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1892 United States presidential election

The 1892 United States presidential election was the 27th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1892. In a rematch of the closely contested 1888 presidential election, former Democratic President Grover Cleveland defeated incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison. Cleveland's victory made him the first and, to date, the only person in American history to be elected to a non-consecutive second presidential term. It was also the first of two times incumbents were defeated in consecutive elections—the second being Jimmy Carter's defeat of Gerald Ford in 1976, followed by Carter's subsequent loss to Ronald Reagan in 1980.

1892 United States presidential election

← 1888 November 8, 1892 1896 →

444 members of the Electoral College
223 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout75.8%[1] 4.7 pp
 
Nominee Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison James B. Weaver
Party Democratic Republican Populist
Home state New York Indiana Iowa
Running mate Adlai Stevenson I Whitelaw Reid James G. Field
Electoral vote 277 145 22
States carried 23 16 5
Popular vote 5,556,918 5,176,108 1,041,028
Percentage 46.0% 43.0% 8.5%

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Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Harrison/Reid, blue denotes those won by Cleveland/Stevenson, green denotes those won by Weaver/Field. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Benjamin Harrison
Republican

Elected President

Grover Cleveland
Democratic

This was the first time a Republican president lost reelection. Harrison's loss was also the second time an elected president lost the popular vote twice, the first being John Quincy Adams in the 1820s. This feat was not repeated until Donald Trump lost the popular vote in 2016 and 2020.[2] This election saw the fourth rematch in presidential history.

Though some Republicans opposed Harrison's renomination, he defeated James G. Blaine and William McKinley on the first presidential ballot of the 1892 Republican National Convention. Cleveland defeated challenges by David B. Hill and Horace Boies on the first presidential ballot of the 1892 Democratic National Convention, becoming both the first presidential candidate and the first Democrat to win his party's presidential nomination in three elections. Groups from The Grange and the Knights of Labor joined together to form a new party called the Populist Party. It had a ticket led by former Congressman James B. Weaver of Iowa.

The campaign centered mainly on economic issues, especially the protectionist 1890 McKinley Tariff. Cleveland ran on a platform of lowering the tariff and opposed the Republicans' 1890 voting rights proposal. He was also a proponent of the gold standard, while the Republicans and Populists both supported bimetalism.

Cleveland swept the Solid South and won several important swing states, taking a majority of the electoral vote and a plurality of the popular vote. Weaver won 8.5% of the popular vote and carried several Western states, while John Bidwell of the Prohibition Party won 2.2% of the popular vote. The Democrats did not win another presidential election until 1912. This was the second of just nine presidential elections won by the Democrats without a southerner on the ticket, the others being 1884, 1912, 1916, 1940, 2008, 2012, and 2020.

Nominations

Democratic Party nomination

1892 Democratic Party ticket
Grover Cleveland Adlai Stevenson
for President for Vice President
 
 
22nd
President of the United States
(1885–1889)
First Assistant United States Postmaster General
(1885–1889)
Campaign
 

By the beginning of 1892, many Americans were ready to return to Cleveland's political policies. Although he was the clear frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination, he was far from the universal choice of the party's supporters; many, such as the journalists Henry Watterson and Charles Anderson Dana, thought that if he were to attain the nomination, their party would lose in November, but few could challenge him effectively. Though he had remained relatively quiet on the issue of silver versus gold, often deferring to bimetalism, Senate Democrats in January 1891 voted for free coinage of silver. Furious, he sent a letter to Ellery Anderson, who headed the New York Reform Club, to condemn the party's apparent drift towards inflation and agrarian control, the "dangerous and reckless experiment of free, unlimited coinage of silver at our mints." Advisors warned that such statements might alienate potential supporters in the South and West and risk his chances for the nomination, but Cleveland felt that being right on the issue was more important than the nomination. After making his position clear, he worked to focus his campaign on tariff reform, hoping that the silver issue would dissipate.[3]

A challenger emerged in the form of David B. Hill, former governor of and incumbent senator from New York. In favor of bimetalism and tariff reform, Hill hoped to make inroads with Cleveland's supporters while appealing to those in the South and Midwest who were not keen on nominating Cleveland for a third consecutive time. Hill had begun to run for the position of president unofficially as early as 1890, and even offered former Postmaster General Donald M. Dickinson his support for the vice-presidential nomination. But he was not able to escape his past association with Tammany Hall, and lack of confidence in his ability to defeat Cleveland for the nomination kept Hill from attaining the support he needed. By the time of the convention, Cleveland could count on the support of a majority of the state Democratic parties, though his native New York remained pledged to Hill.[4]

In a narrow first-ballot victory, Cleveland received 617.33 votes, barely 10 more than needed, to 114 for Hill, 103 for Governor Horace Boies of Iowa, a populist and former Republican, and the rest scattered. Although the Cleveland forces preferred Isaac P. Gray from Indiana for vice president, Cleveland directed his own support to the convention favorite, Adlai E. Stevenson I from Illinois.[5] As a supporter of using paper greenbacks and free silver to inflate the currency and alleviate economic distress in rural districts, Stevenson balanced the ticket headed by Cleveland, who supported hard-money and the gold standard. At the same time, it was hoped that his nomination represented a promise not to ignore regulars, and so potentially get Hill and Tammany Hall to support the Democratic ticket to their fullest in the coming election.[6][7]

Republican Party nomination

1892 Republican Party ticket
Benjamin Harrison Whitelaw Reid
for President for Vice President
 
 
23rd
President of the United States
(1889–1893)
28th
U.S. Ambassador to France
(1889–1892)
 

Benjamin Harrison's administration was widely viewed as unsuccessful, and as a result, Thomas C. Platt (a political boss in New York) and other disaffected party leaders mounted a dump-Harrison movement coalescing around veteran candidate James G. Blaine from Maine, a favorite of Republican party regulars. Blaine had been the Republican nominee in 1884 when he lost to Cleveland.

Privately, Harrison did not want to be renominated for the presidency, but he remained opposed to the nomination going to Blaine, who he was convinced intended to run, and thought himself the only candidate capable of preventing that. Blaine, however, did not want another fight for the nomination and a rematch against Cleveland in the general election. His health had begun to fail, and three of his children had recently died (Walker and Alice in 1890, and Emmons in 1892). Blaine refused to run actively, but the cryptic nature of his responses to a draft effort fueled speculation that he was not averse to such a movement. For his part, Harrison curtly demanded that he either renounce his supporters or resign his position as Secretary of State, with Blaine choosing the latter a scant three days before the National Convention. A boom began to build around the "draft Blaine" effort, with supporters hoping to cause a break towards their candidate.[8]

Senator John Sherman of Ohio, who had been the leading candidate for the nomination at the 1888 Republican Convention before Harrison won it, was also brought up as a possible challenger. Like Blaine, however, he was averse to another bitter battle for the nomination and, "like the rebels down South, want to be let alone." This inevitably turned attention to Ohio Governor William McKinley, who was indecisive as to his intentions in spite of his ill feelings toward Harrison and his popularity among the Republican base. Although not averse to receiving the nomination, he did not expect to win it either. However, should Blaine and Harrison fail to attain the nomination after a number of ballots, he felt he could be brought forth as a harmony candidate. Despite the urging of Republican power broker Mark Hanna, McKinley did not put himself forward as a potential candidate, afraid of offending Harrison and Blaine's supporters, while also feeling that the coming election would not favor the Republicans.[9]

In any case, Harrison's forces had the nomination locked up by the time delegates met in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on June 7–10, 1892. Richard Thomas of Indiana delivered Harrison's nominating speech. Harrison was nominated on the first ballot with 535.17 votes to 182 for McKinley, 181.83 for Blaine, and the rest scattered. McKinley protested when the Ohio delegation threw its entire vote in his name, despite not being formally nominated, but Joseph B. Foraker, who headed the delegation, managed to silence him on a point of order.[10] With the ballots counted, many observers were surprised at the strength of the McKinley vote, which almost overtook Blaine's. Whitelaw Reid of New York, editor of the New York Tribune and recent United States Ambassador to France, was nominated for vice president. The incumbent vice president, Levi P. Morton, was supported by many at the convention, including Reid himself, but Morton did not wish to serve another term, as he was more interested in positioning himself to run for governor of New York at the next scheduled election in 1894.[10] Harrison also did not want Morton on the ticket.

People's Party nomination

1892 People's Party ticket
James B. Weaver James G. Field
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Iowa's 6th
(1879–1881 & 1885–1889)
13th
Attorney General of Virginia
(1877–1882)

Populist candidates:

Candidates gallery

 
Weaver/Field campaign poster

In 1891, the American farmers' alliances met with delegates from labor and reform groups in Cincinnati, Ohio, to discuss the formation of a new political party. They formed the People's Party, commonly known as the "Populists", a year later in St. Louis, Missouri.

