1918 United States gubernatorial elections
United States gubernatorial elections were held in 1918, in 32 states, concurrent with the House and Senate elections, on November 5, 1918 (September 9 in Maine).
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32 state governorships | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Democratic gain Democratic hold Republican gain Republican hold |
Results
State | Incumbent | Party | Status | Opposing Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama | Charles Henderson | Democratic | Term-limited, Democratic victory | Thomas E. Kilby (Democratic) 80.21% Dallas B. Smith (Independent) 19.79% [1] (Democratic primary results: after second preferences) Thomas E. Kilby 36.84% William W. Brandon 34.37% Charles B. Teasley 19.37% John H. Wallace Jr. 7.99% John Purifoy 1.42% [2] |
Arizona | George W. P. Hunt | Democratic | Retired, Republican victory | Thomas Edward Campbell (Republican) 49.90% Fred T. Colter (Democratic) 49.25% George D. Smith (Socialist) 0.86% [3] |
Arkansas | Charles H. Brough | Democratic | Re-elected, 93.43% | Clay Fulks (Socialist) 6.57% (Democratic primary results) √ Charles H. Brough L. C. 'Judge' Smith [data unknown/missing] [4][5][6] |
California | William D. Stephens | Republican | Re-elected | William D. Stephens (Republican) 56.28% Theodore Arlington Bell (Independent) 36.48% Henry H. Roser (Socialist) 4.21% James Rolph Jr. (Democratic)[lower-alpha 1] (write-in) 2.99% Scattering 0.05% [7] |
Colorado | Julius Caldeen Gunter | Democratic | Defeated in Democratic primary, Republican victory | Oliver Henry Nelson Shoup (Republican) 51.15% Thomas J. Tynan (Democratic) 46.47% Mary L. Geffs (Socialist) 2.38% [8] |
Connecticut | Marcus H. Holcomb | Republican | Re-elected, 50.72% | Thomas J. Spellacy (Democratic) 45.87% Martin F. Plunkett (Socialist) 2.39% John Newton Lackey (Prohibition) 0.61% Herman Klawansky (Socialist Labor) 0.34% George A. Parsons (National) 0.07% [9] |
Georgia | Hugh M. Dorsey | Democratic | Re-elected, unopposed [10] | (Democratic primary results) Hugh M. Dorsey (unopposed) [11] |
Idaho | Moses Alexander | Democratic | Retired, Republican victory | David W. Davis (Republican) 59.95% H. F. Samuels (Democratic) 40.05% [12] |
Iowa | William L. Harding | Republican | Re-elected, 50.55% | Claude R. Porter (Democratic) 46.92% Andrew Engle (Socialist) 2.10% M. L. Christian (Prohibition) 0.43% [13] |
Kansas | Arthur Capper | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | Henry J. Allen (Republican) 66.39% W. C. Lansdon (Democratic) 30.68% George W. Kleihege (Socialist) 2.94% [14] |
Maine (held, 9 September 1918) | Carl E. Milliken | Republican | Re-elected, 52.04% | Bertrand G. McIntire (Democratic) 47.96% [15] |
Massachusetts | Samuel W. McCall | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | Calvin Coolidge (Republican) 50.87% Richard H. Long (Democratic) 46.84% Sylvester J. McBride (Socialist) 1.84% Ingvar Paulsen (Socialist Labor) 0.45% [16] |
Michigan | Albert E. Sleeper | Republican | Re-elected, 61.41% | John W. Bailey (Democratic) 36.41% Ernest J. Moore (Socialist) 1.63% John S. McColl (Prohibition) 0.38% John Hinds (Socialist Labor) 0.18% [17] |
Minnesota | Joseph A. A. Burnquist | Republican | Re-elected, 45.04% | David H. Evans (Farmer-Labor) 30.28% Fred E. Wheaton (Democratic) 20.77% L. P. Berot (Socialist) 2.11% Olaf O. Stageberg (National) 1.80% [18] |
Nebraska | Keith Neville | Democratic | Defeated, 44.00% | Samuel R. McKelvie (Republican) 54.47% J. P. Graves (Prohibition) 1.53% [19] |
Nevada | Emmet D. Boyle | Democratic | Re-elected, 52.08% | Tasker L. Oddie (Republican) 47.92% [20] |
New Hampshire | Henry W. Keyes | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | John H. Bartlett (Republican) 54.13% Nathaniel E. Martin (Democratic) 45.86% Scattering 0.01% [21] |
New Mexico | Washington Lindsey | Republican | Lost renomination, Republican victory | Octaviano Ambrosio Larrazolo (Republican) 50.50% Felix Garcia (Democratic) 47.70% A. H. Moulton (Socialist) 1.80% [22] |
New York | Charles S. Whitman | Republican | Defeated, 46.68% | Alfred E. Smith (Democratic) 47.37% Charles W. Ervin (Socialist) 5.71% Olive M. Johnson (Socialist Labor) 0.24% [23] |
North Dakota | Lynn J. Frazier | Republican | Re-elected, 59.75% | S. J. Doyle (Democratic) 40.26% [24] |
Ohio | James M. Cox | Democratic | Re-elected, 50.62% | Frank B. Willis (Republican) 49.38% [25] |
Oklahoma | Robert L. Williams | Democratic | Term-limited, Democratic victory | James B. A. Robertson (Democratic) 53.55% Horace G. McKeever (Republican) 42.63% Patrick S. Nagle (Socialist) 3.83% [26] |
Oregon | James Withycombe | Republican | Re-elected, 52.99% | Walter M. Pierce (Democratic) 42.78% Benjamin Franklin Ramp (Socialist) 4.24% [27] |
Pennsylvania | Martin Grove Brumbaugh | Republican | Term-limited, Republican victory | William Cameron Sproul (Republican) 61.05% Eugene C. Bonniwell (Democratic) 33.74% Edwin J. Fithian (Prohibition) 3.02% Charles Sehl (Socialist) 2.07% Robert C. Macauley Jr. (Single Tax) 0.12% [28] |
