Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1877 United States Senate election in Massachusetts

none

1877 United States Senate election in Massachusetts

none

FieldValue
election_name1877 United States Senate election in Massachusetts
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1873 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts
previous_year1873 (special)
next_election1883 United States Senate election in Massachusetts
next_year1883
election_dateJanuary 16–19, 1877
image_sizex140px
votes_for_electionMajority of legislature needed to win
image1File:George Frisbie Hoar - Brady-Handy.jpg
nominee1George Frisbie Hoar
party1Republican Party (US)
electoral_vote1146
percentage152.52%
image2File:Josiah Gardner Abbott - Brady-Handy.jpg
nominee2Josiah Abbott
party2Democratic Party (US)
electoral_vote262
percentage222.30%
image4File:George Boutwell, Brady-Handy photo portrait, ca1870-1880.jpg
nominee4George S. Boutwell
party4Republican Party (US)
electoral_vote447
percentage416.91%
image5File:AHRice.jpg
nominee5Alexander H. Rice
party5Republican Party (US)
electoral_vote519
percentage56.83%
titleSenator
before_electionGeorge S. Boutwell
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionGeorge Frisbie Hoar
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)

The 1877 United States Senate election in Massachusetts was held in January 1877. Incumbent Republican Senator George S. Boutwell, who had won a special election for the remainder of Henry Wilson's term, was defeated by reformist U.S. Representative George Frisbie Hoar.

At the time, Massachusetts elected United States Senators by a resolution of the Massachusetts General Court.

Background

State legislature

At the time, the Massachusetts legislature was dominated the Republican Party. The Senate was composed of 30 Republicans and 10 Democrats, and the House had 178 Republicans and 62 Democrats. However, if a split within the Republican Party emerged, Democrats could hold the balance and decide the election.

1876 presidential election

The election took place against the backdrop of the contested 1876 presidential election. Several potential or actual candidates were involved in the Compromise of 1877 and the ongoing controversy may have affected the result.

Candidates

Declared

  • George S. Boutwell, incumbent Senator
  • George F. Hoar, U.S. Representative from Worcester
  • Julius Hawley Seelye, U.S. Representative from Amherst
General Benjamin Butler, an eccentric and prominent figure in Massachusetts politics and a key supporter of Senator Boutwell.

George Boutwell, the former Governor and incumbent interim Senator, was backed by Benjamin F. Butler and the patronage wing of the Republican Party. He was challenged by U.S. Representative George Frisbie Hoar, a reformist who had supported Benjamin Bristow at the 1876 Republican National Convention.

Potential

The following candidates were mentioned as potential candidates or received votes, but did not openly declare their willingness or desire to be elected.

  • Alexander Bullock, former Governor of Massachusetts
  • Charles Devens, Judge of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and former Civil War general
  • Alexander H. Rice, Governor of Massachusetts
  • John E. Sanford, former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

Other candidates mentioned included Governor Alexander H. Rice (who had the backing of prohibitionists on the basis that his election would elevate prohibitionist Republican Horatio G. Knight to the Governor's office), Judge Charles Devens, and U.S. Representative Julius Hawley Seelye. Rice was also rumored to have the support of Butler in the event Boutwell became non-viable, as this would clear the nomination for 1877, and Butler greatly coveted the office of Governor.

Democrats, under the direction of Frank Bird, were expected to cast a ceremonial vote for Josiah Abbott or William Gaston before throwing their support to a competitive candidate, possibly former Republican Governor Alexander Bullock, who was aligned with Bird. Democrats were expected to oppose Hoar as an alternative to Boutwell.

Election

January 16

On January 16, the General Court convened and began to cast votes in each house, separately.

The first day of balloting was seen as a victory for Hoar, as Boutwell's support was much lower than his supporters claimed. Democrats voted in a caucus to continue to support Abbott.

After the first day, it was conceded the Boutwell could not be elected, and the question became whether Republicans would rally to Hoar or try to find a third candidate.

January 17

On the second day of balloting, the two houses of the General Court met in joint convention, rather than separately.

After the first ballot, Senator Brimball and Ginnodo changed their votes from Boutwell to Hoar. Abbott gained a voted after Representative Glynn voted, having missed the first ballot.

January 18

On the third day of balloting, Senator James G. Blaine was in attendance. Secretary of the Treasury Justin Morrill sent a letter endorsing Boutwell and imploring his re-election, but it did not appear to have any effect on the vote.

January 19

During the fifth and final ballot on January 19, many Boutwell men changed their votes to Hoar after realizing he would win.

Results

Candidatetitle=The Senatorial Election — The Ballotsdate=17 Jan 1877work=Chicago Daily Tribunepage=2}}S2H1H2J1J2title=Senator Hoarwork=Boston Daily Globepage=1date=20 Jan 1877}}J4J5Total4040235235275276274274278
George Frisbie Hoar121276779395100104146
George S. Boutwell171778799593888347
Josiah Abbott7755556162626262
Alexander H. Rice4415151717171719
Alexander Bullock4444442
Julius Hawley Seelye4444341
Charles Francis Adams Jr.1
Henry L. Pierce1
John E. Sanford1111
Paul A. Chadbourne1

Aftermath

Hoar would remain in the Senate until his death in 1905.

Boutwell was appointed by President Rutherford B. Hayes to codify the Revised Statutes of the United States and later served as United States counsel before the French and American Claims Commission. He later left the Republican Party over imperialism, which both he and Hoar opposed.

References

References

  1. "Composition of the Massachusetts State Senate". Mass.gov.
  2. "Composition of the State of Massachusetts House of Representatives". Mass.gov.
  3. (10 Jan 1877). "Massachusetts: United States Senator". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  4. (11 Jan 1877). "The Massachusetts Senatorship: The Contest Between Messrs. Boutwell, Hoar, and Seelye". The New York Tribune.
  5. (12 Jan 1877). "Give the Young Men a Chance". Boston Daily Globe.
  6. (13 Jan 1877). "The Senatorial Scramble in Massachusetts". The New York Tribune.
  7. (18 Jan 1877). "Hoar Leads". Boston Daily Globe.
  8. (19 Jan 1877). "Mr. Hoar Decidedly Ahead". New York Tribune.
  9. (17 Jan 1877). "The Senatorial Election — The Ballots". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  10. (17 Jan 1877). "Boutwell and Hoar Divide the Republican Vote of Massachusetts". Philadelphia Inquirer.
  11. (20 Jan 1877). "Senator Hoar". Boston Daily Globe.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1877 United States Senate election in Massachusetts — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report