Alternate Wikipedia Infoboxes VI (Do Not Post Current Politics or Political Figures Here)

Status
Not open for further replies.
A thing I've been thinking about/working on for a week or so. I haven't exactly nailed down the POD yet (and I may never do so, in fact) but one of the first really big butterflies is that an influenza epidemic hits Philadelphia and the surrounding area in late spring 1787.
g-wash-1.png

g-wash-2.png
 
A slightly sillier infobox based off @rvbomally's scenario Old Hickory Cut Down, which in itself is based on Hnau's successful Jackson assassination TL.

The Roman War of Independence (Italian: Guerra d'indipendenza romana), also called the Franco-Roman War, the One Month War or the Roman Crisis of 1849, was waged by the Second French Republic against the Roman Republic, a revolutionary state that was previously founded on 9 February 1849 by the Costituente Romana, founded in the wake of liberal protests in the Papal States and Pius IX's self-imposed exile.

a2s6pz.png


Without consulting his ministers, Prince-President Louis Napoleon sent an expeditionary force to Rome in order to restore the temporal power of the Holy See, a move which was extremely popular with Catholics, but angered the more liberal republicans. On 25 April, 10,000 French soldiers led by General Charles Oudinot landed at Civitavecchia, while 4,000 Spanish soldiers marched north from Gaeta, where Pius IX had made his refuge. Giuseppe Garibaldi's fateful arrival to Rome emboldened Republican forces, who routed Oudinot's forces on 30 April.

Giuseppe Mazzini and French diplomat Ferdinand de Lesseps's attempt to sign a ceasefire was denunciated by Louis Napoleon, as he sought to achieve total destruction of the revolutionary regime. Hostilities would resume in May, as Oudinot's army, reinforced by Spanish soldiers and Sicilian volunteers, marched towards Rome. In an unexpected move, however, American President Theodore Frelinghuysen – a Northern Whig and pious humanitarian – declared his tacit support for the Roman cause, sending a squadron of warships under Commodore Perry's command towards the western coast of the Roman state.

As the USS Mississippi stopped by the mouth of the Tiber in late May and American soldiers lent their arms to the defense of Rome, Louis Napoleon was increasingly anxious to continue the war, and a peace treaty would eventually be brokered on 12 June 1849, affirming the Roman Republic's independence. The war would solidify the military alliance between the Roman Republic and the Kingdom of Sardinia, though the Republic's financial issues and disputed legitimacy would see them become Turin's junior partner. As per the conditions of the Treaty of Forli, the Triumvirate would invite the Pope to take refuge in a portion of the city surrounding St. Peter's Basilica, an offer which the increasingly reactionary Pius IX would refuse. Louis Napoleon's withdrawal from Rome would damage his popularity with Roman Catholics, setting the stage for the Crisis of 1850. Frelinghuysen's decision to intervene in an European war caused uproar in the United States and abroad, with Roman Catholic riots occurring in New York City and Southern congressmen denouncing Frelinghuysen's flagrant disregard for the Monroe Doctrine. While Frelinghuysen would continue to support subsequent liberal revolutions in Europe, his outreach would be limited by Congress and he would eventually be defeated in the 1852 presidential election.
 
Last edited:
ALTERNATE SEGA CONSOLES

AltSega.png

(I dont have Photoshop on my computer at this time and my skills are rather subpar)
For some reason GPU cant be shown in Infoboxes for some reason
 
Last edited:
下载.png


After the Nazis seized power in Germany in 1933, Arendelle, who was deeply worried about the future of Germany, began to increase the proportion of defense expenditures. After learning that Britain was preparing to compromise with Germany to sign the Anglo-German naval treaty, in response, Arendelle determined the design of the new battleship, and planned to build two high-speed battleships from 1935 to replace the old Tordenskjold-class battleships. The name of the ship is designated as the two main components of Kingdom-"Norge" (Norway) and "Island" (Iceland).

