1793 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special elections

Summary

Three special elections were held in Connecticut's at-large congressional district in 1793 to fill vacancies caused by the resignation, prior to the start of the 3rd Congress, of three representatives-elect.

First special election edit

The first special election was held on April 8, 1793, after Jonathan Sturges (P) declined to serve the term for which he'd been elected

Candidate Party Votes[1] Percent
Uriah Tracy Pro-Administration 2,197 49.8%
Zephaniah Swift Pro-Administration 817 18.5%
Asher Miller [2] 708 16.1%
Jonathan Ingersoll Pro-Administration 436 9.9%
Tapping Reeve [2] 252 5.7%

Second special election edit

Benjamin Huntington (P) also resigned his seat before the start of Congress and was replaced by Jonathan Ingersoll in a special election held on September 16, 1793.[3]

Third special election edit

A pair of openings lead to a two-seat special election: 1. Member-elect Jonathan Ingersoll declined to serve from the September special election; and 2. Member-elect Stephen M. Mitchell declined to serve from the general election when he was appointed to the U.S. Senate.

A third election was held for their replacements, with the top two winning seats in the 3rd Congress: Joshua Coit (Pro-Administration) and Zephaniah Swift (Pro-Administration).

Candidate Party Votes[4] Percent
 Y Joshua Coit Pro-Administration 2,448 35.7%
 Y Zephaniah Swift Pro-Administration 1,657 24.2%
James Davenport Pro-Administration 1,183 17.2%
Roger Griswold Pro-Administration 864 12.6%
Chauncey Goodrich Pro-Administration 352 5.1%
Nathaniel Smith Pro-Administration 211 3.1%
Samuel W. Dana Pro-Administration 144 2.1%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu.
  2. ^ a b Party affiliation not given in source
  3. ^ United States Congressional Elections, 1788-1997: The Official Results, by Michael J. Dubin (McFarland and Company, 1998)
  4. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu.