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1896 United States presidential election in Colorado

The 1896 United States presidential election in Colorado took place on November 3, 1896. All contemporary 45 states were part of the 1896 United States presidential election. Voters chose four electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.


The 1896 United States presidential election in Colorado took place on November 3, 1896. All contemporary 45 states were part of the 1896 United States presidential election. Voters chose four electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.

In its early days as a state, Colorado had like the Plains States to its east been solidly Republican. However, with crises emerging in its agricultural sector from low wheat prices and a severe drought in 1888 and 1889, and the state's underdevelopment leading to resentment of the Northeast, the new Populist Party was able to largely take over the state's politics in the early 1890s. Aided by fusion with the minority Democratic Party and strong support for free silver in this state which produced over half of all American silver, the Populist Party under James B. Weaver in 1892 carried the state's presidential electoral votes and won both its congressional seats. After the Republicans gained a 130-seat majority in the House of Representatives following the 1894 elections, five dissident Republicans from the Mountain States who supported free silver jointed together as the “Silver Republicans” They supported nominating Centennial State Senator Henry M. Teller for president at first, but ultimately this was viewed as impractical and the Silver Republicans fused with Democrat/Populist ticket headed by William Jennings Bryan.

Bryan's support for free silver against the existing gold standard supported by Republican nominee William McKinley ensured he had virtually unanimous support from Colorado's silver-dependent business elite. Once a fusion between Democrats, Populists, and Silver Republicans was fully finalized, there was no campaigning in Colorado as all polls showed Bryan would carry the state very easily. Bryan, in the end, carried Colorado by a margin of 71.12%, by over twenty percent the best performance by any presidential candidate in the history of the state. This would also prove to be the best result for any post-Civil War presidential candidate in a non-Southern state. Bryan carried all but two of Colorado's counties, and won nineteen with over ninety percent of the vote, with McKinley retaining significant support only on the eastern High Plains, where the power of the silver magnates was much less.

With 84.95% of the popular vote, Colorado would prove to be Bryan's third strongest state in the 1896 presidential election only after Mississippi and South Carolina.

Bryan would win Colorado against William McKinley again in 1900 and would later also win the state against William Howard Taft in 1908, making the state one of just two western states Bryan would carry in all three of his runs (the other being Nevada). This is the first election where the Republican candidate won without the state.

PartyPledged toElectorVotes
Democratic PartyWilliam Jennings BryanGeorge W. Thatcher158,880
Democratic PartyWilliam Jennings BryanEbenezer T. Wells158,729
Democratic PartyWilliam Jennings BryanAllen T. Gunnell158,674
Democratic PartyWilliam Jennings BryanThomas M. Patterson158,616
Republican PartyWilliam McKinleyJoseph F. Humphrey26,279
Republican PartyWilliam McKinleyWilliam A. Hamill26,271
Republican PartyWilliam McKinleyFrederick Walsen26,268
Republican PartyWilliam McKinleyCharles C. Goodale26,243
National-People's PartyWilliam Jennings BryanBenair C. Sawyer2,389
National-People's PartyWilliam Jennings BryanLouise M. Graves2,382
National-People's PartyWilliam Jennings BryanHorace Y. Nichols2,366
National-People's PartyWilliam Jennings BryanGeorge X. Young2,362
Prohibition PartyJoshua LeveringJohn F. White1,724
Prohibition PartyJoshua LeveringCharlotte S. McKinney1,718
Prohibition PartyJoshua LeveringElla W. Chambers1,717
Prohibition PartyJoshua LeveringDavid R. Hunter1,714
National PartyCharles E. BentleyJames Stewart386
National PartyCharles E. BentleySamuel P. Crouch381
National PartyCharles E. BentleyMary O. Mott376
National PartyCharles E. BentleyJacob Saylor366
Socialist Labor PartyCharles H. MatchettAdolf F. Filberg160
Socialist Labor PartyCharles H. MatchettJohn P. Meyer160
Socialist Labor PartyCharles H. MatchettHenry Warnecke159
Socialist Labor PartyCharles H. MatchettOtto H. Viergutz159
National Democratic PartyJohn M. PalmerEdgar W. Conable1
National Democratic PartyJohn M. PalmerJames R. Pershing1
National Democratic PartyJohn M. PalmerFrancis B. Hill1
National Democratic PartyJohn M. PalmerPhilip A. Wieting1
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