Unless otherwise noted, I created the pages listed below. However, given the collaborative nature of this encyclopedia, many may have been significantly edited since their original creation—reflecting both the strength and unpredictability of open-source contributions.
My focus is on American state legislative elections. I typically begin with the earliest verified election returns available for a state, then build a complete archive of election pages for each legislative chamber.
I am proud of my previously completed archive on the Iowa Senate election pages from pre-statehood to present day. I also contributed the Arizona State Legislature election pages for both the Arizona Senate and Arizona House of Representatives from the earliest records digitized by the Arizona State Library, which were the 1956 elections, to the present.
Currently, I'm working on election pages for the Montana State Legislature from 1974 onward. Why 1974? In 1972, the voters of Montana ratified the current Constitution of Montana, establishing the structure of the state legislature that was first instituted in 1974 and is still used today: 50 senators and 100 representatives each elected from a single-member district.[1][2]
Elison, Larry M. and Snyder, Fritz. The Montana State Constitution: A Reference Guide. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001. ISBN 0-313-27346-4