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{{Short description|none}} {{for|related races|1816 United States elections}} {{use mdy dates|date=November 2013}} {{Use American English|date=February 2023}} {{Infobox election | election_name = 1816 United States presidential election | country = United States | flag_year = 1795 | type = presidential | ongoing = no | previous_election = 1812 United States presidential election | previous_year = 1812 | next_election = 1820 United States presidential election | next_year = 1820 | votes_for_election = 217 members of the [[Electoral College (United States)|Electoral College]] | needed_votes = 109 electoral | turnout = 16.9%<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.electproject.org/national-1789-present|title=National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present|work=United States Election Project|publisher=[[CQ Press]]}}</ref> {{decrease}} 23.5 [[percentage point|pp]] | election_date = November 1 β December 4, 1816 | image1 = [[File:John Vanderlyn - James Monroe - Google Art Project (3x4 cropped).jpg|200x200px]] | nominee1 = '''[[James Monroe]]''' | party1 = Democratic-Republican Party | running_mate1 = '''[[Daniel D. Tompkins]]''' | home_state1 = [[Virginia]] | electoral_vote1 = '''183''' | states_carried1 = '''16''' | popular_vote1 = '''76,762''' | percentage1 = '''68.7%''' | image2 = [[File:Gilbert Stuart - Portrait of Rufus King (1819-1820) - Google Art Project (3x4 cropped).jpg|200x200px]] | nominee2 = [[Rufus King]] | party2 = Federalist Party | running_mate2 = ''N/A''{{efn|No candidate was formally nominated. [[John Eager Howard]] received 22 votes, [[James Ross (Pennsylvania congressman)|James Ross]] 5, [[John Marshall]] 4, [[Robert Goodloe Harper]] 3.{{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=25}}}} | home_state2 = [[New York (state)|New York]] | electoral_vote2 = 34 | states_carried2 = 3 | popular_vote2 = 17,300{{efn|name=federalist|Votes cast for Federalist unpledged electors}} | percentage2 = 15.5%{{efn|name=federalist}} | map_size = 350px | map = {{1816 United States presidential election imagemap}} | map_caption = Presidential election results map. <span style="color:green;">Green</span> denotes states won by Monroe and <span style="color:#EA9978;">Salmon</span> denotes states won by King. One elector from Delaware and three from Maryland did not vote. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes cast by each state. | title = President | before_election = [[James Madison]] | before_party = Democratic-Republican Party | after_election = [[James Monroe]] | after_party = Democratic-Republican Party }} [[United States presidential election|Presidential elections]] were held in the [[United States]] from November 1 to December 4, 1816. The [[Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]] ticket of [[United States Secretary of State|secretary of state]] [[James Monroe]] and the [[governor of New York]] [[Daniel D. Tompkins]] defeated the [[de facto]] [[Federalist Party|Federalist]] candidate, the senior [[United States Senate|U.S. senator]] from [[New York (state)|New York]] [[Rufus King]].{{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}} Although not formally nominated, King became the last Federalist presidential candidate upon receiving 34 votes from Federalist [[unpledged elector]]s.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} In the subsequent election, the Federalists carried three states but did not field their own candidate, instead supporting the incumbent Monroe, before disappearing by the end of the 1820s.{{sfn|Howe|2007|pp=146; 95}} The outgoing [[President of the United States|president]] [[James Madison]] did not seek re-election to a third consecutive term. Monroe emerged as the Democratic-Republican frontrunner and secured the party's nomination at its [[congressional nominating caucus]] in March, narrowly defeating the [[United States Secretary of War|secretary of war]] [[William H. Crawford]]. The caucus nominated Tompkins for vice president over the [[governor of Pennsylvania]] [[Simon Snyder]]. The Federalists were disorganized following the end of the [[War of 1812]] and did not hold a caucus or formally select a candidate. King himself remained aloof from the campaign and did nothing to promote his candidacy.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=219β20; 224β25}} No consensus on a vice presidential candidate emerged among the Federalist electors, who scattered their votes between four candidates.{{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=25n1}} Monroe benefited from the popularity of the outgoing [[Presidency of James Madison|Madison administration]] and resurgent nationalism following the end of the war. Madison's 1816 [[State of the Union|message to Congress]] endorsed an ambitious economic program that robbed the Federalists of much of their platform, most notably chartering the [[Second Bank of the United States]].{{sfn|Howe|2007|pp=80-81}} In spite of significant discontent with the caucus system and the incumbent [[Virginia dynasty]], the Democratic-Republicans were able to avoid a major factional schism in contrast to the previous election. The Federalists meanwhile were demoralized, dogged by [[Blue light federalists|accusations of treason]], and ill-prepared to mount a national campaign.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=211; 228β29}} Most took Monroe's election for granted and did not attempt to prevent it.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} In three states where electors were chosen by the [[State legislature (United States)|legislature]], Federalists controlled the selection process and appointed unpledged electors who voted for King.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=230}} Monroe carried the 16 remaining states, including every state where electors were chosen by popular vote, amidst widespread voter apathy and anemic turnout.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=308}} ==Nominations== ===Democratic-Republican Party=== ====Caucus==== [[File:James Madison(cropped)(c).jpg|thumb|200px|[[James Madison]], the incumbent president in 1816, whose second term expired on March 4, 1817]] Monroe followed an uncertain path to the nomination in 1816. He had feuded with Madison for most of the preceding three decades, running against him for a seat in the [[United States House of Representatives]] in [[1789 Virginia's 5th congressional district election|1789]] and for the presidency in [[1808 United States presidential election|1808]].{{sfn|Howe|2007|p=91}} Monroe mended relations with Madison during the War of 1812, serving as secretary of state and secretary of war in the latter's administration, and by 1816 was positioning himself as the president's natural successor. Monroe was not personally popular, and his candidacy encountered resistance from northern Democratic-Republicans and others opposed to the extension of the [[Virginia dynasty]]. During the winter of 1815β16, New York governor Daniel D. Tompkins and Monroe's successor as secretary of war William H. Crawford emerged as rivals for the presidency.