STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - High voter turnout on the South Shore and low turnout on the North Shore led Donald Trump to a victory on Staten Island Tuesday, carrying 57 percent of the vote to Hillary Clinton's 40 percent.

In total, Trump received 95,612 votes in the borough, while Clinton got 67,561. Third-party candidates and write-in votes made up 3 percent of the vote.

As expected, Trump did well on the South Shore and Clinton did well on the North Shore.

But turnout was very high in the solidly Republican South Shore, while many fewer people cast ballots on the solidly Democratic North Shore.

In the Republican 62nd AD, 51,853 people voted in the presidential race, giving Trump his largest margin of victory on the Island -- 75 percent.

That's compared to 38,704 voting in the Democratic North Shore's 61st AD; 44,291 voting in the Mid-Island 63rd AD; and 33,318 voting in the East Shore's 64th AD.

Here's the breakdown by Assembly district:

61st AD: 65 percent Clinton, 32 percent Trump (that's 25,055 votes to 12,310)

62nd AD: 75 percent Trump, 23 percent Clinton (that's 38,657 votes to 11,887)

63rd AD: 53 percent Trump, 44 percent Clinton (that's 23,568 votes to 19,395)

64th AD: 63 percent Trump, 34 percent Clinton (that's 21,077 votes to 11,224) This only includes the Staten Island portion of the district, not the Brooklyn portion

More Staten Islanders voted in Tuesday's presidential election than in the history-making 2008 election -- 109 more Islanders.

The 168,166 Staten Island ballots cast in the presidential election represented a 59 percent voter turnout, the second highest in all five boroughs, with Manhattan topping at 60 percent.

Turnout on the Island was only slightly higher than in 2008, when 168,057 people voted in the election between Barack Obama and John McCain, while only 154,999 cast ballots in the 2012 presidential election.

Third-party candidates Jill Stein and Gary Johnson collectively secured 3 percent of the vote in the 61st AD (1,092 votes), 2 percent in the 62nd AD (1,040 votes), 2.4 percent in the 63rd AD (1,068 votes) and 2.5 percent in the Staten Island portion of the 64th AD (836 votes).

Write-in votes accounted for less than 1 percent of the vote in any given district: 247 in the 61st AD, 269 in the 62nd AD, 260 in the 63rd AD and 181 in the 64th AD, Staten Island portion.

Paper ballots, either provisional ballots submitted at the polls or mail-in absentee ballots, must still be counted. They will be reflected in the certified election results that the Board of Elections releases in coming weeks.

On Staten Island, Rep. Daniel Donovan received the most votes of any one candidate: 105,223, taking 66 percent of the vote against Democrat Richard Reichard, with 33 percent of the vote (52,014 votes).

When factoring Brooklyn votes for the entire 11th Congressional District, Donovan had a slightly smaller margin of victory -- 62 percent to Reichard's 36 percent.

Sen. Charles Schumer received the second highest number of votes in the borough: 100,177, a 62 percent win over Republican Wendy Long, who got 37 percent of the vote here (59,126).

Statewide, Schumer secured about 70 percent of the vote to Long's 27 percent.

A HISTORY OF SUPPORT FOR GOP

Staten Island is known as the red borough for a reason -- it often votes for Republicans in islandwide races, whether local, or national.

Voters in the borough have only voted for a Democrat for president three times since 1964: Bill Clinton in 1996, Al Gore in 2000 and Barack Obama in 2012.