Difference between revisions of "Perry County, Missouri"

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'''The Saxon Lutheran Migration'''
 
'''The Saxon Lutheran Migration'''
  
During the 19th century, a variety of ethnic groups would settle in Perry County, including French, Belgians, and Swiss, along with a number of German Catholics. Possibly the most significant, however, was the arrival of Saxon Lutherans from Germany in the late 1830s. These were traditionalist Lutheran adherents who objected to the Kingdom of [[Prussia]]'s attempts to force them into a single church with [[Calvinists]], and chose to emigrate to America. Some 500-600 arrived in Perry County in 1839 and settled in its eastern portions (as well as in northeastern Cape Girardeau County to the south). Among the communities they established are the modern cities of Altenburg and Frohna, as well as the unincorporated communities of New Wells, Uniontown, and Wittenberg; and they would be instrumental in the founding of the [[Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod]].<ref>https://books.google.com/books?id=MooAAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1&dq&as_brr=1#v=onepage&q&f=false</ref> Eastern Perry County continues to have a strong German Lutheran presence, with some of the older residents still able to speak an old Saxon German dialect.<ref>https://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/when-we-re-gone-it-will-be-german-dialect-has/article_45715974-e8bd-5abd-888d-a14777195eee.html</ref>  
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During the 19th century, a variety of ethnic groups would settle in Perry County, including French, Belgians, and Swiss, along with a number of German Catholics. Possibly the most significant, however, was the arrival of Saxon Lutherans from Germany in the late 1830s. These were traditionalist Lutheran adherents who objected to the Kingdom of [[Prussia]]'s attempts to force them into a single church with [[Calvinists]], and chose to emigrate to America. Some 500-600 arrived in Perry County in 1839 and settled in its eastern portions (as well as in northeastern Cape Girardeau County to the south). Among the communities they established are the modern cities of Altenburg and Frohna, as well as the unincorporated communities of New Wells, Uniontown, and Wittenberg; and they would be instrumental in the founding of the [[Lutheran Church Missouri Synod]].<ref>https://books.google.com/books?id=MooAAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1&dq&as_brr=1#v=onepage&q&f=false</ref> Eastern Perry County continues to have a strong German Lutheran presence, with some of the older residents still able to speak an old Saxon German dialect.<ref>https://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/when-we-re-gone-it-will-be-german-dialect-has/article_45715974-e8bd-5abd-888d-a14777195eee.html</ref>
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==Geography==
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Perry County is located in the northern part of southeastern Missouri, between the St. Francois Mountains and the Mississippi River. It has a roughly triangular shape, with the apex to the north, the base to the south, and the river forming its northeastern leg. It is bordered to the northeast and east by the state of [[Illinois]], to the southeast by [[Cape Girardeau County, Missouri|Cape Girardeau County]], to the southwest by [[Bollinger County, Missouri|Bollinger]] and [[Madison County, Missouri|Madison]] Counties, and to the northwest by [[St. Francois County, Missouri|St. Francois]] and [[Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri|Ste. Genevieve]] Counties.
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The county has a total area of 484.16 square miles, including 474.35 of land and 9.81 of water.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20131021170230/http://www.census.gov/geo/maps-data/data/docs/gazetteer/counties_list_29.txt</ref> It has two main topographical divisions; by far the largest are the foothills of the St. Francois Mountains (themselves the eastern edge of the Ozarks), which are gently rolling in the central part of the county around Perryville and more rugged to the west. Its highest point is an unnamed hill in the far west, near the border with Madison County, rising to about 1,080 feet above sea level. The other part of the county is the floodplain in the northeast along the Mississippi River (mostly north of Brazeau Creek), and is several miles wide in some places. These include the Bois Brule and the Brazeau Bottoms, which average about 360 feet in elevation. These lowlands have by far the most fertile soil in the county, and were the area of first settlement in the early 19th century.<ref>https://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=6574</ref>
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The three major highways in the county are Interstate 55, which passes from northwest to southeast on a line skirting the western edge of Perryville; U.S. Route 61, which passes through the center of Perryville but otherwise generally parallels the interstate several miles to the east; and Missouri State Highway 51, which enters the county from the southwest, intersects I-55 and U.S. 61 at Perryville, and continues north to the Mississippi River, where it crosses the Chester Bridge into Illinois.
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==Demographics==
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At the 2010 census, Perry County had a total population of 18,971, with 7,357 households and 5,162 families. The population density was 39.2 per square mile. There were 8,568 housing units, or about 17.7 per square mile. The racial makeup of the county was about 97.21% White, 0.40% African-American, 0.32% Native American, 0.45% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 0.70% from some other race, and 0.90% from two or more races. Hispanics of any race were 1.68% of the population.
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The median age in the county was 39.2 years. 25.10% of the population was under the age of 18, 7.78% was between the ages of 18 and 24, 24.51% was between the ages of 25 and 44, 27.00% was between the ages of 45 and 64, and 15.60% was 65 years old or older. The sex ratio was 49.9% male, 50.1% female.<ref>https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=CF</ref>
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According to the 2010 American Community Survey, the median income in the county was $45,713 for a household, and $54,983 for a family. Males had a median income of $39,599 versus $27,436 for females. The unemployment rate was 4.2%. The per capita income was $22,200. 10.6% of the population was below the poverty line, including 15.0% of those under the age of 18 and 9.1% of those 65 years old or older.<ref>https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=CF</ref>
  
