1804–05 United States House of Representatives elections#Indiana Territory

{{short description|House elections for the 9th U.S. Congress}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1804–05 United States House of Representatives elections

| country = United States

| flag_year = 1795

| type = legislative

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1802–03 United States House of Representatives elections

| previous_year = {{Nowrap|1802 & 1803}}

| next_election = 1806–07 United States House of Representatives elections

| next_year = {{Nowrap|1806 & 1807}}

| outgoing_members = 8th_United_States_Congress#House_of_Representatives_3

| elected_members = 9th United States Congress#House_of_Representatives_3

| seats_for_election = All 142 seats in the United States House of Representatives

| majority_seats = 72

| election_date = April 24, 1804 – August 5, 1805

| image_size = 160x180px

| party1 = Democratic-Republican Party

| image1 = NC-Congress-NathanielMacon.jpg

| leader1 = Nathaniel Macon

| leaders_seat1 = {{ushr|NC|6|T}}

| last_election1 = 103 seats

| seats1 = 114

| seat_change1 = {{increase}} 11

| popular_vote1 =

| percentage1 =

| swing1 =

| party2 = Federalist Party

| image2 = John Cotton Smith engraving.png

| leader2 = John Cotton Smith

| leaders_seat2 = {{ushr|CT|AL|T}}

| last_election2 = 39 seats

| seats2 = 28

| seat_change2 = {{decrease}} 11

| popular_vote2 =

| percentage2 =

| swing2 =

| title = Speaker

| before_election = Nathaniel Macon

| before_party = Democratic-Republican Party

| after_election = Nathaniel Macon

| after_party = Democratic-Republican Party

| map_caption = Results:
{{Legend0|#f2bfa6|Federalist hold}} {{legend0|#e37132|Federalist gain}}
{{Legend0|#adebb2ff|Democratic-Republican hold}} {{legend0|#008000ff|Democratic-Republican gain}}
{{Legend0|#11a194ff|Dissident Republican Gain}} {{Legend0|#b4b0b1ff|Undistricted}}

| map_size = 350px

| map_image = US House 1804.svg

}}

The 1804–05 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between April 24, 1804 (in New York), and August 5, 1805 (in Tennessee). Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 9th United States Congress convened on December 2, 1805. The elections occurred at the same time as President Thomas Jefferson's re-election. Elections were held for all 142 seats, representing 17 states.

Under Jefferson's popular administration, his party continued to gain seats in the House. Territorial acquisitions from the Louisiana Purchase and economic expansion gave voters a positive view of the Democratic-Republicans, whose majority, already commanding in the 8th Congress, now surpassed three-quarters of the total membership. Following this election, Federalists were able to secure few seats outside of New England and party legitimacy deteriorated as political thought turned away from Federalist ideals perceived to be elitist and anti-democratic.

Election summaries

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

|+ ↓

style="color:white"

| style="background:{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}}; width:80.28%" | 114

| style="background:{{party color|Federalist Party}}; width:19.72%" | 28

Democratic-Republican

| Federalist

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

! rowspan=2 | State

! rowspan=2 | Type

! rowspan=2 | Date

! rowspan=2 | Total
seats

! colspan=2 {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

! colspan=2 {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Seats

! {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Change

! {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Seats

! {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Change

New York

| Districts

| April 24–26, 1804

| 17

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 15

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}3

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}3

Kentucky

| Districts

| August 6, 1804

| 6

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 6

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

North Carolina

| Districts

| August 10, 1804

| 12

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 12

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}1

New Hampshire

| At-large

| August 27, 1804

| 5

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 5

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

Rhode Island

| At-large

| August 28, 1804

| 2

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

Vermont

| Districts

| September 4, 1804{{efn|Majority required for election, which was not met in 2 districts necessitating additional elections on December 18, 1804 and March 25, 1805}}

| 4

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}1

Connecticut

| At-large

| September 17, 1804

| 7

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 7

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

Maryland

| Districts

| October 1, 1804

| 9

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 7

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 2

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}1

Delaware

| At-large

| October 2, 1804

| 1

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{decrease}}1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{increase}}1

Georgia

| At-large

| October 2, 1804

| 4

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 4

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

South Carolina

| Districts

| October 8–9, 1804

| 8

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 8

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}2

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}2

Ohio

| At-large

| October 9, 1804

| 1

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

Pennsylvania

| Districts

| October 9, 1804

| 18

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 17

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{decrease}}1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{increase}}1

Massachusetts

| Districts

| November 5, 1804

| 17

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 10

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}3

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 7

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}3

New Jersey

| At-large

| November 6–7, 1804

| 6

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 6

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

colspan=8 | Late elections (after the March 4, 1805, beginning of the next Congress)
Virginia

| Districts

| April 1805

| 22

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 21

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}3

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 1

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}3

Tennessee

| Districts

| August 4–5, 1805

| 3

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 3

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{Steady}}

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 0

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{Steady}}

valign=top

! colspan=3 | Total

! 142

! {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | 114
{{Small|80.3%}}

! {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | {{increase}}11

! {{Party shading/Federalist}} | 28
{{Small|19.7%}}

! {{Party shading/Federalist}} | {{decrease}}11

{{bar box|title=House seats|titlebar=#ddd|width=600px|barwidth=650px|bars={{bar percent|Dem-Republican|{{party color|Democratic-Republican Party}}|80.28}}

{{bar percent|Federalist|{{party color|Federalist Party (US)}}|19.72}}}}

Special elections

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

There were special elections in 1804 and 1805 during the 8th United States Congress and 9th United States Congress.

Elections are sorted here by date then district.