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=212β14}} Popular in his home state, Tompkins could count on the loyal support of the [[Bucktails|Anti-Clintonian]] faction of the New York Democratic-Republican Party, but his candidacy struggled to attract a national following. While the [[New York General Assembly]] formally nominated him for president on February 14, his lack of name recognition, youth, and volatility were seen as serious disadvantages. By March, Tompkins had seemingly given up all hope of his nomination and instead focused his efforts on the vice presidency.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=214}} Although Crawford publicly denied interest in the presidency, his candidacy quickly gathered significant support from editors and politicians ahead of the party's [[congressional nominating caucus]], and by February had amassed enough strength to present a serious challenge to Monroe. Despite this, Crawford remained hesitant to openly seek the nomination. Having personally assured the secretary of state that he would not be a candidate in 1816, he was reluctant to damage his standing in the party with a fight for the nomination. The continued enthusiasm for his candidacy following his public refusal in February left the war secretary unsure of how to proceed.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=216β17}} Substantial public opinion opposed the caucus system as corrupt, undemocratic, and potentially unconstitutional.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=217}} While Monroe preferred to retain the caucus system, Crawford's popularity among Democratic-Republicans in Congress made calling a caucus immediately disadvantageous to Monroe's chances of gaining the nomination.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=303}} When finally an anonymous notice announced the date of the caucus as March 12, the meeting was attended by only 58 members, principally supporters of Crawford. The gathering was judged too small to command public credibility, and on the motion of [[Jeremiah Morrow]] of [[Ohio]], the caucus adjourned until March 16. During the recess, Crawford instructed the U.S. senators from [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] [[Charles Tait (politician)|Charles Tait]] and [[William W. Bibb]] to withdraw his candidacy, having decided to postpone his ambitions until [[1824 United States presidential election|1824]]. When the caucus met again on the 16th, all but 22 Democratic-Republican members were in attendance. [[Henry Clay]] and [[John W. Taylor (politician)|John W. Taylor]] again moved that it was "inexpedient" to nominate a presidential candidate, but were voted down; the caucus then nominated Monroe by a vote of 65 to 54.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=219}} Monroe owed his majority over Crawford to the 11 Virginians in attendance, who supplied the margin of victory.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=219}} Crawford received the votes of the [[New York (state)|New York]], [[New Jersey]], Georgia, and [[Kentucky]] delegations, notwithstanding their candidate's withdrawal. Of the 22 Democratic-Republican members who did not attend the caucus, the majority were Crawfordites who absented themselves at Crawford's request to allow Monroe's nomination.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=305}} The narrow margin between the candidates and the presumed sympathies of the 22 absent members encouraged the belief that "Crawford would certainly have been nominated had he made even the slighted effort on his behalf."{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=220}} In the event of his defeat, Crawford had instructed Tait and Bibb to issue a statement that he had been [[Draft (politics)|drafted]] without his consent; this the senators neglected to do. Crawford would subsequently attribute Monroe's lack of support for his candidacy in 1824 to this embarrassment.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=219β20}} {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |+ Presidential nomination |- ! Candidate ! 1st |- ! [[James Monroe]] |style="background:#73D873;"| 65 |- ! [[William H. Crawford]] |style="background:#AFE9AF;"| 54 |} ====Nominees==== {| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center;" |- | style="background:#f1f1f1;" colspan="30"|[[File:Tricolour Cockade.svg|65px|center|link=Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican Party]]<big>'''1816 Democratic-Republican Party Ticket'''</big> |- ! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#228B22; width:200px;"| [[James Monroe|{{color|white|James Monroe}}]] ! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#228B22; width:200px;"| [[Daniel D. Tompkins|{{color|white|Daniel D. Tompkins}}]] |- | style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:#90EE90; width:200px;"|'''''for President''''' | style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:#90EE90; width:200px;"|'''''for Vice President''''' |- | [[File:John Vanderlyn - James Monroe - Google Art Project.jpg|center|200x200px]] | [[File:Daniel D Tompkins by John Wesley Jarvis.jpg|center|200x200px]] |- | 7th<br>[[United States Secretary of War|U.S. secretary of state]]<br><small>(1811β17)</small> | [[List of Governors of New York|4th]]<br>[[governor of New York]]<br><small>(1807β17)</small> |- |} ====Candidates==== {| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%" |- <sup>β </sup> |colspan="9" style="text-align:center; width:280px; font-size:120%; color:white; background:{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}};"|''{{small|Candidates in this section are sorted by vote count in the congressional nominating caucus}}'' |- !scope="col" style="width:3em; font-size:120%;"| {{nowrap|[[William H. Crawford]]}} !scope="col" style="width:3em; font-size:120%;"| {{nowrap|[[Daniel D. Tompkins]]}} |- | [[File:William Harris Crawford by John Wesley Jarvis (PAFA).jpg|center|120x120px]] | [[File:Daniel D Tompkins by John Wesley Jarvis.jpg|center|120x120px]] |- style="text-align:center" | [[United States Secretary of War|U.S. secretary of War]] <br> {{small|(1815β17)}} | 4th [[governor of New York]] <br> {{small|(1807β17)}} |- style="text-align:center" | ''{{abbr|LN|Lost Nomination}}: March 16, 1816'' <br> {{small|'''54''' votes}} | ''{{abbr|W|Withdrew}}: March 13, 1816'' <br> {{small|'''0''' votes}} |- style="text-align:center" | {{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=219}} | {{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=214}} |} ====Vice presidential nomination==== Maneuvering for the vice presidency began in the weeks preceding the caucus, when the identity of the presidential candidate was still an open question. Sensing his presidential chances lagging, Tompkins advertised his willingness to accept the vice presidency under either Monroe or Crawford.