Presidential elections were held in the United States from October 30 to December 2, 1840. In the shadow of an incomplete economic recovery from the Panic of 1837, Whig nominee William Henry Harrison defeated incumbent President Martin Van Buren of the Democratic Party. The election marked the first of two Whig victories in presidential elections, but was the only one where they won a majority of the popular vote. This was also the third rematch in American history.

In 1839, the Whigs held a national convention for the first time. The 1839 Whig National Convention saw 1836 nominee William Henry Harrison defeat former Secretary of State Henry Clay and General Winfield Scott. Van Buren faced little opposition at the 1840 Democratic National Convention, but controversial Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson was not renominated. The Democrats thus became the only major party since 1800 to fail to select a vice presidential nominee.

Referencing vice presidential nominee John Tyler and Harrison's participation in the Battle of Tippecanoe, the Whigs campaigned on the slogan of "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too." With Van Buren weakened by economic woes, Harrison won a popular majority and 234 of 294 electoral votes. Voter participation surged as white male suffrage became nearly universal, and a contemporary record of 42.4% of the voting age population voted for Harrison. Van Buren's loss made him the third president to lose re-election.

The Whigs did not enjoy the benefits of victory. The 67-year-old Harrison, the oldest U.S. president elected until Ronald Reagan won the 1980 election, died a little more than a month after inauguration. Harrison was succeeded by John Tyler, who unexpectedly proved not to be a Whig. While Tyler had been a staunch supporter of Clay at the convention, he was a former Democrat, a passionate supporter of states' rights, and effectively an independent. As President, Tyler blocked the Whigs' legislative agenda and was expelled from the Whig Party, subsequently the second independent (after Washington) to serve as president. Van Buren would be the last incumbent president to lose his reelection bid in a general election until fellow Democrat Grover Cleveland in 1888. This was also the last time a challenger to an incumbent president got a majority of the vote until 1932. This was also the last time as of 2024 where the incumbent president seeking re-election flipped a state yet failed to secure re-election, with Van Buren winning South Carolina, despite losing it four years earlier, and losing re-election to Harrison.

Nominations

Whig Party nomination

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center;"

|-

| style="background:#f1f1f1;" colspan="30"|<big>1840 Whig Party ticket</big>

|-

! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#F0DC82; width:200px;"| William Henry Harrison|

! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#F0DC82; width:200px;"| John Tyler|

|- style="color:#000000; font-size:100%; background:#F0DC82;"

| style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:lightyellow; width:200px;"|for President

| style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:lightyellow; width:200px;"|for Vice President

|-

| center|200x200px

| center|200x200px

|-

| United States Minister for Gran Columbia<br /><small>(1829)</small>

| U.S. Senator<br />from Virginia<br /><small>(1827–1836)</small><br>President pro tempore of the Senate<br /><small>(1835)</small>

|-

| colspan=2 |Campaign

|-

|}

The first national convention of the Whig Party was called for by members of the party in Congress and it was attended by almost 250 delegates in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Henry Clay, William Henry Harrison, and Winfield Scott ran for the party's presidential nomination. The delegations of each state balloted separately before meeting together with the other representatives of the states. Clay initially led on the first ballot, but Harrison won on the final ballot with 148 votes compared to Clay's 90 votes and Scott's 16 votes after supporters from Scott switched to Harrison. John Tyler was selected as a factional and geographical balance to Harrison.

Democratic Party nomination

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center;"

|-

| style="background:#f1f1f1;" colspan="30"|<big>1840 Democratic Party ticket</big>

|-

! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#3333FF; width:200px;"| Martin Van Buren|

! style="width:3em; font-size:135%; background:#3333FF; width:200px;" |None of the above|

|-

| style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:#C8EBFF; width:200px;"|for President

| style="width:3em; font-size:100%; color:#000; background:#C8EBFF; width:200px;"|for Vice President

|-

| center|200x200px

|-

| 8th<br />President of the United States<br /><small>(1837–1841)</small>

| N/A

|-

|}

thumb|207x207px|[[Martin Van Buren, the incumbent president in 1840, whose term expired on March 4, 1841]]

Democratic members of the New Hampshire General Court made a call for the 1840 Democratic National Convention which was held in Baltimore, Maryland in May 1840. Delegates from twenty-two states attended the convention, but the sizes of the delegations varied with New Jersey having fifty-nine delegates to cast its eight votes while Massachusetts only had one delegate to cast its fourteen votes.

Birney was unable to campaign during the election as he was in England until November. The Liberty Party received opposition from followers of William Lloyd Garrison and abolitionist Whigs. The Liberty Party received 7,453 votes.

right|thumb|350px|Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage of the winning candidate in each county. Shades of yellow are for Harrison (Whig) and shades of blue are for Van Buren (Democrat).

Whigs took advantage of this quip and declared that Harrison was "the log cabin and hard cider candidate", a man of the common people from the rough-and-tumble West. They depicted Harrison's opponent, President Martin Van Buren, as a wealthy snob who was out of touch with the people. In fact, it was Harrison who came from a family of wealthy planters, while Van Buren's father was a tavernkeeper. Harrison however moved to the frontier and for years lived in a log cabin, while Van Buren had been a well-paid government official.

Nonetheless, the election was held in the wake of the Panic of 1837, one of the worst economic depressions in the nation's history, and voters blamed Van Buren, seeing him as unsympathetic to struggling citizens. Harrison campaigned vigorously and won.

Results

31.9% of the voting age population and 80.3% of eligible voters participated in the election. This was the first time that a majority of southern voters participated in the election. (A majority in the north had first participated in an election in 1828.)

Harrison won the support of western settlers and eastern bankers alike. Of the 1,179 counties/independent cities making returns, Harrison won in 699 (59.29%) while Van Buren carried 477 (40.46%). Three counties (0.25%) in the South split evenly between Harrison and Van Buren.

The extent of Van Buren's unpopularity was evident in Harrison's victories in New York, the president's home state, and in Tennessee, where Andrew Jackson himself had come out of retirement to stump for his former vice-president.

This was the first time a Democratic president lost re-election, as well as the first of only two times (the other being 1980) that a Democratic president lost re-election and lost the popular vote.

This was also the first election in U.S. history in which a candidate won more than a million popular votes.

This was the last election where Indiana voted for the Whigs. It was also the only election where the Whigs won Maine, Michigan, and Mississippi. The election was also the last time that a majority of voters in Mississippi voted against the Democrats until 1872, the last in which a majority of voters in Indiana voted against Democrats until 1860, and the last in which a majority of voters in Maine and Michigan voted against Democrats until 1856. This is the only election in American history in which a majority of voters in Alabama and a majority of voters in Mississippi voted for different candidates.

The 1840 presidential election was the only time in which four people who either had been or would become a U.S. President (Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler, and Polk) received at least one vote in the Electoral College when it voted for president and vice-president.

Harrison's victory won him precious little time as chief executive of the United States. After giving the longest inauguration speech in U.S. history (lasting about 1 hour and 45 minutes, in cold weather and rain), Harrison served only one month as president before dying of pneumonia on April 4, 1841.

File: United States Electoral College 1840.svg

Source (Popular Vote):

Source (Electoral Vote):

<sup>(a)</sup> The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.

Geography of results

<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">

PresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Map of presidential election results by county

WhigPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Map of Whig presidential election results by county

DemocraticPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Map of Democratic presidential election results by county

LibertyPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Map of Liberty presidential election results by county

OtherPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Map of "Other" presidential election results by county

CartogramPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Cartogram of presidential election results by county

CartogramWhigPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Cartogram of Whig presidential election results by county

CartogramDemocraticPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Cartogram of Democratic presidential election results by county

CartogramLibertyPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Cartogram of Liberty presidential election results by county

CartogramOtherPresidentialCounty1840Colorbrewer.gif|Cartogram of "Other" presidential election results by county

</gallery>

Results by state

Source: Data from Walter Dean Burnham, Presidential ballots, 1836–1892 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1955) pp 247–257.

{|class="wikitable"

|-

|States/districts won by Van Buren

|-

|States/districts won by Harrison/Tyler

|}<div style="overflow:auto">

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:right"

|-

! colspan=2 |

! align=center colspan=3 | William Henry Harrison<br />Whig

! align=center colspan=3 | Martin Van Buren<br />Democratic

! align=center colspan=3 | James G. Birney<br />Liberty

! colspan="2" |Margin

! align=center colspan=2 | State Total

|-

! align=center | State

! style="text-align:center; font-size: 60%" | electoral<br />votes

! align=center | #

! align=center | %

! style="text-align:center; font-size: 60%" | electoral<br />votes

! align=center | #

! align=center | %

! style="text-align:center; font-size: 60%" | electoral<br />votes

! align=center | #

! align=center | %

! style="text-align:center; font-size: 60%" | electoral<br />votes

!#

!%

! align=center | #

!

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Alabama

! 7

| <span style="display:none">00013618</span>28,515

| 45.62

| -

| <span style="display:none">00048669</span>33,996

| 54.38

| 7

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

| -5,481

| -8.76

| 62,511

! AL

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Arkansas

! 3

| 5,160

| 43.58

| -

| 6,679

| 56.42

| 3

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

| -1,519

| -12.84

| 11,839

! AR

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Connecticut

! 8

| 31,598

| 55.55

| 8

| 25,281

| 44.45

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|6,317

|11.10

| 56,879

! CT

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Delaware

! 3

| 5,967

| 54.99

| 3

| 4,872

| 44.89

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|1,095

|10.10

| 10,852

! DE

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Georgia

! 11

| 40,339

| 55.78

| 11

| 31,983

| 44.22

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|8,356

|11.56

| 72,322

! GA

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Illinois

! 5

| 45,574

| 48.91

| -

| 47,441

| 50.92

| 5

| 160

| 0.17

| -

| -1,867

| -2.01

| 93,175

! IL

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Indiana

! 9

| 65,302

| 55.86

| 9

| 51,604

| 44.14

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|13,698

|11.72

| 116,906

! IN

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Kentucky

! 15

| 58,488

| 64.20

| 15

| 32,616

| 35.80

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|25,872

|28.40

| 91,104

! KY

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Louisiana

! 5

| 11,296

| 59.73

| 5

| 7,616

| 40.27

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|3,680

|19.46

| 18,912

! LA

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Maine

! 10

| 46,612

| 50.23

| 10

| 46,190

| 49.77

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|422

|0.46

| 92,802

! ME

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Maryland

! 10

| 33,528

| 53.83

| 10

| 28,752

| 46.17

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|4,776

|7.66

| 62,280

! MD

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Massachusetts

! 14

| 72,852

| 57.44

| 14

| 52,355

| 41.28

| -

| 1,618

| 1.28

| -

|20,497

|16.16

| 126,825

! MA

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Michigan

! 3

| 22,933

| 51.71

| 3

| 21,096

| 47.57

| -

| 321

| 0.72

| -

|1,837

|4.14

| 44,350

! MI

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Mississippi

! 4

| 19,515

| 53.43

| 4

| 17,010

| 46.57

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|2,505

|6.86

| 36,525

! MS

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Missouri

! 4

| 22,954

| 43.37

| -

| 29,969

| 56.63

| 4

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

| -7,015

| -13.26

| 52,923

! MO

|-

! style"text-align:left" | New Hampshire

! 7

| 26,310

| 43.88

| -

| 32,774

| 54.66

| 7

| 872

| 1.45

| -

| -6,464

| -10.78

| 59,956

! NH

|-

! style"text-align:left" | New Jersey

! 8

| 33,351

| 51.74

| 8

| 31,034

| 48.15

| -

| 69

| 0.11

| -

|2,317

|3.59

| 64,454

! NJ

|-

! style"text-align:left" | New York

! 42

| 226,001

| 51.18

| 42

| 212,733

| 48.18

| -

| 2,809

| 0.64

| -

|13,268

|3.00

| 441,543

! NY

|-

! style"text-align:left" | North Carolina

! 15

| 46,567

| 57.68

| 15

| 34,168

| 42.32

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|12,399

|15.36

| 80,735

! NC

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Ohio

! 21

| 148,157

| 54.10

| 21

| 124,782

| 45.57

| -

| 903

| 0.33

| -

|23,375

|8.53

| 273,842

! OH

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Pennsylvania

! 30

| 144,010

| 50.00

| 30

| 143,676

| 49.88

| -

| 340

| 0.12

| -

|334

|0.12

| 288,026

! PA

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Rhode Island

! 4

| 5,278

| 61.22

| 4

| 3,301

| 38.29

| -

| 42

| 0.49

| -

|1,977

|22.93

| 8,621

! RI

|-

! style"text-align:left" | South Carolina

! 11

| colspan=3 align=center | no popular vote

| colspan=2 align=center | no popular vote

| 11

| colspan=3 align=center | no popular vote

| -

| -

| -

! SC

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Tennessee

! 15

| 60,194

| 55.66

| 15

| 47,951

| 44.34

| -

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

|12,243

|11.32

| 108,145

! TN

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Vermont

! 7

| 32,445

| 63.90

| 7

| 18,009

| 35.47

| -

| 319

| 0.63

| -

|14,436

|28.43

| 50,773

! VT

|-

! style"text-align:left" | Virginia

! 23

| 42,639

| 49.35

| -

| 43,757

| 50.65

| 23

| colspan=3 align=center | no ballots

| -1,120

| -1.30

| 86,394

! VA

|-

! TOTALS:

! 294

! 1,275,585

! 52.87

! 234

! 1,129,645

! 46.82

! 60

! 7,453

! 0.31

! -

!145,938

!6.05

! 2,412,694

! US

|-

! TO WIN:

! 148

! colspan="17" |

|}</div>

States that flipped from Democratic to Whig

  • Connecticut
  • Louisiana
  • Maine
  • Michigan
  • Mississippi
  • New York
  • North Carolina
  • Pennsylvania
  • Rhode Island

States that flipped from Whig to Democratic

  • South Carolina

Close states

States where the margin of victory was under 1%:

  1. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Pennsylvania 0.12% (334 votes)</span>
  2. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Maine 0.46% (422 votes)</span>

States where the margin of victory was under 5%:

  1. <span style="color:blue;">Virginia 1.3% (1,120 votes)</span>
  2. <span style="color:blue;">Illinois 2.01% (1,867 votes)</span>
  3. <span style="color:#F0C862;">New York 3.0% (13,268 votes)</span>
  4. <span style="color:#F0C862;">New Jersey 3.59% (2,317 votes)</span> (tipping point state)
  5. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Michigan 4.14% (1,837 votes)</span>

States where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Mississippi 6.86% (2,505 votes)</span>
  2. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Maryland 7.66% (4,776 votes)</span>
  3. <span style="color:#F0C862;">Ohio 8.53% (23,375 votes)</span>
  4. <span style="color:blue;">Alabama 8.76% (5,481 votes)</span>

Method of Electoral college selection

Campaign songs/slogans

Harrison

"Tippecanoe and Tyler too"

Van Buren

Election paraphernalia and history

<gallery>

Image:TippecanoeClubRibbonWilliamHenryHarrisonPrezCampaign1840.jpg|Harrison "Tippecanoe Club" ribbon

Image:WilliamHenryHarrisonCampaignRallySilkRibbon09101840.jpg|Ribbon for Harrison political rally

Image:1840 HarrisonConvention DanversMA engr byGGSmith DanversPublicLibrary.png|Ribbon for Danvers, Mass. delegation to Harrison Rally, Bunker Hill, 1840; engraved by George Girdler Smith

Image:DelegateRibbonMassachusettsNatlDemConvention1840.jpg|Delegate badge, Democratic convention

Image:1840 Boston Harrison Club.png|Cover of Boston Harrison Club's Harrison Melodies, 1840

</gallery>

In the 1997 film Amistad, Van Buren (played by Nigel Hawthorne) is seen campaigning for re-election. These scenes have been criticized for their historical inaccuracy.

See also

  • 1840–1841 United States House of Representatives elections
  • 1840–1841 United States Senate elections
  • History of the United States (1789–1849)
  • Second Party System

Notes

References

Works cited

Further reading

  • Chambers, William Nisbet. "The Election of 1840" in Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (ed.) History of American Presidential Elections, 1789–1968 (1971) vol 2; analysis plus primary sources
  • Cheathem, Mark. R. The Coming of Democracy: Presidential Campaigning in the Age of Jackson (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018)
  • Ellis, Richard J. Old Tip vs. the Sly Fox: The 1840 Election and the Making of a Partisan Nation (U of Kansas Press, 2020) online review
  • Formisano, Ronald P. "The new political history and the election of 1840", Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Spring 1993, Vol. 23 Issue 4, pp.&nbsp;661–82 in JSTOR
  • Greeley's description of the 1840 election is posted on Wikisource.
  • Holt, Michael F. "The Election of 1840, Voter Mobilization, and the Emergence of the Second American Party System: A Reappraisal of Jacksonian Voting Behavior", in Holt and John McCardell, eds. A Master's Due: Essays in Honor of David Herbert Donald (1986); emphasizes economic factors; See Formisano (1993) for criticism
  • Leahy, Christopher J. President without a Party: The Life of John Tyler (LSU, 2020), a major scholarly biography; excerpt also online review
  • Shade, William G. "Politics and Parties in Jacksonian America", Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography Vol. 110, No. 4 (Oct. 1986), pp.&nbsp;483–507 online
  • Zboray, Ronald J., and Mary Saracino Zboray. "Whig Women, Politics, and Culture in the Campaign of 1840: Three Perspectives from Massachusetts", Journal of the Early Republic Vol. 17, No. 2 (Summer, 1997), pp.&nbsp;277–315 in JSTOR

Primary sources

  • Chester, Edward W A guide to political platforms (1977) online
  • Porter, Kirk H. and Donald Bruce Johnson, eds. National party platforms, 1840-1964 (1965) online 1840-1956
  • Presidential Election of 1840: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • "The Campaign of 1840: William Henry Harrison and Tyler, Too" high school level lesson plans and documents
  • 1840 popular vote by counties
  • Election of 1840 in Counting the Votes