Alabama's 1st House of Representatives district
(Redirected from Alabama House of Representatives, District 1)
Alabama's 1st House of Representatives district is one of 105 districts in the Alabama House of Representatives. Its current representative is Phillip Pettus.[1] This district was created in 1966 and encompasses parts of Lauderdale County. It is still in use today.
Alabama's 1st State House of Representatives district | |||
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Representative |
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Representatives
editRepresentative | Party | Term start | Term end | Electoral history | Represented counties |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
District created | November 9, 1966 | ||||
James H. Haygood | Democratic | November 9, 1966 | November 4, 1970 | Elected in 1966 | Lauderdale |
Robert M. Hill Jr. | |||||
Democratic | November 4, 1970 | November 6, 1974 | Elected in 1970 | ||
Ronnie Flippo | |||||
Lynn Greer | Democratic | November 6, 1974 | November 8, 1978 | Elected in 1974 Elected in 1978 Resigned | |
November 8, 1978 | June 1, 1981 | ||||
Vacant | June 1, 1981 | July 14, 1981 | |||
John E. Higginbotham[2] | Democratic | July 14, 1981 | Abt. 1982 | Resigned | |
Vacant | Abt. 1982 | November 3, 1982 | [data missing] | ||
Charles F. Ashley | Democratic | November 3, 1982[3] | November 9, 1983 | Elected in 1982 | |
Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | Democratic | November 9, 1983[4] | November 5, 1986 | Elected in 1983 Elected in 1986 Elected in 1990 Elected in 1994 Elected in 1998 Elected in 2002 Died | |
November 5, 1986 | November 7, 1990 | ||||
November 7, 1990 | November 9, 1994 | ||||
November 9, 1994 | November 4, 1998 | Lauderdale (part) | |||
November 4, 1998 | November 6, 2002 | ||||
November 6, 2002 | December 15, 2005 | ||||
Vacant | December 15, 2005 | March 21, 2006 | |||
Tammy L. Irons | Democratic | March 21, 2006 | November 8, 2006 | Elected in 2006 Elected in 2006 | |
November 8, 2006 | November 3, 2010 | ||||
Greg Burdine | Democratic | November 3, 2010 | November 5, 2014 | Elected in 2010 | |
Phillip Pettus | Republican | November 5, 2014 | November 7, 2018 | Elected in 2014 Elected in 2018 | |
November 7, 2018 | November 9, 2022 |
General elections
editSource: District 1 Races (1967-Present)
Year | Democratic | Republican | Other | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | ||||
1966 Places 1-2 |
√Robert M. Hill Jr. | 9,571 | 36.35 | Morris D. McKee | 3,609 | 13.71 | None | |||||
√James H. Haygood | 9,253 | 35.14 | Charles Hamilton | 3,897 | 14.80 | None | ||||||
1970[5] Places 1-2 |
√Ronnie Flippo | 10,948 | 100.00 | None | None | |||||||
√Robert M. Hill Jr. | 10,754 | 100.00 | None | None | ||||||||
1974 | √Lynn Greer | 2,676 | 100.00 | None | None | |||||||
1978 | √Lynn Greer | [data missing] | None | None | ||||||||
1982 | √Charles Ashley | 7,211 | 76.62 | None | Bobby McQuire (Independent) | 2,200 | 23.38 | |||||
1983 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 2,394 | 74.16 | Alfred McCroskey | 834 | 25.84 | None | |||||
1986 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 7,764 | 70.76 | Ken McFall | 3,208 | 29.24 | None | |||||
1990 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 7,095 | 99.99 | None | Others | 1 | 0.01 | |||||
1994 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 7,385 | 62.60 | Duane Phillips | 4,396 | 37.26 | Others | 17 | 0.14 | |||
1998 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 7,569 | 60.14 | Greg Beer | 5,011 | 39.81 | Others | 6 | 0.05 | |||
2002 | √Nelson R. Starkey Jr. | 8,540 | 62.59 | William McNatt | 4,772 | 34.98 | Joey Franklin Others |
304 28 |
2.23 0.21 | |||
2006 | √Tammy L. Irons | 4,229 | 61.49 | William E. Smith | 2,649 | 38.51 | None | |||||
2006 | √Tammy L. Irons | 8,406 | 65.10 | William E. Smith | 4,506 | 34.90 | None | |||||
2010 | √Greg Burdine | 7,083 | 50.69 | Quinton Hanson | 6,877 | 49.21 | Write-Ins | 14 | 0.10 | |||
2014 | Greg Burdine | 4,652 | 48.48 | √Phillip Pettus | 4,933 | 51.41 | Write-Ins | 10 | 0.10 | |||
2018 | None | √Phillip Pettus | 7,348 | 62.57 | Bobby J. Dolan III Write-Ins |
4,336 60 |
36.92 0.51 |
References
edit- ^ "Alabama Legislature". www.legislature.state.al.us. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ "Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1979. (Chapter 5, Page 6-7)". digital.archives.alabama.gov. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
- ^ "AL House 001 1983 Election". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
- ^ "AL House 001 1984 Election". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
- ^ "Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1975 (Chapter 12)". digital.archives.alabama.gov. Retrieved March 29, 2019.