fbpx
Wikipedia

1900 United States presidential election

The 1900 United States presidential election was the 29th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 6, 1900. In a re-match of the 1896 race, incumbent Republican President William McKinley defeated his Democratic challenger, William Jennings Bryan. McKinley's victory made him the first president to win a consecutive re-election since Ulysses S. Grant had accomplished the same feat in 1872. Until 1956, this would be the last time in which an incumbent Republican president would win re-election after serving a full term in office. This election saw the fifth rematch in presidential history, something that would also not occur again until 1956. This was also the first rematch to produce the same winner both times.

1900 United States presidential election

← 1896 November 6, 1900 1904 →

447 members of the Electoral College
224 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout73.7%[1] 5.9 pp
 
Nominee William McKinley William Jennings Bryan
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance
Home state Ohio Nebraska
Running mate Theodore Roosevelt Adlai Stevenson I
Electoral vote 292 155
States carried 28 17
Popular vote 7,228,864 6,370,932
Percentage 51.6% 45.5%

1900 United States presidential election in California1900 United States presidential election in Oregon1900 United States presidential election in Washington (state)1900 United States presidential election in Idaho1900 United States presidential election in Nevada1900 United States presidential election in Utah1900 United States presidential election in Montana1900 United States presidential election in Wyoming1900 United States presidential election in Colorado1900 United States presidential election in North Dakota1900 United States presidential election in South Dakota1900 United States presidential election in Nebraska1900 United States presidential election in Kansas1900 United States presidential election in Texas1900 United States presidential election in Minnesota1900 United States presidential election in Iowa1900 United States presidential election in Missouri1900 United States presidential election in Arkansas1900 United States presidential election in Louisiana1900 United States presidential election in Wisconsin1900 United States presidential election in Illinois1900 United States presidential election in Michigan1900 United States presidential election in Indiana1900 United States presidential election in Ohio1900 United States presidential election in Kentucky1900 United States presidential election in Tennessee1900 United States presidential election in Mississippi1900 United States presidential election in Alabama1900 United States presidential election in Georgia1900 United States presidential election in Florida1900 United States presidential election in South Carolina1900 United States presidential election in North Carolina1900 United States presidential election in Virginia1900 United States presidential election in West Virginia1900 United States presidential election in Maryland1900 United States presidential election in Delaware1900 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania1900 United States presidential election in New Jersey1900 United States presidential election in New York1900 United States presidential election in Connecticut1900 United States presidential election in Rhode Island1900 United States presidential election in Maryland1900 United States presidential election in Vermont1900 United States presidential election in New Hampshire1900 United States presidential election in Maine1900 United States presidential election in Massachusetts1900 United States presidential election in Maryland1900 United States presidential election in Delaware1900 United States presidential election in New Jersey1900 United States presidential election in Connecticut1900 United States presidential election in Rhode Island1900 United States presidential election in Massachusetts1900 United States presidential election in Vermont1900 United States presidential election in New Hampshire
Presidential election results map. Red denotes those won by McKinley/Roosevelt, blue denotes states won by Bryan/Stevenson. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

William McKinley
Republican

Elected President

William McKinley
Republican

McKinley and Bryan each faced little opposition within their own parties. Although some Gold Democrats explored the possibility of a campaign by Admiral George Dewey, Bryan was easily re-nominated at the 1900 Democratic National Convention after Dewey withdrew from the race. McKinley was unanimously re-nominated at the 1900 Republican National Convention. As Vice President Garret Hobart had died in 1899, the Republican convention chose New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt as McKinley's running mate.

The return of economic prosperity and recent victory in the Spanish–American War helped McKinley to score a decisive victory, while Bryan's anti-imperialist stance and continued support for bimetallism attracted only limited support. McKinley carried most states outside of the Solid South and won 51.6% of the popular vote. The election results were similar to those of 1896, though McKinley picked up several Western states and Bryan picked up Kentucky.

Six months into his second term, McKinley was assassinated in September 1901 and was succeeded by Vice President Roosevelt.

Nominations

Republican Party nomination

1900 Republican Party ticket
William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt
for President for Vice President
 
 
25th
President of the United States
(1897–1901)
33rd
Governor of New York
(1899–1900)
 

The 926 delegates to the Republican convention, which met in Philadelphia on June 19–21, re-nominated President William McKinley by acclamation. Thomas C. Platt, the "boss" of the New York State Republican Party, did not like Theodore Roosevelt, New York's popular governor, even though he was a fellow Republican. Roosevelt's efforts to reform New York politics – including Republican politics – led Platt and other state Republican leaders to pressure President McKinley to accept Roosevelt as his new vice presidential candidate, thus filling the spot left open when Vice President Garret Hobart died in 1899. By electing Roosevelt vice president, Platt would remove Roosevelt from New York state politics. Although Roosevelt was reluctant to accept the nomination for vice president, which he regarded as a relatively trivial and powerless office, his great popularity among most Republican delegates led McKinley to pick him as his new running mate. Quite unexpectedly, Roosevelt would be elevated to the presidency in September 1901, when McKinley was assassinated in Buffalo, New York.

The balloting[2]
Presidential ballot Vice presidential ballot
William McKinley 926 Theodore Roosevelt 925
Not voting 1 (Theodore Roosevelt)

Democratic Party nomination

 
Campaign poster promoting Democratic nominee William J. Bryan
1900 Democratic Party ticket
William Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevenson
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Nebraska's 1st
(1891–1895)
23rd
Vice President of the United States
(1893–1897)
Campaign

Other candidates

Candidates are sorted by date of withdrawal
George Dewey
 
Admiral of the Navy from Vermont (1899–1917)
W: May 17, 1900
EM: 1900?
[3]

After Admiral George Dewey's return from the Spanish–American War, many suggested that he run for president on the Democratic ticket. Dewey, however, had already angered some Protestants by marrying the Catholic Mildred McLean Hazen (the widow of General William Babcock Hazen and daughter of Washington McLean, owner of The Washington Post) in November 1899 and giving her the house that the nation had given him following the war.[4] His candidacy was also almost immediately plagued by a number of public relations gaffes. Newspapers started attacking him as naïve after he was quoted as saying the job of president would be easy, since the chief executive was merely following orders in executing the laws enacted by Congress, and that he would "execute the laws of Congress as faithfully as I have always executed the orders of my superiors." Shortly thereafter, he admitted never having voted in a presidential election before, mentioning that the only man he ever would have voted for, had he voted, would have been Grover Cleveland. He drew even more criticism when he offhandedly (and prophetically) told a newspaper reporter that, "Our next war will be with Germany."[5]

Dewey's campaign was met with a level of pessimism by Gold Democrats on whose support his campaign depended. Some even threw their support to Bryan, since they believed him to be the stronger candidate.[6][7] As early as three days into his candidacy, his campaign having been damaged by the aforementioned missteps, rumors abounded regarding Dewey's impending withdrawal which proved false.[8] Further injuries, however, were made when it became clear that the Democratic Party leaders of Vermont were hostile to Dewey and wholly committed to Bryan.[9] Ohio similarly went for Bryan, though with the caveat there that some leaders suggested that all mention to silver in the party platform be dropped.[10] By May 5, John Roll McLean, the brother-in-law of and effective campaign manager for Dewey, defected from the campaign and was widely considered to now be silently supporting Bryan.[11] By May 17, Dewey recognized that there was very little chance for him to gather enough delegates among the Western and Southern states to possibly keep Bryan from attaining two-thirds of the delegates at the convention, publicly commenting that he no longer even knew why he had decided to run for president at all;[12] He effectively withdrew around this time. After this there was a major boom for his nomination as vice president on the ticket alongside Bryan; however Dewey resolutely refused to be considered.[13][14][15]

William Jennings Bryan was faced with little real opposition after Dewey withdrew from the race. Bryan won at the 1900 Democratic National Convention held at Kansas City, Missouri, on July 4–6,[16] garnering 936 delegate votes for the nomination.[17]

Presidential ballot[18]
William Jennings Bryan 936

Official or speculated candidates for the vice-presidential nomination:

Vice presidential ballot[45]
Ballot 1st before shifts 1st after shifts
Adlai E. Stevenson 559.5 936
David B. Hill 200 0
Charles A. Towne 89.5 0
Abraham W. Patrick 46 0
Julian Carr 23 0
John Walter Smith 16 0
Elliott Danforth 1 0
Jim Hogg 1 0

People's Party nomination

As the nation's third largest party, the Populists had made an organizational decision in 1896 to "fuse" with the Democratic Party on the national level - their identity kept separate by the nomination of two different candidates for vice-president. At the state level, local Populist parties were left at liberty to proceed as they saw fit. In the Plains states, the Populists fused with the Democrats, and in some states replaced them entirely. In the South, the Populists fused with the Republican Party. The end result, though Bryan was defeated, was that the Populists greatly enlarged their representation in Congress, from 10 to 26. In several southern states, however, the legislatures were still controlled by the Democrats, and they began passing a series of laws to eliminate the franchise for black voters, with the intention of undermining a significant bloc of the Populist vote. The move had its intended consequences, as in the mid-term election of 1898, Populist representation in the House of Representatives fell to 9, its lowest since the party's founding.

The treatment of Populists by the Democratic Party led to a division in the party. On May 17, 1899, Populist Party leaders met in St. Louis and issued an address calling for a "Middle of the Road" policy, in which the party would decline future fusion efforts. The statement was primarily aimed at the party's national chairman, U.S. Senator Marion Butler of North Carolina, who had been elected to the Senate through fusion with North Carolina Republicans, and was already working for the re-nomination of William J. Bryan by the Populists in 1900. The pro-fusion leaders of the Populists fought back in early 1900. The first state party known to have split was the Nebraska party, which divided during its state convention on March 19. Both factions appointed delegates to the national convention, scheduled for Cincinnati. Ultimately, the Fusion Populists decided to hold a separate national convention when it became apparent that the Ohio Populists did not favor fusion, and were working to organize a convention which would not nominate Bryan, but an independent ticket.

"Fusion" Populist nomination

1900 "Fusionist" People's Party ticket
William Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevenson
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Nebraska's 1st
(1891–1895)
23rd
Vice President of the United States
(1893–1897)
Campaign

The "Fusion" Populist National Convention assembled in a large tent just west of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, on May 9, and unanimously nominated Bryan for the presidency. Charles Towne, the leader of the Silver Republican Party, was near unanimously nominated as his running mate, facing only weak opposition from Representative John Lentz from Ohio. When Adlai Stevenson won the Democratic vice-presidential nomination over Towne, Towne withdrew from the race, with the Fusion Populists endorsing Stevenson.

"Middle of the Road" Populist nomination

1900 "Middle-Road" People's Party ticket
Wharton Barker Ignatius Donnelly
for President for Vice President
 
 
Financier and Publisher
from Pennsylvania
Member of the Minnesota
House of Representatives

(1897–1898)

Meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio, the "Middle of the Road" faction adopted a platform that called for the creation of fiat money, government ownership of key industries, and the opening of conservation lands for economic development. Businessman Wharton Barker was nominated for the presidency, while Representative Ignatius Donnelly was chosen as his running mate.

The balloting
Presidential ballot 1st 2nd Vice presidential ballot 1st
Wharton Barker 314.4 370 Ignatius L. Donnelly 715
Milford W. Howard 326.6 336
Ignatius L. Donnelly 70 7
Others 3 2

Minor party nominations

Social Democratic Party nomination

1900 Social Democratic Party ticket
Eugene Debs Job Harriman
for President for Vice President
 
 
State Senator
from Indiana
(1885–1889)
Attorney at Law
from California

Social Democracy of America was founded by in June 1897, and was later reformed as the Social Democratic Party of America in 1898 while the Socialist Labor Party of America was having internal struggles. James F. Carey, who had been elected to the city council in Haverhill, Massachusetts, was expelled from the Socialist Labor Party. Eugene V. Debs, Carey, and Sylvester Keliher founded the Social Democratic Party. Carey and Louis M. Scates were elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives while John C. Chase was elected as mayor of Haverhill. Victor L. Berger led the party in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and a slate of candidates received almost six percent of the vote in the 1898 election. Twenty members had been elected to office by 1900.[46]

Morris Hillquit and members of his faction, the Kangaroos, in the Socialist Labor Party attempted to oust Daniel De Leon from the party's leadership at the 1899 convention. The Kangaroo faction was removed from the party and formed their own Socialist Labor Party. The Kangaroo faction lost a court case against De Leon for control of the party. They nominated Job Harriman for president and Max S. Hayes for vice president although they were not meant to run in the 1900 election and were instead used for a compromise with the Social Democratic Party of America.[46]

The Social Democrats had been invited to the Kangaroo's convention, but declined although the Social Democrats supported unity between the parties. The Social Democratic National Executive Board allowed for the Kangaroo faction to send delegates to its national convention. The Kangaroos passed a resolution supporting unity and created a unity committee. Sixty-seven delegates from thirty-two states attuned the 1900 convention and voted by acclamation to give their presidential nomination to Debs. Hayes and Harriman were both nominated for the vice-presidential nomination and Harriman won it.[46]

The executive board announced on May 12, 1900, that they would not support unity with the Kangaroos after accusing them of being too dogmatic and impeding an unity referendum. The Kangaroo unity committee sent out sent out ballots to members of both groups and both voted in favor of unity. The Kangaroos nominated Debs and Harriman as their presidential ticket which Debs accepted on July 31. Debs and George D. Herron started the party's campaign on September 29, at Chicago's Music Hall. Debs received 87,945 votes with his largest amount of support coming from New York and Illinois. Debs received over ten times the amount of votes in Chicago that the Socialist Labor Party had in the 1896 election.[46] Debs received more votes than any presidential ticket from the Socialist Labor Party.[47] The Kangaroo faction and the Social Democrats later merged into the Socialist Party of America in 1901.[48]

Prohibition Party nomination

1900 Prohibition Party ticket
John Woolley Henry Metcalf
for President for Vice President
 
 
Editor of The New Voice
from Illinois

State Senator
from Rhode Island
(1885–1886)
Other candidates
Candidates in this section are sorted by performance
Silas C. Swallow Hale Johnson
 
 
Methodist Preacher from Pennsylvania Mayor of Newton, Illinois
(???–???)

320 votes

W: Before 1st Ballot

(endorsed Woolley)

The Prohibition Party met in Chicago, Illinois on June 28 to nominate their presidential ticket. Hale Johnson, who had been their vice-presidential nominee in 1896, withdrew his name immediately before the balloting was to begin. John G. Woolley was nominated on the first ballot, with Henry B. Metcalf of Rhode Island nominated to be his running mate in short order.

The Balloting
Presidential Ballot 1st Vice Presidential Ballot 1st
John G. Woolley 380 Henry B. Metcalf 349
Silas C. Swallow 320 Thomas Carskadon 132
E. L. Eaton 113
Not Voting 35 141

Lincoln Republican nomination

1900 Lincoln Republican ticket
William Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevenson
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Nebraska's 1st
(1891–1895)
23rd
Vice President of the United States
(1893–1897)
Campaign

The Lincoln Republican Party, formerly the Silver Republican Party, had by 1900 come to recognize that the issue of bimetallism had been superseded by that of imperialism, and it was hoped that a broader platform in line with the perceived values of Abraham Lincoln would allow the Party to evolve beyond its singular issue of free silver.

The Lincoln Republicans assembled in Kansas City, Missouri, at the same time as the Democratic National Convention held in the same city. Committed to endorsing William Jennings Bryan for the Presidency, the primary aim of many of those attending was to promote the nomination of national chairman Charles Towne for the Vice Presidency by the Democratic Party, an effort endorsed by Fusionist Populists who had nominated Towne to the same position two months earlier. Unfortunately for those who boomed Towne these efforts may have backfired, pushing away Democratic delegates who might have otherwise been favorable to Towne by presenting the ticket of Bryan and Towne as a fait accompli, with Southern Democratic delegates themselves preferring a Vice-Presidential nominee who'd appeal to voters the Democratic Party lost in the Northeast and Midwest four years prior. Hopes for a personal endorsement of Towne by Bryan were also dashed when Bryan, who personally preferred Towne of those candidates in running and was expected to make mention of this in an acceptance, decided against going to the Convention or involving himself in the Vice-Presidential contest. Ultimately, Towne was a distant third, with Adlai Stevenson winning the nod.

The nomination of Stevenson, who'd previously served as Grover Cleveland's vice president, outraged many of the Lincoln Republicans still in attendance, and in the ensuing pandemonium attempts were made to nominate Charles Towne for the Vice Presidency. Only when Charles Towne himself addressed the convention did the anger settle. Declining the efforts to nominate him, Towne pleaded with the delegates present to accept and support the Democratic ticket as it was, noting that Bryan was at the head of it and much of the Democratic Platform was aligned with that of the Lincoln Republicans. Others, such as Senator Fred Dubois, Senator Henry Teller, and John Shafroth made similar speeches calling for support for Bryan and Stevenson. It was eventually decided that the question of the vice presidential nomination would be handled by the National Committee. They would formalize and endorsement of Adlai Stevenson for the Vice Presidency the following day, in deference to Towne's wishes.

Anti-Imperialist League nomination

1900 Anti-Imperialist League ticket
William Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevenson
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Representative
for Nebraska's 1st
(1891–1895)
23rd
Vice President of the United States
(1893–1897)
Campaign

The American Anti-Imperialist League had been formed in 1898 in opposition to the acquisition of the Philippine Islands, considering its annexation violating the concept of "consent of the governed". While not formalized as a political party, there existed a movement within the League that sought to nominate an independent ticket to run solely on the platform of anti-imperialism or, barring that, to endorse whichever Republican or Democratic presidential nominee that was themselves anti-imperialist. Upon the nominations of McKinley and Bryan however, there were immediate divisions on whether to endorse Bryan and the Democratic Platform, many sympathizing Republicans and Gold Democrats finding it anathema to their own political philosophies beyond its denouncement of imperialism; already by July some were considering supporting McKinley in November. Later that same month a call was made for a National Convention to meet in Indianapolis on August 15 with the intention of either endorsing or nominating a ticket for the general election. Discussions were held with remnants of National Democratic Party about the possibility of a fusion ticket, but this was voted down by their national committee. Then discussed names for possible presidential candidates were former Speaker Thomas Reed, former Secretary of State Richard Olney, former Massachusetts Governor George Boutwell, and former Senator John Henderson

From the beginning the headwinds were in Bryan's favor, with permanent President George Boutwell addressing the convention and calling for the endorsement of the Democratic ticket, this followed in speeches by former General John Beatty, Edgar Bancroft, and Gamaliel Bradford. The resolution to endorse Bryan however was subject to prolonged debate, its principal opponents being representatives of the "third-ticket" movement led by Thomas Osborne. Osborne and those who followed him theorized that many anti-imperialists would not be willing to vote for Bryan or in favor of the Democratic Platform, and would be better served by a candidate of their own. Charles Codman, the author of the resolution, and Edwin Burritt Smith countered that all issues were secondary to the issue of imperialism, and that the most effective means by which to put an anti-imperialist in office should be used. In a voice vote, the Platform of the "Liberty Congress" as it was then known as adopted overwhelmingly, with all amendments to strike the endorsement of the Bryan/Stevenson ticket being voted down. Osborne and other "third-ticketers" would then bolt to the then nearby organizing National Party.

National Party nomination

1900 National Party ticket
Donelson Caffery Archibald Howe
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Senator
from Louisiana
(1892–1901)
DN: September 21
Attorney at Law and Historian
from Massachusetts

DN: September 22

The National Party was an outgrowth of the "third-ticket" movement that existed within the Anti-Imperialist League. The first steps towards its formation were taken after the failure of a number of anti-imperialists, among them Thomas Osborne and John Jay Chapman, to convince the National Democratic Party to either nominate or endorse a third party ticket. A statement was then released by the attending League delegates from New York, denouncing both the Republican and Democratic parties, advocating for the independence of the Philippines and Porto Rico (sic), supporting gold standard and a sound banking system, calling for the abolition of special privileges, and demanding a public service based on merit exclusively. They also called for a national convention to be held from August 14 to 15, which would have placed it alongside the "national" League Convention that was being held from August 15 to August 16.

As the delegates arrived in Indianapolis, it was hoped that the League could be convinced to nominate a third party ticket, with the National Party then offering its endorsement. It swiftly became clear however that the majority of the delegates to the Anti-Imperialist League Convention were in sympathy with Bryan and prepared to endorse him, and attempts on the part of anti-Bryan delegates to kept the platform at least non-committal on the subject of the presidential race were unsuccessful. Those League delegates that were associated with the National Party then left and proceeded to elect Thomas Osborne as Permanent Chairman, calling for a new national convention to be held on September 5. It is claimed that at the time the National Party presidential nomination was offered to Moorfield Storey, but Storey declined and ultimately opted to run as an Anti-Imperialist Independent in the 11th District of Massachusetts; William Jackson Palmer was suggested as a vice-presidential nominee to run alongside him.

Meeting in Carnegie Hall (then Chamber Music Hall) on 5 September, the National Party was formalized, nominating Senator Donelson Caffery of Louisiana for the Presidency, and historian Archibald Howe of Massachusetts for the Vice Presidency. Though there was some concern over whether Caffery would accept the nomination if offered, Osborne claimed that he had been communicating with Caffrey and that he was both sympathetic to the National Party and willing to be their candidate for the Presidency. The party platform was virtually identical to the one offered by the League committee back in July, though the definition of "special privileges was defined as "subsidies, bounties, undeserved pensions, or trust-busting tariffs." A strategy was also adopted where, in those States where it was impractical to nominate a full slate of electors, a single elector would be nominated instead, allowing for voters to vote the Nationalist ticket as well as one other of their choice; it was hoped that this might avail concerns that the Nationalists would take votes away from either Bryan or McKinley, depending on the voters' sympathies.

Unfortunately for the Nationalist Party Senator Cafferty declined the nomination some weeks later, resulting in a scramble where Arthur Briggs Farquhar, owner of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Works, was considered as a possible replacement. A day later, on September 21, the Massachusetts branch of the Party voted to disband. It was then hoped that unpledged electors could be nominated, but papers were only ever taken out for one, Edward Waldo Emerson of Massachusetts.

Other nominations

The Union Reform Party nominated Seth H. Ellis of Ohio for president and Samuel T. Nicholson for vice president.

The United Christian Party nominated Jonah F. R. Leonard for president, and David H. Martin for vice president. Initially, the party had nominated Silas C. Swallow for president and John G. Woolley for vice president, but both men refused, choosing instead to contest the Prohibition Party nomination (of which Woolley would emerge the victor).

General election

Campaign

 
McKinley campaigns on gold coin (gold standard) with support from soldiers, businessmen, farmers and professionals, claiming to restore prosperity at home and victory abroad

The economy was booming in 1900, so the Republican slogan of "Four More Years of the Full Dinner Pail," combined with victory in the brief Spanish–American War in 1898, had a powerful electoral appeal. Teddy Roosevelt had become a national hero fighting in Cuba during the war, and as such he was a popular spokesman for the Republican ticket. Roosevelt proved highly energetic, and an equal match for William Jennings Bryan's famous barnstorming style of campaigning. Roosevelt's theme was that McKinley had brought America peace and prosperity and deserved re-election. In a whirlwind campaign, Roosevelt made 480 stops in 23 states.[49] In his speeches, he repeatedly argued that the war had been just and had liberated the Cubans and Filipinos from Spanish tyranny:[50]

Four years ago the nation was uneasy because at our very doors an American island was writhing in hideous agony under a worse than medieval despotism. We had our Armenia at our threshold. The situation in Cuba had become such that we could no longer stand quiet and retain one shred of self-respect.... We drew the sword and waged the most righteous and brilliantly successful foreign war that this generation has seen.

Bryan's campaign was built around a reprise of his major issue from the 1896 campaign: Free Silver. It was not as successful in 1900, because prosperity had replaced severe depression and McKinley claimed credit. Advocates of enlarging the money supply to raise prices had to admit that a great deal of new gold was flowing into the world economy, and deflation (i.e. falling prices) was no longer a threat. Bryan's second major campaign theme attacked McKinley's imperialism; Bryan had supported the war, but opposed the annexation of the Philippines. He said McKinley had simply replaced a cruel Spanish tyranny with a cruel American one. Bryan was especially harsh in his criticisms of the American military effort to suppress a bloody rebellion by Filipino guerillas. This theme won over some previous opponents, especially "hard money" Germans, former Gold Democrats, and anti-imperialists such as Andrew Carnegie.

Both candidates repeated their 1896 campaign techniques, with McKinley campaigning again from the front porch of his home in Canton, Ohio. At the peak of the campaign, he greeted sixteen delegations and 30,000 cheering supporters in one day. Meanwhile, Bryan took to the rails again, traveling 18,000 miles to hundreds of rallies across the Midwest and East. This time, he was matched by Theodore Roosevelt, who campaigned just as energetically in 24 states, covering 21,000 miles by train.

 
The German-American vote in 1900 was in doubt since they opposed both Bryan's "repudiation" policy and overseas "expansion" under McKinley.

