Atlas U.S. Presidential Elections Master Thread (user search)
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Author Topic: Atlas U.S. Presidential Elections Master Thread  (Read 22754 times)
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Cathcon
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« on: October 24, 2012, 08:11:04 PM »
« edited: June 12, 2013, 11:15:15 PM by Assistant to the Regional Manager Cathcon »

For storing all the maps and lists of Presidents and such.


List of Presidents of the United States
1. George Washington (Independent-Virginia) April 30th, 1789-March 4th, 1797
2. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia) March 4th, 1797-March 4th, 1809
3. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist-South Carolina) March 4th, 1809-March 4th, 1813
4. DeWitt Clinton(Democratic Republican/Independent-New York) March 4th, 1813-March 4th, 1825
5. Henry Clay (Democratic Republican, National Republican-Kentucky) March 4th, 1825-March 4th, 1837
6. Daniel Webster (National Republican-Massachusetts) March 4th, 1837-March 4th, 1841

7. Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York) March 4th, 1841-March 4th, 1849
8. Charles Francis Adams Sr. (Free Soil-Massachusetts) March 4th, 1849-March 4th, 1857
9. William H. Seward (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1857-March 4th, 1861
10. Abraham Lincoln (Republican-Illinois) March 4th, 1861-March 4th, 1869
11. Reuben E. Fenton (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1869-March 4th, 1873
ACTING: Frederick Douglass (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1873-September 23rd, 1873
12. Victoria Woodhull (Equal Rights-Ohio) September 23rd, 1873-March 4th, 1877
13. Samuel J. Tilden (Democrat-New York) March 4th, 1877-March 4th, 1885
14. Stephen Grover Cleveland (Democrat-New York) March 4th, 1885-March 4th, 1889
15. Frederick Douglass (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1889-March 4th, 1893
16. James B. Weaver (Populist-Iowa) March 4th, 1893-March 4th, 1901
17. William McKinley (Republican-Ohio) March 4th, 1901-September 14th, 1901
18. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York) September 14th, 1901-March 4th, 1909
19. Robert Marion La Follette (Republican-Wisconsin) March 4th, 1909-March 4th, 1917
20. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1917-January 6th, 1919

21. George Norris (Republican-Nebraska) January 6th, 1919-March 4th, 1921
22. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana) March 4th, 1921-October 20th, 1926
23. Seymour Stedman (Socialist-Illinois) October 20th, 1926-March 4th, 1929
24. Alfred E. Smith (Democrat-New York) March 4th, 1929-March 4th, 1933
25. Norman Thomas (Socialist-New York) March 4th, 1933-January 20th, 1937
26. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-New York) January 20th, 1937-January 20th, 1949
27. Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California) January 20th, 1949-January 20th, 1957
28. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican-New York) January 20th, 1957-October 22nd, 1962
29. Margaret Chase Smith (Republican-Maine) October 22nd, 1962-January 20th, 1969

30. George S. McGovern (Democrat-South Dakota) January 20th, 1969-January 20th, 1977
31. Frank F. Church III (Democrat-Idaho) January 20th, 1977-March 7th, 1984

32. Birch E. Bayh, Jr. (Democrat-Indiana) March 7th, 1984-January 20th, 1993
33. Mario Cuomo (Democrat-New York) January 20th, 1993-January 20th, 2001
34. Paul Wellstone (Democrat-Minnesota) January 20th, 2001-October 25th, 2002
35. Russell Feingold (Democrat-Wisconsin) October 25th, 2002-January 20th, 2009
36. Maurice "Mike" Gravel (Libertarian-Virginia) January 20th, 2009-January 20th, 2013
37. Herman Cain (Republican-Georgia) January 20th, 2013-Present

List of Vice Presidents of the United States
1. John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) March 4th, 1789-March 4th, 1793
2. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia) March 4th, 1793-March 4th, 1797
3. John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) March 4th, 1797-March 4th, 1805
4. George Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York) March 4th, 1805-March 4th, 1809
5. Rufus King (Federalist-New York) March 4th, 1809-March 4th, 1813
6. Albert Gallatin (Democratic Republican-Pennsylvania) March 4th, 1813-March 4th, 1821
7. Stephen R. Bradley (Independent-Vermont) March 4th, 1821-March 4th, 1825
8. Nathan Sanford (Democratic Republican-New York) March 4th, 1825-March 4th, 1829
9. Richard Rush (National Republican-Pennsylvania) March 4th, 1829-March 4th, 1833
10. John Sergeant (National Republican-Pennsylvania) March 4th, 1833-March 4th, 1837
11. Francis P. Sergeant (National Republican-New York) March 4th, 1837-March 4th, 1841

12. John Tyler (Democrat-Virginia) March 4th, 1841-March 4th, 1849
13. John Parker Hale (Free Soil-New Hampshire) March 4th, 1849-March 4th, 1857
14. Abraham Lincoln (Republican-Illinois) March 4th, 1857-March 4th, 1861
15. John C. Fremont (Republican-California) March 4th, 1861-March 4th, 1865
16. Hannibal Hamlin (Republican-Maine) March 4th, 1865-March 4th, 1869
17. Schuyler Colfax (Republican-Indiana) March 4th, 1869-March 4th, 1873
18. Frederick Douglass (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1873-March 4th, 1877

19. Thomas Hendricks (Democrat-Indiana) March 4th, 1877-March 4th, 1881
20. Joel Parker (Democrat-New Jersey) March 4th, 1881-March 4th, 1885
21. Thomas Hendricks (Democrat-Indiana) March 4th, 1885-November 25th, 1885

