1940 United States presidential election in Tennessee

The 1940 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 5, 1940, as part of the 1940 United States presidential election. Tennessee voters chose 11[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1940 United States presidential election in Tennessee

← 1936 November 5, 1940[1] 1944 →

All 11 Tennessee votes to the Electoral College
 
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 351,601 169,153
Percentage 67.25% 32.35%

County Results

President before election

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

Elected President

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

For over a century after the Civil War, Tennessee was divided according to political loyalties established in that war. Unionist regions covering almost all of East Tennessee, Kentucky Pennyroyal-allied Macon County, and the five West Tennessee Highland Rim counties of Carroll, Henderson, McNairy, Hardin and Wayne[3] voted Republican – generally by landslide margins – as they saw the Democratic Party as the "war party" who had forced them into a war they did not wish to fight.[4] Contrariwise, the rest of Middle and West Tennessee who had supported and driven the state's secession was equally fiercely Democratic as it associated the Republicans with Reconstruction.[5] After the disfranchisement of the state's African-American population by a poll tax was largely complete in the 1890s,[6] the Democratic Party was certain of winning statewide elections if united,[7] although unlike the Deep South Republicans would almost always gain thirty to forty percent of the statewide vote from mountain and Highland Rim support.

In 1920 by moving into a small number of traditionally Democratic areas in Middle Tennessee[8] and expanding turnout due to the Nineteenth Amendment and powerful isolationist sentiment,[9] the Republican Party captured Tennessee's presidential electoral votes and won the governorship and three congressional seats in addition to the rock-ribbed GOP First and Second Districts. In 1922 and 1924, with the ebbing of isolationist sympathy and a consequent decline in turnout,[10] the Democratic Party regained Tennessee's governorship and presidential electoral votes; however, in 1928 anti-Catholicism against Democratic nominee Al Smith in this powerfully fundamentalist state[11] meant that Herbert Hoover bettered Harding’s performance without however gaining the down-ballot coattails of 1920.

These Republican gains would be completely reversed in the 1930s due to the impact of the Great Depression, which was generally blamed upon the Republican Party’s policies during the 1920s. Internal divisions prevented the Republicans taking advantage of a disputed Democratic gubernatorial primary in 1932 between Lewis Pope and Hill McAlister,[12] and for the next third of a century the Republicans would rarely contest statewide offices seriously despite their continuing dominance of East Tennessee and half a dozen Unionist counties in the middle and west of the state.[13] Statewide politics for the decade and a half after the beginning of the Depression would be dominated by Edward Hull “Boss” Crump, whose Memphis political machine would consistently provide decisive votes in statewide Democratic primaries — aided by cross-party voting by Republicans in eastern mountain counties.[13] Crump would be supported during this era by long-serving Senator Kenneth Douglas McKellar, and in 1938 when several statewide candidates allied themselves with Tennessee’s other Senator, Gordon Browning, the Crump/McKellar machine not merely defeated the collaboration, but even unseated Senator Browning.[14]

Incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was now running with Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace in place of incumbent Vice President John Nance Garner, would visit Tennessee at the beginning of September.[15] In his visit he defended his accomplishment as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in the Wilson administration, and the work of the Tennessee Valley Authority which the New Deal had created. Republican nominee Wendell Willkie and running mate Minority Leader and Oregon senior Senator Charles L. McNary did not comment[16] or visit the state. A Gallup poll in mid-october showed Roosevelt maintaining his 1936 68 percent vote percentage,[17] and in the end Roosevelt carried Tennessee with 67.25 percent of the popular vote to 32.35 percent for Willkie.[18]

Results

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1940 United States presidential election in Tennessee[19]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Franklin D. Roosevelt (inc.) 351,601 67.25%
Republican Wendell Willkie 169,153 32.35%
Prohibition Roger Babson 1,606 0.31%
Socialist Norman Thomas 463 0.09%
Total votes 522,823 100%

Results by county

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1940 United States presidential election in Tennessee by county[20]
County Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic
Wendell Lewis Willkie
Republican
Roger Ward Babson
Prohibition
Norman Mattoon Thomas
Socialist
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # % # % # %
Anderson 2,218 54.22% 1,852 45.27% 12 0.29% 9 0.22% 366 8.95% 4,091
Bedford 2,499 81.29% 555 18.05% 20 0.65% 0 0.00% 1,944 63.24% 3,074
Benton 1,996 69.38% 858 29.82% 14 0.49% 9 0.31% 1,138 39.56% 2,877
Bledsoe 1,527 53.69% 1,317 46.31% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 210 7.38% 2,844
Blount 3,363 43.56% 4,312 55.85% 45 0.58% 0 0.00% -949 -12.29% 7,720
Bradley 1,976 42.82% 2,617 56.71% 19 0.41% 3 0.07% -641 -13.89% 4,615
Campbell 2,688 48.77% 2,799 50.78% 25 0.45% 0 0.00% -111 -2.01% 5,512
Cannon 1,699 72.05% 638 27.06% 16 0.68% 5 0.21% 1,061 45.00% 2,358
Carroll 2,830 50.16% 2,782 49.31% 30 0.53% 0 0.00% 48 0.85% 5,642
Carter 2,171 33.50% 4,238 65.40% 50 0.77% 21 0.32% -2,067 -31.90% 6,480
Cheatham 1,932 85.26% 331 14.61% 1 0.04% 2 0.09% 1,601 70.65% 2,266
Chester 1,537 60.23% 1,015 39.77% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 522 20.45% 2,552
Claiborne 2,792 48.44% 2,879 49.95% 61 1.06% 32 0.56% -87 -1.51% 5,764
Clay 1,288 70.58% 537 29.42% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 751 41.15% 1,825
Cocke 1,098 23.50% 3,521 75.35% 32 0.68% 22 0.47% -2,423 -51.85% 4,673
Coffee 2,277 83.96% 424 15.63% 10 0.37% 1 0.04% 1,853 68.33% 2,712
Crockett 2,048 73.41% 733 26.27% 6 0.22% 3 0.11% 1,315 47.13% 2,790
Cumberland 1,443 48.67% 1,492 50.32% 16 0.54% 14 0.47% -49 -1.65% 2,965
Davidson 27,589 75.89% 8,763 24.11% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 18,826 51.79% 36,352
Decatur 1,832 58.77% 1,275 40.90% 7 0.22% 3 0.10% 557 17.87% 3,117
DeKalb 2,830 58.10% 2,041 41.90% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 789 16.20% 4,871
Dickson 2,784 83.88% 527 15.88% 6 0.18% 2 0.06% 2,257 68.00% 3,319
Dyer 3,374 77.03% 961 21.94% 33 0.75% 12 0.27% 2,413 55.09% 4,380
Fayette 1,826 95.80% 78 4.09% 2 0.10% 0 0.00% 1,748 91.71% 1,906
Fentress 919 39.66% 1,365 58.91% 10 0.43% 23 0.99% -446 -19.25% 2,317
Franklin 4,312 88.13% 569 11.63% 9 0.18% 3 0.06% 3,743 76.50% 4,893
Gibson 5,103 80.29% 1,233 19.40% 17 0.27% 3 0.05% 3,870 60.89% 6,356
Giles 3,796 84.34% 692 15.37% 13 0.29% 0 0.00% 3,104 68.96% 4,501
Grainger 842 32.93% 1,688 66.01% 27 1.06% 0 0.00% -846 -33.09% 2,557
Greene 4,406 48.23% 4,587 50.21% 109 1.19% 33 0.36% -181 -1.98% 9,135
Grundy 1,749 85.07% 298 14.49% 7 0.34% 2 0.10% 1,451 70.57% 2,056
Hamblen 2,055 53.00% 1,794 46.27% 28 0.72% 0 0.00% 261 6.73% 3,877
Hamilton 17,083 63.45% 9,771 36.29% 41 0.15% 27 0.10% 7,312 27.16% 26,922
Hancock 1,014 37.54% 1,673 61.94% 14 0.52% 0 0.00% -659 -24.40% 2,701
Hardeman 2,549 88.66% 319 11.10% 7 0.24% 0 0.00% 2,230 77.57% 2,875
Hardin 1,957 46.08% 2,264 53.31% 26 0.61% 0 0.00% -307 -7.23% 4,247
Hawkins 2,108 38.62% 3,314 60.72% 36 0.66% 0 0.00% -1,206 -22.10% 5,458
Haywood 3,466 96.33% 128 3.56% 4 0.11% 0 0.00% 3,338 92.77% 3,598
Henderson 1,560 36.95% 2,653 62.84% 2 0.05% 7 0.17% -1,093 -25.89% 4,222
Henry 3,307 85.10% 563 14.49% 13 0.33% 3 0.08% 2,744 70.61% 3,886
Hickman 2,776 80.84% 644 18.75% 14 0.41% 0 0.00% 2,132 62.09% 3,434
Houston 1,093 82.12% 229 17.21% 9 0.68% 0 0.00% 864 64.91% 1,331
Humphreys 1,717 81.88% 377 17.98% 3 0.14% 0 0.00% 1,340 63.90% 2,097
Jackson 2,046 76.92% 605 22.74% 9 0.34% 0 0.00% 1,441 54.17% 2,660
Jefferson 1,062 35.35% 1,921 63.95% 16 0.53% 5 0.17% -859 -28.60% 3,004
