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GERRYMANDER (usually pronounced " jerrymander," but the g was originally pronounced hard) , an See also: American expression which has taken See also: root in the See also: English language, meaning to arrange election districts so as to give an unfair See also: advantage to the party in power by means of a redistribution See also: act, and so to manipulate constituencies generally, or arrange any See also: political measure, with a view to an unfair party advantage
.
The word is derived from the name of the American politician Elbridge See also: Gerry (q.v.)
.
See also: John Fiske, in his
See also: Civil See also: Government in the See also: United States (189o), says that in 1812, when Gerry was governor of Massachusetts, the Democratic See also: state legislature (in See also: order, according to See also: Winsor, to secure an increased See also: representation of the Democratic party in the state senate) " redistributed the districts in such wise that the shapes of the towns forming a single See also: district in See also: Essex county gave to the district a somewhat dragon-like See also: contour
.
This was indicated upon a map of Massachusetts which Benjamin See also: Russell, an ardent Federalist and editor of the Centinel, hung up over the desk in his office
.
The painter, See also: Gilbert
See also: Stuart, coming into the office one See also: day and observing the uncouth figure, added with his pencil a See also: head, wings and claws, and exclaimed, ` That will do for a See also: salamander!' ` Better say a Gerrymander,' growled the editor; and the outlandish name, thus duly coined, soon came into general currency." It was, however, only the name that was new
.
Fiske (who also refers to Winsor's Memorial See also: History of See also: Boston, iii
.
212, and See also: Bryce's American See also: Commonwealth, i
.
121) says that gerrymandering, as a political See also: dodge, " seems to have been first devised in 1788, by the enemies of the Federal constitution in Virginia, in order to prevent the election of See also: James
See also: Madison to the first Congress, and fortunately it was unsuccessful." But it was really earlier than that, and in the American colonial See also: period political advantage was often obtained by changing county lines
.
In 1709 the Pennsylvania counties of Bucks, See also: Chester and See also: Philadelphia formed a combination for preventing the city of Philadelphia from securing its proportionate representation; and in 1732 See also: George Burrington, royal governor of See also: North Carolina, divided the voting precincts of the province for his own advantage
.
Gerry was not the originator of the Massachusetts See also: law of 1812, which was probably drafted by See also: Samuel Dana or by See also: Judge See also: Story
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The .law resulted in 29 seats being secured in Massachusetts by 50,164 Democratic votes, while 51,766 Federalist votes only returned 11 members; and Essex county, which, undivided, sent 5 Federalists to the Senate, returned 3 Democrats and 2 Federalists after being " gerrymandered," Stuart's See also: drawing (reproduced in Fiske's See also: book) was contrived so as to make the back See also: line of the creature's See also: body See also: form a caricature of Gerry's See also: profile
.
The law of 1812 was repealed in 1813, when the Federalists had again gained control of the Massachusetts legislature
.
See also Elmer C . Griffith, The Rise and Development of the Gerrymander (See also: Chicago, 19o7); John W
.
Dean, " History of the Gerrymander," in New See also: England See also: Historical and Genealogical See also: Register, vol. xlvi
.
(Boston, 1892)
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