108th New York State Legislature

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108th New York State Legislature



107th 109th

The facade of the New York State Capitol building in bright daylight

New York State Capitol (2009)

Overview
Jurisdiction
New York, United States
TermJanuary 1 – December 31, 1885
Senate
Members32
Presidentvacant
Temporary President
Dennis McCarthy (R)
Party controlRepublican (19-13)
Assembly
Members128
Speaker
George Z. Erwin (R)
Party controlRepublican (73-55)
Sessions




1stJanuary 6 – May 15, 1885
2ndMay 15 – 22, 1885

The 108th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 6 to May 22, 1885, during the first year of David B. Hill's governorship, in Albany.




Contents





  • 1 Background


  • 2 Elections


  • 3 Sessions


  • 4 State Senate

    • 4.1 Districts


    • 4.2 Members


    • 4.3 Employees



  • 5 State Assembly

    • 5.1 Assemblymen


    • 5.2 Employees



  • 6 Notes


  • 7 Sources




Background


Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1846, 32 Senators and 128 assemblymen were elected in single-seat districts; senators for a two-year term, assemblymen for a one-year term. The senatorial districts were made up of entire counties, except New York County (seven districts) and Kings County (three districts). The Assembly districts were made up of entire towns, or city wards,[1] forming a contiguous area, all within the same county.


At this time there were two major political parties: the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. In New York City the Democrats were split into three factions: Tammany Hall, "Irving Hall" and the "County Democrats". The Prohibition Party; and a fusion of the Greenback Party, the Anti-Monopoly Party and the "People's Party", also nominated tickets.



Elections


The New York state election, 1884 was held on November 4. Governor Grover Cleveland was elected U.S. President. The only two statewide elective offices up for election were two judgeships on the New York Court of Appeals, which were carried by the two cross-endorsed incumbents, one Democrats and one Republican.



Sessions


The Legislature met for the regular session at the State Capitol in Albany on January 6, 1885; and adjourned on May 15.


On January 6, Gov. Grover Cleveland resigned, and Lt. Gov. David B. Hill succeeded to the office.


George Z. Erwin (R) was elected Speaker with 72 votes against 51 for William Caryl Ely (D).[2]


On January 20, the Legislature elected William M. Evarts (R) to succeed Elbridge G. Lapham (R) as U.S. Senator from New York, for a six-year term beginning on March 4, 1885.[3]


On May 15, the Legislature adjourned. While the members were exchanging farewells, copies of Gov. Hill's proclamation for a special session, to convene on the same day at 4 p.m., were delivered to the clerks of the Senate and the Assembly. The special session was called to consider again — Hill had vetoed a census bill during the regular session — action to be taken concerning the decennial enumeration which, under the Constitution, was due in 1885. In his message to the Legislature, Hill stated that the Constitution required an "enumeration", but not a "census".[4] No enumeration or census bill was passed until 1891.



State Senate



Districts



  • 1st District: Queens and Suffolk counties

  • 2nd District: 1st, 2nd, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 12th and 22nd Ward of the City of Brooklyn, and the towns of Flatbush, Gravesend and New Utrecht in Kings County

  • 3rd District: 3rd, 4th, 7th, 11th, 13th, 19th, 20th, 21st and 23rd Ward of the City of Brooklyn

  • 4th District: 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 24th and 25th Ward of the City of Brooklyn, and the towns of New Lots and Flatlands in Kings County

  • 5th District: Richmond County and the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 8th, 14th and parts of the 4th and 9th Ward of New York City

  • 6th District: 7th, 11th, 13th and part of the 4th Ward of NYC

  • 7th District: 10th, 17th and part of the 15th, 18th and 21st Ward of NYC

  • 8th District: 16th and part of the 9th, 15th, 18th, 20th and 21st Ward of NYC

  • 9th District: Part of the 18th, 19th and 21st Ward of NYC

  • 10th District: Part of the 12th, 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd Ward of NYC

  • 11th District: 23rd and 24th, and part of the 12th, 20th and 22nd Ward of NYC

  • 12th District: Rockland and Westchester counties

  • 13th District: Orange and Sullivan counties

  • 14th District: Greene, Schoharie and Ulster counties

  • 15th District: Columbia, Dutchess and Putnam counties

  • 16th District: Rensselaer and Washington counties

  • 17th District: Albany County

  • 18th District: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga and Schenectady counties

  • 19th District: Clinton, Essex and Warren counties

  • 20th District: Franklin, Lewis and St. Lawrence counties

  • 21st District: Oswego and Jefferson counties

  • 22nd District: Oneida County

  • 23rd District: Herkimer, Madison and Otsego counties

  • 24th District: Chenango, Delaware and Broome counties

  • 25th District: Onondaga and Cortland counties

  • 26th District: Cayuga, Seneca, Tompkins and Tioga counties

  • 27th District: Allegany, Chemung and Steuben counties

  • 28th District: Ontario, Schuyler, Wayne and Yates counties

  • 29th District: Monroe and Orleans counties

  • 30th District: Genesee, Livingston, Niagara and Wyoming counties

  • 31st District: Erie County

  • 32nd District: Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties


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.






































































































































District
Senator
Party
Notes
1st

James Otis*
Republican

2nd

John J. Kiernan*
Democrat

3rd

Albert Daggett*
Republican

4th

John C. Jacobs*
Democrat

5th

Michael C. Murphy*
County/Irv. H. Dem.

