1849 Wisconsin gubernatorial election explained

Election Name:1849 Wisconsin gubernatorial election
Type:presidential
Previous Election:1848 Wisconsin gubernatorial election
Previous Year:1848
Next Election:1851 Wisconsin gubernatorial election
Next Year:1851
Election Date:November 6, 1849
Nominee1:Nelson Dewey
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:16,649
Percentage1:52.42%
Nominee2:Alexander L. Collins
Party2:Whig Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:11,317
Percentage2:35.63%
Nominee3:Warren Chase
Party3:Free Soil Party
Popular Vote3:3,761
Percentage3:11.84%
Map Size:250px
Governor
Before Election:Nelson Dewey
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Nelson Dewey
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1849 Wisconsin gubernatorial election was held on November 6, 1849. Democrat Nelson Dewey won the election with 52% of the vote, winning his second term as Governor of Wisconsin. Dewey defeated Whig Party candidate Alexander L. Collins and Free Soil Party candidate Warren Chase.[1]

This was the second Wisconsin gubernatorial election, and the first election for a full two-year gubernatorial term.

Nominations

Democratic party

Nelson Dewey was the incumbent governor, having been elected in the 1848 election. He was a prominent lawyer and real-estate investor in Grant County, Wisconsin. He did extensive business with the lead-mining industry, which was a major component of the economy of the Wisconsin Territory. He had been a member of nearly every session of the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature, first as a member of the Territorial Assembly, from 1838 to 1842, then as a member of the Territorial Council from 1842 to 1846. He served as Speaker of the Territorial Assembly in 1840, and President of the Territorial Council in 1846.[2]

Other candidates

Although Dewey was renominated on the first ballot, two other names were placed in candidacy for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination at the 1849 State Democratic Convention, held in Madison:

Nomination

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| Vote of the Wisconsin Democratic Convention, September 6, 1849

Whig party

Alexander L. Collins was a prominent lawyer in Madison. At the time of the 1849 election, he was a member of the first Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin. He had been the Whig Party candidate for United States Congress in the 2nd congressional district in 1848. He also served in the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature from 1846 until the territorial government was replaced by the state government in 1848.[3]

Free Soil party

Warren Chase was, at the time of the 1849 election, a member of the Wisconsin State Senate, having been elected on the Democratic Party ticket in 1848. He represented Fond du Lac and Winnebago counties. Chase was an abolitionist and temperance advocate, and was one of only three delegates to attend both the first and second Wisconsin constitutional conventions. Chase was also notable for his fourierist beliefs, having participated in the founding of the Wisconsin phalanx (commune) at Ceresco, Wisconsin.

Results

Results by county

CountyNelson Dewey
Democratic
Alexander L. Collins
Whig
Warren Chase
Free Soil
Scattering
Write-in
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%%
Brown28161.76%17137.58%30.66%00.00%11024.18%455
Calumet13553.36%11746.25%10.40%00.00%187.11%253
Columbia41047.79%43250.35%161.86%00.00%-22-2.56%858
Crawford15282.61%3217.39%00.00%00.00%12065.22%184
Dane66643.67%75949.77%865.64%140.92%-93-6.10%1,525
Dodge1,25560.31%71434.31%1125.38%00.00%54126.00%2,081
Fond du Lac64051.24%38931.14%22017.61%00.00%25120.10%1,249
Grant1,03047.93%1,10351.33%160.74%00.00%-73-3.40%2,149
Green44355.38%32440.50%263.25%70.88%11914.88%800
Iowa68851.00%65548.55%60.44%00.00%332.45%1,349
Jefferson89752.58%64938.04%1589.26%20.12%24814.54%1,706
Lafayette1,09472.45%41627.55%00.00%00.00%67844.90%1,510
Marquette25940.72%24738.84%13020.44%00.00%121.89%636
Milwaukee2,10871.05%71824.20%1414.75%00.00%1,39046.85%2,967
Portage28752.47%25947.35%10.18%00.00%285.12%547
Racine76132.03%71630.13%89937.84%00.00%-138-5.81%2,376
Rock60426.11%1,16850.50%54123.39%00.00%-564-24.38%2,313
Sauk35560.79%22638.70%30.51%00.00%12922.09%584
Sheboygan63565.87%32233.40%70.73%00.00%31332.47%964
St. Croix5670.89%2126.58%00.00%22.53%3544.30%79
Walworth64630.44%66731.43%80637.98%30.14%-139-6.54%2,122
Washington1,61084.38%20810.90%864.51%40.21%1,40273.48%1,908
Waukesha1,31955.94%66928.37%37015.69%00.00%65027.57%2,358
Winnebago31840.46%33542.62%13316.92%00.00%-17-2.16%786
Total16,64952.42%11,31735.63%3,76111.84%320.10%5,33216.79%31,759

Counties that flipped from Whig to Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Whig

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Free Soil

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joint Committee on Legislative Organization, Wisconsin Legislature . 2015 . Wisconsin Blue Book 2015–2016 . Madison, Wisconsin . Wisconsin Department of Administration . 699–701 . 978-0-9752820-7-6.
  2. The Blue Book of the state of Wisconsin, 1882 . 1882 . Heg . J.E.. State of Wisconsin . Annals of the legislature . 161–171, 175–176 . June 15, 2019.
  3. Book: Reed, Parker McCobb . The Bench and Bar of Wisconsin . P. M. Reed . 1882 . 105, 106 . June 17, 2019.