121st New York State Legislature

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121st New York State Legislature



120th 122nd

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, 1898
Senate
Members50
PresidentLt. Gov. Timothy L. Woodruff (R)
Temporary President
Timothy E. Ellsworth (R)
Party controlRepublican (36-14)
Assembly
Members150
Speaker
James M. E. O'Grady (R)
Party controlRepublican (80-70)
Sessions




1stJanuary 5 – March 31, 1898
2ndJuly 11 – 16, 1898

The 121st New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 5 to July 16, 1898, during the second year of Frank S. Black'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 1894, 50 Senators and 150 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 (twelve districts), Kings County (seven districts), Erie County (three districts) and Monroe County (two districts). The Assembly districts were made up of contiguous area, all within the same county.


At the New York state election, 1895, the state officers and state senators were elected to an exceptional three-year term (for the sessions of 1896, 1897 and 1898), so that the election of these officers would be held, beginning in 1898, in even-numbered years, at the same time as the gubernatorial election.


At this time there were two major political parties: the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. The Socialist Labor Party and the Prohibition Party also nominated tickets.



Elections


The New York state election, 1897 was held on November 2. The only statewide elective office up for election was carried by Democrat Alton B. Parker. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote for Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals, was: Democratic 555,000; Republican 494,000; Socialist Labor 21,000; and Prohibition 20,000.



Sessions


The Legislature met for the regular session at the State Capitol in Albany on January 5, 1898; and adjourned on March 31.


James M. E. O'Grady (R) was re-elected Speaker, against Thomas F. Donnelly (D).[1]


On April 25, Congress declared that the Spanish–American War had begun four days previously. Many New Yorkers volunteered to fight for the independence of Cuba, among them Assistant U.S. Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt and Assemblyman William A. Chanler.


The Legislature met for a special session on July 11;[2] and adjourned on July 16.[3] The Legislature enacted a Metropolitan District Elections law which took the organization of elections in New York City out of the hands of the metropolitan police force, then headed by Chief William Stephen Devery, and placed them instead in the hands of a State Superintendent of Elections, appointed by the Governor, and confirmed by the Senate. A few minutes after the law was passed, John McCullagh, Devery's predecessor as head of the metropolitan police, was appointed to the office. The Legislature also appropriated money to an additional war fund; and enacted a Soldiers Vote law, expecting it being necessary to take the vote of the New Yorkers engaged in the Spanish–American War in the field during the next state election.



State Senate



Districts



  • 1st District: Richmond and Suffolk counties

  • 2nd District: Queens County

  • 3rd District: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Ward of Brooklyn, as constituted in 1894

  • 4th District: 7th, 13th, 19th and 21st Ward of Brooklyn, as constituted in 1894

  • 5th District: 8th, 10th, 12th and 30th Ward of Brooklyn, and the annexed former Town of Gravesend, as constituted in 1894

  • 6th District: 9th, 11th, 20th and 22nd Ward of Brooklyn, as constituted in 1894

  • 7th District: 14th, 15th, 16th and 17th Ward of Brooklyn, as constituted in 1894

  • 8th District: 23rd, 24th, 25th and 29th Ward of Brooklyn; and the annexed former Town of Flatlands, as constituted in 1894

  • 9th District: 18th, 26th, 27th and 28th Ward of Brooklyn, as constituted in 1894

  • 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st District: Parts of the City of New York, defined geographically by their bordering streets, regardless of Wards or Assembly districts

  • 22nd District: Westchester County

  • 23rd District: Orange and Rockland counties

  • 24th District: Columbia, Dutchess and Putnam and counties

  • 25th District: Greene and Ulster counties

  • 26th District: Chenango, Delaware and Sullivan counties

  • 27th District: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery and Schoharie counties

  • 28th District: Saratoga, Schenectady and Washington counties

  • 29th District: Albany County

  • 30th District: Rensselaer County

  • 31st District: Clinton, Essex and Warren counties

  • 32nd District: Franklin and St. Lawrence counties

  • 33rd District: Otsego and Herkimer counties

  • 34th District: Oneida County

  • 35th District: Jefferson and Lewis counties

  • 36th District: Onondaga County

  • 37th District: Oswego and Madison counties

  • 38th District: Broome, Cortland and Tioga counties

  • 39th District: Cayuga and Seneca counties

  • 40th District: Chemung, Schuyler and Tompkins counties

  • 41st District: Steuben and Yates counties

  • 42nd District: Ontario and Wayne counties

  • 43rd District: 4th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 16th, 17th and 18th Ward of Rochester; and the towns of Brighton, Henrietta, Irondequoit, Menden, Penfield, Perinton, Pittsford, Rush and Webster, in Monroe County

