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1952 United States presidential election in North Carolina

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1952 United States presidential election in North Carolina

← 1948 November 4, 1952[1] 1956 →

All 14 North Carolina votes to the Electoral College
 
Nominee Adlai Stevenson Dwight D. Eisenhower
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Illinois New York[2]
Running mate John Sparkman Richard Nixon
Electoral vote 14 0
Popular vote 652,803 558,107
Percentage 53.91% 46.09%


President before election

Harry S. Truman
Democratic

Elected President

Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican

The 1952 United States presidential election in North Carolina took place on November 4, 1952, as part of the 1952 United States presidential election. North Carolina voters chose 14[3] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

As a former Confederate state, North Carolina had a history of Jim Crow laws, disfranchisement of its African-American population and dominance of the Democratic Party in state politics. However, unlike the Deep South, the Republican Party had sufficient historic Unionist white support from the mountains and northwestern Piedmont to gain one-third of the statewide vote total in most general elections,[4] where turnout was higher than elsewhere in the former Confederacy due substantially to the state's early abolition of the poll tax in 1920.[5] Like Virginia, Tennessee and Oklahoma, the relative strength of Republican opposition meant that North Carolina did not have statewide white primaries, although certain counties did use the white primary.[6] This persistent local Republican threat from mountain Unionist descendants meant that there was never any question of the state Democratic party bolting to support Strom Thurmond in 1948.[7][8] Additionally, the greatest support for Thurmond was found in middle- and upper-class urban areas of the Piedmont,[9] so that the best Dixiecrat counties correlated strongly with the largest urban areas.[10]

During Truman's second term, there was little satisfaction in North Carolina with the President, due to unresolved Civil Rights struggles, strikes, and evidence of corruption in the Democratic Party.[11] At the beginning of the presidential campaign, though, there was no indication that the state would not back new Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson, and all state Democrats endorsed him.[12] Stevenson began his campaign in North Carolina in late July,[13] but did not return to the state as it was felt by September that Republican nominee and Columbia University President Dwight D. Eisenhower had less chance than in Florida, Texas or the Dixiecrat states of Louisiana and South Carolina.[14] Stevenson was helped by the fact that, much more than in other Southern States, North Carolina's press largely endorsed him over Eisenhower,[14] although in mid-October one of the two largest papers was endorsing the Republican.[15] Nonetheless, polls ten days before the election suggested Stevenson was very likely to carry the state due to the party loyalty created by viable mountain and northwest Piedmont Republican opposition.[16]

Because the Black Belt of the state, unlike the economically conservative Black Belts of the Deep South, was economically more liberal than the Piedmont region where the establishment Democratic faction led since 1929 by O. Max Gardner was based,[17] its entirely white electorate stayed exceedingly loyal to Stevenson – much more so than the Black Belts of other Outer South states. This Democratic loyalty extended to the Outer Banks, which had been a center of anti-Catholic voting when Herbert Hoover carried the state in 1928,[10] so that apart from a seven-vote win in Brunswick County, every county Eisenhower carried was in the urban Piedmont or traditionally GOP mountains. Thus, unlike Texas, Florida and Virginia, urban middle-class Republican voting was inadequate to carry the state for Eisenhower.

North Carolina was ultimately won by Governor Stevenson with 53.91 percent of the popular vote, against Eisenhower with 46.09 percent of the popular vote.[18][19] Stevenson ran with Alabama Senator John Sparkman and Eisenhower with California Senator Richard Nixon.