Vacant: November 25th, 1885-March 4th, 1889
22. Harrison H. Riddleberger (Readjuster-Virginia) March 4th, 1889-January 24th, 1890
Vacant: January 24th, 1890-March 4th, 1893
23. James H. Kyle (Populist-South Dakota) March 4th, 1893-March 4th, 1897
24. Thomas E. Watson (Populist-Georgia) March 4th, 1897-March 4th, 1901

25. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York) March 4th, 1901-September 14th, 1901
Vacant: September 14th, 1901-March 4th, 1905
26. Robert Marion La Follette (Republican-Wisconsin) March 4th, 1905-March 4th, 1909
27. Albert B. Cummins (Republican-Iowa) March 4th, 1909-March 4th, 1917
28. George Norris (Republican-Nebraska) March 4th, 1917-January 6th, 1919

Vacant: January 6th, 1919-March 4th, 1921
29. Seymour Stedman (Socialist-Illinois) March 4th, 1921-October 20th, 1926
Vacant: October 20th, 1926-March 4th, 1929
30. Joseph T. Robinson (Democrat-New York) March 4th, 1929-March 4th, 1933
31. James H. Maurer (Socialist-Pennsylvania) March 4th, 1933-January 20th, 1937
32. John Nance Garner (Democrat-Texas) January 20th, 1937-January 20th, 1941
33. Burton K. Wheeler (Democrat-Montana) January 20th, 1941-January 20th, 1945
34. Harry S. Truman (Democrat-Missouri) January 20th, 1945-January 20th, 1949

35. Harold Stassen (Republican-Minnesota) January 20th, 1949-January 20th, 1953
36. Daniel Hoan (Socialist-Wisconsin) January 20th, 1953-January 20th, 1957
37. Margaret Chase Smith (Republican-Maine) January 20th, 1957-October 22nd, 1962
Vacant: October 22nd, 1962-January 20th, 1965
38. Barry M. Goldwater (Republican-Arizona) January 20th, 1965-January 20th, 1969
39. Wayne Morse (Democrat-Oregon) January 20th, 1969-July 22nd, 1974
Vacant: July 22nd, 1974-August 19th, 1974
40. Shirley Chisholm (Democrat-New York) August 19th, 1974-January 20th, 1977
41. Birch Evans Bayh, Jr. (Democrat-Indiana) January 20th, 1977-March 7th, 1984

Vacant: March 7th, 1984-April 3rd, 1984
42. Edmund Muskie (Democrat-Maine) April 3rd, 1984-January 20th, 1985
43. Mario Cuomo (Democrat-New York) January 20th, 1985-January 20th, 1993
44. Albert A. Gore, Jr. (Democrat-Tennessee) January 20th, 1993-January 20th, 1997
45. Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown, Jr. (Democrat-California) January 20th, 1997-January 20th, 2001
46. Russell Feingold (Democrat-Wisconsin) January 20th, 2001-October 25th, 2002

Vacant: October 25th, 2002-November 14th, 2002
47. John F. Kerry (Democrat-Massachusetts) November 14th, 2002-January 20th, 2005
48. Howard Dean (Democrat-Vermont) January 20th, 2005-January 20th, 2009

49. Gary E. Johnson (Libertarian-New Mexico) January 20th, 2009-January 20th, 2013
50. Jon Huntsman (Republican-Utah) January 20th, 2013-Present


List of Presidents of the Confederation of American States
1. John Caldwell Calhoun (Democrat-South Carolina) February 27th, 1849-March 31st, 1850
2. Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Mississippi) March 31st, 1849-April 3rd, 1854

List of Vice Presidents of the Confederation of American States
1. Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Mississippi) February 27th, 1849-March 31st, 1850
VACANT: March 31st, 1850-July 12th, 1853
2. William Yancy (Democrat-Alabama) July 12th, 1853-April 3rd, 1854
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #1 on: October 24, 2012, 08:20:18 PM »
« Edited: March 25, 2013, 05:00:10 PM by Cathdawg »

1789

General George Washington (Independent-Virginia) 59 electoral votes,
Former Ambassador to Great Britain John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) 34 electoral votes
Secretary of Foreign Affairs John Jay (Federalist-New York) 20 electoral votes
Governor George Clinton (Anti-Federalist-New York) 10 electoral votes
Former Governor Edward Telfair (Anti-Federalist-Georgia) 10 electoral votes
Governor John Hancock (Federalist-Massachusetts) 5 electoral votes

1792

President George Washington (Independent-Virginia) 107 electoral votes
Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia)67 electoral votes
Vice President John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) 66 electoral votes
Governor George Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York) 27 electoral votes
Senator Aaron Burr (Democratic Republican-New York) 1 electoral vote

1796

Vice President Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia) 71 electoral votes
Secretary of State John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) 68 electoral votes
Former Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton (Federalist-New York) 67 electoral votes
Senator Aaron Burr (Democratic Republican-New York) 65 electoral votes
Congressman James Madison (Democratic Republican-Virginia) 6 electoral votes
Governor John Jay (Federalist-New York) 1 electoral vote

1800

President Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia) 83 electoral votes
Vice President John Adams (Federalist-Massachusetts) 55 electoral votes
Senator Aaron Burr (Democratic Republican-New York) 52 electoral votes
Governor John Jay (Federalist-New York) 41 electoral votes
Former Governor George Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York) 31 electoral votes
Former U.S. Minister to France Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist-South Carolina) 14 electoral votes

1804

President Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia)/Governor George Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York) 163 electoral votes, 76.7% of the popular vote
Former U.S. Minister to France Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist-South Carolina)/Former U.S. Minister to Great Britain Rufus King (Federalist-New York) 13 electoral votes, 23.3% of the popular vote

