1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections

{{short description|House elections for the 3rd U.S. Congress}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections

| country = United States

| flag_year = 1777

| type = legislative

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1790–91 United States House of Representatives elections

| previous_year = {{Nowrap|1790 & 1791}}

| next_election = 1794–95 United States House of Representatives elections

| next_year = {{Nowrap|1794 & 1795}}

| outgoing_members = 2nd_United_States_Congress#House_of_Representatives_3

| elected_members = 3rd United States Congress#House_of_Representatives_3

| seats_for_election = All 105 seats in the United States House of Representatives

| majority_seats = 53

| election_date = August 27, 1792 – September 6, 1793

| image_size = x180px

| party1 = Anti-Administration Party (US)

| image1 = Frederick Muhlenberg.jpg

| leader1 = Frederick Muhlenberg{{Cite web |title=Third Congress (membership roster) |url=http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/3.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141206141036/http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/3.pdf |archive-date=December 6, 2014 |access-date=February 1, 2015}}{{efn|Muhlenberg was elected speaker by Anti-Administration Party members but continued to affiliate with the Pro-Administration Party.{{cite book |last1=Jenkins |first1=Jeffrey A. |title=Fighting for the Speakership: The House and the Rise of Party Government |date=2013 |publisher=Princeton University |location=Princeton, N. J. |pages=26–27 |url=https://archive.org/details/fightingforspeak0000jenk/page/26/mode/2up}}}}

| leaders_seat1 = {{ushr|PA|AL|T}}

| last_election1 = 30 seats

| seats1 = 54{{Cite web |title=Party Divisions of the House of Representatives, 1789 to Present {{!}} US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives |url=https://history.house.gov/Institution/Party-Divisions/Party-Divisions/ |access-date=2024-06-30 |website=history.house.gov |language=en}}

| seat_change1 = {{increase}} 24

| party2 = Pro-Administration Party (US)

| image2 = TheodoreSedgwick.jpg

| leader2 = Theodore Sedgwick

| leaders_seat2 = {{ushr|MA|2|T}}

| last_election2 = 39 seats

| seats2 = 51

| seat_change2 = {{increase}} 12

| map_image = 1792–93 US House election.svg

| map_size = 320px

|map_alt =

| map_caption = Results:
{{Legend0|#f2bfa6|Pro-Administration hold}} {{legend0|#e27036|Pro-Administration gain}}
{{Legend0|#aacc99|Anti-Administration hold}} {{legend0|#008000|Anti-Administration gain}}
{{Legend0|#808080ff|Undistricted territory}}

| title = Speaker

| before_election = Jonathan Trumbull

| before_party = Pro-Administration Party (US)

| after_election = Frederick Muhlenberg

| after_party = Pro-Administration Party (US)

}}

The 1792–93 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between August 27, 1792, and September 6, 1793. Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 3rd United States Congress convened on December 2, 1793. With the addition of the new state of Kentucky's representatives, and the congressional reapportionment based on the 1790 United States census, the size of the House increased to 105 seats.

They coincided with the re-election of President George Washington. While Washington ran for president as an independent, his followers (more specifically, the supporters of Alexander Hamilton) formed the nation's first organized political party, the Federalist Party, whose members and sympathizers are identified as pro-Administration on this page. In response, followers of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison created the opposition Democratic-Republican Party, who are identified as anti-Administration on this page. The Federalists promoted urbanization, industrialization, mercantilism, centralized government, and a broad interpretation of the United States Constitution. In contrast, Democratic-Republicans supported the ideal of an agrarian republic made up of self-sufficient farmers and small, localized governments with limited power.

Despite nearly unanimous support for Washington as a presidential candidate, Jeffersonian ideas edged out Hamiltonian principles at the ballot box for congressional candidates, with the Democratic-Republicans taking 24 seats more than they had prior to the organization of their political movement. Most of the increase was due to the addition of new seats in Western regions as a result of the 1790 census. Dominated by agrarian culture, these Western territories offered strong support to Democratic-Republican congressional candidates. As a result, they secured a thin majority in the legislature.

Election summaries

In this period, each state fixed its own date for its congressional election as early as August 1792 (in New Hampshire and Rhode Island) and as late as September 1793 (in Kentucky). In some states, the congressional delegation was not elected until after the legal start of the Congress (on the 4th day of March in the odd-numbered year), but as the first session of Congress typically began in November or December, the elections took place before Congress actually met. The 3rd Congress first met on December 2, 1793.

These were the first elections held after reapportionment following the first census. Thirty-six new seats were added,{{USStat|1|253}} with 1 state losing 1 seat, 3 states having no change, and the remaining 11 states gaining between 1 and 9 seats. This was the first apportionment based on actual census data, the apportionment for the 1st and 2nd Congresses being set by the Constitution using estimated populations.

File:3rd Congress United States House of Representatives.svg

style="width:60%; text-align:center"

|+ ↓

style="background:{{party color|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}; width:51.43%" | 54

| style="color:white; background:{{party color|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}; width:48.57%" | 51

Anti-Administration

| Pro-Administration

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"
valign=bottom

! rowspan=2 | State

! rowspan=2 | Type

! rowspan=2 | Date

! colspan=2 | Total
seats

! colspan=2 {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

! colspan=2 {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

Seats

! Change

! {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Seats

! {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Change

! {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Seats

! {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Change

colspan=9 | General elections
New Hampshire

| At-large

| August 27, 1792

| 4

| {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 3

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{steady}}

Rhode Island

| At-large

| August 28, 1792

| 2

| {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

Connecticut

| At-large

| September 17, 1792

| 7

| {{increase}}2

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 7

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}2

Georgia

| At-large

| October 1, 1792

| 2

| {{decrease}}1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{decrease}}1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{steady}}

Maryland

| Districts

| October 1, 1792

| 8

| {{increase}}2

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 4

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 4

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

Delaware

| At-large

| October 2, 1792

| 1

| {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{steady}}

New Jersey

| At-large

| October 9, 1792

| 5

| {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 5

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

Pennsylvania

| At-large

| October 9, 1792

| 13

| {{increase}}5

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 8

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}4

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 5

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

Massachusetts

| Mixed

| November 2, 1792{{Efn|Massachusetts required a majority for election, which led to additional ballots on January 14, 1793 and April 1, 1793.}}

| 14

| {{increase}}6

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 3

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}2

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 11

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}4

New York

| Districts

| January 2, 1793

| 10

| {{increase}}4

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 3

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 7

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}3

Vermont

| Districts

| January 7, 1793{{Efn|Vermont required a majority for election, which led to an additional ballot on March 20, 1793.}}

| 2

| {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{steady}}

South Carolina

| Districts

| February 5, 1793

| 6

| {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 5

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}3

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{decrease}}2

North Carolina

| Districts

| February 15, 1793

| 10

| {{increase}}5

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 9

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}6

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{decrease}}1

colspan=9 | Late elections {{Small|(after the March 4, 1793 beginning of the 3rd Congress)}}
Virginia

| Districts

| March 18, 1793

| 19

| {{increase}}9

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 15

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}}7

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 4

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}}2

Kentucky

| Districts

| September 6, 1793

| 2

| {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{steady}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{steady}}

colspan=3 | Total

! 105

! {{increase}} 36

! {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | 54
{{Small|51.4%}}

! {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | {{increase}} 24

! {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | 51
{{Small|48.6%}}

! {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | {{increase}} 12

{{bar box|title=House seats|titlebar=#ddd|width=600px|barwidth=650px|bars={{bar percent|Anti-Admin|{{party color|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}|51.43}}

{{bar percent|Pro-Admin|{{party color|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}|48.57}}}}

Change in composition

= End of the [[2nd United States Congress|2nd Congress]] =

With new seats, due to reapportionment, outlined.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:500px"
colspan=8 |

|  

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

{{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

|

|

|

|

{{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Vacant}} | V

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

colspan=19 align=right |Majority →

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

{{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

{{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

|

|

|

|

colspan=8 |

|  

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

|

= Result of the elections =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:500px"
colspan=8 |

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

{{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

{{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

colspan=19 align=right |Majority →

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

{{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

{{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

colspan=8 |

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

valign=top

! Key:

|

{| class=wikitable

align=center {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | A

| Anti-Administration

align=center {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | P

| Pro-Administration

align=center {{Party shading/Vacant}} | V

| Vacant

|}

Special elections

{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}

There were special elections in 1792 and 1793 during the 2nd and 3rd United States Congresses.

Elections are sorted here by state then district.

= 2nd Congress =

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|Kentucky|1|Kentucky 1}}
{{Small|"Southern District"}}

| colspan=3 | Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792.

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New member elected September 7, 1792 and seated November 9, 1792.{{Cite web |title=Second Congress (membership roster) – see footnotes 12 and 13 |url=http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/2.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130306182456/http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/2.pdf |archive-date=March 6, 2013 |access-date=March 8, 2013}}
Anti-Administration gain.
Winner was later re-elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Christopher Greenup (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr" | Source does not give numbers of votes or has incomplete data.}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Robert Brackenridge (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Kentucky|2|Kentucky 2}}
{{Small|"Northern District"}}

| colspan=3 | Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792.