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=314}} Several others were considered available candidates, including the governor of Pennsylvania Simon Snyder and the [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives]] [[Henry Clay]] of Kentucky.{{sfn|Morgan|1972|p=467}} Snyder's hopes were dashed when he failed to secure the formal endorsement of the Pennsylvania congressional delegation.{{sfn|Higginbotham|1952|p=316}} It was widely assumed that Crawford and Tompkins each sought to recruit the other for the second place on the ticket. The New York delegation floated a TompkinsβCrawford ticket that could unite all foes of the Virginia dynasty; when this failed, they approached Clay, to no avail.{{sfn|Morgan|1972|pp=466, 468}} Tompkins emerged as the overwhelming favorite when the caucus met on March 16 and was nominated by a large majority, while Snyder finished a distant second. Passed over for the presidency, the New Yorker substantially exceeded Monroe's margin over Crawford, winning the votes of nearly three quarters of the members in attendance.{{sfn|Turner|2002|pp=305β6}} {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |+ Vice Presidential nomination |- ! Candidate ! 1st |- ! [[Daniel D. Tompkins]] |style="background:#73D873;"| 85 |- ! [[Simon Snyder]] |style="background:#AFE9AF;"| 30 |} ===Federalist Party=== ====Failure to nominate a ticket==== The Federalist Party entered the election in disarray. Following [[Treaty of Ghent|peace with Britain]] in 1815, "the strength that the Federalists had shown in the middle states during the war years melted away."{{sfn|Howe|2007|pp=89β90}} Disconnected state parties lacked a unifying national organization capable of fielding candidates or mounting a national campaign. Where Federalists were more than a negligible presence, charges of disloyalty hounded the party in the wake of the [[Hartford Convention]].{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=228β29; 211}} This enfeebled party apparatus proved incapable of even selecting a candidate to oppose Monroe: although different names were mentioned in hearsay reports and private correspondence, no caucus was ever held, no consensus among state parties or the Federalist press emerged, and as late as December it remained unclear for whom (if anyone) the Federalist electors from [[Connecticut]], [[Delaware]], [[Maryland]], and [[Massachusetts]] would vote.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} If the Federalists were to choose a candidate, King appeared by far the likeliest possibility. A respected senator and former delegate to the [[Constitutional Convention (United States)|Constitutional Convention]] who had twice been the party's vice presidential candidate in [[1804 United States presidential election|1804]] and [[1808 United States presidential election|1808]], by 1816 King was the only individual capable of uniting the party's remaining supporters.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} In February, the ''New York Evening Post'' predicted that King and the former [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives]] [[Langdon Cheves]] would be the nominees of the Federalist caucus for president and vice president. However, in the interim, the New York Federalist Party nominated King for governor in the [[1816 New York gubernatorial election|April 1816 election]] after the party's original candidate, [[William W. Van Ness]], withdrew. King lost the election to Tompkins, and although the Democratic-Republican majority was not overwhelming, the defeat ended any hope of King's nomination for president.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=222; 224}} While some Federalists suggested the former U.S. senator from Maryland [[John Eager Howard]] or even Crawford as possible candidates, no serious movement to nominate either man ever materialized.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} The Federalists thus entered the fall campaign without a ticket, and with most party leaders resigned to an inevitable Democratic-Republican victory.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=224}} ====Candidates==== {| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%" |- <sup>β </sup> |colspan="9" style="text-align:center; width:420px; font-size:120%; color:white; background:{{party color|Federalist Party}};"|''{{small|Candidates in this section are sorted by number of electoral votes for president and then alphabetically by last name}}'' |- !scope="col" style="width:3em; font-size:120%;"| [[Rufus King]] !scope="col" style="width:3em; font-size:120%;"| [[William H. Crawford]] !scope="col" style="width:3em; font-size:120%;"| [[John Eager Howard|John E. Howard]] |- | [[File:Gilbert Stuart - Portrait of Rufus King (1819-1820) - Google Art Project.jpg|center|120x120px]] | [[File:William Harris Crawford by John Wesley Jarvis (PAFA).jpg|center|120x120px]] | [[File:Johneagerhoward.jpg|center|120x120px]] |- style="text-align:center" | [[United States Senate|U.S. senator]] from [[New York (state)|New York]] <br> {{small|(1813β25)}} | [[United States Secretary of War|U.S. secretary of War]] <br> {{small|(1815β17)}} | [[United States Senate|U.S. senator]] from [[Maryland]] <br> {{small|(1796β1803)}} |- style="text-align:center" | ''{{abbr|NN|Not Nominated}}'' | ''{{abbr|W|Withdrew}}: March 16, 1816'' | ''{{abbr|DNR|Did Not Run}}'' |- style="text-align:center" | {{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} | {{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}}{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=219}} | {{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} |} ==Campaign issues== [[File:Election Day 1815 by John Lewis Krimmel.jpg|thumb|300px|''Election Day in Philadelphia'' by [[John Lewis Krimmel]] (1815)]] ===Uncontested election=== The failure of the Federalist Party to nominate a ticket effectively conceded the election to Monroe. In [[New Jersey]], [[Ohio]], [[Rhode Island]], [[Vermont]], and in every state south of the [[Potomac River]], the Federalists did not seriously contest the election.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} Federalist unpledged electors ran in several states, and in [[Pennsylvania]], Monroe's opponents fielded an Independent ticket supported by disaffected Democratic-Republicans and Federalists.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Higginbotham |first1=Sanford W. |title=The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800β1816 |date=1952 |publisher=Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission |location=Harrisburg |page=314 |url=https://archive.org/details/keystoneindemocr0000sanf/mode/2up}}</ref> Lacking a candidate, the opposition all but ignored the presidential race and instead reserved their energies for state and local elections in which the remnants of regional Federalist strength might still be salvaged.