The Norge-class design concept continued the Karl I-class' style-firepower, protection, and speed are equally important. The ships were equipped with 9 15-inch British Mk III main guns, and 10 5.25-inch twin-mounted dual-purpose guns are installed on the ship's side. The thickness of the main armor belt was increased to 13 inches, and the inclination angle is increased to 20 degrees. Combined with the 6-inch thick main armored deck, it could withstand its main gun at a distance of 20-30 kilometers. Powered by 4 McMillan steam turbines and 8 Karlstad-Fairmore high-pressure boilers, the engine output was 152,000 horsepower, the speed was 31.5 knots, the endurance was 7,000 nautical miles under 15 knots, and the standard displacement had increased to 41,500 tons (the public figure is 39,000 tons).

The first ship HArMS Norge was completed just a few months after the outbreak of World War II, and the second ship HArMS Island entered service in January 1941. Unlike the Karl I-class, which is well-known among the citizens of Arendelle, the service dynamics of the Norge-class, which is scheduled to be used in the decisive battle with Germany, are strictly confidential. Many citizens of Arendelle only know that there were two battleships named Norge and Island, But they didn’t know more details. It was not until 1945 that HArMS Island became the flagship of the Arendian Navy’s Far East Fleet, leading 33 ships to the Far East to fight against Japan, shelling Japanese coastal cities and factories, and witnessing the Tokyo Bay surrender ceremony. After World War II, the two Norge-class became escorts of the carrier task force and continued to serve until 1962, after which they were decommissioned and mothballeed.

In the 1980s, the Cold War entered the final round of its peak. Norge-class was proposed to release the storage and accept large-scale modernization. Radar and electronic equipment were all dismantled and upgraded to contemporary technology products. The original 5.25-inch secondary guns only retained two sides each. The secondary gun positions on the centerline and the B Turret were changed to 192-units of Mk 41 vertical launch system, and the remaining four gun positions were replaced with Mk 29 Sea Sparrow SM launcher. But this proposal only stayed at the suggestion stage. In the end, HArMS Norge and HArMS Island were preserved in Oslo and Bergen as naval memorial ships.
 
Last edited:
landslide.png

The 1946 American federal election was held on 1 August 1946 to elect member of the American House of Representatives. The governing Liberal Party sought to maintain their position within parliament. On 20 June 1946, Incumbent Prime Minister Harry Truman advised Governor General Sir William Standley to dissolve parliament, and the writs of election were issued on 1 July.

A key issue in this election seems to have been electing a stable government. The Liberals urged voters to "Return the Harry Truman Government", and argued that only the Liberal Party had a "preponderance of members in all 57 provinces".

Truman was Minister of War under Prime Minister Cordell Hull and was became became Prime Minister following Hull's resignation on 30 November 1944. Truman did not failed the same popularity as the former prime minister. The Liberals had been in power since 1930, for 15 years.
The vote was largely seen as a referendum on Truman, whose party had sunk to 32 percent in opinion polls, over the prime minister's controversial handling of a wave of post-war labor strikes, including a United Auto Workers strike against Ford and General Motors in 1945, a United Mine Workers strike starting in April 1946, and a national railroad worker strike that began in May. Further damage resulted from the back-and-forth over whether to end wartime price controls, unpopular with the American business constituency, to handle shortages, particularly in meat and other foodstuffs. For example, price controls on beef had led to a "hamburger famine", but when the government, in a surprise move, lifted the controls on 8 July — just weeks before the election — meat prices shot up to record levels. While Truman's early months in the White House had been plagued with questions of "What would Hull do if he were in charge?" Conservatives now began to joke "What would Truman do if he were in charge?" and "To err is Truman."

The result of the election showed the Conservatives to have won a landslide victory, making a net gain of 105 seats and winning 54.0%, thus allowing Arthur Vandenberg, the Leader of the Conservative Party, to be appointed prime minister. For the Liberals, the Conservative victory was a shock, as they suffered a net loss of 102 seats despite winning 43.2% of the vote, suffering the worst defeat in the history of the Liberal Party. The Labor Party, which decided to maintain its electoral pact with the Liberals, faced a serious blow after taking a net loss of 10 seats with a vote share of 8.6%, losing many seats in Wisconsin including the seat held by its leader Robert La Follette.
 
