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1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee

The 1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 4, 1924, as part of the 1924 United States presidential election. Tennessee voters chose 12 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee

← 1920 November 4, 1924 1928 →

All 12 Tennessee votes to the Electoral College
 
Nominee John W. Davis Calvin Coolidge
Party Democratic Republican
Home state West Virginia Massachusetts
Running mate Charles W. Bryan Charles G. Dawes
Electoral vote 12 0
Popular vote 158,682 130,728
Percentage 52.86% 43.54%

County Results

President before election

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Elected President

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

For over a century after the Civil War, Tennessee was divided according to political loyalties established in that war. Unionist regions covering almost all of East Tennessee, Kentucky Pennyroyal-allied Macon County, and the five West Tennessee Highland Rim counties of Carroll, Henderson, McNairy, Hardin and Wayne[1] voted Republican – generally by landslide margins – as they saw the Democratic Party as the “war party” who had forced them into a war they did not wish to fight.[2] Contrariwise, the rest of Middle and West Tennessee who had supported and driven the state's secession was equally fiercely Democratic as it associated the Republicans with Reconstruction.[3] After the disfranchisement of the state's African-American population by a poll tax was largely complete in the 1890s,[4] the Democratic Party was certain of winning statewide elections if united,[5] although unlike the Deep South Republicans would almost always gain thirty to forty percent of the statewide vote from mountain and Highland Rim support. When the Democratic Party was bitterly divided, the Republicans did win the governorship in 1910 and 1912, but did not gain at other levels.

The 1920 election saw a significant but not radical change, whereby by moving into a small number of traditionally Democratic areas in Middle Tennessee[6] and expanding turnout due to the Nineteenth Amendment and powerful isolationist sentiment,[7] the Republican Party was able to capture Tennessee's presidential electoral votes and win the governorship and take three congressional seats in addition to the rock-ribbed GOP First and Second Districts. In 1922, with the ebbing of isolationist sympathy and a consequent decline in turnout,[8] the Democratic Party regained the three seats lost in 1920 and also regained Tennessee's governorship under Austin Peay, later to become notorious for attempting to prohibit the teaching of evolution.

During the deeply divided Democratic presidential primaries and 1924 Democratic National Convention, Governor Peay was Tennessee's main representative[9] Despite Tennessee's strong prohibitionist leanings and “Bible Belt” anti-Catholicism, it was thought popular Catholic New York Governor Al Smith would have to carry the state at this convention to win the Democratic nomination.[10] However, in May, Tennessee went to Smith's rival William Gibbs McAdoo, who represented the rural, southern, historically secessionist and prohibitionist wing of the party.[11]

Ultimately neither Smith nor McAdoo could prove acceptable to all Democratic delegates and the nomination went to a compromise candidate in Wall Street lawyer John W. Davis of West Virginia. Although West Virginia was a border state whose limited African-American population had not been disenfranchised as in all former Confederate States,[12] Davis did share the extreme social conservatism of Southern Democrats of his era. He supported poll taxes, opposed women's suffrage, and believed in strictly limited government with no expansion in nonmilitary fields.[13] At the same time a progressive third-party run was predicted as early as winter 1923–24, and ultimately Wisconsin Senator Robert M. La Follette Sr. would be nominated by the “Committee for Progressive Political Action”.[14]

The possibility of large La Follette votes in the Midwest and West tying up the Electoral College led Coolidge and Davis to give major priority to Tennessee and the border states – where La Follette generally had little appeal – in the early fall campaigns.[15] In polling from the beginning of October, Tennessee was without representation, but at the end of that month it was rated as doubtful between Coolidge and Davis,[16] although during the third week of that month Davis himself had said he would carry the state by thirty to fifty thousand votes.[17]

At the beginning of November, a drift to Coolidge was predicted by the New York Times, though Davis was still expected to carry the state by fewer than twenty thousand votes.[18] As it proved, Davis won Tennessee by slightly more than the New York Times expected – with a twenty-eight-thousand vote plurality. Although La Follette would relegate Davis to third in twelve states and carry his home state of Wisconsin, he had very little appeal amongst Tennessee's poll-tax-restricted electorate, with the exception of small nitrate-mining communities in and around Grundy County where he even ran second ahead of Coolidge. It was predicted in the latest polls that La Follette would gain less than ten percent of Tennessee's ballots,[18] and in the end he finished with only 3.55%, making Tennessee La Follette's fourth-weakest state nationwide.

As of 2020, Coolidge remains the last Republican to win the presidency without carrying Tennessee.

