1936 United States presidential election in Alabama explained

See main article: article and 1936 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1936 United States presidential election in Alabama
Country:Alabama
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1932 United States presidential election in Alabama
Previous Year:1932
Next Election:1940 United States presidential election in Alabama
Next Year:1940
Election Date:November 3, 1936
Image1:FDR in 1933 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:New York
Running Mate1:John Nance Garner
Electoral Vote1:11
Popular Vote1:238,196
Percentage1:86.38%
Nominee2:Alf Landon
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:Kansas
Running Mate2:Frank Knox
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:35,358
Percentage2:12.82%
Map Size:300px
Before Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1936 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 3, 1936, as part of the nationwide presidential election. Voters chose eleven representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. In Alabama, voters voted for electors individually instead of as a slate, as in the other states.

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 informal harassment had essentially eliminated opposition parties outside of Unionist Winston County and a few nearby northern hill counties that had been Populist strongholds.[2] The only competitive statewide elections became Democratic Party primaries that were limited by law to white voters. Unlike most other Confederate states, however, soon after black disenfranchisement Alabama’s remaining white Republicans made rapid efforts to expel blacks from the state Republican Party.[3] Indeed under Oscar D. Street, who ironically was appointed state party boss as part of the pro-Taft “black and tan” faction in 1912,[4] the state GOP would permanently turn “lily-white”, with the last black delegates from the state at any Republican National Convention serving in 1920.[3]

The 1920 election, aided by isolationism in Appalachia[5] and the whitening of the state GOP,[6] saw the Republicans gain their best presidential vote share in Alabama since 1884,[7] while the GOP even exceed forty percent in the House of Representatives races for the 4th, 7th and 10th congressional districts.[5] However, funding issues meant the Republicans would not emulate their efforts in the rest of the decade.[8] Nevertheless, a bitter “civil war” over how best to maintain white supremacy after the Democrats nominated urban, anti-Prohibition Catholic Al Smith saw so many Democrats defect to dry, Protestant Republican Herbert Hoover that he came within seven thousand votes of winning the state.[9]

However, the economic catastrophe of the Great Depression meant that this trend towards the GOP would be short-lived.[10] The Depression had extremely severe effects in the South, which had the highest unemployment rate in the nation, and many Southerners blamed this on the North and on Wall Street.[11] Consequently the South gave Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt extremely heavy support in 1932 — he became the only presidential candidate to sweep all of Alabama’s counties.[12]

For 1936, Roosevelt’s campaigning substantially moved away from the South — where almost none of the lower classes could vote — to focus on the working classes of the North and West.[13] However, this was clearly not going to affect his majority amongst an electorate who generally associated the Republican Party — even a lily-white Republican Party — with Reconstruction and black rule.[14] A poll in late September showed Roosevelt leading Republican nominee and Kansas Governor Alf Landon by four-to-one despite Landon leading the nation as a whole.[15] Another poll two weeks later saw the President’s lead falling slightly,[16] but this lead would be maintained in the last poll near the end of October.[17] As it turned out – like all the Literary Digest polls — Roosevelt’s strength was severely underestimated, for he actually won 86.38 percent of Alabama’s vote to Landon’s 12.82 percent, this being the best performance by a presidential candidate in Alabama since the largely uncontested elections of 1832.[12]

