1924 United States presidential election in Louisiana

The 1924 United States presidential election in Louisiana took place on November 4, 1924, as part of the 1924 United States presidential election, which was held throughout all contemporary forty-eight states. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1924 United States presidential election in Louisiana

← 1920 November 4, 1924 1928 →
 
Nominee John W. Davis Calvin Coolidge
Party Democratic Republican
Home state West Virginia Massachusetts
Running mate Charles W. Bryan Charles G. Dawes
Electoral vote 10 0
Popular vote 93,218 24,670
Percentage 76.44% 20.23%

Parish Results

President before election

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Elected President

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Ever since the passage of a new constitution in 1898, Louisiana had been a one-party state dominated by the Democratic Party. The Republican Party became moribund due to the disenfranchisement of blacks and the complete absence of other support bases as Louisiana completely lacked upland or German refugee whites opposed to secession.[1] Despite this absolute single-party dominance, non-partisan tendencies remained strong among wealthy sugar planters in Acadiana and within the business elite of New Orleans.[2]

Following disfranchisement, the state's politics became dominated by the Choctaw Club of Louisiana, generally called the “Old Regulars”. This political machine was based in New Orleans and united with Black Belt cotton planters.[3] Opposition began to emerge with the Socialist Party in the lumbering parishes in the late 1900s, and more seriously with the Progressive movement, chiefly in the southern sugar-growing parishes, in the 1910s. Conflicts with President Wilson's Underwoood-Simmons Act[4] allowed a Progressive Party member in Whitmell P. Martin[a] to be elected to the Third Congressional District in 1914, and in 1920 the racially less hardline[5] Acadiana parishes turned to Republican candidate Warren G. Harding[6] over disagreements on foreign policy and the Nineteenth Amendment.[7] Continued opposition to the Choctaws would elect the reformer John M. Parker, originally part of Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party, as governor at the beginning of 1920.[8]

Louisiana was won easily by John W. Davis of West Virginia over incumbent president Calvin Coolidge, being, as was typical at this height of the “Solid South”, Davis’ third-strongest state behind South Carolina and Mississippi with 76.44 percent of the popular vote.[9] With the easing of foreign-policy tensions and conflicts over women's suffrage, the revolt from the previous two elections in Acadiana weakened, although Coolidge still ran much better than he did in the racially hardline north and Florida Parishes. Louisiana was the only state where Progressive nominee Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin was not on the ballot, although it is known that there were write-in votes cast for him.[10]

Results

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1924 United States presidential election in Louisiana
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John W. Davis 93,218 76.44%
Republican Calvin Coolidge (incumbent) 24,670 20.23%
Write-ins 4,063 3.33%
Total votes 117,888 100%