= 8th Congress =

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Representative

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|NY|1|X}}

| John Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1799 New York's 1st congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned February 22, 1804.
New member elected April 24–26, 1804 and seated November 5, 1804.[http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/8.pdf 8th Congress membership roster] {{webarchive | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121213145153/http://artandhistory.house.gov/house_history/bioguide-front/8.pdf | date=December 13, 2012 }}{{cite book | title=United States Congressional Elections, 1788-1997: The Official Results | first=Michael J. | last=Dubin | publisher=McFarland and Company | year=1998}}
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was not elected to the next term on the same ballot; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Riker (Democratic-Republican) 36.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Eliphalet Wickes (Democratic-Republican) 36.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Joshua Smith (Federalist) 27.1%{{cite web | title= New York 1804 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1, Special | url= https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress1.special.1804 | publisher= Tufts University | work= Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series= A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | access-date= 2018-09-17 | archive-date= 2020-05-21 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20200521170935/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress1.special.1804 | url-status= dead }}

}}

{{ushr|MA|12|X}}

| Thomson J. Skinner

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1796 Massachusetts's 1st congressional district special election
1799 {{Small|(retired)}}
1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned August 10, 1804.
New member elected September 17, 1804 and seated November 5, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was not a candidate for the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Simon Larned (Democratic-Republican) 61.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Daniel Dewey (Federalist) 38.1%{{cite web | url=http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=729898 | title=MA District 12 (Berkshire) - Special Election | date=April 16, 2011 | access-date=September 17, 2018 | via=OurCampaigns.com | archive-date=September 18, 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180918054256/https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=729898 | url-status=live }}

}}

{{ushr|MD|4|X}}

| Daniel Hiester

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1788 (Penn.)
1796 {{Small|(resigned)}}
1801 (Md.)

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent died March 7, 1804.
New member elected October 1, 1804 and seated November 6, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was also elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Roger Nelson (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress4.special.1804 | title=Maryland 1804 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4, Special | access-date=September 17, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 30, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200530020641/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress4.special.1804 | url-status=dead }}

}}

{{ushr|VA|13|X}}

| John Johns Trigg

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent died May 17, 1804.
New member elected in October 1804 and seated November 5, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was later elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Christopher H. Clark (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested{{cite web | url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282455 | title=VA District 13 | date=April 9, 2006 | access-date=September 18, 2018 | via=OurCampaigns.com | archive-date=September 19, 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180919171737/https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282455 | url-status=live }}

}}

{{ushr|PA|10|X}}

| William Hoge

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned October 15, 1804.
New member elected November 2, 1804 to finish his brother's term and seated November 27, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was not a candidate to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Hoge (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name=Hoge | Note: Source mistakenly identifies Hoge as a Federalist.}} 52.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Aaron Lyle (Democratic-Republican) 47.9%{{cite web | url = http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/rep/Congress%201802.pdf | last = Cox | first = Harold | title = Pennsylvania Election Statistics: 1682-2006 | work = The Wilkes University Election Statistics Project | publisher = Wilkes University | access-date = 2018-09-17 | archive-date = 2021-01-25 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210125193448/http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/rep/Congress%201802.pdf | url-status = live }}

}}

{{ushr|VA|5|X}}

| Andrew Moore

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1789

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned to become U.S. Senator.
New member elected November 13, 1804 and seated December 4, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was later elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander Wilson (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested{{cite web | url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282446 | title=VA District 5 - Special Election | date=April 29, 2006 | access-date=September 18, 2018 | via=OurCampaigns.com | archive-date=September 18, 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180918231210/https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282446 | url-status=live }}

}}

{{ushr|NY|3|X}}

| Samuel L. Mitchill

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1800

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned November 22, 1804 to become U.S. Senator.
New member elected January 2–4, 1805 and seated February 14, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was also elected to the next term; see below.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Clinton (Democratic-Republican) 88.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Smith (Unknown) 5.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Woods (Unknown) 4.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Van Pelt (Unknown) 0.8%
  • Scattering 1.0%{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress2and3.special.1805 | title=New York 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, Districts 2 and 3, Special | access-date=September 18, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=April 6, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200406085945/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress2and3.special.1805 | url-status=dead }}

}}

= 9th Congress =

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Representative

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|NY|2|X}}

| Daniel D. Tompkins

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1804

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Representative-elect declined the seat to become associate justice of the New York Supreme Court.
New member elected September 11–13, 1804 and seated December 2, 1805.{{cite web | url=http://historycms.house.gov/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=40195 | title=9th Congress membership roster | access-date=September 17, 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180919085426/http://historycms.house.gov/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=40195 | archive-date=September 19, 2018 | url-status=dead }}
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Gurdon S. Mumford (Democratic-Republican) 84.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}George I. Warner (Unknown) 15.8%{{cite web | url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282503 | title=NY District 3 | date=April 9, 2006 | via=OurCampaigns.com | access-date=September 17, 2018 | archive-date=September 17, 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180917215347/https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=282503 | url-status=live }}, Note: Source incorrectly lists as "3rd district."

}}

{{ushr|NY|3|X}}

| Samuel L. Mitchill

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1800

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned November 22, 1804 to become U.S. Senator.
New member elected January 2–4, 1805 and seated December 2, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Winner was also elected to finish the previous term; see above.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} George Clinton (Democratic-Republican) 89.1%%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Smith (Unknown) 5.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}James Woods (Unknown) 4.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Van Pelt (Unknown) 0.3%
  • Scattering 0.5%{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress2and3.special2.1805 | title=New York 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, Districts 2 and 3, Special | access-date=September 18, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 21, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200521161835/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ny.uscongress2and3.special2.1805 | url-status=dead }}