Results edit

Results by county edit

1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee by county[20]
County John William Davis
Democratic
John Calvin Coolidge
Republican
Robert Marion La Follette, Sr.
Progressive
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # % # % # %
Anderson 548 25.31% 1,495 69.05% 108 4.99% 7 0.65% -947 -43.74% 2,158
Bedford 1,799 64.60% 925 33.21% 59 2.12% 1 0.07% 874 31.38% 2,784
Benton 1,097 58.92% 714 38.35% 33 1.77% 9 0.97% 383 20.57% 1,853
Bledsoe 485 40.96% 690 58.28% 9 0.76% 0 0.00% -205 -17.31% 1,184
Blount 968 25.51% 2,754 72.57% 35 0.92% 19 1.00% -1,786 -47.06% 3,776
Bradley 999 35.40% 1,779 63.04% 36 1.28% 4 0.28% -780 -27.64% 2,818
Campbell 648 18.25% 2,620 73.78% 283 7.97% 0 0.00% -1,972 -55.53% 3,551
Cannon 581 66.17% 285 32.46% 12 1.37% 0 0.00% 296 33.71% 878
Carroll 1,962 45.98% 2,199 51.54% 94 2.20% 6 0.28% -237 -5.55% 4,261
Carter 551 13.01% 3,657 86.33% 28 0.66% 0 0.00% -3,106 -73.32% 4,236
Cheatham 868 81.20% 181 16.93% 14 1.31% 3 0.56% 687 64.27% 1,066
Chester 758 60.25% 484 38.47% 16 1.27% 0 0.00% 274 21.78% 1,258
Claiborne 1,091 36.86% 1,775 59.97% 94 3.18% 0 0.00% -684 -23.11% 2,960
Clay 668 56.80% 488 41.50% 10 0.85% 5 0.85% 180 15.31% 1,171
Cocke 921 26.35% 2,556 73.13% 18 0.52% 0 0.00% -1,635 -46.78% 3,495
Coffee 1,691 75.52% 488 21.80% 60 2.68% 0 0.00% 1,203 53.73% 2,239
Crockett 1,168 65.80% 587 33.07% 20 1.13% 0 0.00% 581 32.73% 1,775
Cumberland 538 35.63% 885 58.61% 87 5.76% 0 0.00% -347 -22.98% 1,510
Davidson 11,363 65.69% 4,516 26.11% 1,322 7.64% 48 0.56% 6,847 39.58% 17,249
Decatur 877 51.71% 799 47.11% 20 1.18% 0 0.00% 78 4.60% 1,696
DeKalb 1,829 56.16% 1,406 43.17% 22 0.68% 0 0.00% 423 12.99% 3,257
Dickson 1,648 72.38% 516 22.66% 99 4.35% 7 0.61% 1,132 49.71% 2,270
Dyer 2,336 82.57% 478 16.90% 5 0.18% 5 0.35% 1,858 65.68% 2,824
Fayette 1,181 92.63% 65 5.10% 25 1.96% 2 0.31% 1,116 87.53% 1,273
Fentress 420 24.62% 1,197 70.16% 89 5.22% 0 0.00% -777 -45.55% 1,706
Franklin 2,072 73.03% 707 24.92% 58 2.04% 0 0.00% 1,365 48.11% 2,837
Gibson 3,235 74.97% 1,037 24.03% 35 0.81% 4 0.19% 2,198 50.94% 4,311
Giles 2,509 76.94% 677 20.76% 75 2.30% 0 0.00% 1,832 56.18% 3,261
Grainger 651 30.59% 1,464 68.80% 13 0.61% 0 0.00% -813 -38.20% 2,128
Greene 2,586 43.83% 3,282 55.63% 26 0.44% 3 0.10% -696 -11.80% 5,897
Grundy 394 51.37% 173 22.56% 194 25.29% 3 0.78% 200[a] 26.08% 764
Hamblen 1,317 48.56% 1,342 49.48% 53 1.95% 0 0.00% -25 -0.92% 2,712
Hamilton 7,511 44.76% 8,421 50.18% 848 5.05% 0 0.00% -910 -5.42% 16,780
Hancock 305 22.76% 1,028 76.72% 7 0.52% 0 0.00% -723 -53.96% 1,340
Hardeman 1,586 83.52% 254 13.38% 55 2.90% 2 0.21% 1,332 70.14% 1,897
Hardin 618 34.39% 1,175 65.39% 4 0.22% 0 0.00% -557 -31.00% 1,797
Hawkins 1,596 37.58% 2,600 61.22% 51 1.20% 0 0.00% -1,004 -23.64% 4,247
Haywood 1,872 96.15% 60 3.08% 15 0.77% 0 0.00% 1,812 93.07% 1,947
Henderson 1,009 37.68% 1,616 60.34% 51 1.90% 1 0.07% -607 -22.67% 2,677
Henry 2,478 77.36% 562 17.55% 143 4.46% 10 0.62% 1,916 59.82% 3,193
Hickman 922 73.29% 315 25.04% 21 1.67% 0 0.00% 607 48.25% 1,258
Houston 444 76.82% 97 16.78% 33 5.71% 2 0.69% 347 60.03% 576
Humphreys 1,005 79.89% 216 17.17% 37 2.94% 0 0.00% 789 62.72% 1,258
Jackson 1,074 74.69% 354 24.62% 10 0.70% 0 0.00% 720 50.07% 1,438
Jefferson 712 20.68% 2,699 78.39% 32 0.93% 0 0.00% -1,987 -57.71% 3,443
Johnson 254 8.29% 2,799 91.35% 11 0.36% 0 0.00% -2,545 -83.06% 3,064
