1856 and 1857 United States House of Representatives elections

Elections to the United States House of Representatives for the 35th Congress were held at various dates in different states from August 1856 to November 1857.

1856 and 1857 United States House of Representatives elections

August 4, 1856 – November 4, 1857[lower-alpha 1]

All 237 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives
118 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader James Orr Galusha A. Grow
Party Democratic Republican
Leader's seat South Carolina 5th Pennsylvania 14th
Last election 81 seats 45 seats[lower-alpha 2]
Seats won 132 90
Seat change 49 45
Popular vote 1,805,827 1,425,265
Percentage 46.85% 36.98%
Swing 2.90% 21.36%[lower-alpha 3]

  Third party Fourth party
 
Party Know Nothing Independent
Last election 51 seats 1 seats[lower-alpha 4]
Seats won 14 1[lower-alpha 5]
Seat change 37
Popular vote 586,254 34,120[lower-alpha 6]
Percentage 15.21% 0.89%
Swing 4.35% 1.72%

Speaker before election

Nathaniel Banks
Know Nothing

Elected Speaker

James Orr
Democratic

The elections briefly returned a semblance of normalcy to the Democratic Party, restoring its House majority amid election of Democratic President James Buchanan. However, victory masked severe, ultimately irretrievable divisions over the slavery issue. Voters next would return a Democratic House majority only in 1874.

Party realignments continued. In 1856, the Whig Party disbanded while the Know Nothing movement declined and its vehicle, the American Party, began to collapse. Many former Northern Whig and American Party Representatives joined the Republican Party, which contended for the Presidency in 1856 and was rapidly consolidating. Though it did not yet demand abolition, its attitude toward slavery was stridently negative. Making no effort to win Southern voter support, it was openly sectional, opposed to fugitive slave laws and slavery in the territories, and for the first time offered a mainstream platform to outspoken abolitionists.

In March 1857, after almost all Northern states had voted, the Supreme Court issued the infamous Dred Scott decision, amplifying tensions and hardening voter attitudes. Remaining elections, scheduled after the decision, were concentrated in the South. Southern voters widely drove the American Party from office, rallying to the Democrats in firm opposition to the Republicans.

In this election cycle, the pending state of Minnesota elected its first Representatives, to be seated by the 35th Congress. Between the admissions of Vermont in 1791 and Wisconsin in 1848, Congress had admitted new states roughly in pairs: one slave, one free. California had been admitted alone as a free state in 1850 only as part of a comprehensive compromise that included significant concessions to slave state interests. Admission of Minnesota in May 1858, also alone but with no such deal, helped expose the declining influence of the South, extinguishing the formerly binding concept that slave and free state power in Congress was best kept in balance while reinforcing a growing sense that public opinion would exclude slavery from the West.

Election summaries

Two seats were added for the new state of Minnesota,[1] which was unrepresented for part of the 1st session.

133 14 90
Democratic KN Republican
State Type Date Total
seats
Democratic Know Nothing Republican
Seats Change Seats Change Seats Change[lower-alpha 7]
Arkansas District August 4, 1856 2 2 0 0
Iowa District August 4, 1856 2 0 1 0 2 1
Missouri District August 4, 1856 7 5[lower-alpha 5] 4 2 2 0 6
Vermont District September 2, 1856 3 0 0 3
Maine District September 8, 1856 6 0 1 0 6 1
Florida At-large October 6, 1856 1 1 0 0
South Carolina District October 13–14, 1856 6 6 0 0
Indiana District October 14, 1856 11 6 4 0 5 4
Ohio District October 14, 1856 21 9 9 0 12 9
Pennsylvania District October 14, 1856 25 15 8 0 1 10 7
California At-large November 4, 1856
(Election Day)[lower-alpha 8]
2 2 0 0
Delaware At-large 1 1 1 0 1 0
Illinois District 9 5 0 4
Massachusetts District 11 0 0 11 11 11
Michigan District 4 0 1 0 4 1
New Jersey District 5 3 2 0 2 2
New York District 33 12 7 0 3 21 4
Wisconsin District 3 0 1 0 3 1
New Hampshire District March 10, 1857 3 0 0 3 3 3
Rhode Island District April 1, 1857 2 0 0 2 2 2
Connecticut District April 6, 1857 4 2 2 0 4 2 2
Virginia District May 28, 1857 13 13 1 0 1 0
Alabama District August 3, 1857 7 7 2 0 2 0
Kentucky District August 3, 1857 10 8 4 2 4 0
Texas District August 3, 1857 2 2 1 0 1 0
North Carolina District August 6, 1857 8 7 2 1 2 0
Tennessee District August 6, 1857 10 7 2 3 2 0
Georgia District October 5, 1857 8 6 2 0
Mississippi District October 5–6, 1857 5 5 1 0 1 0
Minnesota At-large October 13, 1857[lower-alpha 9] 2 2 2 0 0
Louisiana District November 3, 1857 4 3 1 0
Maryland District November 4, 1857 6 3 1 3 1 0
Total 236 133[lower-alpha 5]
56.1%
50[lower-alpha 5] 14
5.9%
37 90
38.0%
10[lower-alpha 7]
House seats
Democratic
56.12%
Know Nothing
5.91%
Republican
37.97%

