired on March 4, 1881

The Republican convention met first, convening in Chicago, Illinois, on June 2. Of the men vying for the Republican nomination, the three strongest candidates leading up to the convention were former president Ulysses S. Grant, Senator James G. Blaine and Treasury Secretary John Sherman.[23] Grant had been the leading military commander for the Northern forces during the Civil War, and had served two terms as president from 1869 to 1877. He was seeking an unprecedented third term in the office. He was backed by Conkling's faction of the Republican Party, now known as the Stalwarts.[24] They were mainly known for their opposition to the civil service reforms sought by President Hayes. Blaine, a senator and former representative from Maine, was backed by the Half-Breed faction of the party, which did support civil service reform.[25] Sherman, the brother of Civil War general William Tecumseh Sherman, was a former senator from Ohio serving in Hayes's cabinet. He was backed by a smaller delegation that supported neither of the major factions.

On the first ballot, Grant and Blaine gleaned 304 and 285 votes, respectively, while Sherman received 93.[26] None of the candidates were close to victory, and the balloting continued in order to determine a winner.[27] Many more ballots were taken, but no candidate prevailed. After the thirty-fifth ballot, Blaine and Sherman delegates switched their support to the new "dark horse" candidate, Representative James A. Garfield from Ohio.[28] On the next ballot, Garfield won the nomination when he received 399 votes, most of them former Blaine and Sherman delegates. To placate the Grant faction, Garfield's Ohio supporters suggested Levi P. Morton for vice president. Morton declined, based on Conkling's advice. They next offered the nomination to Chester A. Arthur, another New York Stalwart. Conkling also advised him to decline, but he accepted. He was nominated, and the longest-ever Republican National Convention was adjourned on June 8, 1880.[29]

Democrats

1880 Democratic Party ticket
Winfield S. Hancock William H. English
for President for Vice President
 
 
Major general
of the U.S. Army
(1844–1886)
U.S. Representative
for Indiana's 2nd congressional district
(1853–1861)
Campaign
 

Later that month, the Democrats held their convention in Cincinnati, Ohio. Six men were officially candidates for nomination at the convention, and several others also received votes. Of these, the two leading candidates were Major General Winfield Scott Hancock from Pennsylvania and Senator Thomas F. Bayard from Delaware. Tilden was not officially a candidate, but he wielded a heavy influence over the convention. Tilden was ambiguous about his willingness to participate in another campaign, leading some delegates to defect to other candidates, while others stayed loyal to their old standard-bearer.[30]

As the convention opened, some delegates favored Bayard, a conservative senator, while others supported Hancock, a career soldier and Civil War hero. Still others flocked to men they saw as surrogates for Tilden, including Henry B. Payne from Ohio, an attorney and former congressman, and Samuel J. Randall from Pennsylvania, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives.[31] The first round of balloting was inconclusive, with Hancock and Bayard leading the count. Before the second round, Tilden's withdrawal from the campaign became known for certain; delegates then shifted to Hancock, who was nominated.[32] William Hayden English, a conservative politician and businessman from the swing state of Indiana, was nominated for vice president.[33]

Minor parties

The Greenback Party convention gathered in Chicago in mid-June, using the hall recently vacated by the Republicans.[34] The party was a newcomer to the political scene in 1880, having arisen as a response to the economic depression that followed the Panic of 1873, mostly in the nation's West and South.[35] During the Civil War, Congress had authorized "greenbacks", a form of money redeemable in government bonds, rather than in gold, as was traditional.[36] After the war, many Democrats and Republicans in the East sought to return to the gold standard, and the government began to withdraw greenbacks from circulation.[37] The reduction of the money supply, combined with the economic depression, made life harder for debtors, farmers, and industrial laborers; the Greenback Party hoped to draw support from these groups.[35] Beyond their support for a larger money supply, they also favored an eight-hour work day, safety regulations in factories, and an end to child labor.[38]

Six men were candidates for the Greenback nomination. James B. Weaver, an Iowa congressman and Civil War general, was the clear favorite, but two other congressmen, Benjamin F. Butler from Massachusetts and Hendrick B. Wright from Pennsylvania, also commanded considerable followings. Weaver triumphed quickly, winning a majority of the 850 delegates' votes on the first ballot.[39] Barzillai J. Chambers, a Texas businessman and Confederate veteran, was likewise nominated for vice president on the initial vote.[39] More tumultuous was the fight over the platform, as delegates from disparate factions of the left-wing movement clashed over women's suffrage, Chinese immigration, and the extent to which the government should regulate working conditions.[40]

A convention of the Prohibition Party also met that month in Cleveland, Ohio.[41] The Prohibitionists, more of a movement than a party, focused their efforts on banning alcohol.[42] Most party members came from pietist churches, and most were former Republicans.[42] Only twelve states sent delegates to the convention, and the platform they agreed on was silent on most issues of the day, focusing instead on the evils of alcohol.[41] For president, the Prohibitionists nominated Neal Dow, a Civil War general from Maine.[43] As mayor of Portland, Dow helped to pass the "Maine law", which banned the sale of alcohol in the city; it became the model for temperance laws around the country.[43] Finally, a revived Anti-Masonic Party nominated John W. Phelps, another Civil War general, on a platform of opposition to Freemasonry.[43] Political prognosticators gave Weaver little chance of victory, and Dow and Phelps none at all.[44]

Candidates

Garfield

 
Garfield–Arthur election poster

James Abram Garfield was raised in humble circumstances on an Ohio farm by his widowed mother. He worked at various jobs, including on a canal boat, in his youth.[45] Beginning at age 17, he studied at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, from which he graduated in 1856.[46] A year later, Garfield entered politics as a Republican. He married Lucretia Rudolph in 1858, and served as a member of the Ohio State Senate (1859–1861).[47] Garfield opposed Confederate secession, served as a major general in the Union Army during the Civil War, and fought in the battles of Middle Creek, Shiloh, and Chickamauga.[48] He was first elected to Congress in 1862 to represent Ohio's 19th District.[49] Throughout Garfield's extended congressional service after the Civil War, he firmly supported the gold standard and gained a reputation as a skilled orator.[50] Garfield initially agreed with Radical Republican views regarding Reconstruction, but later favored a moderate approach for civil rights enforcement for freedmen.[51]

After his nomination, Garfield met with party leaders in an attempt to heal the schism between the Stalwarts and Half-Breeds.[52] In his formal letter to the party accepting his nomination, written with advice from party leaders, he endorsed the ideas of high tariffs and sound money, but drew particular attention to the issues of Chinese immigration and civil service reform.[53] On both, Garfield sought a moderate path. He called for some restrictions on the former, through treaty renegotiation with the Chinese government.[53] He straddled the divide on civil service reform, saying that he agreed with the concept, while promising to make no appointments without consulting party leaders, a position 20th-century biographer Allan Peskin called "inconsistent".[54] As was traditional at the time, Garfield conducted a "front porch campaign", returning to his home for the duration of the contest, and leaving the actual campaigning to surrogates.[55]

Hancock

 
Hancock–English election poster

Winfield Scott Hancock was born and raised in Pennsylvania.[56] He attended the United States Military Academy at West Point and served in the Army for four decades, including service in the Mexican–American War and as a Union general in the Civil War. Known to his Army colleagues as "Hancock the Superb", he was noted in particular for his personal leadership at the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863, where he led the defense of Pickett's Charge, getting wounded in the process. His military service continued after the Civil War, as Hancock participated in the military Reconstruction of the South and the Army's presence at the Western frontier. During Reconstruction, he sided with then-President Andrew Johnson in working for a quick end to military occupation of the South and a return to government by the pre-war establishment.[57] Hancock's reputation as a war hero at Gettysburg, combined with his status as a prominent Democrat with impeccable Unionist credentials and pro-states' rights views, made him a quadrennial presidential possibility.[58]

Hancock was officially notified of his nomination in July, and responded with the traditional letter of acceptance.[59] As Garfield had, the Democratic nominee sought to cause no controversy in his statement, which according to biographer David M. Jordan was "bland and general".[59] After scorning the previous years of Republican rule, Hancock sought to tamp down fears that election of a Democrat would overturn the results of the war and Reconstruction, a common Republican campaign theme.[60] Unlike Garfield, Hancock had no record in elected office, but the acceptance letter gave no further indication of his political preferences.[60] Hancock remained on active duty during the campaign at his post on Governors Island in New York Harbor.[61]

Weaver

 
Weaver–Chambers campaign ribbon

James Baird Weaver was born in Ohio, and moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier.[62] He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers, joining and quitting several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed. After serving in the Union Army in the Civil War, Weaver returned to Iowa and worked for the election of Republican candidates.[63] After making several unsuccessful attempts at Republican nominations to various offices, and growing dissatisfied with the conservative wing of the party, in 1877 Weaver switched to the Greenback Party, advocating an increased money supply and stricter regulation of big business.[64] As a Greenbacker with Democratic support, Weaver won election to the House of Representatives in 1878.[64]

Unlike the major party candidates, Weaver planned to take the field himself, giving speeches around the country.[65] His running mate, Chambers, was to do the same, until a fall from a train in July disabled him for the duration of the campaign.[66] As the Greenbackers had the only ticket that included a Southerner, he hoped to make inroads in that region.[67] Weaver's path to victory, already unlikely, was made more difficult by his refusal to run a fusion ticket in states where Democratic and Greenbacker strength might have combined to outvote the Republicans.[68] His party's message of racial inclusion also presaged difficulty in the South, as the Greenbackers would face the same obstacles the Republicans did in the face of increasing black disenfranchisement.[69]

Campaign

 
A cartoon from Harper's Weekly suggests that defeated Confederates will overturn the results of the Civil War should Hancock be elected.