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=226}} In New York and [[New Hampshire]], where a real effort was made to defeat the Democratic-Republican ticket, the Federalist campaign was distracted and uncoordinated.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=307}} So great was the sense of inevitability surrounding Monroe's election that most public speculation focused on the composition of his incoming [[Cabinet of the United States|cabinet]].{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=229}} Rufus King shared the view of nearly all observers who considered Monroe's election a foregone conclusion. He took no part in the campaign and said or did nothing to indicate that he considered himself a candidate. Following his gubernatorial defeat, King encouraged his colleagues to accept Monroe's election and suggested the Federalist Party should disband. Nothing in King's private correspondence suggests his candidacy for president; in a letter to [[Christopher Gore]] dated November 5, he referred to Monroe as running unopposed.{{sfnmp|1a1=Skeen|1y=2003|1pp=224β25|2a1=Turner|2y=2002|2pp=307β8}} The partisan press did not consider King a candidate. The Democratic-Republican ''Vermont Gazette'' laughed that Connecticut's Federalist electors "probably do not know for whom they shall vote themselves!"<ref>{{cite news |title=Electors of President and V. President |url=https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/524396794/ |work=Vermont Gazette |date=November 19, 1816}}</ref> As late as December 3, the Federalist ''Boston Daily Advertiser'' admitted it did not know for whom the state's Federalist electors would vote. King would not learn of his selection by 34 Federalist electors until after the electoral colleges had already met.{{sfn|Turner|2002|pp=307β8}} ===Caucus system=== The caucus system was a major issue in the campaign. A gathering of members of Congress had selected the Democratic-Republican national ticket in every consecutive election since 1796.{{sfn|Turner|2002|p=302}} Electoral candidates and candidates for state office were commonly chosen by similar gatherings of state legislators.{{sfn|Higginbotham|1952|p=22}} By design, the caucus system gave elected lawmakers substantial influence over the choice of party nominees for state and national office. This feature attracted criticism from Federalists and anti-caucus Democratic-Republicans who argued that the practice of caucus nominations undermined democratic elections, gave undue influence to career officeholders, and potentially violated the constitutional [[separation of powers]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Meeting of Delegates at Carlisle |url=https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/556557618 |work=Intelligencer and Weekly Advertiser |date=October 12, 1816}}</ref> With no organized opposition to Monroe, they noted that the election effectively had been decided by members of Congress and alleged that the constitutional election process had been subverted. The perception that the caucus had forced its choice upon the nation irrespective of the opinions of most voters was particularly salient. "A president is to be made thinks I," went one editorial, "but what shall we call the process? Not an election! for the people have nothing to do with it and the electors have nothing to do with it. One half of the republicans and all the federalists are against the man; but the caucus have said 'it shall be so,' and it must be so."<ref>{{cite news |title=President, What Shall I Call It? |url=https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/558822025 |work=Lancaster Journal |date=October 18, 1816}}</ref> The Federalist press made a significant effort to capitalize on opposition to the caucus.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=217}} The ''Portland Gazette'' suggested that voters should [[Election boycott|boycott]] the election in protest against "this manifest violation of one the most important provisions of the national Charter."<ref>{{cite news |title=It is suggested [...] |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83016082/1816-11-26/ed-1/seq-3/ |work=Portland Gazette |date=November 26, 1816}}</ref> Anti-caucus feeling, which smoldered all through the campaign, would continue to mount over the course of the next decade, and became a major issue in the election of 1824.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=211}} ===Virginia dynasty=== Opposition to the Virginia dynasty was a significant theme in the contest for the Democratic-Republican nomination that carried over into the general election.{{sfn|Morgan|1972|p=475}} Three of the four previous presidents had been Virginians; the only president from [[New England]], [[John Adams]], served a single term from 1797 to 1801. Northern Democratic-Republicans hoped the party's caucus would nominate a candidate from their section and fixed their hopes on Tompkins, who ultimately received the vice presidency; the implied inference that a New Yorker was fit only to play [[Sidekick|second fiddle]] to a Virginian was a source of resentment in the North.{{sfn|Remini|1950|p=309}} In the aftermath of the caucus, the Federalist press attempted to keep the issue alive.{{sfn|Morgan|1972|p=475}} In June, the ''Charlestown Courier'' reprinted an anonymous pamphlet, the ''Exposition of the Motives for Opposing the Nomination of Mr. Monroe for the Office of President of the United States,'' purportedly the work of the "fifty-four Democrats" who had voted to nominate Crawford in the caucus. Probably written by [[John Armstrong Jr.]], the piece alleged that party leaders had ruthlessly blocked the advancement of Monroe's rivals in order to continue the line of Virginian presidents, irrespective of Monroe's evident unfitness for office. Several Federalist editors suggested adopting Crawford as the party's candidate for president, but party leaders ultimately failed to agree upon this strategy.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|p=225β26}} ==Results== ===Statistics=== Monroe won the election decisively, carrying 33 of the 39 constituencies representing 183 electoral votes. He received a majority of the electoral votes from 16 states, including every state where electors were chosen by popular vote. Three states where electors were chosen by the legislatureβConnecticut, Delaware, and Massachusettsβand three popular election districts in Maryland chose upledged Federalist electors, representing 38 electoral votes. Four Federalist electors (the three Maryland Federalists and one elector from Delaware) did not vote; the remaining 34 voted for Rufus King.