1808

Former U.S. Minister to France Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist-South Carolina)/Former U.S. Minister to Great Britain Rufus King (Federalist-New York) 89 electoral votes, 41.2% of the popular vote
Vice President George Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York)/Former Minister to Great Britain James Monroe (Democratic Republican-Virginia) 47 electoral votes, 32.4% of the popular vote
Secretary of State James Madison (Democratic Republican-Virginia)/Governor John Langdon (Democratic Republican-New Hampshire) 40 electoral votes, 23.5% of the popular vote
Former Minister to Great Britain James Monroe (Democratic Republican-Virginia)/none 0 electoral votes, 2.9% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #2 on: October 24, 2012, 08:21:45 PM »
« Edited: January 02, 2013, 10:02:48 PM by Cathcon »

1812

Mayor DeWitt Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York)/Former Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin (Democratic Republican-Pennsylvania) 131 electoral votes, 57.1% of the popular vote
President Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist-South Carolina)/Vice President Rufus King (Federalist-New York) 87 electoral votes, 42.9% of the popular vote

1816

President DeWitt Clinton (Democratic Republican-New York)/Vice President Albert Gallatin (Democratic Republican-Pennsylvania) 123 electoral votes, 53% of the popular vote
Former Vice President Rufus King (Federalist-New York)/Former Senator John Eager Howard (Federalist-Maryland) 98 electoral votes, 47% of the popular vote

1820

President DeWitt Clinton (Independent-New York)/Former Senator Stephen Bradley (Independent-Vermont) 118 electoral votes, 45.8% of the popular vote
Senator James Monroe (Democratic Republican-Virginia)/Governor Daniel D. Thompkins (Democratic Republican-New York) 72 electoral votes, 16% of the popular vote
Secretary of State John Quincy Adams (Democratic Republican-Massachusetts)/U.S. Minister to the United Kingdom Richard Rush (Democratic Republican-Pennsylvania) 45 electoral votes, 37.5% of the popular vote

1824

Speaker of the House of Representatives Henry Clay (Democratic Republican-Kentucky)/Senator Nathan Sanford (Democratic Republican-New York) 109 electoral votes, 37.5% of the popular vote
Secretary of State John Quincy Adams (Democratic Republican-Massachusetts)/Senator John C. Calhoun (Democratic Republican-South Carolina) 77 electoral votes, 34.4% of the popular vote
Senator Andrew Jackson (Democratic Republican-Tennessee)/Senator John C. Calhoun (Democratic Republican-South Carolina) 66 electoral votes, 21.9% of the popular vote
Secretary of the Treasury William H. Crawford (Democratic Republican-Georgia)/Senator Nathaniel Macon (Democratic Republican-North Carolina) 9 electoral votes, 6.3% of the popular vote

1824 House Election

Speaker of the House Henry Clay (Democratic Republican-Kentucky) 15 states
Senator Andrew Jackson (Democratic Republican-Kentucky) 9 electoral votes

1828

President Henry Clay (National Republican-Kentucky)/Secretary of the Treasury Richard Rush (National Republican-Pennsylvania) 155 electoral votes, 57.7% of the popular vote
Senator Andrew Jackson (Democrat-Tennessee)/Vice President John C. Calhoun (Democrat-South Carolina) 106 electoral votes, 42.3% of the popular vote

1832

President Henry Clay (National Republican-Kentucky)/Former Congressman John Sergeant (National Republican-Pennsylvania) 192 electoral votes, 55.2% of the popular vote
Former U.S. Attorney General William Wirt (Anti-Masonic-Maryland)/Former Judge Amos Ellmaker (Anti-Masonic-Pennsylvania) 59 electoral votes, 24.1% of the popular vote
Former Senator Andrew Jackson (Democrat-Tennessee)/Former Governor Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York) 37 electoral votes, 20.7% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #3 on: November 07, 2012, 08:20:42 PM »
« Edited: January 02, 2013, 09:56:31 PM by Cathcon »

1836

Senator Daniel Webster (National Republican-Massachusetts)/Congressman Francis P. Granger (National Republican-New York) 162 electoral votes, 48% of the popular vote
Senator Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York)/Senator Richard M. Johnson (Democrat-Kentucky) 125 electoral votes, 40% of the popular vote
Former Vice President Richard Rush (Anti-Masonic-Pennsylvania)/Former Governor William A. Palmer (Anti-Masonic-Vermont) 7 electoral votes, 12% of the popular vote

1840

Former Senator Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York)/Senator John Tyler (Democrat-Virginia) 133 electoral votes, 36.5% of the popular vote
Former Mayor James G. Birney (Liberty-Michigan)/Attorney Thomas Earle (Liberty-Pennsylvania) 106 electoral votes, 36.3% of the popular vote
President Daniel Webster (National Republican-Massachusetts)/Vice President Francis P. Granger (National Republican-New York) 55 electoral votes, 27.3% of the popular vote

1840 House Election

Former Senator Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York) 15 states
President Daniel Webster (National Republican-Massachusetts) 8 states
Former Mayor James G. Birney (Liberty-Michigan) 3 states

1844

President Martin Van Buren (Democrat-New York)/Vice President John Tyler (Democrat-Virginia) 141 electoral votes, 37.9% of the popular vote
Former President Henry Clay (National Republican-Kentucky)/Former Mayor Theodore Frelinghuysen (National Republican-New Jersey) 73 electoral votes, 27.6% of the popular vote
Governor James G. Birney (Liberty-Michigan)/Former Senator Thomas Morris (Liberty-Ohio) 52 electoral votes, 24.1% of the popular vote
Mayor Joseph Smith (Independent-Illinois)/First Counselor of the Jesus Christ Church of Latter Day Saints Sidney Ridgon (Independent-Missouri) 9 electoral votes, 10.3% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #4 on: November 25, 2012, 11:57:25 AM »
« Edited: January 19, 2013, 02:00:35 PM by Cathcon/Spamage 2013 »

