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1924 United States presidential election in Alabama

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Main article:1924 United States presidential election
1924 United States presidential election in Alabama

← 1920
November 4, 1924
1928 →
 
NomineeJohn W. DavisCalvin Coolidge
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Home stateWest VirginiaMassachusetts
Running mateCharles W. BryanCharles G. Dawes
Electoral vote120
Popular vote112,96645,005
Percentage67.8%27.0%

County results

Davis

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Coolidge

  50–60%
  60–70%


President before election

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Elected President

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

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The1924 United States presidential election in Alabama occurred on November 4, 1924, as a part of thenationwide presidential election, which took place throughout all 48 contemporary states. Voters chose twelve representatives, or electors, to theElectoral College, who voted forpresident andvice president.

Since the 1890s, Alabama had been effectively a one-party state ruled by the Democratic Party.Disenfranchisement of almost all African-Americans and a large proportion ofpoor whites viapoll taxes, literacy tests[1] and informal harassment had essentially eliminated opposition parties outside ofUnionistWinston County and a few nearbynorthern hill counties that had been Populist strongholds.[2] The only competitive statewide elections became Democratic Party primaries that were limited by law to white voters. Unlike most other Confederate states, however, soon after black disenfranchisement Alabama's remaining white Republicans made rapid efforts to expel blacks from the state Republican Party.[3] Indeed, underOscar D. Street, who ironically was appointed state party boss as part of the pro-Taft“black and tan” faction in 1912,[4] the state GOP would permanently turn“lily-white”, with the last black delegates from the state at anyRepublican National Convention servingin 1920.[3]

The 1920 election, aided by isolationism inAppalachia[5] and the whitening of the state GOP,[6] saw the Republicans gain their best presidential vote share in Alabama since 1884,[7] while the GOP even exceed forty percent inthe House of Representatives races for the4th,7th and10th congressional districts.[5] However, isolationist sentiment in Appalachia would ease after the election ofWarren G. Harding[5] and funding issues meant the Republicans would not run a candidate for any Alabama congressional districtin 1922.[8]

With the ebbing of isolationist sentiment and a conservative Southern Democrat supportive ofpoll taxes and opposed to women's suffrage inJohn W. Davis ofWest Virginia nominated after an extremely prolonged convention,[9] neither Davis nor incumbent Republican PresidentCalvin Coolidge nor “La Follette/Wheeler” candidateRobert M. La Follette visited Alabama.[10] No polls were taken in the state, which had given every Democrat since 1876 over sixty percent, and ultimately Davis won Alabama with over sixty-seven percent of the vote. Despite the severe impediments of Alabama's cumulative poll tax, La Follette did reach into double digits in industrialisedJefferson,Baldwin, andMorgan Counties, but overall he polled only just under five percent of Alabama's ballots, making it his eighth-weakest state.[11]

Results

[edit]
1924 United States presidential election in Alabama[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticJohn W. Davis113,13869.69%
RepublicanCalvin Coolidge (incumbent)40,615[a]26.01%
ProgressiveRobert M. La Follette8,0404.95%
National ProhibitionHerman P. Faris5620.35%
Total votes162,355100%