Battle of Lowestoft (1).png

The Battle of Lowestoft was fought on June 13, 1665, at the beginning of the Second Commercial War. A fleet of over a hundred Dutch ships, commanded by Liuetenant-Admiral Jacob van Wassenaer, Lord Obdam, engaged a similarly-sized English fleet under the command of James, Duke of York, forty miles east of Lowestoft, a port city in Suffolk.
Though the battle was a tactical English victory, the death of the Duke of York prevented total victory, and most of the Dutch fleet escaped destruction. England had been unable to win the war quickly in a single decisive battle, while the Dutch rapidly replaced the lost ships with new, better-armed models and improved their fleet organization and discipline. The death of Lord Obdam was another blessing-in-disguise for the Dutch, as he was replaced by the highly capable
Michiel de Ruyter. Thus, the English victory at Lowestoft only contributed to their eventual defeat in the Second Commercial War.
--+======+=======+=======+======+--

Screenshot (41).png

For a wikibox timeline I'm working on, where the Duke of York is killed at the Battle of Lowestoft. These are the first two I've finished.
 
The tenth and eleventh U.S. Presidents in Forgotten No More:

Lee, Edmund J.png

Edmund Jennings Lee was the third member of the Lee family to become President, following his brothers Henry Lee III (1797-1801; 1809-1813) and Charles Lee (1805-1809), and the last until his nephew Robert Lee (1861-1869). Of the four Lee Presidents, Edmund held the officefor the least amount of time due to his assassination by Robert Baker on December 9th, 1829. Because he was President for just nine months and five days, Edmund did not actually accomplish a whole lot while holding the office. Despite his short tenure as President, Edmund's maintains the best reputation of all the Lees amongst the American public in modern times. This is because Edmund, unlike his brothers Charles and Henry, was became a vocal supporter of abolitionism. Though the man did believe freedmen should be resettled, perhaps in Africa, and he did secure the return of some of the leaders of the Charleston Riot in order to be prosecuted, his reputation for vocally supporting the US's adoption of a final date of abolition and his own oversight of abolitionist moves by Virginia as Governor has garnered him praise. Historians dub Edmund the Enlightened Lee, a term coined following the 1931 biography on the man Edmund by Peter Blanchard. His proposal to implement a gradual abolition plan by 1845 caused a wave defections by pro-slavery Southern Federalists from the Deep South to the first Constitution Party and Republican Party.

Porter, Peter B.png

Peter Buell Porter became the first Vice-President to ascend to the Presidency in the country's history, as per the 11th Amendment's succession line. An intra-party scandal occurred when Porter submitted an immediate "nomination" for the Vice-Presidency to the Federalist-dominated Senate, proclaiming his wish to see William Hendricks as his VP. The Senate, however, rallied behind President pro-tempore Charles Adams, one of the leading figures within the Party. The cause of the conflict was rooted in interpretations of the 11th Amendment, which defined succession rules - Porter's camp argued that the 11th Amendment applied to the succession of singular offices such that only the succession to the Presidency had been triggered with Jennings' death, and the President pointed to the 12th Amendment as further evidence that the VP should be up to the President; conversely, the Senate contended that because the Vice-Presidency became vacant upon Porter's ascension, the 11th Amendment's VP succession rules had been triggered as well. Porter's arguments were re-buffed and he eventually consented without it going to the Supreme Court. Slavery remained a hot topic as the SCOTUS ruled that the orchestrators of the Charleston Revolt were guilty of a number of crimes, including rebellion and treason to the United States; the court case is considered one of the darker judicial decisions by modern standards. Towards the end of his term, Congress passed and the President signed into law the Territory and Statehood Act which officially divided the State of Yazoo whilst also creating a separate territory in the far northwest for the relocation of native peoples. The act would be assaulted by opponents who argued the creation of a native-only territory and push for relocation were unconstitutional. Opponents of the act would eventually succeed, with the Supreme Court declaring the act unconstitutional and revoking it. The decision, on the eve of the 1832 Presidential Election, would directly impact the outcome because of its effects on the status of East and West Yazoo. Under the act, the State of Yazoo had been split and East Yazoo and West Yazoo amounted to 7 electoral votes collectively - however, once voided, the singular State of Yazoo amounted to 6 electoral votes. Thomas Hart Benton would have won the election had the decision not nullified the entire act, but instead the electoral college was tied following the election and William Hendricks would eventually become President following Congressional selection.
 