Special elections

There were special elections in 1858 and 1859 during the 34th United States Congress and 35th United States Congress.

34th Congress

35th Congress

Indiana 1

California

District Incumbent This race
Member Party First elected Results Candidates
California at-large
2 seats on a general ticket
James W. Denver Democratic 1854 Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Democratic hold.
  • Y Charles L. Scott (Democratic) 29.9%
  • Y Joseph C. McKibbin (Democratic) 21%
  • A. B. Dibble (Know Nothing) 20.7%
  • Ira P. Rankin (Independent) 13%
  • J. N. Turner (Republican) 12.5%
Philemon T. Herbert Democratic 1854 Incumbent retired after manslaughter acquittal.
New member elected.
Democratic hold.

Florida

District Incumbent Party First
elected
Result Candidates
Florida at-large Augustus Maxwell Democratic 1852 Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Democratic hold.
George S. Hawkins (Democratic) 53.1%
James McNair Baker (Know Nothing) 46.9%

Minnesota

Minnesota Territory elected three members in advance of Minnesota's 1848 statehood. "Although three men won this election, which was held before Minnesota was actually a state, only two representatives from Minnesota were allowed in the congressional bill creating the state in 1858. George L. Becker lost in the drawing of lots to decide who would present their credentials, therefore he did not serve in Congress."[2]

District Vacator Reason for Vacancy Candidates
Representative Party First elected
Minnesota at-large
Two seats on a general ticket
None. New state would be admitted May 11, 1858.
New member elected October 13, 1857.
Democratic gain.
None. New state would be admitted May 11, 1858.
New member elected October 13, 1857.
Democratic gain.

Wisconsin

Election results in Wisconsin for 1856:[3]

District Incumbent This race
Representative Party First
elected
Result Candidates
Wisconsin 1 Daniel Wells, Jr. Democratic 1852 Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Republican gain.
Wisconsin 2 Cadwallader C. Washburn Republican 1854 Incumbent re-elected.
Wisconsin 3 Charles Billinghurst Opposition 1854 Incumbent won re-election as a Republican.
Republican gain.

Non-voting delegates

District Incumbent This race
Delegate Party First elected Results Candidates
Minnesota Territory Henry Mower Rice Democratic 1852 Incumbent retired.
New delegate elected.
Democratic hold.
District eliminated in 1858 upon Minnesota's statehood.

See also

Notes

  1. Excludes states admitted during this Congress
  2. Number of the seats that made up the Parties involved in the Opposition Coalition, excluding the Whig Party.
  3. In comparison to the performance of the Parties involved in the Opposition Coalition, excluding the Whig Party.
  4. Included one Independent Whig: Anthony Ellmaker Roberts of Pennsylvania.
  5. Includes one Independent Democrat (a.k.a. a "Benton Democrat"): Francis Preston Blair Jr. of MO-01. Note that while Martis (p. 110) and Dubin (p. 176) list him as an "Independent Democrat" or "Benton Democrat," others sources (e.g. the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress) list Blair as a "Republican".
  6. Includes votes for those who ran labeled as an "Independent," "Benton Democrat," "Independent Democrat," or "Independent American."
  7. Compared to the 100 Opposition Party members in previous election of 1854.
  8. In 1845, Congress passed a law providing for a uniform date for choosing presidential electors (see: Statutes at Large, 28th Congress, 2nd Session, p. 721). Congressional elections were unaffected by this law, but the date was gradually adopted by the states for Congressional elections as well.
  9. New state. Representatives seated May 11, 1858, during the 1st session.

    References

    1. 11 Stat. 166
    2. "Our Campaigns - MN At-Large Race - Oct 13, 1857". www.ourcampaigns.com.
    3. "Wisconsin U.S. House Election Results" (PDF). Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 5, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2014.

    Bibliography

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