Bloody shirt

Hancock and the Democrats expected to carry the Solid South, while much of the North was considered safe territory for Garfield and the Republicans; most of the campaign would involve a handful of close states, including New York and Indiana. National elections were largely decided in close elections in New York and the Midwest. Practical differences between the major party candidates were few, and Republicans began the campaign with the familiar theme of "waving the bloody shirt", reminding Northern voters that the Democratic Party was responsible for secession and four years of civil war, and that if they held power they would reverse the gains of that war, dishonor Union veterans, and pay Confederate soldiers' pensions out of the federal treasury.[70] With fifteen years having passed since the end of the war, and Union generals at the head of all of the major and minor party tickets, the appeal to wartime loyalties was of diminishing value in exciting the voters.[71]

The Democrats, for their part, campaigned on the character of the candidates. They attacked Garfield for his connection with the Crédit Mobilier of America scandal of the early 1870s, in which many members of Congress were bribed by the Crédit Mobilier corporation, a railroad construction company.[72] Garfield's precise involvement was unknown, but modern biographers agree that his account of his dealings with the construction syndicate were less than perfectly honest.[73] Democrats used the incident as a contrast with Hancock who, as a career army officer, stood apart from Congress and lobbyists. Many in the Republican Party were reluctant to directly criticize the "hero of Gettysburg", but they did characterize Hancock as uninformed on the issues, and some of his former comrades-in-arms gave critical speeches regarding his character.[74] Democrats never made clear what about their victory would improve the nation; Jordan later characterized their message as simply "our man is better than your man".[18]

The Greenbackers saw the impact of Civil War loyalties more acutely as they vied for Southern votes. Weaver embarked on a speaking tour of the South in July and August. Although the local Greenback parties had seen some recent success, the national party, with an ex-Republican Union general at the head of the ticket, faced more opposition.[69] The party's courtship of black voters, too, threatened the white Democratic establishment, leading to violent outbursts at Weaver's rallies and threats against his supporters.[69] As Weaver campaigned in the North in September and October, Republicans accused him of purposely dividing the vote to help Democrats win a plurality in marginal states.[68] Weaver refused to cooperate with Democrats in running fusion slates of presidential electors. However, in state-level races, Greenback candidates did often combine with Democrats to defeat Republican candidates.[68] In the September gubernatorial race in Maine, one such fusion ticket nominated Harris M. Plaisted, who narrowly defeated the incumbent Republican in what was thought to be a safe state for that party.[d][76] The surprise defeat sent a shock through the Garfield campaign, and caused them to rethink their strategy of waving the bloody shirt.[77]

Tariffs and immigration

 
Hancock's blunder about tariffs may have harmed his standing with Northern industrial workers.

After their defeat in Maine, the Republicans began to emphasize policy differences more. One significant difference between them and the Democrats was the plank in the Democratic platform endorsing "a tariff for revenue only". That is the tariff would only be used to cover the costs of the federal government, and not be raised higher to help specific industries.[18] Garfield's campaigners used this statement to paint the Democrats as unsympathetic to the plight of industrial laborers, a group that benefited from a high protective tariff. The tariff issue cut Democratic support in industrialized Northern states, which were essential in establishing a Democratic majority.[78] Hancock made the situation worse when, attempting to strike a moderate stance, he said "the tariff question is a local question".[71] While not completely inaccurate—tariff preferences often reflected local concerns—the statement was at odds with the Democrats' platform and suggested that Hancock did not understand the issue.[72]

The change in tactics appeared to be effective, as October state elections in Ohio and Indiana resulted in Republican victories there, discouraging Democrats about their chances the following month.[78] Democratic party leaders had selected English as Hancock's running mate because of his popularity in Indiana. With their state-level defeat there, some talked of dropping English from the ticket, but he convinced them that the October losses owed more to local issues, and that the Democratic ticket could still carry Indiana, if not Ohio, in November.[78]

In the last weeks before the election, the issue of Chinese immigration entered the race. Both major parties (as well as the Greenbackers) pledged in their platforms to limit immigration from China, which native-born workers in the Western states believed was depressing their wages. On October 20, however, a Democratic newspaper published a letter, purportedly from Garfield to a group of businessmen, pledging to keep immigration at the current levels so that industry could keep workers' wages low.[79] Garfield denounced the letter as a ruse, but not before one hundred thousand copies of the newspaper were mailed to California and Oregon.[80] Once the letter was exposed as a forgery, Garfield biographer Peskin believes it may even have gained votes for the Republican in the East, but it likely weakened him in the West.[81]

Results

The extremely close election, with very high turnout, reflected the typical pattern of the Gilded Age. Democrats were assured of a Solid South electoral vote, as well as most of the border states. Republicans captured the Northeast and Midwest, winning the critical swing states of New York, Ohio and Indiana. The Republicans captured the electoral vote 214–155, but the popular vote margin was under 2000 out of over 9 million votes cast. Republicans won the House of Representatives 147–135, but the Senate was evenly split, with the vice president casting the deciding vote.[82]

When all the ballots were counted, fewer than 2,000 votes separated Garfield and Hancock, the closest popular vote of any American presidential election before or since.[a][3] The voters showed their interest in the election by turning out in record numbers; 78 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot, among largest percentages in American history.[83] Each major party candidate earned just over 48 percent of the vote. Weaver won more than 3 percent, tripling the Greenback total of four years earlier. The other minor party candidates fared far worse, as Dow and Phelps earned 0.1 and 0.01 percent, respectively.[84] Garfield carried the crucial state of New York by 20,000 votes out of 1.1 million cast there.[85] Other states were much closer; Hancock's margin of victory in California was only about 144 votes.[86][a] In the electoral college, the vote was more decisive. As expected, Hancock carried the South and border states, but Garfield swept all but one of the Northern states (the exception was New Jersey, which he lost by just two thousand votes).[86] Both candidates carried nineteen states, but Garfield's triumphs in the more populous North translated into a 214–155 electoral college victory.[86] The sectional divide of the vote more deeply enforced the Republicans' retreat from the South after Reconstruction, and demonstrated that they could win without competing there.[83][87] Weaver's resistance to fusion had no effect on the result; the combined Democratic and Greenback vote would have carried Indiana, but not any other of the states Garfield won, and the result would still have been a Republican majority in the electoral college.[84] Hancock was convinced that the Republicans won New York by fraud. Lacking evidence, and mindful of the turmoil caused by the disputed election four years earlier, the Democrats did not pursue the matter.[88]

Irregularities

In Virginia, a split in the Democratic Party over the payment of state debts led to two Democratic electoral slates being nominated, one by the regular debt-paying "Funder" Democrats, the other by the "Readjuster" or anti-debt paying faction of the party.[89] Both slates were pledged to the Hancock ticket. Republicans initially hoped the split could lead Garfield to win the state, but the results were otherwise. The Readjuster ticket received 31,527 votes, but the Funder Democrats took 96,449 votes, enough to defeat the Republicans, whose slate had 84,020.[90]

Although Hancock won Georgia's popular vote easily, there was an irregularity in that state's electoral votes. According to Article II, Section 1, clause 3 of the Constitution, "The Congress may determine the Time of choosing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States." In 1792, Congress had set the date for the Electoral College to vote on the first Wednesday in December, which in 1880 fell on December 1. However, Georgia's electors failed to cast their ballots on December 1, instead voting on the following Wednesday, December 8.[3] Congress chose to count Georgia's vote in the official tally anyway; had they not done so, Hancock's electoral vote would have been 144, not 155.[3]

Detailed results

 

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote[8] Electoral
vote[3]
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote[3]
James Abram Garfield Republican Ohio 4,454,443 48.32% 214 Chester Alan Arthur New York 214
Winfield Scott Hancock Democratic Pennsylvania 4,444,976 48.21% 155 William Hayden English Indiana 155
James Baird Weaver Greenback Iowa 308,649 3.35% 0 Barzillai Jefferson Chambers Texas 0
Neal Dow Prohibition Maine 10,364 0.11% 0 Henry Adams Thompson Ohio 0
John Wolcott Phelps Anti-Masonic Vermont 1,045 0.01% 0 Samuel Clarke Pomeroy Kansas 0
Total 9,219,477 100% 369 369
Needed to win 185 185
Popular vote
Garfield
48.32%
Hancock
48.21%
Weaver
3.35%
Others
0.12%
Electoral vote
Garfield
57.99%
Hancock
42.01%