1848

Former State Senator Charles Francis Adams (Free Soil-Massachusetts)/Senator John P. Hale (Free Soil-New Hampshire) 204 electoral votes, 1,433,834 popular votes (49.8%)
Senator Lewis Cass (Democrat-Michigan)/Former Representative William O. Butler (Democrat-Kentucky) 74 electoral votes, 581,595 popular votes (20.2%)
Mr. Gerrit Smith (Liberty-New York)/Mr. Charles C. Foote (Liberty-Michigan) 0 electoral votes,  480,824 popular votes (16.7%)
Supreme Court Justice John McLean (National Republican-Ohio)/N.Y. State Comptroller Millard Fillmore (National Republican-New York) 0 electoral votes, 382,931 popular votes (13.3%)



1849

U.S. Senator John C. Calhoun (Democrat-South Carolina) 46 electors
Outgoing U.S. Vice President John Tyler (Democrat-Virginia) 28 electors
U.S. Senator Jefferson Davis (Democrat-Mississippi) 9 electors



1852

President Charles Francis Adams Sr. (Free Soil-Massachusetts)/Vice President John Parker Hale (Free Soil-New Hampshire) 221 electoral votes, 62.9% of the popular vote
Senator Stephen Douglas (Democrat-Illinois)/Former Senator Franklin Pierce (Democrat-New Hampshire) 0 electoral votes, 25.7% of the popular vote
Former Governor Millard Fillmore (National Republican-New York)/Military Governor William Alexander Graham (National Republican-North Carolina) 0 electoral votes, 11.4% of the popular vote

1856

Senator William H. Seward (Republican-New York)/Former Interior Secretary Abraham Lincoln (Republican-Illinois) 222 electoral votes, 68% of the popular vote
Senator Stephen A. Douglas (Democrat-Illinois)/Former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (Democrat-Kentucky) 38 electoral votes, 28% of the popular vote
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court John McLean (American-Ohio)/Former U.S. Envoy to Berlin Andrew Jackson Donelson (American-Tennessee) 0 electoral votes, 4% of the popular vote

1860

Vice President Abraham Lincoln (R-IL)/General John C. Fremont (R-CA) 216 electoral votes, 48.6% of the popular vote
Governor Samuel Houston (CU-TX)/Former Senator Edward Everett (CU-MA) 70 electoral votes, 24.3% of the popular vote
Former Congressman Gerrit Smith (LU-NY)/Mr. Samuel McFarland (LU-OH) 18 electoral votes, 13.5% of the popular vote
Senator Andrew Johnson (D-TN)/Mr. James Guthrie (D-KY) 0 electoral votes, 8.1% of the popular vote
Former Senator Daniel S. Dickinson (SR-NY)/Senator Joseph Lane (SR-OR) 0 electoral votes, 5.4% of the popular vote

1864

President Abraham Lincoln (Republican-Illinois)/Senator Hannibal Hamlin (Republican-Maine) 231 electoral votes, 53.1% of the popular vote
Vice President John C. Fremont (Radical Republican-California)/General John Cochrane (Radical Republican-New York) 44 electoral votes, 28.1% of the popular vote
Governor Horatio Seymour (Democrat-New York)/Congressman George H. Pendleton (Democrat-Ohio) 38 electoral votes, 18.8% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #5 on: December 18, 2012, 09:40:16 PM »
« Edited: January 06, 2013, 09:40:27 PM by Cathcon for President, 2013 »

1868

Governor Reuben E. Fenton (Republican-New York)/Speaker of the House Schuyler Colfax (Republican-Indiana) 161 electoral votes, 48.8% of the popular vote
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Salmon P. Chase (Democrat-Ohio)/Former Congressman Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (Democrat-Missouri) 156 electoral votes 50.2% of the popular vote

1872

Activist Victoria Woodhull (Equal Rights-Ohio)/Writer Frederick Douglass (Republican-New York) 183 electoral votes, 43.8% of the popular vote
Attorney Charles O'Conor (Bourgon Democrat-New York)/Former Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives John Quincy Adams II (Bourbon Democrat-Massachusetts) 112 electoral votes, 28.1% of the popular vote
Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court Salmon P. Chase (Liberal Republican-Ohio)/Governor Benjamin Gatz Brown (Liberal Republican-Massachusetts) 54 electoral votes, 18.8% of the popular vote
President Reuben E. Fenton (Republican-New York)/Senator Henry Wilson (Republican-Massachusetts) 8 electoral votes, 6.3% of the popular vote
Former Chief Justice of the PA Supreme Court Jeremiah S. Black (Democrat-Pennsylvania)/Senator James A. Bayard (Democrat-Delaware) 7 electoral votes, 3.1% of the popular vote

1876

Governor Samuel J. Tilden (Democrat-New York)/Governor Thomas Hendricks (Democrat-Indiana) 248 electoral votes, 54.5% of the popular vote
Former Solicitor General Benjamin H. Bristow (Republican-Kentucky)/Congressman William A. Wheeler (Republican-New York) 121 electoral votes, 45.5% of the popular vote

1880

President Samuel J. Tilden (Democrat-New York)/Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Joel Parker (Democrat-New Jersey) 245 electoral votes, 45.2% of the popular vote
Congressman James B. Weaver (Greenback-Iowa)/Former Congressman Benjamin Franklin Butler (Greenback-Massachusetts) 124 electoral votes, 42.9% of the popular vote
Senator James G. Blaine (Republican-Maine)/Former Collector of the Port of N.Y. Chester Alan Arthur (Republican-New York)0 electoral votes, 11.9%

1884

Governor S. Grover Cleveland (Democrat-New York)/Former Vice President Thomas Hendricks (Democrat-Indiana) 208 electoral votes, 40% of the popular vote
Senator George F. Edmunds (Republican-Vermont)/Senator John A. Logan (Republican-Illinois) 113 electoral votes, 32.5% of the popular vote
Governor Benjamin F. Butler (Greenback-Massachusetts)/Former Senator David B. Davis (Independent-Illinois) 80 electoral votes, 25% of the popular vote
Former Governor John St. John (Prohibition-Kansas)/Former Member of the State Legislature William Daniel (Prohibition-Maryland) 0 electoral votes, 2.5%

1888

Former Vice President Frederick Douglass (Republican-New York)/Harrison H. Riddleberger (Readjuster-Virginia) 267 electoral votes, 47.6% of the popular vote
President S. Grover Cleveland (Democrat-New York)/Governor Isaac Gray (Democrat-Indiana)114 electoral votes, 33.3% of the popular vote
Former IL State Senator Alson Streeter (Union Labor-Illinois)/Mr. Charles E. Cunningham (Union Labor-Arkansas) 20 electoral votes, 16.7% of the popular vote
Brigadier General Clinton Bowen Fisk (Prohibition-New Jersey)/Mr. John Anderson Brooks (Prohibition-Missouri) 0 electoral votes, 2.4% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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« Reply #6 on: January 03, 2013, 10:05:36 PM »

Bump.
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
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« Reply #7 on: January 04, 2013, 10:44:59 AM »


Thanks. Making these is pretty much my motivation for doing this series. Smiley
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Cathcon
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Posts: 27,354
United States


« Reply #8 on: January 09, 2013, 10:22:10 PM »
« Edited: February 12, 2013, 05:32:56 PM by Cathcon/Spamage 2013 »

1892

Former Congressman James B. Weaver (Populist-Iowa)/Senator James H. Kyle (Populist-South Dakota) 245 electoral votes, 48.9% of the popular vote
Former President S. Grover Cleveland (Democrat-New York)/Former Congressman Adlai E. Stevenson (Democrat-Illinois) 195 electoral votes, 37.8% of the popular vote
Former War Secretary Benjamin Harrison (Republican-Indiana)/Former U.S. Ambassador to France Whitelaw Reid (Republican-New York) 4 electoral votes, 13.3% of the popular vote

1896

President James B. Weaver (Populist-Iowa)/Former Congressman Thomas E. Watson (Populist-Georgia) 291 electoral votes, 44.4% of the popular vote
Senator William Freeman Vilas (National Democrat-Wisconsin)/Former President S. Grover Cleveland (National Democrat-New York) 123 electoral votes, 28.9% of the popular vote
Former Governor William McKinley (Republican-Ohio)/Senator William B. Allison (Republican-Iowa) 18 electoral votes, 13.3% of the popular vote
Senator William Jennings Bryan (Democrat-Nebraska)/Mr. Arthur Sewall (Democrat-Maine) 15 electoral votes, 11.1% of the popular vote
Mr. Joshua Levering (Prohibition-Kentucky)/Former Mayor Hale Johnson (Prohibition-Illinois) 0 electoral votes, 2.2% of the popular vote

1900

Senator William McKinley (Republican-Ohio)/Governor Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York) 253 electoral votes, 45.1% of the popular vote
Senator William Jennings Bryan (Democrat-Nebraska)/Former Congressman Ignatius Loyola Donnelly (Populist-Minnesota) 135 electoral votes, 35.3% of the popular vote
Mr. Silas "Southern" Comfort Swallow (Prohibition-Pennsylvania)/Mr. John G. Woolley (Prohibition-Ohio) 59 electoral votes, 19.6%

1904

President Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York)/Governor Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican-Wisconsin) 372 electoral votes, 46.9% of the popular vote
Justice George Gray (Democrat-Delaware)/Justice Alton Brooks Parker (Democrat-New York) 57 electoral votes, 14.3% of the popular vote
Former State Senator Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana)/Mr. Benjamin Hanford (Socialist-Illinois) 47 electoral votes, 30.6% of the popular vote
Senator William V. Allen (Populist-Nebraska)/Mr. Samuel W. Williams (Populist-Indiana) 0 electoral votes, 4.1% of the popular vote
Mr. Silas "Southern" Comfort Swallow (Prohibition-Pennsylvania)/Mr. George Washington Carroll (Prohibition-Texas) 0 electoral votes, 4.1% of the popular vote

1908

Vice President Robert M. La Follette (Republican-Wisconsin)/Governor Albert B. Cummins (Republican-Iowa) 293 electoral votes, 42.6% of the popular vote
Mr. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana)/Mr. Benjamin Hanford (Socialist-New York) 103 electoral votes, 29.6% of the popular vote
Governor John A. Johnson (Democrat-Minnesota)/Mayor George B. McClellan, Jr. (Democrat-New York) 87 electoral votes, 25.9% of the popular vote
ormer Vice President Thomas E. Watson (Populist-Georgia)/Mr. Samuel W. Williams (Populist-Indiana) 0 electoral votes, 1.9% of the popular vote

1912

President Robert La Follette (Republican-Wisconsin)/Vice President Albert B. Cummins (Republican-Iowa) 188 electoral votes, 25.4% of the popular vote
Congressman Oscar W. Underwood (Democrat-Alabama)/Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives James Beauchamp "Champ" Clark (Democrat-Missouri) 178 electoral votes, 25.4% of the popular vote
Mr. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana)/Mayor Emil Seidel (Socialist-Wisconsin) 120 electoral votes, 25.4% of the popular
Former President Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive-New York)/Governor Hiram W. Johnson (Progressive-California) 45 electoral votes, 23.7% of the popular vote