Leonidas L. Polk was the initial frontrunner for the presidential nomination. He had been instrumental in the party's formation and held great appeal with its agrarian base, but he unexpectedly died while in Washington, D.C., on June 11. Another candidate mentioned frequently for the nomination was Walter Q. Gresham, an appellate judge who had made a number of rulings against the railroads that made him a favorite of some farmer and labor groups, and it was felt that his rather dignified image would make the Populists appear as more than minor contenders. Both Democrats and Republicans feared his nomination for this reason, and while Gresham toyed with the idea, he ultimately was not ready to make a complete break with the two parties, declining petitions for his nomination right up to and during the Populist Convention. Later he would endorse Grover Cleveland for the presidency.[11]

At the first Populist national convention in Omaha, Nebraska, in July 1892, James B. Weaver from Iowa was nominated for president on the first ballot, now lacking any serious opposition. While his nomination brought with it significant campaigning experience from over several decades, he also had a longer tract of history for which Republicans and Democrats could criticize him, and he also alienated many potential supporters in the South, having participated in Sherman's March to the Sea. James G. Field from Virginia was nominated for vice-president to try and rectify this problem while also attaining the regional balance often seen in Republican and Democratic tickets.[12]

Presidential Ballot[13] Vice Presidential Ballot[13]
Ballot 1st Ballot 1st
James B. Weaver 995 James G. Field 733
James H. Kyle 265 Ben Stockton Terrell 554
Seymour F. Norton 1
Mann Page 1
Leland Stanford 1
Populist Convention Balloting by State Delegation

The Populist platform called for nationalization of the telegraph, telephone, and railroads, free coinage of silver, a graduated income tax, and creation of postal savings banks.

Prohibition Party nomination

Prohibition candidates:

Candidates gallery

 
National Prohibition Convention, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1892.

The sixth Prohibition Party National Convention assembled in Music Hall in Cincinnati, Ohio. There were 972 delegates present from all states except Louisiana and South Carolina.

Two major stories about the convention loomed before it assembled. In the first place, some members of the national committee sought to merge the Prohibition and Populist Parties. While there appeared a likelihood that the merger would materialize, it was clear that it was not going to happen by the time that the convention convened. Secondly, the southern states sent a number of black delegates. Cincinnati hotels refused to serve meals to blacks and whites at the same time, and several hotels refused service to the black delegates altogether.

The convention nominated John Bidwell from California for president on the first ballot. Prior to the convention, the race was thought to be close between Bidwell and William Jennings Demorest, but the New York delegation became irritated with Demorest and voted for Bidwell 73–7. James B. Cranfill from Texas was nominated for vice-president on the first ballot with 417 votes to 351 for Joshua Levering from Maryland and 45 for others.[14]

Presidential Ballot[14]
Ballot 1st
John Bidwell 590
Gideon T. Stewart 179
William Jennings Demorest 139
H. Clay Bascom 3

Socialist Labor Party nomination

The first Socialist Labor Party National Convention assembled in New York City and, despite running on a platform that called for the abolition of the positions of president and vice-president, decided to nominate candidates for those positions: Simon Wing from Massachusetts for president and Charles Matchett from New York for vice-president.[15] They were on the ballot in five states: Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.[16]

Woman Suffragists' nomination

A "national nominating convention of woman suffragists" met on September 21, 1892, and nominated notorious suffrage and free-love advocate Victoria Woodhull for president and Marietta Stow for vice president.[17] Both had been nominated for these positions before, Woodhull in 1872[18] and Stow in 1884. Both had been nominated by the National Equal Rights Party, which did not nominate a ballot in 1892; instead, the woman suffrage nominating convention, headed by Anna M. Parker and consisting of 50 delegates from 29 states, stepped in.[17]

Women were not yet allowed to vote in 1892, but the Convention's platform urged "election officers throughout the country to allow them to cast a ballot this fall."[19] They were not successful in this, and it was almost 30 more years until women were allowed to vote in national elections.

General election

Campaign

 
Cleveland/Stevenson poster.

The tariff issue dominated this rather lackluster campaign. Harrison defended the protectionist McKinley Tariff passed during his term. For his part, Cleveland assured voters that he opposed absolute free trade and would continue his campaign for a reduction in the tariff. Cleveland also denounced the Lodge Bill, a voting rights bill that sought to protect the rights of African American voters in the South.[20] William McKinley campaigned extensively for Harrison, setting the stage for his own run four years later.

The campaign took a somber turn when, in October, First Lady Caroline Harrison died. Despite the ill health that had plagued Mrs. Harrison since her youth and had worsened in the last decade, she often accompanied Mr. Harrison on official travels. On one such trip, to California in the spring of 1891, she caught a cold. It quickly deepened into her chest, and she was eventually diagnosed with tuberculosis. A summer in the Adirondack Mountains failed to restore her to health. An invalid the last six months of her life, she died in the White House on October 25, 1892, just two weeks before the national election. As a result, all of the candidates ceased campaigning.

Results

 
Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate. Shades of blue are for Cleveland (Democratic), shades of red are for Harrison (Republican), and shades of green are for Weaver (Populist).

The margin in the popular vote for Cleveland was 400,000, the largest since Grant's re-election in 1872.[21] The Democrats won the presidency and both houses of Congress for the first time since 1856. President Harrison's re-election bid was a decisive loss in both the popular and electoral count, unlike President Cleveland's re-election bid four years earlier, in which he won the popular vote, but lost the electoral vote.

Cleveland was the third of only five presidents to win re-election with a smaller percentage of the popular vote than in previous elections, although in the two prior such incidents — James Madison in 1812 and Andrew Jackson in 1832 — not all states held popular elections and a similar vote decrease would happen again for Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1940 and 1944 and Barack Obama in 2012. Ironically, Cleveland saw his popular support decrease not only from his electoral win in 1884 but also from his electoral loss in 1888.

At the county level, Cleveland fared much better than Harrison. The Republicans' vote was not nearly as widespread as the Democrats'. In 1892, it was still a sectionally based party mainly situated in the East, Midwest, and West and was barely visible south of the Mason–Dixon line. In the South, the party was holding on in only a few counties. In East Tennessee and tidewater Virginia, the vote at the county level showed some strength, but it barely existed in Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas.[22]

In a continuation of its collapse there during the 1890 Congressional elections, the Republican Party even struggled in its Midwestern strongholds, where general electoral troubles from economic woes were acutely exacerbated by the promotion of temperance laws and, in Wisconsin and Illinois, the aggressive support of state politicians for English-only compulsory education laws. Such policies, which particularly in the case of the latter were associated with an upwelling of nativist and anti-Catholic attitudes amongst their supporters, resulted in the defection of large sections of immigrant communities, especially Germans, to the Democratic Party. Cleveland carried Wisconsin and Illinois with their 36 combined electoral votes, a Democratic victory not seen in those states since 1852[23] and 1856[24] respectively, and which would not be repeated until Woodrow Wilson's election in 1912. While not as dramatic a loss as in 1890, it would take until the next election cycle for more moderate Republican leaders to pick up the pieces left by the reformist crusaders and bring alienated immigrants back to the fold.[25]

Of the 2,683 counties making returns, Cleveland won in 1,389 (51.77%), Harrison carried 1,017 (37.91%), while Weaver placed first in 276 (10.29%). One county (0.04%) split evenly between Cleveland and Harrison.

Populist James B. Weaver, calling for free coinage of silver and an inflationary monetary policy, received such strong support in the West that he became the only third-party nominee between 1860 and 1912 to carry a single state. The Democratic Party did not have a presidential ticket on the ballot in the states of Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, North Dakota, or Wyoming, and Weaver won the first four of these states.[26] Weaver also performed well in the South as he won counties in Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Texas. Populists did best in Alabama, where electoral chicanery probably carried the day for the Democrats.[21]

The Prohibition ticket received 270,879 votes, or 2.2% nationwide. It was the largest total vote and highest percentage of the vote received by any Prohibition Party national ticket.

Wyoming, having attained statehood two years earlier, became the first state to allow women to vote in a presidential election since 1804. (Women in New Jersey had the right to vote under the state's original constitution, but this right was rescinded in 1807.)

Wyoming was also one of six states (along with North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Washington, and Idaho) participating in their first presidential election. This was the most new states voting since the first election.