{{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}} There was no agreement among the Federalists as to a vice presidential candidate. Twenty-two electors voted for Howard, all from Massachusetts; Connecticut's electors split their votes between the former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania [[James Ross (Pennsylvania politician)|James Ross]] (5) and the [[Chief Justice of the United States|chief justice of the United States]] [[John Marshall]] (4), while three Delaware electors voted for the U.S. senator from Maryland [[Robert Goodloe Harper]]. Tompkins received the votes of all 183 Democratic-Republican electors.<ref name="National Archives">{{cite web |title=1816 Electoral College Results |url=https://www.archives.gov/electoral-college/1816 |website=National Archives |access-date=February 22, 2025}}</ref> ===Indiana's electoral votes=== [[Indiana]] entered the Union as the nineteenth state on December 11, 1816. When Congress met to count the electoral votes on February 22, 1817, John W. Taylor, the member from [[New York's 11th congressional district]], objected to counting Indiana's electoral votes on the grounds that it had not been a state at the time of the meeting of the electoral colleges. Daniel Cady, representing [[New York's 14th congressional district]], and [[William Hendricks]], the newly-elected member from [[Indiana's at-large congressional district|Indiana]], countered that Indiana's representatives to Congress had been seated with the acceptance of the state's [[Constitution of Indiana|constitution]], and that it was therefore entitled to participate in the election. Opinion in the House was overwhelmingly in favor of counting Indiana's votes. On the motion of [[Samuel D. Ingham]], the question of the legality of Indiana's votes was postponed indefinitely, and the final electoral count was read with Indiana's votes included.{{sfn|Skeen|2003|pp=230β31}} ===Electoral results=== {{start U.S. presidential ticket box|pv_footnote={{ref|box-a|(a)}}{{ref|box-b|(b)}}|ev_footnote={{ref|box-c|(c)}}}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row| name=[[James Monroe]]|party=[[Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]]|state=[[Virginia]]|pv=76,752|pv_pct=68.68%|ev=183|vp_name=[[Daniel D. Tompkins]]|vp_state=[[New York (state)|New York]]}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box rowspan|name=[[Rufus King]]|party=[[Federalist Party|Federalist]]|state=[[New York (state)|New York]]|pv={{ref|box-d|(d)}}|pv_pct={{ref|box-d|(d)}}|ev=34|vp_count=4|vp_name=[[John E. Howard]]|vp_state=[[Maryland]]|vp_ev=22}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box vp subrow|vp_name=[[James Ross (Pennsylvania congressman)|James Ross]]|vp_state=[[Pennsylvania]]|vp_ev=5}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box vp subrow|vp_name=[[John Marshall]]|vp_state=[[Virginia]]|vp_ev=4}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box vp subrow|vp_name=[[Robert Goodloe Harper]]|vp_state=[[Maryland]]|vp_ev=3}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row|name=[[Unpledged elector]]s|party=[[Democratic-Republican Party|Democratic-Republican]]|state=''(n/a)''|pv=17,597|pv_pct=15.74%|ev=β|vp_name=''(n/a)''|vp_state=''(n/a)''}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row|name=[[Unpledged elector]]s|party=[[Federalist Party|Federalist]]|state=''(n/a)''|pv=17,300|pv_pct=15.48%|ev=β{{ref|box-e|(e)}}|vp_name=''(n/a)''|vp_state=''(n/a)''}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box other|pv=99|pv_pct=0.09%}} {{end U.S. presidential ticket box|pv=111,748|ev=217|to_win=109}} '''Source (Popular Vote):''' ''A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825''<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog?commit=Limit&f%5Belection_type_sim%5D%5B%5D=General&f%5Boffice_id_ssim%5D%5B%5D=ON056&page=2&q=1820&range%5Bdate_sim%5D%5Bbegin%5D=1820&range%5Bdate_sim%5D%5Bend%5D=1820&search_field=all_fields&utf8=%E2%9C%93 | title=A New Nation Votes}}</ref> {{ubl|a.{{note|box-a||''In nine states, electors were chosen by the legislature rather than by popular vote. The ten states where electors were chosen via popular vote had widely varying restrictions on suffrage.''}} |b.{{note|box-b||''Popular vote figures from Kentucky and Tennessee are incomplete.''}} |c.{{note|box-c||''One elector from Delaware and three electors from Maryland did not vote.''}} |d.{{note|box-d|| ''King was not formally nominated by the Federalist Party and did not camaign; his electoral votes came from [[unpledged elector]]s from three states where electors were chosen by the legislature.''}} |e.{{note|box-e|| ''Federalist unpledged electors carried three Maryland districts. All three electors subsequently abstained.''}}}} {{bar box |title=Popular vote |titlebar=#ddd |width=600px |barwidth=390px |bars= {{bar percent|'''Monroe'''|{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}}|68.7}} {{bar percent|Unpledged electors (DR)|{{party color|Independent politician}}|15.7}} {{bar percent|Unpledged electors (F)|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|15.4}} {{bar percent|Others|{{party color|Independent politician}}|0.1}} }} {{bar box |title=Electoral voteβPresident |titlebar=#ddd |width=600px |barwidth=390px |bars= {{bar percent|'''Monroe'''|{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}}|84.3}} {{bar percent|King|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|15.7}} }} {{bar box |title=Electoral voteβVice President |titlebar=#ddd |width=600px |barwidth=390px |bars= {{bar percent|'''Tompkins'''|{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}}|84.3}} {{bar percent|Howard|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|10.1}} {{bar percent|Ross|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|2.3}} {{bar percent|Marshall|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|1.8}} {{bar percent|Harper|{{party color|Federalist Party}}|1.4}} }} ===Results by state=== Nineteenth century election laws required voters to vote directly for members of the Electoral College rather than for president. This sometimes resulted in small differences in the number of votes cast for electors pledged to the same presidential candidate if some voters did not vote for all the electors nominated by a party, or if one or several electors [[Electoral fusion in the United States|ran on multiple tickets]].