}}

{{ushr|NC|5|X}}

| James Gillespie

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1793
1799 {{Small|(lost)}}
1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Representative-elect died January 5, 1805.
New member elected August 8, 1805 and seated December 2, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Kenan (Democratic-Republican) 65.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Benjamin Smith (Democratic-Republican){{efn | Benjamin Smith was also supported by the Federalists.{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:nc.uscongress5.specialelection.1805 | title=North Carolina 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, District 5, Special | access-date=September 19, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 28, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200528070732/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:nc.uscongress5.specialelection.1805 | url-status=dead }}}} 34.7%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|CT|AL|X}}
{{Small|2 seats on a general ticket}}

| Calvin Goddard

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election

| rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Both incumbents/representatives-elect resigned.
New members elected September 16, 1805 and seated December 2 and 10, 1805.{{efn | name="+" | Date given for the start of the term, of the person elected at the special election (source: 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.}}
Federalist holds.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Timothy Pitkin (Federalist)
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lewis B. Sturges (Federalist)
  • {{data missing|date=February 2020}}

}}

Roger Griswold

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1794

{{ushr|SC|8|X}}

| John B. Earle

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent/representative-elect resigned.
New member elected September 26–27, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elias Earle (Democratic-Republican)
  • {{data missing|date=February 2020}}

}}

{{ushr|DE|AL|X}}

| James A. Bayard

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1796

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Representative-elect declined the seat to become U.S. Senator.
New member elected October 1, 1805.
Federalist hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James M. Broom (Federalist) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}David Hall (Democratic-Republican) 46.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Isaac H. Starr (Democratic-Republican) 0.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Hugh W. Richie (Unknown) <0.1%{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:de.uscongress.1805 | title=Delaware 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, Special | access-date=September 19, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 24, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200524082020/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:de.uscongress.1805 | url-status=dead }}

}}

{{ushr|PA|4|X}}

| John A. Hanna

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1796

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Representative-elect died July 23, 1805.
New member elected October 8, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Whitehill (Democratic-Republican) 70.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James Duncan (Federalist) 29.3%{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:pa.uscongress4.specialelection.1805 | title=Pennsylvania 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4, Special | access-date=September 19, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 29, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200529230734/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:pa.uscongress4.specialelection.1805 | url-status=dead }}

}}

{{ushr|PA|11|X}}

| John B. C. Lucas

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Representative-elect declined the seat.
New member elected October 8, 1805 and seated December 2, 1805.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Smith (Democratic-Republican) 52.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James O'Hara (Federalist) 35.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}Nathaniel Irish (Quid) 11.2%{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:pa.uscongress11.specialelection.1805 | title=Pennsylvania 1805 U.S. House of Representatives, District 11, Special | access-date=September 19, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 22, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200522172429/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:pa.uscongress11.specialelection.1805 | url-status=dead }}

}}

{{ushr|Indiana Territory|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (district created).

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | New delegate elected December 12, 1805.{{cite web | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:in.territory.delegate.3.1805 | title=Indiana 1805 U.S. House of Representatives (Territorial Delegate), Ballot 3 | access-date=September 23, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=May 20, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200520205650/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:in.territory.delegate.3.1805 | url-status=dead }}
Federalist gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=First ballot|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 5 votes

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 5 votes

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Jesse B. Thomas (Unknown) 1 vote}}

{{collapsible list|title=Second ballot|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 5 votes

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 5 votes

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Shadrach Bond (Unknown) 1 vote}}

Third ballot {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 7 votes
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 4 votes

}}

Connecticut

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in Connecticut}}

{{See also|1805 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election|List of United States representatives from Connecticut}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

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

| Calvin Goddard

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected but declined to serve, leading to a special election, see above.

| rowspan=7 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Calvin Goddard (Federalist) 15.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel W. Dana (Federalist) 14.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Davenport (Federalist) 14.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Roger Griswold (Federalist) 14.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Tallmadge (Federalist) 13.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Cotton Smith (Federalist) 11.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jonathan O. Moseley (Federalist) 10.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Timothy Pitkin (Federalist) 3.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Lewis B. Sturges (Federalist) 0.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Theodore Dwight (Federalist) 0.5%
  • Others 1.4%

}}

Samuel W. Dana

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1796

| Incumbent re-elected.

John Davenport

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1798

| Incumbent re-elected.

Roger Griswold

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1794

| Incumbent re-elected but declined to serve, leading to a special election, see above.

Benjamin Tallmadge

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

John Cotton Smith

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

Simeon Baldwin

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803 Connecticut's at-large congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
New member elected.
Federalist hold.

Delaware

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in Delaware}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Delaware|1805 Delaware's at-large congressional district special election}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|DE|AL|X}}

| Caesar A. Rodney

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Federalist gain.
Successor declined to serve, leading to a special election; see above.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James A. Bayard (Federalist) 52.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Caesar A. Rodney (Democratic-Republican) 47.9%

}}

Georgia

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in Georgia}}

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

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan=4 | {{ushr|Georgia|AL|X}}
{{Small|4 seats on a general ticket}}

| Peter Early

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=4 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Early (Democratic-Republican) 24.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David Meriwether (Democratic-Republican) 22.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Bryan (Democratic-Republican) 21.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cowles Mead (Democratic-Republican) 10.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Thomas Spalding (Democratic-Republican) 10.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Carr (Unknown) 6.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Obadiah Jones (Unknown) 2.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Thomas U. P. Charlton (Democratic-Republican) 1.2%

}}

David Meriwether

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

Joseph Bryan

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

Samuel Hammond

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Election was later contested and a new successor named.