1912 House Vote

President Robert La Follette (Republican-Wisconsin) 25 states
Congressman Oscar W. Underwood (Democrat-Alabama) 13 states
Mr. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana) 10 states

1916

Former President Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York)/Senator George Norris (Republican-Nebraska) 384 electoral votes, 35.8% of the popular vote
House Minority Leader James Beauchamp "Champ" Clark (Democrat-Missouri)/Senator Thomas R. Marshall (Democrat-Indiana) 93 electoral votes, 26.4% of the popular vote
Party Chairman James Hudson Maurer (Socialist-Pennsylvania)/Mr. George Ross Kirkpatrick (Socialist-New Jersey) 54 electoral votes, 26.4% of the popular vote
Mr. Henry Ford (Prohibition-Michigan)/Former Governor William Sulzer (Prohibition-New York) 0 electoral votes, 11.3% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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« Reply #9 on: January 15, 2013, 05:12:40 PM »

Cath, how are you dealing with Manifest Destiny or the lack thereof? Are you just rewriting history so Charles Francis Adams annexed Texas?

I think the answer is that Texas stayed independent until the South broke away and then it joined the Confederacy, and so when the US won the civil war they just kept it.

So we're just rewriting history so the presidents at the time acquire the new states, but in different fashions?

The entire point of this series is re-writing history. Had we accepted the non-existence of Manifest Destiny, the map would be severely changed and politics thus so strangely warped that the differences would have been incalculable and far too removed from real life that holding such polls would be pointless.
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« Reply #10 on: January 15, 2013, 06:05:43 PM »

Cath, how are you dealing with Manifest Destiny or the lack thereof? Are you just rewriting history so Charles Francis Adams annexed Texas?

And yes, I confirm what my fellow poster said. During the Civil War, the Confederacy sought an ally in the pro-slavery Republic of Texas. In internal politics, it was only former President Sam Houston and a small minority that opposed siding with the CSA. In the ensuing Union victory, both the Confederacy and its ally Texas were annexed and put under Reconstruction. Sam Houston was at first appointed to head the state by the Federal Government, then elected its first Governor. At this time, the Republic of Texas had expanded and what the result was President Adams bringing the American South-West into the Union. In what was the major triumph of his post-Civil War Presidency, he negotiated the purchase of the states that became Oregon and Washington. In this vein, he became known as one of the nation's greatest Presidents: he saved the Union from its single greatest crisis and expanded it by the greatest amount since Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase.

Also, you say "rewriting history" like it's a bad thing. Again, this entire thing is re-writing history. As the dude running it, I need to somehow make the forum's excesses and idiosyncrasies sync up with reality once in a while. The divergent paths that the nation(s) took in regard to Manifest Destiny was something I felt I needed to eventually bring back to one, and this is how I did it.
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« Reply #11 on: January 15, 2013, 07:15:04 PM »

I can't seem to remember exactly who played President Adams, but I can tell you that the HBO mini-series based on the David McCullough book "Charles Cotesworth Pinckney", starring Paul Giamatti, was well received.

(also, I always found the title, "Adams" kind of confusing given the prominence of that family in American history.)
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Cathcon
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« Reply #12 on: January 15, 2013, 08:24:52 PM »

(also, I always found the title, "Adams" kind of confusing given the prominence of that family in American history.)

Well, would you rather have them call it Adams: The Cool One Who Won The Civil War?

Spielberg should've chosen that title, yes.
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« Reply #13 on: January 19, 2013, 02:31:46 PM »
« Edited: January 22, 2013, 12:28:25 PM by Cathcon/Spamage 2013 »

I will note that there are a few Presidents to be noted as the "great expanders", those that pushed the Union to new limits, geographically.

Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-Virginia) 1797-1805
The first United States territorial gain after the Treaty of 1783, the Louisiana Purchase would make up the second third of the continental United States. It would reach from the current day states of Louisiana up to North Dakota and West to Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado.

Charles Francis Adams (Free Soil-Massachusetts) 1849-1857
Not only the President who ended slavery and saved the Union from its greatest ever crisis, Adams would have a massive legacy on the issue of expansionism alone. The South would be re-captured, the Republic of Texas which engulfed much of the modern American South-West would be annexed, and in post-Civil War negotiations, England would give up the Oregon Territory.

William H. Seward (Republican-New York) 1857-1861
Of less significance than the massive land-grab that was the Adams foreign policy, "Seward's Folly"--the purchase of Alaska from Russia, nonetheless puts Seward into the halls of the Presidents who expanded America's land mass.

Theodore Roosevelt (Republican-New York) 1901-1909
Teddy Roosevelt oversaw one of the final stages of America's great expansion, annexing Hawaii which had been a target of his party for quite a few years. As well, he began a new era of exploration, commissioning a mission to seek out the lost island of Atlantis in the Atlantic Ocean.
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« Reply #14 on: January 30, 2013, 08:41:07 PM »
« Edited: March 07, 2013, 06:07:21 PM by Cathdawg »

1920

Mr. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana)/Mr. Seymour Stedman (Socialist-Illinois) 396 electoral votes, 52.5% of the popular vote
Senator Thomas R. Marshall (Democrat-Indiana)/Governor Alfred E. Smith (Democrat-New York)103 electoral votes, 26.2% of the popular vote
Major General Leonard Wood (Republican-New Hampshire)/Governor John Calvin Coolidge (Republican-Massachusetts) 32 electoral votes, 21.3% of the popular vote

