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United States Senate elections, 1878 and 1879

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Dates vary by state (And other dates for special elections)
  
1880 / 1881 →

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10

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Start date
  
November 11, 1878

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31

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The United States Senate elections of 1878 and 1879 were elections which had the Democratic Party retake control of the United States Senate for the first time since before the Civil War.

Contents

As these elections were prior to ratification of the seventeenth amendment, Senators were chosen by State legislatures.

Results summary

Senate Party Division, 46th Congress (1879–1881)

  • Majority Party: Democratic (42)
  • Minority Party: Republican (31)
  • Other Parties: Independent (1), Anti-Monopoly (1)
  • Total Seats: 76
  • Special elections during the 45th Congress

    In these elections, the winners were seated in 1879 before March 4; ordered by election date.

    Races leading to the 46th Congress

    In these general elections, the winners were elected for the term beginning March 4, 1885; ordered by state.

    All of the elections involved the Class 3 seats.

    Elections during the 46th Congress

    In this election, the winner was elected in 1879 after March 4.

    New York

    In New York, the election was held on January 21, 1879, by the New York State Legislature. Republican Roscoe Conkling had been re-elected in January 1873 to this seat, and his term would expire on March 3, 1879. At the State election in November 1877, 19 Republicans and 13 Democrats were elected for a two-year term (1878-1879) in the State Senate. At the State election in November 1878, 97 Republicans, 28 Democrats and 3 Greenbackers were elected for the session of 1879 to the Assembly, and Republican Thomas Murphy was elected to fill the vacancy in the State Senate caused by the death of Democrat John Morrissey. The 102nd New York State Legislature met from January 7 to May 22, 1879, at Albany, New York.

    The caucus of Republican State legislators met on January 20, Temporary President of the State Senate William H. Robertson presided. Present were all Republican legislators except State Senator Louis S. Goebel (6th D.) and Assemblyman James W. Wadsworth. They re-nominated the incumbent U.S. Senator Conkling unanimously. The caucus of the Democratic State legislators met also on January 20. State Senator Thomas C. E. Ecclesine (8th D.) offered to adopt a prostest against the senatorial election proceedings, claiming that the senatorial and assembly districts were incorrectly apportioned and thus the State Legislature did not represent the wish of the people of the State. The protest was substituted by a resolution to appoint a committee which would elaborate an address on the apportionment at a later date. Ecclesine then marched out, and the remaining legislators nominated Lieutenant Governor William Dorsheimer for the U.S. Senate.

    The two Greenback assemblymen John Banfield (Chemung Co.) and George E. Williams (Oswego Co.) voted for 87-year-old Peter Cooper, a New York City inventor, industrialist and philanthropist who had run for U.S. President in 1876 on the Greenback ticket.

    Roscoe Conkling was the choice of both the Assembly and the State Senate, and was declared elected.

    Note: The votes were cast on January 21, but both Houses met in a joint session on January 22 to compare nominations, and declare the result.

    Pennsylvania

    In Pennsylvania, the election was held January 20, 1879. J. Donald Cameron was re-elected by the Pennsylvania General Assembly to the United States Senate.

    After Sen. Simon Cameron resigned from office, his son J. Donald Cameron was elected by the General Assembly, consisting of the House of Representatives and the Senate, in 1877 to serve the remainder of the unexpired term, which was to expire on March 4, 1879. The Pennsylvania General Assembly convened on January 20, 1879, to elect a Senator to serve the term beginning on March 4, 1879. The results of the vote of both houses combined are as follows:

    References

    United States Senate elections, 1878 and 1879 Wikipedia


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