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1872–73 United States House of Representatives elections

The 1872–73 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between June 4, 1872, and April 7, 1873. Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 43rd United States Congress convened on December 1, 1873. They coincided with the re-election of United States President Ulysses S. Grant. The congressional reapportionment based on the 1870 United States census increased the number of House seats to 292.

Grant's Republican Party increased its majority greatly, partly at the expense of the opposition Democratic Party and partly by adding 49 new seats to the House. The proindustry outlook of the Republicans appealed to many Northern voters, especially as the post-war economy exploded, and this allowed the party to flourish as the Industrial Revolution grew more widespread. The Republicans also benefited from a continuing association with victory in the American Civil War, as well as disarray amongst Democratic leadership.

Election summaries

Following the 1870 census, the House was reapportioned, initially adding 40 seats, followed by a subsequent amendment to the apportionment act adding another seat to 9 states, resulting in a total increase of 49 seats. No states lost seats, 10 states had no change, 13 states gained 1 seat each, 9 states gained 2 seats, 3 states gained 3 seats, 1 state gained 4 seats, and 1 state gained 5 seats. Prior to the supplemental act, two states (New Hampshire and Vermont) had each lost 1 seat. This was the first reapportionment after the repeal of the Three-fifths Compromise by the 14th Amendment.

This would prove the last time until 1966 that a Republican won a House seat in Arkansas.

Election dates

In 1845, Congress passed a law providing for a uniform nationwide date for choosing Presidential electors. This law did not affect election dates for Congress, which remained within the jurisdiction of State governments, but over time, the States moved their Congressional elections to this date as well. In 1872–73, there were still 9 states with earlier election dates, and 2 states with later election dates:

Special elections

|- ! | Julius L. Strong | | 1869 | | Incumbent died September 7, 1872.<br/>New member elected November 5, 1872.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap |

  • : 1873
  • : 1872
  • : 1873
  • : 1873
  • : 1873
  • : 1872

Alabama

|- ! | Benjamin S. Turner | | Republican | 1870 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Liberal Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | Charles W. Buckley | | Republican | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap |

|- ! | William Anderson Handley | | Democratic | 1868 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | Charles Hays | | Republican | 1868 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Peter M. Dox | | Democratic | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Democratic hold. | nowrap |

|- ! | Joseph Humphrey Sloss | | Democratic | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! rowspan=2 | <br/> | colspan=3 | None | | New seat.<br/>Republican gain. | rowspan=2 nowrap |

|- | colspan=3 | None | | New seat.<br/>Republican gain.

Arkansas

|- ! | James M. Hanks | | Democratic | 1870 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | Oliver P. Snyder | | Republican | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap | |- ! | Thomas Boles | | Republican | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap | |- ! | colspan=3 | None | | Vacant since 32nd Congress (Civil War and Reconstruction)<br/>Liberal Republican gain. | nowrap |

California

A new seat was added, following the 1870 U.S. census, bringing the delegation up from three to four Representatives.

Connecticut

|- ! | Joseph R. Hawley | | 1872 <small>(special)</small> | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Stephen Kellogg | | 1869 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Henry H. Starkweather | | 1867 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | William Barnum | | 1867 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

Delaware

The election was held November 5, 1872.

|- ! | Benjamin T. Biggs | | Democratic | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

Florida

Florida gained a second seat after the 1870 census, but delayed districting until 1874, electing both Representatives at-large for this election.

Georgia

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

In the newly formed , George A. Sheridan (Liberal Republican) beat P. B. S. Pinchback (Republican), the first black Governor of Louisiana. Pinchback challenged the election and it was settled in February 1875, in Sheridan's favor, only one month before the end of the Congress.

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

|- ! | George E. Harris | | Republican | 1869 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Democratic gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | Joseph L. Morphis | | Republican | 1869 | | Incumbent lost renomination.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap |

|- ! | Henry W. Barry | | Republican | 1869 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New district.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! rowspan=2 | | Legrand W. Perce | | Republican | 1869 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican loss. | nowrap rowspan=2 | |- | George C. McKee<br/> | | Republican | 1869 | Incumbent re-elected.

|- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New district.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

Missouri

Nebraska

|- ! | John Taffe | | Republican | 1866 | | Incumbent retired.<br>Republican hold. | nowrap |

Nevada

The election was held November 5, 1872.

|- ! | Charles West Kendall | | Democratic | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

New Hampshire

Elections were held March 11, 1873, After the March 4th beginning of the term.

|- ! | Ellery Albee Hibbard | | Democratic | 1871 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | Samuel Newell Bell | | Democratic | 1871 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | Hosea W. Parker | | Democratic | 1871 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

New Jersey

|- ! | John W. Hazelton | | Republican | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap | |- ! | Samuel C. Forker | | Democratic | 1870 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | John T. Bird | | Democratic | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | John Hill | | Republican | 1866 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Democratic gain. | nowrap | |- ! | George A. Halsey | | Republican | 1870 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap | |- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New seat.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap | |- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New seat.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

New York

North Carolina

Ohio

After redistricting and eleven retirements, only four of the nineteen incumbents were re-elected.

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

South Carolina

Tennessee

|- ! | Horace Maynard<br/> | | Republican | 1865 | | New district.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | Roderick R. Butler | | Republican | 1867 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Abraham E. Garrett<br/> | | Democratic | 1870 | | Incumbent lost re-election as an Independent.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New seat.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | John M. Bright | | Democratic | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Edward I. Golladay | | Democratic | 1870 | |Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | Washington C. Whitthorne | | Democratic | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Robert P. Caldwell | | Democratic | 1870 | |Incumbent lost renomination.<br/>Democratic hold. | nowrap |

|- ! | William W. Vaughan | | Democratic | 1870 | |Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | |New seat.<br/>Republican gain. | nowrap |

Texas

Vermont

|- ! | Charles W. Willard | | Republican | 1868 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

|- ! | Luke P. Poland | | Republican | 1866 | Incumbent re-elected | nowrap |

|- ! | Worthington C. Smith | | Republican | 1866 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap |

Virginia

|- ! rowspan=2 | | John Critcher | | 1870 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Democratic loss. | nowrap rowspan=2 | |- | Elliott M. Braxton<br/><small>Redistricted from the </small> | | 1870 | | Incumbent lost re-election.<br/>Republican gain.

|- ! | James H. Platt Jr. | | 1869 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap | |- ! | Charles H. Porter | | 1869 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Republican hold. | nowrap | |- ! | William H. H. Stowell | | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap | |- ! | Richard T. W. Duke | | Conservative | 1870 <small>(special)</small> | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Democratic gain. | nowrap | |- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New seat.<br/>Democratic gain. | nowrap | |- ! | John T. Harris<br/><small>Redistricted from the </small> | | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap | |- ! | colspan=3 | None (new district) | | New seat.<br/>Democratic gain. | nowrap | |- ! | William Terry<br/><small>Redistricted from the </small> | | 1870 | | Incumbent retired.<br/>Democratic hold. | nowrap |

West Virginia

|- ! | John J. Davis | | Democratic | 1870 | | Incumbent re-elected as an Independent Democrat.<br/>Independent Democratic gain. | nowrap |

|- ! | James McGrew | | Republican | 1868 | | Incumbent retired.<br>Republican hold. | nowrap |

|- ! | Frank Hereford | | Democratic | 1870 | Incumbent re-elected. | nowrap |

Wisconsin

Wisconsin elected eight members of congress on Election Day, November 5, 1872. Two seats were newly added in reapportionment after the 1870 census.

Non-voting delegates

See also

Notes

References

Bibliography

External links