Congressional elections to the1st United States Congress were held in Georgia on February 9, 1789, for the state's three congressional districts.[1] All elected representatives were members of theAnti-Administration political faction in Congress.[2]
The Georgia Election Act of 1789 established a mixed at-large/district system for congressional elections. Under the act, representatives were electedat-large on ageneral ticket but for three district-based seats, for which candidates were required to be residents. Each voter was allowed to cast three votes, one for a candidate in each district. Some candidates received votes in multiple districts.[1][3]
The election returns were opened on February 26. Only the returns of Richmond, Wilkes, Effingham, Chatham, Liberty, Burke, and Washington Counties were counted, as they had been received in time. The returns from Greene, Glynn, and Camden Counties came in too late but were published anyways. All elected representatives would've won with the returns of those counties included.[1]
The Lower District was also known as the Eastern District or theFirst District.[3] Jackson led a Savannah-based political faction, referred to as the Jackson party, centered inCoastal Georgia.[4]
1789 Georgia's Lower congressional district election[3][1]
^abcdefghiFoster, William Omer (2009).James Jackson: Duelist and Militant Statesman, 1757-1806. University of Georgia Press. pp. 69–70.ISBN9780820334400.