The election witnessed many states splitting their electoral votes. Electors from the state of Michigan were selected using the congressional district method (the winner in each congressional district wins one electoral vote, the winner of the state wins two electoral votes). This resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors: nine for Harrison and five for Cleveland.[27] In Oregon, the direct election of presidential electors combined with the fact that one Weaver elector was endorsed by the Democratic Party and elected as a Fusionist, resulted in a split between the Republican and Populist electors: three for Harrison and one for Weaver.[27] In California, the direct election of presidential electors combined with the close race resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors: eight for Cleveland and one for Harrison.[27] In Ohio, the direct election of presidential electors combined with the close race resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors: 22 for Harrison and one for Cleveland.[27] In North Dakota, two electors from the Democratic-Populist Fusion ticket won and one Republican Elector won. This created a split delegation of electors: one for Weaver, one for Harrison, and one for Cleveland.[27]

 

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Stephen Grover Cleveland Democratic New York 5,553,898 46.02% 277 Adlai Ewing Stevenson Illinois 277
Benjamin Harrison (Incumbent) Republican Indiana 5,190,819 43.01% 145 Whitelaw Reid New York 145
James Baird Weaver Populist Iowa 1,026,595 8.51% 22 James Gaven Field Virginia 22
John Bidwell Prohibition California 270,879 2.24% 0 James Britton Cranfill Texas 0
Simon Wing Socialist Labor Massachusetts 21,173 0.18% 0 Charles Horatio Matchett New York 0
Other 4,673 0.04% Other
Total 12,068,037 100% 444 444
Needed to win 223 223

Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1892 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.

Popular vote
Cleveland
46.02%
Harrison
43.01%
Weaver
8.51%
Bidwell
2.24%
Others
0.21%
Electoral vote
Cleveland
62.39%
Harrison
32.66%
Weaver
4.95%

Geography of results

 

Cartographic gallery

Results by state

Source: Data from Walter Dean Burnham, Presidential ballots, 1836–1892 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1955) pp 247–57.[28]

States/districts won by Cleveland/Stevenson
States/districts won by Harrison/Reid
States/districts won by Weaver/Field
Grover Cleveland
Democratic
Benjamin Harrison
Republican
James Weaver
Populist
John Bidwell
Prohibition
Simon Wing
Socialist Labor
Margin State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % # state/dist.
Alabama 11 138,135 59.40 11 9,184 3.95 - 84,984 36.55 - 240 0.10 - - - - 53,151 22.86 232,543 AL
Arkansas 8 87,834 59.30 8 47,072 31.78 - 11,831 7.99 - 113 0.08 - - - - 40,762 27.52 148,117 AR
California 9 118,174 43.83 8 118,027 43.78 1 25,311 9.39 - 8,096 3.00 - - - - 147 0.05 269,609 CA
Colorado 4 - - - 38,620 41.13 - 53,584 57.07 4 1,687 1.80 - - - - -14,964 -15.94 93,891 CO
Connecticut 6 82,395 50.06 6 77,032 46.80 - 809 0.49 - 4,026 2.45 - 333 0.20 - 5,363 3.26 164,595 CT
Delaware 3 18,581 49.90 3 18,077 48.55 - - - - 564 1.51 - - - - 504 1.35 37,235 DE
Florida 4 30,153 85.01 4 - - - 4,843 13.65 - 475 1.34 - - - - 25,310 71.35 35,471 FL
Georgia 13 129,446 58.01 13 48,408 21.70 - 41,939 18.80 - 988 0.44 - - - - 81,038 36.32 223,126 GA
Idaho 3 - - - 8,599 44.31 - 10,520 54.21 3 288 1.48 - - - - -1,921 -9.90 19,407 ID
Illinois 24 426,281 48.79 24 399,288 45.70 - 22,207 2.54 - 25,871 2.96 - - - - 26,993 3.09 873,647 IL
Indiana 15 262,740 47.46 15 255,615 46.17 - 22,208 4.01 - 13,050 2.36 - - - - 7,125 1.29 553,613 IN
Iowa 13 196,367 44.31 - 219,795 49.60 13 20,595 4.65 - 6,402 1.44 - - - - -23,428 -5.29 443,159 IA
Kansas 10 - - - 157,241 48.40 - 163,111 50.20 10 4,553 1.40 - - - - -5,870 -1.81 324,905 KS
Kentucky 13 175,461 51.48 13 135,462 39.74 - 23,500 6.89 - 6,441 1.89 - - - - 39,999 11.73 340,864 KY
Louisiana 8 87,926 76.53 8 26,963 23.47 - - - - - - - - - - 60,963 53.06 114,889 LA
Maine 6 48,049 41.26 - 62,936 54.05 6 2,396 2.06 - 3,066 2.63 - - - - -14,887 -12.78 116,451 ME
Maryland 8 113,866 53.39 8 92,736 43.48 - 796 0.37 - 5,877 2.76 - - - - 21,130 9.91 213,275 MD
Massachusetts 15 176,813 45.22 - 202,814 51.87 15 3,210 0.82 - 7,539 1.93 - 649 0.17 - -26,001 -6.65 391,028 MA
Michigan 2 201,624 43.26 - 222,708 47.79 2 19,931 4.28 - 20,857 4.48 - - - - -21,084 -4.52 466,045 MI
MI-1 1 19,990 51.33 1 18,323 47.05 - 291 0.75 - 340 0.87 - - - - 1,667 4.28 38,944 MI-1
MI-2 1 22,427 47.67 1 20,947 44.89 - 1,072 2.30 - 2,401 5.15 - - - - 1,480 3.17 46,667 MI-2
MI-3 1 15,750 37.01 - 21,233 49.98 1 2,938 6.92 - 2,562 6.03 - - - - -5,477 -12.89 42,483 MI-3
MI-4 1 20,084 46.16 - 21,402 49.19 1 - - - 2,024 4.65 - - - - -1,381 -3.17 43,510 MI-4
MI-5 1 20,187 47.72 1 18,173 42.96 - 1,980 4.68 - 1,967 4.65 - - - - 2,014 4.76 42,307 MI-5
MI-6 1 19,500 43.16 - 21,324 47.19 1 2,070 4.58 - 2,286 5.06 - - - - -1,734 -3.84 45,180 MI-6
MI-7 1 15,984 46.57 1 15,723 45.80 - 1,842 5.37 - 777 2.26 - - - - 201 0.59 34,326 MI-7
MI-8 1 15,298 44.55 - 16,672 48.55 1 1,149 3.35 - 1,218 3.35 - - - - -1,374 -4.00 34,337 MI-8
MI-9 1 12,853 43.36 - 14,036 47.35 1 1,062 3.58 - 1,693 5.71 - - - - -1,183 -3.99 29,664 MI-9
MI-10 1 14,972 47.91 1 14,370 45.98 - 1,167 3.73 - 741 2.37 - - - - 602 1.93 31,250 MI-10
MI-11 1 12,743 35.16 - 18,379 50.75 1 3,143 8.68 - 1,961 5.41 - - - - -5,645 -15.59 36,217 MI-11
MI-12 1 16,888 42.68 - 18,811 50.06 1 1,023 2.59 - 1,851 4.68 - - - - -2,923 -7.39 39,573 MI-12
Minnesota 9 100,920 37.76 - 122,823 45.96 9 29,313 10.97 - 14,182 5.31 - - - - -21,903 -8.20 267,238 MN
Mississippi 9 40,030 76.22 9 1,398 2.66 - 10,118 19.27 - 973 1.85 - - - - 29,912 56.95 52,519 MS
Missouri 17 268,400 49.56 17 227,646 42.03 - 41,204 7.61 - 4,333 0.80 - - - - 40,754 7.52 541,583 MO
Montana 3 17,690 39.79 - 18,871 42.44 3 7,338 16.50 - 562 1.26 - - - - -1,181 -2.66 44,461 MT
Nebraska 8 24,943 12.46 - 87,213 43.56 8 83,134 41.53 - 4,902 2.45 - - - - -4,079 -2.04 200,192 NE
Nevada 3 714 6.56 - 2,811 25.84 - 7,264 66.78 3 89 0.82 - - - - -4,453 -40.94 10,878 NV
New Hampshire 4 42,081 47.11 - 45,658 51.11 4 293 0.33 - 1,297 1.45 - - - - -3,577 -4.00 89,329 NH
New Jersey 10 171,066 50.67 10 156,101 46.24 - 985 0.29 - 8,134 2.41 - 1,337 0.40 - 14,965 4.43 337,623 NJ
New York 36 654,868 48.99 36 609,350 45.58 - 16,429 1.23 - 38,190 2.86 - 17,956 1.34 - 45,518 3.41 1,336,793 NY
North Carolina 11 132,951 47.44 11 100,346 35.80 - 44,336 15.82 - 2,637 0.94 - - - - 32,605 11.63 280,270 NC
North Dakota 3 0 0.00 1 17,519 48.50 1 17,700 49.01 1 899 2.49 - - - - -181 -0.50 36,118 ND
Ohio 23 404,115 47.53 1 405,187 47.66 22 14,850 1.75 - 26,012 3.06 - - - - -1,072 -0.13 850,164 OH
Oregon 4 14,243 18.15 - 35,002 44.59 3 26,965 34.35 1 2,281 2.91 - - - - -8,037 -10.24 78,491 OR
Pennsylvania 32 452,264 45.09 - 516,011 51.45 32 8,714 0.87 - 25,123 2.50 - 898 0.09 - -63,747 -6.36 1,003,010 PA
Rhode Island 4 24,336 45.75 - 26,975 50.71 4 228 0.43 - 1,654 3.11 - - - - -2,639 -4.96 53,196 RI
South Carolina 9 54,680 77.56 9 13,345 18.93 - 2,407 3.41 - - - - - - - 41,335 58.63 70,504 SC
South Dakota 4 9,081 12.88 - 34,888 49.48 4 26,544 37.64 - - - - - - - -8,344 -11.83 70,513 SD
Tennessee 12 136,468 51.36 12 100,537 37.83 - 23,918 9.00 - 4,809 1.81 - - - - 35,931 13.52 265,732 TN
Texas 15 239,148 56.65 15 81,144 19.22 - 99,688 23.61 - 2,165 0.51 - - - - 139,460 33.04 422,145 TX
Vermont 4 16,325 29.26 - 37,992 68.09 4 44 0.08 - 1,424 2.55 - - - - -21,667 -38.83 55,796 VT
Virginia 12 164,136 56.17 12 113,098 38.70 - 12,275 4.20 - 2,729 0.93 - - - - 51,038 17.46 292,238 VA
Washington 4 29,802 33.88 - 36,460 41.45 4 19,165 21.79 - 2,542 2.89 - - - - -6,658 -7.57 87,969 WA
West Virginia 6 84,467 49.37 6 80,292 46.93 - 4,167 2.44 - 2,153 1.26 - - - - 4,175 2.44 171,079 WV
Wisconsin 12 177,325 47.72 12 171,101 46.05 - 10,019 2.70 - 13,136 3.54 - - - - 6,224 1.68 371,581 WI
Wyoming 3 - - - 8,454 50.52 3 7,722 46.14 - 530 3.17 - - - - -732 -4.37 16,735 WY
TOTALS: 444 5,553,898 46.02 277 5,190,799 43.01 145 1,026,595 8.51 22 270,889 2.24 - 21,173 0.18 - 363,099 3.01 12,068,027 US

