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County results Pettus: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% >90% Thompson: 50–60% 60–70% 80–90% No vote | |||||||||||||||||
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The1861Mississippi gubernatorial election was held on October 7, 1861, to elect thegovernor of Mississippi. Incumbent GovernorJohn J. Pettus, a Democrat, won against DemocratJacob Thompson and moderate Democrat Madison McAfee.[1]
Amid the start of the Civil War, Governor John J. Pettus faced internal party challenges and criticisms for military handling. Despite discontent and potential withdrawal, Pettus persisted with the campaign. Mobilization orders in September eased criticisms, leading to Pettus winning re-election in October with overwhelming support, securing victory in almost every county.
By the time of the 1861 contest, Mississippi had officiallyseceded and was atwar with the United States.[2]
Pro-secessionist GovernorJohn J. Pettus received the renomination from theMississippi Democratic Party, however several newspapers throughout the state endorsed alternative candidates, like DemocratJacob Thompson, moderate Democrat Madison McAfee, the statequartermaster-general, orWhigSamuel Benton. Pettus was also notified of a long-list of supporters for Madison McAfee campaign.[3] Complaints were levied towards Pettus over mistreatment towards volunteer milita companies and slowness towards mobilizing for the war. Other volunteer units were dissatisfied with the places they were stationed and lack of ability to fight in the war. Nonetheless, theConfederate Army refused to take the surplus volunteers.[4] Pettus in response wrote a public letter, appealing to the voters to investigate the complaints for themselves, though this only angered more Mississippians and generated a rebuke from the JacksonWeekly Mississippian. In August and September, criticisms towards Pettus and his military strategy were at their worst, with volunteer desertions and unfilled equipment requests.[5]
Pettus considered dropping out,[5] however,Reuben Davis advised against doing so and personally stumped for the governor during his campaign as a candidate for theConfederate Congress.[6] Pettus sent McAfee out of state to procure funds from the Confederate government. Noticing the tenuous situation he was in, McAfee withdrew from campaign and defended the governor, blaming himself equally for the military issues. McAfeew was rewarded with a position in the executive mansion in 1863.[6] Finally, in September, mobilization orders arrived in Jackson for 10,000 men, with additional mobilization of companies inNew Orleans.[7]
With the news of the mobilization orders, criticisms against the governor cleared. Pettus won reelection without significant opposition come October.[2][7] Pettus won every county but four, beating his nearest opponest on a margin of ten to one.[7]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | John J. Pettus | 30,169[a] | 88.1% | |
| Democratic | Jacob Thompson | 3,556 | 10.4% | |
| Democratic | Madison McAfee | 234 | 0.7% | |
| Scattering | 662 | 1.9% | ||
| Total votes | 56,113 | 100.00 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||