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With 66.86% of the popular vote, Georgia would prove to be Bryan's fifth strongest state in the 1900 presidential election only after South Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida. [11] Bryan had previously defeated McKinley in Georgia four years earlier and would later win the state again in 1908 against William Howard Taft .
Presidential Election of 1900: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress; Opper cartoons for 1900 election ridiculing TR and McKinley as pawns of Trusts and Sen. Hanna; 1900 popular vote by counties; 1900 State-by-state Popular vote; Election of 1900 in Counting the Votes Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
On election day, 3 October 1900, Democratic nominee Allen D. Candler won re-election with a margin of 67,444 votes against his opponent People's Party nominee John H. Traylor, thereby holding Democratic control over the office of Governor. Candler was sworn in for his second term on 25 October 1900.
Alabama held its last gubernatorial election in August, while Rhode Island held its last in April. In both cases the next gubernatorial election would be held on the same day as federal elections: in Alabama in 1902 and in Rhode Island in 1901. There was a change in Alabama's governorships in 1902, when governors served four-year terms instead ...
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Haralson County is a county in the Northwest region of the U.S. state of Georgia.As of the 2020 census, the population was 29,919, [1] up from 28,780 in 2010. [2] The county seat is Buchanan. [3]
The Georgia General Assembly passed an act on December 5, 1853, to create Pickens County from portions of Cherokee and Gilmer Counties. [3] Pickens received several more land additions from Cherokee (1869) and Gilmer Counties (1858 and 1863); however, several sections of Pickens County have also been transferred to other counties: Dawson County (1857), Gordon County (1860), and Cherokee County ...
Lobbyists for Fulton County and City of Atlanta, and Atlanta Dept of Watershed Management [9] Commissioner Robert Hunter spoke against. As of 2010, Jan Jones (who lives in the new city of Milton, named for the former county) was the speaker pro tempore of the Georgia House, and was expected to make a strong push for the new county. [10]