Results by parish

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1924 United States presidential election in Louisiana by parish[11]
Parish John William Davis
Democratic
John Calvin Coolidge
Republican
Various candidates
Write-ins
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # % # %
Acadia 1,481 64.73% 691 30.20% 116 5.07% 790 34.53% 2,288
Allen 1,012 71.17% 410 28.83% 602 42.33% 1,422
Ascension 679 71.03% 277 28.97% 402 42.05% 956
Assumption 305 33.66% 601 66.34% -296 -32.67% 906
Avoyelles 1,010 76.28% 314 23.72% 696 52.57% 1,324
Beauregard 1,191 83.46% 235 16.47% 1 0.07% 956 66.99% 1,427
Bienville 774 91.71% 67 7.94% 3 0.36% 707 83.77% 844
Bossier 751 91.36% 48 5.84% 23 2.80% 703 85.52% 822
Caddo 4,517 75.41% 1,062 17.73% 411 6.86% 3,455 57.68% 5,990
Calcasieu 2,494 68.22% 1,129 30.88% 33 0.90% 1,365 37.34% 3,656
Caldwell 442 84.51% 77 14.72% 4 0.76% 365 69.79% 523
Cameron 353 94.64% 20 5.36% 333 89.28% 373
Catahoula 218 73.65% 78 26.35% 140 47.30% 296
Claiborne 1,252 95.87% 54 4.13% 1,198 91.73% 1,306
Concordia 319 87.40% 46 12.60% 273 74.79% 365
De Soto 1,146 89.88% 118 9.25% 11 0.86% 1,028 80.63% 1,275
East Baton Rouge 2,764 81.44% 611 18.00% 19 0.56% 2,153 63.44% 3,394
East Carroll 277 79.60% 71 20.40% 206 59.20% 348
East Feliciana 504 95.27% 25 4.73% 479 90.55% 529
Evangeline 603 79.66% 153 20.21% 1 0.13% 450 59.45% 757
Franklin 687 82.77% 143 17.23% 544 65.54% 830
Grant 595 78.08% 167 21.92% 428 56.17% 762
Iberia 740 52.15% 679 47.85% 61 4.30% 1,419
Iberville 556 58.28% 391 40.99% 7 0.73% 165 17.30% 954
Jackson 682 88.57% 88 11.43% 594 77.14% 770
Jefferson 1,663 76.46% 296 13.61% 216 9.93% 1,367 62.85% 2,175
Jefferson Davis 973 52.42% 883 47.58% 90 4.85% 1,856
Lafayette 978 53.36% 531 28.97% 324 17.68% 447 24.39% 1,833
Lafourche 678 52.60% 611 47.40% 67 5.20% 1,289
LaSalle 456 80.14% 102 17.93% 11 1.93% 354 62.21% 569
Lincoln 1,005 86.19% 157 13.46% 4 0.34% 848 72.73% 1,166
Livingston 657 85.66% 110 14.34% 547 71.32% 767
Madison 274 95.47% 13 4.53% 261 90.94% 287
Morehouse 582 80.50% 141 19.50% 441 61.00% 723
Natchitoches 1,132 84.10% 200 14.86% 14 1.04% 932 69.24% 1,346
Orleans 37,785 79.06% 7,865 16.46% 2,141 4.48% 29,920 62.61% 47,791
Ouachita 1,542 73.15% 480 22.77% 86 4.08% 1,062 50.38% 2,108
Plaquemines 432 75.66% 119 20.84% 20 3.50% 313 54.82% 571
Pointe Coupee 369 69.89% 146 27.65% 13 2.46% 223 42.23% 528
Rapides 2,159 65.62% 1,022 31.06% 109 3.31% 1,137 34.56% 3,290
Red River 579 89.49% 34 5.26% 34 5.26% 545 84.23% 647
Richland 678 85.39% 116 14.61% 562 70.78% 794
Sabine 1,176 83.82% 217 15.47% 10 0.71% 959 68.35% 1,403
Saint Bernard 526 97.59% 13 2.41% 513 95.18% 539
Saint Charles 488 78.71% 132 21.29% 356 57.42% 620
Saint Helena 185 91.13% 18 8.87% 167 82.27% 203
Saint James 615 68.64% 278 31.03% 3 0.33% 337 37.61% 896
Saint John the Baptist 336 63.40% 194 36.60% 142 26.79% 530
Saint Landry 1,354 79.14% 357 20.86% 997 58.27% 1,711
Saint Martin 461 71.36% 172 26.63% 13 2.01% 289 44.74% 646
Saint Mary 639 49.15% 633 48.69% 28 2.15% 6 0.46% 1,300
Saint Tammany 969 73.91% 269 20.52% 73 5.57% 700 53.39% 1,311
Tangipahoa 1,626 77.24% 479 22.76% 1,147 54.49% 2,105
Tensas 338 94.15% 21 5.85% 317 88.30% 359
Terrebonne 482 53.73% 415 46.27% 67 7.47% 897
Union 875 99.09% 7 0.79% 1 0.11% 868 98.30% 883
Vermilion 598 58.97% 416 41.03% 182 17.95% 1,014
Vernon 1,372 88.69% 142 9.18% 33 2.13% 1,230 79.51% 1,547
Washington 1,278 77.64% 179 10.87% 189 11.48% 1,099 66.77% 1,646
Webster 929 89.93% 52 5.03% 52 5.03% 877 84.90% 1,033
West Baton Rouge 191 58.95% 92 28.40% 41 12.65% 99 30.56% 324
West Carroll 342 81.62% 68 16.23% 9 2.15% 274 65.39% 419
West Feliciana 347 95.86% 15 4.14% 332 91.71% 362
Winn 797 86.91% 120 13.09% 677 73.83% 917
Totals 93,218 76.44% 24,670 20.23% 4,063 3.33% 68,548 56.21% 121,951

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Martin would join the Democratic Party in 1919.

References

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  1. ^ Phillips, Kevin P. (November 23, 2014). The Emerging Republican Majority. Princeton University Press. pp. 208, 210. ISBN 9780691163246.
  2. ^ Schott, Matthew J. (Summer 1979). "Progressives against Democracy: Electoral Reform in Louisiana, 1894-1921". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 20 (3): 247–260.
  3. ^ Wall, Bennett H.; Rodriguez, John C. (January 28, 2014). Louisiana: A History. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 274–275. ISBN 978-1118619292.
  4. ^ Collin, Richard H. (Winter 1971). "Theodore Roosevelt's Visit to New Orleans and the Progressive Campaign of 1914". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 12 (1): 5–19.
  5. ^ Howard, Perry H. (1954). "A New Look at Reconstruction". Political Tendencies in Louisiana, 1812-1952; An Ecological Analysis of Voting Behavior (Thesis). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. pp. 112–113. OCLC 8115.
  6. ^ Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 268
  7. ^ Wall and Rodriguez. Louisiana: A History, p. 277
  8. ^ Sindler, Allan P. (1956). Huey Long's Louisiana: State Politics, 1920-1952. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 40–41.
  9. ^ "1924 Presidential General Election Results — Louisiana". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.
  10. ^ Scammon, Richard M. (1965). America at the Polls: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics, 1920-1964. p. 201. ISBN 0405077114.
  11. ^ "LA US President Race, November 04, 1924". Our Campaigns.
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