1891 United States House of Representatives elections

There were eight special elections in 1891 in the United States House of Representatives to the 52nd United States Congress.

District Incumbent This race
Representative Party First elected Results Candidates
New York 10 Francis B. Spinola Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent died April 14, 1891.
New member elected November 3, 1891.
Democratic hold.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
Michigan 5 Melbourne H. Ford Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent died April 20, 1891.
New member elected November 3, 1891.
Republican gain.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
  • Y Charles E. Belknap (Republican) 44.53%
  • John S. Lawrence (Democratic) 39.96%
  • Edward L. Hutchins (Populist) 11.20%
  • Henry Shultes (Prohibition) 3.51%[3]
Tennessee 2 Leonidas C. Houk Republican [data unknown/missing] Incumbent died May 25, 1891.
New member elected November 21, 1891.
Republican hold.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
South Dakota at-large John R. Gamble Republican [data unknown/missing] Incumbent died August 14, 1891.
New member elected November 3, 1891.
Republican hold.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
  • Y John L. Jolley (Republican) 44.48%
  • Henry W. Smith (Independent) 37.09%
  • James M. Wood (Democratic) 18.43%[5]
New York 22 Leslie W. Russell Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent resigned September 11, 1891.
New member elected November 3, 1891 when elected judge of the New York Supreme Court.
Republican gain.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
  • Y Newton M. Curtis (Republican) 54.75%
  • Wilbur E. Porter (Democratic) 41.36%
  • Alonzo M. Leffingwell (Prohibition) 3.89%[6]
New York 12 Roswell P. Flower Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent resigned September 16, 1891 to run for Governor of New York.
New member elected November 3, 1891.
Democratic hold.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
  • Y Joseph J. Little (Democratic)[lower-alpha 1] 58.60%
  • William McMichael (Republican) 34.47%
  • David DeVenny (New York County Democracy) 4.16%
  • John J. Flick (Socialist Labor) 2.76%[7]
New York 2 David A. Boody Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent resigned October 13, 1891, to run for Mayor of Brooklyn, New York.
New member elected November 3, 1891.
Democratic hold.
Successor seated December 7, 1891.[1]
Virginia 8 William H. F. Lee Democratic [data unknown/missing] Incumbent died October 15, 1891.
New member elected December 9, 1891.
Democratic hold.
Successor seated December 23, 1891.[1]

Notes

  1. "Tammany" in source[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.