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New member elected September 7, 1792 and seated November 8, 1792..
Anti-Administration gain.
Winner was later re-elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander D. Orr (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Hubbard Taylor (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|GA|1|X}}

| Anthony Wayne

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent disqualified March 21, 1792.
New member elected July 9, 1792.
Anti-Administration hold.
Winner later lost re-election to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Milledge (Anti-Admin.) 55.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Matthew McAllister (Pro-Admin.) 44.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Glen (Unknown) 0.2%{{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ga.uscongress.special.1792 |access-date=September 23, 2020 |website=elections.lib.tufts.edu |archive-date=September 22, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200922091859/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ga.uscongress.special.1792 |url-status=dead }}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MD|2|X}}

| Joshua Seney

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent resigned December 6, 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland's 3rd Judicial District.
New member elected January 7–10, 1793.
Pro-Administration gain.
Winner was already elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Hindman (Pro-Admin.) 63.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Whittington (Unknown) 36.8%{{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress2.1793 |access-date=September 23, 2020 |website=elections.lib.tufts.edu |archive-date=August 20, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200820122956/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress2.1793 |url-status=dead }}

}}

|}

= 3rd Congress =

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|CT|AL|X}}

| Jonathan Sturges

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned to become Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court.
New member elected April 8, 1793.{{Efn|name="+" | Date given for the start of the term, of the person elected at the special election.See Congressional Biographical Directory. In some cases this is clearly wrong as the date of the legal start of the Congress is given, even though the member was elected at a later date.}}
Pro-Administration hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Uriah Tracy (Pro-Admin.) 49.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Zephaniah Swift (Pro-Admin.) 18.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Asher Miller (Unknown){{Efn|name="np" | Party affiliation not given in source}} 16.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan Ingersoll (Pro-Admin.) 9.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Tapping Reeve (Unknown){{Efn|name="np"}} 5.7%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|CT|AL|X}}

| Benjamin Huntington

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Representative-elect resigned.
New member elected September 16, 1793.
Pro-Administration hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jonathan Ingersoll (Pro-Admin.)
  • {{data missing|date=February 2020}}

}}

|-

! rowspan=2 | {{ushr|CT|AL|X}}

| Jonathan Ingersoll

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1793 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special elections

| rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Hold}} | Representative-elect Ingersoll declined the seat and Representative-elect Mitchell resigned to become U.S. Senator.
Two new members elected on a general ticket November 11, 1793.
Two Pro-Administration holds.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joshua Coit (Pro-Admin.) 35.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Zephaniah Swift (Pro-Admin.) 24.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}James Davenport (Pro-Admin.) 17.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Roger Griswold (Pro-Admin.) 12.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Chauncey Goodrich (Pro-Admin.) 5.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Nathaniel Smith (Pro-Admin.) 3.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel W. Dana (Pro-Admin.) 2.1%

}}

|-

| Stephen M. Mitchell

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1792

|}

Connecticut

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in Connecticut}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Connecticut}}

Connecticut gained two seats in reapportionment following the 1790 census.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! rowspan=7 | {{ushr|Connecticut|AL|X}}
{{Small| 7 seats on a general ticket}}

| James Hillhouse

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=7 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jonathan Trumbull Jr. (Pro-Admin.) 14.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Hillhouse (Pro-Admin.) 13.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jonathan Sturges (Pro-Admin.) 11.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Huntington (Pro-Admin.) 10.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jeremiah Wadsworth (Pro-Admin.) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Amasa Learned (Pro-Admin.) 9.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Stephen Mix Mitchell (Pro-Admin.) 7.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Uriah Tracy (Pro-Admin.) 6.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan Ingersoll (Pro-Admin.) 5.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Asher Miller (Unknown) 4.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Zephaniah Swift (Pro-Admin.) 4.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Tapping Reeve (Unknown) 3.0%

}}

|-

| Amasa Learned

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1791 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Jonathan Sturges

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Jonathan Trumbull Jr.

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Jeremiah Wadsworth

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|}

Three special elections followed the 1792 elections in Connecticut after Representatives-elect Sturges and Huntington resigned before the start of Congress and Mitchell was elected to the Senate.

Delaware

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in Delaware}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Delaware}}

Delaware's apportionment did not change following the 1790 census. As in the 1st and 2nd Congresses, each voter cast votes for two separate candidates, at least one of whom had to be from a different county as the voter.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|Delaware|AL|X}}

| John M. Vining

|{{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration gain.
Election was later challenged and overturned.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Patten (Anti-Admin.) 38.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Henry Latimer (Pro-Admin.) 38.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Francis Many (Unknown) 11.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Edward Roche (Unknown) 7.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Andrew Barrett (Unknown) 3.3%

}}

|}

Georgia

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in Georgia}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Georgia}}

Following the 1790 census, Georgia's apportionment was decreased from 3 seats to 2 (the only state whose representation decreased after the census). Georgia switched from separate districts to at-large seats.{{cite web |title=Mapping Early American Elections: 3rd Congress: Georgia 1792 |url=https://earlyamericanelections.org/maps/meae.congressional.congress03.ga.county.html |publisher=Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University |date=2019 |website=earlyamericanelections.org |access-date=7 March 2025}}

