Ohio's 19th congressional district
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Ohio's 19th congressional district was created following the 1830 census and was eliminated after the 2000 census.
From 1992-2002 it included all of Lake County together with a collection of Eastern suburbs of Cleveland. After 2002 it was replaced by the fourteenth district. [1]
[edit] List of Representatives
[edit] Election results
The following chart shows historic election results. Bold type indicates victor. Italic type indicates incumbent.
Year | Democratic | Republican | Other |
---|---|---|---|
1832 | |||
… | … | … | … |
1920 | James Kennedy: 25,250 | John G. Cooper: 60,147 | |
1922 | W. B. Kilpatrick: 27,836 | John G. Cooper: 40,492 | |
1924 | Phebe T. Sutliff: 21,926 | John G. Cooper: 67,581 | |
1926 | James Kennedy: 17,513 | John G. Cooper: 45,788 | |
1928 | Locke Miller: 40,948 | John G. Cooper: 89,731 | |
1930 | W. B. Kilpatrick: 40,960 | John G. Cooper: 53,996 | |
1932 | D. F. Dunlavy: 65,024 | John G. Cooper: 74,534 | John S. Ruth: 166 Harold G. Bickler: 37 |
1934 | Locke Miller: 52,023 | John G. Cooper: 56,200 | Harry K. Collins (S): 769 Joe Dallet (C): 769 |
1936 | Michael J. Kirwan: 93,636 | John G. Cooper: 65,926 | Joe Dallet (C): 756 |
1938 | Michael J. Kirwan: 76,268 | William P. Barnum: 69,214 | |
1940 | Michael J. Kirwan: 122,075 | Charles H. Anderson: 75,016 | |
1942 | Michael J. Kirwan: 60,248 | James T. Begg: 46,567 | |
1944 | Michael J. Kirwan: 120,191 | Herschel Hunt: 69,403 | |
1946 | Michael J. Kirwan: 88,872 | Norman W. Adams: 59,607 | |
1948 | Michael J. Kirwan: 134,408 | William Bacon: 63,079 | |
1950 | Michael J. Kirwan: 119,245 | Henry P. Kosling: 67,661 | |
1952 | Michael J. Kirwan: 91,074 | Allen Russell: 46,202 | |
1954 | Michael J. Kirwan: 81,304 | David S. Edwards: 33,352 | |
1956 | Michael J. Kirwan: 92,924 | Ralph E. Turner: 42,293 | |
1958 | Michael J. Kirwan: 93,660 | Loren E. Van Brocklin: 31,192 | |
1960 | Michael J. Kirwan: 102,874 | Paul E. Stevens: 46,537 | |
1962 | Michael J. Kirwan: 75,967 | William Vincent Williams: 46,200 | |
1964 | Michael J. Kirwan: 111,682 | Albert James: 34,654 | |
1966 | Michael J. Kirwan: 86,975 | Donald J. Lewis: 34,037 | |
1968 | Michael J. Kirwan: 101,813 | Donald J. Lewis: 44,363 | |
1970 | Charles J. Carney[2]: 73,222 | Margaret Dennison: 52,057 | |
1972 | Charles J. Carney: 109,979 | Normal M. Parr: 61,934 | |
1974 | Charles J. Carney: 97,709 | James L. Ripple: 36,649 | |
1976 | Charles J. Carney: 90,386 | Jack C. Hunter: 86,162 | Karl T. Untch: 1089 Kenneth Zurbrugg: 2,258 |
1978 | Charles J. Carney: 69,977 | Lyle Williams: 71,890 | |
1980 | Harry Meshel: 77,272 | Lyle Williams[3]: 107,032 | |
1982 | Edward F. Feighan: 111,760 | Richard G. Anter II: 72,682 | Kevin G. Killeen: 2,371 Thomas Pekarek (L): 2,844 |
1984 | Edward F. Feighan: 139,605 | Matthew J. Hatchadorian: 107,957 | Others: 5,277 |
1986 | Edward F. Feighan: 97,814 | Gary C. Suhadolnik: 80,743 | |
1988 | Edward F. Feighan: 168,065 | Noel F. Roberts: 70,359 | |
1990 | Edward F. Feighan: 132,951 | Susan M. Lawko: 72,315 | |
1992 | Eric D. Fingerhut: 138,465 | Robert A. Gardner: 124,606 | |
1994 | Eric D. Fingerhut: 89,701 | Steven C. LaTourette: 99,997 | Ronald E. Young: 11,364 Jerome A. Brentar: 5,180 |
1996 | Thomas J. Coyne Jr.: 101,152 | Steven C. LaTourette: 135,012 | Thomas A. Martin (N): 10,655 |
1998 | Elizabeth Kelley: 64,090 | Steven C. LaTourette: 126,786 | |
2000 | Dale Virgil Blanchard: 101,842 | Steven C. LaTourette: 206,639 | Sid Stone (L): 10,367 |
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
[edit] References
- ^ Almanac of American Politics 2002, p1237
- ^ Following the death of Kirwan in office in 1970, Carney was elected in a special election to fill out Kirwan's term.
- ^ Redistricting following the 1980 census moved Williams from the 19th district to the 17th district.
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