1928 United States presidential election in Kentucky explained

See main article: 1928 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1928 United States presidential election in Kentucky
Home State1:California
President
After Election:Herbert Hoover
Before Election:Calvin Coolidge
After Party:Republican
Popular Vote1:558,734
Percentage1:59.36%
Electoral Vote1:13
Popular Vote2:381,070
Percentage2:40.48%
Electoral Vote2:0
Running Mate2:Joseph T. Robinson
Running Mate1:Charles Curtis
Home State2:New York
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Type:presidential
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Image1:Herbert Hoover - NARA - 532049.jpg
Next Year:1932
Election Date:November 6, 1928
Nominee2:Al Smith
Nominee1:Herbert Hoover
Next Election:1932 United States presidential election in Kentucky
Previous Year:1924
Previous Election:1924 United States presidential election in Kentucky
Country:Kentucky
Flag Image:Flag of Kentucky (1918-1963).svg
Ongoing:No
Before Party:Republican
Flag Year:1918
Map Size:380px

The 1928 United States presidential election in Kentucky took place on November 6, 1928, as part of the 1928 United States presidential election. Voters chose 13 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Ever since the Civil War, Kentucky had been shaped politically by divisions created by that war between secessionist, Democratic counties and Unionist, Republican ones,[1] although the state as a whole leaned Democratic throughout this era and the GOP carried the state only in 1896 and 1924.[2]

In 1928, as in all of the upland South, Kentucky's extremely stable Civil War partisan political pattern would become significantly disturbed due to the nomination, after all other prominent Democrats sat the election out due to the prevailing prosperity, of urban, anti-Prohibition Catholic Al Smith.[3] Once Smith was nominated – despite his attempt to dispel fears by nominating "dry" Southern Democrat Joseph T. Robinson as his running mate[4] – extreme fear ensued in the South, which had no experience of the Southern and Eastern European Catholic immigrants who were Smith's local constituency. Southern fundamentalist Protestants believed that Smith would allow papal and priestly leadership in the United States, which Protestantism was a reaction against.[5] In the east of the state where many communities were becoming sundown towns or counties[6] it was believed that Smith was unacceptable also because the Catholic Church officially opposed social and political segregation of the races.[7]

As with the former Confederate states, opposition to Smith in Kentucky was organised by the Protestant churches, led by James Cannon Jr. and Arthur J. Barton.[8] A major state paper, The Western Recorder had been heavily opposing Smith for over a year before the campaign began.[9] When the campaign did begin, Smith's religion was the overwhelming concern,[10] and at the beginning of October it appeared as though Republican nominee Herbert Hoover was likely to carry the state.[11] Although later in October there were thoughts Smith would challenge the GOP nominee,[12] in the end Hoover won the state by a margin of 18.88 percent against Al Smith gaining all thirteen of the state's electors as a result.[13] Traditional Democratic loyalties were maintained best in the Jackson Purchase, where racial issues were of greatest importance and there was opposition from memories of the 1927 Mississippi flood to Hoover's record on flood relief.[14]

Hoover became the first Republican nominee to ever win Kentucky with a majority of the vote or to exceed his national vote share in the state, with Kentucky voting 1.40 points more Republican than the nation at-large. This, in combination with Calvin Coolidge's victory in the state four years prior, also marked the first time that Kentucky voted Republican in consecutive elections. He was the solitary Republican presidential candidate to carry Menifee County until George W. Bush in 2000, and also the first ever Republican victor in the following counties: Anderson, Barren, Boone, Bullitt, Daviess, Grant, Hardin, LaRue, Livingston, Mason, McCracken, McLean, Montgomery, Nicholas, Oldham, Powell, Robertson, Scott, Shelby and Spencer.[15]

This was the last time Kentucky voted Republican until Dwight Eisenhower won the state in his re-election bid in 1956.