Close states

Margin of victory less than 1% (35 electoral votes):

  1. California, 0.05% (147 votes)
  2. Ohio, 0.13% (1,072 votes)
  3. North Dakota, 0.50% (181 votes)

Margin of victory between 1% and 5% (158 electoral votes):

  1. Indiana, 1.29% (7,125 votes)
  2. Delaware, 1.35% (504 votes)
  3. Wisconsin, 1.68% (6,224 votes)
  4. Kansas, 1.81% (5,870 votes)
  5. Nebraska, 2.04% (4,079 votes)
  6. West Virginia, 2.44% (4,175 votes)
  7. Montana, 2.66% (1,181 votes)
  8. Illinois, 3.09% (26,993 votes) (tipping point state)
  9. Connecticut, 3.26% (5,363 votes)
  10. New York, 3.41% (45,518 votes)
  11. New Hampshire, 4.00% (3,577 votes)
  12. Wyoming, 4.37% (732 votes) (margin over James Weaver)
  13. New Jersey, 4.43% (14,965 votes)
  14. Michigan, 4.52% (21,084 votes)
  15. Rhode Island, 4.96% (2,639 votes)

Margin of victory between 5% and 10% (101 electoral votes):

  1. Iowa, 5.29% (23,428 votes)
  2. Pennsylvania, 6.36% (63,747 votes)
  3. Massachusetts, 6.65% (26,001 votes)
  4. Missouri, 7.52% (40,754 votes)
  5. Washington, 7.57% (6,658 votes)
  6. Minnesota, 8.20% (21,903 votes)
  7. Idaho, 9.90% (1,921 votes)
  8. Maryland, 9.91% (21,130 votes)

See also

References

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ Enten, Harry (January 10, 2021). "How Trump led Republicans to historic losses". CNN. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  3. ^ History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, Pg 1710–1711
  4. ^ History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, Pg 1711–1714
  5. ^ William DeGregorio, The Complete Book of U.S. Presidents, Gramercy 1997
  6. ^ "VP Adlai Stevenson". Senate.gov. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  7. ^ History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, p. 1719–1720
  8. ^ History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, Pgs 1706–1708
  9. ^ History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, Pgs 1706–1707
  10. ^ a b History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II, Pgs 1716
  11. ^ History of American Presidential Elections Volume II 1848–1896; Schlesinger; Pgs 1721–1722
  12. ^ History of American Presidential Elections Volume II 1848–1896; Schlesinger; Pgs 1722–1723
  13. ^ a b "Weaver. The Man from Iowa Nominated on the First Ballot". The Colorado Daily Chieftain. July 5, 1892. p. 1. Retrieved December 28, 2022.
  14. ^ a b Hinshaw, Seth (2000). Ohio Elects the President: Our State's Role in Presidential Elections 1804-1996. Mansfield: Book Masters. p. 62.
  15. ^ "Named Wing For President". Chicago Tribune. August 29, 1892. p. 2. Retrieved May 13, 2022. It was unanimously resolved to nominate a Presidential ticket and the following candidates were put up: President, Simon Wing of Boston; Vice-President, Charles H. Matchett of Brooklyn.
  16. ^ Kalb, Deborah, ed. (2010). Guide to U.S. Elections. Washington, DC: CQ Press. p. 804. ISBN 978-1-60426-536-1.
  17. ^ a b Daily Public Ledger. (Maysville, Ky.), 23 Sept. 1892. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86069117/1892-09-23/ed-1/seq-3/
  18. ^ "The First Woman To Run For President: Victoria Woodhull (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved February 23, 2023.
  19. ^ The Morning Call. (San Francisco [Calif.]), 23 Sept. 1892. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn94052989/1892-09-23/ed-1/seq-1/
  20. ^ Sig Synnestvedt, The White Response to Black Emancipation: Second-class Citizenship in the United States Since Reconstruction. (1972). p 41.
  21. ^ a b Charles W. Calhoun (ed.), The Gilded Age: Perspectives on the Origins of Modern America. Blue Ridge Summit, PA: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2006; pg. 295.
  22. ^ Presidential Elections, 1789–2008: County, State, and National Mapping of Election Data, Donald R. Deskins, Jr., Hanes Walton, Jr., and Sherman C. Puckett, pg. 250
  23. ^ Counting the Votes; Wisconsin January 1, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Counting the Votes; Illinois January 10, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Jensen, Richard J. The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896, ch. 4: Iowa, Wet or Dry? & ch. 5: Education, the Tariff, and the Melting Pot. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1971. pp. 89-153.
  26. ^ Nathan Fine, Farmer and Labor Parties in the United States, 1828–1928. New York: Rand School of Social Science, 1928; pg. 79.
  27. ^ a b c d e
  28. ^ "1892 Presidential General Election Data – National". Uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved May 7, 2013.

Further reading

  • Ander, O. Fritiof. "The Swedish-American Press and the Election of 1892." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 23.4 (1937): 533–554. online
  • Blaine, James G. "The Presidential Election of 1892." The North American Review 155#432 (1892): 513–525. online, a primary source
  • Faulkner, Harold U. (1959). Politics, Reform and Expansion, 1890–1900. New York: Harper.
  • Jensen, Richard (1971). The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888–1896. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-39825-0.
  • Josephson, Matthew (1938). The Politicos: 1865–1896. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co.
  • Keller, Morton (1977). Affairs of State: Public Life in Late Nineteenth Century America. Cambridge: Belknap Press. ISBN 0-674-00721-2.
  • Kleppner, Paul (1979). The Third Electoral System 1853–1892: Parties, Voters, and Political Cultures. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-1328-1.
  • Knoles, George H. (1942). The Presidential Campaign and Election of 1892. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Knoles, George Harmon. "Populism and Socialism, with Special Reference to the Election of 1892." Pacific Historical Review 12.3 (1943): 295–304. online
  • Morgan, H. Wayne (1969). From Hayes to McKinley: National Party Politics, 1877–1896. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.
  • Nevins, Allan. Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage (1932) Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, the major resource on Cleveland.
  • Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. A History of the United States since the Civil War. Volume V, 1888–1901 (1937). pp 169–244.
  • Sievers, Harry J. "The Catholic Indian school issue and the presidential election of 1892." Catholic Historical Review 38.2 (1952): 129–155. online
  • Steelman, Joseph F. "Vicissitudes of Republican Party Politics: The Campaign of 1892 in North Carolina." North Carolina Historical Review 43.4 (1966): 430–442. online
  • Rhodes, James Ford (1920). History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 to the Mckinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896. Vol. 8. New York: Macmillan.

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

  • Presidential Election of 1892: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • 1892 popular vote by counties
  • Election of 1892 in Counting the Votes March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine


1892, united, states, presidential, election, 27th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1892, rematch, closely, contested, 1888, presidential, election, former, democratic, president, grover, cleveland, defeated, incumbent, republican. The 1892 United States presidential election was the 27th quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 8 1892 In a rematch of the closely contested 1888 presidential election former Democratic President Grover Cleveland defeated incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison Cleveland s victory made him the first and to date the only person in American history to be elected to a non consecutive second presidential term It was also the first of two times incumbents were defeated in consecutive elections the second being Jimmy Carter s defeat of Gerald Ford in 1976 followed by Carter s subsequent loss to Ronald Reagan in 1980 1892 United States presidential election 1888 November 8 1892 1896 444 members of the Electoral College223 electoral votes needed to winTurnout75 8 1 4 7 pp Nominee Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison James B WeaverParty Democratic Republican PopulistHome state New York Indiana IowaRunning mate Adlai Stevenson I Whitelaw Reid James G FieldElectoral vote 277 145 22States carried 23 16 5Popular vote 5 556 918 5 176 108 1 041 028Percentage 46 0 43 0 8 5 Presidential election results map Red denotes states won by Harrison Reid blue denotes those won by Cleveland Stevenson green denotes those won by Weaver Field Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state President before electionBenjamin HarrisonRepublican Elected President Grover ClevelandDemocraticThis was the first time a Republican president lost reelection Harrison s loss was also the second time an elected president lost the popular vote twice the first being John Quincy Adams in the 1820s This feat was not repeated until Donald Trump lost the popular vote in 2016 and 2020 2 This election saw the fourth rematch in presidential history Though some Republicans opposed Harrison s renomination he defeated James G Blaine and William McKinley on the first presidential ballot of the 1892 Republican National Convention Cleveland defeated challenges by David B Hill and Horace Boies on the first presidential ballot of the 1892 Democratic National Convention becoming both the first presidential candidate and the first Democrat to win his party s presidential nomination in three elections Groups from The Grange and the Knights of Labor joined together to form a new party called the Populist Party It had a ticket led by former Congressman James B Weaver of Iowa The campaign centered mainly on economic issues especially the protectionist 1890 McKinley Tariff Cleveland ran on a platform of lowering the tariff and opposed the Republicans 1890 voting rights proposal He was also a proponent of the gold standard while the Republicans and Populists both supported bimetalism Cleveland swept the Solid South and won several important swing states taking a majority of the electoral vote and a plurality of the popular vote Weaver won 8 5 of the popular vote and carried several Western states while John Bidwell of the Prohibition Party won 2 2 of the popular vote The Democrats did not win another presidential election until 1912 This was the second of just nine presidential elections won by the Democrats without a southerner on the ticket the others being 1884 1912 1916 1940 2008 2012 and 2020 Contents 1 Nominations 1 1 Democratic Party nomination 1 2 Republican Party nomination 1 3 People s Party nomination 1 3 1 Candidates gallery 1 4 Prohibition Party nomination 1 4 1 Candidates gallery 1 5 Socialist Labor Party nomination 1 6 Woman Suffragists nomination 2 General election 2 1 Campaign 2 2 Results 2 3 Geography of results 2 3 1 Cartographic gallery 2 4 Results by state 2 5 Close states 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 Primary sources 6 External linksNominations EditDemocratic Party nomination Edit Main article 1892 Democratic National Convention 1892 Democratic Party ticketGrover Cleveland Adlai Stevensonfor President for Vice President 22ndPresident of the United States 1885 1889 First Assistant United States Postmaster General 1885 1889 Campaign By the beginning of 1892 many Americans were ready to return to Cleveland s political policies Although he was the clear frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination he was far from the universal choice of the party s supporters many such as the journalists Henry Watterson and Charles Anderson Dana thought that if he were to attain the nomination their party would lose in November but few could challenge him effectively Though he had remained relatively quiet on the issue of silver versus gold often deferring to bimetalism Senate Democrats in January 1891 voted for free coinage of silver Furious he sent a letter to Ellery Anderson who headed the New York Reform Club to condemn the party s apparent drift towards inflation and agrarian control the dangerous and reckless experiment of free unlimited coinage of silver at our mints Advisors warned that such statements might alienate potential supporters in the South and West and risk his chances for the nomination but Cleveland felt that being right on the issue was more important than the nomination After making his position clear he worked to focus his campaign on tariff reform hoping that the silver issue would dissipate 3 A challenger emerged in the form of David B Hill former governor of and incumbent senator from New York In favor of bimetalism and tariff reform Hill hoped to make inroads with Cleveland s supporters while appealing to those in the South and Midwest who were not keen on nominating Cleveland for a third consecutive time Hill had begun to run for the position of president unofficially as early as 1890 and even offered former Postmaster General Donald M Dickinson his support for the vice presidential nomination But he was not able to escape his past association with Tammany Hall and lack of confidence in his ability to defeat Cleveland for the nomination kept Hill from attaining the support he needed By the time of the convention Cleveland could count on the support of a majority of the state Democratic parties though his native New York remained pledged to Hill 4 In a narrow first ballot victory Cleveland received 617 33 votes barely 10 more than needed to 114 for Hill 103 for Governor Horace Boies of Iowa a populist and former Republican and the rest scattered Although the Cleveland forces preferred Isaac P Gray from Indiana for vice president Cleveland directed his own support to the convention favorite Adlai E Stevenson I from Illinois 5 As a supporter of using paper greenbacks and free silver to inflate the currency and alleviate economic distress in rural districts Stevenson balanced the ticket headed by Cleveland who supported hard money and the gold standard At the same time it was hoped that his nomination represented a promise not to ignore regulars and so potentially get Hill and Tammany Hall to support the Democratic ticket to their fullest in the coming election 6 7 Republican Party nomination Edit Main article 1892 Republican National Convention 1892 Republican Party ticketBenjamin Harrison Whitelaw Reidfor President for Vice President 23rdPresident of the United States 1889 1893 28thU S Ambassador to France 1889 1892 Benjamin Harrison s administration was widely viewed as unsuccessful and as a result Thomas C Platt a political boss in New York and other disaffected party leaders mounted a dump Harrison movement coalescing around veteran candidate James G Blaine from Maine a favorite of Republican party regulars Blaine had been the Republican nominee in 1884 when he lost to Cleveland Privately Harrison did not want to be renominated for the presidency but he remained opposed to the nomination going to Blaine who he was convinced intended to run and thought himself the only candidate capable of preventing that Blaine however did not want another fight for the nomination and a rematch against Cleveland in the general election His health had begun to fail and three of his children had recently died Walker and Alice in 1890 and Emmons in 1892 Blaine refused to run actively but the cryptic nature of his responses to a draft effort fueled speculation that he was not averse to such a movement For his part Harrison curtly demanded that he either renounce his supporters or resign his position as Secretary of State with Blaine choosing the latter a scant three days before the National Convention A boom began to build around the draft Blaine effort with supporters hoping to cause a break towards their candidate 8 Senator John Sherman of Ohio who had been the leading candidate for the nomination at the 1888 Republican Convention before Harrison won it was also brought up as a possible challenger Like Blaine however he was averse to another bitter