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! rowspan=3 | {{ushr|Georgia|AL|X}}
{{Small|2 seats on a general ticket}}

| Abraham Baldwin
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Georgia|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=3 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Abraham Baldwin (Anti-Admin.) 44.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas P. Carnes (Anti-Admin.) 29.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}George Mathews (Pro-Admin.) 10.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Milledge (Anti-Admin.) 8.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Francis Willis (Anti-Admin.) 0.3%
  • Scattering 7.0%

}}

|-

| John Milledge
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Georgia|1|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1792 Georgia's 1st congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration hold.

|-

| Francis Willis
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Georgia|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration loss.

|}

Kentucky

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Kentucky}}

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|Kentucky|1|X}}
{{Small|"Southern district"}}

| Christopher Greenup

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1792 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Christopher Greenup (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Kentucky|2|X}}
{{Small|"Northern district"}}

| Alexander D. Orr

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1792 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander D. Orr (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|}

Maryland

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives elections in Maryland}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Maryland}}

Maryland increased from 6 to 8 representatives after the 1790 census. The previous mixed district/at-large system was replaced with a conventional district system.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|1|X}}

| Philip Key

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1790

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Dent (Pro-Admin.) 44.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}John Parnham (Pro-Admin.) 29.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Philip Key (Pro-Admin.) 25.5%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|2|X}}

| John Francis Mercer
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Maryland|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791 Maryland's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Francis Mercer (Anti-Admin.) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}John Thomas (Pro-Admin.) 42.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Richard A. Contee (Unknown) 0.9%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Uriah Forrest (Pro-Admin.) 71.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Dorsey (Anti-Admin.) 28.1%
  • Others 0.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|4|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Sprigg (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|5|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Smith (Anti-Admin.) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Charles Ridgely (Anti-Admin.) 38.9%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gabriel Christie (Anti-Admin.) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Matthews (Pro-Admin.) 36.4%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|7|X}}

| Joshua Seney
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Maryland|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent retired.
Pro-Administration gain.
Incumbent resigned December 6, 1792 to become Chief Justice of Maryland's 3rd Judicial District.
Winner was also elected to finish the term; see above.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Hindman (Pro-Admin.) 51.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}James Tilghman (Anti-Admin.) 48.3%{{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress7.1792 |access-date=September 23, 2020 |website=elections.lib.tufts.edu |archive-date=April 12, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200412115536/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress7.1792 |url-status=dead }}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Maryland|8|X}}

| William V. Murray
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Maryland|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William V. Murray (Pro-Admin.) 93.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Littleton Dennis (Pro-Admin.) 5.4%
  • Others 0.9%

}}

|}

Massachusetts

{{Main|1792–1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Massachusetts}}

Following the 1790 census, Massachusetts's representation increased from eight to fourteen Representatives and was redistricted into four plural districts, plus a single at-large district. The {{ushr|MA|4|C}} covered the District of Maine (the modern-day State of Maine). The plural districts were concurrent tickets rather than a single general ticket, though the {{ushr|MA|1|R}} and {{ushr|MA|2|R}} districts appeared to have also had a general ticket alongside the more specific tickets.

As before, a majority was required for election, in those districts where a majority was not achieved, additional ballots were required.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|1|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat A: At-large}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jonathan Jones (Unknown) 39.8%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Heath (Unknown) 31.0%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Bowdoin III (Unknown) 23.2%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Theophilus Parsons (Unknown) 6.0%

}}

{{collapsible list

| title = Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}||{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jonathan Jones (Unknown) 29.3%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Holten (Anti-Admin.) 25.6%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Bowdoin III (Unknown) 17.1%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Sewall (Pro-Admin.) 13.1%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Heath (Unknown) 8.3%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Joseph Bradley Varnum (Anti-Admin.) 3.8%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Elbridge Gerry (Anti-Admin.) 2.8%

}}

Third ballot {{Small|(April 1, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Holten (Anti-Admin.) 69.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Benjamin Austin (Unknown) 30.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|1|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat B: Essex County}}

| Benjamin Goodhue
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Goodhue (Pro-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|1|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat C: Middlesex County}}

| Elbridge Gerry
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Dexter (Pro-Admin.) 61.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Joseph Bradley Varnum (Anti-Admin.) 26.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Elbridge Gerry (Anti-Admin.) 12.4%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|1|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat D: Suffolk County}}

| Fisher Ames

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fisher Ames (Pro-Admin.) 62.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Benjamin Austin (Unknown) 37.6%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|2|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat A: At-large}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 41.3%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Admin.) 37.9%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Lyman (Anti-Admin.) 6.7%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Moorhaus (Unknown) 6.2%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Simeon Strong (Unknown) 4.0%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Dwight Foster (Pro-Admin.) 3.5%