Results by county

[edit]
County[13]John W. Davis
Democratic
Calvin Coolidge
Republican
Robert M. La Follette
Progressive
Herman P. Faris
National Prohibition
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%#%
Autauga78181.87%14615.30%222.31%50.52%63566.56%954
Baldwin1,02351.72%54927.76%39219.82%140.71%47423.96%1,978
Barbour1,34091.59%785.33%402.73%50.34%1,26286.26%1,463
Bibb87563.68%25118.27%24017.47%80.58%62445.41%1,374
Blount2,08356.15%1,51840.92%1032.78%60.16%56515.23%3,710
Bullock76398.83%81.04%10.13%00.00%75597.80%772
Butler1,05083.33%957.54%1159.13%00.00%935[b]74.21%1,260
Calhoun1,90767.65%76627.17%1294.58%170.60%1,14140.48%2,819
Chambers1,92291.00%1466.91%432.04%10.05%1,77684.09%2,112
Cherokee1,38060.63%84537.13%451.98%60.26%53523.51%2,276
Chilton84833.60%1,59563.19%752.97%60.24%-747-29.60%2,524
Choctaw1,02197.80%191.82%20.19%20.19%1,00295.98%1,044
Clarke1,05991.93%786.77%121.04%30.26%98185.16%1,152
Clay1,59759.88%1,01738.13%491.84%40.15%58021.75%2,667
Cleburne62245.74%69651.18%382.79%40.29%-74-5.44%1,360
Coffee1,59782.11%32316.61%201.03%50.26%1,27465.50%1,945
Colbert1,50365.98%57625.29%1898.30%100.44%92740.69%2,278
Conecuh95588.10%928.49%312.86%60.55%86379.61%1,084
Coosa79060.12%50838.66%151.14%10.08%28221.46%1,314
Covington1,77685.88%1567.54%1326.38%40.19%1,62078.34%2,068
Crenshaw1,10789.06%1179.41%80.64%110.88%99079.65%1,243
Cullman1,80949.79%1,63945.11%1804.95%50.14%1704.68%3,633
Dale1,11777.52%29720.61%221.53%50.35%82056.90%1,441
Dallas1,94891.76%502.36%1255.89%00.00%1,823[b]85.87%2,123
DeKalb3,00346.65%3,43453.35%00.00%00.00%-431-6.70%6,437
Elmore1,08881.62%21916.43%151.13%110.83%86965.19%1,333
Escambia1,21785.70%15210.70%463.24%50.35%1,06575.00%1,420
Etowah3,08161.41%1,66433.17%2424.82%300.60%1,41728.24%5,017
Fayette1,35857.35%97741.26%301.27%30.13%38116.09%2,368
Franklin1,98546.59%2,208[c]51.82%651.53%30.07%-223-5.23%4,261
Geneva1,19169.53%47727.85%392.28%60.35%71441.68%1,713
Greene40898.31%51.20%10.24%10.24%40397.11%415
Hale85696.72%232.60%40.45%20.23%83394.12%885
Henry81678.84%17917.29%373.57%30.29%63761.55%1,035
Houston1,73183.87%24211.72%834.02%80.39%1,48972.14%2,064
Jackson1,92366.11%88530.42%862.96%150.52%1,03835.68%2,909
Jefferson15,13363.64%5,67823.88%2,80811.81%1610.68%9,45539.76%23,780
Lamar1,08779.40%26219.14%181.31%20.15%82560.26%1,369
Lauderdale2,26671.30%82325.90%802.52%90.28%1,44345.41%3,178
Lawrence99067.26%46831.79%120.82%20.14%52235.46%1,472
Lee1,29085.77%986.52%1117.38%50.33%1,179[b]78.39%1,504
Limestone1,41587.35%1368.40%513.15%181.11%1,27978.95%1,620
Lowndes60295.86%50.80%203.18%10.16%582[b]92.68%628
Macon53891.34%488.15%20.34%10.17%49083.19%589
Madison2,16683.76%36814.23%491.89%30.12%1,79869.53%2,586
Marengo1,24398.42%171.35%20.16%10.08%1,22697.07%1,263
Marion1,35999.05%00.00%120.87%10.07%1,347[b]98.18%1,372
Marshall2,62959.31%1,71838.75%811.83%50.11%91120.55%4,433
Mobile4,12564.91%1,81428.54%3805.98%360.57%2,31136.37%6,355
Monroe1,15596.09%221.83%221.83%30.25%1,13394.26%1,202
Montgomery4,42287.70%2334.62%3757.44%120.24%4,047[b]80.27%5,042
Morgan2,24771.58%51916.53%35211.21%210.67%1,72855.05%3,139
Perry92896.17%252.59%121.24%00.00%90393.58%965
Pickens1,04587.45%13211.05%151.26%30.25%91376.40%1,195
Pike1,83297.34%301.59%150.80%50.27%1,80295.75%1,882
Randolph1,30765.32%66933.43%180.90%70.35%63831.88%2,001
Russell47491.33%142.70%315.97%00.00%443[b]85.36%519
St. Clair1,28145.30%1,43250.64%1103.89%50.18%-151-5.34%2,828
Shelby1,88249.18%1,75345.81%1864.86%60.16%1293.37%3,827
Sumter83794.68%283.17%192.15%00.00%80991.52%884
Talladega1,73071.72%62826.04%481.99%60.25%1,10245.69%2,412
Tallapoosa1,71399.59%10.06%30.17%30.17%1,710[b]99.42%1,720
Tuscaloosa2,36385.80%2478.97%1284.65%160.58%2,11676.83%2,754
Walker3,35154.59%2,44639.85%3325.41%90.15%90514.74%6,138
Washington61089.97%558.11%121.77%10.15%55581.86%678
Wilcox93897.81%60.63%151.56%00.00%923[b]96.25%959
Winston65036.19%1,09661.02%452.51%50.28%-446-24.83%1,796
Totals113,13868.76%42,80126.01%8,0404.89%5620.34%70,33742.75%164,541

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^This total excludes an uncertain figure forFranklin County.
  2. ^abcdefghiIn this county where La Follette ran second ahead of Coolidge, margin goven is Davis vote minus La Follette vote and percentage margin Davis percentage minus La Follette percentage.
  3. ^Sources vary in the Republican total for this county.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Perman, Michael (2001).Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888–1908. Chapel Hill, NC:University of North Carolina Press. p. Introduction.ISBN 9780807849095.
  2. ^Webb, Samuel L. "From Independents to Populists to Progressive Republicans: The Case of Chilton County, Alabama, 1880-1920".The Journal of Southern History.59 (4):707–736.doi:10.2307/2210539.JSTOR 2210539.
  3. ^abHeersink, Boris; Jenkins, Jeffery A. (2020).Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865-1968. Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–253.ISBN 9781107158436.
  4. ^Casdorph, Paul D. (1981).Republicans, Negroes, and Progressives in the South, 1912-1916.The University of Alabama Press. pp. 70,94–95.ISBN 0817300481.
  5. ^abcPhillips, Kevin P. (1969).The Emerging Republican Majority. Arlington House. p. 255.ISBN 0870000586.
  6. ^Heersink and Jenkins,Republican Party Politics and the American South, p. 19
  7. ^Leip, Dave."Presidential General Election Results Comparison — Alabama". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  8. ^See"G.O.P. Funds Are Reported Short: Forces "Counted On" Disappoint Republican Political Managers".The Birmingham News.Birmingham,Alabama. August 19, 1922. p. 5.
  9. ^Newman, Roger K. (January 2009).The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law. Yale University Press. p. 153.ISBN 978-0300113006.
  10. ^"Davis Closes His Campaign in West and Moves South; Helping Hand Across Sea Might Save Europe, Nominee Claims — Goes to Nashville To renew Attack on G.O.P.; From Tennessee He Returns North for Tour of Four States".The Birmingham News. Birmingham, Alabama. October 19, 1924. p. 1.
  11. ^SeeStark, Rodney and Christiano, Kevin J.; 'Support for the American Left, 1920-1924: The Opiate Thesis Reconsidered';Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 31, No. 1 (March, 1992), pp. 62-75
  12. ^Leip, Dave."1924 Presidential General Election Results — Alabama". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  13. ^"Vote for Presidential Electors, November 4, 1924".Alabama Official and Statistical Register. State of Alabama Department of Archives and History. 1927.
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