The triumph of the American army and navy in the war against Spain was a decisive factor in building Republican support. Democrats tried to argue that the war was not over because of the insurgency in the Philippines; this became their major issue. A perception that the Philippine–American War was coming to an end would be an electoral asset for the Republicans, and the McKinley administration stated that there were reductions of troops there. Republicans pledged that the fighting in the Philippines would die down of its own accord within sixty days of McKinley's re-election.[51] However, as one lieutenant explained in a letter to his wife, "It looks good on paper, but there really has been no reduction of the force here. These battalions [being sent home] are made up on men...about to be discharged."[52]

In addition, Secretary of War Elihu Root had a report from MacArthur of September 1900 that he did not release until after the election.[53] General Arthur MacArthur, Jr., had been in command of the Philippines for four months, warning Washington that the war was not lessening and that the end was not even in sight. MacArthur believed that the guerrilla stage of the war was just beginning and that Filipinos were refining their techniques through experience. Furthermore, Philippine leader Emilio Aguinaldo's strategy had popular support. MacArthur wrote:

The success of this unique system of war depends upon almost complete unity of action of the entire native population. That such unity is a fact is too obvious to admit of discussion; how it is brought about and maintained is not so plain. Intimidation has undoubtedly accomplished much to this end, but fear as the only motive is hardly sufficient to account for the united and apparently spontaneous action of several millions of people. One traitor in each town would eventually destroy such a complex organization. It is more probable that the adhesive principle comes from ethological homogeneity, which induces men to respond for a time to the appeals of consanguineous leadership even when such action is opposed to their interests and convictions of expediency.[54]

Nonetheless, the majority of soldiers in the Philippines did not support Bryan. Any mention of the election of 1900 in the soldiers' letters and diaries indicated overwhelming support for the Republican ticket of McKinley and Roosevelt. According to Sergeant Beverly Daley, even the "howling Democrats" favored McKinley. Private Hambleton wrote, "Of course, there are some boys who think Bryan is the whole cheese, but they don't say too much."[55]

Despite Bryan's energetic efforts, the renewed prosperity under McKinley, combined with the public's approval of the Spanish–American War, allowed McKinley to gain a comfortable victory.

Results

 
Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate. Shades of red are for McKinley (Republican), shades of blue are for Bryan (Democratic), and shades of green are for "Other(s)" (Non-Democratic/Non-Republican).[56]

Theodore Roosevelt, the vice-presidential candidate on the Republican ticket, attracted unusual attention in the campaign, and it has been commonly asserted that he brought a considerable number of votes to the Republican ticket.

McKinley polled roughly 7,200,000 votes. He carried 28 states with a combined 292 electoral votes (65.32%). He slightly increased his national percentage (51.60%) with 120,000 more votes than in 1896. This change is reflected in the gains made in number of counties carried; McKinley had 222 more counties than he had carried in 1896, thus gaining a slight majority of the total number of counties making returns in 1900.

Of the 2,729 counties making returns, McKinley won in 1,385 (50.75%) while Bryan carried 1,340 (49.10%). Two counties (0.07%) were split evenly between McKinley and Bryan, while two counties (0.07%) in Texas recorded more votes cast for "Other(s)" than either of the two-party candidates. McKinley had a majority in 1,288 counties while Bryan had a majority in 1,253 counties.

Further examination reveals that changes in counties were even more impressive. Of the 2,729 counties making returns, 2,286 were identical in these two elections; 113 changed from Republican to Democratic; and 328 changed from Democratic to Republican.

A notable feature was the Bryan gains made in the New England and (Northeastern) Mid-Atlantic sections, with also a slight gain in the East North Central section.[57] Bryan even managed to win New York City by almost 30,000 votes when he had lost it by more than 60,000 votes just 4 years earlier.[58] In all other sections, Bryan's vote was less than in 1896, and in the nation his total vote was 23,000 less than in 1896. The percentage of total was 45.52, a slight loss. Kentucky, which he carried this time, showed an increase of 17,005. In 16 states, the Democratic vote increased, but in 29 states it was less than in 1896. Bryan carried only 17 states. This was the only one of his three runs in which he failed to carry his home state of Nebraska.[59]

This was the last election in which the Republicans won the majority of electoral votes in Maryland until 1920. It is also the last election in which a Republican won the presidency without winning Idaho and Montana. In addition, this would also be the last election in 100 years when the Republican candidate would win without earning a minimum of 300 electoral votes. That did not occur again until George W. Bush narrowly defeated Al Gore in the 2000 United States Presidential Election.

 

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
William McKinley Jr. (Incumbent) Republican Ohio 7,228,864 51.64% 292 Theodore Roosevelt Jr. New York 292
William Jennings Bryan Democratic Nebraska 6,370,932 45.52% 155 Adlai Ewing Stevenson Illinois 155
John Granville Woolley Prohibition Illinois 210,864 1.51% 0 Henry Brewer Metcalf Rhode Island 0
Eugene Victor Debs Social Democratic Indiana 87,945 0.63% 0 Job Harriman California 0
Wharton Barker Populist Pennsylvania 50,989 0.36% 0 Ignatius Loyola Donnelly Minnesota 0
Joseph Francis Malloney Socialist Labor Massachusetts 40,943 0.29% 0 Valentine Remmel Pennsylvania 0
Other 6,889 0.05% Other
Total 13,997,426 100% 447 447
Needed to win 224 224

Source (popular vote): Leip, David. "1900 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 28, 2005.

Source (electoral vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 31, 2005.

Popular vote
McKinley
51.64%
Bryan
45.52%
Woolley
1.51%
Debs
0.63%
Barker
0.36%
Others
0.34%
Electoral vote
McKinley
65.32%
Bryan
34.68%

Geography of results

 

Cartographic gallery

Results by state

[60]

States/districts won by Bryan/Stevenson
States/districts won by McKinley/Roosevelt
William McKinley
Republican
William Jennings Bryan
Democratic
John Woolley
Prohibition
Eugene V. Debs
Social Democratic
Wharton Barker
Populist
Joseph F. Malloney
Socialist Labor
Margin State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % #
Alabama 11 55,612 34.82 - 97,129 60.82 11 2,763 1.73 - - - - 4,188 2.62 - - - - -41,517 -26.00 159,692 AL
Arkansas 8 44,800 35.04 - 81,142 63.46 8 584 0.46 - - - - 972 0.76 - - - - -36,342 -28.42 127,866 AR
California 9 164,755 54.50 9 124,985 41.34 - 5,024 1.66 - - - - - - - 7,554 2.50 - 39,770 13.16 302,318 CA
Colorado 4 93,072 42.04 - 122,733 55.43 4 3,790 1.71 - 714 0.32 - 389 0.18 - 684 0.31 - -29,661 -13.39 221,408 CO
Connecticut 6 102,572 56.92 6 74,014 41.07 - 1,617 0.90 - 1,029 0.57 - - - - 908 0.50 - 28,558 15.85 180,195 CT
Delaware 3 22,535 53.67 3 18,852 44.90 - 546 1.30 - 56 0.13 - - - - - - - 3,683 8.77 41,989 DE
Florida 4 7,355 18.55 - 28,273 71.31 4 2,244 5.66 - 634 1.60 - 1,143 2.88 - - - - -20,918 -52.76 39,649 FL
Georgia 13 34,260 28.22 - 81,180 66.86 13 1,402 1.15 - - - - 4,568 3.76 - - - - -46,920 -38.64 121,410 GA
Idaho 3 27,198 46.96 - 29,414 50.79 3 857 1.48 - - - - 445 0.77 - - - - -2,216 -3.83 57,914 ID
Illinois 24 597,985 52.83 24 503,061 44.44 - 17,626 1.56 - 9,687 0.86 - 1,141 0.10 - 1,373 0.12 - 94,924 8.39 1,131,897 IL
Indiana 15 336,063 50.60 15 309,584 46.62 - 13,718 2.07 - 2,374 0.36 - 1,438 0.22 - 663 0.10 - 26,479 3.98 664,094 IN
Iowa 13 307,808 58.04 13 209,265 39.46 - 9,502 1.79 - 2,742 0.52 - 613 0.12 - 259 0.05 - 98,543 18.58 530,355 IA
Kansas 10 185,955 52.56 10 162,601 45.96 - 3,605 1.02 - 1,605 0.45 - - - - - - - 23,354 6.60 353,766 KS
Kentucky 13 227,132 48.51 - 235,126 50.21 13 2,890 0.62 - 766 0.16 - 1,961 0.42 - 390 0.08 - -7,994 -1.70 468,265 KY
Louisiana 8 14,234 20.96 - 53,668 79.03 8 - - - - - - - - - - - - -39,434 -58.07 67,906 LA
Maine 6 65,412 61.89 6 36,822 34.84 - 2,581 2.44 - 878 0.83 - - - - - - - 28,590 27.05 105,693 ME
Maryland 8 136,185 51.50 8 122,238 46.23 - 4,574 1.73 - 904 0.34 - - - - 388 0.15 - 13,947 5.27 264,434 MD
Massachusetts 15 238,866 57.59 15 156,997 37.85 - 6,202 1.50 - 9,607 2.32 - - - - 2,599 0.63 - 81,869 19.74 414,804 MA
Michigan 14 316,269 58.10 14 211,685 38.89 - 11,859 2.18 - 2,826 0.52 - 903 0.17 - 837 0.15 - 104,584 19.21 544,379 MI
Minnesota 9 190,461 60.21 9 112,901 35.69 - 8,555 2.70 - 3,065 0.97 - - - - 1,329 0.42 - 77,560 24.52 316,311 MN
Mississippi 9 5,707 9.66 - 51,706 87.56 9 - - - - - - 1,642 2.78 - - - - -45,999 -77.90 59,055 MS
Missouri 17 314,092 45.94 - 351,922 51.48 17 5,965 0.87 - 6,139 0.90 - 4,244 0.62 - 1,294 0.19 - -37,830 -5.54 683,656 MO
Montana 3 25,409 39.79 - 37,311 58.43 3 306 0.48 - 711 1.11 - - - - 119 0.19 - -11,902 -18.64 63,856 MT
Nebraska 8 121,835 50.46 8 114,013 47.22 - 3,655 1.51 - 823 0.34 - 1,104 0.46 - - - - 7,822 3.24 241,430 NE
Nevada 3 3,849 37.75 - 6,347 62.25 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - -2,498 -24.50 10,196 NV
New Hampshire 4 54,799 59.33 4 35,489 38.42 - 1,270 1.37 - 790 0.86 - - - - - - - 19,310 20.91 92,364 NH
New Jersey 10 221,707 55.28 10 164,808 41.09 - 7,183 1.79 - 4,609 1.15 - 669 0.17 - 2,074 0.52 - 56,899 14.19 401,050 NJ
New York 36 822,013 53.10 36 678,462 43.83 - 22,077 1.43 - 12,869 0.83 - - - - 12,621 0.82 - 143,551 9.27 1,548,042 NY
North Carolina 11 132,997 45.47 - 157,733 53.92 11 990 0.34 - - - - 798 0.27 - - - - -24,736 -8.45 292,518 NC
North Dakota 3 35,898 62.12 3 20,531 35.53 - 731 1.26 - 520 0.90 - 111 0.19 - - - - 13,141 26.59 57,791 ND
Ohio 23 543,918 52.30 23 474,882 45.66 - 10,203 0.98 - 4,847 0.47 - 251 0.02 - 1,688 0.16 - 69,036 6.64 1,040,073 OH
Oregon 4 46,172 55.46 4 32,810 39.41 - 2,536 3.05 - 1,464 1.76 - 269 0.32 - - - - 13,362 16.05 83,251 OR
Pennsylvania 32 712,665 60.74 32 424,232 36.16 - 27,908 2.38 - 4,831 0.41 - 638 0.05 - 2,936 0.25 - 288,433 24.58 1,173,210 PA
Rhode Island 4 33,784 59.74 4 19,812 35.04 - 1,529 2.70 - - - - - - - 1,423 2.52 - 13,972 24.70 56,548 RI
South Carolina 9 3,579 7.04 - 47,233 92.96 9 - - - - - - - - - - - - -43,654 -85.92 50,812 SC
South Dakota 4 54,530 56.73 4 39,544 41.14 - 1,542 1.60 - 169 0.18 - 339 0.35 - - - - 14,986 15.59 96,124 SD
Tennessee 12 123,108 44.95 - 145,240 53.03 12 3,844 1.40 - 346 0.13 - 1,322 0.48 - - - - -22,132 -8.08 273,860 TN
Texas 15 130,641 30.83 - 267,432 63.12 15 2,644 0.62 - 1,846 0.44 - 20,981 4.95 - 162 0.04 - -136,791 -32.29 423,706 TX
Utah 3 47,139 50.58 3 45,006 48.30 - 209 0.22 - 720 0.77 - - - - 106 0.11 - 2,133 2.28 93,189 UT
Vermont 4 42,569 75.73 4 12,849 22.86 - 383 0.68 - 39 0.07 - 367 0.65 - - - - 29,720 52.87 56,212 VT
Virginia 12 115,769 43.82 - 146,079 55.29 12 2,130 0.81 - - - - 63 0.02 - 167 0.06 - -30,310 -11.47 264,208 VA
Washington 4 57,456 53.44 4 44,833 41.70 - 2,363 2.20 - 2,006 1.87 - - - - 866 0.81 - 12,623 11.74 107,524 WA
West Virginia 6 119,829 54.27 6 98,807 44.75 - 1,628 0.74 - 286 0.13 - 246 0.11 - - - - 21,022 9.52 220,796 WV
Wisconsin 12 265,760 60.06 12 159,163 35.97 - 10,027 2.27 - 7,048 1.59 - - - - 503 0.11 - 106,597 24.09 442,501 WI
Wyoming 3 14,482 58.66 3 10,164 41.17 - - - - 21 0.09 - 20 0.08 - - - - 4,318 17.49 24,687 WY
TOTALS: 447 7,228,864 51.64 292 6,370,932 45.52 155 210,867 1.51 - 87,945 0.63 - 50,989 0.36 - 40,943 0.29 - 857,932 6.12 13,997,429 US