Last edited:
I already uploaded the map to this election, so I might as well add the infobox, too. Here is my infobox for the 1867 Confederate States presidential election from Harry Turtledove's classic 1992 alternate history novel The Guns of the South

View attachment 575539
View attachment 575540
Notes:
1: The map labels Robert E. Lee (Confederate Party) as blue and Nathan Bedford Forrest (Patriot Party) as red. However, Lee's states are red and Forrest's states are blue.
2: I originally had the map posted inside the infobox. However, the map screwed up the infobox somehow and I was forced to remove it and put it under the infobox, instead.

The 1867 Confederate States presidential election took place on November 5, 1867 and was the second sextennial presidential election held. It set the stage for the path of the country going forward, particularly as regards to slavery. Two new parties were born, the Confederate Party of General Robert E. Lee and the Patriot Party of Nathan Bedford Forrest.

Candidates
The new Confederate Party was created by Confederate General Robert E. Lee. It had Liberal-Centralist positions on Federalism, nationalism and was anti-slavery. Lee was nominated to be the party's candidate while Albert Gallitin Brown was chosen as his running mate.

The new Patriot Party was founded by Nathan Bedford Forrest. It had Conservative-Centralist positions on Nationalism, Confederalism, States' Rights and was pro-slavery. Forrest was nominated to be the party's candidate while Louis Wigfall was chosen to be his running mate. Forrest was also supported by the Rivington Men.

Campaign
During the campaign Forrest went on the stump around the Confederacy, while Lee remained at home. Until election day, Lee felt sure he would win. Forrest ran for president on the platform to continue slavery, while Lee promised to ease restrictions against blacks. Lee also went soft-line on the United States and made use of various issues, while Forrest just kept to his platform.

Election Results
The election came to ride on Tennessee with the Electoral College tied down 55-50 (60 were required for election). Eventually, several days after the election, Lee won the College 69-50 and the popular vote 496,536 to 466,901.

Totals by States

Totals:

Robert E. Lee-Albert Gallatin Brown (Confederate Party)

496,536
popular votes
69 electoral votes
6 states carried


Nathan Bedford Forrest-Louis Wigfall (Patriot Party)


466,901 popular votes
50 electoral votes
6 states carried

Total amount of popular votes: 963,437
Total amount of electoral votes: 119

Results by state:

Alabama
Forrest wins the state with 51,189 popular votes and also wins the states 11 electoral votes. Lee comes in second with 38,933 votes. 90,122 votes in the state in total.

Arkansas
Forrest wins the state with 28,376 popular votes and also wins the states 6 electoral votes. Lee comes in second with 25,776 votes. 54,152 votes in the state in total.

Florida
Lee wins the state with 7,063 popular votes and also wins the states 4 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 6,238 votes. 13,301 votes in the state in total

Georgia
Lee wins the state with 57,056 popular votes and also wins the states 12 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 49,391 votes. 106,447 votes in the state in total.

Kentucky
Lee wins the state with 80,565 popular votes and also wins the states 14 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 65,651 votes. 146,216 votes in the state in total.

Louisiana
Forrest wins the state with 26, 215 popular votes and also wins the state 8 electoral votes. Lee comes in second with 24,295 votes. 50,510 votes in the state in total.

Mississippi
Forrest wins the state with 39,384 popular votes and also wins the states 9 electoral votes. Lee comes in second with 29,711 votes. 69,095 votes in the state in total.

North Carolina
Lee wins the state with 55,223 popular votes and also wins the states 12 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 41,489 votes. 96,712 votes in state in total.

South Carolina
No popular vote in the state, but Forrest wins the states 8 electoral votes.

Tennessee
Lee wins the state with 74,368 popular votes and also wins the states 14 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 71,738 votes. 146,106 votes in the state in total.

Texas
Forrest wins the state with 35,248 popular votes and also wins the states 8 electoral votes. Lee comes in second with 27,807 votes. 63,055 votes in the state in total.

Virginia
Lee wins the state with 75,739 popular votes and also wins the states 13 electoral votes. Forrest comes in second with 51,982. 127,721 votes in the state in total.

Note: South Carolina's electors to the Electoral College were chosen by the state's legislature rather than by popular vote.

