Dixville Notch, a small unincorporated community of nine registered voters nestled in New Hampshire's White Mountains, is the first place in the state to vote during each election. The midnight voting tradition dates back to 1960, making it the longest continuous streak of midnight voting in the country. While two other small New Hampshire communities will also vote at midnight this year, Dixville Notch's teeny-tiny election has the most notoriety and is referred to as the first vote in the nation.

Dixville Notch voters filling out their ballots now. They'll officially open the poll at midnight. Close it shortly after the count. — Jana Barnello WGME (@JanaWGME) February 9, 2016

This year's results: A close win for John Kasich over Donald Trump, and Bernie Sanders demolished Hillary Clinton.

#BREAKING Dixville Notch results: GOP: Trump 2, Kasich 3. Dems Sanders 4, Clinton 0. @DixvilleVote — Jana Barnello WGME (@JanaWGME) February 9, 2016

Polls in the rest of New Hampshire close at 7:00 p.m., and it will certainly be interesting to see if this tiny community is an accurate barometer of the state's politics.

UPDATE: The Kasich camp is pretty stoked by this victory: