Who was the first political Party to hold a national convention to nominate a presidential candidate?

“To Lincoln: You are nominated.”

These five words, with little fanfare, were telegraphed in 1860 from the Republican National Convention in Chicago, Illinois, to Springfield, as Abraham Lincoln, former congressman and current lawyer, walked toward his law office there. A crowd surrounded Lincoln in the street, shaking his hand and congratulating him on his nomination as the Republican Party’s candidate for president of the United States. Lincoln later received official notice of his nomination by letter and accepted by one of his own.

For more than a century, nominating conventions were used not to crown a known frontrunner but for party bosses to gather and hash out who should actually run. Presumptive candidates didn’t accept their nominations at conventions, or even attend them. Their acceptance speeches, when they gave them at all, were delivered close to home rather than before their party’s delegates.

But thanks to technology, changes to the U.S. political system, and the dawn of mass media, that changed. Presidential nominations are now a foregone conclusion after a series of primary elections, while the convention itself has shifted into a public event full of laudatory addresses from fellow party leaders and culminating in the candidate’s acceptance speech.

This year, however, marks a return to the past. Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, neither Democrat Joe Biden nor Republican Donald Trump plan to attend their conventions—which are taking place August 17-20 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and August 24-27 in Charlotte, North Carolina, respectively—in person. Instead, like Lincoln, they’ll receive news of their official nomination remotely.

But why do we have these conventions at all? Here’s how they began and how they evolved.

Early conventions

When the U.S. Constitution was written, it didn’t lay out a process for determining a presidential nominee. For years, political parties relied on a secretiveprocess known by the derisive nickname “King Caucus” to select their candidates. These caucuses were informal affairs in which U.S. Congressmen met to set their parties’ platforms and determine who would run.

Candidates and citizens alike despised this undemocratic system. By the 1820s, criticism had reached a fever pitch and it became clear King Caucus’ days were numbered. But how should parties figure out who to nominate?

An answer came out of left field in 1831, when the nation’s first third party, the Anti-Masons, held the first ever nominating convention in an attempt to do away with caucus secrecy. Though the nominee, William Wirt, only won seven electoral votes in the national election and the party lasted little more than a decade, the idea almost immediately was taken up by the two major political parties, the Democrats and the Whigs, forerunners of the Republicans.

But 19th-century nominating conventions were dramatically different from today’s. In theory, they gave the American people more say in the political process by shifting the nominating responsibility from Congress to state delegates who would vote on the candidates at a national convention. But in reality party insiders controlled these proceedings, too, as they were valuable opportunities to meet and exchange both information and political favors. As presidential historian Gleaves Whitney writes, it was “the era of the proverbial smoke-filled room.” (These are four of the worst political predictions in history.)

Left:

Aspiring presidential nominee William Gibbs McAdoo arrived in New York a week before the Democratic National Convention started in 1924. Over the course of 16 days, delegates would cast 103 votes before settling on John W. Davis, making it the longest convention in history.

Photograph by George Rinhart, Corbis/Getty

Right:

Shirley Chisholm, the first Black person and second woman to vie for a major party's presidential nomination, thanks delegates at the 1972 Democratic National Convention. Although she did not win the nomination, 152 votes were cast in her favor.

Photograph by O'Halloran, Thomas J., Library of Congress

Candidates didn’t attend those early conventions, as it was considered immodest to take part in rallying delegates to their side, and nominations were rarely a foregone conclusion. Conventions could be dramatic, boisterous affairs, and issues like slavery split parties into bitter factions. In 1852, for example, the Democratic convention had to hold 49 votes before two-thirds of the delegates could agree on a compromise candidate, pro-slavery Franklin Pierce. Presidential candidates like Pierce instead followed along by telegraph, which Samuel Morse had invented in the 1840s, and responded to the nomination with hometown speeches and acceptance letters.

In the 1890s, a Progressive-era push to further democratize the electoral process led several states to institute a system of primary elections that allowed ordinary Americans to either choose a candidate or the candidate’s delegates directly without party boss interference. Though it now became easier to predict frontrunners, party bosses retained considerable power at the conventions—and presidential candidates still stayed home.

Evolution to modern conventions

Things began to change with the dawn of radio and with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a New York Democrat who had spent over a decade honing his reputation as a skilled speaker stumping for other candidates at political conventions.

During his first presidential campaign in 1932, Roosevelt broke with tradition, flying to Chicago to address delegates in person. Noting that his appearance was “unprecedented and unusual,” Roosevelt told the audience, “I have started out on the tasks that lie ahead by breaking the absurd traditions that the candidate should remain in professed ignorance of what has happened for weeks until he is formally notified.”

Roosevelt’s acceptance speech, which was broadcast by radio to a massive prime-time audience, signaled a new era in candidate participation in political conventions.

Roosevelt missed the nominating conventions for his third and fourth terms in 1940 and 1944—by choice in 1940 and after that due to World War II strategy sessions—and delivered radio addresses remotely instead. (In 1940, his acceptance speech was also broadcast on television, the first time a political convention utilized the medium.) But the precedent had been set: Since 1948, every presidential nominee of a major political party has attended the convention and accepted the nomination in person.

Though more states switched to primary elections over the years, party bosses still occasionally managed to work around the will of voters. In 1968, the Democratic National Convention descended into chaos after Hubert Humphrey, a candidate who had not participated in a single primary race—concentrating instead on non-primary states—clinched the nomination due to backroom dealing by political bosses. (Here's the difference between a caucus and a primary election.)

In the wake of the contentious convention, the McGovern-Fraser Commission proposed new rules that permanently wrested control away from political bosses and prompted the majority of states to adopt the primary system.

Since then, contested conventions have become much rarer. Political conventions no longer take place in smoke-filled rooms, but in glitzy auditoriums, and they spotlight party platforms as well as presumptive nominees. That is, until the 2020 pandemic.

This year, both presumptive presidential nominees plan to accept the nomination not at the convention, but closer to home. President Donald Trump has suggested he will give his acceptance speech either at Gettysburg National Military Park in Pennsylvania or at the White House itself; presumptive Democratic nominee Joseph Biden has indicated he will give an address from his Delaware home. Perhaps the tradition of hometown nominations has survived, after all.

