1801 Massachusetts's 14th congressional district special election
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A special election was held in Massachusetts's 14th congressional district to fill the vacancy left by George Thatcher (F) declining to serve a 7th term, having served continuously since the 1st Congress and, after the death of Thomas Hartley (F) in Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district on December 21, 1800, the last remaining member of the 1st Congress to have continuously served in the House. The election was held on June 22, 1801
Election results
[edit]Candidate | Party | Votes[1] | Percent |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Cutts | Democratic-Republican | 634 | 55.6% |
John Lords | Federalist | 394 | 34.5% |
Benjamin Greene | Unknown | 113 | 9.9% |
Cutts took his seat with the rest of the 7th Congress at the start of the 1st session.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]U.S. Senate | |
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U.S. House |
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Governors | |
States and territories |
Federal elections in Massachusetts | |
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U.S. President | |
U.S. Senate Class 1 | |
U.S. Senate Class 2 | |
U.S. House | |
U.S. House Special Elections |
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"s/" = Special election For statewide elections, see Template:State elections in Massachusetts footer. |
Elections spanning two years (through 1879) |
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Elections held in a single year (starting 1880) |
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Elections by state |
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Speaker elections | |||||
Summaries | |||||
This Massachusetts elections–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Categories:
- Massachusetts special elections
- Special elections to the 7th United States Congress
- United States House of Representatives special elections
- United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts
- 1801 United States House of Representatives elections
- 1801 Massachusetts elections
- Massachusetts election stubs