Results

[edit]
1952 United States presidential election in North Carolina
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Adlai Stevenson 652,803 53.91%
Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower 558,107 46.09%
Total votes 1,210,910 100%

Results by county

[edit]
County[20] Adlai Stevenson
Democratic
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican
Margin Total
# % # % # %
Alamance 13,402 54.06% 11,388 45.94% 2,014 8.12% 24,790
Alexander 2,665 42.56% 3,597 57.44% -932 -14.88% 6,262
Alleghany 1,809 50.28% 1,789 49.72% 20 0.56% 3,598
Anson 4,143 69.21% 1,843 30.79% 2,300 38.42% 5,986
Ashe 4,536 49.85% 4,563 50.15% -27 -0.30% 9,099
Avery 964 20.56% 3,725 79.44% -2,761 -58.88% 4,689
Beaufort 5,429 69.31% 2,404 30.69% 3,025 38.62% 7,833
Bertie 3,557 90.26% 384 9.74% 3,173 80.52% 3,941
Bladen 3,506 67.22% 1,710 32.78% 1,796 34.44% 5,216
Brunswick 2,951 49.94% 2,958 50.06% -7 -0.12% 5,909
Buncombe 22,425 47.85% 24,444 52.15% -2,019 -4.30% 46,869
Burke 7,732 41.03% 11,113 58.97% -3,381 -17.94% 18,845
Cabarrus 9,140 37.78% 15,053 62.22% -5,913 -24.44% 24,193
Caldwell 7,533 45.13% 9,160 54.87% -1,627 -9.74% 16,693
Camden 996 74.55% 340 25.45% 656 49.10% 1,336
Carteret 4,280 59.06% 2,967 40.94% 1,313 18.12% 7,247
Caswell 2,597 72.75% 973 27.25% 1,624 45.50% 3,570
Catawba 11,554 40.73% 16,814 59.27% -5,260 -18.54% 28,368
Chatham 4,303 54.41% 3,606 45.59% 697 8.82% 7,909
Cherokee 3,363 51.02% 3,228 48.98% 135 2.04% 6,591
Chowan 1,448 72.95% 537 27.05% 911 45.90% 1,985
Clay 1,439 49.93% 1,443 50.07% -4 -0.14% 2,882
Cleveland 9,709 56.07% 7,606 43.93% 2,103 12.14% 17,315
Columbus 6,941 69.81% 3,001 30.19% 3,940 39.62% 9,942
Craven 6,092 68.34% 2,822 31.66% 3,270 36.68% 8,914
Cumberland 8,839 54.18% 7,474 45.82% 1,365 8.36% 16,313
Currituck 1,471 78.04% 414 21.96% 1,057 56.08% 1,885
Dare 959 55.56% 767 44.44% 192 11.12% 1,726
Davidson 10,931 43.33% 14,299 56.67% -3,368 -13.34% 25,230
Davie 2,406 37.50% 4,010 62.50% -1,604 -25.00% 6,416
Duplin 6,392 75.14% 2,115 24.86% 4,277 50.28% 8,507
Durham 18,897 62.58% 11,301 37.42% 7,596 25.16% 30,198
Edgecombe 8,504 81.53% 1,927 18.47% 6,577 63.06% 10,431
Forsyth 24,535 48.14% 26,436 51.86% -1,901 -3.72% 50,971
Franklin 5,376 87.90% 740 12.10% 4,636 75.80% 6,116
Gaston 17,781 48.14% 19,157 51.86% -1,376 -3.72% 36,938
Gates 1,247 77.41% 364 22.59% 883 54.82% 1,611
Graham 1,590 53.54% 1,380 46.46% 210 7.08% 2,970
Granville 4,583 79.72% 1,166 20.28% 3,417 59.44% 5,749
Greene 2,976 94.12% 186 5.88% 2,790 88.24% 3,162
Guilford 29,028 46.57% 33,310 53.43% -4,282 -6.86% 62,338
Halifax 8,807 79.94% 2,210 20.06% 6,597 59.88% 11,017
Harnett 7,595 63.82% 4,306 36.18% 3,289 27.64% 11,901
Haywood 8,761 58.86% 6,124 41.14% 2,637 17.72% 14,885
Henderson 3,803 30.25% 8,768 69.75% -4,965 -39.50% 12,571
Hertford 2,859 83.16% 579 16.84% 2,280 66.32% 3,438
Hoke 1,761 74.08% 616 25.92% 1,145 48.16% 2,377