Knox 6,935 36.53% 10,709 56.41% 1,340 7.06% 0 0.00% -3,774 -19.88% 18,984
Lake 817 89.39% 87 9.52% 8 0.88% 1 0.22% 730 79.87% 913
Lauderdale 1,596 85.44% 242 12.96% 30 1.61% 0 0.00% 1,354 72.48% 1,868
Lawrence 2,185 47.34% 2,375 51.45% 56 1.21% 0 0.00% -190 -4.12% 4,616
Lewis 310 58.94% 191 36.31% 25 4.75% 0 0.00% 119 22.62% 526
Lincoln 2,356 85.67% 357 12.98% 25 0.91% 6 0.44% 1,999 72.69% 2,744
Loudon 703 30.49% 1,533 66.48% 62 2.69% 4 0.35% -830 -35.99% 2,302
Macon 689 27.43% 1,808 71.97% 15 0.60% 0 0.00% -1,119 -44.55% 2,512
Madison 3,422 69.40% 1,110 22.51% 399 8.09% 0 0.00% 2,312 46.89% 4,931
Marion 1,036 46.84% 1,074 48.55% 102 4.61% 0 0.00% -38 -1.72% 2,212
Marshall 1,696 81.34% 349 16.74% 40 1.92% 0 0.00% 1,347 64.60% 2,085
Maury 3,000 76.06% 844 21.40% 100 2.54% 0 0.00% 2,156 54.67% 3,944
McMinn 1,617 35.85% 2,654 58.85% 239 5.30% 0 0.00% -1,037 -22.99% 4,510
McNairy 1,125 40.53% 1,625 58.54% 26 0.94% 0 0.00% -500 -18.01% 2,776
Meigs 574 46.10% 657 52.77% 14 1.12% 0 0.00% -83 -6.67% 1,245
Monroe 2,226 47.18% 2,480 52.56% 12 0.25% 0 0.00% -254 -5.38% 4,718
Montgomery 1,946 66.10% 941 31.96% 51 1.73% 3 0.20% 1,005 34.14% 2,941
Moore 492 91.62% 41 7.64% 4 0.74% 0 0.00% 451 83.99% 537
Morgan 411 23.39% 1,103 62.78% 243 13.83% 0 0.00% -692 -39.39% 1,757
Obion 3,223 85.51% 485 12.87% 61 1.62% 0 0.00% 2,738 72.65% 3,769
Overton 1,532 61.85% 900 36.33% 45 1.82% 0 0.00% 632 25.51% 2,477
Perry 494 64.49% 268 34.99% 4 0.52% 0 0.00% 226 29.50% 766
Pickett 643 48.56% 676 51.06% 5 0.38% 0 0.00% -33 -2.49% 1,324
Polk 1,150 47.31% 1,247 51.30% 34 1.40% 0 0.00% -97 -3.99% 2,431
Putnam 2,474 61.47% 1,489 36.99% 48 1.19% 7 0.35% 985 24.47% 4,018
Rhea 1,169 48.59% 1,168 48.55% 65 2.70% 2 0.17% 1 0.04% 2,404
Roane 795 30.75% 1,635 63.25% 139 5.38% 8 0.62% -840 -32.50% 2,577
Robertson 1,645 85.50% 229 11.90% 38 1.98% 6 0.62% 1,416 73.60% 1,918
Rutherford 2,137 75.01% 680 23.87% 32 1.12% 0 0.00% 1,457 51.14% 2,849
Scott 274 13.22% 1,611 77.71% 188 9.07% 0 0.00% -1,337 -64.50% 2,073
Sequatchie 374 59.74% 247 39.46% 5 0.80% 0 0.00% 127 20.29% 626
Sevier 448 11.23% 3,517 88.17% 24 0.60% 0 0.00% -3,069 -76.94% 3,989
Shelby 13,696 59.37% 7,369 31.95% 2,002 8.68% 0 0.00% 6,327 27.43% 23,067
Smith 1,701 69.86% 700 28.75% 22 0.90% 6 0.49% 1,001 41.11% 2,429
Stewart 1,369 82.57% 264 15.92% 25 1.51% 0 0.00% 1,105 66.65% 1,658
Sullivan 3,313 58.90% 2,247 39.95% 65 1.16% 0 0.00% 1,066 18.95% 5,625
Sumner 2,631 84.25% 435 13.93% 57 1.83% 0 0.00% 2,196 70.32% 3,123
Tipton 1,917 87.98% 218 10.00% 40 1.84% 2 0.18% 1,699 77.97% 2,177
Trousdale 684 82.31% 143 17.21% 4 0.48% 0 0.00% 541 65.10% 831
Unicoi 381 20.02% 1,381 72.57% 135 7.09% 3 0.32% -1,000 -52.55% 1,900
Union 368 18.73% 1,540 78.37% 57 2.90% 0 0.00% -1,172 -59.64% 1,965
Van Buren 357 73.91% 123 25.47% 3 0.62% 0 0.00% 234 48.45% 483
Warren 1,356 72.17% 490 26.08% 23 1.22% 5 0.53% 866 46.09% 1,874
Washington 1,839 35.65% 3,243 62.87% 76 1.47% 0 0.00% -1,404 -27.22% 5,158
Wayne 448 24.11% 1,398 75.24% 12 0.65% 0 0.00% -950 -51.13% 1,858
Weakley 3,149 72.78% 1,154 26.67% 24 0.55% 0 0.00% 1,995 46.11% 4,327
White 1,162 70.17% 452 27.29% 42 2.54% 0 0.00% 710 42.87% 1,656
Williamson 1,626 84.86% 242 12.63% 48 2.51% 0 0.00% 1,384 72.23% 1,916
Wilson 2,043 76.78% 580 21.80% 26 0.98% 6 0.45% 1,463 54.98% 2,655
Totals 158,682 52.82% 130,728 43.52% 10,610 3.53% 200 0.13% 27,954 9.30% 300,220