Well, since I've added an infobox the 1867 Confederate States presidential election from Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South, I might as well upload the infobox for the 1864 United States presidential election as well.

1864USAGOTSPrezElectionPart1.png

1864USAGOTSPrezElectionPart2.png

GOTS_1864_US_Presidential_Election.png

Notes:
1: The map shows Nevada with 2 electoral votes (like in the real life 1864 US Presidential Election). However, in the book, the state has 3. In real life, three were cast, but one elector abstained and was not replaced. He was apparently replaced in the altered timeline.
2: I originally had the map posted inside the infobox. However, the map screwed up the infobox somehow and I was forced to remove it and put it under the infobox, instead.
3: I know that a War Democrat like Andrew Johnson would never be on the Radical Republican ticket with John C. Frémont. Take that up with the big man himself, Harry Turtledove.
4: I know that Dutch_Atlantic_13 made an infobox about this election a while back. But this is established alternate history, so it's fair game.
5: I couldn't get the Radical Republicans on the infobox to link up with the article for some reason no matter how I tried to link or redirect it. So sorry that the writing under Frémont is black and not blue like it should be.


The 1864 United States presidential election, the 20th quadrennial presidential election, was held on Tuesday, November 8, 1864. Following the aftermath of the Second American Revolution (the American Civil War), Democratic candidate Horatio Seymour defeated incumbent Republican president Abraham Lincoln by a narrow margin of 138 to 83 electoral votes and a popular vote percentage of 41.5% to 40.6%. Also running in the election were Radical Republican candidate John C. Frémont and Independent candidate George McClellan.

Nominations
Republican Party nomination
GOTS 1864 GOP Ticket.png

Confederate General Robert E. Lee's seizure of Washington, D.C. delayed the convention in Baltimore, Maryland, but when it finally took place it renominated President Abraham Lincoln and Vice President Hannibal Hamlin respectively.

Democratic Party Nomination
GOTS 1864 Dem Ticket.png

The Democrats were in no better condition than the Republicans. They had barely finished nominating former Governor of New York Horatio Seymour and Clement Vallandigham of Ohio on September 5. This was a mismatched ticket, as Seymour tended to be a War Democrat while Vallandigham was a Copperhead. This illustrated just how confused the Democrats were.

Radical Republican Nomination
GOTS 1864 Radical GOP Ticket.png

In response to the Republicans renomination Lincoln and Hamlin, the Radical Republicans seceded (a word used by both the Richmond Dispatch and the northern papers) and put forward General (and the first Republican nominee from 1856) John C. Frémont (who had attempted to free Missouri's slaves in 1861, only to be overruled by Lincoln) with Senator Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, who still adamantly refused to admit that his home state no longer accepted the authority of Washington D.C.

Independent Nomination
GOTS 1864 Independent Ticket.png

Following his failure to gain the Democratic nomination, General George McClellan had announced he would run an independent campaign like. Edward Everett (the former 1860 Constitutional Union Party running mate ) as his running mate.
Campaign
During late September, John C. Frémont gave a series of fiery speeches that put Abraham Lincoln on the defensive. Some former Democrats, like Benjamin Butler, had one foot and a couple of toes in the Frémont camp. Others, Lincoln loyalists like Edwin M. Stanton, were sorry to see the path ahead so rocky. Other Republicans, like William Seward, were against Lincoln but still within the party. At this time, George McClellan was calling for an invasion of British North America.
Results
The election ran close, and it took until November 19 to work out whether Lincoln or Seymour had won, but Seymour ultimately triumphed narrowly. Seymour won 10 states while Lincoln won 12. McClellan won only two states (Delaware and his home state of New Jersey) while Frémont won only radical Kansas.

This would be the final time Kentucky would vote in a United States presidential election. Following the election, both Kentucky and Missouri would vote in plebiscites to see if they would either remain in the Union or join the Confederacy. As a result of the plebiscites, Missouri voted to remain in the Union while Kentucky chose to join the Confederacy. Kentucky would vote in its first Confederate presidential election in 1867.

