Only five of the seven Connecticut incumbents were re-elected.
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
James Hillhouse | Pro-Administration | 1790 | Incumbent re-elected to a new party. Federalist gain. |
√ Jonathan Trumbull Jr. (Federalist) 13.1% √ Uriah Tracy (Federalist) 12.5% √ James Hillhouse (Federalist) 12.4% √ Joshua Coit (Federalist) 10.8% √ Roger Griswold (Federalist) 10.2% √ Zephaniah Swift (Federalist) 9.7% √ Chauncey Goodrich (Federalist) 6.7% Nathaniel Smith (Federalist) 5.7% James Davenport (Federalist) 5.1% Samuel W. Dana (Federalist) 3.7% William Edmond (Federalist) 3.4% John Allen (Federalist) 2.5% John Treadwell (Federalist) 2.3% David Daggett (Federalist) 2.2% |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Amasa Learned | Pro-Administration | 1790 | Incumbent retired. New member elected. Federalist gain. | |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Joshua Coit | Pro-Administration | 1792 | Incumbent re-elected to a new party. Federalist gain. | |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Jonathan Trumbull Jr. | Pro-Administration | 1788 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. Senator. New member elected. Federalist gain. | |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Jeremiah Wadsworth | Pro-Administration | 1788 | Incumbent retired. New member elected. Federalist gain. | |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Zephariah Swift | Pro-Administration | 1792 | Incumbent re-elected to a new party. Federalist gain. | |
Connecticut at-large (General ticket) |
Uriah Tracy | Pro-Administration | 1792 | Incumbent re-elected to a new party. Federalist gain. |
References
See also
- List of United States representatives from Connecticut
- United States House of Representatives elections, 1794 and 1795
Elections in Connecticut | |
---|---|
General | |
State Senate | |
State House | |
Governor |
|
U.S. President |
|
U.S. Senate |
|
U.S. House |
|
See also: Political party strength in Connecticut |
This Connecticut elections-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |