1789: 62.1% Anti-Federalist; George Washington
1796: 63.0% Thomas Jefferson
1800: 75.0% Thomas Jefferson
1804: 85.7% Thomas Jefferson
1808: 76.9% James Madison
1812: 50.0% James Madison
1816: 69.2% James Monroe
1820: 60.0% James Monroe
1828: 48.0% John Q. Adams
1832: 51.5% Henry Clay
1836: 56.8% Martin Van Buren
1840: 42.9% Martin Van Buren
1844: 50.0% James Birney
1848: 83.3% Martin Van Buren
1852: 69.2% John Hale
1856: 74.2% John Fremont
1860: 71.7% Abraham Lincoln
1864: 71.4% Abraham Lincoln
1868: 77.1% Ulysses Grant
1872: 65.4% Ulysses Grant
1880: 44.8% James Garfield
1884: 53.8% Grover Cleveland
1888: 51.6% Grover Cleveland
1896: 32.5% John Palmer
1904: 51.4% Theodore Roosevelt
1908: 47.4% William Taft
1912: 37.5% William Taft
1920: 41.5% Warren Harding
1924: 52.4% Robert La Follette
1928: 40.0% Al Smith
1936: 45.5% Franklin Roosevelt
1940: 45.0% Wendell Willkie
1944: 56.8% Franklin Roosevelt
1948: 35.7% Harry Truman
1952: 63.9% Dwight Eisenhower
1956: 67.5% Dwight Eisenhower
1960: 58.8% John Kennedy
1964: 49.2% Lyndon Johnson
1968: 44.4% Hubert Humphrey
1972: 60.5% George McGovern
1976: 50.0% Gerald Ford
1980: 26.2% Ronald Reagan
1984: 48.1% Walter Mondale
1988: 43.1% Michael Dukakis
1992: 33.9% William Clinton
2000: 48.3% Al Gore
2008: 53.8% Barack Obamahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1792George Washington's unopposed re-election, however, voters could still oddly vote for electors. Instead of Fed vs. Anti-Fed (1789) its Fed vs. D-R. A grand total of 28,579 people voted in this election, the lowest in US history.
Democratic-Republican electors.