  • 44th District: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 15th, 19th and 20th Ward of Rochester; and the towns of Chili, Clarkson, Gates, Greece, Hamlin, Ogden, Parma, Riga, Sweden and Wheatland, in Monroe County

  • 45th District: Genesee, Niagara and Orleans counties

  • 46th District: Allegany, Livingston and Wyoming counties

  • 47th District: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 6th, 15th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd and 24th Ward of Buffalo

  • 48th District: 4th, 5th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th and 16th Ward of Buffalo

  • 49th District: 17th, 18th and 25th Ward of the City of Buffalo; and all area in Erie County outside Buffalo

  • 50th District: Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties


Note: In 1897, New York County (the boroughs of Manhattan and Bronx), Kings County (the borough of Brooklyn), Richmond County (the borough of Staten Island) and the Western part of Queens County (the borough of Queens) were consolidated into the present-day City of New York. The Eastern part of Queens County (the non-consolidated part) was separated in 1899 as Nassau County. Parts of the 1st and 2nd Assembly districts of Westchester County were annexed by New York City in 1895, and became part of the Borough of the Bronx in 1898.



Members


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














































































































































































































District
Senator
Party
Notes
1st

Richard Higbie*
Republican

2nd

Theodore Koehler*
Democrat

3rd

Frank Gallagher*
Democrat

4th

George W. Brush*
Republican

5th

Michael J. Coffey*
Democrat

6th

Peter H. McNulty*
Democrat

7th

Patrick H. McCarren*
Democrat

8th

Albert A. Wray*
Republican

9th

Julius L. Wieman*
Republican

10th

John F. Ahearn*
Democrat

11th

Timothy D. Sullivan*
Democrat

12th

Samuel J. Foley*
Democrat

13th

Bernard F. Martin*
Democrat

14th

Thomas F. Grady*
Democrat

15th

Frank D. Pavey*
Republican

16th

Louis Munzinger*
Democrat

17th

Charles B. Page*
Republican

18th

Maurice Featherson*
Democrat

19th

John Ford*
Republican

20th

Jacob A. Cantor*
Democrat
Minority Leader
21st

Charles L. Guy*
Democrat

22nd

J. Irving Burns*
Republican

23rd

Clarence Lexow*
Republican

24th

William C. Daley*
Republican

25th

Charles Davis*
Republican

26th

John Grant*
Republican

27th

Hobart Krum*
Republican

28th

Edgar T. Brackett*
Republican

29th

Myer Nussbaum*
Republican

30th

LeGrand C. Tibbits*
Republican

31st

George Chahoon*
Republican

32nd

George R. Malby*
Republican

33rd

Walter L. Brown*
Republican

34th

Henry J. Coggeshall*
Ind. Rep.