Johnson 469 15.79% 2,502 84.21% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% -2,033 -68.43% 2,971
Knox 20,226 58.96% 13,877 40.45% 134 0.39% 67 0.20% 6,349 18.51% 34,304
Lake 2,962 92.94% 213 6.68% 2 0.06% 10 0.31% 2,749 86.26% 3,187
Lauderdale 6,279 95.09% 317 4.80% 7 0.11% 0 0.00% 5,962 90.29% 6,603
Lawrence 3,936 67.44% 1,877 32.16% 19 0.33% 4 0.07% 2,059 35.28% 5,836
Lewis 1,343 78.26% 368 21.45% 2 0.12% 3 0.17% 975 56.82% 1,716
Lincoln 3,781 87.62% 521 12.07% 13 0.30% 0 0.00% 3,260 75.55% 4,315
Loudon 2,068 47.90% 2,226 51.56% 16 0.37% 7 0.16% -158 -3.66% 4,317
Macon 711 29.08% 1,730 70.76% 4 0.16% 0 0.00% -1,019 -41.68% 2,445
Madison 6,154 82.63% 1,271 17.06% 19 0.26% 4 0.05% 4,883 65.56% 7,448
Marion 3,242 59.65% 2,158 39.71% 35 0.64% 0 0.00% 1,084 19.94% 5,435
Marshall 3,132 88.90% 389 11.04% 2 0.06% 0 0.00% 2,743 77.86% 3,523
Maury 4,529 87.33% 634 12.23% 20 0.39% 3 0.06% 3,895 75.11% 5,186
McMinn 5,192 56.92% 3,901 42.77% 19 0.21% 9 0.10% 1,291 14.15% 9,121
McNairy 2,484 49.34% 2,550 50.66% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% -66 -1.31% 5,034
Meigs 889 60.81% 573 39.19% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 316 21.61% 1,462
Monroe 4,121 55.57% 3,253 43.86% 42 0.57% 0 0.00% 868 11.70% 7,416
Montgomery 3,158 79.15% 819 20.53% 11 0.28% 2 0.05% 2,339 58.62% 3,990
Moore 869 88.49% 106 10.79% 6 0.61% 1 0.10% 763 77.70% 982
Morgan 1,783 55.18% 1,448 44.82% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 335 10.37% 3,231
Obion 4,360 88.73% 536 10.91% 14 0.28% 4 0.08% 3,824 77.82% 4,914
Overton 1,718 62.86% 988 36.15% 11 0.40% 16 0.59% 730 26.71% 2,733
Perry 1,068 76.12% 332 23.66% 3 0.21% 0 0.00% 736 52.46% 1,403
Pickett 652 43.70% 830 55.63% 8 0.54% 2 0.13% -178 -11.93% 1,492
Polk 3,611 86.53% 562 13.47% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 3,049 73.06% 4,173
Putnam 2,963 65.21% 1,576 34.68% 3 0.07% 2 0.04% 1,387 30.52% 4,544
Rhea 2,364 54.52% 1,956 45.11% 16 0.37% 0 0.00% 408 9.41% 4,336
Roane 2,384 51.27% 2,245 48.28% 19 0.41% 2 0.04% 139 2.99% 4,650
Robertson 3,258 86.49% 490 13.01% 18 0.48% 1 0.03% 2,768 73.48% 3,767
Rutherford 4,207 83.99% 782 15.61% 20 0.40% 0 0.00% 3,425 68.38% 5,009
Scott 1,448 39.68% 2,187 59.93% 14 0.38% 0 0.00% -739 -20.25% 3,649
Sequatchie 1,003 71.24% 401 28.48% 4 0.28% 0 0.00% 602 42.76% 1,408
Sevier 1,181 20.54% 4,569 79.46% 0 0.00% 0 0.00% -3,388 -58.92% 5,750
Shelby 57,664 88.61% 7,312 11.24% 55 0.08% 43 0.07% 50,352 77.38% 65,074
Smith 2,244 77.22% 648 22.30% 8 0.28% 6 0.21% 1,596 54.92% 2,906
Stewart 2,699 87.40% 374 12.11% 14 0.45% 1 0.03% 2,325 75.29% 3,088
Sullivan 7,234 63.34% 4,153 36.36% 34 0.30% 0 0.00% 3,081 26.98% 11,421
Sumner 3,591 80.75% 834 18.75% 17 0.38% 5 0.11% 2,757 62.00% 4,447
Tipton 5,815 95.13% 288 4.71% 9 0.15% 1 0.02% 5,527 90.41% 6,113
Trousdale 929 90.63% 94 9.17% 2 0.20% 0 0.00% 835 81.46% 1,025
Unicoi 985 34.19% 1,863 64.67% 29 1.01% 4 0.14% -878 -30.48% 2,881
Union 673 36.90% 1,143 62.66% 8 0.44% 0 0.00% -470 -25.77% 1,824
Van Buren 732 69.52% 318 30.20% 3 0.28% 0 0.00% 414 39.32% 1,053
Warren 2,323 80.46% 546 18.91% 18 0.62% 0 0.00% 1,777 61.55% 2,887
Washington 3,565 42.81% 4,719 56.67% 43 0.52% 0 0.00% -1,154 -13.86% 8,327
Wayne 1,100 30.62% 2,486 69.21% 6 0.17% 0 0.00% -1,386 -38.59% 3,592
Weakley 3,474 74.74% 1,139 24.51% 26 0.56% 9 0.19% 2,335 50.24% 4,648
White 2,256 77.05% 657 22.44% 15 0.51% 0 0.00% 1,599 54.61% 2,928
Williamson 3,215 85.82% 505 13.48% 26 0.69% 0 0.00% 2,710 72.34% 3,746
Wilson 3,020 82.04% 655 17.79% 6 0.16% 0 0.00% 2,365 64.25% 3,681
Totals 351,601 67.25% 169,153 32.35% 1,606 0.31% 463 0.09% 182,448 34.90% 522,823