Notes edit

  1. ^ In this county where La Follette ran second ahead of Coolidge, margin given is Davis vote minus La Follette vote and percentage margin Davis percentage minus La Follette percentage.

References edit

  1. ^ Wright, John K.; ‘Voting Habits in the United States: A Note on Two Maps’; Geographical Review, vol. 22, no. 4 (October 1932), pp. 666-672
  2. ^ Key (Jr.), Valdimer Orlando; Southern Politics in State and Nation (New York, 1949), pp. 282-283
  3. ^ Lyons, William; Scheb (II), John M. and Stair Billy; Government and Politics in Tennessee, pp. 183-184 ISBN 1572331410
  4. ^ Phillips, Kevin P.; The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 208, 210 ISBN 9780691163246
  5. ^ Grantham, Dewey W.; ‘Tennessee and Twentieth-Century American Politics’; Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. 54, No. 3 (Fall 1995), pp. 210-229
  6. ^ Reichard, Gary W.; ‘The Aberration of 1920: An Analysis of Harding's Victory in Tennessee’; The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 36, No. 1 (February 1970), pp. 33-49
  7. ^ Phillips; The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 211
  8. ^ Phillips; The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 287
  9. ^ ‘Who's Who Among the Convention Leaders: Democratic Big Guns, Including Favorite Sons and Dark Horses, From All Parts of the Country, Will Be at Madison Square Garden’; New York Times, June 22, 1924, p. XX5
  10. ^ ‘See McAdoo's Hopes Go as Smith's Gain: Democratic Leaders Predict a Deadlock on Nominations for President’; New York Times, February 12, 1924, p. 3
  11. ^ Price, Harry N.; ‘Compromise Seen Democrats’ Choice; Deadlock Possible: No Leading Candidate Will Win, Shrewd Observers Declare’; The Washington Post, May 25, 1924, p. 1
  12. ^ Ranney, Joseph A.; In the Wake of Slavery: Civil War, Civil Rights, and the Reconstruction of Southern Law; p. 141 ISBN 0275989720
  13. ^ Newman, Roger K.; The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law, p. 153 ISBN 0300113005
  14. ^ Richardson, Danny G.; Others: "Fighting Bob" La Follette and the Progressive Movement: Third-Party Politics in the 1920s, pp. 180-183 ISBN 0595481264
  15. ^ Price, Harry N.; ‘Both Parties Count on Tennessee and Kentucky Victories: Vote of Border States Important if La Follette Ties Up Electoral College’; The Washington Post, September 15, 1924, p. 3
  16. ^ Henning, Arthur Sears; ‘Coolidge Majority Is Forecast at 33 Votes As Minimum: Likely to Reach 180 or 190 Electoral Ballots, Writer Declares’; The Washington Post, October 26, 1924, p. 1
  17. ^ ‘Third Party Victory in 6 to 8 States Expected by Davis: He Holds Democrats Have Nothing to Fear, as Only Menace Is to Republican Party’; Special to The New York Times, October 20, 1924, p. 1
  18. ^ a b ‘Tennessee: Correspondents See Drift to Coolidge’; Special to the New York Times
  19. ^ "1924 Presidential General Election Results – Tennessee". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  20. ^ Tennessee Secretary of State, Division of Elections (untitled)