Rhode Island | R. Livingston Beeckman | Republican | Re-elected, 53.11% | Alberic A. Archambault (Democratic) 44.84% Ernest Sherwood (Socialist) 2.05% [29] |
South Carolina | Richard Irvine Manning III | Democratic | Retired, Democratic victory | Robert Archer Cooper (Democratic) unopposed [30] (Democratic primary results) Robert Archer Cooper 57.96% John Gardiner Richards 29.24% Andrew J. Bethea 9.70% Scattering 3.10% [31] |
South Dakota | Peter Norbeck | Republican | Re-elected, 53.22% | Mark P. Bates (Independent) 26.12% James B. Bird (Democratic) 18.57% Knute Lewis (Independent) 1.32% Orville Anderson (Socialist) 0.77% [32] |
Tennessee | Thomas C. Rye | Democratic | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Democratic victory | Albert H. Roberts (Democratic) 62.37% Hugh B. Lindsay (Republican) 37.64% [33] |
Texas | William Pettus Hobby | Democratic | Re-elected, 84.00% | Charles A. Boynton (Republican) 15.06% William D. Simpson (Socialist) 0.94% [34] |
Vermont | Horace F. Graham | Republican | Retired, Republican victory | Percival Wood Clement (Republican) 67.00% William B. Mayo (Democratic) 32.75% Scattering 0.25% [35] |
Wisconsin | Emanuel L. Philipp | Republican | Re-elected, 46.99% | Henry A. Moehlenpah (Democratic) 33.95% Emil Seidel (Socialist) 17.35% William C. Dean (Prohibition) 1.60% Scattering 0.12% [36] |
Wyoming | Frank L. Houx | Democratic | Defeated, 43.90% | Robert D. Carey (Republican) 56.11% [37] |
gollark: I ran a broken program in `gdb` and this happened?```Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.0x00007ffff7fde4c1 in _dl_relocate_object () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2```
gollark: So I got one reply on r/archlinux about my weird issue, and it turned out to not be very helpful.
gollark: Can't see anything obvious about Qt there.
gollark: I should probably ask on r/archlinux or something.
gollark: I would suspect it being a distro thing, but I have multiMC installed from the AUR and recompiling it didn't help.
See also
- United States elections, 1918
- United States Senate elections, 1918
- United States House of Representatives elections, 1918
References
- "AL Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- Mrs Marie B. Owen, Director, ed. (1920). Alabama official and statistical register, 1919. State of Alabama; Department of Archives and History: The Brown Printing Co., Montgomery, Ala. p. 396.
- "AZ Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- Herndon, Dallas T. (1922). Centennial History of Arkansas, Volume II. Chicago and Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company. p. 379.
- Lisenby, Foy (1996). Charles Hillman Brough: a Biography. Fayetteville: The University of Arkansas Press. p. 41. ISBN 1-55728-411-3.
- "100 years ago". Arkansas Democrat Gazette. May 29, 2018.
- "CA Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "CO Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "CT Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "GA Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- Ostermeier, Dr. Eric (May 23, 2018). "Stacey Abrams Notches 3rd Best Showing in Contested Georgia Democratic Gubernatorial Primary Since 1898". Smart Politics. University of Minnesota Libraries. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
- "ID Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "IA Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "KS Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "ME Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "MA Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "MI Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "MN Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "NE Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "NV Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "NH Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "NM Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "NY Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "ND Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "OH Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "OK Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "OR Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "PA Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "RI Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "SC Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "SC Governor, 1918 – D Primary". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "SD Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "TN Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "TX Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "VT Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "WI Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
- "WY Governor, 1918". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
Notes
- Rolph, a Republican, ran for the Republican and Democratic nominations. He lost the Republican nomination and won the Democratic nomination. However, under California's crossfiling law, he could not be the Democratic nominee after losing the primary of his own party.
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