The 1962 United States Senate election in Maryland was held on November 6, 1962. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator John Marshall Butler did not run for re-election to a third term in office. Democratic U.S. Representative Daniel Brewster won the re-election to succeed him easily over Republican U.S. Representative Edward Tylor Miller.

Republican primary

Candidates

  • James P. Gleason, former legislative assistant to Senators Richard Nixon and William F. Knowland
  • Henry J. Laque Jr., perennial candidate
  • Edward Tylor Miller, U.S. Representative from Easton
  • Harry L. Simms, real estate broker[1]

Withdrew

Results

1962 Republican U.S. Senate primary[2][3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Edward Tylor Miller 43,437 48.15%
Republican James P. Gleason 34,523 38.27%
Republican Harry L. Simms 7,689 8.52%
Republican Henry J. Laque, Jr. 4,565 5.06%
Total votes 90,214 100.00%

Democratic primary

Candidates

Results

1962 Democratic U.S. Senate primary[4][5]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Daniel Brewster 182,272 52.18%
Democratic Blair Lee III 100,915 28.89%
Democratic Elbert M. Byrd, Jr. 32,147 9.20%
Democratic Herbert J. Hoover 19,719 5.65%
Democratic Andrew J. Easter 14,276 4.09%
Total votes 349,329 100.00%

General election

Results

1962 U.S. Senate election in Maryland[6][7][8]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Daniel Brewster 439,723 62.03%
Republican Edward Tylor Miller 269,131 37.97%
Total votes 708,854 100.00%
Democratic gain from Republican

Results by county

County Daniel Brewster

Democratic

Edward Tylor Miller

Republican Other

Margin Total

Votes

Cast

# % # % # %
Allegany 10090 44.97% 12348 55.03% -2258 -10.06% 22438
Anne Arundel 25522 61.41% 16036 38.59% 9486 22.83% 41558
Baltimore (City) 439723 62.03% 269131 37.97% 170592 24.07% 708854
Baltimore (County) 92742 67.38% 44889 32.62% 47853 34.77% 137631
Calvert 2306 62.31% 1395 37.69% 911 24.61% 3701
Caroline 2083 46.34% 2412 53.66% -329 -7.32% 4495
Carroll 6719 53.30% 5888 46.70% 831 6.59% 12607
Cecil 4921 51.77% 4584 48.23% 337 3.55% 9505
Charles 4009 50.32% 3958 49.68% 51 0.64% 7967
Dorchester 4073 56.84% 3093 43.16% 980 13.68% 7166
Frederick 9234 54.68% 7652 45.32% 1582 9.37% 16886
Garrett 2080 37.69% 3438 62.31% -1358 -24.61% 5518
Harford 9139 62.94% 5381 37.06% 3758 25.88% 14520
Howard 5397 54.26% 4550 45.74% 847 8.52% 9947
Kent 2538 50.29% 2509 49.71% 29 0.57% 5047
Montgomery 49323 50.61% 48139 49.39% 1184 1.21% 97462
Prince George's 44248 62.55% 26489 37.45% 17759 25.11% 70737
Queen Anne's 2752 55.62% 2196 44.38% 556 11.24% 4948
St. Mary's 3550 72.39% 1354 27.61% 2196 44.78% 4904
Somerset 2946 51.29% 2798 48.71% 148 2.58% 5744
Talbot 2461 37.57% 4090 62.43% -1629 -24.87% 6551
Washington 12339 53.97% 10525 46.03% 1814 7.93% 22864
Wicomico 5523 49.78% 5571 50.22% -48 -0.43% 11094
Worcester 2601 55.72% 2067 44.28% 534 11.44% 4668
Total 746319 60.34% 490493 39.66% 255826 20.68% 1236812

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Carper, Elise. "Maryland GOP Race Left to Scull, Small". The Washington Post. March 6, 1962. p. A1.
  2. "Archives of Maryland, Volume 0171, Page 0466 - Maryland Manual, 1963-64". msa.maryland.gov. Maryland State Archives. n.d. p. 466. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  3. "Our Campaigns - MD US Senate Race - R Primary Race - May 15 1962". www.ourcampaigns.com. Our Campaigns. n.d. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  4. "Archives of Maryland, Volume 0171, Page 0465 - Maryland Manual, 1963-64". msa.maryland.gov. Maryland State Archives. n.d. p. 465. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  5. "Our Campaigns - MD US Senate Race - D Primary Race - May 15 1962". www.ourcampaigns.com. Our Campaigns. n.d. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  6. "Archives of Maryland, Volume 0171, Page 0445 - Maryland Manual, 1963-64". msa.maryland.gov. Maryland State Archives. n.d. p. 445. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  7. "Our Campaigns - MD US Senate Race - Nov 06, 1962". www.ourcampaigns.com. Our Campaigns. n.d. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  8. "1962 Senatorial General Election Results - Maryland". uselectionatlas.org. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. March 5, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2023.