Indiana Territory

Kentucky

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky}}

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

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|KY|1|X}}

| Matthew Lyon

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1796–1797 United States House of Representatives elections in Vermont
1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Matthew Lyon (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr" | Source does not give numbers of votes or has incomplete data.}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Samuel Hopkins (Unknown)

}}

{{ushr|KY|2|X}}

| John Boyle

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John Boyle (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|KY|3|X}}

| Matthew Walton

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Matthew Walton (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|KY|4|X}}

| Thomas Sandford

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Thomas Sandford (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|KY|5|X}}

| John Fowler

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John Fowler (Democratic-Republican) 61.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Benjamin Howard (Democratic-Republican) 38.1%

}}

{{ushr|KY|6|X}}

| George M. Bedinger

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} George M. Bedinger (Democratic-Republican) 70.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Robert H. Grayson (Democratic-Republican) 17.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Philemon Thomas (Democratic-Republican) 12.3%

}}

Maryland

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in Maryland}}

{{See also|1804 Maryland's 4th congressional district special election|List of United States representatives from Maryland}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{efn | name="m1" | Unless otherwise noted, only candidates with at least 1% of the vote listed.}}

{{ushr|MD|1|X}}

| John Campbell

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Campbell (Federalist) 99.6%

}}

{{ushr|MD|2|X}}

| Walter Bowie

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1802 Maryland's 2nd congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leonard Covington (Democratic-Republican) 52.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Archibald Van Horne (Democratic-Republican) 46.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Clement Hill (Federalist) 1.1%

}}

{{ushr|MD|3|X}}

| Thomas Plater

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Patrick Magruder (Democratic-Republican) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas Plater (Federalist) 44.0%

}}

{{ushr|MD|4|X}}

| Daniel Hiester

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1788 United States House of Representatives election in Pennsylvania
1796 {{Small|(resigned)}}
1801 United States House of Representatives elections in Maryland

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent died March 7, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.
Successor was also elected on the same day to finish the current term; see above.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Roger Nelson (Democratic-Republican) 98.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Eli Williams (Federalist) 0.8%
  • Scattering 0.7%{{cite web | title=Maryland 1804 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4 | url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress4.1804 | access-date=September 21, 2018 | publisher=Tufts University | work=Tufts Digital Collations and Archives | series=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825 | archive-date=June 5, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200605085339/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:md.uscongress4.1804 | url-status=dead }}

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|MD|5|X}}
{{Small|Plural district with 2 seats}}

| Nicholas R. Moore

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nicholas R. Moore (Democratic-Republican) 50.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William McCreery (Democratic-Republican) 46.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Robert Goodloe Harper (Federalist) 1.8%
  • Others 1.0%

}}

William McCreery

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|MD|6|X}}

| John Archer

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Archer (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|MD|7|X}}

| Joseph H. Nicholson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1798 Maryland's 7th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph H. Nicholson (Democratic-Republican) 99.6%

}}

{{ushr|MD|8|X}}

| John Dennis

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1796

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Federalist hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Goldsborough (Federalist) 56.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Henry Waggaman (Democratic-Republican) 43.4%

}}

Massachusetts

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts}}

{{See also|1804 Massachusetts's 12th congressional district special election|List of United States representatives from Massachusetts}}

The majority requirement was met in all 17 districts in the 1804 elections.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{efn | name="m1"}}

{{ushr|MA|1|X}}
{{Small|"Suffolk district"}}

| William Eustis

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1801

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

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Josiah Quincy (Federalist) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}William Eustis (Democratic-Republican) 49.0%

}}

{{ushr|MA|2|X}}
{{Small|"Essex South district"}}

| Jacob Crowninshield

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jacob Crowninshield (Democratic-Republican) 58.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Nathan Read (Federalist) 41.2%

}}

{{ushr|MA|3|X}}
{{Small|"Essex North district"}}

| Manasseh Cutler

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Federalist hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jeremiah Nelson (Federalist) 56.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Thomas Kitteridge (Democratic-Republican) 43.2%

}}

{{ushr|MA|4|X}}
{{Small|"Middlesex district"}}

| Joseph Bradley Varnum

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1794

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Bradley Varnum (Democratic-Republican) 71.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Timothy Bigelow (Federalist) 28.0%

}}

{{ushr|MA|5|X}}
{{Small|"Hampshire South district"}}

| Thomas Dwight

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Federalist hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Ely (Federalist) 62.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Samuel Fowler (Democratic-Republican) 36.7%

}}

{{ushr|MA|6|X}}
{{Small|"Hampshire North district"}}

| Samuel Taggart

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Taggart (Federalist) 69.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Solomon Snead (Democratic-Republican) 30.5%

}}

{{ushr|MA|7|X}}
{{Small|"Plymouth district"}}

| Nahum Mitchell

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Barker (Democratic-Republican) 60.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Nahum Mitchell (Federalist) 38.3%
  • Others 1.3%

}}

{{ushr|MA|8|X}}
{{Small|"Barnstable district"}}

| Lemuel Williams

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1798

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Isaiah L. Green (Democratic-Republican) 60.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Lemuel Williams (Federalist) 39.4%

}}

{{ushr|MA|9|X}}
{{Small|"Bristol district"}}

| Phanuel Bishop

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1798

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Phanuel Bishop (Democratic-Republican) 62.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Nicholas Tillinghast (Federalist) 30.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Josiah Deane (Democratic-Republican) 3.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}John Bowers (Federalist) 3.4%

}}

{{ushr|MA|10|X}}
{{Small|"Worcester South district"}}

| Seth Hastings

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801 Massachusetts's 4th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Seth Hastings (Federalist) 51.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Edward Bangs (Democratic-Republican) 48.8%

}}

{{ushr|MA|11|X}}
{{Small|"Worcester North district"}}

| William Stedman

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Stedman (Federalist) 60.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}John Whiting (Democratic-Republican) 39.0%

}}

{{ushr|MA|12|X}}
{{Small|"Berkshire district"}}

| Simon Larned

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1804 Massachusetts's 12th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Barnabas Bidwell (Democratic-Republican) 59.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Daniel Dewey (Federalist) 40.3%

}}

{{ushr|MA|13|X}}
{{Small|"Norfolk district"}}

| Ebenezer Seaver

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ebenezer Seaver (Democratic-Republican) 64.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas B. Adams (Federalist) 35.0%

