1940 United States presidential election in Alabama

November 5, 1940
 
Nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt Wendell Willkie
Party Democratic Republican
Home state New York New York
Running mate Henry A. Wallace Charles L. McNary
Electoral vote 11 0
Popular vote 250,726 42,184
Percentage 85.22% 14.34%

County results

President before election

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

Elected President

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

The 1940 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 5, 1940, as part of the 1940 United States presidential election. Alabama voters chose 11 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. In Alabama, voters voted for electors individually instead of as a slate, as in the other states.

Since the 1890s, Alabama had been effectively a one-party state ruled by the Democratic Party. Disenfranchisement of almost all African-Americans and a large proportion of Poor Whites via poll taxes, literacy tests[1] and informal harassment had essentially eliminated opposition parties outside Unionist Winston County and a few nearby northern hill counties that had been Populist strongholds.[2] The only competitive statewide elections became Democratic Party primaries that were limited by law to white voters. Unlike most other Confederate states, however, soon after black disenfranchisement Alabama's remaining white Republicans made rapid efforts to expel blacks from the state Republican Party.[3] Indeed under Oscar D. Street, who ironically was appointed state party boss as part of the pro-Taft "black and tan" faction in 1912,[4] the state GOP would permanently turn "lily-white", with the last black delegates from the state at any Republican National Convention serving in 1920.[3]

The 1920 election, aided by isolationism in Appalachia[5] and the whitening of the state GOP,[6] saw the Republicans even exceed forty percent in the House of Representatives races for the 4th, 7th and 10th congressional districts.[5] However, funding issues meant the Republicans would not emulate this achievement for several decades subsequently.[7] Nevertheless, a bitter "civil war" over how best to maintain white supremacy after the Democrats nominated urban, anti-Prohibition Catholic Al Smith saw so many Democrats defect to dry, Protestant Republican Herbert Hoover that he came within seven thousand votes of winning the state.[8]

However, the economic catastrophe of the Great Depression meant that this trend towards the GOP would be short-lived.[9] The Depression had extremely severe effects in the South, which had the highest unemployment rate in the nation, and many Southerners blamed this on the North and on Wall Street.[10] Consequently the South gave Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt extremely heavy support in 1932 – he became the only presidential candidate to sweep all of Alabama's counties[11] — and in 1936.

For 1940, opposition amongst Alabama's ruling elite to the New Deal meant that planter and business interests led by former Congressman George Huddleston attempted to organise the "independent elector" movements that would proliferate after Harry S. Truman's civil rights proposals.[12] Other "Big Mules" already supported Republican nominees, corporate lawyer Wendell Willkie and Senate Minority Leader Charles L. McNary.[13] However, the hatred of the Republican label, in spite of five election cycles as a party exclusive of blacks,[14] meant that the state Democratic Party was far too strong to allow such a revolt.[15]

Polling

No polls were carried out in the state until a Gallup poll in the middle of September, which had Roosevelt winning 85 percent of the two-party vote to.[16] Another poll from late October said that Willkie could gain around one hundred thousand votes or one-third of the expected statewide total.[17]

Alabama was won in a landslide by Roosevelt – now running with Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace of Iowa — with 85.22 percent of the popular vote against Willkie's 14.34 percent for a Democratic margin of 70.88 percent. Third-party candidates only managed to pick up 0.44 percent of the vote.[18] Roosevelt was undoubtedly helped, especially in Appalachian regions of the state, by support for aid to Britain in World War II, which he had emphasised in his campaign.[19] In many Appalachian rural counties, Roosevelt indeed improved upon his 1932 and 1936 performances for this reason.[20]

Results

General election results[21]
Party Pledged to Elector Votes
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Charles W. Edwards 250,726
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Ben Bloodworth 250,723
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Otis R. Burton 250,714
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt W. F. Covington, Jr. 250,710
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Tully A. Goodwin 250,709
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Roy Mayhall 250,706
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Norvelle R. Leigh, III 250,701
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Walter C. Lusk 250,701
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt W. E. James 250,692
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Bart J. Cowart 250,687
Democratic Party Franklin D. Roosevelt Walter F. Miller 250,682
Republican Party Wendell Willkie W. B. R. Pennington 42,184
Republican Party Wendell Willkie R. M. Wilbanks 42,180
Republican Party Wendell Willkie R. DuPont Thompson 42,179
Republican Party Wendell Willkie James S. Coleman, Sr. 42,174
Republican Party Wendell Willkie J. E. Paterson 42,174
Republican Party Wendell Willkie William H. Armbrecht 42,172
Republican Party Wendell Willkie C. L. Burton 42,170
Republican Party Wendell Willkie Morris B. Malone 42,168
Republican Party Wendell Willkie David S. Anderson 42,167
Republican Party Wendell Willkie T. M. Jones, Sr. 42,161
Republican Party Wendell Willkie G. C. Youngerman 42,084
Prohibition Party Roger Babson W. C. McMachan 700
Prohibition Party Roger Babson J. A. Fields 699
Prohibition Party Roger Babson W. A. Wheeler 699
Prohibition Party Roger Babson Frank Barnard 698
Prohibition Party Roger Babson L. E. Barton 698
Prohibition Party Roger Babson Charles Lehman 696
Prohibition Party Roger Babson J. B. Lockhart 696
Prohibition Party Roger Babson John C. Orr 696
Prohibition Party Roger Babson Joseph K. Suggs 695
Prohibition Party Roger Babson Leander M. Coop 693
Prohibition Party Roger Babson George W. Crosby 693
Communist Party USA Earl Browder John W. Campbell 509
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Bob F. Hall 345
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Reany Smith 344
Communist Party USA Earl Browder A. M. Forsman 343
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Anton Valla, Jr. 343
Communist Party USA Earl Browder D. W. Gilbert 342
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Anna Kral 341
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Theron Ward 341
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Joseph Machulka 339
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Frank Maildorf 337
Communist Party USA Earl Browder Joe Stuchly 337
Socialist Party of America Norman Thomas D. R. Calloway 100
Socialist Party of America Norman Thomas John W. Estes, Jr. 96
Socialist Party of America Norman Thomas Joseph Ciganek 92
Socialist Party of America Norman Thomas W. H. Chichester 91
Total votes 294,219

Results by county

1940 United States presidential election in Alabama by county[22][20]
County Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic
Wendell Lewis Willkie
Republican
Roger Ward Babson
Prohibition
Earl Russell Browder
Communist
Norman Mattoon Thomas
Socialist
Margin Total votes cast
#  % #  % #  % #  % #  % #  %
Autauga 1,630 93.62% 99 5.69% 10 0.57% 2 0.11% 0 0.00% 1,531 87.94% 1,741
Baldwin 2,681 76.58% 617 17.62% 24 0.72% 12 0.36% 5 0.15% 2,064 61.85% 3,501
Barbour 2,328 95.88% 90 3.71% 7 0.29% 3 0.12% 0 0.00% 2,238 92.17% 2,428
Bibb 1,821 90.51% 173 8.60% 9 0.45% 9 0.45% 0 0.00% 1,647 81.90% 2,012
Blount 2,784 75.71% 855 23.25% 32 0.87% 5 0.14% 1 0.03% 1,929 52.46% 3,677
Bullock 1,301 98.64% 18 1.36% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,283 97.27% 1,319
Butler 2,732 97.99% 52 1.87% 1 0.04% 3 0.11% 0 0.00% 2,680 96.13% 2,788
Calhoun 4,408 86.89% 645 12.71% 16 0.32% 2 0.04% 0 0.00% 3,764 74.21% 5,073
Chambers 4,141 97.16% 110 2.58% 10 0.23% 1 0.02% 0 0.00% 4,031 94.58% 4,262
Cherokee 2,617 86.94% 381 12.66% 10 0.33% 1 0.03% 1 0.03% 2,236 74.29% 3,010
Chilton 2,746 57.80% 1,995 41.99% 5 0.11% 5 0.11% 0 0.00% 751 15.81% 4,751
Choctaw 2,023 96.52% 73 3.48% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,950 93.03% 2,096
Clarke 3,753 98.71% 48 1.26% 1 0.03% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 3,705 97.45% 3,802
Clay 2,153 71.22% 854 28.25% 6 0.20% 10 0.33% 0 0.00% 1,299 42.97% 3,023
Cleburne 1,369 75.72% 434 24.00% 4 0.19% 1 0.05% 0 0.00% 1,205 57.99% 1,808
Coffee 2,226 93.88% 145 6.12% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 2,081 87.77% 2,371
Colbert 3,998 91.47% 365 8.35% 4 0.09% 1 0.02% 3 0.07% 3,633 83.12% 4,371
Conecuh 2,345 97.71% 50 2.08% 5 0.21% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 2,295 95.63% 2,400
Coosa 1,347 80.32% 317 18.90% 11 0.66% 2 0.12% 0 0.00% 1,030 61.42% 1,677
Covington 4,635 96.08% 186 3.86% 2 0.04% 1 0.02% 0 0.00% 4,449 92.23% 4,824
Crenshaw 2,680 96.65% 84 3.03% 7 0.25% 2 0.07% 0 0.00% 2,596 93.62% 2,773
Cullman 5,603 64.51% 3,057 35.19% 11 0.13% 11 0.13% 4 0.05% 2,546 29.31% 8,686
Dale 2,543 87.03% 374 12.80% 1 0.03% 4 0.14% 0 0.00% 2,169 74.23% 2,922
Dallas 3,106 95.10% 157 4.81% 2 0.06% 1 0.03% 0 0.00% 2,949 90.29% 3,266
DeKalb 5,432 65.77% 2,810 34.02% 13 0.16% 2 0.02% 2 0.02% 2,622 31.75% 8,259
Elmore 4,267 96.54% 144 3.26% 7 0.16% 2 0.05% 0 0.00% 4,123 93.28% 4,420
Escambia 2,772 95.03% 137 4.70% 5 0.17% 3 0.10% 0 0.00% 2,635 90.33% 2,917
Etowah 7,012 84.33% 1,270 15.27% 27 0.32% 4 0.05% 2 0.02% 5,742 69.06% 8,315
Fayette 2,091 73.42% 737 25.88% 10 0.35% 10 0.35% 0 0.00% 1,354 47.54% 2,848
Franklin 3,523 63.67% 1,989 35.95% 8 0.14% 12 0.22% 1 0.02% 1,534 27.72% 5,533
Geneva 2,565 87.19% 364 12.37% 6 0.20% 7 0.24% 0 0.00% 2,201 74.81% 2,942
Greene 894 92.07% 77 7.93% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 817 84.14% 971
Hale 1,691 98.14% 32 1.86% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,659 96.29% 1,723
Henry 1,960 96.50% 69 3.40% 2 0.10% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,891 93.11% 2,031
Houston 3,941 88.78% 483 10.88% 13 0.29% 2 0.05% 0 0.00% 3,458 77.90% 4,439
Jackson 3,818 80.01% 945 19.80% 7 0.15% 2 0.04% 0 0.00% 2,873 60.21% 4,772
Jefferson 37,110 84.34% 6,714 15.26% 105 0.24% 52 0.12% 19 0.04% 30,395 69.08% 44,001
Lamar 2,665 90.28% 275 9.32% 8 0.27% 4 0.14% 0 0.00% 2,391 80.97% 2,952
Lauderdale 5,065 90.35% 507 9.04% 19 0.34% 10 0.18% 4 0.07% 4,558 81.32% 5,606
Lawrence 2,277 82.23% 480 17.33% 2 0.07% 10 0.36% 0 0.00% 1,797 64.90% 2,769
Lee 2,566 95.96% 103 3.85% 4 0.15% 1 0.04% 0 0.00% 2,463 92.11% 2,674
Limestone 2,941 96.58% 95 3.12% 9 0.30% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 2,846 93.46% 3,045
Lowndes 1,132 98.86% 12 1.05% 1 0.09% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,120 97.82% 1,145
Macon 1,259 96.77% 41 3.15% 1 0.08% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,218 93.62% 1,301
Madison 5,515 90.44% 566 9.28% 9 0.15% 3 0.05% 5 0.08% 4,959 81.46% 6,098
Marengo 2,284 96.94% 70 2.97% 2 0.08% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 2,214 93.97% 2,356
Marion 2,654 69.64% 1,081 28.37% 12 0.31% 64 1.68% 0 0.00% 1,573 41.28% 3,811
Marshall 4,142 81.55% 913 17.98% 18 0.35% 4 0.08% 2 0.04% 3,229 63.58% 5,079
Mobile 11,480 85.08% 1,887 13.99% 89 0.66% 14 0.10% 14 0.10% 9,592 71.20% 13,493
Monroe 2,953 98.17% 40 1.33% 12 0.40% 3 0.10% 0 0.00% 2,913 96.84% 3,008
Montgomery 11,311 97.74% 230 1.99% 16 0.14% 16 0.14% 0 0.00% 11,081 95.75% 11,573
Morgan 5,345 90.93% 500 8.51% 22 0.37% 8 0.14% 1 0.02% 4,846 82.46% 5,878
Perry 1,509 97.17% 39 2.51% 5 0.32% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,470 94.66% 1,553
Pickens 1,714 92.00% 140 7.51% 7 0.45% 2 0.13% 0 0.00% 1,277 81.55% 1,863
Pike 3,049 95.94% 121 3.81% 1 0.03% 7 0.22% 0 0.00% 2,928 92.13% 3,178
Randolph 2,407 77.92% 670 21.69% 8 0.26% 4 0.13% 0 0.00% 1,737 56.23% 3,089
Russell 2,435 97.95% 48 1.93% 2 0.08% 1 0.04% 0 0.00% 2,387 96.02% 2,486
Shelby 2,777 74.61% 938 25.20% 5 0.13% 2 0.05% 0 0.00% 1,839 49.41% 4,024
St. Clair 2,462 61.18% 1,540 38.27% 9 0.22% 6 0.15% 7 0.17% 922 22.91% 3,722
Sumter 1,404 96.76% 46 3.17% 1 0.07% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,358 93.59% 1,451
Talladega 3,965 87.88% 534 11.84% 9 0.20% 4 0.09% 0 0.00% 3,431 76.04% 4,512
Tallapoosa 4,325 96.65% 139 3.11% 7 0.16% 3 0.07% 1 0.02% 4,186 93.54% 4,475
Tuscaloosa 6,284 93.35% 426 6.33% 14 0.21% 5 0.07% 3 0.04% 5,858 87.02% 6,732
Walker 5,940 74.52% 2,007 25.18% 17 0.21% 4 0.05% 3 0.04% 3,933 49.34% 7,971
Washington 1,892 95.65% 80 4.04% 5 0.25% 1 0.05% 0 0.00% 1,812 91.61% 1,978
Wilcox 1,534 98.71% 20 1.29% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 1,514 97.43% 1,554
Winston 1,394 45.10% 1,686 54.55% 6 0.19% 4 0.13% 0 0.00% -301 -9.78% 3,091
Totals250,72685.22%42,18414.34%7000.24%5090.17%1000.03%208,54270.88%294,219

