US Election 1880 Map
Our 1880 US election maps shows Republican James A. Garfield as the winner. It was one of the narrowest margins in US election history.
Our 1880 US election maps shows Republican James A. Garfield as the winner. It was one of the narrowest margins in US election history.
Our map shows the US 1876 election as razor-thin. Rutherford B. Hayes, the Republican, narrowly defeated Democrat Samuel J. Tilden.
In 1872, Ulysses S. Grant easily won re-election, sweeping nearly the entire country. His Republican support stretched across the U.S.
Our map of the 1868 US election shows Ulysses S. Grant’s victory. But the nation was still being stitched together after the Civil War.
The US 1864 election was at war with itself without Confederate states. Abraham Lincoln’s re-election came as the Civil War neared its end.
Our map of the 1860 election shows a division that is impossible to miss. When all the dust settled, Abraham Lincoln won the US 1860 election.
If you look at this map of the 1856 election, it looks fairly split apart. In the end, the Democratic Party defeated the Republicans.
The map of the 1852 election looks calmer than it really was. Blue stretches across nearly every state. But the old Whig Party was collapsing.
This map of the US 1848 election shows a country divided. Zachary Taylor’s Whig support spreads across the South and much of the West.
Our US election 1844 map shows how sharply divided the nation had become between James K. Polk (Democratic) and Henry Clay (Whig Party).
Our 1840 US election map shows Harrison’s support in the North, the West, and the Mid-Atlantic. Van Buren held on mainly in the South.
In 1836, the presidency was wide open as Martin Van Buren ran to succeed Andrew Jackson. See our US election 1836 map to see the results.
Our US election 1832 map shows Jackson sweeping most of the country, especially the South and West. Clay held a few pockets in New England.
Our US election 1828 map shows Andrew Jackson’s victory. He dominated the South and much of the West. Adams held on mostly in New England.
The 1824 election was a political free-for-all. Four men ran for president and Andrew Jackson won. This map tells the story of that chaos.