 
==Communities==
 
==Communities==
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===CDP===
 
===CDP===
 
* [[Biehle, Missouri|Biehle]]
 
* [[Biehle, Missouri|Biehle]]
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==Government==
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Local government in Perry County is provided by the elected officials. Traditionally, these have been dominated by the [[Republican]] Party, which at present holds all the elected positions.<ref>http://perrycountymo.us/8/Government-Offices</ref>
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{| class="wikitable"
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|-
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! Countywide official !! Name !! Party
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|-
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| Assessor || Charles Triller || Republican
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|-
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| Circuit Clerk || Jennifer Hotop || Republican
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|-
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| County Clerk || Jared W. Kutz || Republican
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|-
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| Collector || Rodney J. Richardet || Republican
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|-
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| Commissioner (presiding) || Mike Sauer || Republican
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|-
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| Commissioner (District 1) || Jay Wengert || Republican
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|-
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| Commissioner (District 2) || James L. Sutterer || Republican
 +
|-
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| Coroner || William Bohnert || Republican
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|-
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| Prosecuting Attorney || Caitlin Pistorio || Republican
 +
|-
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| Public Administrator || Tamara Tarrillion || Republican
 +
|-
 +
| Recorder || Dana Pritchard || Republican
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|-
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| Sheriff || Gary J. Schaaf || Republican
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|-
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| Surveyor || Tim Baer || Republican
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|-
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| Treasurer || Kathy Schumer || Republican
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|}
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At the state level, Perry County is part of two separate legislative districts for the Missouri House of Representatives. Most of the northern and eastern portions, including part of the city of Perryville, is part of the 116th District, which also includes parts of St. Francois and Ste. Genevieve Counties. It is currently represented by Dale Wright (R-Farmington), who was elected to his first term in November 2018, defeating Democrat Bill Kraemer.
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{| class="wikitable"
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|-
 +
! Candidate !! Party !! Votes !! Vote Percentage
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|-
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| Dale Wright || Republican || 9,531 || 64.014%
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|-
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| Bill Kraemer || Democratic || 5,354 || 35.959%
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|}
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The southern and southwestern parts of the county, including the cities of Altenburg and Frohna and the majority of Perryville, lie within the 145th District, which also includes all of Bollinger and Madison Counties. It is currently represented by Rick Francis (R-Perryville), who was re-elected to a second term in November 2018, defeating Democrat Ronald G. Pember.
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{| class="wikitable"
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|-
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! Candidate !! Party !! Votes !! Vote Percentage
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|-
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| Rick Francis || Republican || 11,381 || 82.316%
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|-
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| Ronald G. Pember || Democratic || 2,445 || 17.684%
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|}
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In the Missouri State Senate, Perry County is part of the 27th District, which also includes Bollinger, Cape Girardeau, Madison, [[Scott County, Missouri|Scott]] and [[Wayne County, Missouri|Wayne]] Counties. It is currently represented by Wayne Wallingford (R-Cape Girardeau), who was re-elected in November 2016, defeating Democrat Donnie Owens.
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{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
! Candidate !! Party !! Votes !! Vote Percentage
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|-
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| Wayne Wallingford || Republican || 56,750 || 74.440%
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|-
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| Donnie Owens || Democratic || 19,486 || 25.560%
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|}
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Wallingford significantly overperformed in Perry County, winning 6,233 votes to 1,791 for Owens.
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At the federal level, Perry County is part of Missouri's 8th Congressional District, which includes most of southeast and south-central Missouri. It is represented by Jason Smith (R-Salem), who won re-election in November 2018, defeating Democrat Kathy Ellis.
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{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
! Candidate !! Party !! Votes !! Vote Percentage
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|-
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| Jason Smith || Republican || 194,042 || 73.39%
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|-
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| Kathy Ellis || Democratic || 66,151 || 25.019%
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|-
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| Jonathan Shell || Libertarian || 4,206 || 1.591%
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|}
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Smith slightly overperformed his average margin in Perry County, winning 77.569% of the vote.<ref>https://www.sos.mo.gov/elections/s_default</ref>
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'''Political Culture'''
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As the above numbers indicate, Perry County is solidly Republican at the state and federal level, and has in fact been known as a traditional stronghold for the Missouri GOP since the early 20th century. Much of this can be attributed to the high number of German-Americans, who have tended to vote Republican since their arrival in the mid-19th century. The county voted for a [[Democrat]] for president only twice in the 20th century, in 1932 and 1964. In fact, it has only trended more strongly Republican since the 1990s, with its mostly rural, middle- and working-class population being alienated by the Democratic Party's social radicalism. In the 2016 general election, the county overwhelmingly supported [[Donald Trump]], who won 79.04% of the vote.<ref>https://enrarchives.sos.mo.gov/enrnet/CountyResults.aspx</ref>
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Like much of southern Missouri, Perry County can be included within the [[Bible Belt]], and tends to combine social [[conservatism]] with economic [[populism]]. In 2004, it voted overwhelmingly in favor of Constitutional Amendment 2, which recognized marriage as between a man and a woman only—the measure passed in Perry County with 85.07% support. In 2006, while the state overall narrowly passed an amendment to fund embryonic stem-cell research, the county decisively defeated the measure with 69.45% voting against. At the same time, it often supports economic measures that appear to favor the working and middle class--though this happens less frequently than elsewhere in Southeast Missouri, possibly because of its longer tradition of identifying with the Republican Party. In the November 2018 election, the county narrowly rejected a proposed increase in the state minimum wage, with 50.44% voting against (though it passed the state at large). These results mark Perry County as one of the state's most reliably [[conservative]] regions.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 03:21, August 21, 2020