Cartographic gallery

Results by state

States/districts won by Hancock/English
States/districts won by Garfield/Arthur
James Garfield
Republican
Winfield Hancock
Democratic
James Weaver
Greenback
Neal Dow
Prohibition
John Phelps
Anti-Masonic
Margin State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % #
Alabama 10 56,221 36.98 91,185 59.97 10 4,642 3.05 −34,964 −22.99 152,048 AL
Arkansas 6 42,436 39.55 60,775 56.65 6 4,079 3.80 −18,339 −17.10 107,290 AR
California 6 80,348 48.92 1 80,443 48.98 5 3,395 2.07 59 0.04 −95 −0.06 164,245 CA
Colorado 3 27,450 51.26 3 24,647 46.03 1,435 2.68 2,803 5.23 53,546 CO
Connecticut 6 67,071 50.52 6 64,415 48.52 868 0.65 409 0.31 2,656 2.00 132,802 CT
Delaware 3 14,133 47.86 15,275 51.73 3 120 0.41 −1,142 −3.87 29,528 DE
Florida 4 23,654 45.83 27,964 54.17 4 −4,310 −8.35 51,618 FL
Georgia 11 54,086 34.33 102,470 65.05 11 −48,384 −30.72 156,556 GA
Illinois 21 318,037 51.11 21 277,321 44.56 26,358 4.24 443 0.07 153 0.02 40,716 6.54 622,312 IL
Indiana 15 232,164 49.33 15 225,522 47.91 12,986 2.76 6,642 1.41 470,672 IN
Iowa 11 183,927 56.85 11 105,845 32.72 32,701 10.11 592 0.18 433 0.13 78,082 24.13 323,498 IA
Kansas 5 121,549 60.40 5 59,801 29.72 19,851 9.87 25 0.01 61,748 30.68 201,226 KS
Kentucky 12 106,306 39.80 149,068 55.80 12 11,499 4.30 258 0.10 −42,762 −16.00 267,104 KY
Louisiana 8 38,637 37.10 65,067 62.48 8 439 0.42 −26,430 −25.38 104,143 LA
Maine 7 74,056 51.45 7 65,171 45.28 4,480 3.11 93 0.06 142 0.10 8,841 6.14 143,903 ME
Maryland 8 78,515 45.37 93,706 54.15 8 818 0.47 −15,191 −8.78 173,039 MD
Massachusetts 13 165,205 58.50 13 111,690 39.65 4,548 1.61 682 0.24 53,515 18.85 282,125 MA
Michigan 11 185,341 52.54 11 131,597 37.30 34,895 9.89 942 0.27 2 0.00 53,744 15.24 352,777 MI
Minnesota 5 93,903 62.28 5 53,315 35.36 3,267 2.17 286 0.19 40,587 26.92 150,771 MN
Mississippi 8 34,854 29.94 75,750 65.08 8 5,797 4.98 −40,896 −35.14 116,401 MS
Missouri 15 153,567 38.65 208,609 52.51 15 35,135 8.84 −55,042 −13.86 400,311 MO
Nebraska 3 54,979 62.87 3 28,523 32.62 3,950 4.52 26,456 30.25 87,452 NE
Nevada 3 8,732 47.60 9,613 52.40 3 −881 −4.80 18,345 NV
New Hampshire 5 44,852 51.94 5 40,794 47.24 528 0.61 180 0.21 4,058 4.70 86,354 NH
New Jersey 9 120,555 49.02 122,565 49.84 9 2,617 1.06 191 0.08 −2,010 −0.82 245,928 NJ
New York 35 555,544 50.32 35 534,511 48.42 12,373 1.12 1,517 0.14 75 .01 21,033 1.91 1,103,945 NY
North Carolina 10 115,874 48.04 124,208 51.49 10 1,126 0.47 −8,334 −3.45 241,208 NC
Ohio 22 375,048 51.73 22 340,821 47.01 6,456 0.89 2,616 0.36 34,227 4.72 724,967 OH
Oregon 3 20,619 50.51 3 19,955 48.89 245 0.60 664 1.64 40,819 OR
Pennsylvania 29 444,704 50.84 29 407,428 46.57 20,668 2.36 1,939 0.22 44 0.01 37,276 4.26 874,783 PA
Rhode Island 4 18,195 62.24 4 10,779 36.87 236 0.81 20 0.07 7,416 25.37 29,235 RI
South Carolina 7 58,071 33.97 112,312 65.70 7 566 0.33 −54,241 −31.73 170,949 SC
Tennessee 12 107,677 44.53 129,191 53.01 12 5,917 2.45 43 0.02 −21,514 −8.48 242,828 TN
Texas 8 57,893 23.95 156,428 64.71 8 27,405 11.34 −98,535 −40.76 241,726 TX
Vermont 5 45,567 69.88 5 18,316 28.09 1,215 1.86 105 0.16 27,251 41.79 65,203 VT
Virginia 11 83,533 39.47 128,083 60.53 11 −44,550 −21.05 211,616 VA
West Virginia 5 46,243 41.03 57,391 50.92 5 9,079 8.05 −11,148 −9.89 112,713 WV
Wisconsin 10 144,400 54.04 10 114,649 42.91 7,986 2.99 69 0.03 91 0.03 29,751 11.14 267,195 WI
TOTALS: 369 4,454,433 48.32 214 4,444,976 48.21 155 308,649 3.35 10,364 0.11 1,045 0.01 9,457 0.11 9,219,477[a][8] US

Close states

 
A map of the election results in Scribner's Statistical Atlas of the United States (1883)

Margin of victory less than 1% (15 electoral votes):

  1. California, 0.06% (95 votes)
  2. New Jersey, 0.82% (2,010 votes)

Margin of victory between 1% and 5% (131 electoral votes):

  1. Indiana, 1.41% (6,642 votes)
  2. Oregon, 1.64% (664 votes)
  3. New York, 1.91% (21,033 votes) (tipping point state)
  4. Connecticut, 2.00% (2,656 votes)
  5. North Carolina, 3.45% (8,334 votes)
  6. Delaware, 3.87% (1,142 votes)
  7. Pennsylvania, 4.26% (37,276 votes)
  8. New Hampshire, 4.70% (4,058 votes)
  9. Ohio, 4.72% (34,227 votes)
  10. Nevada, 4.80% (881 votes)

Margin of victory between 5% and 10% (58 electoral votes):

  1. Colorado, 5.23% (2,803 votes)
  2. Maine, 6.14% (8,841 votes)
  3. Illinois, 6.54% (40,716 votes)
  4. Florida, 8.35% (4,310 votes)
  5. Tennessee, 8.48% (21,514 votes)
  6. Maryland, 8.78% (15,191 votes)
  7. West Virginia, 9.89% (11,148 votes)

Aftermath

 
Chester Arthur succeeded to the presidency upon Garfield's 1881 assassination.

As Garfield entered office in March 1881, the Republican party schism that had been patched up for the election tore apart once more. Garfield appointed Blaine to the cabinet, and Conkling's Stalwart faction became irked at their lack of control over patronage, even in Conkling's home state of New York.[87] Garfield appointed William H. Robertson, a civil service reform supporter, to the most lucrative government post in New York, and refused to withdraw the nomination despite Conkling's protests; in response, Conkling and his allies brought all legislative action in the closely divided Senate to a halt.[91] In May, Conkling and fellow New York Senator Thomas C. Platt resigned from the Senate in protest.[91] The two Stalwarts expected the New York legislature to reelect them in triumph; instead, the legislature deadlocked for months, eventually declining to return either man to the Senate.[92] Before that result was known, however, Charles Guiteau, a mentally unstable man angry about not receiving a patronage appointment, shot Garfield in Washington, D.C. on July 2, 1881.[93]

Garfield lingered for 2+12 months before dying on September 19, 1881.[94] Vice President Chester A. Arthur, the New York Stalwart, was sworn in as president that night.[94] Garfield's murder by a spoilsman inspired the nation to reform the civil service—and Arthur, erstwhile member of the Conkling machine, joined the cause.[95] In 1883, a bipartisan majority in Congress passed the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act to reform the worst of the office-seeking system, and Arthur signed the measure into law.[96]

Congress also settled the issue of Chinese immigration, passing the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882. Arthur initially vetoed a similar measure, which he believed contradicted the United States' treaty with China, but eventually signed a compromise bill, which banned immigration from China for ten years.[97] Tariffs, a major issue in the campaign, remained largely unchanged in the four years that followed, although Congress did pass a minor revision that reduced them by an average of less than 2 percent.[98] After a half-hearted attempt at the nomination in 1884, Arthur retired and died two years later.[99]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e There is considerable disagreement among historians about the exact vote totals. As Kenneth Ackerman explained in his 2003 book: "Because (a) voting was decentralized, (b) states certified electoral votes, not popular votes as 'official', and (c) Democratic votes were divided among various splinter groups, there remains today a range of published 'final results' for the 1880 presidential popular vote."[2] The federal government lists the margin of victory as 1,898, which is used in this article.[3] Others give the margin as 7,018;[4][5] 7,368;[6] 9,070;[7] or 9,457[8] among others.
  2. ^ In 1876, Colorado appointed electors by state legislature due to insufficient time to organize an election. From 1864–1872, some states did not choose electors due to the Civil War or Reconstruction. Before then, some states gave the choice of electors to the state legislature, including South Carolina which used the system up through 1860.
  3. ^ These sectarian divisions were far from absolute. For more detail, see Third party system.
  4. ^ Several states in those days held elections for state-level offices months before the federal elections in November. Maine's, in particular, were often considered harbingers of nationwide trends.[75]

