Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 1788–89 United States presidential election in New Hampshire took place on January 7, 1789, as part of the 1788–89 United States presidential election to elect the first President. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College , who voted for President and Vice President .
The 1788 New Hampshire gubernatorial election was held on 11 March 1788 in order to elect the President of New Hampshire. (The office would be renamed to Governor in ...
The popular vote was primarily directed to filling the office of vice president. The sole electoral vote against Monroe came from William Plumer, an elector from New Hampshire and former United States senator and New Hampshire governor. Plumer cast his electoral ballot for Secretary of State John Quincy Adams. While some accounts claim ...
New Hampshire at-large 3 seats on a general ticket: Pro-Administration win. First place winner chose not to serve before the start of the Congress. A special election was held June 22, 1789. First ballot (December 15, 1788): Benjamin West (Pro-Administration) 15.4% Samuel Livermore (Anti-Administration) 14.6% Paine Wingate (Pro-Administration ...
The United States Constitution was ratified by New Hampshire on June 21, 1788, when New Hampshire became the ninth state to do so. [23] New Hampshire was a Jacksonian stronghold; the state sent Franklin Pierce to the White House in the election of 1852.
New Hampshire was one of the original Thirteen Colonies and was admitted as a state on June 21, 1788. [1] Before it declared its independence, New Hampshire was a colony of the Kingdom of Great Britain. The original 1776 Constitution of New Hampshire did not provide for a chief executive.
The Continental Congress was initially a convention of delegates from several British American colonies at the height of the American Revolution era, who spoke and acted collectively for the people of the Thirteen Colonies that ultimately became the United States.
1788–1789 United States House of Representatives election in New Hampshire; 1788 United States Senate elections in New Hampshire This page was last ...