“We can not have free authorities with out elections,” President Abraham Lincoln mirrored outdoors the White Home on Nov. 10, 1864. “And if the riot might power us to forego or postpone a nationwide election it’d pretty declare to have already conquered and ruined us.”
By the autumn of 1864, america had been engulfed in a civil warfare for almost 44 months, with “the bones of hundreds of Northern boys [lying] in Southern graves or decayed unburied within the thickets and swamps of Dixie,” writes historian Gerald Swick.
For Lincoln — and for the Union — the end result of the 1864 presidential election hung within the steadiness. If voters rejected Lincoln, the warfare to avoid wasting the Union would virtually definitely be misplaced. In keeping with Swick, Peace Democrats, Lincoln’s chief political opposition, wished an finish to hostilities instantly, underneath virtually any circumstances.
With so many males out on the sphere of battle, the incumbent president feared that many Union troopers wouldn’t be capable of forged their vote — and in his favor.
For Lincoln, the election was to be received by bullets and ballots, with a string of Union victories that fall — David Farragut damning the torpedoes at Cellular Bay and William T. Sherman conquering the Southern metropolis of Atlanta — serving to to quell the Democrats’ requires an early peace
By November 1864, as males bodily lined up within the North to vote for Lincoln or the previous Union basic, George B. McClellan, a novel method to accommodate a soldier’s proper to vote was sweeping the battlefield.
There was some precedent for absentee voting. Throughout the Battle of 1812, Pennsylvania after which New Jersey modified their laws to permit for mail-in voting for his or her troopers at warfare.
On Oct. 1, 1864, Secretary of Battle Edwin M. Stanton revealed Basic Orders No. 265 outlining the procedures for Military voting. The order’s goal was to “safe a good distribution” of election materials and forestall fraud and intimidation on the entrance and additional invited “civilian inspectors of every political social gathering” to go to the assorted brigade headquarters all through the Military “to see that the elections are pretty carried out.”
Throughout the warfare, 19 Union states modified their legal guidelines to permit their troopers to vote absentee. Different states permitted troopers to vote by proxy, whereas others created polling websites in camps and hospitals underneath on-site inspection by appointed clerks or state officers. (In lots of states, nonetheless, the legal guidelines solely referred to organizations inside the Military: corporations, regiments and brigades. Thus, many new voting legal guidelines didn’t apply to members of the Navy, in line with the Nationwide Park Service.)
Every state devised its personal strategies for absentee voting procedures, with Connecticut, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia mailing proxy votes, ballots or tally sheets. Pennsylvania officers ready mailing supplies for conveying the votes gathered on the entrance, whereas Ohio produced envelopes for each the state and nationwide elections, in line with the Nationwide Postal Museum.
Ohioan certified navy absentee voters forged 12% of all of the navy ballots, with a majority voting for the reelection of Lincoln.
By the top of Election Day on Nov. 8, 1864, of the 40,247 Union troopers who voted, 30,503 voted for Lincoln, roughly 75.8% of the Union citizen-soldiers, in line with the American Battlefield Belief. Lincoln carried all however three states (Kentucky, Delaware and New Jersey) with a 90% margin within the Electoral School, 212–21.
Since then, states have provided, to various levels, the choice of absentee voting.
Throughout the Second World Battle, the Soldier Voting Act of 1942 permitted 3.2 million absentee ballots to be forged in the course of the battle. The act was amended in 1944 and expired at warfare’s finish. Presently, the Uniformed and Abroad Residents Absentee Voting Act permits for roughly three-quarters of the 1.3 million active-duty troops to be eligible to vote absentee, in line with the Federal Voting Help Program.
Claire Barrett is the Strategic Operations Editor for Sightline Media and a World Battle II researcher with an unparalleled affinity for Sir Winston Churchill and Michigan soccer.




