}}

{{ushr|MA|14|X}}
{{Small|District of Maine
"York district"}}

| Richard Cutts

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Cutts (Democratic-Republican) 51.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Joseph Leland (Federalist) 31.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Daniel Cleaves (Democratic-Republican) 16.7%

}}

{{ushr|MA|15|X}}
{{Small|District of Maine
"Cumberland district"}}

| Peleg Wadsworth

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1792

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peleg Wadsworth (Federalist) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}William Widgery (Democratic-Republican) 19.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Isaac Parsons (Democratic-Republican) 17.1%

}}

{{ushr|MA|16|X}}
{{Small|District of Maine
"Lincoln district"}}

| Samuel Thatcher

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1801–1802 Massachusetts's 12th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Orchard Cook (Democratic-Republican) 54.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Samuel Thatcher (Federalist) 45.4%

}}

{{ushr|MA|17|X}}
{{Small|District of Maine
"Kennebec district"}}

| Phineas Bruce

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Chandler (Democratic-Republican) 64.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Whitwell (Federalist) 35.5%

}}

Mississippi Territory

New Hampshire

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in New Hampshire}}

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

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan=5 | {{ushr|NH|AL|X}}
{{Small|5 seats on a general ticket}}

| Silas Betton

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=5 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Tenney (Federalist) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David Hough (Federalist) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas W. Thompson (Federalist) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Silas Betton (Federalist) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Caleb Ellis (Federalist) 10.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Nahum Parker (Democratic-Republican) 9.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Ezra Bartlett (Democratic-Republican) 9.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Thomas Cogswell (Democratic-Republican) 9.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Clement Storer (Democratic-Republican) 9.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Jedediah K. Smith (Democratic-Republican) 9.6%

}}

Samuel Hunt

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Federalist hold.

Samuel Tenney

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

David Hough

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

Clifton Clagett

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Federalist/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Federalist hold.

New Jersey

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in New Jersey}}

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

The Federalist ticket was announced only a week before the election, with no active campaigning.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan=6 | {{ushr|NJ|AL|X}}
{{Small|6 seats on a general ticket}}

| Adam Boyd

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| rowspan=6 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry Southard (Democratic-Republican) 16.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ebenezer Elmer (Democratic-Republican) 16.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Lambert (Democratic-Republican) 16.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Helms (Democratic-Republican) 16.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Sloan (Democratic-Republican) 16.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ezra Darby (Democratic-Republican) 16.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Aaron Ogden (Federalist) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Peter DeVroom (Federalist) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Franklin Davenport (Federalist) 0.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James H. Imlay (Federalist) 0.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Lambert Cadwalader (Federalist) 0.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Colfax (Federalist) 0.1%

}}

Ebenezer Elmer

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

William Helms

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

James Mott

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

Henry Southard

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

James Sloan

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

New York

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in New York}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New York|1804 New York's 1st congressional district special election| 1804 New York's 2nd and 3rd congressional districts special election|1805 New York's 2nd and 3rd congressional districts special election}}

New York held elections for the 9th Congress on April 24–26, 1804. For this year and the next election year, the 2nd and 3rd districts had combined returns, effectively a plural district with 2 seats, though still numbered as separate districts. At the time, District 2 consisted of only part of New York County, while District 3 consisted of the remainder of New York County plus Kings and Richmond Counties. By consolidating the two, it ensured that New York County would be combined into a single district.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

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

| John Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1799 New York's 1st congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned February 22, 1804.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Eliphalet Wickes (Democratic-Republican) 35.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Samuel Riker (Democratic-Republican) 35.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Joshua Smith (Federalist) 28.6%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|New York|2|X}}
and
{{ushr|New York|3|X}}
{{Small|Joint ticket}}

| Samuel L. Mitchill

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected but later resigned to become a U.S. Senator, triggering a special election; see above.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel L. Mitchill (Democratic-Republican) 27.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel D. Tompkins (Democratic-Republican) 27.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Nicholas Fish (Federalist) 22.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Wynandt Van Zandt (Federalist) 22.2%

}}

Joshua Sands

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
New member elected but declined the seat to become associate justice of the state supreme court.
Democratic-Republican gain.

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

| Philip Van Cortlandt

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1793

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Philip Van Cortlandt (Democratic-Republican) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}John Herring (Democratic-Republican) 35.2%

}}

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

| Andrew McCord

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Blake Jr. (Democratic-Republican) 63.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}David M. Westcott (Federalist) 36.9%

}}

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

| Daniel C. Verplanck

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803 New York's 6th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel C. Verplanck (Democratic-Republican) 58.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Akin (Federalist) 42.0%

}}

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

| Josiah Hasbrouck

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803 New York's 7th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Martin G. Schuneman (Democratic-Republican) 60.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Gerrit Abeel (Federalist) 40.0%

}}

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

| Henry W. Livingston

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

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

| Killian Van Rensselaer

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Killian Van Rensselaer (Federalist) 56.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}David McCarty (Democratic-Republican) 43.6%

}}

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

| George Tibbits

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Josiah Masters (Democratic-Republican) 55.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Jonathan Brown (Federalist) 44.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|11|X}}

| Beriah Palmer

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Sailly (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|New York|12|X}}

| David Thomas

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David Thomas (Democratic-Republican) 70.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Reuben Skinner (Federalist) 29.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|13|X}}

| Thomas Sammons

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Sammons (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|New York|14|X}}

| Erastus Root

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Russell (Democratic-Republican) 85.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Gilbert (Federalist) 6.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Solomon Martin (Federalist) 3.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Erastus Root (Democratic-Republican) 3.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas R. Gold (Federalist) 1.0%

