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The Presidential Election of 1916. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-0965-8. Miller, Sally M. "The Socialist Party and the Negro, 1901–20," Journal of Negro History 56 (July 1971): 220–229. online; Oks, David. "The Election of 1916, 'Negrowumpism,' and the Black Defection from the Republican Party."
As Wilson narrowly won re-election nationwide, Massachusetts ended up weighing in as about 7% more Republican than the national average. To date, this is the last time that the town of Granville voted Democratic. Wilson is the last Democrat to win a presidential election while losing Massachusetts.
From March 7 to June 6, 1916, voters of the Democratic Party chose its nominee for president in the 1916 United States presidential election. [1] Incumbent President Woodrow Wilson was selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 1916 Democratic National Convention held from June 14 to June 16, 1916, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Democratic President Woodrow Wilson defeated the Republican nominee, former Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes, in the presidential election. [3] Hughes won the Republican nomination on the third ballot of the 1916 Republican National Convention, defeating several other candidates. Republicans won several Northern states, but Wilson's ...
Hughes in Winona, Minnesota, during the 1916 presidential campaign campaigning on the Olympian. Taft and Roosevelt endured a bitter split during Taft's presidency, and Roosevelt challenged Taft for the 1912 Republican presidential nomination. Taft won re-nomination, but Roosevelt ran on the ticket of a third party, the Progressive Party. [39]
The 1912 presidential election was an epochal disaster for the Republican Party, which had won eleven of the previous thirteen elections, a period of dominance only interrupted by the two non-consecutive terms of Grover Cleveland and unequaled before or since in the history of the
1916 US presidential election; United States House of Representatives elections in California, 1916; 1916 Minnesota gubernatorial election; 1916 New York state election; United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, 1916; 1916 South Carolina gubernatorial election; 1916 United States House of Representatives elections
1916 United States presidential election in Connecticut [1] Party Candidate Running mate Popular vote Electoral vote Count % Count % Republican: Charles Evans Hughes of New York: Charles Warren Fairbanks of Indiana: 106,514: 49.80%: 7: 100.00%: Democratic: Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey: Thomas Riley Marshall of Indiana: 99,786 46.66% 0 0.00% ...