Results

Results by county

1928 United States presidential election in Kentucky by county
CountyHerbert Clark Hoover
Republican
Alfred Emmanuel Smith
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast[16]
data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%
Adair3,85669.01%1,73230.99%00.00%2,12438.01%5,588
Allen4,25373.14%1,56226.86%00.00%2,69146.28%5,815
Anderson1,85951.96%1,71848.02%10.03%1413.94%3,578
Ballard94024.49%2,89675.44%30.08%-1,956-50.95%3,839
Barren5,10159.07%3,53040.88%50.06%1,57118.19%8,636
Bath2,22354.74%1,83045.06%80.20%3939.68%4,061
Bell6,57071.84%2,55127.90%240.26%4,01943.95%9,145
Boone2,60458.31%1,85541.54%70.16%74916.77%4,466
Bourbon4,51258.34%3,21841.61%40.05%1,29416.73%7,734
Boyd9,11866.38%4,61133.57%70.05%4,50732.81%13,736
Boyle3,51754.01%2,99245.95%30.05%5258.06%6,512
Bracken2,82069.98%1,20129.80%90.22%1,61940.17%4,030
Breathitt2,30943.35%3,01756.65%00.00%-708-13.29%5,326
Breckinridge4,78361.53%2,98738.43%30.04%1,79623.11%7,773
Bullitt1,79350.45%1,75849.47%30.08%350.98%3,554
Butler3,27282.56%68417.26%70.18%2,58865.30%3,963
Caldwell2,85562.61%1,69537.17%100.22%1,16025.44%4,560
Calloway1,55731.13%3,43168.59%140.28%-1,874-37.47%5,002
Campbell17,31754.25%14,50845.45%950.30%2,8098.80%31,920
Carlisle78728.28%1,99471.65%20.07%-1,207-43.37%2,783
Carroll1,64946.91%1,86353.00%30.09%-214-6.09%3,515
Carter5,34268.73%2,39230.77%390.50%2,95037.95%7,773
Casey3,80571.39%1,51928.50%60.11%2,28642.89%5,330
Christian7,06955.35%5,70244.65%00.00%1,36710.70%12,771
Clark3,49550.25%3,46049.75%00.00%350.50%6,955
Clay4,43986.97%65112.75%140.27%3,78874.22%5,104
Clinton2,58088.81%32511.19%00.00%2,25577.62%2,905
Crittenden3,00068.46%1,37631.40%60.14%1,62437.06%4,382
Cumberland2,59382.79%53817.18%10.03%2,05565.61%3,132
Daviess8,89654.77%7,33245.14%150.09%1,5649.63%16,243
Edmonson3,10474.15%1,07625.70%60.14%2,02848.45%4,186
Elliott60131.33%1,31768.67%00.00%-716-37.33%1,918
Estill3,64165.82%1,88634.09%50.09%1,75531.72%5,532
Fayette16,98865.11%9,06534.74%390.15%7,92330.37%26,092
Fleming3,79864.50%2,08635.43%40.07%1,71229.08%5,888
Floyd5,10947.17%5,72152.83%00.00%-612-5.65%10,830
Franklin3,48547.45%3,85352.46%70.10%-368-5.01%7,345
Fulton1,36630.34%3,13269.55%50.11%-1,766-39.22%4,503
Gallatin1,01055.04%82344.85%20.11%18710.19%1,835
Garrard2,86262.34%1,72937.66%00.00%1,13324.68%4,591
Grant2,44859.48%1,66240.38%60.15%78619.10%4,116
Graves3,22333.98%6,23765.76%240.25%-3,014-31.78%9,484
Grayson3,93763.07%2,29536.77%100.16%1,64226.31%6,242
Green2,82468.95%1,27231.05%00.00%1,55237.89%4,096
Greenup4,41064.43%2,43535.57%00.00%1,97528.85%6,845
Hancock1,61458.33%1,15141.60%20.07%46316.73%2,767
Hardin4,62458.92%3,21040.90%140.18%1,41418.02%7,848
Harlan12,25175.41%3,95824.36%370.23%8,29351.05%16,246
Harrison2,90947.86%3,16452.06%50.08%-255-4.20%6,078
Hart3,48059.66%2,33940.10%140.24%1,14119.56%5,833
Henderson5,44357.03%4,06842.62%330.35%1,37514.41%9,544
Henry2,33444.29%2,92955.58%70.13%-595-11.29%5,270
Hickman76726.12%2,16373.67%60.20%-1,396-47.55%2,936
Hopkins6,33048.69%6,64051.08%300.23%-310-2.38%13,000
Jackson3,55296.52%1233.34%50.14%3,42993.18%3,680
Jefferson97,80360.14%64,47239.65%3380.21%33,33120.50%162,613
Jessamine2,85755.45%2,29544.55%00.00%56210.91%5,152
