71st New York State Legislature
71st New York State Legislature | |||
The Old State Capitol (1879) | |||
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Duration: January 1 – December 31, 1848 | |||
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President of the State Senate: | Lt. Gov. Hamilton Fish (W) | ||
Temporary President of the State Senate: | |||
Speaker of the State Assembly: | Amos K. Hadley (W) | ||
Members: | 32 Senators 128 Assemblymen | ||
Senate Majority: | Whig (24-8) | ||
Assembly Majority: | Whig (93-35) | ||
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Sessions | |||
1st: January 4 – April 12, 1848 | |||
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The 71st New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 4 to April 12, 1848, during the second year of John Young's governorship, in Albany.
Background
Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1846, 32 Senators were elected in single-seat senatorial districts for a two-year term, the whole Senate being renewed biennially. The senatorial districts (except those in New York City) were made up of entire counties. 128 Assemblymen were elected in single-seat districts to a one-year term, the whole Assembly being renewed annually. The Assembly districts were made up of entire towns, or city wards, forming a contiguous area, all in the same county. The City and County of New York was divided into four senatorial districts, and 16 Assembly districts.
On September 27, the Legislative passed "An Act to provide for the electioon of a Lieutenant Governor", to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Addison Gardiner.
At this time there were two major political parties: the Democratic Party and the Whig Party. The Democratic Party was split into two factions: the "Barnburners" and the "Hunkers." The radical abolitionists appeared as the Liberty Party. The Anti-Rent Party nominated some candidates, but mostly cross-endorsed Whigs or Democrats, according to their opinion on the rent issue. The Native American Party (later better known as "Know Nothings") also ran.
Elections
The New York state election, 1847 was held on November 3. Hamilton Fish (W) was elected Lieutenant Governor; and all the other eleven statewide elective offices were won by the Whigs.
24 Whigs and 8 Democrats were elected to the State Senate. 93 Whigs and 35 Democrats were elected to the Assembly.
Sessions
The Legislature met for the regular session at the Old State Capitol in Albany on January 4, 1848; and adjourned on April 12.
Amos K. Hadley (W) was elected Speaker with 89 votes against 22 for Henry Wager (D).
State Senate
Districts
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Note: There are now 62 counties in the State of New York. The counties which are not mentioned in this list had not yet been established, or sufficiently organized, the area being included in one or more of the abovementioned counties.
Members
The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Valentine Treadwell and William J. Cornwell changed from the Assembly to the Senate.
Party affiliations follow the vote on Clerk and Sergeant-at-Arms.[1]
District | Senator | Party | Notes |
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1st | John G. Floyd | Democrat | |
2nd | David A. Bokee | Whig | on November 7, 1848, elected to the 31st U.S. Congress |
3rd | William Hall | Whig | |
4th | John L. Lawrence | Whig | |
5th | Samuel Frost | Whig | |
6th | William Samuel Johnson | Whig | |
7th | Saxton Smith* | Democrat | |
8th | Alexander J. Coffin | Whig | |
9th | Samuel J. Wilkin | Whig | |
10th | Platt Adams | Democrat | |
11th | Valentine Treadwell* | Whig | |
12th | Albert R. Fox | Whig | |
13th | James M. Cook | Whig | |
14th | James S. Whallon | Democrat | |
15th | John Fine | Democrat | |
16th | Thomas Burch | Whig | |
17th | John M. Betts | Democrat | |
18th | David H. Little | Whig | |
19th | Thomas E. Clark | Whig | |
20th | Thomas H. Bond | Whig | |
21st | John W. Tamblin | Democrat | |
22nd | George Geddes | Whig | |
23rd | Samuel H. P. Hall* | Whig | |
24th | William J. Cornwell* | Whig | |
25th | Timothy S. Williams | Whig | |
26th | William M. Hawley | Democrat | |
27th | Jerome Fuller | Whig | |
28th | A. Hyde Cole | Whig | |
29th | Allen Ayrault | Whig | resigned his seat on June 2, 1848 |
30th | John W. Brownson | Whig | |
31st | John T. Bush | Whig | |
32nd | Frederick S. Martin | Whig | |
Employees
- Clerk: Andrew H. Calhoun
- Deputy Clerks: John P. Lott, J. N. T. Tucker
- Sergeant-at-Arms: Senter M. Giddings
- Doorkeeper: Ransom Van Valkenburgh
- Assistant Doorkeeper: George A. Loomis
- Reporter (Albany Argus): William G. Bishop
- Reporter (Evening Journal): Frans. S. Rew
- Messengers: John Manning, Richard E. Nagle
- Janitor: David Emery
State Assembly
Assemblymen
The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued as members of this Legislature.
Party affiliations follow the vote on Speaker.[2]
District | Assemblymen | Party | Notes | |
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Albany | 1st | Edward S. Willett | Whig | |
2nd | Frederick Mathias | Whig | ||
3rd | Robert H. Pruyn | Whig | ||
4th | Henry A. Brigham | Whig | ||
Allegany | 1st | John Wheeler | Whig | |
2nd | William Cobb | Democrat | ||
Broome | Jeremiah Hull | Whig | ||
Cattaraugus | 1st | James G. Johnson | Whig | |
2nd | Marcus H. Johnson | |||
Cayuga | 1st | Ebenezer Curtis | Whig | |
2nd | John I. Brinckerhoff | Whig | ||
3rd | Hector C. Tuthill | Whig | ||
Chautauqua | 1st | John H. Pray | Whig | |
2nd | David H. Treadway | Whig | ||
Chemung | George W. Buck | Whig | ||
Chenango | 1st | Levi H. Case | Democrat | |
2nd | Ezra P. Church | Whig | ||
Clinton | Rufus Heaton* | Democrat | ||
Columbia | 1st | Jonas H. Miller | Whig | |
2nd | Charles B. Osborn | Whig | ||
Cortland | James Comstock | Whig | ||
Delaware | 1st | Platt Townsend | ||
2nd | John Calhoun | Whig | ||
Dutchess | 1st | Edgar Vincent | Whig | |
2nd | David Collins Jr. | Whig | ||
3rd | James Hammond | Whig | ||
Erie | 1st | Elbridge G. Spaulding | Whig | on November 7, 1848, elected to the 31st U.S. Congress |
2nd | Harry Slade | Whig | ||
3rd | Ira E. Irish | Whig | ||
4th | Charles C. Severance | Whig | ||
Essex | William H. Butrick* | Whig | ||
Franklin | Elos L. Winslow | Democrat | ||
Fulton and Hamilton | Isaac Benedict | Democrat | ||
Genesee | 1st | Tracy Pardee | Whig | |
2nd | Alonzo S. Upham* | Whig | ||
Greene | 1st | Alexander H. Palmer | Whig | |
2nd | Frederick A. Fenn | Democrat | ||
Herkimer | 1st | James Feeter | Whig | |
2nd | Lawrence L. Merry | Whig | ||
Jefferson | 1st | Benjamin Maxson | Democrat | |
2nd | Harvey D. Parker | Democrat | ||
3rd | Fleury Keith | Democrat | ||
Kings | 1st | Ebenezer W. Peck* | Whig | |
2nd | Edwards W. Fiske | Whig | ||
3rd | John A. Cross | Whig | ||
Lewis | David D. Reamer | Whig | ||
Livingston | 1st | Gurdon Nowlen | Whig | Nowlan |
2nd | Nathaniel Coe | Whig | ||
Madison | 1st | John T. G. Bailey | Whig | |
2nd | George Grant | Democrat | ||
Monroe | 1st | Ezra Sheldon | Whig | |
2nd | Abraham M. Schermerhorn | Whig | on November 7, 1848, elected to the 31st U.S. Congress | |
3rd | Isaac Chase Jr. | Whig | ||
Montgomery | 1st | Asa Bowman | Whig | |
2nd | William A. Haslet | Democrat | ||
New York | 1st | J. Phillips Phoenix | Whig | on November 7, 1848, elected to the 31st U.S. Congress |
2nd | James Bowen | Whig | ||
3rd | John H. Bowie* | Democrat | ||
4th | John F. Rodman | Whig | ||
5th | Peter H. Titus | Whig | ||
6th | Samuel G. Raymond | Whig | ||
7th | William B. Meech | Whig | ||
8th | Thomas Charlock | Democrat | ||
9th | Dennis Garrison* | Democrat | ||
10th | Martin H. Truesdell | Whig | ||
11th | Alexander Stewart* | Democrat | ||
12th | Michael Walsh* | Democrat | ||
13th | Erastus C. Benedict | Whig | ||
14th | Robert G. Campbell | Whig | ||
15th | Merwin R. Brewer | Whig | ||
16th | James Brooks | Whig | on November 7, 1848, elected to the 31st U.S. Congress | |
Niagara | 1st | Elias Ransom | Whig | |
2nd | Solomon Moss | Democrat | contested by Morgan Johnson (W) who was seated on April 1[3] | |
Oneida | 1st | Luke Smith | Whig | |
2nd | Warren Converse | Whig | ||
3rd | Bloomfield J. Beach | Whig | ||
4th | Henry Wager | Democrat | ||
