Marrietta Stow ran for the National Equal Rights Party in 1884. As far as I know she's the first documented female to run for vice president in the united states.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_female_United_States_presidential_and_vice-presidential_candidates
He won by a small number of votes.
Andrew Jackson essentially founded a national Democratic party. The party split just before the Civil War and had to re-organize almost totally. Samuel Tilden was the first candidate of the reformed Democratic Party to have a serious chance of winning.
John Adams was the first vice president of USA under George Washington and was the second president of USA. He was initially a part of democratic-republican party and then joined federalist party under whose auspice s he won the presidential elections.
John C. Frémont was a Union general and a prominent figure in the early stages of the Civil War. He gained fame as an explorer and the first Republican presidential candidate in 1856 but is best known for his role in the war as the commander of Union forces in the West. In 1861, he issued an emancipation proclamation in Missouri that aimed to free enslaved people, though it was later revoked by President Lincoln. Frémont's actions and political ambitions often put him at odds with military and political leaders, impacting the Union's strategy in the early war years.
Andrew Johnson of Tennessee. He had his reward by becoming the Vice Presidential candidate on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864, replacing Hannibal Hamlin, who was Vice President during Lincoln's first term. Johnson became President when Lincoln was murdered.
Geraldine Ferraro
The first female vice-presidential candidate was Geraldine Ferraro, who ran on the Democratic ticket with presidential nominee Walter Mondale in the 1984 election. Ferraro's candidacy marked a significant moment in U.S. political history, as she was the first woman to be nominated for vice president by a major political party. Her campaign focused on issues such as women's rights and social justice, and she became a symbol of progress for women in politics.
Geraldine Ferraro
the national republicans
the national republicans
Victoria Woodhull http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/ww/people_woodhull.html ~Stacey
First female vice president in US history A+
the national republicans
Al Smith was the first Catholic candidate for a regular political party who did not win the election.
The antislavery political party that ran John C. Fremont in the 1856 presidential election was the Republican Party. This was their first presidential candidate, as they had formed in opposition to the expansion of slavery into the western territories. Fremont's campaign platform focused on limiting the expansion of slavery and promoting free labor.
The Republican Party did not exist in 1848. It was begun 1854 and nominated its first Presidential candidate in 1856. He was John C. Fremont.
alf landon