References

  1. ^ Peskin 1980, p. 176.
  2. ^ Ackerman 2003, p. 220n.
  3. ^ a b c d e NARA 2012.
  4. ^ Clancy 1958, p. 242.
  5. ^ Jordan 1996, p. 306.
  6. ^ Peskin 1978, p. 510.
  7. ^ Burnham 1955, pp. 247–257.
  8. ^ a b c Petersen 1963, p. 49.
  9. ^ Kleppner 1979, pp. 298–299.
  10. ^ Kleppner 1979, p. 144.
  11. ^ Kleppner 1979, pp. 180–197.
  12. ^ Wiebe 1967, pp. 31–37.
  13. ^ a b Unger 1964, pp. 14–16.
  14. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 43–67.
  15. ^ Wiebe 1967, p. 6.
  16. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 374–407.
  17. ^ a b Peskin 1980, pp. 175–176.
  18. ^ a b c d Jordan 1996, p. 297.
  19. ^ a b Clancy 1958, pp. 17–21.
  20. ^ a b Clancy 1958, pp. 52–55.
  21. ^ a b Clancy 1958, pp. 22–23.
  22. ^ Hoogenboom 1995, pp. 266–267.
  23. ^ Doenecke 1981, pp. 17–19.
  24. ^ Peskin 1980, p. 178.
  25. ^ Peskin 1980, p. 179.
  26. ^ McFeely 1981, pp. 479–481.
  27. ^ Ackerman 2003, pp. 96–101.
  28. ^ Ackerman 2003, pp. 110–114.
  29. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 480–481.
  30. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 70–75, 124–126.
  31. ^ Clancy 1958, p. 138.
  32. ^ Clancy 1958, p. 139.
  33. ^ Jordan 1996, p. 281.
  34. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 115–116.
  35. ^ a b Lause 2001, pp. 22–29.
  36. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 14–15.
  37. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 16–17.
  38. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 163–164.
  39. ^ a b Lause 2001, p. 81.
  40. ^ Lause 2001, p. 82.
  41. ^ a b Clancy 1958, p. 164.
  42. ^ a b Kleppner 1979, pp. 252–255.
  43. ^ a b c Clancy 1958, p. 165.
  44. ^ Clancy 1958, p. 166.
  45. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 4–12.
  46. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 33–46.
  47. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 55–61.
  48. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 86–220.
  49. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 146–148.
  50. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 261–268.
  51. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 251–260.
  52. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 488–489.
  53. ^ a b Peskin 1978, pp. 482–483.
  54. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 483–484.
  55. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 498–500.
  56. ^ Jordan 1996, p. 5.
  57. ^ Jordan 1996, pp. 203–212.
  58. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 68–70.
  59. ^ a b Jordan 1996, pp. 287–292.
  60. ^ a b Jordan 1996, pp. 282–293.
  61. ^ Jordan 1996, p. 288.
  62. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 7–31.
  63. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 55–59.
  64. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, pp. 68–74.
  65. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 102–103.
  66. ^ Barr 1967, p. 282.
  67. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 85–104.
  68. ^ a b c Lause 2001, pp. 124–146.
  69. ^ a b c Lause 2001, pp. 105–124.
  70. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 175–180.
  71. ^ a b Peskin 1978, pp. 493–494.
  72. ^ a b Cherny 1997, p. 67.
  73. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 354–362.
  74. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 201–204.
  75. ^ Jordan 1996, p. 296.
  76. ^ Lause 2001, p. 153.
  77. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 196–197.
  78. ^ a b c Jordan 1996, pp. 297–301.
  79. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 506–507.
  80. ^ Hinckley 1980, p. 392.
  81. ^ Peskin 1978, pp. 507–510.
  82. ^ Doenecke 2003, p. 386.
  83. ^ a b Peskin 1978, p. 512.
  84. ^ a b Clancy 1958, p. 243.
  85. ^ Ackerman 2003, p. 220.
  86. ^ a b c Peskin 1978, p. 511.
  87. ^ a b Cherny 1997, p. 68.
  88. ^ Clancy 1958, pp. 243–246.
  89. ^ Moore 1974, pp. 74–75.
  90. ^ Moore 1974, p. 76.
  91. ^ a b Peskin 1978, pp. 559–572.
  92. ^ Ackerman 2003, pp. 368–370, 432–433.
  93. ^ Ackerman 2003, pp. 335–340.
  94. ^ a b Peskin 1978, pp. 604–608.
  95. ^ Cherny 1997, p. 70.
  96. ^ Cherny 1997, p. 73.
  97. ^ Reeves 1975, pp. 278–279.
  98. ^ Reeves 1975, pp. 330–335.
  99. ^ Reeves 1975, pp. 368–418.

Bibliography

Books

  • Ackerman, Kenneth D. (2003). Dark Horse: The Surprise Election and Political Murder of President James A. Garfield. New York, New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0-7867-1151-5.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (1955). Presidential Ballots, 1836–1892. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-405-07678-9.
  • Cherny, Robert W. (1997). American Politics in the Gilded Age: 1868–1900. Wheeling, West Virginia: Harlan Davidson Inc. ISBN 0-88295-933-6.
  • Clancy, Herbert J. (1958). The Presidential Election of 1880. Chicago, Illinois: Loyola University Press. ISBN 978-1-258-19190-0.
  • Doenecke, Justus D. (1981). The Presidencies of James A. Garfield & Chester A. Arthur. Lawrence, Kansas: The Regents Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0208-9.
  • Doenecke, Justus D. (2003). "Presidential election of 1880". In Leonard C. Schlup; James Gilbert Ryan (eds.). Historical Dictionary of the Gilded Age. M.E. Sharpe. p. 386. ISBN 9780765621061.
  • Hoogenboom, Ari (1995). Rutherford Hayes: Warrior and President. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0641-2.
  • Jensen, Richard J. (1971). The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-39825-0.
  • Jordan, David M. (1996) [1988]. Winfield Scott Hancock: A Soldier's Life. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-21058-5.
  • Kleppner, Paul (1979). The Third Electoral System, 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Cultures. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-1328-1.
  • Lause, Mark A. (2001). The Civil War's Last Campaign: James B. Weaver, the Greenback-Labor Party & the Politics of Race and Section. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN 0-7618-1917-7.
  • McFeely, William S. (1981). Grant: A Biography. New York, New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-01372-3.
  • Mitchell, Robert B. (2008). Skirmisher: The Life, Times, and Political Career of James B. Weaver. Roseville, Minnesota: Edinborough Press. ISBN 978-1-889020-26-6.
  • Moore, James Tice (1974). Two Paths to The New South: The Virginia Debt Controversy, 1870–1883. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-5364-3.
  • Morgan, H. Wayne. From Hayes to McKinley: National Party Politics, 1877–1896 (1969) pp 57–121. By H. Wayne Morgan. (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1969. x + 618 pp. Illustrations ...
  • Petersen, Svend (1963). A Statistical History of the American Presidential Elections. New York, New York: Frederick Ungar. OCLC 500975.
  • Peskin, Allan (1978). Garfield: A Biography. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 0-87338-210-2.
  • Reeves, Thomas C. (1975). Gentleman Boss: The Life of Chester A. Arthur. New York, New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-46095-6.
  • Thomas, Harrison Cook, The return of the Democratic Party to power in 1884 (1919) online
  • Unger, Irwin (1964). The Greenback Era: A Social and Political History of American Finance, 1865–1879. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-04517-8.
  • Wiebe, Robert H. (1967). The Search for Order: 1877–1920. New York, New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 0-8090-0104-7.

Articles

  • Barr, Alwyn (October 1967). "B. J. Chambers and the Greenback Party Split". Mid-America. 49: 276–284.
  • Dinnerstein, Leonard. "Election of 1880." In Arthur Schlesinger Jr, ed. Running for President: The Candidates in their Images (1994) pp 345–83
  • Hinckley, Ted C. (Autumn 1980). . Ohio History. 89: 381–399. Archived from the original on May 30, 2015.
  • Peskin, Allan (Spring 1980). "The Election of 1880". The Wilson Quarterly. 4 (2): 172–181. JSTOR 40255831.

Primary sources

  • 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

External links

  • "Historical Election Results: Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. 2012. Retrieved May 25, 2015.
  • 1880 popular vote by counties
  • Campaign Song: The Old Bloody Shirt
  • Campaign Song: Glory of a Reunited Nation