Results

Party! Pledged to! Elector! Votes
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltW. E. James238,196
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltRalph H. Parker238,195
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltBen Bloodworth238,194
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltCharles W. Edwards238,192
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltR. E. Jones238,191
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltFrancisc J.Ingre238,186
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltB. J. Cowart238,185
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltN. Frank Pridgen238,185
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltReese T. Amis238,131
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltHowards H. Sullinger238,090
bgcolor=Democratic PartyFranklin D. RooseveltTom B. Ware238,075
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonS. B. Adams35,358
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonJ. F. Brawner35,340
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonL. A. Carroll35,334
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonFrank Barchard, Sr.35,330
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonN. C. Fuller35,328
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonJ. D. Bush35,320
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonA. L. Isbell35,320
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonJ. M. Pennington35,304
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonA. P. Longshore, Jr.35,303
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonH. W. Pond35,297
bgcolor=Republican PartyAlf LandonS. E. Wright35,288
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinFrank Barnard719
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderA. M. Forman678
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderHugh C. Taylor647
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderHarry Gideon646
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderD. J. Williams645
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderKery A. McCloud644
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderJohn Smith644
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderCharles Otto642
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderJesse G. Owen642
bgcolor=Communist Party USAEarl BrowderR. I. Smith642
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinJoseph Suggs617
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinR. M. Hunter613
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinW. T. Ellisor610
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinJohn C. Orr610
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinJ. W. Frankling609
bgcolor=Prohibition PartyD. Leigh ColvinW. C. McMahan608
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeW. O. Broyles551
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeR. E. Hill550
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeW. O. Bonham549
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeL. D. Holstun549
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeA. W. Holstun549
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeRudolph Kern549
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeC. C. Rolfe549
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeA. B. Fewell548
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeArthur S. Gray548
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeGeorge Jodan548
bgcolor=Union PartyWilliam LemkeJ. Jordan548
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasArlie Barber242
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasJane Wheeler242
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasGeorge W. Wilson241
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasW. H. Chichester240
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasMary Denman240
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasEmma Connally239
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasC. G. Hutchisson239
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasW. F. Spencer239
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasW. M. Vaughan239
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasHugh Barber238
bgcolor=Socialist Party of AmericaNorman ThomasO. H. Brittain238
Total votes275,744

Results by county

County! colspan="2"
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic
Alfred Mossman Landon
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
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" %
Autauga1,52594.37%845.20%70.43%1,44189.17%1,616
Baldwin2,33778.79%43314.60%1966.61%1,90464.19%2,966
Barbour2,38697.51%502.04%110.45%2,33695.46%2,447
Bibb1,86890.42%1909.20%80.39%1,67881.22%2,066
Blount2,78878.23%74420.88%320.90%2,04457.35%3,564
Bullock1,18899.50%50.42%10.08%1,18399.08%1,194
Butler2,35896.32%833.39%70.29%2,27592.93%2,448
Calhoun4,32287.12%58111.71%581.17%3,74175.41%4,961
Chambers3,62696.90%1122.99%40.11%3,51493.91%3,742
Cherokee2,11384.28%37514.96%190.76%1,73869.33%2,507
Chilton2,56563.26%1,46936.23%210.52%1,09627.03%4,055
Choctaw1,50795.32%744.68%00.00%1,43390.64%1,581
Clarke2,67397.73%602.19%20.07%2,61395.54%2,735
Clay2,13871.84%69923.49%1394.67%1,43948.35%2,976
Cleburne1,21268.63%54330.75%110.62%66937.88%1,766
Coffee3,17896.16%1103.33%170.51%3,06892.83%3,305
Colbert3,36592.75%2516.92%120.33%3,11485.83%3,628
Conecuh2,19595.60%893.88%120.52%2,10691.72%2,296
Coosa1,34683.24%23914.78%321.98%1,10768.46%1,617
Covington4,26595.93%1673.76%140.31%4,09892.17%4,446
Crenshaw2,37195.95%963.89%40.16%2,27592.07%2,471
Cullman3,77968.75%1,70330.98%150.27%2,07637.77%5,497
Dale2,40492.50%1937.43%20.08%2,21185.07%2,599
Dallas3,20598.37%491.50%40.12%3,15696.87%3,258
DeKalb6,12256.89%4,61742.90%230.21%1,50513.98%10,762
Elmore3,96792.47%1754.08%1483.45%3,79288.39%4,290
Escambia2,58592.72%1936.92%100.36%2,39285.80%2,788
Etowah5,73982.24%1,20717.30%320.46%4,53264.95%6,978
Fayette2,24474.82%73224.41%230.77%1,51250.42%2,999
Franklin3,05961.62%1,87537.77%300.60%1,18423.85%4,964
Geneva2,65289.93%29510.00%20.07%2,35779.93%2,949
Greene86197.40%202.26%30.34%84195.14%884
Hale1,62698.31%201.21%80.48%1,60697.10%1,654
Henry1,92598.06%351.78%30.15%1,89096.28%1,963
Houston3,53893.52%2306.08%150.40%3,30887.44%3,783
Jackson3,45078.71%92621.13%70.16%2,52457.59%4,383
Jefferson35,98089.52%3,8109.48%4041.01%32,17080.04%40,194
Lamar2,39392.25%1957.52%60.23%2,19884.73%2,594
Lauderdale4,68591.97%3897.64%200.39%4,29684.33%5,094
Lawrence2,21383.10%44416.67%60.23%1,76966.43%2,663
Lee2,18295.62%934.08%70.31%2,08991.54%2,282
Limestone2,86195.69%1083.61%210.70%2,75392.07%2,990
Lowndes1,20499.01%100.82%20.16%1,19498.19%1,216
Macon1,14696.71%393.29%00.00%1,10793.42%1,185
Madison5,66291.03%5138.25%450.72%5,14982.78%6,220
Marengo2,28798.54%331.42%10.04%2,25497.11%2,321
Marion2,65573.96%89224.85%431.20%1,76349.11%3,590
Marshall4,20881.68%92517.95%190.37%3,28363.72%5,152
Mobile11,16590.78%1,0728.72%620.50%10,09382.06%12,299
Monroe2,55898.54%291.12%90.35%2,52997.42%2,596
Montgomery12,06197.80%2231.81%480.39%11,83895.99%12,332
Morgan5,59792.39%4327.13%290.48%5,16585.26%6,058
Perry1,52798.45%241.55%00.00%1,50396.91%1,551
Pickens1,66593.59%1076.01%70.39%1,55887.58%1,779
Pike3,10098.19%551.74%20.06%3,04596.45%3,157
Randolph2,76677.39%79322.19%150.42%1,97355.20%3,574
Russell2,18196.68%662.93%90.40%2,11593.75%2,256
Shelby2,37174.54%77724.43%331.04%1,59450.11%3,181
St. Clair2,39961.83%1,46537.76%160.41%93424.07%3,880
Sumter1,36998.28%241.72%00.00%1,34596.55%1,393
Talladega3,75185.42%48911.14%1513.44%3,26274.29%4,391
Tallapoosa3,62596.10%1413.74%60.16%3,48492.36%3,772
Tuscaloosa6,02994.31%3325.19%320.50%5,69789.11%6,393
Walker5,69776.12%1,69922.70%881.18%3,99853.42%7,484
Washington1,73695.28%723.95%140.77%1,66491.33%1,822
Wilcox1,36599.13%110.80%10.07%1,35498.33%1,377
Winston1,27046.98%1,42552.72%80.30%−155−5.73%2,703
Totals238,19686.38%35,35812.82%2,1900.79%202,83873.56%275,744