6th

Timothy J. Campbell*
County/Irv. H. Dem.
on November 3, 1885, elected to the 49th U.S. Congress
7th

James Daly*
County Dem.

8th

Frederick S. Gibbs*
Republican

9th

John J. Cullen*
Tammany Dem.

10th

J. Hampden Robb*
Democrat

11th

George W. Plunkitt*
Tammany Dem.

12th

Henry C. Nelson*
Democrat

13th

Henry R. Low*
Republican

14th

John Van Schaick*
Democrat

15th

Thomas Newbold*
Democrat

16th

Albert C. Comstock*
Republican

17th

John B. Thacher*
Democrat

18th

James Arkell*
Republican

19th

Shepard P. Bowen*
Republican

20th

John I. Gilbert*
Republican

21st

Frederick Lansing*
Republican

22nd

Henry J. Coggeshall*
Republican

23rd

Andrew Davidson*
Republican

24th

Edward B. Thomas*
Republican

25th

Dennis McCarthy*
Republican
President pro tempore
26th

Edward S. Esty*
Republican

27th

J. Sloat Fassett*
Republican

28th

Thomas Robinson*
Republican

29th

Charles S. Baker*
Republican
on November 4, 1884, elected to the 49th U.S. Congress
30th

Timothy E. Ellsworth*
Republican

31st

Robert C. Titus*
Democrat

32nd

Commodore P. Vedder*
Republican


Employees


  • Clerk: John W. Vrooman

  • Sergeant-at-Arms: George A. Goss

  • Doorkeeper: David W. Bogert

  • Stenographer: Hudson C. Tanner

  • Postmaster: A. E. Darrow

  • Janitor: A. L. Neidick

  • Chaplain: S. V. Leech


State Assembly



Assemblymen


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued as members of this Legislature.































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assemblymen
Party
Notes

Albany
1st

Stephen H. Niles
Democrat

2nd

Lansing Hotaling
Republican

3rd

Patrick Murray
Democrat

4th

Terence I. Hardin
Democrat


Allegany

William R. McEwen
Republican


Broome

William H. Olin*
Republican


Cattaraugus
1st

Frederick W. Kruse*
Republican

2nd

Eugene A. Nash*
Republican


Cayuga
1st

Willoughby B. Priddy*
Republican

2nd

Michael B. Van Buskirk
Republican


Chautauqua
1st

Dana P. Horton*
Republican

2nd

Julien T. Williams
Republican


Chemung

Jonas S. Van Duzer*
Republican


Chenango

George B. Whitmore[5]
Republican


Clinton

George W. Palmer
Republican


Columbia

John C. Hogeboom[6]
Republican


Cortland

Harlan P. Andrews
Republican


Delaware

Silas S. Cartwright*
Republican


Dutchess
1st

Joseph H. Storm
Republican

2nd

Edward B. Osborne*
Democrat


Erie
1st

William F. Sheehan
Democrat

2nd

Frank M. Giese
Democrat

3rd

William M. Hawkins
Republican

4th

Timothy W. Jackson*
Democrat

5th

Amos H. Baker
Republican


Essex

Wesley Barnes
Republican


Franklin

William T. O'Neil*
Republican


Fulton and Hamilton

Alden W. Berry
Republican


Genesee

Lucien R. Bailey*
Republican


Greene

Stephen T. Hopkins
Republican


Herkimer

John M. Budlong
Republican


Jefferson
1st

Allen E. Kilby
Republican

2nd

Eli J. Seeber*
Republican


Kings
1st

Moses J. Wafer
Democrat

2nd

Richard Nagle*
Democrat

3rd

Peter K. McCann
Democrat

4th

Henry F. Haggerty
Democrat

5th

Michael J. Coffey*
Democrat

6th

Thomas F. Farrell*
Democrat

7th

George H. Lindsay*
Democrat

8th

Robert E. Connelly
Democrat

9th

Lewis A. Myers
Republican

10th

James Taylor*
Republican

11th

Henry Heath*
Republican

12th

Mortimer C. Earl*
Democrat


Lewis

G. Henry P. Gould
Democrat


Livingston

Kidder M. Scott*
Republican


Madison

Edward F. Haskell*
Republican


Monroe
1st

Walter S. Hubbell*
Republican

2nd

James P. Tumilty
Democrat
unsuccessfully contested by Charles W. Voshall (R)[7]
3rd

Philip Garbutt*
Republican


Montgomery

Thomas Liddle
Republican


New York
1st

Daniel E. Finn
Irving H. Dem.

2nd

James Oliver*
Democrat

3rd

Charles Eiseman
Tammany Dem.

4th

Patrick H. Roche*
Democrat

5th

Michael Brennan
County/Irv. H. Dem.

6th

Edward F. Reilly
Tammany Dem.