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

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Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

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Analysis

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Roosevelt’s 67.25 percent vote share was slightly below what he managed in 1936, but slightly greater than what he gained in Tennessee in 1932. Nationally Willkie won eight states and almost 700 counties that had supported Roosevelt four years earlier, mostly because of Midwestern German-American opposition to increasing "tension" with Nazi Germany.[21] However, in heavily Anglophile Tennessee, support for aid to the United Kingdom in World War II turned substantial numbers of normally rock-ribbed GOP voters to Roosevelt.[22] Although FDR lost five normally Republican counties which he had carried in 1936 in Bradley, Claiborne, Cumberland, Greene and Hardin, he won two counties that had backed Hoover and Landon in his first two runs. FDR was the first Democrat to ever carry Roane County.[23]

As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last occasion when Knox County has voted for a Democratic presidential candidate.[24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "United States Presidential election of 1940 — Encyclopædia Britannica". Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  2. ^ "1940 Election for the Thirty-ninth Term (1941-45)". Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  3. ^ Wright, John K. (October 1932). "Voting Habits in the United States: A Note on Two Maps". Geographical Review. 22 (4): 666–672. Bibcode:1932GeoRv..22..666W. doi:10.2307/208821. JSTOR 208821.
  4. ^ Key (Jr.), Valdimer Orlando; Southern Politics in State and Nation (New York, 1949), pp. 282-283
  5. ^ Lyons, William; Scheb (II), John M.; Stair, Billy (2001). Government and Politics in Tennessee. Univ. of Tennessee Press. pp. 183–184. ISBN 1572331410.
  6. ^ Phillips, Kevin P.; The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 208, 210 ISBN 9780691163246
  7. ^ Grantham, Dewey W. (Fall 1995). "Tennessee and Twentieth-Century American Politics'". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 54 (3): 210–229.
  8. ^ Reichard, Gary W. (February 1970). "The Aberration of 1920: An Analysis of Harding's Victory in Tennessee". The Journal of Southern History. 36 (1): 33–49. doi:10.2307/2206601. JSTOR 2206601.
  9. ^ Phillips; The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 211
  10. ^ Phillips; The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 287
  11. ^ Larson, Edward J. (October 3, 2006). Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America's Continuing Debate over Science and Religion. Basic Books. ISBN 9780465075102.
  12. ^ Majors, William R. (1986). Change and continuity: Tennessee politics since the Civil War. Mercer University Press. p. 65. ISBN 9780865542099.
  13. ^ a b Majors, Change and continuity, p. 72
  14. ^ Majors, Change and continuity, p. 70
  15. ^ "Thinks Public Should Approve — Willkie Disapproves of Destroyer Move by Roosevelt". Sioux City Journal. Sioux City, Iowa. September 4, 1940. pp. 1, 5.
  16. ^ "Expects U.S. Will Back Ship Deal – Willkie Finds Fault, However, Because Roosevelt Did not Get Congress' Approval". Lancaster Daily Intelligencer Journal. Lancaster, Pennsylvania. September 4, 1940. p. 3.
  17. ^ Gallup, George (October 18, 1940). "Gallup Poll Shows Willkie Is Gaining". The Spokane Chronicle. Spokane, Washington. p. 1.
  18. ^ "The American Presidency Project — Election of 1940". Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  19. ^ "1940 Presidential General Election Results — Tennessee". Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  20. ^ "TN US President, November 05, 1940". Our Campaigns.
  21. ^ Dunn, Susan (June 4, 2013). 1940: FDR, Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler–the Election Amid the Storm. Yale University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0300190861.
  22. ^ Phillips; The Emerging Republican Majority; p. 93
  23. ^ Menendez, Albert J. (2005). The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004. McFarland. p. 68. ISBN 0786422173.
  24. ^ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016