Close states

Margin of victory less than 5% (42 electoral votes):

  1. Kentucky, 1.71% (7,994 votes)
  2. Utah, 2.29% (2,133 votes)
  3. Nebraska, 3.24% (7,822 votes)
  4. Idaho, 3.83% (2,216 votes)
  5. Indiana, 3.99% (26,479 votes)

Margin of victory between 5% and 10% (150 electoral votes):

  1. Maryland, 5.27% (13,947 votes)
  2. Missouri, 5.53% (37,830 votes)
  3. Kansas, 6.60% (23,354 votes)
  4. Ohio, 6.64% (69,036 votes)
  5. Tennessee, 8.08% (22,132 votes)
  6. Illinois, 8.39% (94,924 votes) (tipping point state)
  7. North Carolina, 8.46% (24,736 votes)
  8. Delaware, 8.77% (3,683 votes)
  9. New York, 9.27% (143,551 votes)
  10. West Virginia, 9.52% (21,022 votes)

Statistics

Counties with highest percent of vote (Republican)

  1. Keweenaw County, Michigan 92.24%
  2. Leslie County, Kentucky 91.23%
  3. Unicoi County, Tennessee 89.64%
  4. Scott County, Tennessee 89.59%
  5. Johnson County, Tennessee 89.20%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Democratic)

  1. Irion County, Texas 100.00%
  2. Hampton County, South Carolina 99.89%
  3. Greenwood County, South Carolina 99.73%
  4. Saluda County, South Carolina 99.45%
  5. Abbeville County, South Carolina 99.42%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Other)

  1. Carson County, Texas 78.71%
  2. Chambers County, Texas 44.50%
  3. Comanche County, Texas 32.82%
  4. Franklin County, Georgia 30.92%
  5. Scurry County, Texas 28.69%

Counties with lowest percent of vote (Republican)

  1. Randall County, Texas 00.00%
  2. Irion County, Texas 00.00%
  3. Hampton County, South Carolina 00.11%
  4. Greenwood County, South Carolina 00.27%
  5. Dooly County, Georgia 00.35%

Counties with lowest percent of vote (Democratic)

  1. Keweenaw County, Michigan 06.33%
  2. Unicoi County, Tennessee 08.29%
  3. Leslie County, Kentucky 08.46%
  4. Scott County, Tennessee 10.23%
  5. Johnson County, Tennessee 10.42%

Counties with most votes (Republican)

  1. Cook County, Illinois 203,760
  2. Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania 173,657
  3. New York County, New York 153,001
  4. Kings County, New York 108,977
  5. Allegheny County, Pennsylvania 71,780

Counties with most votes (Democratic)

  1. Cook County, Illinois 186,193
  2. New York County, New York 181,786
  3. Kings County, New York 106,232
  4. Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania 58,179
  5. Suffolk County, Massachusetts 47,534

Counties with most votes (Other)

  1. New York County, New York 11,700
  2. Cook County, Illinois 10,242
  3. Milwaukee County, Wisconsin 5,857
  4. Kings County, New York 4,639
  5. Essex County, Massachusetts 4,242

Counties with lowest percent of vote and win (Republican)

  1. Cherokee County, Alabama 41.94%
  2. Paulding County, Georgia 46.00%
  3. Logan County, Colorado 46.59%
  4. Chattahoochee County, Georgia 47.18%
  5. Otter Tail County, Minnesota 47.19%

Counties with lowest percent of vote and win (Democratic)

  1. Murray County, Georgia 45.18%
  2. Geneva County, Alabama 46.48%
  3. Douglas County, Georgia 46.75%
  4. Linn County, Oregon 46.77%
  5. Fresno County, California 47.41%

See also

References

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ Hinshaw, Seth (2000). Ohio Elects the President: Our State's Role in Presidential Elections 1804-1996. Mansfield: Book Masters, Inc. p. 68.
  3. ^ "ADMIRAL DEWEY LOSES HOPE; Says Now Doesn't Know What Prompted Him to Aspire to the Presidency" (PDF). The New York Times. May 18, 1900.
  4. ^ HarpWeek | Elections | 1900 Medium Cartoons at elections.harpweek.com
  5. ^ Convention Diary: NRO Total Convention at nationalreview.com
  6. ^ "A KENTUCKY VIEW OF DEWEY. - Ex-Gold Democratic Leader Says Admiral Has No Chance" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  7. ^ "DEWEY HAS NO SHOW, KYLE SAYS. - South Dakota Senator Thinks Gold Democrats Are for Bryan" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  8. ^ "DEWEY SAYS HE WILL NOT WITHDRAW - The Admiral Denies that He Has Any Intention of Quitting. SOME OTHER DEWEY RUMORS A New Story Is that He Will Not Oppose Chicago Platform -- Avoiding Visitors" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  9. ^ "DEWEY'S STATE AGAINST HIM. - Vermont's Eight Votes at Kansas City to Go for Bryan" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  10. ^ "Ohio Democrats for Bryan" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  11. ^ "McLEAN DESERTS DEWEY? - Stated Positively in Columbus that the Admiral's Candidacy Is to be Gradually Abandoned" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  12. ^ "ADMIRAL DEWEY LOSES HOPE. - Says Now He Doesn't Know What Prompted Him to Aspire to the Presidency" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  13. ^ a b "DEWEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT. - Democrats May Avail Themselves of His Popularity in the Middle West" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  14. ^ a b c "DEWEY BOOM GROWS. - Democrats Favor His Candidacy for Vice President -- Other Names Proposed" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  15. ^ a b "DEWEY NOT A CANDIDATE. - He Would Not Accept a Nomination for Vice President" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  16. ^ "Election of 1900 Overview". HarpWeek. Retrieved December 29, 2018.
  17. ^ Schlup, Leonard (1986). "In the Shadow of Bryan: Adlai E Stevenson and the Resurgence of Conservatism at the 1900 Convention" (PDF). Nebraska History. 67: 223, 230. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  18. ^ Bain, Richard C.; Parris, Judith H. (1973). "Appendix C: Voting Records, 1900 Democratic". Convention Decisions and Voting Records. Studies in Presidential Selection (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution. ISBN 0-8157-0768-1.
  19. ^ "REVOLT AGAINST SILVER MAY DEFEAT TOWNE - Adlai E. Stevenson Enters the Field for Vice President. A BAD SITUATION FOR BRYAN Whatever Choice Is Made Is Likely to be Unsatisfactory to Large Part of Convention" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  20. ^ "VICE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  21. ^ "Danforth for Vice President" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  22. ^ "CROKER ON THE GROUND. - New Yorkers Arrive at Kansas City -- Intimate that Tammany. May Not Fight Hill's Nomination" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  23. ^ "SULZER FOR VICE PRESIDENT. - New Yorker Is Termed "the Probable Candidate" with Bryan" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  24. ^ "SULZER CONSULTS BRYAN. - Says He Is Not Seeking the Vice Presidency -- His Highest Ambition to See Bryan President" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  25. ^ "HOUSE DEMOCRATS DIVIDED - Differences Accentuated in the Deficiency Bill Debate. MR. SIBLEY DEFENDS MR. GAGE Congressman Driggs Resents an Imputation Cast Upon His Democracy -- Cannon Pokes Fun at Sulzer" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  26. ^ "THE INDIANA CONVENTION. - Platform Question Almost Lost Sight of in Excitement Over Democratic Gubernatorial Nomination" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  27. ^ "KANSAS POPULISTS FOR BRYAN. - Twenty County Conventions Favor Him and ex.Gov. Pattison" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  28. ^ "WILLIAMS FOR VICE PRESIDENT. - Populists Plan to Link His Same with Bryan's" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  29. ^ "GEORGE FRED WILLIAMS TALKS - Denounces Hill and Cleveland, and Discusses the Platform" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  30. ^ "ALTGELD AGAINST PATTISON. - Ex-Governor Says Candidate Must Be the Counterpart of the Head of the Ticket" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  31. ^ "THE KANSAS CITY PLATFORM" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  32. ^ "CARTER HARRISON TO BE BOOMED" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  33. ^ "HILL HUMILIATED BY RICHARD CROKEER - Scene of Great Excitement in New York Delegation. ANGRY CHARGESON BOTH SIDES Fight Likely to Result in a Split in the Democratic Party. Van Wyck Given the Place on Platform Committee -- Delegation to Support Keller for Vice President. HILL HUMILIATED BY RICHARD CROKER" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  34. ^ "BRYAN'S RUNNING MATE TALKS. - Mr. Towne Says His Name Will Be Submitted to Kansas City Convention" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  35. ^ "HILL FOR VICE PRESIDENT - His Nomination Is Regarded as Not Improbable. Should Republicans Select a New York Man the Democrats Would Be More Likely to Name Mr. Hill" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  36. ^ "PREFERENCES OF DELEGATES. - Most of Them Want a Money Plank That Will Avoid a Declaration in Favor of Silver at 16 to 1" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  37. ^ a b "BOSTONIANS INVITE BRYAN. - Bryan Club of Massachusetts Asks Him to Breakfast Jan. 30" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  38. ^ "BRYAN AND ATKINSON?" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  39. ^ "CALDWELL NOT A CANDIDATE. - Arkansas Judge Does Not Want Vice Presidential Nomination" (PDF). The New York Times. (PDF) from the original on October 11, 2021. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  40. ^ "DEWEY GROWS STRONGER - Perry Belmont, Who Is Working for Him, Talks to Congressmen. THE FEELING AGAINST BRYAN Belief that If All Democrats Spoke Out the Admiral's Nomination Would Be Assured" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  41. ^ "LETTER FROM ADMIRAL SCHLEY. - Repeats His Declaration that He Has No Desire for Office" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  42. ^ "Ohioans Favor W.R. Hearst" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  43. ^ "COL. CODY FOR VICE PRESIDENT. - D.J. Campan Says He Would Be as Picturesque as Roosevelt" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  44. ^ "FOR HILL OR TOWNE - ANTI OR PRO SILVER - Contest for Vice Presidential Nomination Narrows. SHIVELY RETIRES FROM FIELD Sulzer's Boom Is Regarded as Dead or Dying -- Hill Will Not Run on a 16 to 1 Platform - Towne Will" (PDF). The New York Times. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved May 24, 2014.
  45. ^ Havel, James T. (1996). U.S. Presidential Elections and the Candidates: A Biographical and Historical Guide. Vol. 2: The Elections, 1789–1992. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 77. ISBN 0-02-864623-1.
  46. ^ a b c d Morgan, H. Wayne (1962). Eugene V. Debs: Socialist for President. Syracuse University Press.
  47. ^ Haynes, Fred (1924). Social Politics in the United States. The Riverside Press Cambridge. p. 77.
  48. ^ Currie, Harold W. (1976). Eugene V. Debs. Twayne Publishers.
  49. ^ John M. Hilpert, American Cyclone: Theodore Roosevelt and His 1900 Whistle-Stop Campaign (U Press of Mississippi, 2015).
  50. ^ [Brands 1997: 400]
  51. ^ [Miller 1982: 143]; Detroit Evening News, September 7, 1900; San Francisco Call, September 8, 21, 1900; Boston Evening Transcript, September 20, 1900
  52. ^ [Miller 1982: 148]; Lt. Samuel Powell Lyon to his wife, April 12, 1900, Carlisle Collection
  53. ^ [Miller 1982: 143, 148]
  54. ^ [Miller 1982: 150–151]; Literary Digest 21 (1900): 605–606
  55. ^ [Miller 1982: 187]; Letters of Sergeant Beverly Daley, November 16, 1900, Private Hambleton, March 4, 1900.
  56. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896-1932 – Google Books. Stanford University Press. 1934. ISBN 9780804716963. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  57. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, pg. 9
  58. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, pg. 37
  59. ^ "Historical U.S. Presidential Elections 1789-2020 - 270toWin". 270toWin.com. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  60. ^ "1900 Presidential General Election Data - National". Retrieved March 18, 2013.

