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33rd Governor of New York
25th Vice President of the United States
26th President of the United States
First term
Second term
Post Presidency
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Theodore Roosevelt served as the 26th president of the United States (1901–1909), the 25th vice president (1901), and the 33rd governor of New York (1899–1900).
Mayoral elections
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Abram Hewitt | 90,552 | 41.23 | |
Labor | Henry George | 68,110 | 31.01 | |
Republican | Theodore Roosevelt | 60,435 | 27.52 | |
Prohibition | William T. Wardwell | 532 | 0.24 % | |
Democratic gain from Nonpartisan | ||||
Gubernatorial elections
New York gubernatorial race, 1898 New York gubernatorial election, 1898
- Theodore Roosevelt/Timothy L. Woodruff (R) - 661,715 (49.09%)
- Augustus Van Wyck/Elliott Danforth (D) - 643,921 (47.77%)
- Benjamin Hanford (Socialist) - 23,860 (1.77%)
- John Kline (Prohibition) - 18,383 (1.36%)
Vice presidential nomination
Vice Presidential race, 1900 1900 Republican National Convention (Vice Presidential tally):
- Theodore Roosevelt - 925 (99.89%)
- Abstaining - 1 (0.11%)
1900 United States presidential election:
- William McKinley/Theodore Roosevelt (R) - 7,228,864 (51.6%) and 292 electoral votes (65.32%, 28 states carried)
- William Jennings Bryan/Adlai E. Stevenson I (D) - 6,370,932 (45.5%) and 155 electoral votes (34.68%, 17 states carried)
- John Granville Woolley/Henry Brewer Metcalf (Prohibition) - 210,864 (1.5%)
- Eugene V. Debs/Job Harriman (Socialist) - 87,945 (0.6%)
- Wharton Barker/Ignatius L. Donnelly (Populist) - 50,989 (0.4%)
- Joseph Francis Maloney/Valentine Remmel (Socialist Labor) - 40,943 (0.3%)
- Others - 6,889 (0.0%)
Presidential races, 1904-1916
1904 Republican National Convention (Presidential tally)
- Theodore Roosevelt (inc.) - 994 (100.00%)
1904 United States presidential election:
- Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks (R) - 7,630,457 (56.4%) and 336 electoral votes (70.59%, 32 states carried)
- Alton B. Parker/Henry G. Davis (D) - 5,083,880 (37.6%) and 140 electoral votes (29.41%, 13 states carried)
- Eugene V. Debs/Benjamin Hanford (Socialist) - 402,810 (3.0%)
- Silas C. Swallow/George W. Carroll (Prohibition) - 259,102 (1.9%)
- Thomas E. Watson/Thomas Tibbles (Populist) - 114,070 (0.8%)
- Charles Hunter Corregan/William Wesley Cox (Socialist Labor) - 33,454 (0.2%)
- Others - 1,229 (0.0%)
1908 Republican National Convention (Presidential tally):
- William Howard Taft - 702 (71.63%)
- Philander C. Knox - 68 (6.94%)
- Charles Evans Hughes - 67 (6.84%)
- Joseph Gurney Cannon - 58 (5.92%)
- Charles W. Fairbanks - 40 (4.08%)
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 25 (2.55%)
- Joseph B. Foraker - 16 (1.63%)
- Theodore Roosevelt (inc.) - 3 (0.31%)
- Abstaining - 1 (0.10%)
1911 New York Republican Senate caucus:
- Chauncey M. DePew (inc.) - 58 (87.88%)
- E. H. Butler - 2 (3.03%)
- Theodore Roosevelt - 2 (3.03%)
- L. A. Grace - 1 (1.52%)
- Seth Low - 1 (1.52%)
- George L. Meade - 1 (1.52%)
- Andrew D. White - 1 (1.52%)
1912 Republican presidential primaries:
- Theodore Roosevelt - 1,183,238 (51.14%)
- William Howard Taft (inc.) - 800,441 (34.59%)
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 327,357 (14.15%)