Perry County is a county in the southeastern part of the state of Missouri. It had a population of 18,971 at the 2010 census.

The county was officially organized in 1820 and named for Oliver Hazard Perry, an American naval hero during the War of 1812. Perryville is the county seat and largest city.

History

The Perry County area was part of the Mississippian culture before and during the Middle Ages. The Mississippians were known for their construction of earthen mounds, a number of which still exist near the Mississippi River. By the time of European contact, the region was dominated by the Illinois Confederation, including such tribes as the Kaskaskians and the Cahokians, though members of the Shawnee tribe would also move in from the east during the late 18th century.

The first Europeans to explore the area were Father Marquette and Ensign Joliet, leading a French expedition down the Mississippi from Canada in 1673; they were the first to observe and describe Grand Tower Rock in the middle of the river. French soldiers and colonists began settling just to the north, around Kaskaskia and Ste. Genevieve, by the mid-18th century; however, no such settlements were made in the Perry County area until after the Spanish took possession of the Louisiana Territory following the French and Indian War. In 1795, the colonial government began issuing land grants to settlers from the new United States. A number of these early settlers were English Catholics arriving from Kentucky, though some also came from Pennsylvania and the South.[1] Most of the first settlements occurred in the so-called "Bois Brule" river bottoms, opposite Kaskaskia Island to the northeast.

