Vermont elected five Democratic-Republicans to the Nineteenth Congress. Four of those Democratic-Republicans were part of a faction led by John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay.
The map for this election is incomplete due to the lack of returns at the town or county level.
Vermont switched back to a district system for electing members to Congress.
District | Candidate | Party | Vote | Percentage | Elected |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | William C. Bradley | Adams/Clay | 1,741 | 63.7% | ✓ |
1 | Phineas White | Federalist | 980 | 35.9% | |
2 | Rollin C. Mallory | Adams/Clay | 3,284 | 95.6% | ✓ |
3 | George E. Wales | Democratic-Republican | 2,763 | 70% | ✓ |
3 | Horace Everett | Federalist | 944 | 23.9% | |
3 | Other candidates | 239 | 6% | ||
4 | Ezra Meech | Adams/Clay | 3,095 | 54.6% | ✓ |
4 | Benjamin Swift | Democratic-Republican | 1,836 | 32.4% | |
4 | Stephen Royce, Jr. | Democratic-Republican | 409 | 7.2% | |
4 | Other candidates | 332 | 5.3% | ||
5 | John Mattocks | Adams/Clay | 2,629 | 51.9% | ✓ |
5 | Daniel Arzo A. Buck | Democratic-Republican | 2,349 | 46.4% |
In most cases, only candidates who received more than 5 percent of the vote in a district are reported. Other candidates are reported as a group, but only if they in aggregate received more than 5 percent of the vote. In addition, percentages for each district may not add up to 100 percent due to rounding. The term Dissenting Republican includes various breakaway factions of the Democratic-Republican party.
Mapping Early American Elections is generously funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and developed by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University.
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