<ref>{{multiref|{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/?f%5Boffice_id_ssim%5D%5B%5D=ON056 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 23, 2025}}|{{cite journal |last1=Ratcliffe |first1=Donald J. |title=Popular Preferences in the Presidential Election of 1824 |journal=Journal of the Early Republic |date=Spring 2014 |volume=34 |issue=1 |page=57 |jstor=24486931 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24486931}}}}</ref> In most cases, this table compares the results for the most popular elector pledged to each ticket. For the single-member electoral districts in Maryland, all votes for electors pledged to one party or nominee are counted in cases where multiple electors were pledged to the same presidential candidate. In Pennsylvania, four electors ran on both the Democratic-Republican and the Independent ticket and were elected without opposition; this table counts the result for the most popular elector to run exclusively on the Democratic-Republican ticket (William Gilliland) for Monroe, and the result for the most popular elector to run exclusively on the Independent ticket ([[Andrew Gregg]]) for the Others. Returns from Tennessee and one Kentucky district appear to have been lost. {| class="wikitable sortable" |+ !rowspan=2| State !rowspan=2 style="font-size: 60%"| Electoral<br>votes !colspan=3| James Monroe<br>Democratic-Republican !colspan=3| Unpledged electors{{efn|Except as noted, the Federalist electors voted for Rufus King.}}<br>Federalist !colspan=3| Others !colspan=2| Margin !rowspan=2| Total !rowspan=2| Citation |- ! No. ! % !style="font-size: 60%"| Electoral<br>votes ! No. ! % !style="font-size: 60%"| Electoral<br>votes ! No. ! % !style="font-size: 60%"| Electoral<br>votes ! No. ! % |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Connecticut|Connecticut]] ! 9 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 9 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Connecticut 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/s1784k92m |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ![[1816 United States presidential election in Delaware|Delaware]] ! 4 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 4{{efn|One elector did not vote; the three remaining electors voted for Rufus King.}} |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Delaware 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/8k71nh893 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Georgia|Georgia]] ! 8 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 8 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Indiana|Indiana]] ! 3 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 3 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=22}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Indiana 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/9880vr597 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Kentucky|Kentuckyβ1]]{{efn|name=lost|Returns from this district appear to have been lost.}} ! 4 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 4 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Kentucky 1816 Electoral College, District 1 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/rf55z8124 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Kentucky|Kentuckyβ2]] ! 4 |align=right| 1,508 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 4 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 1,508 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 1,508 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Kentucky 1816 Electoral College, District 2 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/41687j152 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Kentucky|Kentuckyβ3]] ! 4 |align=right| 356 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 4 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 356 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 356 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Kentucky 1816 Electoral College, District 3 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/jw827b74h |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Louisiana|Louisiana]] ! 3 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 3 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Louisiana 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/j9602120t |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ1]] ! 1 |align=right| 2 |align=right| 0.74 |align=right| β |align=right| 270 |align=right| 99.26 |align=right| 1{{efn|name=maryland|Did not vote}} |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 268 |align=right| 98.52 |align=right| 272 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 1 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/t435gd78w |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ2]] ! 1 |align=right| 523 |align=right| 73.7 |align=right| 1 |align=right| 184 |align=right| 25.9 |align=right| β |align=right| 3 |align=right| 0.4 |align=right| β |align=right| 339 |align=right| 47.8 |align=right| 710 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 2 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/qr46r2205 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ3]] ! 2 |align=right| 1,440 |align=right| 99.0 |align=right| 2 |align=right| 13 |align=right| 0.9 |align=right| β |align=right| 2 |align=right| 0.1 |align=right| β |align=right| 1,427 |align=right| 98.1 |align=right| 1,455 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 3 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/kk91fn018 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ4]] ! 2 |align=right| 1,855 |align=right| 95.6 |align=right| 2 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 85 |align=right| 4.4 |align=right| β |align=right| 1,722 |align=right| 91.4 |align=right| 1,938 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 4 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/dz010q44w |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ5]] ! 1 |align=right| 693 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 693 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 693 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 5 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/qz20sv000 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ6]] ! 1 |align=right| 938 |align=right| 67.9 |align=right| 1 |align=right| 435 |align=right| 31.5 |align=right| β |align=right| 9 |align=right| 0.6 |align=right| β |align=right| 503 |align=right| 36.4 |align=right| 1,382 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 6 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/7m01bn26d |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ7]] ! 1 |align=right| 750 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 750 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 750 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 7 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/rb68xd39h |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ8]] ! 1 |align=right| 1,272 |align=right| 48.9 |align=right| β |align=right| 1,338 |align=right| 51.1 |align=right| 1{{efn|name=maryland}} |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| -56 |align=right| -2.2 |align=right| 2,610 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 8 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/ng451j14j |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Marylandβ9]] ! 