1924, united, states, presidential, election, tennessee, main, article, 1924, united, states, presidential, election, took, place, november, 1924, part, 1924, united, states, presidential, election, tennessee, voters, chose, representatives, electors, electora. Main article 1924 United States presidential election The 1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 4 1924 as part of the 1924 United States presidential election Tennessee voters chose 12 representatives or electors to the Electoral College who voted for president and vice president 1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee 1920 November 4 1924 1928 All 12 Tennessee votes to the Electoral College Nominee John W Davis Calvin CoolidgeParty Democratic RepublicanHome state West Virginia MassachusettsRunning mate Charles W Bryan Charles G DawesElectoral vote 12 0Popular vote 158 682 130 728Percentage 52 86 43 54 County Results Davis 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Coolidge 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 President before electionCalvin CoolidgeRepublican Elected President Calvin CoolidgeRepublicanFor over a century after the Civil War Tennessee was divided according to political loyalties established in that war Unionist regions covering almost all of East Tennessee Kentucky Pennyroyal allied Macon County and the five West Tennessee Highland Rim counties of Carroll Henderson McNairy Hardin and Wayne 1 voted Republican generally by landslide margins as they saw the Democratic Party as the war party who had forced them into a war they did not wish to fight 2 Contrariwise the rest of Middle and West Tennessee who had supported and driven the state s secession was equally fiercely Democratic as it associated the Republicans with Reconstruction 3 After the disfranchisement of the state s African American population by a poll tax was largely complete in the 1890s 4 the Democratic Party was certain of winning statewide elections if united 5 although unlike the Deep South Republicans would almost always gain thirty to forty percent of the statewide vote from mountain and Highland Rim support When the Democratic Party was bitterly divided the Republicans did win the governorship in 1910 and 1912 but did not gain at other levels The 1920 election saw a significant but not radical change whereby by moving into a small number of traditionally Democratic areas in Middle Tennessee 6 and expanding turnout due to the Nineteenth Amendment and powerful isolationist sentiment 7 the Republican Party was able to capture Tennessee s presidential electoral votes and win the governorship and take three congressional seats in addition to the rock ribbed GOP First and Second Districts In 1922 with the ebbing of isolationist sympathy and a consequent decline in turnout 8 the Democratic Party regained the three seats lost in 1920 and also regained Tennessee s governorship under Austin Peay later to become notorious for attempting to prohibit the teaching of evolution During the deeply divided Democratic presidential primaries and 1924 Democratic National Convention Governor Peay was Tennessee s main representative 9 Despite Tennessee s strong prohibitionist leanings and Bible Belt anti Catholicism it was thought popular Catholic New York Governor Al Smith would have to carry the state at this convention to win the Democratic nomination 10 However in May Tennessee went to Smith s rival William Gibbs McAdoo who represented the rural southern historically secessionist and prohibitionist wing of the party 11 Ultimately neither Smith nor McAdoo could prove acceptable to all Democratic delegates and the nomination went to a compromise candidate in Wall Street lawyer John W Davis of West Virginia Although West Virginia was a border state whose