Hyde 919 69.36% 406 30.64% 513 38.72% 1,325
Iredell 8,580 42.09% 11,804 57.91% -3,224 -15.82% 20,384
Jackson 4,296 53.86% 3,680 46.14% 616 7.72% 7,976
Johnston 9,997 64.81% 5,429 35.19% 4,568 29.62% 15,426
Jones 1,673 83.48% 331 16.52% 1,342 66.96% 2,004
Lee 4,688 69.01% 2,105 30.99% 2,583 38.02% 6,793
Lenoir 6,723 75.07% 2,233 24.93% 4,490 50.14% 8,956
Lincoln 5,389 46.39% 6,228 53.61% -839 -7.22% 11,617
Macon 3,396 50.51% 3,327 49.49% 69 1.02% 6,723
Madison 3,666 43.55% 4,751 56.45% -1,085 -12.90% 8,417
Martin 5,493 92.98% 415 7.02% 5,078 85.96% 5,908
McDowell 4,755 50.24% 4,710 49.76% 45 0.48% 9,465
Mecklenburg 33,044 42.70% 44,334 57.30% -11,290 -14.60% 77,378
Mitchell 1,236 23.57% 4,009 76.43% -2,773 -52.86% 5,245
Montgomery 3,176 49.96% 3,181 50.04% -5 -0.08% 6,357
Moore 5,066 48.21% 5,442 51.79% -376 -3.58% 10,508
Nash 10,424 79.82% 2,636 20.18% 7,788 59.64% 13,060
New Hanover 10,330 52.54% 9,330 47.46% 1,000 5.08% 19,660
Northampton 4,334 88.14% 583 11.86% 3,751 76.28% 4,917
Onslow 4,275 77.22% 1,261 22.78% 3,014 54.44% 5,536
Orange 5,156 57.49% 3,813 42.51% 1,343 14.98% 8,969
Pamlico 1,428 61.26% 903 38.74% 525 22.52% 2,331
Pasquotank 3,579 63.01% 2,101 36.99% 1,478 26.02% 5,680
Pender 2,029 63.78% 1,152 36.22% 877 27.56% 3,181
Perquimans 1,245 65.91% 644 34.09% 601 31.82% 1,889
Person 4,266 75.64% 1,374 24.36% 2,892 51.28% 5,640
Pitt 11,271 83.65% 2,203 16.35% 9,068 67.30% 13,474
Polk 2,741 51.70% 2,561 48.30% 180 3.40% 5,302
Randolph 8,975 41.93% 12,429 58.07% -3,454 -16.14% 21,404
Richmond 7,340 68.59% 3,361 31.41% 3,979 37.18% 10,701
Robeson 9,311 69.29% 4,127 30.71% 5,184 38.58% 13,438
Rockingham 12,423 64.34% 6,885 35.66% 5,538 28.68% 19,308
Rowan 11,296 39.18% 17,535 60.82% -6,239 -21.64% 28,831
Rutherford 7,755 48.04% 8,387 51.96% -632 -3.92% 16,142
Sampson 6,956 51.89% 6,449 48.11% 507 3.78% 13,405
Scotland 2,912 64.68% 1,590 35.32% 1,322 29.36% 4,502
Stanly 7,202 41.64% 10,093 58.36% -2,891 -16.72% 17,295
Stokes 4,504 54.29% 3,792 45.71% 712 8.58% 8,296
Surry 8,206 51.95% 7,591 48.05% 615 3.90% 15,797
Swain 1,949 53.71% 1,680 46.29% 269 7.42% 3,629
Transylvania 3,641 47.36% 4,047 52.64% -406 -5.28% 7,688
Tyrrell 916 70.41% 385 29.59% 531 40.82% 1,301
Union 7,416 66.18% 3,790 33.82% 3,626 32.36% 11,206
Vance 5,697 76.80% 1,721 23.20% 3,976 53.60% 7,418
Wake 23,393 60.84% 15,057 39.16% 8,336 21.68% 38,450
Warren 2,960 81.68% 664 18.32% 2,296 63.36% 3,624
Washington 1,974 71.83% 774 28.17% 1,200 43.66% 2,748
Watauga 3,600 44.30% 4,527 55.70% -927 -11.40% 8,127
Wayne 7,281 60.96% 4,662 39.04% 2,619 21.92% 11,943
Wilkes 7,143 38.43% 11,446 61.57% -4,303 -23.14% 18,589
Wilson 8,684 77.17% 2,569 22.83% 6,115 54.34% 11,253
Yadkin 2,786 33.46% 5,540 66.54% -2,754 -33.08% 8,326
Yancey 3,693 55.57% 2,953 44.43% 740 11.14% 6,646
Totals 652,803 53.91% 558,107 46.09% 94,696 7.82% 1,210,910

