1944 United States presidential election in Mississippi explained

See main article: 1944 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1944 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Country:Mississippi
Flag Image:Flag of Mississippi (1894-1996).svg
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1940 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Previous Year:1940
Next Election:1948 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Next Year:1948
Votes For Election:All 9 Mississippi votes to the Electoral College
Election Date:November 7, 1944[1]
Image1:1944_portrait_of_FDR_(1)(small).jpg
Nominee1:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:New York
Running Mate1:Harry S. Truman
Electoral Vote1:9
Popular Vote1:168,479
Percentage1:93.56%
Nominee2:Thomas E. Dewey
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:New York
Running Mate2:John W. Bricker
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:11,601
Percentage2:6.44%
Map Size:305px
President
Before Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1944 United States presidential election in Mississippi took place on November 7, 1944, as part of the 1944 United States presidential election. Mississippi voters chose nine[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Ever since the end of Reconstruction, Mississippi had been a one-party state dominated by the Democratic Party. The Republican Party was virtually nonexistent as a result of disenfranchisement among African Americans and poor whites,[3] including voter intimidation against those who refused to vote Democratic.

From the time of Henry A. Wallace's appointment as vice-president and the 1943 Detroit race riots,[4] however, the northern left wing of the Democratic Party became committed to restoring black political rights,[5] a policy vehemently opposed by all Southern Democrats as an infringement upon "states' rights". Anger with the FDR administration intensified further when the Supreme Court ruled in Smith v. Allwright that the white primaries upon which the politics of Mississippi and most other Southern states were based violated the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.

Consequently, Mississippi Democrats, already developing opposition to the New Deal, which had provided substantial work for white Mississippians during the 1930s, were very concerned about Roosevelt being renominated for a fourth term. In fact, the original slate of Democratic electors was pledged to vote for a candidate other than Roosevelt.[6] However, FDR remained extremely popular with the majority of Mississippians, even those wealthy enough to pay the state's poll tax.[7] Consequently, Governor Thomas L. Bailey was forced to call a convention that deleted the Democratic electors’ names from the presidential ballot, which meant that they were pledged to vote for Roosevelt.[7]

Mississippi was won by incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt (DNew York), running with Senator Harry S. Truman, with 93.56 percent of the popular vote, against Governor Thomas E. Dewey (R–New York), running with Governor John Bricker, with 6.44 percent of the popular vote, making it Roosevelt's strongest state in the election.[8] [9]

As of 2020, this marks the last time that any candidate has received over ninety percent of the popular vote in any state, or that Forrest County has voted for a Democratic presidential candidate.[10] It was also the last time until 1972 that Mississippi would back the national winner in a presidential election. This was the last election in which every county voted for the Democrats in Mississippi. The next election would also see all the state's counties go to just one party, albeit to the Dixiecrats rather than the Democrats. The same would be true of 1964, when all the state's counties went entirely to the Republican Party.

As Roosevelt's strongest state, this is the most recent time Mississippi has voted more Democratic than Georgia.

