2. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Chesnut Ward
3. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Dock Ward
4. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Locust Ward
5. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Lower Delaware Ward
6. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Middle Ward
7. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, New Market Ward
8. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, North Ward
9. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Northern Liberties District
10. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, South Mulberry Ward
11. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, South Ward
12. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Upper Delaware Ward
13. Pennsylvania 1805 Inspector, Philadelphia City, Walnut Ward
14. New York 1806 Assembly, Dutchess County
15. New York 1806 Assembly, Montgomery County
16. New York 1806 Assembly, New York County
17. New York 1806 Assembly, Rensselaer County
18. New York 1806 Assembly, Rockland County
19. New York 1806 Assembly, Ulster County
20. New York 1806 Assembly, Washington County
21. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 11
22. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 15
23. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 16
24. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 17
25. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2
26. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4
27. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 7
28. New York 1806 U.S. House of Representatives, District 9
29. Mississippi 1807 Territorial Legislature, Jefferson District, Special
30. New York 1807 Assembly, Rensselaer County
31. New York 1807 Clerk of the Assembly
32. New York 1807 Council of Appointment
33. New York 1807 Speaker of the Assembly
34. New York 1808 Assembly, Cayuga County
35. New York 1808 Assembly, Saratoga County
36. New York 1808 Assembly, Seneca County
37. New York 1808 Assembly, Suffolk County
38. Pennsylvania 1808 Director, Bank of Philadelphia, Special
39. Pennsylvania 1811 Auditor, Berks County
40. Pennsylvania 1811 Commissioner, Berks County
41. Pennsylvania 1811 Coroner, Berks County
42. Pennsylvania 1811 Sheriff, Berks County
43. Pennsylvania 1813 Commissioner, Philadelphia City and County, Special
44. Pennsylvania 1813 House of Representatives, Cambria and Somerset Counties
45. Pennsylvania 1813 House of Representatives, Philadelphia County
46. Pennsylvania 1813 Sheriff, Philadelphia City and Philadelphia County
47. Pennsylvania 1813 State Senate, District 1
48. Pennsylvania 1814 House of Representatives, Philadelphia County
49. Pennsylvania 1814 State Senate, District 1
50. Pennsylvania 1819 Speaker of the House
candidate parties
With the fading of the Federalist party in many areas and the lack of organized political "parties" in the modern-sense, several candidates for election were often described in terms of their support for a single candidate.
New York 1806-08: Morgan Lewis was the Governor of New York from 1804-07. He was elected in 1804 with the support of DeWitt Clinton, but after their split, those supporters of Lewis would be described as such in many newspapers.
Pennsylvania 1805, 1811: With the split in the Republican Party in Pennsylvania in 1805 (See
"A strong and aggressive Federalist Party had contributed much to the Republican victory in Pennsylvania in 1799. It had forged Republican unity and, by its excesses, had added large numbers to the ranks of its opponents. After the election of 1800 Federalism in the State declined precipitately; and within two years John Quincy Adams was to describe it as 'so completely palsied, that scarcely a trace of it is to be discovered except in here and there a newspaper edited by New England men.' (ft: John Quincy Adams to Rufus King, October 8, 1802 in Charles R. King (ed.) The Life and Correspondence of Rufus King, 6 vols. (New York, 1894-1900), IV, 176.) Gratifying as such a metamorphosis must have been to the Republicans, it was not without its cost. The virtual disappearance of Federalism weakened the compulsion for unity and gave play to Republican differences on measures and men which by 1802 had resulted in a number of local divisions in the party." (The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800-1816. Sanford W. Higginbotham. 1952. p 25)
"Whatever the true explanation of these intricate political maneuvers, the [1801] senatorial election had disclosed division in the Republican ranks. The party had begun a new era in its history." (Higginbotham, p 34)
Pennsylvania 1808, 1813-14: Michael Leib was elected in 1808 as a U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania. In that same year, Thomas Humphreys, a candidate for the Bank Director of the Bank of Philadelphia was described by The True American as "Leib's candidate." Later, in 1813 and 1814, factions would develop in the Republican Party and many candidates for elections in these two years would be described by The Democratic Press (Philadelphia) as Leibites.
Much of the division in Pennsylvania, and specifically, Philadelphia politics stemmed from those supporters of Simon Snyder, who was the Speaker of the House, and later Governor, and Michael Leib, whose power over the Republican party lead to the Constitutionalists, those supporters of then governor Thomas McKean, to split away from the Republican Party in Pennsylvania as a whole and form their own party for several years, from 1805-1808.
"The new era was dominated by two themes. The first of these was the national issue of supporting the administration's foreign policy, including the War of 1812. Party lines were sharply drawn, and a strong Federalist minority took an active part in politics. The second was the bitter feud between the Leib-Duane faction and the followers of Snyder. This persisted in full rancor throughout the period and was only partially subdued by the compulsion for the Democratic unity exerted by the War of 1812." (Higginbotham, p 177
"The second period, which ended with the election of 1808, was characterized by two main questions - whether the Federalist-Quid coalition was to form the basis of a permanent new party; and whether the city Democrats, led by Leib and Duane, or the country Democrats, controlled by the adherents of Snyder, should dominate the party. The growing importance of foreign relations arising out of American neutrality in the Napoleonic wars settled the first question in the negative and forced the postponement of a decision of the second. In the face of a resurgent Federalism, Pennsylvania Republicans suppressed their differences and united in a successful support of Snyder, Madison, and the embargo. Foreign affairs continued to be important for the next three years; but congressional vacillation and the relaxing of Federalist efforts within the State permitted the Snyderites and the Duane-Leib faction, now known as the Old School, to fight out their battle for control of the party. The Olmsted affair offered the occasion, and for a time it appeared that the Old School might be victorious. However, its own intemperate violence and political blundering redounded to the benefit of the Governor adn his adherents; and by 1811 Duane had forsworn State politics, and the Old School consisted only of Leib and a few hangers-on. The Snyderites not only dominated the State as a whole, but, acting through Binns, had achieved supremacy in Philadelphia." (Higginbotham, p 328-329.
Pennsylvania 1819 Speaker of the House: Joseph Lawrence is listed as a Findlayite. In the same election, Rees Hill is listed as a Binnsman by the American Republican of December 14, 1819 and as a Binnite by the Crawford Weekly Messenger (Meadville) of December 17, 1819. The Village Record of December 15, 1819 lists Lawrence as an Administration candidate and Hill as an Anti-Administration candidate.