1944 United States presidential election in North Carolina explained

See main article: 1944 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1944 United States presidential election in North Carolina
Country:North Carolina
Flag Year:1885
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1940 United States presidential election in North Carolina
Previous Year:1940
Next Election:1948 United States presidential election in North Carolina
Next Year:1948
Votes For Election:All 14 North Carolina 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 Vote1:14
Popular Vote1:527,399
Percentage1:66.71%
Nominee2:Thomas E. Dewey
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:New York
Running Mate2:John W. Bricker
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:263,155
Percentage2:33.29%
Map Size:400px
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 North Carolina took place on November 7, 1944, as part of the 1944 United States presidential election. North Carolina voters chose 14[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

As a former Confederate state, North Carolina had a history of Jim Crow laws, disfranchisement of its African-American population and dominance of the Democratic Party in state politics. However, unlike the Deep South, the Republican Party had sufficient historic Unionist white support from the mountains and northwestern Piedmont to gain one-third of the statewide vote total in most general elections,[3] where turnout was higher than elsewhere in the former Confederacy due substantially to the state’s early abolition of the poll tax in 1920.[4] Like Virginia, Tennessee and Oklahoma, the relative strength of Republican opposition meant that North Carolina did not have statewide white primaries, although certain counties did use the white primary.[5] A rapid move following disenfranchisement to a completely “lily-white” state GOP also helped maintain Republican support.[6]

In 1928, anti-Catholicism in the Outer Banks and growing middle-class urban Republicanism in Piedmont cities turned North Carolina to GOP nominee Herbert Hoover,[7] but this was sharply and severely reversed with the coming of the Great Depression. With the South having the highest unemployment in the nation and blaming its fate upon the North and Wall Street,[8] exceptionally heavy support was given to Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 and 1936 everywhere except in a few rock-ribbed Republican mountain bastions.[7] Nevertheless, there was virtually no change to the state’s social structure during the New Deal,[9] and the conservative “Shelby Dynasty” was strong enough to prevent any populist challenge so much as developing.[10] Additionally, the state was among the least isolationist and strongly supported aid to Britain during the early phase of World War II,[11] while the absence of a statewide white primary meant local response to the landmark court case of Smith v. Allwright was generally calm.[5] However, the precarious health of incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt produced strong Southern opposition to vice-President Henry A. Wallace, who was viewed as a dangerous liberal throughout the region.[12] Initially the South attempted to have former Supreme Court Justice James F. Byrnes replace Wallace, but Byrnes was unacceptable because of his lapsed Catholicism to the northern Catholic urban bosses, and also to the party’s union backers.[13] Consequently, Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman became Roosevelt’s running mate.[14]

Polls were not taken in the state, but less than a week before the poll there were appeals to state Democrats to not support FDR for a fourth term.[15]

Results

Results by county

County! colspan="2"
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic
Thomas Edmund Dewey
Republican
Margin
%%%
Martin97.07%4,4082.93%13394.14%4,275
Bertie96.20%3,1423.80%12492.41%3,018
Greene95.72%2,5284.28%11391.44%2,415
Northampton95.28%3,4704.72%17290.55%3,298
Pitt94.53%8,5565.47%49589.06%8,061
Hertford94.11%1,9965.89%12588.21%1,871
Halifax94.08%6,9895.92%44088.15%6,549
Edgecombe93.79%6,7626.21%44887.57%6,314
Franklin93.21%3,9676.79%28986.42%3,678
Hoke91.76%1,7828.24%16083.52%1,622
Warren91.11%2,4808.89%24282.22%2,238
Granville90.82%3,2159.18%32581.64%2,890
Lenoir90.46%5,2539.54%55480.92%4,699
Nash89.64%7,57710.36%87679.27%6,701
Wilson89.39%6,48010.61%76978.78%5,711
Chowan88.78%1,31411.22%16677.57%1,148
Scotland88.67%2,37211.33%30377.35%2,069
Vance88.62%4,11011.38%52877.23%3,582
Gates87.84%1,10512.16%15375.68%952
Anson87.54%3,58212.46%51075.07%3,072
Robeson86.68%7,27813.32%1,11873.37%6,160
Onslow86.23%2,71113.77%43372.46%2,278
Craven85.50%4,87214.50%82671.01%4,046
Jones85.27%1,22114.73%21170.53%1,010
Richmond85.19%5,39414.81%93870.37%4,456
Union83.72%5,72916.28%1,11467.44%4,615
Currituck81.95%1,04918.05%23163.91%818
Wake81.87%18,05018.13%3,99663.75%14,054
Lee81.02%3,44818.98%80862.03%2,640
Beaufort80.60%4,70619.40%1,13361.19%3,573
Person80.51%2,50719.49%60761.01%1,900
Pender79.71%1,73220.29%44159.41%1,291
Caswell79.63%1,92320.37%49259.25%1,431
Duplin79.18%5,46420.82%1,43758.35%4,027
Camden78.91%72221.09%19357.81%529
Dare78.86%96621.14%25957.71%707
Columbus78.65%5,71721.35%1,55257.30%4,165
Perquimans78.30%96021.70%26656.61%694
Washington78.19%1,78221.81%49756.38%1,285
Bladen77.67%2,54222.33%73155.33%1,811
Durham77.57%12,76322.43%3,69055.14%9,073
New Hanover76.99%9,46723.01%2,82953.99%6,638
Cumberland76.66%6,61523.34%2,01453.32%4,601
Wayne76.49%6,22823.51%1,91452.98%4,314
Cleveland75.61%8,17024.39%2,63651.21%5,534
Pasquotank74.71%2,54025.29%86049.41%1,680
Rockingham74.33%8,75525.67%3,02448.65%5,731
Hyde74.10%92425.90%32348.20%601
Mecklenburg73.34%25,95026.66%9,43446.68%16,516
Haywood72.65%7,75527.35%2,91945.31%4,836
Gaston69.53%13,74430.47%6,02339.06%7,721
Orange69.06%3,27430.94%1,46738.11%1,807
Carteret69.02%3,48930.98%1,56638.04%1,923
Buncombe68.96%20,87831.04%9,39837.92%11,480
Tyrrell68.50%61131.50%28137.00%330
Cabarrus68.17%9,06431.83%4,23336.33%4,831
Harnett67.34%6,57932.66%3,19134.68%3,388
Johnston65.19%8,28234.81%4,42330.37%3,859
Alamance64.86%9,18435.14%4,97629.72%4,208
Guilford64.45%23,49535.55%12,96228.89%10,533
Pamlico64.30%1,29535.70%71928.60%576
McDowell63.96%4,00836.04%2,25827.93%1,750
Iredell63.21%8,35836.79%4,86426.43%3,494
Rowan62.38%9,72137.62%5,86224.76%3,859
Forsyth62.07%16,39037.93%10,01424.15%6,376
Chatham61.33%3,85638.67%2,43122.67%1,425
Rutherford61.10%7,37938.90%4,69822.20%2,681
Jackson60.40%4,10939.60%2,69420.80%1,415
Surry60.02%7,67939.98%5,11620.03%2,563
Catawba58.45%10,14641.55%7,21116.91%2,935
Swain58.37%2,11041.63%1,50516.74%605
Polk58.24%2,34041.76%1,67816.48%662
Moore58.22%3,71141.78%2,66316.44%1,048
Graham58.21%1,88941.79%1,35616.43%533
Yancey57.88%3,30142.12%2,40215.76%899
Montgomery57.58%2,66542.42%1,96315.17%702
Transylvania57.29%3,01942.71%2,25114.57%768
Caldwell55.39%5,41944.61%4,36510.77%1,054
Henderson55.18%5,67944.82%4,61310.36%1,066
Stokes54.90%4,11045.10%3,3769.80%734
Alleghany54.77%1,81045.23%1,4959.53%315
Brunswick54.02%2,34645.98%1,9978.04%349
Burke53.72%6,79546.28%5,8557.43%940
Macon53.22%2,85546.78%2,5106.43%345
Lincoln53.12%4,16846.88%3,6786.25%490
Davidson50.03%9,45549.97%9,4450.05%10
Clay49.64%1,24550.36%1,263-0.72%-18
Cherokee49.59%2,58250.41%2,625-0.83%-43
Ashe49.09%4,36350.91%4,524-1.81%-161
Stanly47.48%5,49952.52%6,083-5.04%-584
Randolph45.61%7,27754.39%8,678-8.78%-1,401
Watauga44.84%3,21455.16%3,954-10.32%-740
Alexander43.44%2,28256.56%2,971-13.12%-689
Davie41.13%2,26658.87%3,244-17.75%-978
Sampson41.04%4,22058.96%6,062-17.91%-1,842
Wilkes37.99%5,58762.01%9,121-24.03%-3,534
Yadkin36.00%2,47064.00%4,392-28.01%-1,922
Madison34.30%2,29165.70%4,388-31.40%-2,097
Mitchell24.29%1,02475.71%3,192-51.42%-2,168
Avery20.87%83879.13%3,178-58.27%-2,340

Analysis

North Carolina was won by Roosevelt with 66.71 percent of the popular vote, against Governor Thomas E. Dewey (R–New York), running with Governor John Bricker with 33.29 percent.[16] [17]

This was nonetheless a decline of over fifteen percentage points upon Roosevelt’s 1940 performance, reflecting the significant isolationism in Appalachia,[18] alongside developing hostility towards Democratic liberalism on racial issues., this is the last election in which the following counties voted for a Democratic presidential candidate: Catawba, Davidson and Henderson.[19]

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: [[Kevin Phillips (political commentator)|Phillips]], Kevin P.. The Emerging Republican Majority. 210, 242. 978-0-691-16324-6.
  4. Book: [[Valdimer Orlando Key|Key]], Valdimer Orlando. Southern Politics in State and Nation. 502. Alfred A. Knopf. 1949.
  5. Klarman. Michael J.. The White Primary Rulings: A Case Study in the Consequences of Supreme Court Decision-Making. Florida State University Law Review. 29. 2001. 55–107.
  6. Book: Heersink. Boris. Jenkins. Jeffery A.. Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865–1968. 48–50, 239–243. 9781316663950.
  7. Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 212-215
  8. Book: Ritchie, Donald A.. 2007. Electing FDR: the New Deal campaign of 1932. Lawrence, Kansas. University Press of Kansas. 143. 070061687X.
  9. See Book: Abrams, Douglas Carl. Conservative constraints: North Carolina and the New Deal. 1992. University Press of Mississippi. Jackson, Mississippi. 9780878055593.
  10. Book: Christensen, Rob. The paradox of Tar Heel politics: the personalities, elections, and events that shaped modern North Carolina. 2010. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill, North Carolina. 9780807899632 . 62–68.
  11. See Book: Menendez, Albert J.. 2005. The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004. 68. 0786422173.
  12. Book: Weintraub, Stanley. Final victory: FDR’s Extraordinary World War II Presidential Campaign. 2012. Da Capo Press. Philadelphia. 9780306821134. 23–28. Bungled Beginnings.
  13. Book: Divine, Robert A.. Foreign policy and U.S. presidential elections, 1940-1948. 1974. New Viewpoints. New York, New York. 0531064956. 119–120.
  14. Book: Weintraub, Stanley. Final victory: FDR’s Extraordinary World War II Presidential Campaign. 2012. 37–48. The Missouri Compromise.
  15. News: Senator Wherry Heard At Rally — GOP Senate Whip Urges "Jeffersonian Democrats" To Vote Against FDR. The News and Observer. November 2, 1944 . Raleigh, North Carolina. 2.
  16. Web site: 1944 Presidential General Election Results – North Carolina. July 19, 2018.
  17. Web site: The American Presidency Project – Election of 1944. July 19, 2018.
  18. Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 215, 289
  19. Sullivan. Robert David. How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century. America Magazine. The National Catholic Review. June 29, 2016.