1 |align=right| 30 |align=right| 3.3 |align=right| β |align=right| 886 |align=right| 96.7 |align=right| 1{{efn|name=maryland}} |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| -856 |align=right| -93.4 |align=right| 916 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Maryland 1816 Electoral College, District 9 |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/hq37vp97s |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|Massachusetts]] ! 22 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 22 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Massachusetts 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/4f16c398v |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New Hampshire|New Hampshire]] ! 8 |align=right| 15,225 |align=right| 53.3 |align=right| 8 |align=right| 13,338 |align=right| 46.7 |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 1,887 |align=right| 6.6 |align=right| 28,563 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=New Hampshire 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/f1881n29h |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New Jersey|New Jersey]] ! 8 |align=right| 5,441 |align=right| 99.0 |align=right| 8 |align=right| 54 |align=right| 1.0 |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 5,387 |align=right| 98.0 |align=right| 5,495 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=New Jersey 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/df65v867z |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New York|New York]] ! 29 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 29 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=New York 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/b2773w59r |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in North Carolina|North Carolina]] ! 15 |align=right| 9,549 |align=right| 98.4 |align=right| 15 |align=right| 158 |align=right| 1.6 |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 9,391 |align=right| 96.7 |align=right| 9,707 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=North Carolina 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/nz805z754 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Ohio|Ohio]] ! 8 |align=right| 3,326 |align=right| 84.9 |align=right| 8 |align=right| 593 |align=right| 15.1 |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 2,733 |align=right| 69.7 |align=right| 3,919 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=23}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Ohio 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/8623hz494 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]] ! 25 |align=right| 25,749 |align=right| 59.4 |align=right| 25 |align=right| 27 |align=right| 0.1 |align=right| β |align=right| 17,597 |align=right| 40.6 |align=right| β |align=right| 8,152 |align=right| 18.8 |align=right| 43,346 |align=right| <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Pennsylvania 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/5q47rp95g |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Rhode Island|Rhode Island]] ! 4 |align=right| 1,236 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 4 |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 1,236 |align=right| 100.0 |align=right| 1,236 |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Rhode Island 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/9019s413h |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in South Carolina|South Carolina]] ! 11 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 11 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=South Carolina 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/76537189d |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ1]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Tennessee 1816 Electoral Carter, Greene, Hawkins, Sullivan and Washington Counties |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/sf268627r |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ2]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ3]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ4]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Tennessee 1816 Electoral College, Bledsoe, Franklin, Jackson, Overton, Rhea, Warren and White Counties |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/n583xw49q |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ5]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ6]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Tennessee 1816 Electoral College, Bedford, Davidson and Rutherford Counties |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/707959148 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ7]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennesseeβ8]]{{efn|name=lost}} ! 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| 1 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{tooltip|**|No data}} |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Vermont|Vermont]] ! 8 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| 8 |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| {{tooltip|*|Electors chosen by the legislature}} |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}} |-{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Virginia|Virginia]] ! 25 |align=right| 6,859 |align=right| 99.9 |align=right| 25 |align=right| 4 |align=right| 0.1 |align=right| β |align=right colspan=2| β |align=right| β |align=right| 6,855 |align=right| 99.8 |align=right| β |align=right| {{sfn|Dubin|2002|p=24}}<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lampi |first1=Philip J. |title=Virginia 1816 Electoral College |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/2z10wq971 |website=A New Nation Votes |publisher=American Antiquarian Society |access-date=February 17, 2025}}</ref> |- ! TOTALS ! 221 ! 76,752 ! 68.7 ! 183 ! 17,300 ! 15.5 ! 38 ! 17,696 ! 15.8 ! 0 ! 59,489 ! 53.2 ! 111,748 ! |} ====States and districts that flipped from Federalist to Democratic-Republican==== *[[Maryland|Maryland's 2nd electoral district]] *[[Maryland|Maryland's 4th electoral district]] *[[New York (state)|New York]] *[[New Jersey]] *[[New Hampshire]] *[[Rhode Island]] ====Districts that flipped from Democratic-Republican to Federalist==== *[[Maryland|Maryland's 8th electoral district]] ====Close states and districts==== Districts where the margin of victory was less than 5 percentage points: # '''<span style="color:#EA9978;">Maryland's 8th electoral district, 2.2% (56 votes)</span>''' States where the margin of victory was less than 10 percentage points: # '''<span style="color:#008000;">New Hampshire, 6.3% (1,813 votes)</span>''' ===Electoral votes by state=== {|class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:right" |- !rowspan=2| State !rowspan=2 style="font-size: 60%"| Electoral<br />votes !colspan=3| For President |rowspan=23 style="background: #efefef" class="unsortable"| !colspan=6| For Vice President |- ! {{abbrlink|JM|James Monroe}} ! {{abbrlink|RK|Rufus King}} ! {{abbr|B|Blank}} ! {{abbrlink|DT|Daniel D. Tompkins}} ! {{abbrlink|JH|John Eager Howard}} ! {{abbrlink|JR|James Ross (Pennsylvania politician)}} ! {{abbrlink|JM|John Marshall}} ! {{abbrlink|RH|Robert Goodloe Harper}} ! {{abbr|B|Blank}} |- {{party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Connecticut|Connecticut]] ! 