1836
  • Democratic Vice President Richard Johnson was selected by the Senate when none of the four Vice-Presidential candidates received a majority in the electoral college.
1840
  • First published party platform.
  • The Democratic convention did not name a nominee because of "much diversity of opinion" candidates including incumbent Vice President Richard Johnson.  Ultimately, Johnson received 80 percent of the Democratic electoral college votes for vice president (11 others going to L W. Tazelwell and 1 to James K. Polk).
1844
  • Former President Martin Van Buren tried, but failed to win nomination at convention
  • James K. Polk emerged as the first "dark horse."
  • First convention reported by telegraph.
1852
  • Incumbent President Millard Fillmore was defeated for the Whig nomination by Winfield Scott.
1856
  • First Republican Party Convention (Pittsburgh).
  • At this convention, William L. Dayton defeated Abraham Lincoln in a contest for the Vice Presidency.
  • Incumbent President Franklin Pierce was defeated for the Democratic Party nomination by James Buchanan.
  • At the Democratic convention, the Vice Presidential candidate, John Breckenridge, (only 35 years old) was present in the hall at the time of his nomination—very unusual at this time.
  • Former President Millard Fillmore was nominated by the Know-Nothing Party.
1860
  • The Republicans held the first ever convention in Chicago.
  • The Democrats were highly divided and held two conventions—Charleston and Baltimore.
1868
  • Democrats held first ever convention in New York City.
  • Andrew Johnson was a candidate for the Democratic nomination and received the second largest number of votes on the first convention ballot.
1872
  • Henry Wilson challenged and took the Vice Presidential nomination from Ulysses Grant's sitting Vice President Schuyler Colfax.
  • The Democrats, in disarray, endorsed the nominee of the "Liberal Republican Party," Horace Greeley.
1876
  • Frederick Douglas addressed the Republican Convention.
  • The Democrats met in St. Louis, the first convention west of the Mississippi River.
1884
  • Incumbent president Chester Arthur (who had become President when Garfield was Assassinated) lost the Republican Party nomination to James G. Blaine.
  • The Democrats gave delegate rights to the Territories.
1892
  • Grover Cleveland was first the Democratic incumbent renominated by acclamation.
1896
  • Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan had not been a candidate prior to the convention.
1900
  • Incumbent Republican Vice President, Garret A. Hobart had died just days before the GOP convention. At that convention, Theodore Roosevelt was unanimously selected despite the fact that the party leadership preferred another candidate.
1904
  • The Democrats nominated Henry Davis for Vice President. At age 81, he was the oldest nominee ever of either party for top office.
1908
  • The Democrats were the first national party convention to accredit women delegates.
1912
  • The Democratic Platform favored one-term presidencies.
  • Former President Theodore Roosevelt unsuccessfully sought the Republican Nomination, and broke off to form a third party.
1916
  • Charles Evans Hughes, a sitting Supreme Court Justice, was nominated for President by the Republicans
1920
  • First Women Delegates at a Republican Convention (Chicago).
  • Democrats met in San Francisco, the first convention west of the Rockies.
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for the Vice Presidency (along with Governor James M. Cox for President).
1924
  • Deeply divided Democrats (split between urban and rural factions) took 103 ballots to select a compromise candidate, John W. Davis.
  • For the first time ever, a woman, Lena Springs, was placed in nomination for Vice President (but not selected by the convention).
1928
  • Democratic convention met in Houston, the first time for either party in the South.
  • Democrat Al Smith was first Catholic to be nominated by a major party.
  • Charles Curtis, Republican nominee for Vice President, was an American Indian, member of the Kaw Nation.
1936
  • First Democratic convention not governed by the requirement that the nominee win by a 2/3 majority (the GOP had never embraced that rule).
1940
  • The Republicans nominated Windell Wilkie for President, a prominent businessman, a former Democrat, with no prior political experience.
  • Against substantial opposition at the convention, Franklin D. Roosevelt dictated the Vice Presidential choice in naming Henry Wallace.  (The Los Angeles Times  wrote that "few conventions in the past have been marked by a more genuine or a more violent upthrust of common or garden variety of howling antagonism to an effort to dictate the outcome of a national party convention.") This precedent has generally held in all subsequent nominating conventions except 1956.
  • Eleanor Roosevelt address the Democratic convention--a first for First Ladies.
1944
  • Thomas Dewey was the first Republican candidate to personally accept the nomination.
  • Harry Truman, nominated as Vice President by the Democrats, was not the preferred choice of FDR, but emerged at the convention.
1956
  • First time since 1888 that the Democratic convention preceded the Republican.
  • Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson declined to choose a Vice President, and the convention picked Estes Kefauver.
1960
  • Democratic convention met in Los Angeles, first ever in that city.
  • John F. Kennedy was the first Catholic to be elected President.
1964
  • Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert H. Humphrey were nominated by acclamation, the first since 1936.
  • Senator Margaret Chase Smith was the first woman candidate for the Republican nomination.
1972
  • Pat Nixon was the second First Lady to address a national convention.
  • Shirley Chisholm was first African-American candidate for a major party's nomination and the first woman candidate for the Democratic Party nomination.
1976
  • Three weeks before the Republican convention, Ronald Reagan named liberal Senator Richard Schweiker (R-PA) as his running mate.
  • On the roll-call vote at the Republican convention, incumbent president Gerald Ford received 1187 votes to Reagan's 1070, the narrowest margin for either party's nominee since 1952.
1984
  • Introduction of "superdelegates" for the first time.
  • Geraldine Ferraro was the first woman nominated for vice president by either party.
1992
  • Clinton/Gore ticket was the youngest candidate combination in US history.
1996
  • Spouses of both incumbents and challengers speak at this and all subsequent conventions.
2000
  • Joseph Lieberman was the first Jew nominated for vice president by either party.
2008
  • Barack Obama was first African-American nominated for president by a major party.
2016
  • One week before the May 3 Indiana Primary (and 10 weeks before the Republican Convention), Ted Cruz named Carly Fiorina as his running mate.
  • Hillary Clinton was the first woman nominated for President by a major party.
2020
  • California Senator Kamala Harris was the first Vice Presidential candidate selected by a major party who is African-American and South-Asian.

Voting Rules: Until 1936, the Democrats required nomination by a 2/3 majority; until 1940 the Democrats apportioned delegates based on the electoral vote size of the state. For much of the period the Democrats adopted a "unit rule" requiring states to cast their votes for the majority winner in the state. The GOP never followed the 2/3 rule and had a variety of practices with respect to the other rules, typically not following a unit rule.