Bibliography

Secondary sources

  • Willis J. Abbot et al.: The Battle of 1900; an official hand-book for every American citizen
  • Bailey, John W. Jr. (1973). "The Presidential Election of 1900 in Nebraska: McKinley over Bryan". Nebraska History. 54 (4): 561–584. ISSN 0028-1859.
  • Bailey, Thomas A. (1937). "Was the Presidential Election of 1900 a Mandate on Imperialism?". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 24 (1): 43–52. doi:10.2307/1891336. JSTOR 1891336.
  • Coletta, Paolo E. (1964). William Jennings Bryan. Vol. 1. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-4050-3.
  • Fahey, James J. "Building Populist Discourse: An Analysis of Populist Communication in American Presidential Elections, 1896–2016." Social Science Quarterly 102.4 (2021): 1268-1288. online
  • Gould, Lewis L. (1980). The Presidency of William McKinley. Lawrence: Regents Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0206-2.
  • Harrington, Fred H. (1935). "The Anti-Imperialist Movement in the United States, 1898–1900". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 22 (2): 211–230. doi:10.2307/1898467. JSTOR 1898467.
  • Hilpert, John M. (2015) American Cyclone: Theodore Roosevelt and His 1900 Whistle-Stop Campaign (U Press of Mississippi, 2015). xii, 349 pp.
  • Kent, Noel Jacob (2000). America in 1900. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-0595-3.
  • Miller, Stuart Creighton (1982). Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899–1903. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03081-9.
  • Morgan, H. Wayne (1963). William McKinley and His America. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 0-87338-765-1.
  • Morgan, H. Wayne (1966). "William McKinley as a Political Leader". Review of Politics. 28 (4): 417–432. doi:10.1017/S0034670500013188. JSTOR 1405280.
  • Schlup, Leonard (1986). "In the Shadow of Bryan: Adlai E. Stevenson and the Resurgence of Conservatism at the 1900 Convention". Nebraska History. 67 (3): 224–238. ISSN 0028-1859.
  • Schlup, Leonard (1991). "The American Chameleon: Adlai E. Stevenson and the Quest for the Vice Presidency in Gilded Age Politics". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 21 (3): 511–529. ISSN 0360-4918.
  • Tompkins, E. Berkeley (1967). "Scilla and Charybdis: the Anti-imperialist Dilemma in the Election of 1900". Pacific Historical Review. 36 (2): 143–161. doi:10.2307/3636719. ISSN 0030-8684. JSTOR 3636719.

Primary sources

  • Bryan, William Jennings. "The Election of 1900," pp. 788–801 Bryan gives his analysis of why he lost
  • Stevenson, Adlai E., et al. "Bryan or McKinley? The Present Duty of American Citizens," The North American Review Vol. 171, No. 527 (Oct. 1900), pp. 433–516 in JSTOR political statements by politicians on all sides, including Adlai E. Stevenson, B. R. Tillman, Edward M. Shepard, Richard Croker, Erving Winslow, Charles Emory Smith, G. F. Hoar, T. C. Platt, W. M. Stewart, Andrew Carnegie, and James H. Eckels
  • 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 1900: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Opper cartoons for 1900 election ridiculing TR and McKinley as pawns of Trusts and Sen. Hanna
  • 1900 popular vote by counties
  • Election of 1900 in Counting the Votes March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine

1900, united, states, presidential, election, 29th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1900, match, 1896, race, incumbent, republican, president, william, mckinley, defeated, democratic, challenger, william, jennings, bryan, mckinley. The 1900 United States presidential election was the 29th quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 6 1900 In a re match of the 1896 race incumbent Republican President William McKinley defeated his Democratic challenger William Jennings Bryan McKinley s victory made him the first president to win a consecutive re election since Ulysses S Grant had accomplished the same feat in 1872 Until 1956 this would be the last time in which an incumbent Republican president would win re election after serving a full term in office This election saw the fifth rematch in presidential history something that would also not occur again until 1956 This was also the first rematch to produce the same winner both times 1900 United States presidential election 1896 November 6 1900 1904 447 members of the Electoral College224 electoral votes needed to winTurnout73 7 1 5 9 pp Nominee William McKinley William Jennings BryanParty Republican DemocraticAlliance Parties Fusion PopulistLincoln RepublicanAnti Imperialist LeagueHome state Ohio NebraskaRunning mate Theodore Roosevelt Adlai Stevenson IElectoral vote 292 155States carried 28 17Popular vote 7 228 864 6 370 932Percentage 51 6 45 5 Presidential election results map Red denotes those won by McKinley Roosevelt blue denotes states won by Bryan Stevenson Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state President before electionWilliam McKinleyRepublican Elected President William McKinleyRepublicanMcKinley and Bryan each faced little opposition within their own parties Although some Gold Democrats explored the possibility of a campaign by Admiral George Dewey Bryan was easily re nominated at the 1900 Democratic National Convention after Dewey withdrew from the race McKinley was unanimously re nominated at the 1900 Republican National Convention As Vice President Garret Hobart had died in 1899 the Republican convention chose New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt as McKinley s running mate The return of economic prosperity and recent victory in the Spanish American War helped McKinley to score a decisive victory while Bryan s anti imperialist stance and continued support for bimetallism attracted only limited support McKinley carried most states outside of the Solid South and won 51 6 of the popular vote The election results were similar to those of 1896 though McKinley picked up several Western states and Bryan picked up Kentucky Six months into his second term McKinley was assassinated in September 1901 and was succeeded by Vice President Roosevelt Contents 1 Nominations 1 1 Republican Party nomination 1 2 Democratic Party nomination 1 2 1 Other candidates 1 3 People s Party nomination 1 3 1 Fusion Populist nomination 1 3 2 Middle of the Road Populist nomination 1 4 Minor party nominations 1 4 1 Social Democratic Party nomination 1 4 2 Prohibition Party nomination 1 4 2 1 Other candidates 1 4 3 Lincoln Republican nomination 1 4 4 Anti Imperialist League nomination 1 4 5 National Party nomination 1 4 6 Other nominations 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 2 5 1 Statistics 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Secondary sources 5 2 Primary sources 6 External linksNominations EditRepublican Party nomination Edit Main article 1900 Republican National Convention 1900 Republican Party ticketWilliam McKinley Theodore Rooseveltfor President for Vice President 25thPresident of the United States 1897 1901 33rdGovernor of New York 1899 1900 The 926 delegates to the Republican convention which met in Philadelphia on June 19 21 re nominated President William McKinley by acclamation Thomas C Platt the boss of the New York State Republican Party did not like Theodore Roosevelt New York s popular governor even though he was a fellow Republican Roosevelt s efforts to reform New York politics including Republican politics led Platt and other state Republican leaders to pressure President McKinley to accept Roosevelt as his new vice presidential candidate thus filling the spot left open when Vice President Garret Hobart died in 1899 By electing Roosevelt vice president Platt would remove Roosevelt from New York state politics Although Roosevelt was reluctant to accept the nomination for vice president which he regarded as a relatively trivial and powerless office his great popularity among most Republican delegates led McKinley to pick him as his new running mate Quite unexpectedly Roosevelt would be elevated to the presidency in September 1901 when McKinley was assassinated in Buffalo New York The balloting 2 Presidential ballot Vice presidential ballotWilliam McKinley 926 Theodore Roosevelt 925Not voting 1 Theodore Roosevelt Democratic Party nomination Edit Main article 1900 Democratic National Convention Campaign poster promoting Democratic nominee William J Bryan 1900 Democratic Party ticketWilliam Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevensonfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Nebraska s 1st 1891 1895 23rdVice President of the United States 1893 1897 CampaignOther candidates Edit Candidates are sorted by date of withdrawalGeorge Dewey Admiral of the Navy from Vermont 1899 1917 W May 17 1900EM 1900 3 After Admiral George Dewey s return from the Spanish American War many suggested that he run for president on the Democratic ticket Dewey however had already angered some Protestants by marrying the Catholic Mildred McLean Hazen the widow of General William Babcock Hazen and daughter of Washington McLean owner of The Washington Post in November 1899 and giving her the house that the nation had given him following the war 4 His candidacy was also almost immediately plagued by a number of public relations gaffes Newspapers started attacking him as naive after he was quoted as saying the job of president would be easy since the chief executive was merely following orders in executing the laws enacted by Congress and that he would execute the laws of Congress as faithfully as I have always executed the orders of my superiors Shortly thereafter he admitted never having voted in a presidential election before mentioning that the only man he ever would have voted for had he voted would have been Grover Cleveland He drew even more criticism when he offhandedly and prophetically told a newspaper reporter that Our next war will be with Germany 5 Dewey s campaign was met with a level of pessimism by Gold Democrats on whose support his campaign depended Some even threw their support to Bryan since they believed him to be the stronger candidate 6 7 As early as three days into his candidacy his campaign having been damaged by the aforementioned missteps rumors abounded regarding Dewey s impending withdrawal which proved false 8 Further injuries however were made when it became clear that the Democratic Party leaders of Vermont were hostile to Dewey and wholly committed to Bryan 9 Ohio similarly went for Bryan though with the caveat there that some leaders suggested that all mention to silver in the party platform be dropped 10 By May 5 John Roll McLean the brother in law of and effective campaign manager for Dewey defected from the campaign and was widely considered to now be silently supporting Bryan 11 By May 17 Dewey recognized that there was very little chance for him to gather enough delegates among the Western and Southern states to possibly keep Bryan from attaining two thirds of the delegates at the convention publicly commenting that he no longer even knew why he had decided to run for president at all 12 He effectively withdrew around this time After this there was a major boom for his nomination as vice president on the ticket alongside Bryan however Dewey resolutely refused to be considered 13 14 15 William Jennings Bryan was faced with little real opposition after Dewey withdrew from the race Bryan won at the 1900 Democratic National Convention held at Kansas City Missouri on July 4 6 16 garnering 936 delegate votes for the nomination 17 Presidential ballot 18 William Jennings Bryan 936Official or speculated candidates for the vice presidential nomination Adlai Stevenson I Former Vice President and former Representative from Illinois 19 Charles A Towne Former Representative from Minnesota 20 Elliott Danforth Former Democratic State Committee Chairman from New York 21 22 William Sulzer Representative from New York 23 24 Joseph C Sibley Representative from Pennsylvania 25 26 Robert E Pattison Former Governor of Pennsylvania 27 George F Williams Former Representative from Massachusetts 28 29 James P Tarvin Judge from Kentucky 30 George B McClellan Jr Representative from New York 13 John W Daniel Senator and Former Representative from Virginia 14 John J Lentz Representative from Ohio 31 Carter Harrison Jr Mayor of Chicago Illinois 32 John W Keller Charities Commissioner of New York City from New York 33 David B Hill Former Senator from and former Governor of New York 34 35 John Walter Smith Representative from Maryland 36 Jim Hogg Former Governor of Texas 37 Edward Atkinson Economist and founding member of the American Anti Imperialist League from Massachusetts 38 Winfield Scott Schley Rear Admiral in the United States Navy from Maryland 37 Henry Clay Caldwell Federal Judge from Arkansas 39 Alton B Parker Chief Judge from New York 40 Benjamin F Shively Former Representative from Indiana 41 George Dewey Admiral of the Navy from Vermont 14 15 William Randolph Hearst Business magnate from New York 42 William Frederick Buffalo Bill Cody soldier bison hunter and showman from Colorado 43 Augustus Van Wyck Former Court Justice from New York 44 Vice presidential ballot 45 Ballot 1st before shifts 1st after shiftsAdlai E Stevenson 559 5 936David B Hill 200 0Charles A Towne 89 5 0Abraham W Patrick 46 0Julian Carr 23 0John Walter Smith 16 0Elliott Danforth 1 0Jim Hogg 1 0People s Party nomination Edit As the nation s third largest party the Populists had made an organizational decision in 1896 to fuse with the Democratic Party on the national level their identity kept separate by the nomination of two different candidates for vice president At the state level local Populist parties were left at liberty to proceed as they saw fit In the Plains states the Populists fused with the Democrats and in some states replaced them entirely In the South the Populists fused with the Republican Party The end result though Bryan was defeated was that the Populists greatly enlarged their representation in Congress from 10 to 26 In several southern states however the legislatures were still controlled by the Democrats and they began passing a series of laws to eliminate the franchise for black voters with the intention of undermining a significant bloc of the Populist vote The move had its intended consequences as in the mid term election of 1898 Populist representation in the House of Representatives fell to 9 its lowest since the party s founding The treatment of Populists by the Democratic Party led to a division in the party On May 17 1899 Populist Party leaders met in St Louis and issued an address calling for a Middle of the Road policy in which the party would decline future fusion efforts The statement was primarily aimed at the party s national chairman U S Senator Marion Butler of North Carolina who had been elected to the Senate through fusion with North Carolina Republicans and was already working for the re nomination of William J Bryan by the Populists in 1900 The pro fusion leaders of the Populists fought back in early 1900 The first state party known to have split was the Nebraska party which divided during its state convention on March 19 Both factions appointed delegates to the national convention scheduled for Cincinnati Ultimately the Fusion Populists decided to hold a separate national convention when it became apparent that the Ohio Populists did not favor fusion and were working to organize a convention which would not nominate Bryan but an independent ticket Fusion Populist nomination Edit 1900 Fusionist People s Party ticketWilliam Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevensonfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Nebraska s 1st 1891 1895 23rdVice President of the United States 1893 1897 CampaignThe Fusion Populist National Convention assembled in a large tent just west of Sioux Falls South Dakota on May 9 and unanimously nominated Bryan for the presidency Charles Towne the leader of the Silver Republican Party was near unanimously nominated as his running mate facing only weak opposition from Representative John Lentz from Ohio When Adlai Stevenson won the Democratic vice presidential nomination over Towne Towne withdrew from the race with the Fusion Populists endorsing Stevenson Middle of the Road Populist nomination Edit 1900 Middle Road People s Party ticketWharton Barker Ignatius Donnellyfor President for Vice President Financier and Publisherfrom Pennsylvania Member of the MinnesotaHouse of Representatives 1897 1898 Meeting in Cincinnati Ohio the Middle of the Road faction adopted a platform that called for the creation of fiat money government ownership of key industries and the opening of conservation lands for economic development Businessman Wharton Barker was nominated for the presidency while Representative Ignatius Donnelly was chosen as his running mate The balloting Presidential ballot 1st 2nd Vice presidential ballot 1stWharton Barker 314 4 370 Ignatius L Donnelly 715Milford W Howard 326 6 336Ignatius L Donnelly 70 7Others 3 2 Minor party nominations Edit Social Democratic Party nomination Edit 1900 Social Democratic Party ticketEugene Debs Job Harrimanfor President for Vice President State Senatorfrom Indiana 1885 1889 Attorney at Lawfrom CaliforniaSocial Democracy of America was founded by in June 1897 and was later reformed as the Social Democratic Party of America in 1898 while the Socialist Labor Party of America was having internal struggles James F Carey who had been elected to the city council in Haverhill Massachusetts was expelled from the Socialist Labor Party Eugene V Debs Carey and Sylvester Keliher founded the Social Democratic Party Carey and Louis M Scates were elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives while John C Chase was elected as mayor of Haverhill Victor L Berger led the party in Milwaukee Wisconsin and a slate of candidates received almost six percent of the vote in the 1898 election Twenty members had been elected to office by 1900 46 Morris Hillquit and members of his faction the Kangaroos in the Socialist Labor Party attempted to oust Daniel De Leon from the party s leadership at the 1899 convention The Kangaroo faction was removed from the party and formed their own Socialist Labor Party The Kangaroo faction lost a court case against De Leon for control of the party They nominated Job Harriman for president and Max S Hayes for vice president although they were not meant to run in the 1900 election and were instead used for a compromise with the Social Democratic Party of America 46 The Social Democrats had been invited to the Kangaroo s convention but declined although the Social Democrats supported unity between the parties The Social Democratic National Executive Board allowed for the Kangaroo faction to send delegates to its national convention The Kangaroos passed a resolution supporting unity and created a unity committee Sixty seven delegates from thirty two states attuned the 1900 convention and voted by acclamation to give their presidential nomination to Debs Hayes and Harriman were both nominated for the vice presidential nomination and Harriman won it 46 The executive board announced on May 12 1900 that they would not support unity with the Kangaroos after accusing them of being too dogmatic and impeding an unity referendum The Kangaroo unity committee sent out sent out ballots to members of both groups and both voted in favor of unity The Kangaroos nominated Debs and Harriman as their presidential ticket which Debs accepted on July 31 Debs and George D Herron started the party s campaign on September 29 at Chicago s Music Hall Debs received 87 945 votes with his largest amount of support coming from New York and Illinois Debs received over ten times the amount of votes in Chicago that the Socialist Labor Party had in the 1896 election 46 Debs received more votes than any presidential ticket from the Socialist Labor Party 47 The Kangaroo faction and the Social Democrats later merged into the Socialist Party of America in 1901 48 Prohibition Party nomination Edit 1900 Prohibition Party ticketJohn Woolley Henry Metcalffor President for Vice President Editor of The New Voicefrom Illinois State Senatorfrom Rhode Island 1885 1886 Other candidates Edit Candidates in this section are sorted by performanceSilas C Swallow Hale Johnson Methodist Preacher from Pennsylvania Mayor of Newton Illinois 320 votes W Before 1st Ballot endorsed Woolley The Prohibition Party met in Chicago Illinois on June 28 to nominate their presidential ticket Hale Johnson who had been their vice presidential nominee in 1896 withdrew his name immediately before the balloting was to begin John G Woolley was nominated on the first ballot with Henry B Metcalf of Rhode Island nominated to be his running mate in short order The Balloting Presidential Ballot 1st Vice Presidential Ballot 1stJohn G Woolley 380 Henry B Metcalf 349Silas C Swallow 320 Thomas Carskadon 132E L Eaton 113Not Voting 35 141Lincoln Republican nomination Edit 1900 Lincoln Republican ticketWilliam Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevensonfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Nebraska s 1st 1891 1895 23rdVice President of the United States 1893 1897 CampaignThe Lincoln Republican Party formerly the Silver Republican Party had by 1900 come to recognize that the issue of bimetallism had been superseded by that of imperialism and it was hoped that a broader platform in line with the perceived values of Abraham Lincoln would allow the Party to evolve beyond its singular issue of free silver The Lincoln Republicans assembled in Kansas City Missouri at the same time as the Democratic National Convention held in the same city Committed to