Earl Browder's visit

Communist party candidate Earl Browder personally campaigned in the state giving speeches in Bullock County, Choctaw County, Clarke County, Coffee County, Conecuh County, Greene County and Hale County. Browder campaigned as an isolationist candidate advocating the United States not get involved in the war in Europe. Browder referred to the war as an "imperialist" war and he took a decidedly "anti-British tone" while campaigning in the aforementioned Alabama counties. In each of his speeches he condemned Winston Churchill and praised Joseph Stalin.[23][24] However, Browder said he was "irked by how cold" the crowds there were towards him. In the seven counties where Browder campaigned he ultimately received zero votes in the election (however, in the state as a whole he won just over 500 votes in comparison to Roosevelt's 250,726 votes and Willkie's 42,184 votes.)[23]

See also

References

  1. Perman, Michael (2001). Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888–1908. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. Introduction. ISBN 9780807849095.
  2. Webb, Samuel L. "From Independents to Populists to Progressive Republicans: The Case of Chilton County, Alabama, 1880–1920". The Journal of Southern History. 59 (4): 707–736.
  3. 1 2 Heersink, Boris; Jenkins, Jeffery A. (2020). Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865–1968. pp. 251–253. ISBN 9781107158436.
  4. Casdorph, Paul D. (1981). Republicans, Negroes, and Progressives in the South, 1912–1916. The University of Alabama Press. pp. 70, 94–95. ISBN 0817300481.
  5. 1 2 Phillips, Kevin P. (1969). The Emerging Republican Majority. p. 255. ISBN 0870000586.
  6. Heersink and Jenkins, Republican Party Politics and the American South, p. 19
  7. See "G.O.P. Funds Are Reported Short: Forces "Counted On" Disappoint Republican Political Managers". The Birmingham News. Birmingham, Alabama. August 19, 1922. p. 5.
  8. Feldman, Glenn (September 13, 2004). "Epilogue. Ugly Roots: Race, Emotion and the Rise of the Modern Republican Party in Alabama and the South". In Feldman, Glenn (ed.). Before Brown: Civil Rights and White Backlash in the Modern South. University of Alabama Press. pp. 270–273. ISBN 9780817351342.
  9. Lewinson, Paul (1965). Race, class and party; a history of Negro suffrage and white politics in the South. pp. 167–168.
  10. Ritchie, Donald A. (2007). Electing FDR: the New Deal campaign of 1932. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. p. 143. ISBN 070061687X.
  11. Thomas, G. Scott (1987). The pursuit of the White House: a handbook of presidential election statistics and history. pp. 390, 418. ISBN 0313257957.
  12. Feldman, Glenn (2013). The Irony of the Solid South: Democrats, Republicans, and Race, 1865–1944. University of Alabama Press. p. 150. ISBN 9780817317935.
  13. Feldman, Glenn (2015). The Great Melding: War, the Dixiecrat Rebellion, and the Southern Model for America's New Conservatism. University of Alabama Press. p. 60. ISBN 9780817318666.
  14. Heersink; Jenkins. Republican Party Politics and the American South, pp. 48–50
  15. Feldman. The Irony of the Solid South, pp. 151–152
  16. "Willkie Campaigns in Roosevelt Territory". The Des Moines Register. September 22, 1940. p. 10.
  17. Rothermel, J.F. (October 20, 1940). "Everyone Can Find His Choice on Alabama Ballot This Year: Most G.O.P. Electors Are Fromer Democrats While One Republican Is Now a Communist". The Sunday Star. Washington D.C. p. B-4.
  18. "1940 Presidential General Election Results — Alabama". Dave Leip's U.S. Election Atlas.
  19. Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 93
  20. 1 2 "AL US President Race, November 05, 1940". Our Campaigns.
  21. Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1943. Wetumpka, Alabama: Wetumpka Printing Co. pp. 671–684.
  22. Scammon, Richard M. (compiler); America at the Polls: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics 1920–1964; pp. 29–30 ISBN 0405077114.
  23. 1 2 Isserman, Maurice (1982). Which Side Were You On?: The American Communist Party During the Second World War. University of Illinois Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780252063367.
  24. The Southern Historian. United States: Alabama Media Planning Board and the Beta Omicron Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta, 1997.
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