battle for the nomination and like the rebels down South want to be let alone This inevitably turned attention to Ohio Governor William McKinley who was indecisive as to his intentions in spite of his ill feelings toward Harrison and his popularity among the Republican base Although not averse to receiving the nomination he did not expect to win it either However should Blaine and Harrison fail to attain the nomination after a number of ballots he felt he could be brought forth as a harmony candidate Despite the urging of Republican power broker Mark Hanna McKinley did not put himself forward as a potential candidate afraid of offending Harrison and Blaine s supporters while also feeling that the coming election would not favor the Republicans 9 In any case Harrison s forces had the nomination locked up by the time delegates met in Minneapolis Minnesota on June 7 10 1892 Richard Thomas of Indiana delivered Harrison s nominating speech Harrison was nominated on the first ballot with 535 17 votes to 182 for McKinley 181 83 for Blaine and the rest scattered McKinley protested when the Ohio delegation threw its entire vote in his name despite not being formally nominated but Joseph B Foraker who headed the delegation managed to silence him on a point of order 10 With the ballots counted many observers were surprised at the strength of the McKinley vote which almost overtook Blaine s Whitelaw Reid of New York editor of the New York Tribune and recent United States Ambassador to France was nominated for vice president The incumbent vice president Levi P Morton was supported by many at the convention including Reid himself but Morton did not wish to serve another term as he was more interested in positioning himself to run for governor of New York at the next scheduled election in 1894 10 Harrison also did not want Morton on the ticket People s Party nomination Edit 1892 People s Party ticketJames B Weaver James G Fieldfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Iowa s 6th 1879 1881 amp 1885 1889 13thAttorney General of Virginia 1877 1882 Populist candidates James B Weaver former U S representative from Iowa James H Kyle U S senator from South Dakota Leonidas L Polk former representative from North Carolina Walter Q Gresham Appellate judge from IndianaCandidates gallery Edit James B Weaverfrom Iowa SenatorJames H Kylefrom South Dakota Leonidas L Polkfrom North Carolina Died June 11 1892 Appellate JudgeWalter Q Greshamfrom Indiana Declined to be Nominated Weaver Field campaign poster In 1891 the American farmers alliances met with delegates from labor and reform groups in Cincinnati Ohio to discuss the formation of a new political party They formed the People s Party commonly known as the Populists a year later in St Louis Missouri Leonidas L Polk was the initial frontrunner for the presidential nomination He had been instrumental in the party s formation and held great appeal with its agrarian base but he unexpectedly died while in Washington D C on June 11 Another candidate mentioned frequently for the nomination was Walter Q Gresham an appellate judge who had made a number of rulings against the railroads that made him a favorite of some farmer and labor groups and it was felt that his rather dignified image would make the Populists appear as more than minor contenders Both Democrats and Republicans feared his nomination for this reason and while Gresham toyed with the idea he ultimately was not ready to make a complete break with the two parties declining petitions for his nomination right up to and during the Populist Convention Later he would endorse Grover Cleveland for the presidency 11 At the first Populist national convention in Omaha Nebraska in July 1892 James B Weaver from Iowa was nominated for president on the first ballot now lacking any serious opposition While his nomination brought with it significant campaigning experience from over several decades he also had a longer tract of history for which Republicans and Democrats could criticize him and he also alienated many potential supporters in the South having participated in Sherman s March to the Sea James G Field from Virginia was nominated for vice president to try and rectify this problem while also attaining the regional balance often seen in Republican and Democratic tickets 12 Presidential Ballot 13 Vice Presidential Ballot 13 Ballot 1st Ballot 1stJames B Weaver 995 James G Field 733James H Kyle 265 Ben Stockton Terrell 554Seymour F Norton 1Mann Page 1Leland Stanford 1Populist Convention Balloting by State Delegation 1st Presidential Ballot 1st Vice Presidential Ballot The Populist platform called for nationalization of the telegraph telephone and railroads free coinage of silver a graduated income tax and creation of postal savings banks Prohibition Party nomination Edit Main article 1892 Prohibition National Convention Prohibition candidates John Bidwell former U S representative from California Gideon T Stewart Prohibition Party Chairman from Ohio William Jennings Demorest magazine publisher from New YorkCandidates gallery Edit John Bidwellfrom California Prohibition Party ChairmanGideon T Stewartfrom Ohio Magazine PublisherWilliam J Demorestfrom New York National Prohibition Convention Cincinnati Ohio 1892 The sixth Prohibition Party National Convention assembled in Music Hall in Cincinnati Ohio There were 972 delegates present from all states except Louisiana and South Carolina Two major stories about the convention loomed before it assembled In the first place some members of the national committee sought to merge the Prohibition and Populist Parties While there appeared a likelihood that the merger would materialize it was clear that it was not going to happen by the time that the convention convened Secondly the southern states sent a number of black delegates Cincinnati hotels refused to serve meals to blacks and whites at the same time and several hotels refused service to the black delegates altogether The convention nominated John Bidwell from California for president on the first ballot Prior to the convention the race was thought to be close between Bidwell and William Jennings Demorest but the New York delegation became irritated with Demorest and voted for Bidwell 73 7 James B Cranfill from Texas was nominated for vice president on the first ballot with 417 votes to 351 for Joshua Levering from Maryland and 45 for others 14 Presidential Ballot 14 Ballot 1stJohn Bidwell 590Gideon T Stewart 179William Jennings Demorest 139H Clay Bascom 3Socialist Labor Party nomination Edit The first Socialist Labor Party National Convention assembled in New York City and despite running on a platform that called for the abolition of the positions of president and vice president decided to nominate candidates for those positions Simon Wing from Massachusetts for president and Charles Matchett from New York for vice president 15 They were on the ballot in five states Connecticut Massachusetts New Jersey New York and Pennsylvania 16 Woman Suffragists nomination Edit A national nominating convention of woman suffragists met on September 21 1892 and nominated notorious suffrage and free love advocate Victoria Woodhull for president and Marietta Stow for vice president 17 Both had been nominated for these positions before Woodhull in 1872 18 and Stow in 1884 Both had been nominated by the National Equal Rights Party which did not nominate a ballot in 1892 instead the woman suffrage nominating convention headed by Anna M Parker and consisting of 50 delegates from 29 states stepped in 17 Women were not yet allowed to vote in 1892 but the Convention s platform urged election officers throughout the country to allow them to cast a ballot this fall 19 They were not successful in this and it was almost 30 more years until women were allowed to vote in national elections General election EditCampaign Edit Main article Grover Cleveland 1892 presidential campaign Cleveland Stevenson poster The tariff issue dominated this rather lackluster campaign Harrison defended the protectionist McKinley Tariff passed during his term For his part Cleveland assured voters that he opposed absolute free trade and would continue his campaign for a reduction in the tariff Cleveland also denounced the Lodge Bill a voting rights bill that sought to protect the rights of African American voters in the South 20 William McKinley campaigned extensively for Harrison setting the stage for his own run four years later The campaign took a somber turn when in October First Lady Caroline Harrison died Despite the ill health that had plagued Mrs Harrison since her youth and had worsened in the last decade she often accompanied Mr Harrison on official travels On one such trip to California in the spring of 1891 she caught a cold It quickly deepened into her chest and she was eventually diagnosed with tuberculosis A summer in the Adirondack Mountains failed to restore her to health An invalid the last six months of her life she died in the White House on October 25 1892 just two weeks before the national election As a result all of the candidates ceased campaigning Results Edit Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate Shades of blue are for Cleveland Democratic shades of red