South Carolina's at-large congressional seat

http://dbpedia.org/resource/South_Carolina's_at-large_congressional_seat an entity of type: WikicatAt-largeUnitedStatesCongressionalDistricts

South Carolina was readmitted to Congress in 1868, after passage of the 14th Amendment. That amendment ended the three-fifths rule effectively raising the population of states that once had slavery. As a result, South Carolina and other slave states tried to seat extra members of Congress. South Carolina choose two additional congress members during an at-large election in 1870. In one of those, Johann Peter Martin Epping defeated Lucius W. Wimbush by 61 votes: 71803-71742. But the House refused to seat him and the other at-large winner. "A number of southern states upon readmission claimed that since their slaves were emancipated, they were entitled to larger delegations in the House. Epping's election falls in this category. The claims were rejected by the House." rdf:langString
rdf:langString South Carolina's at-large congressional seat
xsd:integer 14657581
xsd:integer 1093492144
rdf:langString South Carolina
xsd:integer 1873
rdf:langString South Carolina was readmitted to Congress in 1868, after passage of the 14th Amendment. That amendment ended the three-fifths rule effectively raising the population of states that once had slavery. As a result, South Carolina and other slave states tried to seat extra members of Congress. South Carolina choose two additional congress members during an at-large election in 1870. In one of those, Johann Peter Martin Epping defeated Lucius W. Wimbush by 61 votes: 71803-71742. But the House refused to seat him and the other at-large winner. "A number of southern states upon readmission claimed that since their slaves were emancipated, they were entitled to larger delegations in the House. Epping's election falls in this category. The claims were rejected by the House." In 1873, South Carolina's apportionment in the United States House of Representatives was officially increased from 4 to 5 members. From 1873 to 1875, therefore, the state elected its fifth member at-large statewide. In 1875, the state redistricted its seats and the at-large seat was eliminated. The at-large representative was Republican Richard H. Cain.
xsd:integer 1870
rdf:langString at-large
xsd:integer 1875
rdf:langString yes
xsd:integer 1870
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3674

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