Johnson5,33973.98%1,86925.90%90.12%3,47048.08%7,217
Kenton21,04353.67%18,16546.33%00.00%2,8787.34%39,208
Knott1,00426.24%2,82273.76%00.00%-1,818-47.52%3,826
Knox5,92879.76%1,49720.14%70.09%4,43159.62%7,432
Larue1,89252.19%1,72747.64%60.17%1654.55%3,625
Laurel4,90681.06%1,14118.85%50.08%3,76562.21%6,052
Lawrence3,27759.59%2,21740.32%50.09%1,06019.28%5,499
Lee2,00563.91%1,13136.05%10.03%87427.86%3,137
Leslie2,80694.51%1595.36%40.13%2,64789.15%2,969
Letcher5,40060.55%3,50239.27%160.18%1,89821.28%8,918
Lewis4,07778.36%1,12021.53%60.12%2,95756.83%5,203
Lincoln3,90362.68%2,31437.16%100.16%1,58925.52%6,227
Livingston1,76759.12%1,21740.72%50.17%55018.40%2,989
Logan4,85855.79%3,84344.13%70.08%1,01511.66%8,708
Lyon1,21548.43%1,28651.26%80.32%-71-2.83%2,509
Madison6,32557.03%4,73642.71%290.26%1,58914.33%11,090
Magoffin2,81660.93%1,80639.07%00.00%1,01021.85%4,622
Marion2,39540.85%3,46159.03%70.12%-1,066-18.18%5,863
Marshall1,87947.87%2,03651.87%100.25%-157-4.00%3,925
Martin1,67480.44%40419.41%30.14%1,27061.03%2,081
Mason5,01259.79%3,36440.13%60.07%1,64819.66%8,382
McCracken7,36856.93%5,53542.76%400.31%1,83314.16%12,943
McCreary3,62289.10%43510.70%80.20%3,18778.40%4,065
McLean2,40858.07%1,72841.67%110.27%68016.40%4,147
Meade1,61048.54%1,70051.25%70.21%-90-2.71%3,317
Menifee73250.24%72549.76%00.00%70.48%1,457
Mercer3,46261.76%2,14038.17%40.07%1,32223.58%5,606
Metcalfe2,31466.92%1,14433.08%00.00%1,17033.83%3,458
Monroe3,12778.59%84321.19%90.23%2,28457.40%3,979
Montgomery2,74258.35%1,93841.24%190.40%80417.11%4,699
Morgan2,02544.02%2,57555.98%00.00%-550-11.96%4,600
Muhlenberg6,65156.22%5,13043.36%490.41%1,52112.86%11,830
Nelson2,92642.04%4,03157.92%30.04%-1,105-15.88%6,960
Nicholas1,86750.36%1,83649.53%40.11%310.84%3,707
Ohio5,69066.83%2,78432.70%400.47%2,90634.13%8,514
Oldham1,60454.02%1,35945.77%60.20%2458.25%2,969
Owen1,57338.04%2,55261.72%100.24%-979-23.68%4,135
Owsley2,10789.55%24110.24%50.21%1,86679.30%2,353
Pendleton3,19667.03%1,56732.86%50.10%1,62934.17%4,768
Perry6,09961.44%3,81438.42%140.14%2,28523.02%9,927
Pike9,38654.14%7,93045.75%190.11%1,4568.40%17,335
Powell1,16061.31%73238.69%00.00%42822.62%1,892
Pulaski9,34878.84%2,49421.03%150.13%6,85457.81%11,857
Robertson74253.69%64046.31%00.00%1027.38%1,382
Rockcastle3,85880.95%90819.05%00.00%2,95061.90%4,766
Rowan1,85761.25%1,17038.59%50.16%68722.66%3,032
Russell3,02878.45%82321.32%90.23%2,20557.12%3,860
Scott3,19252.82%2,84347.05%80.13%3495.78%6,043
Shelby3,93354.89%3,23245.11%00.00%7019.78%7,165
Simpson1,63539.64%2,49060.36%00.00%-855-20.73%4,125
Spencer1,56562.20%94737.64%40.16%61824.56%2,516
Taylor3,14965.05%1,68434.79%80.17%1,46530.26%4,841
Todd2,49650.78%2,41649.16%30.06%801.63%4,915
Trigg2,34653.55%2,03146.36%40.09%3157.19%4,381
Trimble57330.21%1,31769.43%70.37%-744-39.22%1,897
Union2,35037.64%3,88462.21%90.14%-1,534-24.57%6,243
Warren7,93160.90%5,09239.10%10.01%2,83921.80%13,024
Washington2,93356.36%2,26643.54%50.10%66712.82%5,204
Wayne2,90764.00%1,63536.00%00.00%1,27228.01%4,542
Webster3,52749.49%3,59150.39%90.13%-64-0.90%7,127
Whitley8,06083.26%1,61016.63%100.10%6,45066.63%9,680
Wolfe1,27048.36%1,35651.64%00.00%-86-3.27%2,626
Woodford2,49054.71%2,05645.18%50.11%4349.54%4,551
Totals558,06459.34%381,07040.52%1,3870.15%176,99418.82%940,521

