The 'United States presidential election of 1864' saw
Abraham Lincoln, the Republican running on a coalition ticket, win by a landslide over the Democratic candidate,
George B. McClellan.
It was conducted during the
Civil War, and as such the
Confederate states did not participate. Republicans across the country were jittery over the summer, but that was before the Democrats had to confront their severe, internal strains at their convention. With
William Tecumseh Sherman marching inexorably toward Atlanta, and
Ulysses S. Grant pushing Lee into the outer defenses of Richmond, it became increasingly obvious that a Union military victory was inevitable. The Lincoln/Johnson ticket ran with the slogan “Don't change horses in the middle of a stream.” The Republican party name was changed to Union, to appeal to War Democrats; the new name vanished after the election. Johnson, however, never became a Republican.
The Republican/Union party made an all-out effort, ridiculing McClellan for his pacifist platform, and denouncing Democrats as traitorous
Copperheads. On
November 8, Lincoln won by over 400,000 popular votes and easily clinched an electoral majority. Several states allowed their citizens serving as soldiers in the field to cast ballots, a first in United States history. Soldiers in the
Army gave Lincoln more than 70% of their vote.
Nominations
"National Union Party" nomination

National Union (Republican) Party poster for Pennsylvania in 1864
Abraham Lincoln was renominated by the
Republican Party, which changed its name for the 1864 election to the
"National Union Party”. Lincoln's nomination was not unanimous, however, as 22 disgruntled opponents of Lincoln voted for
Ulysses S. Grant, who was not a candidate. Seeing an opportunity to work with the
War Democrats under the Union banner, the convention nominated Governor
Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, a War Democrat, as Lincoln's running mate over incumbent Vice President
Hannibal Hamlin and three other War Democrats - former New York Senator
Daniel S. Dickinson, Buchanan cabinet member
Joseph Holt and General
Ben Butler.
Democratic Party nomination
The
Democratic Party was bitterly split between the War Democrats and the anti-war Copperheads. The compromise was to nominate pro-war General
George B. McClellan along with an anti-war platform. McClellan defeated
Horatio Seymour and others for the nomination; he and ticketmate
George H. Pendleton were nominated on a peace platform—a platform McClellan personally rejected.
[ George B. McClellan ]
General election
The 1864 election was the first time since 1812 that a presidential election took place during a war. McClellan's chances of victory faded after Union victories in Georgia and Virginia, followed by the withdrawal of
John C. Fremont's independent candidacy for President.
A foretaste of the national election came in the state elections held in the months prior to the presidential election. In these six state elections (Oregon on 6/5, Vermont on 9/6, Maine on 9/11, Ohio and Pennsylvania on 10/10, and West Virginia on 10/26), the Union Republican Party won a sweeping victory. These six states elected 44 Union Republicans in U.S. House races, compared to just 10 Democrats, for a net gain of 18 seats for the Union Republicans. The stage had been set for Lincoln.
Results
Only 24 states participated, because 11 had seceded from the Union and claimed to have formed their own nation: the Confederate States of America (CSA). Three new states participated for the first time:
Nevada,
West Virginia, and
Kansas. The reconstructed portions of Tennessee and Louisiana elected presidential Electors, although Congress did not count their votes.
'Source (Popular Vote):'
'Source (Electoral Vote):'
(a) ''The states in rebellion did not participate in the election of 1864.''
(b) ''One Elector from Nevada did not vote''
(c) ''Andrew Johnson had been a Democrat, and after 1869 was a Democrat. The Republicans did not run a presidential candidate in 1864 but formed the National Union Party to accommodate the War Democrats.''
References
★ Harold M. Dudley. "The Election of 1864," ''Mississippi Valley Historical Review'', Vol. 18, No. 4 (Mar., 1932) , pp. 500-518 full text in JSTOR
★ David E. Long. ''Jewel of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln's Re-election and the End of Slavery'' (1994)
★ Merrill, Louis Taylor. "General Benjamin F. Butler in the Presidential Campaign of 1864." ''Mississippi Valley Historical Review'' 33 (March 1947): 537-70 full text in JSTOR
★ Nelson, Larry E. ''Bullets, Ballots, and Rhetoric: Confederate Policy for the United States Presidential Contest of 1864'' University of Alabama Press, 1980.
★ Nevins, Allan. ''Ordeal of the Union: The War for the Union'' vol 8 (1971)
★ Randall, James G. and Richard N. Current. ''Lincoln the President: Last Full Measure''. Vol. 4 of Lincoln the President. 1955.
★ Vorenberg, Michael. "'The Deformed Child': Slavery and the Election of 1864" ''Civil War History'' 2001 47(3): 240-257. ISSN 0009-8078 full text in JSTOR
★ Jack Waugh ''Reelecting Lincoln: The Battle for the 1864 Presidency'' (1998), a popular study
★ White, Jonathan W. "Canvassing the Troops: the Federal Government and the Soldiers' Right to Vote" ''Civil War History'' 2004 50(3): 291-317. ISSN 0009-8078
★
American election campaigns in the 19th century
★
History of the United States (1849–1865)
★
Third Party System
External links
★
1864 popular vote by counties
★
1864 State-by-state popular results
★ Transcript of the 1864
Democratic Party Platform
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