- Robert G. Ross - 605 (0.03%)
- Charles Evans Hughes - 13 (0.00%)
- Others - 2,193 (0.10%)
1912 Republican National Convention (Presidential tally):
- William Howard Taft (inc.) - 556 (51.58%)
- Abstaining - 355 (32.93%)
- Theodore Roosevelt - 107 (9.93%)
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 41 (3.80%)
- Albert B. Cummins - 17 (1.58%)
- Charles Evans Hughes - 2 (0.19%)
1912 Progressive National Convention:
- Theodore Roosevelt - unanimously
1912 United States presidential election:
- Woodrow Wilson/Thomas R. Marshall (D) - 6,296,284 (41.8%) and 435 electoral votes (81.92%, 40 states carried)
- Theodore Roosevelt/Hiram W. Johnson (Progressive) - 4,122,721 (27.4%) and 88 electoral votes (16.57%, 6 states carried)
- William Howard Taft/Nicholas M. Butler (R) - 3,486,242 (23.2%) and 8 electoral votes (1.51%, 2 states carried)
- Eugene V. Debs/Emil Seidel (Socialist) - 901,551 (6.0%)
- Eugene Wilder Chafin/Aaron Sherman Watkins (Prohibition) - 208,156 (1.4%)
- Arthur Elmer Reimer/August Gilhaus (Socialist Labor) - 29,324 (0.2%)
- Others - 4,556 (0.0%)
1916 Progressive presidential primaries:
- Theodore Roosevelt - 5,152 (71.12%)
- Charles Evans Hughes - 10 (0.14%)
- Lawrence Sherman - 10 (0.14%)
- Others - 2,072 (28.60%)
1916 Republican presidential primaries:
- Unpledged delegates - 455,765 (23.60%)
- Martin G. Brumbaugh - 233,100 (12.07%)
- Albert B. Cummins - 191,951 (9.94%)
- Charles W. Fairbanks - 176,080 (9.12%)
- Lawrence Sherman - 155,945 (8.07%)
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 133,476 (6.91%)
- Henry Ford - 131,965 (6.83%)
- Theodore Elijah Burton - 122,169 (6.33%)
- Theodore Roosevelt - 83,739 (4.34%)
- Charles Evans Hughes - 82,530 (4.27%)
- William Alden Smith - 77,872 (4.03%)
- Henry D. Estabrook - 30,676 (1.59%)
- William Grant Webster - 17,927 (0.93%)
- William O. Simpson - 14,365 (0.74%)
1916 Progressive National Convention:
- Theodore Roosevelt - unanimously
1916 Republican National Convention:
1st ballot:
- Charles Evans Hughes - 253.5
- John W. Weeks - 105
- Elihu Root - 103
- Albert B. Cummins - 85
- Charles W. Fairbanks - 74.5
- Theodore E. Burton - 77.5
- Theodore Roosevelt - 65
- Philander C. Knox - 36
- Henry Ford - 32
- Martin G. Brumbaugh - 29
- Robert M. La Follette - 25
- Others - 25
2nd ballot:
- Charles Evans Hughes - 328.5
- Elihu Root - 98.5
- Charles W. Fairbanks - 88.5
- Albert W. Cummins - 85
- Theodore Roosevelt - 81
- John W. Weeks - 79
- Theodore E. Burton - 76.5
- Philander C. Knox - 36
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 25
- Others - 13
3rd ballot:
- Charles Evans Hughes - 949.5
- Theodore Roosevelt - 18.5
- Robert M. La Follette, Sr. - 3
- John W. Weeks - 3
- Others - 13
References
- ↑ Brookhiser, Richard (1993). "1886: The Men Who Would Be Mayor". City Journal. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ↑ Sharp, Arthur G. (2011). The Everything Theodore Roosevelt Book: The Extraordinary Life of an American Icon. Adams Media. pp. 78–79. ISBN 9781440527296.
- ↑ Taylor, Dorceta E. (23 November 2009). The Environment and the People in American Cities, 1600s-1900s: Disorder, Inequality, and Social Change. Duke University press. p. 572.
- ↑ "RaceID=105179". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 6 October 2019.