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1859 California gubernatorial election

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1859 California gubernatorial election

← 1857 September 7, 1859 1861 →
 
Nominee Milton Latham John Currey Leland Stanford
Party Lecompton Democratic Democratic Republican
Popular vote 61,352 31,298 10,110
Percentage 59.13% 31.13% 9.74%

County Results
Latham:      40-50%      50-60%     60-70%     70-80%     80-90%     >90%
Currey:     50-60%

Governor before election

John B. Weller
Lecompton Democratic

Elected Governor

Milton Latham
Lecompton Democratic

The 1859 California gubernatorial election was held on September 7, 1859, to elect the governor of California.

Since the beginning of the 1850s, issues regarding slavery had effectively split the state Democratic Party. Initially divided by pro-slavery Chivalrists and anti-slavery Free Soilers, by 1857, the party had split into the Lecompton and Anti-Lecompton factions. Lecompton members supported the Kansas Lecompton Constitution, a document explicitly allowing slavery into the territory, while Anti-Lecompton faction members were in opposition to slavery's expansion. The violence between supporting and opposition forces led to the period known as Bleeding Kansas. Splits in the Democratic Party, as well as the power vacuum created by the collapse of the Whig Party, helped facilitate the rise of the American Party both in state and federal politics. In particular, state voters voted Know-Nothings into the California State Legislature, and elected J. Neely Johnson as governor in the 1855 general elections.

During the 1859 general elections, Lecompton Democrats voted Latham, who had briefly lived in the American South, as their nominee for governor. Anti-Lecomptons in turn selected John Currey as their nominee. The infant Republican Party, running in its first gubernatorial election, selected businessman Leland Stanford as its nominee. To make matters more complicated, after the election, Senator David C. Broderick, an Anti-Lecompton Democrat, was killed in a duel by slavery supporter and former state Supreme Court Justice David Terry on September 13.[1]

Results

[edit]
California gubernatorial election, 1859[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Lecompton Democratic Milton Latham 61,352 59.13% +59.13%
Democratic John Currey 31,298 31.13% −25.58%
Republican Leland Stanford 10,110 9.74% −12.72%
Majority 29,054 28.00%
Total votes 103,760 100.00%
Lecompton Democratic hold Swing -6.25%

Results by county

[edit]
County Milton Latham
Lecompton
John Currey
Anti-Lecompton
Leland Stanford
Republican
Margin Total votes cast[2]
# % # % # % # %
Alameda 1,066 52.54% 664 32.73% 299 14.74% 402 19.81% 2,029
Amador 2,023 62.44% 985 30.40% 232 7.16% 1,038 32.04% 3,240
Butte 1,915 48.67% 1,666 42.34% 354 9.00% 249 6.33% 3,935
Calaveras 3,275 69.67% 1,391 29.59% 35 0.74% 1,884 40.08% 4,701
Colusa 541 74.93% 166 22.99% 15 2.08% 375 51.94% 722
Contra Costa 805 65.77% 378 30.88% 41 3.35% 427 34.89% 1,224
Del Norte 392 73.13% 126 23.51% 18 3.36% 266 49.63% 536
El Dorado 3,096 52.32% 2,413 40.78% 408 6.90% 683 11.54% 5,917
Fresno 359 96.77% 11 2.96% 1 0.27% 348 93.80% 371
Humboldt 397 46.60% 372 43.66% 83 9.74% 25 2.93% 852
Klamath 607 83.38% 120 16.48% 1 0.14% 487 66.90% 728
Los Angeles 1,916 87.69% 49 2.24% 220 10.07% 1,696[a] 77.62% 2,185
Marin 467 76.68% 75 12.32% 67 11.00% 392 64.37% 609
Mariposa 1,462 86.92% 212 12.60% 8 0.48% 1,250 74.32% 1,682
Mendocino 730 88.38% 85 10.29% 11 1.33% 645 78.09% 826
Merced 231 87.50% 32 12.12% 1 0.38% 199 75.38% 264
Monterey 495 69.13% 175 24.44% 46 6.42% 320 44.69% 716
Napa 810 46.85% 905 52.34% 14 0.81% -95 -5.49% 1,729
Nevada 3,185 50.56% 2,534 40.22% 581 9.22% 651 10.33% 6,300
Placer 2,326 53.61% 1,117 25.74% 896 20.65% 1,209 27.86% 4,339
Plumas 882 51.16% 649 37.65% 193 11.19% 233 13.52% 1,724
Sacramento 3,526 54.82% 2,678 41.64% 228 3.54% 848 13.18% 6,432
San Bernardino 532 92.20% 6 1.04% 39 6.76% 493[a] 85.44% 577
San Diego 259 93.50% 1 0.36% 17 6.14% 242[a] 87.36% 277
San Francisco 4,747 44.29% 2,943 27.46% 3,027 28.24% 1,720[a] 16.05% 10,717
San Joaquin 1,806 62.43% 878 30.35% 209 7.22% 928 32.08% 2,893
San Luis Obispo 284 82.56% 30 8.72% 30 8.72% 254 73.84% 344
San Mateo 420 44.54% 418 44.33% 105 11.13% 2 0.21% 943
Santa Barbara 431 92.49% 0 0.00% 35 7.51% 396[a] 84.98% 466
Santa Clara 1,407 58.63% 367 15.29% 626 26.08% 781[a] 32.54% 2,400
Santa Cruz 496 45.21% 451 41.11% 150 13.67% 45 4.10% 1,097
Shasta 1,456 50.28% 1,432 49.45% 8 0.28% 24 0.83% 2,896
Sierra 2,814 58.93% 1,666 34.89% 295 6.18% 1,148 24.04% 4,775
Siskiyou 2,159 61.60% 1,303 37.18% 43 1.23% 856 24.42% 3,505
Solano 1,172 56.16% 827 39.63% 88 4.22% 345 16.53% 2,087
Sonoma 1,981 62.04% 1,148 35.95% 64 2.00% 833 26.09% 3,193
Stanislaus 389 76.57% 106 20.87% 13 2.56% 283 55.71% 508
Sutter 695 73.86% 159 16.90% 87 9.25% 536 56.96% 941
Tehama 770 85.84% 92 10.26% 35 3.90% 678 75.59% 897
Trinity 1,285 60.67% 829 39.14% 4 0.19% 456 21.53% 2,118
Tulare 821 91.73% 63 7.04% 11 1.23% 758 84.69% 895
Tuolumne 3,723 68.58% 737 13.58% 969 17.85% 2,754[a] 50.73% 5,429
Yolo 757 54.42% 568 40.83% 66 4.74% 189 13.59% 1,391
Yuba 2,442 56.14% 1,471 33.82% 437 10.05% 971 22.32% 4,350
Total 61,352 59.13% 32,298 31.13% 10,110 9.74% 29,054 28.00% 103,760

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Margin over Stanford

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Election History for the state of California". JoinCalifornia. September 7, 1859. Retrieved May 21, 2007.
  2. ^ a b California State Archives, Statement of the Votes Polled at a General Election Held in the State of California, on the Seventh Day of September, A.D. 1859