}}

{{collapsible list

| title = Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}||{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 35.4%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Dwight Foster (Pro-Admin.) 25.1%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Thomson J. Skinner (Anti-Admin.) 19.6%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Lyman (Anti-Admin.) 12.1%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan Grout (Anti-Admin.) 4.0%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Shepard (Pro-Admin.) 3.8%

}}

Third ballot {{Small|(April 1, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dwight Foster (Pro-Admin.) 55.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 44.7%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|2|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat B: Berkshire County}}

| Theodore Sedgwick
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|4|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Admin.) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Thomson J. Skinner (Anti-Admin.) 29.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Bacon (Anti-Admin.) 7.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|2|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat C: Hampshire County}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 37.4%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Lyman (Anti-Admin.) 32.3%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Dwight (Pro-Admin.) 16.8%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Hinshaur (Unknown) 6.7%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Williams (Unknown) 3.6%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Dwight Foster (Pro-Admin.) 3.1%

}}

{{collapsible list

| title = Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}||{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Lyman (Anti-Admin.) 38.0%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 31.3%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Shepard (Pro-Admin.) 18.0%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Dwight (Pro-Admin.) 12.7%

}}

Third ballot {{Small|(April 1, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Lyman (Anti-Admin.) 53.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Lyman (Pro-Admin.) 46.9%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|2|X}} ({{Small|4 seats}})
{{Small|Seat D: Worcester County}}

| Artemas Ward
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Artemas Ward (Pro-Admin.) 59.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan Grout (Anti-Admin.) 36.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Dwight Foster (Pro-Admin.) 3.8%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|3|X}} ({{Small|2 seats}})
{{Small|Seat A: Barnstable, Dukes, & Nantucket Counties}}

| George Leonard
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peleg Coffin Jr. (Pro-Admin.) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}George Leonard (Pro-Admin.) 34.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Phanuel Bishop (Anti-Admin.) 13.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|3|X}} ({{Small|2 seats}})
{{Small|Seat B: Bristol & Plymouth Counties}}

| Shearjashub Bourne
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}John Davis (Pro-Admin.) 49.2%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Shearjashub Bourne (Pro-Admin.) 26.1%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Warren (Unknown) 24.8%

}}

Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Shearjashub Bourne (Pro-Admin.) 53.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}John Davis (Pro-Admin.) 40.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Warren (Unknown) 6.4%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|4|X}} ({{Small|3 seats}})
{{Small|District of Maine
Seat A: Cumberland County}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Daniel Davis (Unknown) 40.0%|{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Admin.) 38.6%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Robert Southgate (Unknown) 11.7%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Josiah Thacker (Unknown) 9.8%

}}

{{collapsible list

| title = Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}||{{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Admin.) 48.4%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Daniel Davis (Unknown) 42.2%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Robert Southgate (Unknown) 9.4%

}}

Third ballot {{Small|(April 1, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Admin.) 58.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Daniel Davis (Unknown) 42.0%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|4|X}} ({{Small|3 seats}})
{{Small|District of Maine
Seat B: Lincoln, Hancock, & Washington Counties}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list

| title = First ballot {{Small|(November 2, 1792)}}||{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Lithgow (Unknown) 49.98%|{{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Henry Dearborn (Anti-Admin.) 32.2%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Daniel Coney (Unknown) 11.8%|{{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Alan Campbell (Unknown) 6.0%

}}

Second ballot {{Small|(January 14, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry Dearborn (Anti-Admin.) 60.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Lithgow (Unknown) 39.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|MA|4|X}} ({{Small|3 seats}})
{{Small|District of Maine
Seat C: York County}}

| George Thatcher
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|MA|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Thatcher (Pro-Admin.) 57.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Nathaniel Wells (Pro-Admin.) 35.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Tristan Jordan (Unknown) 6.9%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Massachusetts|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David Cobb (Pro-Admin.) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Charles Jarvis (Anti-Admin.) 9.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Heath (Unknown) 6.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Admin.) 4.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Elbridge Gerry (Anti-Admin.) 2.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jonathan Jones (Unknown) 1.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Fisher Ames (Pro-Admin.) 1.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}James Sullivan (Anti-Admin.) 1.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Horton (Unknown) 1.3%
  • Scattering 17.4%

}}

|}

New Hampshire

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in New Hampshire}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Hampshire}}