35th

Elon R. Brown
Republican
elected to fill vacancy, in place of Joseph Mullin
36th

Horace White*
Republican

37th

Nevada N. Stranahan*
Republican

38th

William Elting Johnson*
Republican

39th

Benjamin M. Wilcox*
Republican

40th

Edwin C. Stewart*
Republican

41st

John S. Sheppard*
Republican

42nd

John Raines*
Republican

43rd

Cornelius R. Parsons*
Republican

44th

Henry Harrison*
Republican

45th

Timothy E. Ellsworth*
Republican
President pro tempore
46th

Lester H. Humphrey*
Republican

47th

Charles Lamy*
Republican

48th

Simon Seibert*
Republican

49th

George Allen Davis*
Republican

50th

Frank W. Higgins*
Republican


Employees


  • Clerk: James S. Whipple

  • Sergeant-at-Arms: Garret J. Benson

  • Doorkeeper: Nathan Lewis

  • Stenographer: Edward Shaughnessy


State Assembly



Assemblymen
























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assemblymen
Party
Notes

Albany
1st

William L. Coughtry
Republican

2nd

James B. McEwan*
Republican

3rd

George T. Kelly*
Democrat

4th

George W. Stedman
Republican


Allegany

Almanzo W. Litchard
Republican


Broome
1st

Charles E. Fuller*
Republican

2nd

Edgar L. Vincent
Republican


Cattaraugus
1st

George A. Stoneman
Republican

2nd

Girvease A. Matteson*
Republican


Cayuga
1st

Elias Q. Dutton
Republican

2nd

George S. Fordyce
Republican


Chautauqua
1st

Frederick R. Peterson*
Republican

2nd

S. Frederick Nixon*
Republican
Majority Leader

Chemung

John H. Holbert*
Republican


Chenango

Jotham P. Allds*
Republican


Clinton

Edmund J. Pickett
Democrat


Columbia

Robert Hoes*
Republican


Cortland

David W. Van Hoesen
Democrat


Delaware

Delos Axtell
Republican


Dutchess
1st

John A. Hanna*
Republican

2nd

William A. Tripp
Republican


Erie
1st

Anthony J. Boland
Democrat

2nd

Henry W. Hill*
Republican

3rd

William Maloney*
Democrat

4th

John C. Mohring
Democrat

5th

Henry Streifler
Democrat

6th

Nicholas J. Miller*
Republican

7th

John K. Patton
Republican

8th

E. Freeman Baker
Republican


Essex

James H. Pierce*
Republican


Franklin

Thomas A. Sears*
Republican


Fulton and Hamilton

Daniel Hays
Republican


Genesee

John J. Ellis
Republican


Greene

Sylvester B. Sage
Democrat


Herkimer

E. LaGrange Smith
Republican


Jefferson
1st

Walter Zimmerman*
Republican

2nd

Cornelius J. Clark*
Republican


Kings
1st

Henry S. Griggs
Democrat

2nd

John McKeown*
Democrat

3rd

Thomas H. Cullen*
Democrat

4th

David Floyd Davis
Republican

5th

Abram C. DeGraw
Republican

6th

William R. McGuire
Democrat

7th

Francis P. Gallagher
Democrat

8th

Thomas J. Farrell
Democrat

9th

John J. Cain*
Democrat

10th

Samuel M. Hubbard
Democrat

11th

Joseph A. Guider
Democrat

12th

Charles C. Schoeneck
Democrat

13th

Bartley J. Wright
Democrat

14th

August F. Schmid
Democrat

15th

Harry H. Dale
Democrat

16th

Edward C. Brennan*
Republican

17th

Henry Marshall*
Republican

18th

George Tiffany
Republican

19th

Frederick Schmid*
Democrat

20th

Otto Wicke
Democrat

21st

John E. Reisert
Democrat


Lewis

Addison L. Clark
Republican


Livingston

Otto Kelsey*
Republican


Madison

Robert J. Fish*
Republican


Monroe
1st

James B. Perkins
Republican

2nd

James M. E. O'Grady*
Republican
re-elected Speaker;
on November 8, 1898, elected to the 56th U.S. Congress
3rd

William W. Armstrong*
Republican

4th

Jacob S. Haight
Democrat


Montgomery

Richard Murphy
Republican


New York
1st

Daniel E. Finn*
Democrat

2nd

James Oliver
Democrat

3rd

Dominick F. Mullaney
Democrat

4th

Patrick H. Roche*
Democrat

5th

William A. Chanler
Democrat
did not attend the special session, due to
engagement in the Spanish–American War;
on November 8, 1898, elected to the 56th U.S. Congress
6th

Timothy P. Sullivan*
Democrat

7th

John F. Maher
Democrat

8th

Charles S. Adler*
Republican

9th

N. Taylor Phillips
Democrat

10th

Julius Harburger
Democrat

11th

John J. O'Connor
Democrat

12th

Joseph Schulum*
Democrat

13th

Patrick F. Trainor*
Democrat

14th

Jacob Fritz*
Democrat

15th

Thomas Smith
Democrat

16th

Benjamin Hoffman*
Democrat

17th

John F. Brennan
Democrat

18th

Charles P. Dillon
Democrat

19th

Solomon C. Weill
Democrat
contested in the courts;[4] election vacated after his death;[5]
died on April 28, 1898[6]

Perez M. Stewart

Citizens Union
seated on July 11, by order of the Court of Appeals
20th

Cornelius F. Collins
Democrat

21st

Thomas J. Murray
Democrat

22nd

Henry Hachemeister
Democrat

23rd

Mark J. Lowenthal
Republican

24th

John B. Fitzgerald*
Democrat

25th

John A. Weekes, Jr.
Republican

26th

Charles S. Sinsheimer
Democrat

27th

Francis E. Laimbeer*
Ind. Rep.

