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New Hampshire gubernatorial election
1823 New Hampshire gubernatorial election
The 1823 New Hampshire gubernatorial election was held on March 11, 1823.
Incumbent
Democratic-Republican
Governor
Samuel Bell did not run for re-election to a fifth term in office.
Levi Woodbury defeated
Samuel Dinsmoor with 56.72% of the vote.
Democratic-Republican nomination
Candidates
Results
The Democratic-Republican caucus met at Concord on June 21, 1822.
The results of the balloting were as follows:
[2]
[3]
[4]
Gubernatorial Ballot
1st
2nd
Samuel Dinsmoor
72
92
Arthur Livermore
29
27
Jonathan Harvey
27
27
David L. Morril
18
7
William Pickering
8
0
Ezra Bartlett
5
1
William Badger
1
0
Josiah Butler
1
0
General election
Candidates
Some 20th Century sources record Woodbury as an Independent Republican. Woodbury stood at the invitation of a convention of
Portsmouth Republicans.
[6] Contemporary sources record both candidates as Republicans; Dinsmoor as a supporter of
William H. Crawford for the
U.S. Presidency , and Woodbury a supporter of
John Quincy Adams .
[7]
[8]
[9] (However, Woodbury would be elected to the
U.S. Senate in
1825 as a
Jacksonian )
Results
References
^
"New Hampshire 1822 Governor, Nomination for 1823" . Tufts Digital Collations and Archives . A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825.
Tufts University . Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"New Hampshire 1822 Governor, Nomination for 1823, Ballot 2" . Tufts Digital Collations and Archives . A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825.
Tufts University . Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"New-Hampshire" . The Portland gazette . Portland, Me. July 2, 1822. p. 2. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"Savannah: Friday Morning, Feb. 14, 1823" . Savannah Georgian . Savannah, Ga. February 15, 1823. p. 1. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"Domestic" . The Portland gazette . Portland, Me. February 11, 1823. p. 1. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"The election of State Officers" . Savannah Georgian . Savannah, Ga. March 22, 1823. p. 1. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^
"The election for Governor in New Hampshire" . The Georgia journal . Milledgeville, Ga. April 8, 1823. p. 3. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^ Gubernatorial Elections, 1787-1997 . Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Inc. 1998. p. 66.
ISBN
1-56802-396-0 .
^ Kallenbach, Joseph E.; Kallenbach, Jessamine S., eds. (1977). American State Governors, 1776-1976 . Vol. I. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.: Oceana Publications, Inc. p. 381.
ISBN
0-379-00665-0 .
^
"Journal of the Senate, of the State of New-Hampshire, at their Session, holden at the Capitol in Concord, commencing on the first Wednesday of June, 1823" . Journals of the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the State of New Hampshire at Their Session, Holden at the Capitol in Concord Commencing . Concord: Jacob B. Moore: 10. 1823.
^ Farmer, James (1772).
The New Hampshire Annual Register and United States Calendar, 1833 . Concord: Marsh, Capen and Lyon. p. 19.
^ Carter, Hosea B., ed. (1891). "Gubernatorial Vote of New Hampshire – 1784 to 1890".
The New Hampshire Manual for the General Court 1680–1891 . Concord: Office of the Secretary of State. p. 152.
^ Coolidge, A. J.; Mansfield, J. B. (1860).
History and Description of New England. New Hampshire . Boston: Austin J. Coolidge. p. 708.
^
"NH Governor, 1823" . Our Campaigns. Retrieved December 3, 2021 .
^ Glashan, Roy R. (1979). American Governors and Gubernatorial Elections, 1775-1978 . Westport, CT: Meckler Books. pp. 200–201.
ISBN
0-930466-17-9 .
Notes
^ Some sources give slightly different results. The result given is taken from the New Hampshire Senate Journal.
[16]
[17]
Bibliography