1924

President Eugene V. Debs (Socialist-Indiana)/Vice President Seymour Steadman (Socialist-Illinois) 386 electoral votes, 48.1% of the popular vote
Former Governor John Calvin Coolidge (Republican-Massachusetts)/Senator Hiram W. Johnson (Republican-California) 96 electoral votes, 30.8% of the popular vote
Governor Alfred E. Smith (Democrat-New York)/Senator Oscar W. Underwood (Democrat-Alabama) 31 electoral votes, 7.7% of the popular vote
Former President Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Progressive-Wisconsin)/Senator Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive-Montana) 18 electoral votes, 13.5% of the popular vote

1928

Governor Alfred E. Smith (Democrat-New York)/Senator Joseph T. Robinson (Democrat-Arkansas) 290 electoral votes, 43.1% of the popular vote
President Seymour Stedman (Socialist-Illinois)/Congressman James H. Maurer (Socialist-Pennsylvania) 237 electoral votes, 41.5% of the popular vote
Mr. Herbert C. Hoover (Republican-California)/Senator Charles Curtis (Republican-Kansas) 4 electoral votes 15.4% of the popular vote

1932

Former Mayor Norman Thomas (Socialist-New York)/Former Congressman James H. Maurer (Socialist-Pennsylvania) 281 electoral votes, 41.8% of the popular vote
President Alfred E. Smith (Democrat-New York)/Vice President Joseph T. Robinson (Democrat-Arkansas) 221 electoral votes, 40.3% of the popular vote
Former Governor John Calvin Coolidge (Republican-Massachusetts)/Governor Gifford Pinchot (Republican-Pennsylvania) 29 electoral votes, 17.9% of the popular vote

1936

Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-New York)/House Minority Leader John Nance Garner (Democrat-Texas) 422 electoral votes, 42.9% of the popular vote
President Norman Thomas (Socialist-New York)/Governor George A. Nelson (Socialist-Wisconsin) 73 electoral votes, 28.6% of the popular vote
Senator William E. Borah (Republican-Idaho)/Publisher Frank Knox (Republican-Illinois) 36 electoral votes, 23.2% of the popular vote
Congressman William Lemke (Union-North Dakota)/Mr. Thomas C. O'Brien (Union-Massachusetts) 5.4% of the popular vote
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« Reply #15 on: February 07, 2013, 11:25:32 PM »

Also, screw the primary maps until maybe the 40's or the 60's. Too much research needs to be done for these primary maps, though I maybe put some together after the fact.
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« Reply #16 on: February 19, 2013, 01:27:33 PM »
« Edited: February 19, 2013, 04:00:07 PM by Cathdawg »

As the series is over half over, and one day we will inevitably draw towards the end, I'm thinking about the different party systems that Atlamerica has had in place.

1789-1824, the Democratic-Republican Era Dominated by the political personalities of George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, and DeWitt Clinton. It would be marked by the politics of the First Bank of the United States of America, flirtations of war with Britain and France, and the groundwork of the Republic.

1824-1848, National Republicans and Democrats 1824 marked the collapse of the Democratic Republicans, while the Federalists had been petering out for quite some time. Henry Clay led the nation into a new era during his twelve years in power. Despite National Republican domination for the majority of this time, National Republicans were on the wane during the Van Buren years and the period ended with them on largely equal ground: in defeat.

1848-1872, Free Soil, Civil War, and Republicans: With the election of Charles F. Adams, the latest in the Adams political dynasty which had come so close to the Presidency in previous elections, the nation was at war. Over the next twenty years, the Free Soil Party, then the Republicans, would dominate politics and Reconstruction. It would only be after the end of Reconstruction under the reign of President Lincoln that the Democrats gained some teeth.

1872-1900, Divided Government: The election of radical Victoria Woodhull in a race still controversial today began an era of a "house divided". After that, Democrats would preside over another brief period of dominance, followed by one term of Republicans under Frederick Douglass, and finally eight years of Populists in power. There would be little united policy during that time, and a lot of partisanship.

1900-1920, Republicans Resurgent: With the election of William McKinley in 1900, Republicans would find themselves victorious in every election after that before 1920. Though it became quite obvious that Republicans were losing power as the 1920's approached, they nevertheless maintained electability in the face of many challenges.

1920-?
While political historians are unsure of what the future holds, it seems the Socialist party has entered an era of power.
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Cathcon
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« Reply #17 on: February 19, 2013, 04:18:30 PM »


1848-1872, Liberty, Civil War, and Republicans: With the election of Charles F. Adams, the latest in the Adams political dynasty which had come so close to the Presidency in previous elections, the nation was at war. Over the next twenty years, the Liberty Party, then the Republicans, would dominate politics and Reconstruction. It would only be after the end of Reconstruction under the reign of President Lincoln that the Democrats gained some teeth.

I think you meant "Free Soil."

Fixed. Tongue
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« Reply #18 on: March 10, 2013, 12:37:39 PM »
« Edited: April 07, 2013, 12:14:29 PM by Captain Cathcon »

1940

President Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-New York)/Senator Burton K. Wheeler (Democrat-Montana) 454 electoral votes, 44.9% of the popular vote
Senator Robert A. Taft (Republican-Ohio)/Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (Republican-Michigan) 43 electoral votes, 28.6% of the popular vote
Governor Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California)/Congressman Maynard C. Kruefer (Socialist-Illinois) 34 electoral votes, 26.5% of the popular vote

1944

President Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-New York)/Senator Harry S. Truman (Democrat-Misouri) 227 electoral votes, 37.3% of the popular vote
Former Governor Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California)/Former Congressman Darlington Hoopes (Socialist-Pennsylvania) 170 electoral votes, 32.2% of the popular vote
Former Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, General Douglas MacArthur (Republican-New York)/Governor John W. Bricker (Republican-Ohio) 134 electoral votes, 30.5% of the popular vote

1944 House Election

President Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat-New York): 25 states
Former Chief of Staff of the United States Army Douglas MacArthur (Republican-New York): 15 states
Former Governor Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California): 5 states
Split: 3 states