1880, united, states, presidential, election, 24th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1880, which, republican, nominee, james, garfield, defeated, winfield, scott, hancock, democratic, party, voter, turnout, rate, highest, nation, h. The 1880 United States presidential election was the 24th quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 2 1880 in which Republican nominee James A Garfield defeated Winfield Scott Hancock of the Democratic Party The voter turnout rate was one of the highest in the nation s history Garfield would be assassinated 6 months after his inauguration 1880 United States presidential election 1876 November 2 1880 1884 369 members of the Electoral College185 electoral votes needed to winTurnout78 1 4 6 pp Nominee James A Garfield Winfield Scott HancockParty Republican DemocraticHome state Ohio PennsylvaniaRunning mate Chester A Arthur William H EnglishElectoral vote 214 155States carried 19 19Popular vote 4 446 158 a 4 444 260 a Percentage 48 32 48 21 Presidential election results map Red denotes those won by Garfield Arthur blue denotes states won by Hancock English Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state President before electionRutherford B HayesRepublican Elected President James A GarfieldRepublicanIncumbent President Rutherford B Hayes did not seek re election After the longest convention in the party s history the factionalized Republicans chose Representative Garfield of Ohio as their standard bearer The Democratic Party chose General Winfield Scott Hancock of Pennsylvania as their nominee The dominance of the two major parties began to fray as an upstart left wing party the Greenback Party nominated another Civil War general for president Iowa Congressman James B Weaver In a campaign fought mainly over issues of Civil War loyalties tariffs and Chinese immigration Garfield narrowly won both the electoral and popular vote He and Hancock each took just over 48 percent of the popular vote while Weaver and two other minor candidates Neal Dow and John W Phelps together made up the remainder The election of 1880 was the sixth and final consecutive presidential election won by the Republicans the second longest winning streak in American history after the Democratic Republican Party during the period 1800 1824 In the end the popular vote totals of the two main candidates were separated by 1 898 votes 0 11 the smallest victory in the national popular vote ever recorded In the electoral college however Garfield s victory was much larger he won the decisive state of New York by 21 033 votes 1 91 Hancock s sweep of the Southern states was not enough for victory but it cemented his party s dominance of the region for generations This was the first presidential election in which people in every state were able to vote directly for presidential electors b Contents 1 Background 1 1 Issues 1 2 1876 election 2 Conventions 2 1 Republicans 2 2 Democrats 2 3 Minor parties 3 Candidates 3 1 Garfield 3 2 Hancock 3 3 Weaver 4 Campaign 4 1 Bloody shirt 4 2 Tariffs and immigration 5 Results 5 1 Irregularities 5 2 Detailed results 5 3 Cartographic gallery 5 4 Results by state 5 5 Close states 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 10 1 Primary sources 11 External linksBackground EditThe two major parties were the Republicans and the Democrats and after the end of the Reconstruction Era in 1877 the national electorate was closely divided between them 9 Party membership was only partly based on ideology party identification often reflected ethnic and religious background as well as Civil War loyalties that were still keenly felt by many voters 10 Most Northern Protestants voted Republican as did black Southerners On the other hand white Southerners and Northern Catholics generally voted Democratic c 11 Issues Edit The gold standard and the tariff tax on imports divided the major parties 12 The monetary debate was over the basis for the value of the United States dollar Nothing but gold and silver coin had ever been legal tender in the United States until the Civil War when the mounting costs of the war forced the United States Congress to issue greenbacks dollar bills backed by government bonds 13 Greenbacks helped pay for the war but resulted in severe inflation 13 After the war bondholders and other creditors based in the North wanted to return to a gold standard At the same time debtors especially in the South and West benefited from the way inflation reduced the real value of their debts and workers and some businessmen liked the way inflation made for easy credit 14 The issue cut across parties producing dissension among Republicans and Democrats alike and spawning a third party the Greenback Party in 1876 when both major parties nominated hard money candidates i e candidates who favored the gold backed currency instead of soft money greenbacks that generated inflation Monetary debate intensified as Congress effectively demonetized silver in 1873 and began redeeming greenbacks in gold by 1879 while limiting their circulation 15 As the 1880 election season began the nation s money was backed by gold alone but the issue was far from settled 16 Tariff policy was a major source of party conflict in late 19th century and early 20th century During the Civil War Congress raised protective tariffs to new heights This was done partly to pay for the war but partly because high tariffs were popular in the North A high tariff meant that foreign goods were more expensive which made it easier for American businesses to sell goods domestically 17 Republicans supported high tariffs as a way to protect American jobs and increase prosperity 18 Democrats condemned them as a source of higher prices for goods whereas the higher revenues that they generated for the federal government were not needed after the conclusion of the Civil War 17 However Northern Democrats from manufacturing districts especially in Pennsylvania also supported high tariffs In the interest of party unity the leaders of each party often sought to avoid the question as much as possible 18 1876 election Edit In the election of 1876 Republican Rutherford B Hayes of Ohio defeated Democrat Samuel J Tilden of New York in one of the most hotly contested presidential elections in the nation s history 19 The early results indicated a Democratic victory but the electoral votes of several Southern states were disputed bitterly Both parties in Congress agreed to convene a bipartisan Electoral Commission which ultimately decided the race for Hayes 19 For Democrats the stolen election became a rallying cry and the Democratic majority in the House of Representatives spent much of 1878 investigating it although they failed to turn up any new evidence against their Republican foes 20 At first Tilden was seen as the front runner for the 1880 nomination 20 For leading Republicans Hayes s inauguration in 1877 signaled the start of backroom maneuverings for the nomination in 1880 21 Even before his election Hayes had pledged not to run for a second term leaving the path to the White House open in 1880 22 His cabinet selections alienated many party leaders as well deepening the growing divide within the Republican party between forces loyal to New York Senator Roscoe Conkling and those loyal to Maine Senator James G Blaine 21 Conventions EditThe parties agreed on their respective platforms and nominees at conventions which met in the summer before the election Republicans Edit Main article 1880 Republican National Convention 1880 Republican Party ticketJames A Garfield Chester A Arthurfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Ohio s 19th congressional district 1863 1880 10thChairman of the New York Republican Party 1879 1881 Rutherford B Hayes the incumbent president in 1880 whose term expired on March 4 1881 The Republican convention met first convening in Chicago Illinois on June 2 Of the men vying for the Republican nomination the three strongest candidates leading up to the convention were former president Ulysses S Grant Senator James G Blaine and Treasury Secretary John Sherman 23 Grant had been the leading military commander for the Northern forces during the Civil War and had served two terms as president from 1869 to 1877 He was seeking an unprecedented third term in the office He was backed by Conkling s faction of the Republican Party now known as the Stalwarts 24 They were mainly known for their opposition to the civil service reforms sought by President Hayes Blaine a senator and former representative from Maine was backed by the Half Breed faction of the party which did support civil service reform 25 Sherman the brother of Civil War general William Tecumseh Sherman was a former senator from Ohio serving in Hayes s cabinet He was backed by a smaller delegation that supported neither of the major factions On the first ballot Grant and Blaine gleaned 304 and 285 votes respectively while Sherman received 93 26 None of the candidates were close to victory and the balloting continued in order to determine a winner 27 Many more ballots were taken but no candidate prevailed After the thirty fifth ballot Blaine and Sherman delegates switched their support to the new dark horse candidate Representative James A Garfield from Ohio 28 On the next ballot Garfield won the nomination when he received 399 votes most of them former Blaine and Sherman delegates To placate the Grant faction Garfield s Ohio supporters suggested Levi P Morton for vice president Morton declined based on Conkling s advice They next offered the nomination to Chester A Arthur another New York Stalwart Conkling also advised him to decline but he accepted He was nominated and the longest ever Republican National Convention was adjourned on June 8 1880 29 Ulysses S Grant President of the United States 1869 1877 James G Blaine Senator from Maine John Sherman Secretary of the Treasury James A Garfield U S representative from Ohio Democrats Edit Main article 1880 Democratic National Convention 1880 Democratic Party ticketWinfield S Hancock William H Englishfor President for Vice President Major generalof the U S Army 1844 1886 U S Representativefor Indiana s 2nd congressional district 1853 1861 Campaign Later that month the Democrats held their convention in Cincinnati Ohio Six men were officially candidates for nomination at the convention and several others also received votes Of these the two leading candidates were Major General Winfield Scott Hancock from Pennsylvania and Senator Thomas F Bayard from Delaware Tilden was not officially a candidate but he wielded a heavy influence over the convention Tilden was ambiguous about his willingness to participate in another campaign leading some delegates to defect to other candidates while others stayed loyal to their old standard bearer 30 As the convention opened some delegates favored Bayard a conservative senator while others supported Hancock a career soldier and Civil War hero Still others flocked to men they saw as surrogates for Tilden including Henry B Payne from Ohio an attorney and former congressman and Samuel J Randall from Pennsylvania