}}

{{ushr|New York|15|X}}

| Gaylord Griswold

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nathan Williams (Democratic-Republican) 57.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas R. Gold (Federalist) 42.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|16|X}}

| John Paterson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Uri Tracy (Democratic-Republican) 62.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Edward Edwards (Federalist) 37.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|17|X}}

| Oliver Phelps

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Silas Halsey (Democratic-Republican) 40.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Nathaniel W. Howell (Federalist) 37.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Joseph Grover (Democratic-Republican) 11.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Peter Hughes (Democratic-Republican) 10.8%

}}

North Carolina

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Carolina|1805 North Carolina's 5th congressional district special election}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{efn | name="m1"}}

{{ushr|NC|1|X}}

| Thomas Wynns

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802 (special)

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Wynns (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas Harvey (Unknown)

}}

{{ushr|NC|2|X}}

| Willis Alston

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1798

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Willis Alston (Democratic-Republican) 66.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}John Binford (Federalist) 20.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William R. Davie (Federalist) 12.7%

}}

{{ushr|NC|3|X}}

| William Kennedy

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Blount (Democratic-Republican) 51.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}William Kennedy (Democratic-Republican) 48.6%

}}

{{ushr|NC|4|X}}

| William Blackledge

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Blackledge (Democratic-Republican) 96.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}John Stanly (Federalist) 3.4%

}}

{{ushr|NC|5|X}}

| James Gillespie

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1793
1803

| Incumbent re-elected.
Gillespie died January 5, 1805, triggering a special election.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Gillespie (Democratic-Republican) 52.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Smith (Federalist) 40.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Samuel Ashe (Democratic-Republican) 7.3%

}}

{{ushr|NC|6|X}}

| Nathaniel Macon

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nathaniel Macon (Democratic-Republican) 99.9%

}}

{{ushr|NC|7|X}}

| Samuel D. Purviance

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Duncan McFarlan (Democratic-Republican) 36.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Joseph Pickett (Federalist) 31.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Martin (Federalist) 31.1%

}}

{{ushr|NC|8|X}}

| Richard Stanford

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1796

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Stanford (Democratic-Republican)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Duncan Cameron (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Archibald Murphey (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Hinton Jr. (Unknown){{efn | Source does not give complete results, but partial results suggest a very large majority}}

}}

{{ushr|NC|9|X}}

| Marmaduke Williams

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Marmaduke Williams (Democratic-Republican) 98.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Theophilus Lacey (Democratic-Republican) 1.0%

}}

{{ushr|NC|10|X}}

| Nathaniel Alexander

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nathaniel Alexander (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}

}}

{{ushr|NC|11|X}}

| James Holland

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Holland (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|NC|12|X}}

| Joseph Winston

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Winston (Democratic-Republican) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Meshack Franklin (Democratic-Republican) 43.0%

}}

Ohio

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in Ohio}}

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

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|OH|AL|X}}

| Jeremiah Morrow

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jeremiah Morrow (Democratic-Republican) 70.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Elias Langham (Federalist) 29.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Rufus Putnam (Unknown) 0.4%

}}

Pennsylvania

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in Pennsylvania}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|1804 Pennsylvania's 10th congressional district special election|1805 Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district special election|1805 Pennsylvania's 11th congressional district special election}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{Cite web |url=http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/rep/Congress%201804.pdf |title=Wilkes University Elections Statistics Project |access-date=2012-11-25 |archive-date=2016-03-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304041238/http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/rep/Congress%201804.pdf |url-status=live }}

rowspan=3 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|X}}
{{Small|Plural district with 3 seats}}

| Joseph Clay

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=3 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Clay (Democratic-Republican) 33.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jacob Richards (Democratic-Republican) 31.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Michael Leib (Democratic-Republican) 18.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Penrose (Federalist) 16.7%

}}

Jacob Richards

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

Michael Leib

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1798

| Incumbent re-elected.

rowspan=3 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|X}}
{{Small|Plural district with 3 seats}}

| Robert Brown

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1798 Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=3 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Pugh (Democratic-Republican) 32.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frederick Conrad (Democratic-Republican) 31.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Brown (Democratic-Republican) 21.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}John Ross (Quid) 13.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}Samuel Preston (Quid) 1.3%

}}

Frederick Conrad

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

Isaac Van Horne

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1801 Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

rowspan=3 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|X}}
{{Small|Plural district with 3 seats}}

| Isaac Anderson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=3 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Christian Lower (Democratic-Republican) 33.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Whitehill (Democratic-Republican) 23.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Isaac Anderson (Democratic-Republican) 22.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas Boude (Federalist) 10.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Isaac Wayne (Federalist) 10.3%

}}

Joseph Hiester

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797 Pennsylvania's 5th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

John Whitehill

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|X}}
{{Small|Plural district with 2 seats}}

| John A. Hanna

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1796

| Incumbent re-elected, but died July 23, 1805

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David Bard (Democratic-Republican) 34.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John A. Hanna (Democratic-Republican) 31.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Oliver Pollock (Democratic-Republican) 18.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Robert Mitchell (Democratic-Republican) 16.1%

}}

David Bard

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|X}}

| Andrew Gregg

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1791

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Andrew Gregg (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|X}}

| John Stewart

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

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

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Kelly (Federalist) 58.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}John Stewart (Democratic-Republican) 41.5%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|X}}

| John Rea

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Rea (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|X}}

| William Findley

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Findley (Democratic-Republican) 64.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}John Brandon (Federalist) 35.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|X}}

| John Smilie

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1792
1794 {{Small|(retired)}}
1798

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Smilie (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|X}}

| William Hoge

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1801 Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Hamilton (Democratic-Republican)
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}John Israel (Federalist){{efn | Source did not have returns for Israel.}}

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|X}}

| John Lucas

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected, but resigned before the start of the Congress.
Successor elected in a special election.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Lucas (Democratic-Republican) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James O'Hara (Federalist) 35.2%