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "United States Presidential election of 1952 - Encyclopædia Britannica". Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  2. ^ "U.S. presidential election, 1952". Facts on File. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 24, 2013. Eisenhower, born in Texas, considered a resident of New York, and headquartered at the time in Paris, finally decided to run for the Republican nomination
  3. ^ "1952 Election for the Forty-Second Term (1953-57)". Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  4. ^ Phillips, Kevin P. (November 23, 2014). The Emerging Republican Majority. Princeton University Press. pp. 210, 242. ISBN 978-0-691-16324-6.
  5. ^ Key, Valdimer Orlando (1949). Southern Politics in State and Nation. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 502.
  6. ^ Klarman, Michael J. (2001). "The White Primary Rulings: A Case Study in the Consequences of Supreme Court Decision-Making". Florida State University Law Review. 29: 55–107.
  7. ^ Ader, Emile B. (August 1953). "Why the Dixiecrats Failed". The Journal of Politics. 15 (3): 356–369. doi:10.2307/2126102. JSTOR 2126102.
  8. ^ Guthrie, Paul Daniel (August 1955). The Dixiecrat Movement of 1948 (Thesis). Bowling Green State University. p. 183. Docket 144207.
  9. ^ Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 297
  10. ^ a b See Strong, Donald S. (August 1955). "The Presidential Election in the South, 1952". The Journal of Politics. 17 (3): 343–389. doi:10.1017/S0022381600091064.
  11. ^ Grayson, A.G. (December 1975). "North Carolina and Harry Truman, 1944-1948". Journal of American Studies. 9 (3): 283–300. doi:10.1017/S0021875800003005.
  12. ^ "Dixie Sun Smiles on Eisenhower: Ike Could Win 79 Votes in South". Daily Boston Globe. August 3, 1952. p. C41.
  13. ^ "Democrats Expect To Win the South: Leaders Believe Sparkman Will Offset Eisenhower's Appeal to Dixie Bloc". The New York Times. July 27, 1952. p. 38.
  14. ^ a b "South not so Solid, Press Poll Hints: Survey by the A.P. Indicates Eisenhower Might "Pull" 3 to 5 States to G.O.P.". The New York Times. Associated Press. September 18, 1952. p. 19.
  15. ^ "Nominees Share 2 Papers: One in North Carolina Endorses Eisenhower, One Stevenson". The New York Times. October 12, 1952. p. 78.
  16. ^ Popham, John N. (October 24, 1952). "Party Fealty Firm in North Carolina: State Has Remained Regular During Fair Deal and Seems Likely to Do So No". The New York Times (Special to the New York Times ed.). p. 18.
  17. ^ Key. Southern Politics in State and Nation, pp. 215-217
  18. ^ "1952 Presidential General Election Results – North Carolina". Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  19. ^ "The American Presidency Project – Election of 1952". Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  20. ^ "NC US President Race, November 04, 1952". Our Campaigns.