are for Harrison Republican and shades of green are for Weaver Populist The margin in the popular vote for Cleveland was 400 000 the largest since Grant s re election in 1872 21 The Democrats won the presidency and both houses of Congress for the first time since 1856 President Harrison s re election bid was a decisive loss in both the popular and electoral count unlike President Cleveland s re election bid four years earlier in which he won the popular vote but lost the electoral vote Cleveland was the third of only five presidents to win re election with a smaller percentage of the popular vote than in previous elections although in the two prior such incidents James Madison in 1812 and Andrew Jackson in 1832 not all states held popular elections and a similar vote decrease would happen again for Franklin D Roosevelt in 1940 and 1944 and Barack Obama in 2012 Ironically Cleveland saw his popular support decrease not only from his electoral win in 1884 but also from his electoral loss in 1888 At the county level Cleveland fared much better than Harrison The Republicans vote was not nearly as widespread as the Democrats In 1892 it was still a sectionally based party mainly situated in the East Midwest and West and was barely visible south of the Mason Dixon line In the South the party was holding on in only a few counties In East Tennessee and tidewater Virginia the vote at the county level showed some strength but it barely existed in Alabama Mississippi and Texas 22 In a continuation of its collapse there during the 1890 Congressional elections the Republican Party even struggled in its Midwestern strongholds where general electoral troubles from economic woes were acutely exacerbated by the promotion of temperance laws and in Wisconsin and Illinois the aggressive support of state politicians for English only compulsory education laws Such policies which particularly in the case of the latter were associated with an upwelling of nativist and anti Catholic attitudes amongst their supporters resulted in the defection of large sections of immigrant communities especially Germans to the Democratic Party Cleveland carried Wisconsin and Illinois with their 36 combined electoral votes a Democratic victory not seen in those states since 1852 23 and 1856 24 respectively and which would not be repeated until Woodrow Wilson s election in 1912 While not as dramatic a loss as in 1890 it would take until the next election cycle for more moderate Republican leaders to pick up the pieces left by the reformist crusaders and bring alienated immigrants back to the fold 25 Of the 2 683 counties making returns Cleveland won in 1 389 51 77 Harrison carried 1 017 37 91 while Weaver placed first in 276 10 29 One county 0 04 split evenly between Cleveland and Harrison Populist James B Weaver calling for free coinage of silver and an inflationary monetary policy received such strong support in the West that he became the only third party nominee between 1860 and 1912 to carry a single state The Democratic Party did not have a presidential ticket on the ballot in the states of Colorado Idaho Kansas North Dakota or Wyoming and Weaver won the first four of these states 26 Weaver also performed well in the South as he won counties in Alabama Georgia Mississippi North Carolina and Texas Populists did best in Alabama where electoral chicanery probably carried the day for the Democrats 21 The Prohibition ticket received 270 879 votes or 2 2 nationwide It was the largest total vote and highest percentage of the vote received by any Prohibition Party national ticket Wyoming having attained statehood two years earlier became the first state to allow women to vote in a presidential election since 1804 Women in New Jersey had the right to vote under the state s original constitution but this right was rescinded in 1807 Wyoming was also one of six states along with North Dakota South Dakota Montana Washington and Idaho participating in their first presidential election This was the most new states voting since the first election The election witnessed many states splitting their electoral votes Electors from the state of Michigan were selected using the congressional district method the winner in each congressional district wins one electoral vote the winner of the state wins two electoral votes This resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors nine for Harrison and five for Cleveland 27 In Oregon the direct election of presidential electors combined with the fact that one Weaver elector was endorsed by the Democratic Party and elected as a Fusionist resulted in a split between the Republican and Populist electors three for Harrison and one for Weaver 27 In California the direct election of presidential electors combined with the close race resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors eight for Cleveland and one for Harrison 27 In Ohio the direct election of presidential electors combined with the close race resulted in a split between the Republican and Democratic electors 22 for Harrison and one for Cleveland 27 In North Dakota two electors from the Democratic Populist Fusion ticket won and one Republican Elector won This created a split delegation of electors one for Weaver one for Harrison and one for Cleveland 27 Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteStephen Grover Cleveland Democratic New York 5 553 898 46 02 277 Adlai Ewing Stevenson Illinois 277Benjamin Harrison Incumbent Republican Indiana 5 190 819 43 01 145 Whitelaw Reid New York 145James Baird Weaver Populist Iowa 1 026 595 8 51 22 James Gaven Field Virginia 22John Bidwell Prohibition California 270 879 2 24 0 James Britton Cranfill Texas 0Simon Wing Socialist Labor Massachusetts 21 173 0 18 0 Charles Horatio Matchett New York 0Other 4 673 0 04 Other Total 12 068 037 100 444 444Needed to win 223 223Source Popular Vote Leip David 1892 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 Popular voteCleveland 46 02 Harrison 43 01 Weaver 8 51 Bidwell 2 24 Others 0 21 Electoral voteCleveland 62 39 Harrison 32 66 Weaver 4 95 Geography of results Edit Results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the voteCartographic gallery Edit Map of presidential election results by county Map of Democratic presidential election results by county Map of Republican presidential election results by county Map of Populist presidential election results by county Map of Other presidential election results by county Cartogram of presidential election results by county Cartogram of Democratic presidential election results by county Cartogram of Republican presidential election results by county Cartogram of Populist presidential election results by county Cartogram of other presidential election results by countyResults by state Edit Source Data from Walter Dean Burnham Presidential ballots 1836 1892 Johns Hopkins University Press 1955 pp 247 57 28 States districts won by Cleveland StevensonStates districts won by Harrison ReidStates districts won by Weaver FieldGrover ClevelandDemocratic Benjamin HarrisonRepublican James WeaverPopulist John BidwellProhibition Simon WingSocialist Labor Margin State TotalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes state dist Alabama 11 138 135 59 40 11 9 184 3 95 84 984 36 55 240 0 10 53 151 22 86 232 543 ALArkansas 8 87 834 59 30 8 47 072 31 78 11 831 7 99 113 0 08 40 762 27 52 148 117 ARCalifornia 9 118 174 43 83 8 118 027 43 78 1 25 311 9 39 8 096 3 00 147 0 05 269 609 CAColorado 4 38 620 41 13 53 584 57 07 4 1 687 1 80 14 964 15 94 93 891 COConnecticut 6 82 395 50 06 6 77 032 46 80 809 0 49 4 026 2 45 333 0 20 5 363 3 26 164 595 CTDelaware 3 18 581 49 90 3 18 077 48 55 564 1 51 504 1 35 37 235 DEFlorida 4 30 153 85 01 4 4 843 13 65 475 1 34 25 310 71 35 35 471 FLGeorgia 13 129 446 58 01 13 48 408 21 70 41 939 18 80 988 0 44 81 038 36 32 223 126 GAIdaho 3 8 599 44 31 10 520 54 21 3 288 1 48 1 921 9 90 19 407 IDIllinois 24 426 281 48 79 24 399 288 45 70 22 207 2 54 25 871 2 96 26 993 3 09 873 647 ILIndiana 15 262 740 47 46 15 255 615 46 17 22 208 4 01 13 050 2 36 7 125 1 29 553 613 INIowa 13 196 367 44 31 219 795 49 60 13 20 595 4 65 6 402 1 44 23 428 5 29 443 159 IAKansas 10 157 241 48 40 163 111 50 20 10 4 553 1 40 5 870 1 81 324 905 KSKentucky 13 175 461 51 48 13 135 462 39 74 23 500 6 89 6 441 1 89 39 999 11 73 340 864 KYLouisiana 8 87 926 76 53 8 26 963 23 47 60 963 53 06 114 889 LAMaine 6 48 049 41 26 62 936 54 05 6 2 396 2 06 3 066 2 63 14 887 12 78 116 451 MEMaryland 8 113 866 53 39 8 92 736 43 48 796 0 37 5 877 2 76 21 130 9 91 213 275 MDMassachusetts 15 176 813 45 22 202 814 51 87 15 3 210 0 82 7 539 1 93 649 0 17 26 001 6 65 391 028 MAMichigan 2 201 624 43 26 222 708 47 79 2 19 931 4 28 20 857 4 48 21 084 4 52 466 045 MIMI 1 1 19 990 51 33 1 18 323 47 05 291 0 75 340 0 87 1 667 4 28 38 944 MI 1MI 2 1 22 427 47 67 1 20 947 44 89 1 072 2 30 2 401 5 15 1 480 3 17 46 667 MI 2MI 3 1 15 750 37 01 21 233 49 98 1 2 938 6 92 2 562 6 03 5 477 12 89 42 483 MI 3MI 4 1 20 084 46 16 21 402 49 19 1 2 024 4 65 1 381 3 17 43 510 MI 4MI 5 1 20 187 47 72 1 18 173 42 96 1 980 4 68 1 967 4 65 2 014 4 76 42 307 MI 5MI 6 1 19 500 43 16 21 324 47 19 1 2 070 4 58 2 286 5 06 1 734 3 84 45 180 MI 6MI 7 1 15 984 46 57 1 15 723 45 80 