Totals:
Horatio Seymour-Clement Vallandigham (Democratic Party)

1,671,580 popular votes
138 electoral votes
10 states carried

Abraham Lincoln-Hannibal Hamlin (Republican Party)

1,638,415 popular votes
83 electoral votes
12 states carried

John C. Frémont-Andrew Johnson (Radical Republicans)

436,337 popular votes
3 electoral votes
1 state carried

George McClellan-Edward Everett (Independent)

287,749 popular votes
10 electoral votes
2 states carried

Total amount of popular vote: 4,034,081
Total amount of electoral vote: 234


Results by state:

California:
Seymour wins the state with 38,649 popular votes and also carrying its 5 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 36,108 votes, McClellan in third with 19,860 votes and Frémont in last place with 12,379.

Connecticut:
Lincoln wins the state with 35,740 popular votes and also carrying its 6 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 29653 votes, Frémont in third with 11,913 votes and McClellan in last with 9,652 votes.

Delaware:
McClellan wins the state with 5,889 popular votes and also carrying its 3 electoral votes (This state and neighboring New Jersey are the only states that McClellan won). Seymour and Lincoln come in a close second and third place with Seymour getting 4,941 votes and Lincoln getting 4,874. Frémont comes in last with just 1218 votes.

Illinois:
Lincoln wins his home state with 164,716 popular votes and also carrying its 16 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 161,233 votes, Frémont comes in third with 18,457 votes while McClellan comes in last with 3,831 votes.

Indiana:
Seymour wins the state with 124,372 popular votes and also carrying its 13 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 117,089 votes, Frémont comes in third with 29,412 votes while McClellan comes in last with 9,244 votes.

Iowa:
Lincoln wins the state with 62,618 popular votes and also carrying its 8 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 51,716 votes, Frémont comes in third with 18,457 votes while McClellan comes in last with 4,254 votes.

Kansas:
Frémont wins the state with 11,524 popular votes and also wins the state's 3 electoral votes (This was the only state that Frémont would win) . Lincoln comes in second with 6,215 votes, Seymour comes in third with 3,151 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 691 votes.

Kentucky:
Seymour wins the state with 59,213 popular votes and also wins the states 11 electoral votes. McClellan comes in second with 18,510 votes, Lincoln comes in third with 12,892 votes while Frémont comes in last with 1,473 votes.

Maine:
Lincoln wins the state with 46,034 popular votes and also wins the states 7 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 40,638 votes, Frémont comes in third with 23,303 votes while McClellan comes in last with 4,821 votes.

Maryland:
Seymour wins the state with 40,892 popular votes and also wins the states 7 electoral votes. McClellan comes in second with 19,900 votes, Lincoln comes in third with 18,879 votes while Frémont comes in last 2,114 votes.

Massachusetts:
Lincoln wins the state with 83,005 popular votes and also wins the states 12 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 42,468 votes, Frémont comes in third with 35,273 votes while McClellan comes in last with 14,741 votes.

Michigan:
Lincoln wins the state with 74,106 popular votes and also wins the state 8 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 71,070 votes, Frémont comes in third with 19338 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 661 votes.

Minnesota:
Lincoln wins the state with 19,465 popular votes and also wins the states 4 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 15,818 votes, McClellan comes in third with 13,461 votes and Frémont comes in last with 6,615 votes.

Missouri:
Seymour wins the state with 49,147 popular votes and also wins the states 11 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 37,356 votes, McClellan comes in third with 13,461 votes while Frémont comes in last with 4,318 votes.

Nevada:
Lincoln wins the state with 7,389 popular votes and also wins the states 3 electoral votes. Seymour comes in a close second with 6,814 votes, Frémont comes in third with 1,626 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 591 votes.

New Hampshire:
Lincoln wins the state with 30,150 popular votes and also wins the states 5 electoral votes, Seymour comes in second with 26,758 votes, Frémont comes in third with 11,49 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 1,323 votes.

New Jersey:
McClellan wins the state with 50,982 popular votes and also wins the states 7 electoral votes (This state and neighboring Delaware are the only states that McClellan won), Seymour comes in a close second with 49,051 votes, Lincoln comes in third with 16,350 votes while Fremont comes in last with 12,359 votes.

New York:
Seymour wins the state with 333,209 popular votes and wins the states 33 electoral votes (the most votes from any state). Lincoln comes in second with 293,019 votes, Frémont comes in third with 87,687 votes while McClellan comes in last with 16,807.