the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives 31 The first round of balloting was inconclusive with Hancock and Bayard leading the count Before the second round Tilden s withdrawal from the campaign became known for certain delegates then shifted to Hancock who was nominated 32 William Hayden English a conservative politician and businessman from the swing state of Indiana was nominated for vice president 33 Winfield Scott Hancock U S Major General Thomas F Bayard U S senator from Delaware Samuel J Randall Speaker of the house of Representatives and Leader of the House Democratic Caucus Minor parties Edit Main articles 1880 Greenback National Convention and 1880 Prohibition National Convention The Greenback Party convention gathered in Chicago in mid June using the hall recently vacated by the Republicans 34 The party was a newcomer to the political scene in 1880 having arisen as a response to the economic depression that followed the Panic of 1873 mostly in the nation s West and South 35 During the Civil War Congress had authorized greenbacks a form of money redeemable in government bonds rather than in gold as was traditional 36 After the war many Democrats and Republicans in the East sought to return to the gold standard and the government began to withdraw greenbacks from circulation 37 The reduction of the money supply combined with the economic depression made life harder for debtors farmers and industrial laborers the Greenback Party hoped to draw support from these groups 35 Beyond their support for a larger money supply they also favored an eight hour work day safety regulations in factories and an end to child labor 38 Six men were candidates for the Greenback nomination James B Weaver an Iowa congressman and Civil War general was the clear favorite but two other congressmen Benjamin F Butler from Massachusetts and Hendrick B Wright from Pennsylvania also commanded considerable followings Weaver triumphed quickly winning a majority of the 850 delegates votes on the first ballot 39 Barzillai J Chambers a Texas businessman and Confederate veteran was likewise nominated for vice president on the initial vote 39 More tumultuous was the fight over the platform as delegates from disparate factions of the left wing movement clashed over women s suffrage Chinese immigration and the extent to which the government should regulate working conditions 40 A convention of the Prohibition Party also met that month in Cleveland Ohio 41 The Prohibitionists more of a movement than a party focused their efforts on banning alcohol 42 Most party members came from pietist churches and most were former Republicans 42 Only twelve states sent delegates to the convention and the platform they agreed on was silent on most issues of the day focusing instead on the evils of alcohol 41 For president the Prohibitionists nominated Neal Dow a Civil War general from Maine 43 As mayor of Portland Dow helped to pass the Maine law which banned the sale of alcohol in the city it became the model for temperance laws around the country 43 Finally a revived Anti Masonic Party nominated John W Phelps another Civil War general on a platform of opposition to Freemasonry 43 Political prognosticators gave Weaver little chance of victory and Dow and Phelps none at all 44 Candidates EditGarfield Edit Garfield Arthur election poster James Abram Garfield was raised in humble circumstances on an Ohio farm by his widowed mother He worked at various jobs including on a canal boat in his youth 45 Beginning at age 17 he studied at Williams College in Williamstown Massachusetts from which he graduated in 1856 46 A year later Garfield entered politics as a Republican He married Lucretia Rudolph in 1858 and served as a member of the Ohio State Senate 1859 1861 47 Garfield opposed Confederate secession served as a major general in the Union Army during the Civil War and fought in the battles of Middle Creek Shiloh and Chickamauga 48 He was first elected to Congress in 1862 to represent Ohio s 19th District 49 Throughout Garfield s extended congressional service after the Civil War he firmly supported the gold standard and gained a reputation as a skilled orator 50 Garfield initially agreed with Radical Republican views regarding Reconstruction but later favored a moderate approach for civil rights enforcement for freedmen 51 After his nomination Garfield met with party leaders in an attempt to heal the schism between the Stalwarts and Half Breeds 52 In his formal letter to the party accepting his nomination written with advice from party leaders he endorsed the ideas of high tariffs and sound money but drew particular attention to the issues of Chinese immigration and civil service reform 53 On both Garfield sought a moderate path He called for some restrictions on the former through treaty renegotiation with the Chinese government 53 He straddled the divide on civil service reform saying that he agreed with the concept while promising to make no appointments without consulting party leaders a position 20th century biographer Allan Peskin called inconsistent 54 As was traditional at the time Garfield conducted a front porch campaign returning to his home for the duration of the contest and leaving the actual campaigning to surrogates 55 Hancock Edit Hancock English election poster Winfield Scott Hancock was born and raised in Pennsylvania 56 He attended the United States Military Academy at West Point and served in the Army for four decades including service in the Mexican American War and as a Union general in the Civil War Known to his Army colleagues as Hancock the Superb he was noted in particular for his personal leadership at the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863 where he led the defense of Pickett s Charge getting wounded in the process His military service continued after the Civil War as Hancock participated in the military Reconstruction of the South and the Army s presence at the Western frontier During Reconstruction he sided with then President Andrew Johnson in working for a quick end to military occupation of the South and a return to government by the pre war establishment 57 Hancock s reputation as a war hero at Gettysburg combined with his status as a prominent Democrat with impeccable Unionist credentials and pro states rights views made him a quadrennial presidential possibility 58 Hancock was officially notified of his nomination in July and responded with the traditional letter of acceptance 59 As Garfield had the Democratic nominee sought to cause no controversy in his statement which according to biographer David M Jordan was bland and general 59 After scorning the previous years of Republican rule Hancock sought to tamp down fears that election of a Democrat would overturn the results of the war and Reconstruction a common Republican campaign theme 60 Unlike Garfield Hancock had no record in elected office but the acceptance letter gave no further indication of his political preferences 60 Hancock remained on active duty during the campaign at his post on Governors Island in New York Harbor 61 Weaver Edit Weaver Chambers campaign ribbon James Baird Weaver was born in Ohio and moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier 62 He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers joining and quitting several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed After serving in the Union Army in the Civil War Weaver returned to Iowa and worked for the election of Republican candidates 63 After making several unsuccessful attempts at Republican nominations to various offices and growing dissatisfied with the conservative wing of the party in 1877 Weaver switched to the Greenback Party advocating an increased money supply and stricter regulation of big business 64 As a Greenbacker with Democratic support Weaver won election to the House of Representatives in 1878 64 Unlike the major party candidates Weaver planned to take the field himself giving speeches around the country 65 His running mate Chambers was to do the same until a fall from a train in July disabled him for the duration of the campaign 66 As the Greenbackers had the only ticket that included a Southerner he hoped to make inroads in that region 67 Weaver s path to victory already unlikely was made more difficult by his refusal to run a fusion ticket in states where Democratic and Greenbacker strength might have combined to outvote the Republicans 68 His party s message of racial inclusion also presaged difficulty in the South as the Greenbackers would face the same obstacles the Republicans did in the face of increasing black disenfranchisement 69 Campaign Edit A cartoon from Harper s Weekly suggests that defeated Confederates will overturn the results of the Civil War should Hancock be elected Bloody shirt Edit Hancock and the Democrats expected to carry the Solid South while much of the North was considered safe territory for Garfield and the Republicans most of the campaign would involve a handful of close states including New York and Indiana National elections were largely decided in close elections in New York and the Midwest Practical differences between the major party candidates were few and Republicans began the campaign with the familiar theme of waving the bloody shirt reminding Northern voters that the Democratic Party was responsible for secession and four years of civil war and that if they held power they would reverse the gains of that war dishonor Union veterans and pay Confederate soldiers pensions out of the federal treasury 70 With fifteen years having passed since the end of the war and Union generals at the head of all of the major and minor party tickets the appeal to wartime loyalties was of diminishing value in exciting the voters 71 The Democrats for their part campaigned on the character of the candidates They attacked Garfield for his connection with the Credit Mobilier of America scandal of the early 1870s in which many members of Congress were bribed by the Credit Mobilier corporation a railroad construction company 72 Garfield s precise involvement was unknown but modern biographers agree that his account of his dealings with the construction syndicate were less than perfectly honest 73 Democrats used the incident as a contrast with Hancock who as a career army officer stood apart from Congress and lobbyists Many in the Republican Party were reluctant to directly criticize the hero of Gettysburg but they did characterize Hancock as uninformed on the issues and some of his former comrades in arms gave critical speeches regarding his character 74 Democrats never made clear what about their victory would improve the nation Jordan later characterized their message as simply our man is better than your man 18 The Greenbackers saw the impact of Civil War loyalties more acutely as they vied for Southern votes Weaver embarked on a speaking tour of the South in July and August Although the local Greenback parties had seen some recent success the national party with an ex Republican Union general at the head of the ticket faced more opposition 69 The party s courtship of black voters