endorsing William Jennings Bryan for the Presidency the primary aim of many of those attending was to promote the nomination of national chairman Charles Towne for the Vice Presidency by the Democratic Party an effort endorsed by Fusionist Populists who had nominated Towne to the same position two months earlier Unfortunately for those who boomed Towne these efforts may have backfired pushing away Democratic delegates who might have otherwise been favorable to Towne by presenting the ticket of Bryan and Towne as a fait accompli with Southern Democratic delegates themselves preferring a Vice Presidential nominee who d appeal to voters the Democratic Party lost in the Northeast and Midwest four years prior Hopes for a personal endorsement of Towne by Bryan were also dashed when Bryan who personally preferred Towne of those candidates in running and was expected to make mention of this in an acceptance decided against going to the Convention or involving himself in the Vice Presidential contest Ultimately Towne was a distant third with Adlai Stevenson winning the nod The nomination of Stevenson who d previously served as Grover Cleveland s vice president outraged many of the Lincoln Republicans still in attendance and in the ensuing pandemonium attempts were made to nominate Charles Towne for the Vice Presidency Only when Charles Towne himself addressed the convention did the anger settle Declining the efforts to nominate him Towne pleaded with the delegates present to accept and support the Democratic ticket as it was noting that Bryan was at the head of it and much of the Democratic Platform was aligned with that of the Lincoln Republicans Others such as Senator Fred Dubois Senator Henry Teller and John Shafroth made similar speeches calling for support for Bryan and Stevenson It was eventually decided that the question of the vice presidential nomination would be handled by the National Committee They would formalize and endorsement of Adlai Stevenson for the Vice Presidency the following day in deference to Towne s wishes Anti Imperialist League nomination Edit 1900 Anti Imperialist League ticketWilliam Jennings Bryan Adlai Stevensonfor President for Vice President U S Representativefor Nebraska s 1st 1891 1895 23rdVice President of the United States 1893 1897 CampaignThe American Anti Imperialist League had been formed in 1898 in opposition to the acquisition of the Philippine Islands considering its annexation violating the concept of consent of the governed While not formalized as a political party there existed a movement within the League that sought to nominate an independent ticket to run solely on the platform of anti imperialism or barring that to endorse whichever Republican or Democratic presidential nominee that was themselves anti imperialist Upon the nominations of McKinley and Bryan however there were immediate divisions on whether to endorse Bryan and the Democratic Platform many sympathizing Republicans and Gold Democrats finding it anathema to their own political philosophies beyond its denouncement of imperialism already by July some were considering supporting McKinley in November Later that same month a call was made for a National Convention to meet in Indianapolis on August 15 with the intention of either endorsing or nominating a ticket for the general election Discussions were held with remnants of National Democratic Party about the possibility of a fusion ticket but this was voted down by their national committee Then discussed names for possible presidential candidates were former Speaker Thomas Reed former Secretary of State Richard Olney former Massachusetts Governor George Boutwell and former Senator John HendersonFrom the beginning the headwinds were in Bryan s favor with permanent President George Boutwell addressing the convention and calling for the endorsement of the Democratic ticket this followed in speeches by former General John Beatty Edgar Bancroft and Gamaliel Bradford The resolution to endorse Bryan however was subject to prolonged debate its principal opponents being representatives of the third ticket movement led by Thomas Osborne Osborne and those who followed him theorized that many anti imperialists would not be willing to vote for Bryan or in favor of the Democratic Platform and would be better served by a candidate of their own Charles Codman the author of the resolution and Edwin Burritt Smith countered that all issues were secondary to the issue of imperialism and that the most effective means by which to put an anti imperialist in office should be used In a voice vote the Platform of the Liberty Congress as it was then known as adopted overwhelmingly with all amendments to strike the endorsement of the Bryan Stevenson ticket being voted down Osborne and other third ticketers would then bolt to the then nearby organizing National Party National Party nomination Edit 1900 National Party ticketDonelson Caffery Archibald Howefor President for Vice President U S Senatorfrom Louisiana 1892 1901 DN September 21 Attorney at Law and Historianfrom MassachusettsDN September 22The National Party was an outgrowth of the third ticket movement that existed within the Anti Imperialist League The first steps towards its formation were taken after the failure of a number of anti imperialists among them Thomas Osborne and John Jay Chapman to convince the National Democratic Party to either nominate or endorse a third party ticket A statement was then released by the attending League delegates from New York denouncing both the Republican and Democratic parties advocating for the independence of the Philippines and Porto Rico sic supporting gold standard and a sound banking system calling for the abolition of special privileges and demanding a public service based on merit exclusively They also called for a national convention to be held from August 14 to 15 which would have placed it alongside the national League Convention that was being held from August 15 to August 16 As the delegates arrived in Indianapolis it was hoped that the League could be convinced to nominate a third party ticket with the National Party then offering its endorsement It swiftly became clear however that the majority of the delegates to the Anti Imperialist League Convention were in sympathy with Bryan and prepared to endorse him and attempts on the part of anti Bryan delegates to kept the platform at least non committal on the subject of the presidential race were unsuccessful Those League delegates that were associated with the National Party then left and proceeded to elect Thomas Osborne as Permanent Chairman calling for a new national convention to be held on September 5 It is claimed that at the time the National Party presidential nomination was offered to Moorfield Storey but Storey declined and ultimately opted to run as an Anti Imperialist Independent in the 11th District of Massachusetts William Jackson Palmer was suggested as a vice presidential nominee to run alongside him Meeting in Carnegie Hall then Chamber Music Hall on 5 September the National Party was formalized nominating Senator Donelson Caffery of Louisiana for the Presidency and historian Archibald Howe of Massachusetts for the Vice Presidency Though there was some concern over whether Caffery would accept the nomination if offered Osborne claimed that he had been communicating with Caffrey and that he was both sympathetic to the National Party and willing to be their candidate for the Presidency The party platform was virtually identical to the one offered by the League committee back in July though the definition of special privileges was defined as subsidies bounties undeserved pensions or trust busting tariffs A strategy was also adopted where in those States where it was impractical to nominate a full slate of electors a single elector would be nominated instead allowing for voters to vote the Nationalist ticket as well as one other of their choice it was hoped that this might avail concerns that the Nationalists would take votes away from either Bryan or McKinley depending on the voters sympathies Unfortunately for the Nationalist Party Senator Cafferty declined the nomination some weeks later resulting in a scramble where Arthur Briggs Farquhar owner of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Works was considered as a possible replacement A day later on September 21 the Massachusetts branch of the Party voted to disband It was then hoped that unpledged electors could be nominated but papers were only ever taken out for one Edward Waldo Emerson of Massachusetts Other nominations Edit The Union Reform Party nominated Seth H Ellis of Ohio for president and Samuel T Nicholson for vice president The United Christian Party nominated Jonah F R Leonard for president and David H Martin for vice president Initially the party had nominated Silas C Swallow for president and John G Woolley for vice president but both men refused choosing instead to contest the Prohibition Party nomination of which Woolley would emerge the victor General election EditCampaign Edit McKinley campaigns on gold coin gold standard with support from soldiers businessmen farmers and professionals claiming to restore prosperity at home and victory abroad The economy was booming in 1900 so the Republican slogan of Four More Years of the Full Dinner Pail combined with victory in the brief Spanish American War in 1898 had a powerful electoral appeal Teddy Roosevelt had become a national hero fighting in Cuba during the war and as such he was a popular spokesman for the Republican ticket Roosevelt proved highly energetic and an equal match for William Jennings Bryan s famous barnstorming style of campaigning Roosevelt s theme was that McKinley had brought America peace and prosperity and deserved re election In a whirlwind campaign Roosevelt made 480 stops in 23 states 49 In his speeches he repeatedly argued that the war had been just and had liberated the Cubans and Filipinos from Spanish tyranny 50 Four years ago the nation was uneasy because at our very doors an American island was writhing in hideous agony under a worse than medieval despotism We had our Armenia at our threshold The situation in Cuba had become such that we could no longer stand quiet and retain one shred of self respect We drew the sword and waged the most righteous and brilliantly successful foreign war that this generation has seen Bryan s campaign was built around a reprise of his major issue from the 1896 campaign Free Silver It was not as successful in 1900 because prosperity had replaced severe depression and McKinley claimed credit Advocates of enlarging the money supply to raise prices had to admit that a great deal of new gold was flowing into the world economy and deflation i e falling prices was no longer a threat Bryan s second major campaign theme attacked McKinley s imperialism Bryan had supported the war but opposed the annexation of the Philippines He said McKinley had simply replaced a cruel Spanish tyranny with a cruel American one Bryan was especially harsh in his criticisms of the American military effort to suppress a bloody rebellion by Filipino guerillas This theme won over some previous opponents especially hard money Germans former Gold Democrats and anti imperialists such as Andrew Carnegie Both candidates repeated their 1896 campaign techniques with McKinley campaigning again from the front porch of his home in Canton Ohio At the peak of the campaign he greeted sixteen delegations and 30 000 cheering supporters in one day Meanwhile Bryan took to the rails again traveling 18 000 miles to hundreds of rallies across the Midwest and East This time he was matched by Theodore Roosevelt who campaigned just as energetically in 24 states covering 21 000 miles by train The German American vote in 1900 was in doubt since they opposed both Bryan s repudiation policy and overseas expansion under McKinley The triumph of the American army and navy in the war against Spain was a decisive factor in building Republican support Democrats tried to argue that the war was not over because of the insurgency in the Philippines this became their major issue A perception that the Philippine American War was coming to an end would be an electoral asset for the Republicans and the McKinley administration stated that there were reductions of troops there Republicans pledged that the fighting in the Philippines would die down of its own accord within sixty days of McKinley s re election 51 However as one lieutenant explained in a letter to his wife It looks good on paper but there really has been no reduction of the force here These battalions being sent home are made up on men about to be discharged 52 In addition Secretary of War Elihu Root had a report from MacArthur of September 1900 that he did not release until after the election 53 General Arthur MacArthur Jr had been in command of the Philippines for four months warning Washington that the war was not lessening and that the end was not even in sight MacArthur believed that the guerrilla stage of the war was just beginning and that Filipinos were refining their techniques through experience Furthermore Philippine leader Emilio Aguinaldo s strategy had popular support MacArthur wrote The success of this unique system of war depends upon almost complete unity of action of the entire native population That such unity is a fact is too obvious to admit of discussion how it is brought about and maintained is not so plain Intimidation has undoubtedly accomplished much to this end but fear as the only motive is hardly sufficient to account for the united and apparently spontaneous action of several millions of people One traitor in each town would eventually destroy such a complex organization It is more probable that the adhesive principle comes from ethological homogeneity which induces men to respond for a time to the appeals of consanguineous leadership even when such action is opposed to their interests and convictions of expediency 54 Nonetheless the majority of soldiers in the Philippines did not support Bryan Any mention of the election of 1900 in the soldiers letters and diaries indicated overwhelming support for the Republican ticket of McKinley and Roosevelt According to Sergeant Beverly Daley even the howling Democrats favored McKinley Private Hambleton wrote Of course there are some boys who think Bryan is the whole cheese but they don t say too much 55 Despite Bryan s energetic efforts the renewed prosperity under McKinley combined with the public s approval of the Spanish American War allowed McKinley to gain a comfortable victory Results Edit Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate Shades of red are for McKinley Republican shades of blue are for Bryan Democratic and shades of green are for Other s Non Democratic Non Republican 56 Theodore Roosevelt the vice presidential candidate on the Republican ticket attracted unusual attention in the campaign and it has been commonly asserted that he brought a considerable number of votes to the Republican ticket McKinley polled roughly 7 200 000 votes He carried 28 states with a combined 292 electoral votes 65 32 He slightly increased his national percentage 51 60 with 120 000 more votes than in 1896 This change is reflected in the gains made in number of counties carried McKinley had 222 more counties than he had carried in 1896 thus gaining a slight majority of the total number of counties making returns in 1900 Of the 2 729 counties making returns McKinley won in 1 385 50 75 while Bryan carried 1 340 49 10 Two counties 0 07 were split evenly between McKinley and Bryan while two counties 0 07 in Texas recorded more votes cast for Other s than either of the two party candidates McKinley had a majority in 1 288 counties while Bryan had a majority in 1 253 counties Further examination reveals that changes in counties were even more impressive Of the 2 729 counties making returns 2 286 were identical in these two elections 113 changed from Republican to Democratic and 328 changed from Democratic to Republican A notable feature was the Bryan gains made in the New England and Northeastern Mid Atlantic sections with also a slight gain in the East North Central section 57 Bryan even managed to win New York City by almost 30 000 votes when he had lost it by more than 60 000 votes just 4 years earlier 58 In all other sections Bryan s vote was less than in 1896 and in the nation his total vote was 23 000 less than in 1896 The percentage of total was 45 52 a slight loss Kentucky which he carried this time showed an increase of 17 005 In 16 states the Democratic vote increased but in 29 states it was less than in 1896 Bryan carried only 17 states This was the only one of his three runs in which he failed to carry his home state of Nebraska 59 This was the last election in which the Republicans won the majority of electoral votes in Maryland until 1920 It is also the last election in which a Republican won the presidency without winning Idaho and Montana In addition this would also be the last election in 100 years when the Republican candidate would win without earning a minimum of 300 electoral votes That did not occur again until George W Bush narrowly defeated Al Gore in the 2000 United States Presidential Election Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteWilliam McKinley Jr Incumbent Republican Ohio 7 228 864 51 64 292 Theodore Roosevelt Jr New York 292William Jennings Bryan Democratic Nebraska 6 370 932 45 52 155 Adlai Ewing Stevenson Illinois 155John Granville Woolley Prohibition Illinois 210 864 1 51 0 Henry Brewer Metcalf Rhode Island 0Eugene Victor Debs Social Democratic Indiana 87 945 0 63 0 Job Harriman California 0Wharton Barker Populist Pennsylvania 50 989 0 36 0 Ignatius Loyola Donnelly Minnesota 0Joseph Francis Malloney Socialist Labor Massachusetts 40 943 0 29 0 Valentine Remmel Pennsylvania 0Other 6 889 0 05 Other Total 13 997 426 100 447 447Needed to win 224 224Source popular vote Leip David 1900 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved July 28 2005 Source electoral vote Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved July 31 2005 Popular voteMcKinley 51 64 Bryan 45 52 Woolley 1 51 Debs 0 63 Barker 0 36 Others 0 34 Electoral voteMcKinley 65 32 Bryan 34 68 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 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 