1863 Texas gubernatorial election

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1863 Texas gubernatorial election
Flag of Texas.svg
  1861 August 3, 1863 1866  
  Pendleton murrah.jpg Thomas J. Chambers.jpg
Nominee Pendleton Murrah Thomas J. Chambers
Party Independent Independent
Alliance Pro-Administration Anti-Administration
Popular vote17,511 [lower-alpha 1] 12,455 [lower-alpha 1]
Percentage56.4%40.1%

1863 Texas gubernatorial election results map by county.svg
County Results [lower-alpha 1] [lower-alpha 2] [1]

Seal of the Governor of Texas.svg
Governor before election

Francis Lubbock
Independent

Seal of the Governor of Texas.svg
Elected Governor

Pendleton Murrah
Independent

The 1863 Texas gubernatorial election was held on August 3, 1863, to elect the governor of Texas. Harrison County attorney Pendleton Murrah, backed by Incumbent Governor Francis Lubbock who chose not to run for a second term, defeated perennial candidate Thomas J. Chambers, a wealthy political gadfly from East Texas. [3]

Contents

The major issue this election was each candidate's stance towards the Jefferon Davis administration. While each candidate tried to avoid being identified as "anti-administration" (or "anti-Davis") and "pro-administration" (or "pro-Davis"), public perception categorized them as such. Murrah was seen as the pro-administration candidate, while Chambers, who opposed sending more troops beyond Texas borders whilst the coastline remained undefended and denounced martial law, was viewed as the anti-administration candidate. Chambers also advocated for civil authority over military commanders, opposed restrictions on cotton cultivation, and opposed the "odious" draft exemption law. [3]

Chambers hurt his own credibility during the campaign, throwing out accusations that statewide newspapers were conspiring against him to elect Murrah and that President Davis had dishonourably declined to respect his pleas for an army commission. Chambers received only about 1/4 of the votes he had garnered in the 1861 election, with many of his former supporters either not voting or defecting to Murrah. His base in this election was largely made up of a diverse protest vote that not only reflected resistance to conscription and annoyance with impressment, but also expressed the convictions of outspoken Texas-firsters and also the hopes of quiescent reconstructionists. [3]

The Murrah campaign made a more practical or sensible effort, benefiting from the endorsement of Incumbent Governor Francis Lubbock and his supporters, most of whom were non-slaveholders, whilst Chambers carried the slaveholder vote. Murrah also received the backing of the Confederate military authorities in Shreveport, Louisiana who aided his candidacy by avoiding acts that could possibly turn discontented voters to Chambers, stipulating that they would not impress slaves and cotton in East Texas until after the election. [3]

Results

General Election Results [4]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Independent Pendleton Murrah 17,511 56.42%
Independent Thomas J. Chambers12,45540.13%
No Party Write-ins 1,0703.45%
Total votes31,036 100.00%
Independent hold

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 The returns for Angelina, Jack, Mason, Smith, and Wood Counties were listed as "informal." Including them, the total would be 17,916 for Pendleton and 13,003 for Chambers. [1]
  2. No returns reported for Hardin, McCulloch and Zapata Counties. [1] According to the Atlas of Historical County Borders, Greer County was disputed between Texas and the Indian Territory. A strip of territory was disputed between Jack and Clay Counties. Most other counties were unorganized. [2]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Dubin, Michael J. (2014). United States Gubernatorial Elections, 1861-1911: The Official Results by State and County. McFarland & Company. pp. 529–530. ISBN   9780786456468.
  2. "TX: Consolidated Chronology". digital.newberry.org. Retrieved October 5, 2024.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Baum, Dale (1998). The Shattering of Texas Unionism: Politics in the Lone Star State During the Civil War Era. LSU Press. pp. 85, 109–112. ISBN   9780807122457.
  4. "Texas Almanac". Archived from the original on November 19, 2015. Retrieved August 22, 2015.