Population growth increased after the Louisiana Territory was purchased by the U.S. in 1803, with more American pioneers arriving, including a colony of North Carolina Presbyterians who settled around Brazeau Creek further south in 1817, with a village of that name growing up around it. After the creation of the Missouri Territory and its division into counties in 1812, the region was made a part of Ste. Genevieve County, but soon a movement arose to form a separate jurisdiction. Perry County was officially formed by the legislature on November 16, 1820, though a county court was not organized until the following spring. The present site of Perryville was selected for a county seat, with a courthouse constructed in 1825. Perry County was the last to be formed before Missouri's official admission into the Union in 1821.[2]

The Saxon Lutheran Migration

During the 19th century, a variety of ethnic groups would settle in Perry County, including French, Belgians, and Swiss, along with a number of German Catholics. Possibly the most significant, however, was the arrival of Saxon Lutherans from Germany in the late 1830s. These were traditionalist Lutheran adherents who objected to the Kingdom of Prussia's attempts to force them into a single church with Calvinists, and chose to emigrate to America. Some 500-600 arrived in Perry County in 1839 and settled in its eastern portions (as well as in northeastern Cape Girardeau County to the south). Among the communities they established are the modern cities of Altenburg and Frohna, as well as the unincorporated communities of New Wells, Uniontown, and Wittenberg; and they would be instrumental in the founding of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod.[3] Eastern Perry County continues to have a strong German Lutheran presence, with some of the older residents still able to speak an old Saxon German dialect.[4]

Geography

Perry County is located in the northern part of southeastern Missouri, between the St. Francois Mountains and the Mississippi River. It has a roughly triangular shape, with the apex to the north, the base to the south, and the river forming its northeastern leg. It is bordered to the northeast and east by the state of Illinois, to the southeast by Cape Girardeau County, to the southwest by Bollinger and Madison Counties, and to the northwest by St. Francois and Ste. Genevieve Counties.

The county has a total area of 484.16 square miles, including 474.35 of land and 9.81 of water.[5] It has two main topographical divisions; by far the largest are the foothills of the St. Francois Mountains (themselves the eastern edge of the Ozarks), which are gently rolling in the central part of the county around Perryville and more rugged to the west. Its highest point is an unnamed hill in the far west, near the border with Madison County, rising to about 1,080 feet above sea level. The other part of the county is the floodplain in the northeast along the Mississippi River (mostly north of Brazeau Creek), and is several miles wide in some places. These include the Bois Brule and the Brazeau Bottoms, which average about 360 feet in elevation. These lowlands have by far the most fertile soil in the county, and were the area of first settlement in the early 19th century.[6]

The three major highways in the county are Interstate 55, which passes from northwest to southeast on a line skirting the western edge of Perryville; U.S. Route 61, which passes through the center of Perryville but otherwise generally parallels the interstate several miles to the east; and Missouri State Highway 51, which enters the county from the southwest, intersects I-55 and U.S. 61 at Perryville, and continues north to the Mississippi River, where it crosses the Chester Bridge into Illinois.

Demographics

At the 2010 census, Perry County had a total population of 18,971, with 7,357 households and 5,162 families. The population density was 39.2 per square mile. There were 8,568 housing units, or about 17.7 per square mile. The racial makeup of the county was about 97.21% White, 0.40% African-American, 0.32% Native American, 0.45% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 0.70% from some other race, and 0.90% from two or more races. Hispanics of any race were 1.68% of the population.

The median age in the county was 39.2 years. 25.10% of the population was under the age of 18, 7.78% was between the ages of 18 and 24, 24.51% was between the ages of 25 and 44, 27.00% was between the ages of 45 and 64, and 15.60% was 65 years old or older. The sex ratio was 49.9% male, 50.1% female.[7]

According to the 2010 American Community Survey, the median income in the county was $45,713 for a household, and $54,983 for a family. Males had a median income of $39,599 versus $27,436 for females. The unemployment rate was 4.2%. The per capita income was $22,200. 10.6% of the population was below the poverty line, including 15.0% of those under the age of 18 and 9.1% of those 65 years old or older.[8]

Communities

Perry County is home to six incorporated communities, including three cities, two villages, and one census-designated place (CDP).

Cities

Villages

CDP

Government

Local government in Perry County is provided by the elected officials. Traditionally, these have been dominated by the Republican Party, which at present holds all the elected positions.[9]

Countywide official Name Party
Assessor Charles Triller Republican
Circuit Clerk Jennifer Hotop Republican
County Clerk Jared W. Kutz Republican
Collector Rodney J. Richardet Republican
Commissioner (presiding) Mike Sauer Republican
Commissioner (District 1) Jay Wengert Republican
Commissioner (District 2) James L. Sutterer Republican
Coroner William Bohnert Republican
Prosecuting Attorney Caitlin Pistorio Republican
Public Administrator Tamara Tarrillion Republican
Recorder Dana Pritchard Republican
Sheriff Gary J. Schaaf Republican
Surveyor Tim Baer Republican
Treasurer Kathy Schumer Republican

At the state level, Perry County is part of two separate legislative districts for the Missouri House of Representatives. Most of the northern and eastern portions, including part of the city of Perryville, is part of the 116th District, which also includes parts of St. Francois and Ste. Genevieve Counties. It is currently represented by Dale Wright (R-Farmington), who was elected to his first term in November 2018, defeating Democrat Bill Kraemer.

Candidate Party Votes Vote Percentage
Dale Wright Republican 9,531 64.014%
Bill Kraemer Democratic 5,354 35.959%

The southern and southwestern parts of the county, including the cities of Altenburg and Frohna and the majority of Perryville, lie within the 145th District, which also includes all of Bollinger and Madison Counties. It is currently represented by Rick Francis (R-Perryville), who was re-elected to a second term in November 2018, defeating Democrat Ronald G. Pember.

Candidate Party Votes Vote Percentage
Rick Francis Republican 11,381 82.316%
Ronald G. Pember Democratic 2,445 17.684%

In the Missouri State Senate, Perry County is part of the 27th District, which also includes Bollinger, Cape Girardeau, Madison, Scott and Wayne Counties. It is currently represented by Wayne Wallingford (R-Cape Girardeau), who was re-elected in November 2016, defeating Democrat Donnie Owens.

Candidate Party Votes Vote Percentage
Wayne Wallingford Republican 56,750 74.440%
Donnie Owens Democratic 19,486 25.560%

Wallingford significantly overperformed in Perry County, winning 6,233 votes to 1,791 for Owens.

At the federal level, Perry County is part of Missouri's 8th Congressional District, which includes most of southeast and south-central Missouri. It is represented by Jason Smith (R-Salem), who won re-election in November 2018, defeating Democrat Kathy Ellis.

Candidate Party Votes Vote Percentage
Jason Smith Republican 194,042 73.39%
Kathy Ellis Democratic 66,151 25.019%
Jonathan Shell Libertarian 4,206 1.591%

Smith slightly overperformed his average margin in Perry County, winning 77.569% of the vote.[10]

Political Culture

As the above numbers indicate, Perry County is solidly Republican at the state and federal level, and has in fact been known as a traditional stronghold for the Missouri GOP since the early 20th century. Much of this can be attributed to the high number of German-Americans, who have tended to vote Republican since their arrival in the mid-19th century. The county voted for a Democrat for president only twice in the 20th century, in 1932 and 1964. In fact, it has only trended more strongly Republican since the 1990s, with its mostly rural, middle- and working-class population being alienated by the Democratic Party's social radicalism. In the 2016 general election, the county overwhelmingly supported Donald Trump, who won 79.04% of the vote.[11]

Like much of southern Missouri, Perry County can be included within the Bible Belt, and tends to combine social conservatism with economic populism. In 2004, it voted overwhelmingly in favor of Constitutional Amendment 2, which recognized marriage as between a man and a woman only—the measure passed in Perry County with 85.07% support. In 2006, while the state overall narrowly passed an amendment to fund embryonic stem-cell research, the county decisively defeated the measure with 69.45% voting against. At the same time, it often supports economic measures that appear to favor the working and middle class--though this happens less frequently than elsewhere in Southeast Missouri, possibly because of its longer tradition of identifying with the Republican Party. In the November 2018 election, the county narrowly rejected a proposed increase in the state minimum wage, with 50.44% voting against (though it passed the state at large). These results mark Perry County as one of the state's most reliably conservative regions.

References