1800 United States presidential election in Rhode Island

1800 United States presidential election in Rhode Island

October 31 – December 3, 1800
 
Nominee John Adams Thomas Jefferson
Party Federalist Democratic-Republican
Home state Massachusetts Virginia
Electoral vote 4 0
Popular vote 2,353 2,159
Percentage 52.15% 47.85%

 
Nominee Charles Cotesworth Pinckney John Jay
Party Federalist Federalist
Home state South Carolina New York
Electoral vote 3 1


President before election

John Adams
Federalist

Elected President

Thomas Jefferson
Democratic-Republican

The 1800 United States presidential election in Rhode Island took place as part of the 1800 United States presidential election. Voters chose four representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College who voted for president and vice president.

Rhode Island voted for the Federalist candidate, John Adams, over the Democratic-Republican candidate, Thomas Jefferson. Adams won Rhode Island by a margin of 4.3%. All four Adams electors received more votes than the four Jefferson electors and the electoral vote was all for Adams in Rhode Island. Adams’s running mate Charles Cotesworth Pinckney received three electoral votes, and John Jay received one electoral vote. Rhode Island was the only state in the election of 1800 in which an elector “threw away” a vote by not voting for both candidates on a party’s ticket.

Results

1800 United States presidential election in Rhode Island [1]
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Federalist John Adams (incumbent) 2,353 52.15% 4
Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson 2,159 47.85% 0
Totals 4,512 100.0% 4

Results by county

1800 United States presidential election in Rhode Island[1]
County John Adams

Federalist

Thomas Jefferson

Democratic-Republican

Margin Total

votes

# % # % # %
Bristol 213 75.27% 70 24.73% 143 50.54% 283
Kent 359 63.20% 209 36.80% 150 26.40% 568
Newport 454 45.81% 537 54.19% -83 -8.38% 991
Providence 1,008 56.53% 775 43.47% 233 13.06% 1,783
Washington 311 35.79% 558 64.21% -247 -28.42% 869
Total 2,345 52.18% 2,149 47.82% 196 4.36% 4,494

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved April 25, 2022.