limited African American population had not been disenfranchised as in all former Confederate States 12 Davis did share the extreme social conservatism of Southern Democrats of his era He supported poll taxes opposed women s suffrage and believed in strictly limited government with no expansion in nonmilitary fields 13 At the same time a progressive third party run was predicted as early as winter 1923 24 and ultimately Wisconsin Senator Robert M La Follette Sr would be nominated by the Committee for Progressive Political Action 14 The possibility of large La Follette votes in the Midwest and West tying up the Electoral College led Coolidge and Davis to give major priority to Tennessee and the border states where La Follette generally had little appeal in the early fall campaigns 15 In polling from the beginning of October Tennessee was without representation but at the end of that month it was rated as doubtful between Coolidge and Davis 16 although during the third week of that month Davis himself had said he would carry the state by thirty to fifty thousand votes 17 At the beginning of November a drift to Coolidge was predicted by the New York Times though Davis was still expected to carry the state by fewer than twenty thousand votes 18 As it proved Davis won Tennessee by slightly more than the New York Times expected with a twenty eight thousand vote plurality Although La Follette would relegate Davis to third in twelve states and carry his home state of Wisconsin he had very little appeal amongst Tennessee s poll tax restricted electorate with the exception of small nitrate mining communities in and around Grundy County where he even ran second ahead of Coolidge It was predicted in the latest polls that La Follette would gain less than ten percent of Tennessee s ballots 18 and in the end he finished with only 3 55 making Tennessee La Follette s fourth weakest state nationwide As of 2020 update Coolidge remains the last Republican to win the presidency without carrying Tennessee Contents 1 Results 1 1 Results by county 2 Notes 3 ReferencesResults editPresidential Candidate Running Mate Party Electoral Vote EV Popular Vote PV John W Davis of West Virginia Charles W Bryan Democratic 12 19 158 682 52 86 Calvin Coolidge Charles G Dawes Republican 0 130 728 43 54 Robert M La Follette Burton K Wheeler Progressive 0 10 610 3 53 Herman P Faris Marie C Brehm Prohibition 0 100 0 03 Gilbert Nations Charles Hiram Randall American 0 100 0 03 Results by county edit 1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee by county 20 County John William DavisDemocratic John Calvin CoolidgeRepublican Robert Marion La Follette Sr Progressive Various candidatesOther parties Margin Total votes cast Anderson 548 25 31 1 495 69 05 108 4 99 7 0 65 947 43 74 2 158Bedford 1 799 64 60 925 33 21 59 2 12 1 0 07 874 31 38 2 784Benton 1 097 58 92 714 38 35 33 1 77 9 0 97 383 20 57 1 853Bledsoe 485 40 96 690 58 28 9 0 76 0 0 00 205 17 31 1 184Blount 968 25 51 2 754 72 57 35 0 92 19 1 00 1 786 47 06 3 776Bradley 999 35 40 1 779 63 04 36 1 28 4 0 28 780 27 64 2 818Campbell 648 18 25 2 620 73 78 283 7 97 0 0 00 1 972 55 53 3 551Cannon 581 66 17 285 32 46 12 1 37 0 0 00 296 33 71 878Carroll 1 962 45 98 2 199 51 54 94 2 20 6 0 28 237 5 55 4 261Carter 551 13 01 3 657 86 33 28 0 66 0 0 00 3 106 73 32 4 236Cheatham 868 81 20 181 16 93 14 1 31 3 0 56 687 64 27 1 066Chester 758 60 25 484 38 47 16 1 27 0 0 00 274 21 78 1 258Claiborne 1 091 36 86 1 775 59 97 94 3 18 0 0 00 684 23 11 2 960Clay 668 56 80 488 41 50 10 0 85 5 0 85 180 15 31 1 171Cocke 921 26 35 2 556 73 13 18 0 52 0 0 00 1 635 46 78 3 495Coffee 1 691 75 52 488 21 80 60 2 68 0 0 00 1 203 53 73 2 239Crockett 1 168 65 80 587 33 07 20 1 13 0 0 00 581 32 73 1 775Cumberland 538 35 63 885 58 61 87 5 76 0 0 