Onondaga | 1st | James Little | Democrat | |
2nd | Horace Hazen | Whig | ||
3rd | Thomas Spencer | Whig | ||
4th | Curtis J. Hurd | Whig | ||
Ontario | 1st | Charles S. Brother | Whig | |
2nd | Hiram Ashley | Whig | ||
Orange | 1st | Stephen Rapelje | Whig | |
2nd | George Houston | Whig | ||
3rd | Augustus P. Thompson | Whig | ||
Orleans | Arba Chubb | Whig | ||
Oswego | 1st | M. Lindley Lee* | Whig | |
2nd | Andrew Z. McCarty | Whig | ||
Otsego | 1st | Benjamin Davis | Whig | |
2nd | Olcott C. Chamberlin | |||
3rd | Elisha S. Sanders | Democrat | ||
Putnam | Chauncey R. Weeks | Whig | ||
Queens | Wessell S. Smith* | Whig | ||
Rensselaer | 1st | Amos K. Hadley* | Whig | elected Speaker |
2nd | George T. Denison | Whig | ||
3rd | George W. Glass | Whig | ||
Richmond | Ephraim J. Totten | Whig | ||
Rockland | Lawrence J. Sneden | Whig | ||
St. Lawrence | 1st | Charles G. Myers | Democrat | also D.A. of St. Lawrence County |
2nd | John S. Chipman | Whig | ||
3rd | Benjamin Holmes | Whig | ||
Saratoga | 1st | Cady Hollister | Democrat | |
2nd | George Payn | Whig | ||
Schenectady | Abraham W. Toll | Democrat | ||
Schoharie | 1st | Adam Mattice | Democrat | |
2nd | James Parsons | Democrat | ||
Seneca | John Kennedy | Democrat | ||
Steuben | 1st | Abel Kendall | Democrat | |
2nd | John G. Mersereau | Whig | ||
3rd | Alexander H. Stephens | |||
Suffolk | 1st | Edwin Rose | Whig | |
2nd | William Sidney Smith | Democrat | ||
Sullivan | James F. Bush | Whig | ||
Tioga | Erastus Goodrich | Democrat | ||
Tompkins | 1st | John Jessup | Whig | |
2nd | Alpheus West | Whig | ||
Ulster | 1st | George A. Gay | Whig | |
2nd | Job G. Elmore | Whig | ||
Warren | Albert Cheney | Whig | ||
Washington | 1st | Benjamin Crocker | Whig | |
2nd | Elisha A. Martin | Whig | ||
Wayne | 1st | Eliada Pettit | Whig | |
2nd | John Lapham | Whig | ||
Westchester | 1st | Richard M. Underhill | Whig | |
2nd | Jared V. Peck | Democrat | ||
Wyoming | Paul Richards | Whig | ||
Yates | Hatley N. Dox | Whig | ||
Employees
- Clerk: Philander B. Prindle
- Deputy Clerks: Edgar A. Barber, William E. Mills, Friend W. Humphrey
- Sergeant-at-Arms: Samuel H. Marks
- Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms: William Van Olinda
- Doorkeeper: John Davies
- First Assistant Doorkeeper: Samuel Merclean
- Second Assistant Doorkeeper: Erasmus D. S. Strong
- Doorkeeper for the Gentlemen's Gallery: Isaac Betticker
- Dorrkeeper for the Ladies' Gallery: Alexander Hamilton Stoutenburgh
- Porter: George Fonda
- Librarians: Ira Dubois, John T. Diossey
- Messengers: William Freeman, George W. Weed, Peter Craff, Edward Martin, James Whelpley, Seymour Daley, Harris Fellows, Peter Drum, Andrew Ryan, Penfield Strong, Webster Gardiner, Eugene Rearden, A. W. Baker
Notes
- ↑ see Journal of the Senate (71st Session) (1848; pg. 6)
- ↑ see Journal of the Assembly (71st Session) (1848; pg. 8f);
see also incomplete result in New York Daily Tribune (issue of November 6, 1847) - ↑ see A Compilation of Cases of Contested Elections to Seats in the Assembly of the State of New York (1871; pg. 206–228)
Sources
- The New York Civil List compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858) [pg. 109 for Senate districts; pg. 136 for senators; pg. 148–157 for Assembly districts; pg. 234ff for assemblymen]
- Documents of the Senate (71st Session) (1848; pg. 61ff