}}

Rhode Island

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives election in Rhode Island}}

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

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{efn | name="m1"}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|RI|AL|X}}
{{Small|2 seats on a general ticket}}

| Nehemiah Knight

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Nehemiah Knight (Democratic-Republican) 49.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Stanton Jr. (Democratic-Republican) 49.5%

}}

Joseph Stanton Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

South Carolina

{{Main|1804 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina}}

{{See also|1805 South Carolina's 8th congressional district special election|List of United States representatives from South Carolina}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|SC|1|X}}
{{Small|"Charleston district"}}

| Thomas Lowndes

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1800

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Robert Marion (Democratic-Republican) 60.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas L. Smith (Federalist) 37.0%
  • Scattering 2.4%

}}

{{ushr|SC|2|X}}
{{Small|"Beaufort and Edgefield district"}}

| William Butler Sr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} William Butler Sr. (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|SC|3|X}}
{{Small|"Georgetown district"}}

| Benjamin Huger

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1798

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} David R. Williams (Democratic-Republican) 58.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Robert Witherspoon (Democratic-Republican) 29.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Joseph Blyth (Democratic-Republican) 13.0%

}}

{{ushr|SC|4|X}}
{{Small|"Orangeburgh district"}}

| Wade Hampton

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} O'Brien Smith (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}John Taylor (Democratic-Republican)

}}

{{ushr|SC|5|X}}
{{Small|"Sumter district"}}

| Richard Winn

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802 (special)

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Richard Winn (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Kershaw (Unknown)

}}

{{ushr|SC|6|X}}
{{Small|"Abbeville district"}}

| Levi Casey

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Levi Casey (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|SC|7|X}}
{{Small|"Chester district"}}

| Thomas Moore

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1800

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Thomas Moore (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|SC|8|X}}
{{Small|"Pendleton district"}}

| John B. Earle

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected but resigned March 3, 1805, triggering a special election.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John B. Earle (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

Tennessee

{{Main|1805 United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee}}

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

Beginning with the 9th Congress, Tennessee was divided into 3 districts.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|TN|1|X}}
{{Small|"Washington district"}}

| John Rhea
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|TN|AL|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Rhea (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|TN|2|X}}
{{Small|"Hamilton district"}}

| George W. Campbell
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|TN|AL|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George W. Campbell (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|TN|3|X}}
{{Small|"Mero district"}}

| William Dickson
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|TN|AL|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Dickson (Democratic-Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

Vermont

{{Main|1804–1805 United States House of Representatives elections in Vermont}}

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

Vermont required a majority for election, which frequently mandated runoff elections. The {{ushr|VT|2|2nd}}, and {{ushr|VT|3|3rd}} districts both required second elections in this election cycle, and districts both required second elections in this election cyclethe 3rd district required a third election.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates{{efn|name="m1"}}

{{ushr|VT|1|X}}
{{Small|"Southwestern district"}}

| Gideon Olin

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gideon Olin (Democratic-Republican) 56.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Jonas Galusha (Democratic-Republican) 24.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Chauncey Langdon (Federalist) 18.6%
  • Others 1.4%

}}

{{ushr|VT|2|X}}
{{Small|"Southeastern district"}}

| James Elliot

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=First ballot {{Small|(September 4, 1804)}}|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James Elliot (Federalist) 41.9%

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Samuel Fletcher (Federalist) 15.6%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Mark Richards (Democratic-Republican) 15.5%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Pascal P. Enos (Democratic-Republican) 12.1%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Aaron Leland (Democratic-Republican) 4.3%

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Lewis R. Morris (Federalist) 3.1%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Elias Keyes (Democratic-Republican) 2.9%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Paul Brigham (Democratic-Republican) 1.4%

| Others 3.1%}}

Second ballot {{Small|(December 18, 1804)}}
{{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Elliot (Federalist) 62.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Mark Richards (Democratic-Republican) 36.4%
  • Others 1.6%

}}

{{ushr|VT|3|X}}
{{Small|"Northeastern district"}}

| William Chamberlain

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=First ballot {{Small|(September 4, 1804)}}|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Chamberlain (Federalist) 48.0%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}James Fisk (Democratic-Republican) 38.4%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Nathaniel Niles (Democratic-Republican) 9.9%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Samuel C. Crafts (Democratic-Republican) 2.6%

| Others 1.2%}}

{{collapsible list|title=Second ballot {{Small|(December 18, 1804)}}|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Chamberlain (Federalist) 49.3%

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}James Fisk (Democratic-Republican) 49.1%

| Others 1.6%}}

Third ballot {{Small|(March 25, 1805)}} {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}{{Aye}} James Fisk (Democratic-Republican) 56.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Chamberlain (Federalist) 42.7%
  • Others 1.2%

}}

{{ushr|VT|4|X}}
{{Small|"Northwestern district"}}

| Martin Chittenden

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1802

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Martin Chittenden (Federalist) 50.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party}}Ezra Butler (Democratic-Republican) 46.7%
  • Others 3.0%

}}

Virginia

{{Main|1805 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia}}

{{See also|1804 Virginia's 5th congressional district special election|1804 Virginia's 13th congressional district special election|List of United States representatives from Virginia}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|VA|1|X}}

| John G. Jackson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John G. Jackson (Democratic-Republican) 57.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas Wilson (Federalist) 42.8%

}}

{{ushr|VA|2|X}}

| James Stephenson

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John Morrow (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}James Stephenson (Federalist)

}}

{{ushr|VA|3|X}}

| John Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John Smith (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|VA|4|X}}

| David Holmes

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} David Holmes (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|VA|5|X}}

| Alexander Wilson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1804 Virginia's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Alexander Wilson (Democratic-Republican) 60.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}Robert Bailey (D-R Quid) 39.4%

}}

{{ushr|VA|6|X}}

| Abram Trigg

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Abram Trigg (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|VA|7|X}}

| Joseph Lewis Jr.

