1820 New York gubernatorial election

The 1820 New York gubernatorial election was held in April 1820 to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of New York.

1820 New York gubernatorial election

← 1817 (special) April 1820 1822 →
 
Nominee DeWitt Clinton Daniel D. Tompkins
Party Democratic-Republican Democratic-Republican
Alliance Clintonian Anti-Clintonian
Popular vote 47,447 45,990
Percentage 50.78% 49.22%

County results
Clinton:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Tompkins:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

Governor before election

DeWitt Clinton
Democratic-Republican

Elected Governor

DeWitt Clinton
Democratic-Republican

Incumbent Governor DeWitt Clinton was re-elected to a second term in office over Daniel D. Tompkins, his predecessor and the Vice President of the United States.

Background

edit

In 1816, Governor Daniel D. Tompkins was elected Vice President of the United States as the running mate of James Monroe and resigned the office of governor. DeWitt Clinton was the sole candidate for the 1817 special election to succeed him, despite opposition from the Tammany Hall organization.

This was the first election where the Governor of New York was elected to serve a 2 year term. A practice that would continue until 1876 when it was expanded back to a 3 year term as used previously.

General election

edit

Candidates

edit

The Clintonian faction of the Democratic-Republican Party nominated incumbent DeWitt Clinton. For Lieutenant Governor they nominated incumbent John Tayler.

The anti-Clintonian faction of the Democratic-Republican Party nominated Vice President Daniel D. Tompkins.

Results

edit

The Clintonian ticket of Clinton and Tayler was elected.

1820 New York gubernatorial election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic-Republican (Clintonian) DeWitt Clinton (incumbent) 47,447 50.78%
Democratic-Republican (Anti-Clintonian) Daniel D. Tompkins 45,990 49.22%
Total votes 93,437 100%

See also

edit

Sources

edit

Result: The Tribune Almanac 1841