New Hampshire increased from 3 seats to 4 seats after the 1790 census.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! rowspan=4 | {{ushr|New Hampshire|AL|X}}
{{Small|4 seats on a general ticket}}

| Jeremiah Smith

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=4 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jeremiah Smith (Pro-Admin.) 24.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nicholas Gilman (Pro-Admin.) 16.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John S. Sherburne (Anti-Admin.) 14.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paine Wingate (Pro-Admin.) 12.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Abiel Foster (Pro-Admin.) 8.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}James Sheafe (Pro-Admin.) 8.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Nathaniel Peabody (Pro-Admin.) 7.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Timothy Walker (Unknown) 4.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Page (Unknown) 2.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Joshua Atherton (Unknown) 2.3%

}}

|-

| Samuel Livermore

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Incumbent retired.
Anti-Administration gain.

|-

| Nicholas Gilman

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|}

New Jersey

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in New Jersey}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Jersey}}

Following the 1790 census, New Jersey's apportionment increased from 4 to 5 seats.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Candidates Ref={{Efn|name="m1"}}}}

|-

! rowspan=5 | {{ushr|New Jersey|AL|X}}
{{Small|5 seats on a general ticket}}

| Elias Boudinot

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=5 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Beatty (Pro-Admin.) 16.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jonathan Dayton (Pro-Admin.) 13.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Abraham Clark (Pro-Admin.) 11.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elias Boudinot (Pro-Admin.) 10.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lambert Cadwalader (Pro-Admin.) 10.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Sinnickson (Pro-Admin.) 48.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Aaron Kitchell (Pro-Admin.) 8.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}James Linn (Anti-Admin.) 5.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan Elmer (Pro-Admin.) 4.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Dick (Unknown) 4.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Henderson (Unknown) 2.9%

}}

|-

| Abraham Clark

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Jonathan Dayton

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Aaron Kitchell

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1791

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration hold.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|}

New York

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in New York}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New York}}

Due to re-apportionment following the 1790 census, New York's congressional delegation grew from 6 to 10. Three incumbents ran for re-election, two of whom won, and the other three incumbents retired. With the increase following re-apportionment, this left seven open seats.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|1|X}}

| Thomas Tredwell

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791 New York's 1st congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Tredwell (Anti-Admin.) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Joshua Sands (Pro-Admin.) 26.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Harry Peters (Pro-Admin.) 23.3%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|2|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Watts (Pro-Admin.) 72.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William S. Livingston (Anti-Admin.) 27.3%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Philip Van Cortlandt (Anti-Admin.) 55.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Richard Hatfield (Pro-Admin.) 44.5%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|4|X}}

| Cornelius C. Schoonmaker

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1790

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Van Gaasbeck (Pro-Admin.) 47.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Hathorn (Anti-Admin.) 46.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Carpenter (Anti-Admin.) 2.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Cornelius C. Schoonmaker (Anti-Admin.) 1.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Thompson (Anti-Admin.) 1.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jesse Woodhull (Anti-Admin.) 0.6%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|5|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Theodorus Bailey (Anti-Admin.) 53.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}James Kent (Pro-Admin.) 46.4%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ezekiel Gilbert (Pro-Admin.) 35.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Peter R. Livingston (Anti-Admin.) 34.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Peter Van Ness (Anti-Admin.) 30.8%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|7|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Evert Van Alen (Pro-Admin.) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Henry K. Van Rensselaer (Anti-Admin.) 42.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Sickles (Anti-Admin.) 0.6%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|8|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry Glen (Pro-Admin.) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (Anti-Admin.) 36.2%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|9|X}}

| James Gordon
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|NY|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Gordon (Pro-Admin.) 46.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Williams (Anti-Admin.) 41.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John M. Thompson (Anti-Admin.) 12.8%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|New York|10|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Silas Talbot (Pro-Admin.) 34.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Cooper (Pro-Admin.) 26.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Winn (Anti-Admin.) 25.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Andrew Fink (Anti-Admin.) 11.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Josiah Crane (Anti-Admin.) 2.4%

}}

|}

North Carolina

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Carolina}}

Following the 1790 census, North Carolina's apportionment increased from 5 to 10 seats.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|1|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph McDowell (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|2|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Matthew Locke (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Alexander{{Efn|name="incname" | Source does not give full name.}} (Pro-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Montford Stokes (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Winston (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jesse Franklin (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Williams (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Martin (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Clarke{{Efn|name="incname"}} (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|4|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander Mebane (Anti-Admin.) 44.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Stephen Moore (Pro-Admin.) 39.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Ambrose Ramsey (Pro-Admin.) 16.2%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|5|X}}

| Nathaniel Macon
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|North Carolina|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nathaniel Macon (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Gillespie (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Henry Hill (Pro-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Benjamin Smith (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|7|X}}

| William B. Grove
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|North Carolina|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William B. Grove (Pro-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|8|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William J. Dawson (Anti-Admin.) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Stephen Cabarrus (Anti-Admin.) 36.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Cumming (Unknown) 0.2%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|9|X}}

| John B. Ashe
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|NC|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1790

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Blount (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John B. Ashe (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}John Leigh (Pro-Admin.)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|North Carolina|10|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Williams (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}William Maclure (Anti-Admin.)