1 842 5 37 777 2 26 201 0 59 34 326 MI 7MI 8 1 15 298 44 55 16 672 48 55 1 1 149 3 35 1 218 3 35 1 374 4 00 34 337 MI 8MI 9 1 12 853 43 36 14 036 47 35 1 1 062 3 58 1 693 5 71 1 183 3 99 29 664 MI 9MI 10 1 14 972 47 91 1 14 370 45 98 1 167 3 73 741 2 37 602 1 93 31 250 MI 10MI 11 1 12 743 35 16 18 379 50 75 1 3 143 8 68 1 961 5 41 5 645 15 59 36 217 MI 11MI 12 1 16 888 42 68 18 811 50 06 1 1 023 2 59 1 851 4 68 2 923 7 39 39 573 MI 12Minnesota 9 100 920 37 76 122 823 45 96 9 29 313 10 97 14 182 5 31 21 903 8 20 267 238 MNMississippi 9 40 030 76 22 9 1 398 2 66 10 118 19 27 973 1 85 29 912 56 95 52 519 MSMissouri 17 268 400 49 56 17 227 646 42 03 41 204 7 61 4 333 0 80 40 754 7 52 541 583 MOMontana 3 17 690 39 79 18 871 42 44 3 7 338 16 50 562 1 26 1 181 2 66 44 461 MTNebraska 8 24 943 12 46 87 213 43 56 8 83 134 41 53 4 902 2 45 4 079 2 04 200 192 NENevada 3 714 6 56 2 811 25 84 7 264 66 78 3 89 0 82 4 453 40 94 10 878 NVNew Hampshire 4 42 081 47 11 45 658 51 11 4 293 0 33 1 297 1 45 3 577 4 00 89 329 NHNew Jersey 10 171 066 50 67 10 156 101 46 24 985 0 29 8 134 2 41 1 337 0 40 14 965 4 43 337 623 NJNew York 36 654 868 48 99 36 609 350 45 58 16 429 1 23 38 190 2 86 17 956 1 34 45 518 3 41 1 336 793 NYNorth Carolina 11 132 951 47 44 11 100 346 35 80 44 336 15 82 2 637 0 94 32 605 11 63 280 270 NCNorth Dakota 3 0 0 00 1 17 519 48 50 1 17 700 49 01 1 899 2 49 181 0 50 36 118 NDOhio 23 404 115 47 53 1 405 187 47 66 22 14 850 1 75 26 012 3 06 1 072 0 13 850 164 OHOregon 4 14 243 18 15 35 002 44 59 3 26 965 34 35 1 2 281 2 91 8 037 10 24 78 491 ORPennsylvania 32 452 264 45 09 516 011 51 45 32 8 714 0 87 25 123 2 50 898 0 09 63 747 6 36 1 003 010 PARhode Island 4 24 336 45 75 26 975 50 71 4 228 0 43 1 654 3 11 2 639 4 96 53 196 RISouth Carolina 9 54 680 77 56 9 13 345 18 93 2 407 3 41 41 335 58 63 70 504 SCSouth Dakota 4 9 081 12 88 34 888 49 48 4 26 544 37 64 8 344 11 83 70 513 SDTennessee 12 136 468 51 36 12 100 537 37 83 23 918 9 00 4 809 1 81 35 931 13 52 265 732 TNTexas 15 239 148 56 65 15 81 144 19 22 99 688 23 61 2 165 0 51 139 460 33 04 422 145 TXVermont 4 16 325 29 26 37 992 68 09 4 44 0 08 1 424 2 55 21 667 38 83 55 796 VTVirginia 12 164 136 56 17 12 113 098 38 70 12 275 4 20 2 729 0 93 51 038 17 46 292 238 VAWashington 4 29 802 33 88 36 460 41 45 4 19 165 21 79 2 542 2 89 6 658 7 57 87 969 WAWest Virginia 6 84 467 49 37 6 80 292 46 93 4 167 2 44 2 153 1 26 4 175 2 44 171 079 WVWisconsin 12 177 325 47 72 12 171 101 46 05 10 019 2 70 13 136 3 54 6 224 1 68 371 581 WIWyoming 3 8 454 50 52 3 7 722 46 14 530 3 17 732 4 37 16 735 WYTOTALS 444 5 553 898 46 02 277 5 190 799 43 01 145 1 026 595 8 51 22 270 889 2 24 21 173 0 18 363 099 3 01 12 068 027 USClose states Edit Margin of victory less than 1 35 electoral votes California 0 05 147 votes Ohio 0 13 1 072 votes North Dakota 0 50 181 votes Margin of victory between 1 and 5 158 electoral votes Indiana 1 29 7 125 votes Delaware 1 35 504 votes Wisconsin 1 68 6 224 votes Kansas 1 81 5 870 votes Nebraska 2 04 4 079 votes West Virginia 2 44 4 175 votes Montana 2 66 1 181 votes Illinois 3 09 26 993 votes tipping point state Connecticut 3 26 5 363 votes New York 3 41 45 518 votes New Hampshire 4 00 3 577 votes Wyoming 4 37 732 votes margin over James Weaver New Jersey 4 43 14 965 votes Michigan 4 52 21 084 votes Rhode Island 4 96 2 639 votes Margin of victory between 5 and 10 101 electoral votes Iowa 5 29 23 428 votes Pennsylvania 6 36 63 747 votes Massachusetts 6 65 26 001 votes Missouri 7 52 40 754 votes Washington 7 57 6 658 votes Minnesota 8 20 21 903 votes Idaho 9 90 1 921 votes Maryland 9 91 21 130 votes See also Edit1892 United States House of Representatives elections 1892 93 United States Senate elections American election campaigns in the 19th century History of the United States 1865 1918 History of the United States Democratic Party History of the United States Republican Party Second inauguration of Grover ClevelandReferences Edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press Enten Harry January 10 2021 How Trump led Republicans to historic losses CNN Retrieved February 3 2021 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II Pg 1710 1711 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II Pg 1711 1714 William DeGregorio The Complete Book of U S Presidents Gramercy 1997 VP Adlai Stevenson Senate gov Retrieved August 18 2016 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II p 1719 1720 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II Pgs 1706 1708 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II Pgs 1706 1707 a b History of American Presidential Elections Volume II Pgs 1716 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II 1848 1896 Schlesinger Pgs 1721 1722 History of American Presidential Elections Volume II 1848 1896 Schlesinger Pgs 1722 1723 a b Weaver The Man from Iowa Nominated on the First Ballot The Colorado Daily Chieftain July 5 1892 p 1 Retrieved December 28 2022 a b Hinshaw Seth 2000 Ohio Elects the President Our State s Role in Presidential Elections 1804 1996 Mansfield Book Masters p 62 Named Wing For President Chicago Tribune August 29 1892 p 2 Retrieved May 13 2022 It was unanimously resolved to nominate a Presidential ticket and the following candidates were put up President Simon Wing of Boston Vice President Charles H Matchett of Brooklyn Kalb Deborah ed 2010 Guide to U S Elections Washington DC CQ Press p 804 ISBN 978 1 60426 536 1 a b Daily Public Ledger Maysville Ky 23 Sept 1892 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn86069117 1892 09 23 ed 1 seq 3 The First Woman To Run For President Victoria Woodhull U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved February 23 2023 The Morning Call San Francisco Calif 23 Sept 1892 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress https chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn94052989 1892 09 23 ed 1 seq 1 Sig Synnestvedt The White Response to Black Emancipation Second class Citizenship in the United States Since Reconstruction 1972 p 41 a b Charles W Calhoun ed The Gilded Age Perspectives on the Origins of Modern America Blue Ridge Summit PA Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 2006 pg 295 Presidential Elections 1789 2008 County State and National Mapping of Election Data Donald R Deskins Jr Hanes Walton Jr and Sherman C Puckett pg 250 Counting the Votes Wisconsin Archived January 1 2017 at the Wayback Machine Counting the Votes Illinois Archived January 10 2017 at the Wayback Machine Jensen Richard J The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 ch 4 Iowa Wet or Dry amp ch 5 Education the Tariff and the Melting Pot Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1971 pp 89 153 Nathan Fine Farmer and Labor Parties in the United States 1828 1928 New York Rand School of Social Science 1928 pg 79 a b c d e 1892 Presidential Election Results 1892 Presidential General Election Data National Uselectionatlas org Retrieved May 7 2013 Further reading EditAnder O Fritiof The Swedish American Press and the Election of 1892 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 23 4 1937 533 554 online Blaine James G The Presidential Election of 1892 The North American Review 155 432 1892 513 525 online a primary source Faulkner Harold U 1959 Politics Reform and Expansion 1890 1900 New York Harper Jensen Richard 1971 The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 39825 0 Josephson Matthew 1938 The Politicos 1865 1896 New York Harcourt Brace and Co Keller Morton 1977 Affairs of State Public Life in Late Nineteenth Century America Cambridge Belknap Press ISBN 0 674 00721 2 Kleppner Paul 1979 The Third Electoral System 1853 1892 Parties Voters and Political Cultures Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 1328 1 Knoles George H 1942 The Presidential Campaign and Election of 1892 Stanford Stanford University Press Knoles George Harmon Populism and Socialism with Special Reference to the Election of 1892 Pacific Historical Review 12 3 1943 295 304 online Morgan H Wayne 1969 From Hayes to McKinley National Party Politics 1877 1896 Syracuse Syracuse University Press Nevins Allan Grover Cleveland A Study in Courage 1932 Pulitzer Prize winning biography the major resource on Cleveland Oberholtzer Ellis Paxson A History of the United States since the Civil War Volume V 1888 1901 1937 pp 169 244 Sievers Harry J The Catholic Indian school issue and the presidential election of 1892 Catholic Historical Review 38 2 1952 129 155 online Steelman Joseph F Vicissitudes of Republican Party Politics The Campaign of 1892 in North Carolina North Carolina Historical Review 43 4 1966 430 442 online Rhodes James Ford 1920 History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 to the Mckinley Bryan Campaign of 1896 Vol 8 New York Macmillan 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 1892 Presidential Election of 1892 A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress 1892 popular vote by counties 1892 State by state Popular vote Election of 1892 in Counting the Votes Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1892 United States presidential election amp oldid 1143654381, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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