Results

Results by county

1944 United States presidential election in Mississippi by county[11]
CountyFranklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic
Thomas Edmund Dewey
Republican
MarginTotal votes cast
data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"sdata-sort-type="number"%%
Adams1,63885.31%28214.69%1,35670.63%1,920
Alcorn2,66992.83%2067.17%2,46385.67%2,875
Amite1,42694.25%875.75%1,33988.50%1,513
Attala2,18796.17%873.83%2,10092.35%2,274
Benton85295.30%424.70%81090.60%894
Bolivar2,44486.61%37813.39%2,06673.21%2,822
Calhoun2,07295.53%974.47%1,97591.06%2,169
Carroll1,43895.48%684.52%1,37090.97%1,506
Chickasaw1,93591.49%1808.51%1,75582.98%2,115
Choctaw1,11993.64%766.36%1,04387.28%1,195
Claiborne71094.04%455.96%66588.08%755
Clarke1,69494.69%955.31%1,59989.38%1,789
Clay1,15891.40%1098.60%1,04982.79%1,267
Coahoma2,39292.61%1917.39%2,20185.21%2,583
Copiah2,40996.59%853.41%2,32493.18%2,494
Covington1,67296.65%583.35%1,61493.29%1,730
DeSoto1,56192.70%1237.30%1,43885.39%1,684
Forrest3,64989.33%43610.67%3,21378.65%4,085
Franklin1,21196.11%493.89%1,16292.22%1,260
George1,05191.95%928.05%95983.90%1,143
Greene90789.27%10910.73%79878.54%1,016
Grenada1,37392.15%1177.85%1,25684.30%1,490
Hancock1,64292.30%1377.70%1,50584.60%1,779
Harrison5,97690.57%6229.43%5,35481.15%6,598
Hinds10,46691.58%9628.42%9,50483.16%11,428
Holmes1,95494.12%1225.88%1,83288.25%2,076
Humphreys1,15097.05%352.95%1,11594.09%1,185
Issaquena21597.73%52.27%21095.45%220
Itawamba1,35088.06%18311.94%1,16776.13%1,533
Jackson2,63692.52%2137.48%2,42385.05%2,849
Jasper1,66797.26%472.74%1,62094.52%1,714
Jefferson76696.84%253.16%74193.68%791
Jefferson Davis1,37293.97%886.03%1,28487.95%1,460
Jones4,78293.42%3376.58%4,44586.83%5,119
Kemper1,34597.32%372.68%1,30894.65%1,382
Lafayette2,14896.11%873.89%2,06192.21%2,235
Lamar1,06591.97%938.03%97283.94%1,158
Lauderdale6,03694.09%3795.91%5,65788.18%6,415
Lawrence1,53597.15%452.85%1,49094.30%1,580
Leake2,80099.15%240.85%2,77698.30%2,824
Lee3,50993.85%2306.15%3,27987.70%3,739
Leflore2,39992.30%2007.70%2,19984.61%2,599
Lincoln2,44595.96%1034.04%2,34291.92%2,548
Lowndes2,21686.02%36013.98%1,85672.05%2,576
Madison1,92194.86%1045.14%1,81789.73%2,025
Marion2,44197.84%542.16%2,38795.67%2,495
Marshall1,44195.81%634.19%1,37891.62%1,504
Monroe3,10495.13%1594.87%2,94590.25%3,263
Montgomery1,37194.88%745.12%1,29789.76%1,445
Neshoba3,02595.85%1314.15%2,89491.70%3,156
Newton2,51697.82%562.18%2,46095.65%2,572
Noxubee99490.61%1039.39%89181.22%1,097
Oktibbeha1,94894.66%1105.34%1,83889.31%2,058
Panola1,93195.55%904.45%1,84191.09%2,021
Pearl River2,13196.21%843.79%2,04792.42%2,215
Perry79694.76%445.24%75289.52%840
Pike2,97292.30%2487.70%2,72484.60%3,220
Pontotoc1,71695.17%874.83%1,62990.35%1,803
Prentiss1,65290.42%1759.58%1,47780.84%1,827
Quitman1,10694.94%595.06%1,04789.87%1,165
Rankin2,37496.04%983.96%2,27692.07%2,472
Scott2,16597.30%602.70%2,10594.61%2,225
Sharkey69896.68%243.32%67493.35%722
Simpson2,47096.94%783.06%2,39293.88%2,548
Smith2,45693.70%1656.30%2,29187.41%2,621
Stone98995.83%434.17%94691.67%1,032
Sunflower2,79994.75%1555.25%2,64489.51%2,954
Tallahatchie2,40198.36%401.64%2,36196.72%2,441
Tate1,45598.05%291.95%1,42696.09%1,484
Tippah2,53995.27%1264.73%2,41390.54%2,665
Tishomingo1,41282.67%29617.33%1,11665.34%1,708
Tunica72195.37%354.63%68690.74%756
Union2,14092.12%1837.88%1,95784.24%2,323
Walthall1,23094.76%685.24%1,16289.52%1,298
Warren3,20291.33%3048.67%2,89882.66%3,506
Washington2,01281.59%45418.41%1,55863.18%2,466
Wayne1,38097.53%352.47%1,34595.05%1,415
Webster1,50492.21%1277.79%1,37784.43%1,631
Wilkinson86391.52%808.48%78383.03%943
Winston1,82297.28%512.72%1,77194.55%1,873
Yalobusha1,58294.22%975.78%1,48588.45%1,679
Yazoo2,30196.72%783.28%2,22393.44%2,379
Totals168,62193.56%11,6136.44%157,00887.11%180,234

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United States Presidential election of 1944 – Encyclopædia Britannica. July 19, 2018.
  2. Web site: 1944 Election for the Fortieth Term (1945-49). July 19, 2018.
  3. Book: Wright-Austin, Sharon D.. The Transformation of Plantation Politics: Black Politics, Concentrated Poverty, and Social Capital in the Mississippi Delta. 45. 9780791468012.
  4. Book: Scher, Richard K.. Politics in the New South: Republicanism, Race and Leadership in the Twentieth Century. 95. 1563248484. December 4, 2023. registration. Internet Archive.
  5. Book: Frederickson, Karl A.. The Dixiecrat Revolt and the End of the Solid South, 1932-1968. 39. 0807849103. December 3, 2023. registration. Internet Archive.
  6. Book: Webb, Clyde. Massive Resistance: Southern Opposition to the Second Reconstruction. 198. 019029227X. Oxford University Press. 2005. registration. December 4, 2023. Internet Archive.
  7. Book: Busbee, Wesley F.. Mississippi: A History. 266. 2014. 1118822722.
  8. Web site: 1944 Presidential General Election Results – Mississippi. July 19, 2018.
  9. Web site: The American Presidency Project – Election of 1944. July 19, 2018.
  10. Web site: Sullivan. Robert David. How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century. America Magazine. The National Catholic Review. June 29, 2016.
  11. Scammon, Richard M. (compiler); America at the Polls: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics 1920-1964; pp. 249-250