7th

Lucas L. Van Allen*
Republican

8th

Charles Smith*
Republican

9th

John P. Rockefeller
Republican

10th

George F. Roesch
County/Irv. H. Dem.

11th

Walter Howe*
Republican

12th

Solomon D. Rosenthal*
County/Irv. H. Dem.

13th

John P. Windolph
Republican

14th

Jacob Kunzenman
County Dem.

15th

John B. McGoldrick
Tammany Dem.

16th

Edward P. Hagan
County Dem.

17th

John H. O'Hara
Democrat

18th

John F. Kenny
County/Irv. H. Dem.

19th

Eugene S. Ives
Democrat

20th

James Haggerty*
Tammany Dem.

21st

Henry A. Barnum
Republican

22nd

Joseph L. Gerety
County/Irv. H. Dem.

23rd

Jacob A. Cantor
Tammany Dem.

24th

John B. Shea
County/Irv. H. Dem.


Niagara
1st

Jacob A. Driess*
Democrat

2nd

Walter P. Horne
Democrat


Oneida
1st

Henry A. Steber
Labor Reform/Rep.

2nd

Lewis B. Sherman
Dem./Labor Reform

3rd

T. James Owens*
Republican


Onondaga
1st

Wallace Tappan
Republican

2nd

Francis Hendricks*
Republican

3rd

Conrad Shoemaker*
Republican


Ontario

John Raines
Republican


Orange
1st

Samuel L. Carlisle
Republican

2nd

George W. Greene
Democrat


Orleans

J. Marshall Dibble*
Republican


Oswego
1st

Henry C. Howe
Republican

2nd

Gouverneur M. Sweet*
Republican


Otsego
1st

William Caryl Ely*
Democrat
Minority Leader
2nd

Frank B. Arnold
Republican


Putnam

Robert A. Livingston
Republican


Queens
1st

Louis K. Church*
Democrat

2nd

Thomas Allen Smith
Republican


Rensselaer
1st

James P. Hooley*
Dem./Labor Reform

2nd

Eugene L. Demers
Republican

3rd

Charles C. Lodewick
Democrat


Richmond

Michael S. Tynan
Republican


Rockland

John W. Felter*
Democrat


St. Lawrence
1st

N. Martin Curtis*
Republican

2nd

Andrew Tuck
Rep./Proh.

3rd

George Z. Erwin*
Republican
elected Speaker

Saratoga
1st

Daniel C. Briggs*
Republican

2nd

Bartlett B. Grippin
Republican


Schenectady

Edward D. Cutler
Democrat


Schoharie

Addison H. Bartley
Democrat


Schuyler

Fremont Cole
Republican


Seneca

William B. Clark
Democrat


Steuben
1st

George E. Whiteman*
Democrat

2nd

Charles D. Baker
Republican


Suffolk

Simeon S. Hawkins*
Republican


Sullivan

James D. Decker
Democrat


Tioga

Charles F. Barager*
Republican


Tompkins

Hiland K. Clark
Republican


Ulster
1st

Robert A. Snyder
Republican

2nd

Gilbert D. B. Hasbrouck*
Republican

3rd

Cornelius A. J. Hardenbergh
Democrat


Warren

Frank Bryne
Democrat


Washington
1st

George Scott
Republican

2nd

Charles K. Baker*
Republican


Wayne
1st

Ammon S. Farnum*
Republican

2nd

Edwin K. Burnham
Democrat


Westchester
1st

Charles P. McClelland
Democrat

2nd

Samuel W. Johnson*
Democrat

3rd

James W. Husted*
Republican


Wyoming

John E. Lowing
Republican


Yates

Clark E. Smith
Republican


Employees


  • Clerk: Charles A. Chickering

  • Sergeant-at-Arms: Edward H. Talbott

  • Doorkeeper: Michael Maher

  • Assistant Doorkeeper: Herman K. Fox

  • Stenographer: Emory P. Close


Notes



  1. ^ Except New York City where the wards were apportioned into election districts, and then some whole wards and some election districts of other wards were gerrymandered together into Assembly districts.


  2. ^ TO-DAY'S NEWS; The Assembly in The Yonkers Statesman on January 6, 1885


  3. ^ EVARTS ELECTED SENATOR in NYT on January 22, 1885


  4. ^ AN EXTRA SESSION CALLED in NYT on May 16, 1885


  5. ^ George B. Whitmore (born 1835), brother of assemblyman Daniel E. Whitmore (in 1875)


  6. ^ John C. Hogeboom (born 1857), grandson of state senator John C. Hogeboom (1801–05)


  7. ^ see A Compilation of Cases of Contested Elections to Seats in the Assembly of the State of New York (1899; pg. 684)



Sources



  • The New York Red Book compiled by Edgar L. Murlin (published by James B. Lyon, Albany NY, 1897; see pg. 384f for senate districts; pg. 403 for senators; pg. 410–417 for Assembly districts; and pg. 504 for assemblymen)


  • Biographical sketches of the Members of the Legislature in The Evening Journal Almanac (1885) [e-book]


  • ERWIN DEFEATS HUBBELL in NYT on January 6, 1885







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