E's Flashcards
Election of 1796
The second election for president and vice president of the United States, in which John Adams, the Federalist candidate, won the highest number of electoral votes, thereby becoming president; Thomas Jefferson, who ran under the opposition banner of e Republicans, received the second-highest number of electoral votes and thereby became vice president
Election of 1800
The election in which Republicans Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr won handily against Federalists John Adams and Charles Pinckney; however, because both received the same number of electoral votes, the selection was left up to the House of Representatives; after a lengthy deadlock, Alexander Hamilton threw his support to Jefferson, and Burr accepted the vice presidency
Election of 1808
The election in which Republican James Madison won the election over Federalist Charles Pinckney, but the Federalists gained seats in both houses of the Congress
Election of 1824
The first national election in which members of the Electoral College were now almost universally elected by the people, rather than by the state legislatures, as in the early days
Election of 1828
A national election characterized by a dirty campaign in which Adam’s supporters, calling themselves National Republicans, accused Jackson of adultery and the murder of several militiamen who had been executed for desertion during he war of 1812; Jackson’s followers, then called the Democratic Republicans, in turn defamed Adams and his programs and accused him of extravagance with public funds; Jackson won 56% of the popular vote and swept 178 of the 261 electoral votes; John Calhoun was elected vice president
Election of 1832
The national election in which President Jackson soundly defeated Henry Clay in the presidential race and considered his victory a mandate from the people to destroy the Bank of the United States
Election of 1836
The national election in which Jackson’s hand-picked Democratic successor, Martin Van Buren of New York, won, defeating three Whig Party candidates
Election of 1840
An election with the largest voter turnout to date in which Whig candidate William Henry Harrison won a narrow popular victory, but swept 80 percent of the electoral vote
Election of 1844
An election that involved the key issues of the annexation of Texas and Oregon, and slavery; the winner of the presidential race was Tennessee politician James K. Polk, who was a staunch Jacksonian and opposed protective tariffs and a national bank but, most importantly, favored territorial expansion, including not only annexation of Texas but also occupation of all the Oregon country
Election of 1848
An election in which both parties sought to avoid as much as possible the hot issue of slavery in the territories; Whig candidate General Zachary Taylor, whose fame in the Mexican War made him a strong candidate, was elected president (although he knew nothing of politics, had never voted, liked to think of himself as above politics, and took no position at all with respect to slavery in the territories).
Election of 1856
An election in which Democratic nominee James Buchanan of Pennsylvania won the presidency; his chief qualification for the nomination was that during the slavery squabbles he had been out of the country as American minister to Great Britain and, therefore, had not been forced to take public positions on controversial issues
Election of 1860
The election in which Abraham Lincoln carried the North, led in popular votes, and, though he was short of a majority in that category, he did have the needed majority in electoral votes and was elected president
Election of 1864
The election in which incumbent President Lincoln ran on the ticket of the National Union party (essentialy the Republican Party with loyal or “war” Democrats) with vice-presidential candidate Andrew Johnson, a loyal Democrat from Tennessee; following the news that General Sherman had taken Atlanta, they won a resounding victory
Election of 1868
An election in which the Republican convention, dominated by the Radicals, drew up a platform endorsing Radical Reconstruction and nominated Ulysses S. Grant (who had no political record and whose views - if any - on national issues were unknown) as their presidential candidate. Despite his enormous popularity as a war hero, Grant won the presidency by only a narrow margin
Election of 1876
An election that was disputed when Democratic candidate Samuel Tilden won the popular vote and led Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayes in the electoral vote 184 to 165; however, 185 electoral votes were needed for election; twenty votes from the three Southern states still occupied by federal troops and run by Republican governments, were disputed, resulting in a vote by a specially created commission of Congress to give all twenty disputed votes - and the election - to Hayes