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. 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.
  3. Book: Heersink. Jenkins. Boris. Jeffery A.. Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865-1968. 251–253. 9781107158436. 2020.
  4. Book: Casdorph, Paul D.. Republicans, Negroes, and Progressives in the South, 1912-1916. The University of Alabama Press. 1981. 70, 94–95. 0817300481.
  5. Book: Phillips, Kevin P.. The Emerging Republican Majority. 255. 1969. 0870000586.
  6. Heersink and Jenkins, Republican Party Politics and the American South, p. 19
  7. Web site: Presidential General Election Results Comparison — Alabama. Leip. Dave. Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  8. See News: G.O.P. Funds Are Reported Short: Forces "Counted On" Disappoint Republican Political Managers. The Birmingham News. August 19, 1922. 5. Birmingham, Alabama.
  9. Book: Feldman, Glenn. Epilogue. Ugly Roots: Race, Emotion and the Rise of the Modern Republican Party in Alabama and the South. Feldman. Glenn. Before Brown: Civil Rights and White Backlash in the Modern South. September 13, 2004. University of Alabama Press. 270–273. 9780817351342.
  10. Book: Lewinson, Paul. Race, class and party; a history of Negro suffrage and white politics in the South. 1965. 167–168.
  11. Book: Ritchie, Donald A.. Electing FDR: the New Deal campaign of 1932. 143. 2007. Lawrence, Kansas. University Press of Kansas. 070061687X.
  12. Book: Thomas, G. Scott. The pursuit of the White House: a handbook of presidential election statistics and history. 1987. 390, 418. 0313257957.
  13. Ritchie. Electing FDR p. 186
  14. Heersink; Jenkins. Republican Party Politics and the American South, pp. 48–50
  15. News: Literary Digest Poll Gives Landon 108,477 Votes in the Lead. Blaine County Booster. Dunning, Nebraska. September 24, 1936. 1.
  16. News: Presidential Poll Taken from the Radio, Wednesday. Blaine County Booster. Dunning, Nebraska. October 8, 1936. 1.
  17. News: Our Last Presidential Poll by Radio. Blaine County Booster. Dunning, Nebraska. October 29, 1936. 1.