00 347 22 98 1 510Davidson 11 363 65 69 4 516 26 11 1 322 7 64 48 0 56 6 847 39 58 17 249Decatur 877 51 71 799 47 11 20 1 18 0 0 00 78 4 60 1 696DeKalb 1 829 56 16 1 406 43 17 22 0 68 0 0 00 423 12 99 3 257Dickson 1 648 72 38 516 22 66 99 4 35 7 0 61 1 132 49 71 2 270Dyer 2 336 82 57 478 16 90 5 0 18 5 0 35 1 858 65 68 2 824Fayette 1 181 92 63 65 5 10 25 1 96 2 0 31 1 116 87 53 1 273Fentress 420 24 62 1 197 70 16 89 5 22 0 0 00 777 45 55 1 706Franklin 2 072 73 03 707 24 92 58 2 04 0 0 00 1 365 48 11 2 837Gibson 3 235 74 97 1 037 24 03 35 0 81 4 0 19 2 198 50 94 4 311Giles 2 509 76 94 677 20 76 75 2 30 0 0 00 1 832 56 18 3 261Grainger 651 30 59 1 464 68 80 13 0 61 0 0 00 813 38 20 2 128Greene 2 586 43 83 3 282 55 63 26 0 44 3 0 10 696 11 80 5 897Grundy 394 51 37 173 22 56 194 25 29 3 0 78 200 a 26 08 764Hamblen 1 317 48 56 1 342 49 48 53 1 95 0 0 00 25 0 92 2 712Hamilton 7 511 44 76 8 421 50 18 848 5 05 0 0 00 910 5 42 16 780Hancock 305 22 76 1 028 76 72 7 0 52 0 0 00 723 53 96 1 340Hardeman 1 586 83 52 254 13 38 55 2 90 2 0 21 1 332 70 14 1 897Hardin 618 34 39 1 175 65 39 4 0 22 0 0 00 557 31 00 1 797Hawkins 1 596 37 58 2 600 61 22 51 1 20 0 0 00 1 004 23 64 4 247Haywood 1 872 96 15 60 3 08 15 0 77 0 0 00 1 812 93 07 1 947Henderson 1 009 37 68 1 616 60 34 51 1 90 1 0 07 607 22 67 2 677Henry 2 478 77 36 562 17 55 143 4 46 10 0 62 1 916 59 82 3 193Hickman 922 73 29 315 25 04 21 1 67 0 0 00 607 48 25 1 258Houston 444 76 82 97 16 78 33 5 71 2 0 69 347 60 03 576Humphreys 1 005 79 89 216 17 17 37 2 94 0 0 00 789 62 72 1 258Jackson 1 074 74 69 354 24 62 10 0 70 0 0 00 720 50 07 1 438Jefferson 712 20 68 2 699 78 39 32 0 93 0 0 00 1 987 57 71 3 443Johnson 254 8 29 2 799 91 35 11 0 36 0 0 00 2 545 83 06 3 064Knox 6 935 36 53 10 709 56 41 1 340 7 06 0 0 00 3 774 19 88 18 984Lake 817 89 39 87 9 52 8 0 88 1 0 22 730 79 87 913Lauderdale 1 596 85 44 242 12 96 30 1 61 0 0 00 1 354 72 48 1 868Lawrence 2 185 47 34 2 375 51 45 56 1 21 0 0 00 190 4 12 4 616Lewis 310 58 94 191 36 31 25 4 75 0 0 00 119 22 62 526Lincoln 2 356 85 67 357 12 98 25 0 91 6 0 44 1 999 72 69 2 744Loudon 703 30 49 1 533 66 48 62 2 69 4 0 35 830 35 99 2 302Macon 689 27 43 1 808 71 97 15 0 60 0 0 00 1 119 44 55 2 512Madison 3 422 69 40 1 110 22 51 399 8 09 0 0 00 2 312 46 89 4 931Marion 1 036 46 84 1 074 48 55 102 4 61 0 0 00 38 1 72 2 212Marshall 1 696 81 34 349 16 74 40 1 92 0 0 00 1 347 64 60 2 085Maury 3 000 76 06 844 21 40 100 2 54 0 0 00 2 156 54 67 3 944McMinn 1 617 35 85 2 654 58 85 239 5 30 0 0 00 1 037 22 99 4 510McNairy 1 125 40 53 1 625 58 54 26 0 94 0 0 00 500 18 01 2 776Meigs 574 46 10 657 52 77 14 1 12 0 0 00 83 6 67 1 245Monroe 2 226 47 18 2 480 52 56 12 0 25 0 0 00 254 5 38 4 718Montgomery 1 946 66 10 941 31 96 51 1 73 3 0 20 1 005 34 14 2 941Moore 492 91 62 41 7 64 4 0 74 0 0 00 451 83 99 537Morgan 411 23 39 1 103 62 78 243 13 83 0 0 00 692 39 39 1 757Obion 3 223 85 51 485 12 87 61 1 62 0 0 00 2 738 72 65 3 769Overton 1 532 61 85 900 36 33 45 1 82 0 0 00 632 25 51 2 477Perry 494 64 49 268 34 99 4 0 52 0 0 00 226 29 50 766Pickett 643 48 56 676 51 06 5 0 38 0 0 00 33 2 49 1 324Polk 1 150 47 31 1 247 51 30 34 1 40 0 0 00 97 3 99 2 431Putnam 2 474 61 47 1 489 36 99 48 1 19 7 0 35 985 24 47 4 018Rhea 1 169 48 59 1 168 48 55 65 2 70 2 0 17 1 0 04 2 404Roane 795 30 75 1 635 63 25 139 5 38 8 0 62 840 32 50 2 577Robertson 1 645 85 50 229 11 90 38 1 98 6 0 62 1 416 73 60 1 918Rutherford 2 137 75 01 680 23 87 32 1 12 0 0 00 1 457 51 14 2 849Scott 274 13 22 1 611 77 71 188 9 07 0 0 00 1 337 64 50 2 073Sequatchie 374 59 74 247 39 46 5 0 80 0 0 00 127 20 29 626Sevier 448 11 23 3 517 88 17 24 0 60 0 0 00 3 069 76 94 3 989Shelby 13 696 59 37 7 369 31 95 2 002 8 68 0 0 00 6 327 27 43 23 067Smith 1 701 69 86 700 28 75 22 0 90 6 0 49 1 001 41 11 2 429Stewart 1 369 82 57 264 15 92 25 