Delaware gained a seat after the 1810 census, and chose to elect both seats on a general ticket. The ten years between 1813 and 1823 were the only time when Delaware was represented by more than one Representative, and is one of only three states (the other two being Alaska and Wyoming) that have never been divided into districts.
Delaware elected its members October 6, 1812.
District | Incumbent | This race | |||
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Representative | Party | First elected | Results | Candidates | |
Delaware at-large 2 seats on a general ticket |
Henry M. Ridgely | Federalist | 1810 | Incumbent re-elected. | √ Henry M. Ridgely (Federalist) 28.3% √ Thomas Cooper (Federalist) 28.2% David Hall (Democratic-Republican) 21.8% Richard Dale (Democratic-Republican) 21.7% |
None (seat created) | New seat. New member elected. Federalist gain. |
See also
- 1812–13 United States House of Representatives elections
- List of United States representatives from Delaware
(1811←) 1812 United States elections (→1813) | |
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U.S. President | |
U.S. Senate | |
U.S. House | |
Governors | |
States and territories |
Elections in Delaware | |
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General | |
Delaware Senate | |
Delaware House | |
Governor |
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U.S. President |
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U.S. Senate Class 1 |
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U.S. Senate Class 2 |
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U.S. House |
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Wilmington mayor | |
New Castle County Executive | |
See also: Political party strength in Delaware |
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