60 States districts won by Bryan StevensonStates districts won by McKinley RooseveltWilliam McKinleyRepublican William Jennings BryanDemocratic John WoolleyProhibition Eugene V DebsSocial Democratic Wharton BarkerPopulist Joseph F MalloneySocialist Labor Margin State TotalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes Alabama 11 55 612 34 82 97 129 60 82 11 2 763 1 73 4 188 2 62 41 517 26 00 159 692 ALArkansas 8 44 800 35 04 81 142 63 46 8 584 0 46 972 0 76 36 342 28 42 127 866 ARCalifornia 9 164 755 54 50 9 124 985 41 34 5 024 1 66 7 554 2 50 39 770 13 16 302 318 CAColorado 4 93 072 42 04 122 733 55 43 4 3 790 1 71 714 0 32 389 0 18 684 0 31 29 661 13 39 221 408 COConnecticut 6 102 572 56 92 6 74 014 41 07 1 617 0 90 1 029 0 57 908 0 50 28 558 15 85 180 195 CTDelaware 3 22 535 53 67 3 18 852 44 90 546 1 30 56 0 13 3 683 8 77 41 989 DEFlorida 4 7 355 18 55 28 273 71 31 4 2 244 5 66 634 1 60 1 143 2 88 20 918 52 76 39 649 FLGeorgia 13 34 260 28 22 81 180 66 86 13 1 402 1 15 4 568 3 76 46 920 38 64 121 410 GAIdaho 3 27 198 46 96 29 414 50 79 3 857 1 48 445 0 77 2 216 3 83 57 914 IDIllinois 24 597 985 52 83 24 503 061 44 44 17 626 1 56 9 687 0 86 1 141 0 10 1 373 0 12 94 924 8 39 1 131 897 ILIndiana 15 336 063 50 60 15 309 584 46 62 13 718 2 07 2 374 0 36 1 438 0 22 663 0 10 26 479 3 98 664 094 INIowa 13 307 808 58 04 13 209 265 39 46 9 502 1 79 2 742 0 52 613 0 12 259 0 05 98 543 18 58 530 355 IAKansas 10 185 955 52 56 10 162 601 45 96 3 605 1 02 1 605 0 45 23 354 6 60 353 766 KSKentucky 13 227 132 48 51 235 126 50 21 13 2 890 0 62 766 0 16 1 961 0 42 390 0 08 7 994 1 70 468 265 KYLouisiana 8 14 234 20 96 53 668 79 03 8 39 434 58 07 67 906 LAMaine 6 65 412 61 89 6 36 822 34 84 2 581 2 44 878 0 83 28 590 27 05 105 693 MEMaryland 8 136 185 51 50 8 122 238 46 23 4 574 1 73 904 0 34 388 0 15 13 947 5 27 264 434 MDMassachusetts 15 238 866 57 59 15 156 997 37 85 6 202 1 50 9 607 2 32 2 599 0 63 81 869 19 74 414 804 MAMichigan 14 316 269 58 10 14 211 685 38 89 11 859 2 18 2 826 0 52 903 0 17 837 0 15 104 584 19 21 544 379 MIMinnesota 9 190 461 60 21 9 112 901 35 69 8 555 2 70 3 065 0 97 1 329 0 42 77 560 24 52 316 311 MNMississippi 9 5 707 9 66 51 706 87 56 9 1 642 2 78 45 999 77 90 59 055 MSMissouri 17 314 092 45 94 351 922 51 48 17 5 965 0 87 6 139 0 90 4 244 0 62 1 294 0 19 37 830 5 54 683 656 MOMontana 3 25 409 39 79 37 311 58 43 3 306 0 48 711 1 11 119 0 19 11 902 18 64 63 856 MTNebraska 8 121 835 50 46 8 114 013 47 22 3 655 1 51 823 0 34 1 104 0 46 7 822 3 24 241 430 NENevada 3 3 849 37 75 6 347 62 25 3 2 498 24 50 10 196 NVNew Hampshire 4 54 799 59 33 4 35 489 38 42 1 270 1 37 790 0 86 19 310 20 91 92 364 NHNew Jersey 10 221 707 55 28 10 164 808 41 09 7 183 1 79 4 609 1 15 669 0 17 2 074 0 52 56 899 14 19 401 050 NJNew York 36 822 013 53 10 36 678 462 43 83 22 077 1 43 12 869 0 83 12 621 0 82 143 551 9 27 1 548 042 NYNorth Carolina 11 132 997 45 47 157 733 53 92 11 990 0 34 798 0 27 24 736 8 45 292 518 NCNorth Dakota 3 35 898 62 12 3 20 531 35 53 731 1 26 520 0 90 111 0 19 13 141 26 59 57 791 NDOhio 23 543 918 52 30 23 474 882 45 66 10 203 0 98 4 847 0 47 251 0 02 1 688 0 16 69 036 6 64 1 040 073 OHOregon 4 46 172 55 46 4 32 810 39 41 2 536 3 05 1 464 1 76 269 0 32 13 362 16 05 83 251 ORPennsylvania 32 712 665 60 74 32 424 232 36 16 27 908 2 38 4 831 0 41 638 0 05 2 936 0 25 288 433 24 58 1 173 210 PARhode Island 4 33 784 59 74 4 19 812 35 04 1 529 2 70 1 423 2 52 13 972 24 70 56 548 RISouth Carolina 9 3 579 7 04 47 233 92 96 9 43 654 85 92 50 812 SCSouth Dakota 4 54 530 56 73 4 39 544 41 14 1 542 1 60 169 0 18 339 0 35 14 986 15 59 96 124 SDTennessee 12 123 108 44 95 145 240 53 03 12 3 844 1 40 346 0 13 1 322 0 48 22 132 8 08 273 860 TNTexas 15 130 641 30 83 267 432 63 12 15 2 644 0 62 1 846 0 44 20 981 4 95 162 0 04 136 791 32 29 423 706 TXUtah 3 47 139 50 58 3 45 006 48 30 209 0 22 720 0 77 106 0 11 2 133 2 28 93 189 UTVermont 4 42 569 75 73 4 12 849 22 86 383 0 68 39 0 07 367 0 65 29 720 52 87 56 212 VTVirginia 12 115 769 43 82 146 079 55 29 12 2 130 0 81 63 0 02 167 0 06 30 310 11 47 264 208 VAWashington 4 57 456 53 44 4 44 833 41 70 2 363 2 20 2 006 1 87 866 0 81 12 623 11 74 107 524 WAWest Virginia 6 119 829 54 27 6 98 807 44 75 1 628 0 74 286 0 13 246 0 11 21 022 9 52 220 796 WVWisconsin 12 265 760 60 06 12 159 163 35 97 10 027 2 27 7 048 1 59 503 0 11 106 597 24 09 442 501 WIWyoming 3 14 482 58 66 3 10 164 41 17 21 0 09 20 0 08 4 318 17 49 24 687 WYTOTALS 447 7 228 864 51 64 292 6 370 932 45 52 155 210 867 1 51 87 945 0 63 50 989 0 36 40 943 0 29 857 932 6 12 13 997 429 USClose states Edit Margin of victory less than 5 42 electoral votes Kentucky 1 71 7 994 votes Utah 2 29 2 133 votes Nebraska 3 24 7 822 votes Idaho 3 83 2 216 votes Indiana 3 99 26 479 votes Margin of victory between 5 and 10 150 electoral votes Maryland 5 27 13 947 votes Missouri 5 53 37 830 votes Kansas 6 60 23 354 votes Ohio 6 64 69 036 votes Tennessee 8 08 22 132 votes Illinois 8 39 94 924 votes tipping point state North Carolina 8 46 24 736 votes Delaware 8 77 3 683 votes New York 9 27 143 551 votes West Virginia 9 52 21 022 votes Statistics Edit Counties with highest percent of vote Republican Keweenaw County Michigan 92 24 Leslie County Kentucky 91 23 Unicoi County Tennessee 89 64 Scott County Tennessee 89 59 Johnson County Tennessee 89 20 Counties with highest percent of vote Democratic Irion County Texas 100 00 Hampton County South Carolina 99 89 Greenwood County South Carolina 99 73 Saluda County South Carolina 99 45 Abbeville County South Carolina 99 42 Counties with highest percent of vote Other Carson County Texas 78 71 Chambers County Texas 44 50 Comanche County Texas 32 82 Franklin County Georgia 30 92 Scurry County Texas 28 69 Counties with lowest percent of vote Republican Randall County Texas 00 00 Irion County Texas 00 00 Hampton County South Carolina 00 11 Greenwood County South Carolina 00 27 Dooly County Georgia 00 35 Counties with lowest percent of vote Democratic Keweenaw County Michigan 06 33 Unicoi County Tennessee 08 29 Leslie County Kentucky 08 46 Scott County Tennessee 10 23 Johnson County Tennessee 10 42 Counties with most votes Republican Cook County Illinois 203 760 Philadelphia County Pennsylvania 173 657 New York County New York 153 001 Kings County New York 108 977 Allegheny County Pennsylvania 71 780Counties with most votes Democratic Cook County Illinois 186 193 New York County New York 181 786 Kings County New York 106 232 Philadelphia County Pennsylvania 58 179 Suffolk County Massachusetts 47 534Counties with most votes Other New York County New York 11 700 Cook County Illinois 10 242 Milwaukee County Wisconsin 5 857 Kings County New York 4 639 Essex County Massachusetts 4 242Counties with lowest percent of vote and win Republican Cherokee County Alabama 41 94 Paulding County Georgia 46 00 Logan County Colorado 46 59 Chattahoochee County Georgia 47 18 Otter Tail County Minnesota 47 19 Counties with lowest percent of vote and win Democratic Murray County Georgia 45 18 Geneva County Alabama 46 48 Douglas County Georgia 46 75 Linn County Oregon 46 77 Fresno County California 47 41 See also EditHistory of the United States 1865 1918 Newspaper endorsements in the 1900 United States presidential election 1900 United States House of Representatives elections 1900 01 United States Senate elections Second inauguration of William McKinleyReferences Edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press Hinshaw Seth 2000 Ohio Elects the President Our State s Role in Presidential Elections 1804 1996 Mansfield Book Masters Inc p 68 ADMIRAL DEWEY LOSES HOPE Says Now Doesn t Know What Prompted Him to Aspire to the Presidency PDF The New York Times May 18 1900 HarpWeek Elections 1900 Medium Cartoons at elections harpweek com Convention Diary NRO Total Convention at nationalreview com A KENTUCKY VIEW OF DEWEY Ex Gold Democratic Leader Says Admiral Has No Chance PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 DEWEY HAS NO SHOW KYLE SAYS South Dakota Senator Thinks Gold Democrats Are for Bryan PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 DEWEY SAYS HE WILL NOT WITHDRAW The Admiral Denies that He Has Any Intention of Quitting SOME OTHER DEWEY RUMORS A New Story Is that He Will Not Oppose Chicago Platform Avoiding Visitors PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 DEWEY S STATE AGAINST HIM Vermont s Eight Votes at Kansas City to Go for Bryan PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 Ohio Democrats for Bryan PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 McLEAN DESERTS DEWEY Stated Positively in Columbus that the Admiral s Candidacy Is to be Gradually Abandoned PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 ADMIRAL DEWEY LOSES HOPE Says Now He Doesn t Know What Prompted Him to Aspire to the Presidency PDF The New York Times Retrieved May 24 2014 a b DEWEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT Democrats May Avail Themselves of His Popularity in the Middle West PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 a b c DEWEY BOOM GROWS Democrats Favor His Candidacy for Vice President Other Names Proposed PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 a b DEWEY NOT A CANDIDATE He Would Not Accept a Nomination for Vice President PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 Election of 1900 Overview HarpWeek Retrieved December 29 2018 Schlup Leonard 1986 In the Shadow of Bryan Adlai E Stevenson and the Resurgence of Conservatism at the 1900 Convention PDF Nebraska History 67 223 230 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Bain Richard C Parris Judith H 1973 Appendix C Voting Records 1900 Democratic Convention Decisions and Voting Records Studies in Presidential Selection 2nd ed Washington D C The Brookings Institution ISBN 0 8157 0768 1 REVOLT AGAINST SILVER MAY DEFEAT TOWNE Adlai E Stevenson Enters the Field for Vice President A BAD SITUATION FOR BRYAN Whatever Choice Is Made Is Likely to be Unsatisfactory to Large Part of Convention PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 VICE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 Danforth for Vice President PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 CROKER ON THE GROUND New Yorkers Arrive at Kansas City Intimate that Tammany May Not Fight Hill s Nomination PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 SULZER FOR VICE PRESIDENT New Yorker Is Termed the Probable Candidate with Bryan PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 SULZER CONSULTS BRYAN Says He Is Not Seeking the Vice Presidency His Highest Ambition to See Bryan President PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 HOUSE DEMOCRATS DIVIDED Differences Accentuated in the Deficiency Bill Debate MR SIBLEY DEFENDS MR GAGE Congressman Driggs Resents an Imputation Cast Upon His Democracy Cannon Pokes Fun at Sulzer PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 THE INDIANA CONVENTION Platform Question Almost Lost Sight of in Excitement Over Democratic Gubernatorial Nomination PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 KANSAS POPULISTS FOR BRYAN Twenty County Conventions Favor Him and ex Gov Pattison PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 WILLIAMS FOR VICE PRESIDENT Populists Plan to Link His Same with Bryan s PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 GEORGE FRED WILLIAMS TALKS Denounces Hill and Cleveland and Discusses the Platform PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 ALTGELD AGAINST PATTISON Ex Governor Says Candidate Must Be the Counterpart of the Head of the Ticket PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 THE KANSAS CITY PLATFORM PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 CARTER HARRISON TO BE BOOMED PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 HILL HUMILIATED BY RICHARD CROKEER Scene of Great Excitement in New York Delegation ANGRY CHARGESON BOTH SIDES Fight Likely to Result in a Split in the Democratic Party Van Wyck Given the Place on Platform Committee Delegation to Support Keller for Vice President HILL HUMILIATED BY RICHARD CROKER PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 BRYAN S RUNNING MATE TALKS Mr Towne Says His Name Will Be Submitted to Kansas City Convention PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 HILL FOR VICE PRESIDENT His Nomination Is Regarded as Not Improbable Should Republicans Select a New York Man the Democrats Would Be More Likely to Name Mr Hill PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 PREFERENCES OF DELEGATES Most of Them Want a Money Plank That Will Avoid a Declaration in Favor of Silver at 16 to 1 PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 a b BOSTONIANS INVITE BRYAN Bryan Club of Massachusetts Asks Him to Breakfast Jan 30 PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 BRYAN AND ATKINSON PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 CALDWELL NOT A CANDIDATE Arkansas Judge Does Not Want Vice Presidential Nomination PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 11 2021 Retrieved May 24 2014 DEWEY GROWS STRONGER Perry Belmont Who Is Working for Him Talks to Congressmen THE FEELING AGAINST BRYAN Belief that If All Democrats Spoke Out the Admiral s Nomination Would Be Assured PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 LETTER FROM ADMIRAL SCHLEY Repeats His Declaration that He Has No Desire for Office PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 Ohioans Favor W R Hearst PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 COL CODY FOR VICE PRESIDENT D J Campan Says He Would Be as Picturesque as Roosevelt PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 FOR HILL OR TOWNE ANTI OR PRO SILVER Contest for Vice Presidential Nomination Narrows SHIVELY RETIRES FROM FIELD Sulzer s Boom Is Regarded as Dead or Dying Hill Will Not Run on a 16 to 1 Platform Towne Will PDF The New York Times Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 24 2014 Havel James T 1996 U S Presidential Elections and the Candidates A Biographical and Historical Guide Vol 2 The Elections 1789 1992 New York Simon amp Schuster p 77 ISBN 0 02 864623 1 a b c d Morgan H Wayne 1962 Eugene V Debs Socialist for President Syracuse University Press Haynes Fred 1924 Social Politics in the United States The Riverside Press Cambridge p 77 Currie Harold W 1976 Eugene V Debs Twayne Publishers John M Hilpert American Cyclone Theodore Roosevelt and His 1900 Whistle Stop Campaign U Press of Mississippi 2015 Brands 1997 400 Miller 1982 143 Detroit Evening News September 7 1900 San Francisco Call September 8 21 1900 Boston Evening Transcript September 20 1900 Miller 1982 148 Lt Samuel Powell Lyon to his wife April 12 1900 Carlisle Collection Miller 1982 143 148 Miller 1982 150 151 Literary Digest 21 1900 605 606 Miller 1982 187 Letters of Sergeant Beverly Daley November 16 1900 Private Hambleton March 4 1900 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Google Books Stanford University Press 1934 ISBN 9780804716963 Retrieved August 12 2014 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson pg 9 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson pg 37 Historical U S Presidential Elections 1789 2020 270toWin 270toWin com Retrieved May 27 2022 1900 Presidential General Election Data National Retrieved March 18 2013 Bibliography EditSecondary sources Edit Willis J Abbot et al The Battle of 1900 an official hand book for every American citizen Bailey John W Jr 1973 The Presidential Election of 1900 in Nebraska McKinley over Bryan Nebraska History 54 4 561 584 ISSN 0028 1859 Bailey Thomas A 1937 Was the Presidential Election of 1900 a Mandate on Imperialism Mississippi Valley Historical Review 24 1 43 52 doi 10 2307 1891336 JSTOR 1891336 Coletta Paolo E 1964 William Jennings Bryan Vol 1 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 4050 3 Fahey James J Building Populist Discourse An Analysis of Populist Communication in American Presidential Elections 1896 2016 Social Science Quarterly 102 4 2021 1268 1288 onlineGould Lewis L 1980 The Presidency of William McKinley Lawrence Regents Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0206 2 Harrington Fred H 1935 The Anti Imperialist Movement in the United States 1898 1900 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 22 2 211 230 doi 10 2307 1898467 JSTOR 1898467 Hilpert John M 2015 American Cyclone Theodore Roosevelt and His 1900 Whistle Stop Campaign U Press of Mississippi 2015 xii 349 pp Kent Noel Jacob 2000 America in 1900 Armonk NY M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 0595 3 Miller Stuart Creighton 1982 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03081 9 Morgan H Wayne 1963 William McKinley and His America Syracuse Syracuse University Press ISBN 0 87338 765 1 Morgan H Wayne 1966 William McKinley as a Political Leader Review of Politics 28 4 417 432 doi 10 1017 S0034670500013188 JSTOR 1405280 Schlup Leonard 1986 In the Shadow of Bryan Adlai E Stevenson and the Resurgence of Conservatism at the 1900 Convention Nebraska History 67 3 224 238 ISSN 0028 1859 Schlup Leonard 1991 The American Chameleon Adlai E Stevenson and the Quest for the Vice Presidency in Gilded Age Politics Presidential Studies Quarterly 21 3 511 529 ISSN 0360 4918 Tompkins E Berkeley 1967 Scilla and Charybdis the Anti imperialist Dilemma in the Election of 1900 Pacific Historical Review 36 2 143 161 doi 10 2307 3636719 ISSN 0030 8684 JSTOR 3636719 Primary sources Edit Bryan William Jennings The Election of 1900 pp 788 801 Bryan gives his analysis of why he lost Stevenson Adlai E et al Bryan or McKinley The Present Duty of American Citizens The North American Review Vol 171 No 527 Oct 1900 pp 433 516 in JSTOR political statements by politicians on all sides including Adlai E Stevenson B R Tillman Edward M Shepard Richard Croker Erving Winslow Charles Emory Smith G F Hoar T C Platt W M Stewart Andrew Carnegie and James H Eckels 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 1900 Presidential Election of 1900 A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress Opper cartoons for 1900 election ridiculing TR and McKinley as pawns of Trusts and Sen Hanna 1900 popular vote by counties 1900 State by state Popular vote Election of 1900 in Counting the Votes Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1900 United States presidential election amp oldid 1151137304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.