1948

Former Governor Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California)/Former Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace (Progressive-Iowa) 261 electoral votes, 39.7% of the popular vote
Senator Robert A. Taft (Republican-Ohio)/Former Governor Harold Stassen (Republican-Minnesota) 132 electoral votes, 20.7% of the popular vote
Governor J. Strom Thurmond (States Rights-South Carolina)/Governor L. Fielding Wright (States Rights-Mississippi) 104 electoral votes, 19% of the popular vote
Vice President Harry S. Truman (Democrat-Missouri)/Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court William O. Douglas (Democrat-Washington D.C.) 34 electoral votes, 15.5% of the popular vote
Former Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace (Progressive-Iowa)/Former Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia (Progressive-New York) 0 electoral votes, 5.2% of the popular vote

1948 House Election

Former Governor Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California) 25 states
Senator Robert A. Taft (Republican-Ohio) 13 states
Governor J. Strom Thurmond (States Rights-South Carolina)

1952

President Upton Sinclair (Socialist-California)/Governor Daniel Hoan (Socialist-Wisconsin) 267 electoral votes, 46.6% of the popular vote
General Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican-New York)/Senator Margaret Chase Smith (Republican-Maine) 264 electoral votes, 44.8% of the popular vote
Senator Estes Kefauver (Democrat-Tennessee)/Governor Adlai E. Stevenson II (Democrat-Illinois) 0 electoral votes, 6.9% of the popular vote
Former State Attorney General Eric Hass (Socialist Labor-New York)/Congressman Arla A. Albaugh (Socialist Labor-Ohio) 0 electoral votes, 1.7% of the popular vote

1956

General Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican-New York)/Senator Margaret Chase Smith (Republican-Maine)    435 electoral votes, 47% of the popular vote
Senator Estes Kefauver (Democrat-Tennessee)/Senator Hubert H. Humphrey (Democrat-Minnesota) 57 electoral votes, 31.8% of the popular vote
Vice President Daniel Hoan (Socialist-Wisconsin)/Congressman Samuel H. Friedman (Socialist-New York)   24 electoral votes, 18.2% of the popular vote
Senator Herman Talmadge (Democrat-Georgia)/Former Congressman Thomas H. Werdel (Democrat-California) [Unpledged Electors] 15 electoral votes, 3% of the popular vote
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Cathcon
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« Reply #19 on: March 24, 2013, 12:42:48 PM »


Thanks dawg. I appreciate the bumps.
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Cathcon
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« Reply #20 on: March 24, 2013, 05:02:06 PM »


Just trying to keep this on Page 1. Also, I note that you've sort of divided your multi-map posts into eras (Washington to Pinckney, the dominance of the Dem-Reps and the rise of the Democrats and National Republicans, the Civil War through Reconstruction, the divided government smorgasbord, the Progressive Era (including Weaver), the golden age of Socialism, and the decline of the Socialists). Now, while those don't exactly match up with the eras you previously described, they're somewhat similar. Did you do that for a reason?

Yeah. They're somewhat era-based, though not exactly according to the grand scheme of things, given I don't have complete retrospect, and some eras are much longer than others. I've done a lot of shifting of maps around to different posts in the past to make it more organized. I had intended for 1892 to begin the "Progressive Era", but all around it falls much better into the Era of Divided Government, whereas 1900-1920 would be the Era of Progressive Republicanism. I intended for 1940 to mark a new chapter, given it took place in the context of WWII and thus would be the transition to a much more global (and hopefully Socialist free, which was part of the plan) world. Not sure when I'll end my current post, though in retrospect I should've given each election its own post. Maybe if some sort of realignment happens (not very possible given the era of party stability we're moving into), I'll cut it off. The 1968 of our lifetime would be a good year to start a new post, though in this thing it'll likely just be a continuation of the then-current order. Tongue
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« Reply #21 on: March 24, 2013, 05:53:59 PM »
« Edited: March 24, 2013, 05:56:28 PM by Cathdawg »

Huh. I was thinking the next post would begin in 1960, what with the collapse of the Socialists and all.

That's considered as well. I as of yet have no "titles" for the post-1920 system, though it may become the "Socialist Era" of politics (1920-1956/60).

EDIT: Though it seems a bit strange to merely chop history into little two decade sections.
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« Reply #22 on: March 24, 2013, 06:09:32 PM »

Huh. I was thinking the next post would begin in 1960, what with the collapse of the Socialists and all.

That's considered as well. I as of yet have no "titles" for the post-1920 system, though it may become the "Socialist Era" of politics (1920-1956/60).

EDIT: Though it seems a bit strange to merely chop history into little two decade sections.

It gives me titles for the chapters of my Glorious Textbook Monopoly, which is heavily biased towards the Socialists.

"The Early Republic 1789-1796"
"Jeffersonian Democracy 1796-1824"
"Clay's Americanism 1824-1848"
"The Civil War, Reconstruction, and Republicans 1848-1872"
"A Government Divided 1872-1900"
"Progressive Republicanism Ascendant 1900-1920"
"The Era of Socialist Dominance 1920-1940"
"World War II and the Socialist Decline 1940-1960"
"The Modern System 1960-?"
-Atlamerican History, Jones Publishing, 1962
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« Reply #23 on: March 25, 2013, 04:43:43 PM »

Hmm... Wonder if some people would like to show their own voting records in past elections like we do with the real life thread.
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« Reply #24 on: March 25, 2013, 06:36:02 PM »

As the forum's deity, I have often voted in the interest of avoding overwhelming land-slides and overwhelming losses for certain characters, so if I make one of these, I'd do it in "honest election" form, as opposed to how I've actually voted.
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