Ohio's 21st congressional district
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The 21st congressional district of Ohio was eliminated in the redistricting following the 1990 census.
[edit] Election results
The following chart shows historic election results. Bold type indicates victor. Italic type indicates incumbent.
Year | Democratic | Republican | Other |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | Louis Stokes*: 103,338 | Franklin H. Roski: 25,906 | |
1988 | Louis Stokes: 148,388 | Franklin H. Roski: 24,804 | |
1986 | Louis Stokes: 99,878 | Franklin H. Roski: 22,594 | |
1984 | Louis Stokes: 165,247 | Robert L. Woodall: 29,500 | |
1982 | Louis Stokes: 132,544 | Alan G. Shatteen: 21,332 | |
1980 | Louis Stokes: 83,188 | Robert L. Woodall: 11,103 | |
1978 | Louis Stokes: 58,934 | Bill Mack: 9,533 | |
1976 | Louis Stokes: 91,903 | Barbara Sparks: 12,434 | Anthony R. Curry: 5,289 |
1974 | Louis Stokes: 58,969 | Bill Mack: 12,986 | |
1972 | Louis Stokes: 99,190 | James D. Johnson: 13,861 | Joseph Piriacin (SL): 5,779 Cecil Lampkins: 3,509 |
1970 | Louis Stokes: 74,340 | Bill Mack: 21,440 | |
1968 | Louis Stokes: 85,509 | Charles P. Lucas: 28,931 | |
1966 | Charles A. Vanik*: 81,210 | Frederick M. Coleman: 18,205 | |
1964 | Charles A. Vanik: 113,157 | Eugene E. Smith: 12,416 | |
1962 | Charles A. Vanik: 79,514 | Leodis Harris: 20,027 | |
1960 | Charles A. Vanik: 103,460 | William O. Walker: 88,389 | |
1958 | Charles A. Vanik: 93,987 | Elmer L. Watson: 22,956 | |
1956 | Charles A. Vanik: 96,106 | Chales H. Loeb: 38,060 | |
1954 | Charles A. Vanik: 76,201 | Francis E. Young: 24,076 | |
1952 | Robert W. Crosser: 100,340 | Lawrence O. Payne: 45,896 | |
1950 | Robert W. Crosser: 66,341 | William Hodge: 21,588 | |
1948 | Robert W. Crosser: 72,417 | Harry W. Mitchell: 22,932 | |
1946 | Robert W. Crosser: 49,111 | James S. Hudee: 27,657 | |
1944 | Robert W. Crosser: 77,525 | Harry C. Gahn: 22,288 | |
1942 | Robert W. Crosser: 35,109 | William J. Rogers: 19,137 | Arnold S. Johnson: 744 |
1940 | Robert W. Crosser: 79,602 | J. E. Chizek: 23,658 | |
1938 | Robert W. Crosser: 53,180 | J. E. Chizek: 24,240 | |
1936 | Robert W. Crosser: 70,596 | Harry C. Gahn: 23,811 | |
1934 | Robert W. Crosser: 47,540 | Frank W. Sotak: 25,253 | E. C. Greenfield (C): 1,684 |
1932 | Robert W. Crosser: 49,436 | Gerard Pilliod: 25,527 | Joseph Schiffer (C): 672 Eugene F. Cheeks: 204 |
1930 | Robert W. Crosser: 30,722 | George H. Bender: 29,081 | Gustave F. Ebding: 96 |
1928 | Robert W. Crosser: 39,090 | Joseph F. Lange: 26,267 | |
1926 | Robert W. Crosser: 17,819 | Harry C. Gahn: 10,733 | |
1924 | Robert W. Crosser: 24,889 | Harry C. Gahn: 21,629 | John Brahtin (W): 272 |
1922 | Robert W. Crosser: 18,645 | Harry C. Gahn: 14,024 | Henry Kuhlman (S): 997 Frank Kalcec (SL): 185 |
1920 | John J. Babka: 18,252 | Harry C. Gahn: 27,127 | Henry Skinner: 558 |
- Redistricting following the 1990 census eliminated the 21st district and put Stokes in the 11th district. In 1992, Stokes won re-election from that district.
- In 1968, Vanik moved from the 21st district to the 22nd district, and won re-election from that district.
Ohio's congressional districts |
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AL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 (Territory) The At-large, 19th – 24th districts are obsolete. See also: Ohio's past & present Representatives, Senators, and Delegations All U.S. districts - Apportionment - Redistricting - Gerrymandering - Maps |