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John Langdon, a senator from New Hampshire, was elected president pro
tempore of the first Congress and his first task as such was to count the
electoral votes. He personally opened, counted, and declared the results:
for President, George Washington; for Vice-President, John Adams.
Charles Thomson, longtime secretary to Congress, was selected to carry
the formal certification of election and a personal letter from Langdon
to Washington, dated New York, April 6. Langdon wrote that the election
was unanimous and that it should "...be considered a sure pledge of the
affection and support you are to expect from a free and enclightened people."
Shown here is Washington's reply to Langdon, accepting the Presidency
and announcing his intention to depart Mount Vernon for New York on April
16.
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