9 | β | 9 | β | β | β | 5 | 4 | β | β |- {{party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Delaware|Delaware]] ! 4 | β | 3 | 1 | β | β | β | β | 3 | 1 |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Georgia|Georgia]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Indiana|Indiana]] ! 3 | 3 | β | β | 3 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Kentucky|Kentucky]] ! 12 | 12 | β | β | 12 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Louisiana|Louisiana]] ! 3 | 3 | β | β | 3 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Maryland|Maryland]] ! 11 | 8 | β | 3 | 8 | β | β | β | β | 3 |- {{party shading/Federalist}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|Massachusetts]] ! 22 | β | 22 | β | β | 22 | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New Hampshire|New Hampshire]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New Jersey|New Jersey]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in New York|New York]] ! 29 | 29 | β | β | 29 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in North Carolina|North Carolina]] ! 15 | 15 | β | β | 15 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Ohio|Ohio]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]] ! 25 | 25 | β | β | 25 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Rhode Island|Rhode Island]] ! 4 | 4 | β | β | 4 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in South Carolina|South Carolina]] ! 11 | 11 | β | β | 11 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Tennessee|Tennessee]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Vermont|Vermont]] ! 8 | 8 | β | β | 8 | β | β | β | β | β |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} ! [[1816 United States presidential election in Virginia|Virginia]] ! 25 | 25 | β | β | 25 | β | β | β | β | β |- ! TOTAL ! 221 ! 183 ! 34 ! 4 ! 183 ! 22 ! 5 ! 4 ! 3 ! 4 |- ! TO WIN ! 109 !colspan=3| ! 109 ! colspan=5| |} ===Maps=== <gallery heights="200" mode="packed"> File:1816 US Presidential Election Results.svg|Map of presidential election results by county, shaded according to the vote share of the highest result for an elector of any given candidate 1816 Presidential Election Results By Electoral District.svg|Map of presidential election results by electoral district, shaded according to the vote share of the highest result for an elector of any given candidate. Electoral boundaries for Maryland and most of Tennessee could not be found </gallery> ==Electoral college selection== {{start electoral college selection}} {{electoral college selection row|method=Electors are chosen by the state legislature|states={{plainlist| *[[Connecticut]] *[[Delaware]] *[[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] *[[Indiana]] *[[Louisiana]] *[[Massachusetts]] *[[New York (state)|New York]] *[[South Carolina]] *[[Vermont]]}}}} {{electoral college selection row|method=Electors are chosen by voters in a statewide election|states={{plainlist| *[[New Hampshire]] *[[New Jersey]] *[[North Carolina]] *[[Ohio]] *[[Pennsylvania]] *[[Rhode Island]] *[[Virginia]]}}}} {{electoral college selection row|method=Electors are chosen by voters from single- or multi-member districts|states={{plainlist| *[[Kentucky]] *[[Maryland]] *[[Tennessee]]}}}} {{end electoral college selection}} ==See also== * [[First inauguration of James Monroe]] * [[History of the United States (1789-1849)]] * [[1816β17 United States House of Representatives elections]] * [[1816β17 United States Senate elections]] ==Notes== {{notelist}} {{reflist}} ==Bibliography== * {{cite web |title=1816 Electoral College Results |url=https://www.archives.gov/electoral-college/1816 |website=National Archives |access-date=February 22, 2025}} * {{cite book |last1=Dubin |first1=Michael J. |title=United States Presidential Elections, 1788β1860: The Official Results by County and State |date=2002 |publisher=McFarland & Co. |location=Jefferson, NC}} * {{cite book|last=Howe |first=Daniel |author-link=Daniel Walker Howe |title=What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815β1848 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |date=2007 |url=https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug0000howe_j9v1 |isbn=978-0-19-507894-7}} * {{cite journal |last1=Morgan |first1=William G. |title=The Congressional Nominating Caucus of 1816: The Struggle against the Virginia Dynasty |journal=Virginia Magazine of History and Biography |date=October 1972 |volume=80 |issue=4 |pages=461β75 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4247750}} * {{cite journal |last1=Remini |first1=Robert V. |title=New York and the Presidential Election of 1816 |journal=New York History |date=July 1950 |volume=31 |issue=3 |pages=308β24 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23149983}} * {{cite book |last1=Skeen |first1=Carl Edward |title=1816: America Rising |date=2003 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington |url=https://archive.org/details/1816americarisin0000skee/2up}} * {{cite book |last=Turner |first=Lynn W. |editor-last1=Schlesinger |editor-first1=Arthur M. Jr. |editor-last2 = Israel |editor-first2 = Fred L. |title=History of American Presidential Elections, 1789β2001 |volume=1 |publisher=Chelsea House Publishers |location = Philadelphia |date = 2002 |chapter=Elections of 1816 and 1820 |pages=298β345 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/historyofamerica01schl/page/298/mode/2up}} ==External links== {{Commons}} * [https://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/elections/election1816.html Presidential Elections of 1816 and 1820: A Resource Guide] from the Library of Congress * [https://web.archive.org/web/20110202214223/http://elections.lib.tufts.edu/aas_portal/index.xq A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns, 1787-1825] * [http://www.countingthevotes.com/1816/ Election of 1816 in Counting the Votes] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191222141927/http://www.countingthevotes.com/1816/ |date=December 22, 2019 }} {{James Monroe}} {{USPresidentialElections}} {{1816 United States presidential election}} {{State results of the 1816 U.S. presidential election}} {{Federalist Party}} {{Democratic-Republican Party}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:1816 United States presidential election| ]] [[Category:Presidency of James Monroe]] [[Category:James Monroe]] [[Category:Daniel D. Tompkins]]
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