}}

|}

Pennsylvania

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in Pennsylvania}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania}}

Pennsylvania switched from using districts to electing its representatives on an at-large basis for the 3rd Congress, just as it had done for the 1st Congress. This would be the last time that Pennsylvania would elect all of its Representatives at-large. Due to re-apportionment following the 1790 census, Pennsylvania's delegation increased from 8 representatives to 13.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Candidates Ref={{Cite web |title=Wilkes University Elections Statistics Project |url=http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/rep/Congress%201792.pdf}}}}

|-

! rowspan=13 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|AL|X}}
{{Small|13 seats on a general ticket}}

| Thomas Fitzsimons
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|1|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=13 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Findley (Anti-Admin.) 8.21%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frederick Muhlenberg (Anti-Admin.) 8.01%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel Hiester (Anti-Admin.) 7.96%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Irvine (Anti-Admin.) 7.67%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John W. Kittera (Pro-Admin.) 7.39%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Hartley (Pro-Admin.) 7.06%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Muhlenberg (Anti-Admin.) 5.40%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Fitzsimons (Pro-Admin.) 4.46%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Andrew Gregg (Anti-Admin.) 4.30%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Armstrong (Pro-Admin.) 4.29%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Montgomery (Anti-Admin.) 4.22%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Smilie (Anti-Admin.) 4.15%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Scott (Pro-Admin.) 4.13%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Samuel Sitgreaves (Pro-Admin.) 3.86%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Jonathan D. Sergeant (Anti-Admin.) 3.74%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Barclay (Anti-Admin.) 3.70%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Charles Thomson (Anti-Admin.) 3.68%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}William Bingham (Pro-Admin.) 3.59%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Henry Wynkoop (Pro-Admin.) 3.55%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Israel Jacobs (Pro-Admin.) 0.65%

}}

|-

| Frederick Muhlenberg
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Israel Jacobs
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1791

| {{Party shading/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Pro-Administration hold.

|-

| Daniel Hiester
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|4|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| John W. Kittera
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Andrew Gregg
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| Thomas Hartley
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| William Findley
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|PA|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

|}

Rhode Island

{{Main|1792 United States House of Representatives election in Rhode Island}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Rhode Island}}

Rhode Island gained a second representative from the results of the 1790 census. Rhode Island did not divide itself into districts, but elected two at-large representatives.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! rowspan=2 | {{ushr|RI|AL|X}}
{{Small|2 seats elected at-large on a general ticket}}

| Benjamin Bourne

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Bourne (Pro-Admin.) 100%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Francis Malbone (Pro-Admin.){{efn| Numbers of votes missing or incomplete in source.}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Paul Mumford (Unknown){{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/5m60qt50t |access-date=September 23, 2020 |website=elections.lib.tufts.edu}}

}}

|-

| colspan=3 | None (new seat)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

|}

South Carolina

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from South Carolina}}

South Carolina gained one representative as a result of the 1790 census, increasing from 5 to 6.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead}}

|-

! rowspan=2 | {{ushr|South Carolina|1|X}}

| William L. Smith

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-Administration

| 1788

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William L. Smith (Pro-Admin.) 61.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Tudor Tucker (Anti-Admin.) 22.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Jacob Read (Pro-Admin.) 16.4%

}}

|-

| Thomas Tudor Tucker
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|SC|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-Administration

| 1788

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration loss.

|-

! {{ushr|South Carolina|2|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Hunter (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|South Carolina|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lemuel Benton (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|South Carolina|4|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Winn (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|South Carolina|5|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander Gillon (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|South Carolina|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Andrew Pickens (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}

}}

|}

Vermont

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Vermont}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Vermont}}

Vermont had no apportionment in the House of Representatives before 1790 census because it was not admitted to the Union until 1791. Vermont's election laws at the time required a majority to win election to the House of Representatives. If no candidate won a majority, a runoff election was held, which happened in the {{ushr|Vermont|1|C}}.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Candidates Ref={{Efn|name="m1" | Only candidates with at least 1% of the vote listed.}}}}

|-

! {{ushr|Vermont|1|X}}
{{Small|"Western district"}}

| Israel Smith

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=First ballot {{small|(January 7, 1793)}}|

| {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Israel Smith (Anti-Admin.) 44.2%

| {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Matthew Lyon (Anti-Admin.) 33.8%

| {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Isaac Tichenor (Pro-Admin.) 17.8%