too threatened the white Democratic establishment leading to violent outbursts at Weaver s rallies and threats against his supporters 69 As Weaver campaigned in the North in September and October Republicans accused him of purposely dividing the vote to help Democrats win a plurality in marginal states 68 Weaver refused to cooperate with Democrats in running fusion slates of presidential electors However in state level races Greenback candidates did often combine with Democrats to defeat Republican candidates 68 In the September gubernatorial race in Maine one such fusion ticket nominated Harris M Plaisted who narrowly defeated the incumbent Republican in what was thought to be a safe state for that party d 76 The surprise defeat sent a shock through the Garfield campaign and caused them to rethink their strategy of waving the bloody shirt 77 Tariffs and immigration Edit Hancock s blunder about tariffs may have harmed his standing with Northern industrial workers After their defeat in Maine the Republicans began to emphasize policy differences more One significant difference between them and the Democrats was the plank in the Democratic platform endorsing a tariff for revenue only That is the tariff would only be used to cover the costs of the federal government and not be raised higher to help specific industries 18 Garfield s campaigners used this statement to paint the Democrats as unsympathetic to the plight of industrial laborers a group that benefited from a high protective tariff The tariff issue cut Democratic support in industrialized Northern states which were essential in establishing a Democratic majority 78 Hancock made the situation worse when attempting to strike a moderate stance he said the tariff question is a local question 71 While not completely inaccurate tariff preferences often reflected local concerns the statement was at odds with the Democrats platform and suggested that Hancock did not understand the issue 72 The change in tactics appeared to be effective as October state elections in Ohio and Indiana resulted in Republican victories there discouraging Democrats about their chances the following month 78 Democratic party leaders had selected English as Hancock s running mate because of his popularity in Indiana With their state level defeat there some talked of dropping English from the ticket but he convinced them that the October losses owed more to local issues and that the Democratic ticket could still carry Indiana if not Ohio in November 78 In the last weeks before the election the issue of Chinese immigration entered the race Both major parties as well as the Greenbackers pledged in their platforms to limit immigration from China which native born workers in the Western states believed was depressing their wages On October 20 however a Democratic newspaper published a letter purportedly from Garfield to a group of businessmen pledging to keep immigration at the current levels so that industry could keep workers wages low 79 Garfield denounced the letter as a ruse but not before one hundred thousand copies of the newspaper were mailed to California and Oregon 80 Once the letter was exposed as a forgery Garfield biographer Peskin believes it may even have gained votes for the Republican in the East but it likely weakened him in the West 81 Results EditThe extremely close election with very high turnout reflected the typical pattern of the Gilded Age Democrats were assured of a Solid South electoral vote as well as most of the border states Republicans captured the Northeast and Midwest winning the critical swing states of New York Ohio and Indiana The Republicans captured the electoral vote 214 155 but the popular vote margin was under 2000 out of over 9 million votes cast Republicans won the House of Representatives 147 135 but the Senate was evenly split with the vice president casting the deciding vote 82 When all the ballots were counted fewer than 2 000 votes separated Garfield and Hancock the closest popular vote of any American presidential election before or since a 3 The voters showed their interest in the election by turning out in record numbers 78 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot among largest percentages in American history 83 Each major party candidate earned just over 48 percent of the vote Weaver won more than 3 percent tripling the Greenback total of four years earlier The other minor party candidates fared far worse as Dow and Phelps earned 0 1 and 0 01 percent respectively 84 Garfield carried the crucial state of New York by 20 000 votes out of 1 1 million cast there 85 Other states were much closer Hancock s margin of victory in California was only about 144 votes 86 a In the electoral college the vote was more decisive As expected Hancock carried the South and border states but Garfield swept all but one of the Northern states the exception was New Jersey which he lost by just two thousand votes 86 Both candidates carried nineteen states but Garfield s triumphs in the more populous North translated into a 214 155 electoral college victory 86 The sectional divide of the vote more deeply enforced the Republicans retreat from the South after Reconstruction and demonstrated that they could win without competing there 83 87 Weaver s resistance to fusion had no effect on the result the combined Democratic and Greenback vote would have carried Indiana but not any other of the states Garfield won and the result would still have been a Republican majority in the electoral college 84 Hancock was convinced that the Republicans won New York by fraud Lacking evidence and mindful of the turmoil caused by the disputed election four years earlier the Democrats did not pursue the matter 88 Irregularities Edit In Virginia a split in the Democratic Party over the payment of state debts led to two Democratic electoral slates being nominated one by the regular debt paying Funder Democrats the other by the Readjuster or anti debt paying faction of the party 89 Both slates were pledged to the Hancock ticket Republicans initially hoped the split could lead Garfield to win the state but the results were otherwise The Readjuster ticket received 31 527 votes but the Funder Democrats took 96 449 votes enough to defeat the Republicans whose slate had 84 020 90 Although Hancock won Georgia s popular vote easily there was an irregularity in that state s electoral votes According to Article II Section 1 clause 3 of the Constitution The Congress may determine the Time of choosing the Electors and the Day on which they shall give their Votes which Day shall be the same throughout the United States In 1792 Congress had set the date for the Electoral College to vote on the first Wednesday in December which in 1880 fell on December 1 However Georgia s electors failed to cast their ballots on December 1 instead voting on the following Wednesday December 8 3 Congress chose to count Georgia s vote in the official tally anyway had they not done so Hancock s electoral vote would have been 144 not 155 3 Detailed results Edit Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote 8 Electoralvote 3 Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote 3 James Abram Garfield Republican Ohio 4 454 443 48 32 214 Chester Alan Arthur New York 214Winfield Scott Hancock Democratic Pennsylvania 4 444 976 48 21 155 William Hayden English Indiana 155James Baird Weaver Greenback Iowa 308 649 3 35 0 Barzillai Jefferson Chambers Texas 0Neal Dow Prohibition Maine 10 364 0 11 0 Henry Adams Thompson Ohio 0John Wolcott Phelps Anti Masonic Vermont 1 045 0 01 0 Samuel Clarke Pomeroy Kansas 0Total 9 219 477 100 369 369Needed to win 185 185Popular voteGarfield 48 32 Hancock 48 21 Weaver 3 35 Others 0 12 Electoral voteGarfield 57 99 Hancock 42 01 Cartographic gallery Edit Map of presidential election results by county Map of Republican presidential election results by county Map of Democratic presidential election results by county Map of other presidential election results by county Cartogram of presidential election results by county Cartogram of Republican presidential election results by county Cartogram of Democratic presidential election results by county Cartogram of other presidential election results by countyResults by state Edit States districts won by Hancock EnglishStates districts won by Garfield ArthurJames GarfieldRepublican Winfield HancockDemocratic James WeaverGreenback Neal DowProhibition John PhelpsAnti Masonic Margin State TotalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes Alabama 10 56 221 36 98 91 185 59 97 10 4 642 3 05 34 964 22 99 152 048 ALArkansas 6 42 436 39 55 60 775 56 65 6 4 079 3 80 18 339 17 10 107 290 ARCalifornia 6 80 348 48 92 1 80 443 48 98 5 3 395 2 07 59 0 04 95 0 06 164 245 CAColorado 3 27 450 51 26 3 24 647 46 03 1 435 2 68 2 803 5 23 53 546 COConnecticut 6 67 071 50 52 6 64 415 48 52 868 0 65 409 0 31 2 656 2 00 132 802 CTDelaware 3 14 133 47 86 15 275 51 73 3 120 0 41 1 142 3 87 29 528 DEFlorida 4 23 654 45 83 27 964 54 17 4 4 310 8 35 51 618 FLGeorgia 11 54 086 34 33 102 470 65 05 11 48 384 30 72 156 556 GAIllinois 21 318 037 51 11 21 277 321 44 56 26 358 4 24 443 0 07 153 0 02 40 716 6 54 622 312 ILIndiana 15 232 164 49 33 15 225 522 47 91 12 986 2 76 6 642 1 41 470 672 INIowa 11 183 927 56 85 11 105 845 32 72 32 701 10 11 592 0 18 433 0 13 78 082 24 13 323 498 IAKansas 5 121 549 60 40 5 59 801 29 72 19 851 9 87 25 0 01 61 748 30 68 201 226 KSKentucky 12 106 306 39 80 149 068 55 80 12 11 499 4 30 258 0 10 42 762 16 00 267 104 KYLouisiana 8 38 637 37 10 65 067 62 48 8 439 0 42 26 430 25 38 104 143 LAMaine 7 74 056 51 45 7 65 171 45 28 4 480 3 11 93 0 06 142 0 10 8 841 6 14 143 903 MEMaryland 8 78 515 45 37 93 706 54 15 8 818 0 47 15 191 8 78 173 039 MDMassachusetts 13 165 205 58 50 13 111 690 39 65 4 548 1 61 682 0 24 53 515 18 85 282 125 MAMichigan 11 185 341 52 54 11 131 597 37 30 34 895 9 89 942 0 27 2 0 00 53 744 15 24 352 777 MIMinnesota 5 93 903 62 28 5 53 315 35 36 3 267 2 17 286 0 19 40 587 26 92 150 771 MNMississippi 8 34 854 29 94 75 750 65 08 8 5 797 4 98 40 896 35 14 116 401 MSMissouri 15 153 567 38 65 208 609 52 51 15 35 135 8 84 55 042 13 86 400 311 MONebraska 3 54 979 62 87 3 28 523 32 62 3 950 4 52 26 456 30 25 87 452 NENevada 3 8 732 47 60 9 613 52 40 3 881 4 80 18 345 NVNew Hampshire 5 44 852 51 94 5 40 794 47 24 528 0 61 180 0 21 4 058 4 70 86 354 NHNew Jersey 9 120 555 49 02 122 565 49 84 9 2 617 1 06 191 0 08 2 010 0 82 245 928 NJNew York 35 555 544 50 32 35 534 511 48 42 12 373 1 12 1 517 0 14 75 01 21 033 1 91 1 103 945 NYNorth Carolina 10 115 874 48 04 124 208 51 49 10 1 126 0 47 8 334 3 45 241 208 NCOhio 22 375 048 51 73 22 340 821 47 01 6 456 0 89 2 616 0 36 34 227 4 72 724 967 OHOregon 3 20 619 50 51 3 19 955 48 89 245 0 60 664 1 64 40 819 ORPennsylvania 29 444 704 50 84 29 407 428 46 57 20 668 2 36 1 939 0 22 44 0 01 37 276 4 26 874 783 PARhode Island 4 18 195 62 24 4 10 779 36 87 236 0 81 20 0 07 7 416 25 37 29 235 RISouth Carolina 7 58 071 33 97 112 312 65 70 7 566 0 33 54 241 31 73 170 949 SCTennessee 12 107 677 44 53 129 191 53 01 12 5 917 2 45 43 0 02 21 514 8 48 242 828 TNTexas 