Notes and References

  1. Sullivan, Robert David; 'How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century'; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  2. [Kevin Phillips (political commentator)|Phillips, Kevin P.]
  3. Warren, Kenneth F.; Encyclopedia of U.S. campaigns, elections, and electoral behavior: A-M, Volume 1, p. 620
  4. Nelson, Michael (1991); Historic documents on presidential elections, 1787–1988, p. 296
  5. Whisenhunt, Donald W.; President Herbert Hoover, p. 69
  6. Loewen, James A.; Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism, pp. 72-74
  7. Moore, Edmund A. A Catholic Runs For President (New York, 1956) p. 157
  8. Watson, Richard L., Jr.; 'Some Recent Interpretations of the Election of 1928'; The High School Journal, May, 1967, Vol. 50, No. 8, "Teaching about Practical Politics" (May, 1967), pp. 428-448
  9. Miller, Robert Moats; 'A Footnote to the Role of the Protestant Churches in the Election of 1928'; Church History, volume 25, no. 2 (June 1956), pp. 145-159
  10. Oulahan, Richard V.; 'Many Questions Enter into Kentucky Campaign: But Questions Raised by Smith's Religious Faith Seem to Be Dominant'; The New York Times, September 27, 1928, p. 3
  11. 'Dixie Hoover Men Predict a Break in the Solid South: State Chairmen Assert Florida, Georgia, Alabama and Kentucky Will Go Republican, Louisiana Held Doubtful'; The New York Times, October 1, 1928, p. 1
  12. Henderson, William; 'G.O.P. in Kentucky Worried by Smith: Republicans Move to Check Tide Seen Moving Away From Hoover'; The Washington Post, October 21, 1928, p. M4
  13. Web site: 1928 Presidential General Election Results – Kentucky. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. 2020-08-13.
  14. Heersink, Boris; Peterson, Brenton D. and Jenkins, Jeffery A .; 'Disasters and Elections: Estimating the Net Effect of Damage and Relief in Historical Perspective'; Political Analysis; volume 25, issue 2 (April 2017), pp. 260-268
  15. Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868–2004, pp. 206-211
  16. Scammon, Richard M. (compiler); America at the Polls: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics 1920–1964; pp. 176-177