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Hitchcock (Unknown) 4.2%}}

Second ballot {{Small|(March 20, 1793)}}{{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Israel Smith (Anti-Admin.) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Matthew Lyon (Anti-Admin.) 44.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Isaac Tichenor (Pro-Admin.) 4.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Hitchcock (Unknown) 0.6%
  • Others{{Efn|Four individuals received 1 vote each.}} 0.1%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Vermont|2|X}}
{{Small|"Eastern district"}}

| Nathaniel Niles

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nathaniel Niles (Anti-Admin.) 60.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Elijah Paine (Pro-Admin.) 14.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Stephen Jacob (Unknown) 7.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Paul Brigham (Anti-Admin.) 4.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Cutler (Unknown) 3.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Daniel Buck (Pro-Admin.) 3.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Isaac Tichenor (Pro-Admin.) 2.2%
  • Others 4.0%

}}

|}

Virginia

{{Main|1793 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Virginia}}

Virginia gained nine representatives from the 1790 census, and in addition, the old {{ushr|Virginia|2|C}} was lost after its territory became the new State of Kentucky. There were, therefore, ten new districts created for the 3rd Congress.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Candidates Ref={{Cite web|title=Virginia Elections Database » Virginia Election Results and Statistics|url=https://historical.elections.virginia.gov/|access-date=2024-09-06|website=Virginia Elections Database|language=en-US}}}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|1|X}}

| Alexander White

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Rutherford (Anti-Admin.) 56.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Smith (Anti-Admin.) 25.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Alexander White (Pro-Admin.) 17.6%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|2|X}}

| Andrew Moore
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Andrew Moore (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Neville (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}George Jackson (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jeremiah Jacobs (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William MacCleery (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|4|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.
Results subsequently challenged but upheld.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Francis Preston (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Abram Trigg (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|5|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | New seat.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Hancock (Pro-Admin.) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Charles Clay (Anti-Admin.) 34.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Calohill Minnis (Anti-Admin.) 5.5%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Isaac Coles (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|7|X}}

| Abraham B. Venable
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Abraham B. Venable (Anti-Admin.) 79.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Joseph Wyatt (Unknown) 12.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Thomas Scott (Pro-Admin.) 8.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}Tarlton Woodson (Pro-Admin.) 0.4%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|8|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Claiborne (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Richard Kennon (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jesse Brown (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}J. Nicholson (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|9|X}}

| William B. Giles

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1790

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William B. Giles (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Robert Bolling (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|10|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carter B. Harrison (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John H. Briggs (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|11|X}}

| Josiah Parker
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent re-elected as Pro-Administration.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Josiah Parker (Pro-Admin.){{Efn|name=Changed }}{{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Neirson (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|12|X}}

| John Page
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Page (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|13|X}}

| Samuel Griffin
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|10|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Incumbent re-elected as Pro-Administration.
Pro-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Griffin (Pro-Admin.){{Efn|name=Changed | Had been Anti-Administration in the previous election.}} 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|14|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Francis Walker (Anti-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|15|X}}

| James Madison
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | Anti-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Madison (Anti-Admin.) 64.7%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|16|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Anthony New (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}John Roane (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Francis Corbin (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|17|X}}

| Richard Bland Lee
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|VA|4|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Pro-Administration}} | Pro-
Administration

| 1789

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Pro-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Bland Lee (Pro-Admin.) 100%

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|18|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Nicholas (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Pickett (Unknown)

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Virginia|19|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Anti-Administration}} | New seat.
Anti-Administration gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Heath (Anti-Admin.){{Efn|name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Anti-Administration Party (US)}}Walter Jones (Anti-Admin.)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Francis L. Lee (Unknown)

}}

|}

See also

Notes

{{Notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825 |url=http://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:de.uscongress.1789 |access-date=January 17, 2015 |publisher=Tufts Digital Library, Tufts University |archive-date=January 29, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150129054451/http://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:de.uscongress.1789 |url-status=dead }}
  • {{Cite book |last=Dubin |first=Michael J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9ElyQgAACAAJ&q=United+States+Congressional+Elections,+1788-1997:+The+Official+Results |title=1788 United States Congressional Elections-1997: The Official Results of the Elections of the 1st Through 105th Congresses |date=March 1, 1998 |publisher=McFarland and Company |isbn=978-0786402830}}
  • {{Cite book |last=Martis |first=Kenneth C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q0hyQgAACAAJ&q=The+Historical+Atlas+of+Political+Parties+in+the+United+States+Congress,+1789-1989 |title=The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, 1789-1989 |date=January 1, 1989 |publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company |isbn=978-0029201701}}
  • {{Cite web |title=Party Divisions of the House of Representatives* 1789–Present |url=http://history.house.gov/Institution/Party-Divisions/Party-Divisions/ |access-date=January 21, 2015 |publisher=Office of the Historian, United States House of Representatives}}
  • {{Cite web|title=Mapping Early American Elections|url=https://earlyamericanelections.org/maps/|access-date=2024-09-06|publisher=Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University|year=2019|author=Mapping Early American Elections project team}}