1920 United States presidential election in Alabama explained

See main article: 1920 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1920 United States presidential election in Alabama
Country:Alabama
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1916 United States presidential election in Alabama
Previous Year:1916
Next Election:1924 United States presidential election in Alabama
Next Year:1924
Election Date:November 2, 1920
Image1:James M. Cox 1920.jpg
Nominee1:James M. Cox
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:Ohio
Running Mate1:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Electoral Vote1:12
Popular Vote1:160,560
Percentage1:61.68%
Nominee2:Warren G. Harding
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:Ohio
Running Mate2:Calvin Coolidge
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:96,589
Percentage2:31.37%
Map Size:300px
President
Before Election:Woodrow Wilson
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Warren G. Harding
After Party:Republican Party (United States)

The 1920 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 general election, in which all 48 states participated. Alabama voters chose twelve electors to represent them in the Electoral College via popular vote pitting Democratic nominee James M. Cox and his running mate, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Roosevelt, against Republican challenger U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding and his running mate, Governor Calvin Coolidge.

Since the 1890s, Alabama had been effectively a one-party state ruled by the Democratic Party. Disenfranchisement of almost all African-Americans and a large proportion of poor whites via poll taxes, literacy tests[1] and extralegal violence[2] had essentially eliminated opposition parties outside of Unionist Winston County and a few nearby northern hill counties that had been Populist strongholds.[3] The only competitive statewide elections became Democratic Party primaries that were limited by law to white voters.

Unlike the other Deep South states, however, soon after black disenfranchisement Alabama's white Republicans made rapid efforts to expel blacks from the state Republican Party.[4] For the 1904 Convention, President Theodore Roosevelt rejected this proposal, unlike in North Carolina where he acquiesced without opposition to the demands of Jeter Connelly Pritchard.[4] Nevertheless, under Oscar D. Street, who ironically was appointed state party boss as part of the pro-Taft “black and tan” faction in 1912,[5] the state GOP would turn completely “lily-white”, with 1920 seeing the final black delegates at any Republican National Convention.[4]

After having doubled their representation in the state legislature from three to six in 1918 the now lily-white Alabama Republican Party would make substantial efforts to break the stranglehold of the Democrats in state politics. Isolationism in Appalachian North Alabama would substantially affect this election,[6] as the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, opposition to outgoing President Woodrow Wilson’s interventionism in Europe, and major labor disputes in coal mining that were unresolved at the time of the election and would affect the results of Democratic nominee James M. Cox and other Democrats in the less partisan north.[7]

The result of this was that the Republican candidates Ohio Senator Warren G. Harding and Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge were able to make substantial gains, although Cox and running mate Franklin D. Roosevelt still won the election in Alabama with over 61 percent of the vote. Nonetheless, Harding managed to carry nine counties as against only Union holdout Winston County, Populist stronghold Chilton County and urbanized Shelby County carried by Hughes in 1916, with his most pronounced triumph being in DeKalb County, where he was the first Republican to win since the 1872 Presidential Election. Despite wants to make seat inroads not coming into fruition, the Republicans used Appalachian isolationism and the call for “return to normalcy” to come within ten percent of winning the 4th, 7th and 10th congressional districts.[6]

Results

1920 United States presidential election in Alabama[8]
PartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticJames M. CoxFranklin D. Roosevelt160,56061.68%12
RepublicanWarren G. HardingCalvin Coolidge96,58937.11%0
SocialistSeymour Stedman2,3691.00%0
ProhibitionAaron S. WatkinsD. Leigh Colvin7480.32%0
Totals260,266100.00%12
Voter turnout (Voting age)20.3%[9]