Ohio:
Seymour wins the state with 219,618 popular votes and also wins the states 21 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 197,939 votes, Frémont comes in third place with 41,002 votes while McClellan comes in last with 12,725 votes.

Oregon:
Seymour wins the state with 6,789 popular votes wand also wins the states 3 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 5,210 votes while McClellan and Frémont come in a close third and last with McClellan getting 3,302 votes and Frémont coming in close behind with 3,064 votes.

Pennsylvania:
Seymour wins the state with 228,678 popular votes and also wins the states 26 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 217,033 votes, McClellan comes in third with 72,371 votes while Frémont comes in last with 55,652 votes.

Rhode Island:
Lincoln wins the state with 8,696 popular votes and also wins the states 4 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 7,820 votes, Frémont comes in third with 5559 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 992 votes.

Vermont:
Lincoln wins the state with 25,083 popular votes and also carrying its 5 electoral votes. Frémont comes in second with 17,391 votes, Seymour comes in third with 11,873 votes while McClellan comes in last with 1,394 votes.

West Virginia:
Lincoln wins the state with 19,585 popular votes and also carrying the states 5 electoral votes. Seymour comes in second with 11,754 votes, Frémont comes in third with 2,197 votes while McClellan comes in last with 1,091 votes.

Wisconsin:
Seymour wins the state with 68,996 popular votes and also carrying the states 8 electoral votes. Lincoln comes in second with 66,159 votes, Frémont comes in third with 13,590 votes while McClellan comes in last with just 597 votes.
 
Last edited:
I've been teaching myself to do wikiboxes while watching the Thick of It on Netflix, not sure if it belongs here nor if its been done before but I spent a while on it and thought I'd post it anyway.
Nicola Murray Wikibox.jpg
 

Deleted member 92121

Well, since I've added an infobox the 1867 Confederate States presidential election from Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South, I might as well upload the infobox for the 1864 United States presidential election as well.

View attachment 576133
View attachment 576134
View attachment 576135
Notes:
1: The map shows Nevada with 2 electoral votes (like in the real life 1864 US Presidential Election). However, in the book, the state has 3. In real life, three were cast, but one elector abstained and was not replaced. He was apparently replaced in the altered timeline.
2: I originally had the map posted inside the infobox. However, the map screwed up the infobox somehow and I was forced to remove it and put it under the infobox, instead.


The 1864 United States presidential election, the 20th quadrennial presidential election, was held on Tuesday, November 8, 1864. Following the aftermath of the Second American Revolution (the American Civil War), Democratic candidate Horatio Seymour defeated incumbent Republican president Abraham Lincoln by a narrow margin of 138 to 83 electoral votes and a popular vote percentage of 41.5% to 40.6%. Also running in the election were Radical Republican candidate John C. Frémont and Independent candidate George McClellan.

Nominations
Republican Party nomination
View attachment 576321
Confederate General Robert E. Lee's seizure of Washington, D.C. delayed the convention in Baltimore, Maryland, but when it finally took place it renominated President Abraham Lincoln and Vice President Hannibal Hamlin respectively.



Democratic Party Nomination

Radical Republican Nomination

In response to the Republicans renomination Lincoln and Hamlin, the Radical Republicans seceded (a word used by both the Richmond Dispatch and the northern papers) and put forward General (and the first Republican nominee from 1856) John C. Frémont (who had attempted to free Missouri's slaves in 1861, only to be overruled by Lincoln) with Senator Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, who still adamantly refused to admit that his home state no longer accepted the authority of Washington D.C.

Independent Nomination

Campaign

Results



More information will be added later.
If you're going to continue past the books, its good to remember that by the end the US is in a War with Britain, ostly taking over Canada (while the british bomb us cities with naval superiority). I used to imagine the US taking over Canada in this TL under General Sherman, which leads to his election in 1868. The end of the book makes it clear that the US is going down a vengeful path not too different to the Southern Victory series.
 
There is something very strange about the concept of San Andreas on the Nintendo GameCube. It makes sense in a world that maintains a Nintendo-Sega dichotomy, but still.
Ive read that GTA III and Vice City were planned for the GameCube before being cancelled
 
Top
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top