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Lewis Jr. (Federalist) 54.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}William Elzey (Democratic-Republican) 45.7%

}}

{{ushr|VA|8|X}}

| Walter Jones

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Walter Jones (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Henry Lee (Federalist)

}}

{{ushr|VA|9|X}}

| Philip R. Thompson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1793

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Philip R. Thompson (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|VA|10|X}}

| John Dawson

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dawson (Democratic-Republican) 66.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}James Barbour (D-R Quid) 33.8%

}}

{{ushr|VA|11|X}}

| Anthony New

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1793

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} James M. Garnett (Democratic-Republican){{efn| name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Carter Braxton (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}John Roane (Democratic-Republican)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Smith (Unknown)
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Archibald Ritchie (Unknown)

}}

{{ushr|VA|12|X}}

| Thomas Griffin

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | Federalist

| 1803

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic-Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Burwell Bassett (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Thomas Griffin (Federalist)

}}

{{ushr|VA|13|X}}

| Christopher H. Clark

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1804 Virginia's 13th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|VA|14|X}}

| Matthew Clay

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1797

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Matthew Clay (Democratic-Republican) 88.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}William Lewis (Federalist) 11.1%

}}

{{ushr|VA|15|X}}

| John Randolph

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1799

| {{Party shading/Tertium quid}} | Incumbent re-elected as a {{nowrap|D-R}} Quid.
D-R Quid gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Tertium quids}}{{Aye}} John Randolph (D-R Quid) 100%

}}

{{ushr|VA|16|X}}

| John W. Eppes

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John W. Eppes (Democratic-Republican) 100%

}}

{{ushr|VA|17|X}}

| Thomas Claiborne

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1793
1801

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} John Claiborne (Democratic-Republican){{efn | name="nr"}}
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}Mark Alexander (Democratic-Republican)

}}

{{ushr|VA|18|X}}

| Peterson Goodwyn

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Peterson Goodwyn (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|VA|19|X}}

| Edwin Gray

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1799

| {{Party shading/Tertium quid}} | Incumbent re-elected as a {{nowrap|D-R}} Quid.
D-R Quid gain.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Tertium quids}}{{Aye}} Edwin Gray (D-R Quid) 100%

{{ushr|VA|20|X}}

| Thomas Newton Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1799

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Thomas Newton Jr. (Democratic-Republican) 100%

{{ushr|VA|21|X}}

| Thomas M. Randolph

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican}}{{Aye}} Thomas M. Randolph (Democratic-Republican) 63.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Old Republican Party}}Walter Leake (D-R Quid) 36.3%

}}

{{ushr|VA|22|X}}

| John Clopton

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-Republican

| 1801

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Clopton (Democratic-Republican) 100%

Non-voting delegates

{{See also|Delegate (United States Congress)}}

There were three territories with non-voting delegates in the 9th Congress, one of which (the Orleans Territory) did not send its first representative until 1806. The delegates were elected by the territorial legislatures, votes here are the number of members of the territorial legislatures voting for each candidate.

In the Mississippi Territory, the territorial legislature was locked. The first vote given above was on the 7th ballot, after which point the territorial legislature adjourned, the second vote was at a later session of the territorial legislature.

{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Delegate=Yes}}

|-

! {{ushr|Indiana Territory|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Federalist}} | New delegate elected September 11, 1805.
Federalist gain.
New delegate seated December 12, 1805.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=First ballot|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 5

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 5

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}Jesse B. Thomas (Democratic-Republican) 1

}}

{{collapsible list|title=Second ballot|

| {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 5

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 5

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Shadrach Bond (Unknown) 1

}}

Third ballot {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Federalist Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Benjamin Parke (Federalist) 7
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Thomas J. Davis (Unknown) 4{{Cite web|url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/fq977v358|title=A New Nation Votes|access-date=2020-09-16|archive-date=2020-11-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201128221305/https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/fq977v358|url-status=live}}

}}

|-

! {{ushr|Mississippi Territory|AL|X}}

| William Lattimore

| {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} | Democratic-
Republican

| 1803

| Incumbent re-elected on an unknown date in 1805.

| nowrap | {{collapsible list|title=Seventh ballot|

| {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}William Lattimore (Democratic-Republican) 5

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Cato West (Unknown) 5

| {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}William Gordon Freeman (Unknown) 4}}

Eventual decision:
{{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic-Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Lattimore (Democratic-Republican) 10
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}Cato West (Unknown) 2
  • {{Party stripe|Unknown Party (US)}}John Ellis (Unknown) 1{{Cite web |title=A New Nation Votes |url=https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:ms.territorydelegate.1805 |access-date=December 11, 2020 |website=elections.lib.tufts.edu }}{{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

}}

|}

See also

Notes

{{Notelist}}

{{Reflist|group="Note"}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite web |url=http://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/tufts:de.uscongress.1789 |title=A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825 |publisher=Tufts Digital Library, Tufts University |access-date=January 17, 2015 |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 | first=Michael J. |last=Dubin | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9ElyQgAACAAJ&q=United+States+Congressional+Elections,+1788-1997:+The+Official+Results | title=United States Congressional Elections, 1788-1997: The Official Results of the Elections of the 1st Through 105th Congresses | publisher=McFarland and Company | date=March 1, 1998 |isbn=978-0786402830}}
  • {{cite book | first=Kenneth C. |last=Martis | 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 | publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company | date=January 1, 1989 |isbn=978-0029201701}}
  • {{cite web | url=http://history.house.gov/Institution/Party-Divisions/Party-Divisions/ |title=Party Divisions of the House of Representatives* 1789–Present |publisher=Office of the Historian, United States House of Representatives |access-date=January 21, 2015}}
  • {{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}}