Misplaced Pages

1857 Georgia gubernatorial election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

1857 Georgia gubernatorial election

← 1855 October 5 1857 1859 →
 
Nominee Joseph E. Brown Benjamin Harvey Hill
Party Democratic Know Nothing
Popular vote 57,631 46,796
Percentage 55.19% 44.81%

Results by County
Brown:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Hill:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

Governor before election

Herschel V. Johnson
Democratic

Elected Governor

Joseph E. Brown
Democratic

Elections in Georgia
Federal government
Presidential elections
Presidential primaries
Democratic
2000
2004
2008
2016
2020
2024
Republican
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
U.S. Senate elections
U.S. House elections
Special elections
Senate
1796
1806
1807
1809
1813
1816
1818
1819
1821
1824
1828
1829
1833
1835
1837
1845
1880
1882
1894
1907
1911
1914
1922
1932
1972
2000
2020
House
At-large
1801
1802
1803
1806
1812
1813
1816
1819
1824
1829
1831
1835
1836
1837
1841
1843
1844
1st
1792
1827
1879
1906
1931
2nd
1827
1910
1913
1953
3rd
1846
1896
1932
4th
1871
1872
1918
1939
5th
1870
1929
1946
1977
2020
6th
1870
1932
1999
2017
7th
1958
1983
8th
1873
1882
1917
1940
9th
1875
1877
2010
10th
1895
1933
2007
State government
State elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant gubernatorial elections
Secretary of State elections
Attorney General elections
State Senate elections
House of Representatives elections
Judicial elections
Special elections
Ballot measures
2004
2020
Atlanta
City elections
Mayoral elections
Savannah
Mayoral elections
Mableton
Mayoral elections

The 1857 Georgia gubernatorial election was held on October 5, 1857, in order to elect the Governor of Georgia. Democratic nominee and state circuit court judge Joseph E. Brown defeated Know Nothing (Sam) nominee and State legislator Benjamin Harvey Hill.

Brown was a relatively unknown figure in Georgia politics before his governorship, with his victory over John H. Lumpkin, a close associate of former governor Howell Cobb, for the Democratic nomination shocking many people, with Robert Toombs reportedly asking "who the devil is Joe Brown" upon hearing his nomination.

Brown grew up poor and was not a planter, only owning 13 slaves. A self-made man, he went Yale University to study law and became a lawyer in Canton. Over half his assets came in stock and bonds (including railroad securities) and less than a fourth of his wealth resulted from his ownership of slaves. Additionally, the district that had elected him was in the mountain region of Georgia where very few owned slaves.

Brown's victory over Hill in the general election, as commented by one writer, "was in its moral effect similar to the accession of Andrew Jackson to the Presidency in 1828 - a shock to the aristocratic regime in Georgia."

General election

On election day, October 5 1857, Democratic nominee Joseph E. Brown won the election by a margin of 10,835 votes against Know Nothing (Sam) nominee Benjamin Harvey Hill, thereby continuing Democratic control over the office of Governor. Johnson was sworn in for his first of four terms on November 6, 1857.

Results

Georgia gubernatorial election, 1855
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joseph E. Brown 57,631 55.19
Know Nothing Benjamin Harvey Hill 46,889 44.81
Total votes 104,427 100.00

Notes

  1. ^ Including returns from Clay and Webster County that were not included in the official count.
  2. ^ In Georgia the Know Nothing Party was called "Sam" by the local Democratic party. Its use was so widespread that even some Know-Nothings adopted it. According to Royce McCrary, the origins of the term are obscure. Sam was a term applied to the raw Irish immigrants in the 1850s. Apparently the Democrats, in a mocking way, meant to imply that the anti-Irish Know-Nothings were actually Irish.

References

  1. McCrary, Royce (1977). "John Macpherson Berrien and the Know-Nothing Movement in Georgia". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 61 (1): 41 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ Dubin, Michael J. (2003). United States Gubernatorial Elections, 1776 1860: The Official Results By State And County. McFarland. pp. 43–44. ISBN 9780786414390.
  3. ^ Collins, Bruce (1987). "Governor Joseph E. Brown, Economic Issues, and Georgia's Road to Secession, 1857-59". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 71 (2): 197–199 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ Hay, Thomas (1929). "JOSEPH EMERSON BROWN GOVERNOR OF GEORGIA, 1857-1865". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 13 (2): 89–90 – via JSTOR.
  5. "Our Campaigns - GA Governor Race - Oct 05, 1857". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved 2024-03-29.
Categories: