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1941 United States Senate elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

There were three special elections to theUnited States Senate in 1941 during the77th United States Congress.

Race summary

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In these elections, the winners were elected in 1941 after January 3; sorted by election date.

StateIncumbentResultsCandidates
SenatorPartyElectoral history
Texas
(Class 2)
Andrew Jackson HoustonDemocratic1941(Appointed)Interim appointee died June 26, 1941.
New senator electedJune 28, 1941.
Democratic hold.
Mississippi
(Class 2)
James EastlandDemocratic1941(Appointed)Interim appointee retired.
New senator electedSeptember 29, 1941.
Democratic hold.
South Carolina
(Class 2)
Roger C. PeaceDemocratic1941(Appointed)Interim appointee retired.
New senator electedSeptember 30, 1941.
Democratic hold.

Mississippi (special)

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1941 United States Senate special election in Mississippi

← 1936September 29, 19411942 →
 
NomineeWall DoxeyRoss A. Collins
PartyDemocraticDemocratic
Popular vote59,55658,738
Percentage50.35%49.65%

U.S. senator before election

James Eastland
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Wall Doxey
Democratic

Main article:1941 United States Senate special election in Mississippi
See also:List of United States senators from Mississippi

Four-term Democratic senatorPat Harrison died June 22, 1941, and DemocratJames Eastland was appointed June 30, 1941, to continue the term. DemocratWall Doxey won the September 29, 1941, special election, but would later lose renomination to Eastland for thenext term in 1942.[2]

South Carolina (special)

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1941 U.S. Senate Democratic primary runoff in South Carolina

← 1936September 16, 19411942 →
 
NomineeBurnet R. MaybankOlin D. Johnston
PartyDemocraticDemocratic
Popular vote92,10070,687
Percentage56.58%43.42%

County results
Maybank:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Johnston:     50–60%     60–70%

U.S. senator before election

Roger C. Peace
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Burnet R. Maybank
Democratic

Main article:1941 United States Senate special election in South Carolina
See also:List of United States senators from South Carolina

James F. Byrnes (Democratic) had resigned July 8, 1941, andAlva Lumpkin (Democratic) was appointed July 22, 1941, to continue the term. Lumpkin died, however, August 1, 1941, soRoger C. Peace (Democratic) was then appointed August 5, 1941, to continue the term. Peace was not a candidate in the special election.

GovernorBurnet R. Maybank took the most votes in the September 2, 1941, Democratic primary over GovernorOlin Johnston and RepresentativeJoseph R. Bryson.[3] Maybank then won the September 16, 1941, primary runoff.[4] Maybank won the general election unopposed[5] and would serve through two general elections (1942 and1948) until his death in 1954.

Texas (special)

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1941 United States Senate special election in Texas

← 1936June 28, 19411942 →
 
NomineePappy O'DanielLyndon B. Johnson
PartyDemocraticDemocratic
Popular vote175,590174,279
Percentage30.49%30.26%

 
NomineeGerald MannMartin Dies Jr.
PartyDemocraticDemocratic
Popular vote140,80780,653
Percentage24.45%14.01%

County results[a][6]
Congressional district results[a]
O'Daniel:     20–30%     30–40%     40–50%     50–60%

Johnson:     30–40%     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     >90%
Mann:     20–30%     30–40%     40–50%     50–60%

Dies:     20–30%     30–40%     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%

U.S. senator before election

Andrew Jackson Houston
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Pappy O'Daniel
Democratic

Main article:1941 United States Senate special election in Texas
See also:List of United States senators from Texas

DemocratMorris Sheppard died April 9, 1941, and DemocratAndrew Jackson Houston was appointed April 21, 1941, to continue the term. Houston died, however, June 26, 1941, before the August 4, 1941, special election. In a 14-candidate race, "Pappy"W. Lee O'Daniel (Democratic) won a slim plurality over RepresentativeLyndon Baines Johnson (Democratic), which was sufficient for the election.[1]

References

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  1. ^ab"Our Campaigns - TX US Senate - Special Election Race - Jun 28, 1941".
  2. ^ab"Our Campaigns - MS US Senate - Special Election Race - Sep 23, 1941".
  3. ^"Our Campaigns - SC US Senate - Special D Primary Race - Sep 02, 1941".
  4. ^"Our Campaigns - SC US Senate - Special D Runoff Race - Sep 16, 1941".
  5. ^"Our Campaigns - SC US Senate - Special Election Race - Sep 30, 1941".
  6. ^Texas State Historical Association (1943)."Texas Almanac, 1943-1944".The Portal to Texas History.The Dallas Morning News. pp. 259–260. RetrievedJune 20, 2022.
  1. ^abAmong the top 4 candidates
  • Mississippi: United States Congressional Elections, 1788-1997 The Official Results Michael J. Dubin
  • Texas: Southern Primaries and Elections, 1920-1949 (O'Daniel, Johnson, Mann, Dies) and Brownsville Herald, 6/15/1941 (rest)
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