1 51 0 0 00 1 105 66 65 1 658Sullivan 3 313 58 90 2 247 39 95 65 1 16 0 0 00 1 066 18 95 5 625Sumner 2 631 84 25 435 13 93 57 1 83 0 0 00 2 196 70 32 3 123Tipton 1 917 87 98 218 10 00 40 1 84 2 0 18 1 699 77 97 2 177Trousdale 684 82 31 143 17 21 4 0 48 0 0 00 541 65 10 831Unicoi 381 20 02 1 381 72 57 135 7 09 3 0 32 1 000 52 55 1 900Union 368 18 73 1 540 78 37 57 2 90 0 0 00 1 172 59 64 1 965Van Buren 357 73 91 123 25 47 3 0 62 0 0 00 234 48 45 483Warren 1 356 72 17 490 26 08 23 1 22 5 0 53 866 46 09 1 874Washington 1 839 35 65 3 243 62 87 76 1 47 0 0 00 1 404 27 22 5 158Wayne 448 24 11 1 398 75 24 12 0 65 0 0 00 950 51 13 1 858Weakley 3 149 72 78 1 154 26 67 24 0 55 0 0 00 1 995 46 11 4 327White 1 162 70 17 452 27 29 42 2 54 0 0 00 710 42 87 1 656Williamson 1 626 84 86 242 12 63 48 2 51 0 0 00 1 384 72 23 1 916Wilson 2 043 76 78 580 21 80 26 0 98 6 0 45 1 463 54 98 2 655Totals 158 682 52 82 130 728 43 52 10 610 3 53 200 0 13 27 954 9 30 300 220Notes edit In this county where La Follette ran second ahead of Coolidge margin given is Davis vote minus La Follette vote and percentage margin Davis percentage minus La Follette percentage References edit Wright John K Voting Habits in the United States A Note on Two Maps Geographical Review vol 22 no 4 October 1932 pp 666 672 Key Jr Valdimer Orlando Southern Politics in State and Nation New York 1949 pp 282 283 Lyons William Scheb II John M and Stair Billy Government and Politics in Tennessee pp 183 184 ISBN 1572331410 Phillips Kevin P The Emerging Republican Majority pp 208 210 ISBN 9780691163246 Grantham Dewey W Tennessee and Twentieth Century American Politics Tennessee Historical Quarterly Vol 54 No 3 Fall 1995 pp 210 229 Reichard Gary W The Aberration of 1920 An Analysis of Harding s Victory in Tennessee The Journal of Southern History Vol 36 No 1 February 1970 pp 33 49 Phillips The Emerging Republican Majority p 211 Phillips The Emerging Republican Majority p 287 Who s Who Among the Convention Leaders Democratic Big Guns Including Favorite Sons and Dark Horses From All Parts of the Country Will Be at Madison Square Garden New York Times June 22 1924 p XX5 See McAdoo s Hopes Go as Smith s Gain Democratic Leaders Predict a Deadlock on Nominations for President New York Times February 12 1924 p 3 Price Harry N Compromise Seen Democrats Choice Deadlock Possible No Leading Candidate Will Win Shrewd Observers Declare The Washington Post May 25 1924 p 1 Ranney Joseph A In the Wake of Slavery Civil War Civil Rights and the Reconstruction of Southern Law p 141 ISBN 0275989720 Newman Roger K The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law p 153 ISBN 0300113005 Richardson Danny G Others Fighting Bob La Follette and the Progressive Movement Third Party Politics in the 1920s pp 180 183 ISBN 0595481264 Price Harry N Both Parties Count on Tennessee and Kentucky Victories Vote of Border States Important if La Follette Ties Up Electoral College The Washington Post September 15 1924 p 3 Henning Arthur Sears Coolidge Majority Is Forecast at 33 Votes As Minimum Likely to Reach 180 or 190 Electoral Ballots Writer Declares The Washington Post October 26 1924 p 1 Third Party Victory in 6 to 8 States Expected by Davis He Holds Democrats Have Nothing to Fear as Only Menace Is to Republican Party Special to The New York Times October 20 1924 p 1 a b Tennessee Correspondents See Drift to Coolidge Special to the New York Times 1924 Presidential General Election Results Tennessee Dave Leip s U S Election Atlas Tennessee Secretary of State Division of Elections untitled Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1924 United States presidential election in Tennessee amp oldid 1196669995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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