Results by county

1920 United States presidential election in Alabama by county[10]
CountyJames M. Cox
Democratic
Warren G. Harding
Republican
Eugene V. Debs
Socialist
Aaron S. Watkins
Prohibition
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%%
Autauga91880.60%21018.44%70.61%40.35%70862.16%1,139
Baldwin1,23063.50%55628.70%1346.92%170.88%67434.80%1,937
Barbour1,56887.79%20311.37%130.73%20.11%1,36576.43%1,786
Bibb1,64376.49%36416.95%1366.33%50.23%1,27959.54%2,148
Blount3,53550.14%3,46549.15%450.64%50.07%700.99%7,050
Bullock87799.66%20.23%00.00%10.11%87599.43%880
Butler1,29988.31%15310.40%120.82%70.48%1,14677.91%1,471
Calhoun3,42374.40%1,13924.76%220.48%170.37%2,28449.64%4,601
Chambers1,99485.58%32213.82%80.34%60.26%1,67271.76%2,330
Cherokee1,96954.65%1,57643.74%581.61%00.00%39310.91%3,603
Chilton96229.25%2,27369.11%481.46%60.18%-1,311-39.86%3,289
Choctaw1,07192.65%827.09%30.26%00.00%98985.55%1,156
Clarke1,25396.24%433.30%10.08%50.38%1,21092.93%1,302
Clay2,16550.34%2,13349.59%20.05%10.02%320.74%4,301
Cleburne68441.28%97158.60%20.12%00.00%-287-17.32%1,657
Coffee1,72171.47%67327.95%40.17%100.42%1,04843.52%2,408
Colbert1,86972.41%65025.18%622.40%00.00%1,21947.23%2,581
Conecuh1,31587.43%18912.57%00.00%00.00%1,12674.87%1,504
Coosa1,00757.09%74142.01%140.79%20.11%26615.08%1,764
Covington2,03976.83%54820.65%642.41%30.11%1,49156.18%2,654
Crenshaw1,41181.61%31017.93%40.23%40.23%1,10163.68%1,729
Cullman2,56642.06%3,49257.24%370.61%60.10%-926-15.18%6,101
Dale1,38663.72%76835.31%50.23%160.74%61828.41%2,175
Dallas2,70297.19%782.81%00.00%00.00%2,62494.39%2,780
DeKalb3,89444.28%4,85255.17%460.52%30.03%-958-10.89%8,795
Elmore1,76283.07%35316.64%20.09%40.19%1,40966.43%2,121
Escambia1,45588.88%17810.87%20.12%20.12%1,27778.01%1,637
Etowah5,91764.05%3,21834.83%1001.08%30.03%2,69929.22%9,238
Fayette1,41342.70%1,86556.36%150.45%160.48%-452-13.66%3,309
Franklin2,09441.15%2,93057.58%641.26%10.02%-836-16.43%5,089
Geneva1,48856.97%1,08841.65%240.92%120.46%40015.31%2,612
Greene52097.93%101.88%00.00%10.19%51096.05%531
Hale95397.74%181.85%00.00%40.41%93595.90%975
Henry71559.34%48940.58%10.08%00.00%22618.76%1,205
Houston2,04577.00%57121.50%311.17%90.34%1,47455.50%2,656
Jackson2,51362.62%1,48336.95%90.22%80.20%1,03025.67%4,013
Jefferson24,98275.84%7,12421.63%5551.68%2780.84%17,85854.22%32,939
Lamar1,62873.33%57625.95%60.27%100.45%1,05247.39%2,220
Lauderdale2,64468.32%1,16430.08%561.45%60.16%1,48038.24%3,870
Lawrence93552.47%83146.63%100.56%60.34%1045.84%1,782
Lee1,62085.58%1558.19%1115.86%70.37%1,46577.39%1,893
Limestone1,81285.71%28513.48%140.66%30.14%1,52772.23%2,114
Lowndes72799.18%60.82%00.00%00.00%72198.36%733
Macon69391.30%648.43%20.26%00.00%62982.87%759
Madison2,82284.49%48914.64%240.72%50.15%2,33369.85%3,340
Marengo1,37097.03%422.97%00.00%00.00%1,32894.05%1,412
Marion2,46156.85%1,86543.08%30.07%00.00%59613.77%4,329
Marshall4,04150.78%3,87948.74%360.45%20.03%1622.04%7,958
Mobile6,17168.39%2,68129.71%1331.47%380.42%3,49038.68%9,023
Monroe1,29597.52%201.51%60.45%70.53%1,27596.01%1,328
Montgomery6,41194.63%3144.63%320.47%180.27%6,09789.99%6,775
Morgan4,05776.13%1,20122.54%500.94%210.39%2,85653.59%5,329
Perry1,19596.14%342.74%131.05%10.08%1,16193.40%1,243
Pickens1,41983.37%26315.45%171.00%30.18%1,15667.92%1,702
Pike1,58688.01%20411.32%30.17%90.50%1,38276.69%1,802
Randolph1,35754.74%1,11344.90%80.32%10.04%2449.84%2,479
Russell67189.71%293.88%456.02%30.40%62683.69%748
St. Clair1,93441.56%2,56155.04%471.01%1112.39%-627-13.48%4,653
Shelby2,52343.64%3,23555.95%130.22%110.19%-712-12.31%5,782
Sumter1,08898.37%151.36%30.27%00.00%1,07397.02%1,106
Talladega2,13769.18%93130.14%110.36%100.32%1,20639.04%3,089
Tallapoosa2,25788.44%26910.54%240.94%20.08%1,98877.90%2,552
Tuscaloosa3,43886.91%49112.41%160.40%110.28%2,94774.49%3,956
Walker4,70350.04%4,48847.75%1861.98%220.23%2152.29%9,399
Washington57586.73%8512.82%30.45%00.00%49073.91%663
Wilcox1,09999.73%20.18%00.00%10.09%1,09799.55%1,102
Winston1,03731.01%2,30768.99%00.00%00.00%-1,270-37.98%3,344
Totals160,56061.68%96,58937.11%2,4020.92%7560.29%63,97124.58%260,307

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Perman, Michael. Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888–1908. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill, NC. 2001. Introduction. 9780807849095.
  2. Book: Feldman, Glenn. The Disfranchisement Myth: Poor Whites and Suffrage Restriction in Alabama. 157. 0820326151.
  3. Webb. Samuel L.. From Independents to Populists to Progressive Republicans: The Case of Chilton County, Alabama, 1880-1920. The Journal of Southern History. 59. 4. 707–736.
  4. Book: Heersink. Jenkins. Boris. Jeffery A.. Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865-1968. 251–253. 9781107158436. 2020.
  5. Book: Casdorph, Paul D.. Republicans, Negroes, and Progressives in the South, 1912-1916. The University of Alabama Press. 1981. 70, 94–95. 0817300481.
  6. Book: Phillips, Kevin P.. The Emerging Republican Majority. 255. 1969. 0870000586.
  7. Book: Rogers, William Warren. Alabama: the history of a Deep South state. 1994. 419. 0817307141.
  8. Web site: Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. 1920 Presidential General Election Results – Alabama.
  9. Book: Gans. Curtis. Mulling. Matthew. Voter Turnout in the United States, 1788-2009. 383. 9781604265958.
  10. Encyclopedia: Alabama Official and Statistical Register. 1923. Vote for Presidential Electors from State at Large, November 2, 1920. State of Alabama Department of Archives and History.