8 57 893 23 95 156 428 64 71 8 27 405 11 34 98 535 40 76 241 726 TXVermont 5 45 567 69 88 5 18 316 28 09 1 215 1 86 105 0 16 27 251 41 79 65 203 VTVirginia 11 83 533 39 47 128 083 60 53 11 44 550 21 05 211 616 VAWest Virginia 5 46 243 41 03 57 391 50 92 5 9 079 8 05 11 148 9 89 112 713 WVWisconsin 10 144 400 54 04 10 114 649 42 91 7 986 2 99 69 0 03 91 0 03 29 751 11 14 267 195 WITOTALS 369 4 454 433 48 32 214 4 444 976 48 21 155 308 649 3 35 10 364 0 11 1 045 0 01 9 457 0 11 9 219 477 a 8 USClose states Edit A map of the election results in Scribner s Statistical Atlas of the United States 1883 Margin of victory less than 1 15 electoral votes California 0 06 95 votes New Jersey 0 82 2 010 votes Margin of victory between 1 and 5 131 electoral votes Indiana 1 41 6 642 votes Oregon 1 64 664 votes New York 1 91 21 033 votes tipping point state Connecticut 2 00 2 656 votes North Carolina 3 45 8 334 votes Delaware 3 87 1 142 votes Pennsylvania 4 26 37 276 votes New Hampshire 4 70 4 058 votes Ohio 4 72 34 227 votes Nevada 4 80 881 votes Margin of victory between 5 and 10 58 electoral votes Colorado 5 23 2 803 votes Maine 6 14 8 841 votes Illinois 6 54 40 716 votes Florida 8 35 4 310 votes Tennessee 8 48 21 514 votes Maryland 8 78 15 191 votes West Virginia 9 89 11 148 votes Aftermath Edit Chester Arthur succeeded to the presidency upon Garfield s 1881 assassination As Garfield entered office in March 1881 the Republican party schism that had been patched up for the election tore apart once more Garfield appointed Blaine to the cabinet and Conkling s Stalwart faction became irked at their lack of control over patronage even in Conkling s home state of New York 87 Garfield appointed William H Robertson a civil service reform supporter to the most lucrative government post in New York and refused to withdraw the nomination despite Conkling s protests in response Conkling and his allies brought all legislative action in the closely divided Senate to a halt 91 In May Conkling and fellow New York Senator Thomas C Platt resigned from the Senate in protest 91 The two Stalwarts expected the New York legislature to reelect them in triumph instead the legislature deadlocked for months eventually declining to return either man to the Senate 92 Before that result was known however Charles Guiteau a mentally unstable man angry about not receiving a patronage appointment shot Garfield in Washington D C on July 2 1881 93 Garfield lingered for 2 1 2 months before dying on September 19 1881 94 Vice President Chester A Arthur the New York Stalwart was sworn in as president that night 94 Garfield s murder by a spoilsman inspired the nation to reform the civil service and Arthur erstwhile member of the Conkling machine joined the cause 95 In 1883 a bipartisan majority in Congress passed the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act to reform the worst of the office seeking system and Arthur signed the measure into law 96 Congress also settled the issue of Chinese immigration passing the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882 Arthur initially vetoed a similar measure which he believed contradicted the United States treaty with China but eventually signed a compromise bill which banned immigration from China for ten years 97 Tariffs a major issue in the campaign remained largely unchanged in the four years that followed although Congress did pass a minor revision that reduced them by an average of less than 2 percent 98 After a half hearted attempt at the nomination in 1884 Arthur retired and died two years later 99 See also EditAmerican election campaigns in the 19th century History of the United States 1865 1918 Inauguration of James A Garfield 1880 United States House of Representatives elections 1880 81 United States Senate elections Third Party SystemNotes Edit a b c d e There is considerable disagreement among historians about the exact vote totals As Kenneth Ackerman explained in his 2003 book Because a voting was decentralized b states certified electoral votes not popular votes as official and c Democratic votes were divided among various splinter groups there remains today a range of published final results for the 1880 presidential popular vote 2 The federal government lists the margin of victory as 1 898 which is used in this article 3 Others give the margin as 7 018 4 5 7 368 6 9 070 7 or 9 457 8 among others In 1876 Colorado appointed electors by state legislature due to insufficient time to organize an election From 1864 1872 some states did not choose electors due to the Civil War or Reconstruction Before then some states gave the choice of electors to the state legislature including South Carolina which used the system up through 1860 These sectarian divisions were far from absolute For more detail see Third party system Several states in those days held elections for state level offices months before the federal elections in November Maine s in particular were often considered harbingers of nationwide trends 75 References Edit Peskin 1980 p 176 Ackerman 2003 p 220n a b c d e NARA 2012 Clancy 1958 p 242 Jordan 1996 p 306 Peskin 1978 p 510 Burnham 1955 pp 247 257 a b c Petersen 1963 p 49 Kleppner 1979 pp 298 299 Kleppner 1979 p 144 Kleppner 1979 pp 180 197 Wiebe 1967 pp 31 37 a b Unger 1964 pp 14 16 Unger 1964 pp 43 67 Wiebe 1967 p 6 Unger 1964 pp 374 407 a b Peskin 1980 pp 175 176 a b c d Jordan 1996 p 297 a b Clancy 1958 pp 17 21 a b Clancy 1958 pp 52 55 a b Clancy 1958 pp 22 23 Hoogenboom 1995 pp 266 267 Doenecke 1981 pp 17 19 Peskin 1980 p 178 Peskin 1980 p 179 McFeely 1981 pp 479 481 Ackerman 2003 pp 96 101 Ackerman 2003 pp 110 114 Peskin 1978 pp 480 481 Clancy 1958 pp 70 75 124 126 Clancy 1958 p 138 Clancy 1958 p 139 Jordan 1996 p 281 Clancy 1958 pp 115 116 a b Lause 2001 pp 22 29 Unger 1964 pp 14 15 Unger 1964 pp 16 17 Clancy 1958 pp 163 164 a b Lause 2001 p 81 Lause 2001 p 82 a b Clancy 1958 p 164 a b Kleppner 1979 pp 252 255 a b c Clancy 1958 p 165 Clancy 1958 p 166 Peskin 1978 pp 4 12 Peskin 1978 pp 33 46 Peskin 1978 pp 55 61 Peskin 1978 pp 86 220 Peskin 1978 pp 146 148 Peskin 1978 pp 261 268 Peskin 1978 pp 251 260 Peskin 1978 pp 488 489 a b Peskin 1978 pp 482 483 Peskin 1978 pp 483 484 Peskin 1978 pp 498 500 Jordan 1996 p 5 Jordan 1996 pp 203 212 Clancy 1958 pp 68 70 a b Jordan 1996 pp 287 292 a b Jordan 1996 pp 282 293 Jordan 1996 p 288 Mitchell 2008 pp 7 31 Mitchell 2008 pp 55 59 a b Mitchell 2008 pp 68 74 Mitchell 2008 pp 102 103 Barr 1967 p 282 Lause 2001 pp 85 104 a b c Lause 2001 pp 124 146 a b c Lause 2001 pp 105 124 Clancy 1958 pp 175 180 a b Peskin 1978 pp 493 494 a b Cherny 1997 p 67 Peskin 1978 pp 354 362 Clancy 1958 pp 201 204 Jordan 1996 p 296 Lause 2001 p 153 Clancy 1958 pp 196 197 a b c Jordan 1996 pp 297 301 Peskin 1978 pp 506 507 Hinckley 1980 p 392 Peskin 1978 pp 507 510 Doenecke 2003 p 386 a b Peskin 1978 p 512 a b Clancy 1958 p 243 Ackerman 2003 p 220 a b c Peskin 1978 p 511 a b Cherny 1997 p 68 Clancy 1958 pp 243 246 Moore 1974 pp 74 75 Moore 1974 p 76 a b Peskin 1978 pp 559 572 Ackerman 2003 pp 368 370 432 433 Ackerman 2003 pp 335 340 a b Peskin 1978 pp 604 608 Cherny 1997 p 70 Cherny 1997 p 73 Reeves 1975 pp 278 279 Reeves 1975 pp 330 335 Reeves 1975 pp 368 418 Bibliography EditBooks Ackerman Kenneth D 2003 Dark Horse The Surprise Election and Political Murder of President James A Garfield New York New York Carroll amp Graf ISBN 0 7867 1151 5 Burnham Walter Dean 1955 Presidential Ballots 1836 1892 Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 405 07678 9 Cherny Robert W 1997 American Politics in the Gilded Age 1868 1900 Wheeling West Virginia Harlan Davidson Inc ISBN 0 88295 933 6 Clancy Herbert J 1958 The Presidential Election of 1880 Chicago Illinois Loyola University Press ISBN 978 1 258 19190 0 Doenecke Justus D 1981 The Presidencies of James A Garfield amp Chester A Arthur Lawrence Kansas The Regents Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0208 9 Doenecke Justus D 2003 Presidential election of 1880 In Leonard C Schlup James Gilbert Ryan eds Historical Dictionary of the Gilded Age M E Sharpe p 386 ISBN 9780765621061 Hoogenboom Ari 1995 Rutherford Hayes Warrior and President Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0641 2 Jensen Richard J 1971 The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 39825 0 Jordan David M 1996 1988 Winfield Scott Hancock A Soldier s Life Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 21058 5 Kleppner Paul 1979 The Third Electoral System 1853 1892 Parties Voters and Political Cultures Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 1328 1 Lause Mark A 2001 The Civil War s Last Campaign James B Weaver the Greenback Labor Party amp the Politics of Race and Section Lanham Maryland University Press of America ISBN 0 7618 1917 7 McFeely William S 1981 Grant A Biography New York New York Norton ISBN 0 393 01372 3 Mitchell Robert B 2008 Skirmisher The Life Times and Political Career of James B Weaver Roseville Minnesota Edinborough Press ISBN 978 1 889020 26 6 Moore James Tice 1974 Two Paths to The New South The Virginia Debt Controversy 1870 1883 Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 5364 3 Morgan H Wayne From Hayes to McKinley National Party Politics 1877 1896 1969 pp 57 121 By H Wayne Morgan Syracuse Syracuse University Press 1969 x 618 pp Illustrations Petersen Svend 1963 A Statistical History of the American Presidential Elections New York New York Frederick Ungar OCLC 500975 Peskin Allan 1978 Garfield A Biography Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 0 87338 210 2 Reeves Thomas C 1975 Gentleman Boss The Life of Chester A Arthur New York New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 46095 6 Thomas Harrison Cook The return of the Democratic Party to power in 1884 1919 online Unger Irwin 1964 The Greenback Era A Social and Political History of American Finance 1865 1879 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 04517 8 Wiebe Robert H 1967 The Search for Order 1877 1920 New York New York Hill and Wang ISBN 0 8090 0104 7 Articles Barr Alwyn October 1967 B J Chambers and the Greenback Party Split Mid America 49 276 284 Dinnerstein Leonard Election of 1880 In Arthur Schlesinger Jr ed Running for President The Candidates in their Images 1994 pp 345 83 Hinckley Ted C Autumn 1980 The Politics of Sinophobia Garfield the Morey Letter and the Presidential Election of 1880 Ohio History 89 381 399 Archived from the original on May 30 2015 Peskin Allan Spring 1980 The Election of 1880 The Wilson Quarterly 4 2 172 181 JSTOR 40255831 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 1956External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States presidential election 1880 Historical Election Results Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration 2012 Retrieved May 25 2015 1880 popular vote by counties Campaign Song The Old Bloody Shirt Campaign Song Glory of a Reunited Nation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1880 United States presidential election amp oldid 1141191674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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