28th

Joseph I. Green*
Democrat

29th

Alfred F. Seligsberg
Gold Dem.

30th

George W. Meyer, Jr.*
Democrat

31st

Albert E. Crabtree
Democrat

32nd

Thomas F. Donnelly*
Democrat
Minority Leader
33rd

John J. Egan
Democrat

34th

Lyman W. Redington
Democrat

35th

Richard H. Mitchell
Democrat


Niagara
1st

Dow Vroman
Democrat

2nd

Henry S. Tompkins
Democrat


Oneida
1st

John Williams
Republican

2nd

Louis M. Martin
Republican

3rd

John E. Mason
Republican


Onondaga
1st

William G. Cottle
Ind. Rep.

2nd

Edward G. Ten Eyck*
Republican

3rd

Joseph Bondy*
Republican

4th

John T. Delaney
Republican


Ontario

Robert B. Simmons
Republican


Orange
1st

Louis F. Goodsell*
Republican

2nd

Daniel P. Shultz
Democrat


Orleans

Dennis W. Evarts
Republican


Oswego
1st

Louis P. Taylor*
Republican

2nd

Thomas M. Costello*
Republican


Otsego

Leland M. Cowles
Republican


Putnam

Emerson W. Addis*
Republican


Queens
1st

George L. Glaser
Democrat

2nd

Cyrus B. Gale
Democrat

3rd

George Wallace
Republican


Rensselaer
1st

Benjamin O. Brewster
Republican

2nd

William Hutton, Jr.*
Democrat

3rd

Michael Russell
Republican


Richmond

Charles J. Kullman
Democrat


Rockland

Irving Brown
Democrat


St. Lawrence
1st

Ira C. Miles*
Republican

2nd

Martin V. B. Ives*
Republican


Saratoga

George W. Kavanaugh*
Republican


Schenectady

John C. Myers
Democrat


Schoharie

George M. Palmer*
Democrat


Schuyler

Charles A. Sloane
Republican


Seneca

William V. Van Rensselaer
Republican


Steuben
1st

Edward D. Cross
Republican

2nd

Hyatt C. Hatch
Republican


Suffolk
1st

Erastus F. Post*
Republican

2nd

Carll S. Burr, Jr.*
Republican


Sullivan

George McLaughlin*
Republican


Tioga

Daniel P. Witter*
Republican


Tompkins

Theron Johnson
Republican


Ulster
1st

Jacob H. Tremper
Republican

2nd

Charles J. Ackert
Democrat


Warren

Taylor J. Eldridge*
Republican


Washington

Charles R. Paris
Republican


Wayne

Marvin I. Greenwood
Republican


Westchester
1st

Jared Sandford
Democrat

2nd

William J. Graney
Democrat

3rd

John Gibney
Democrat


Wyoming

Daniel P. Whipple
Republican


Yates

Miles W. Raplee*
Republican


Employees


  • Clerk: Archie E. Baxter

  • Sergeant-at-Arms: James C. Crawford


Notes



  1. ^ PROCEEDINGS IN THE ASSEMBLY in NYT on January 6, 1898


  2. ^ FEW ASSEMBLYMEN ABSENT in NYT on July 12, 1898


  3. ^ PROCEEDINGS IN THE SENATE in NYT on July 17, 1898


  4. ^ For more information see THE CITIZENS' UNION WINS in NYT on November 10, 1897; CITIZENS' ELECTION APPEALS in NYT on March 1, 1898


  5. ^ Weill died before the final decision was taken by the Court of Appeals, two weeks after his death the case was still pending in the Appellate Division, see NINETEENTH DISTRICT VOTE in NYT on May 13, 1898


  6. ^ DEATH LIST OF A DAY; Solomon C. Weill in NYT on May 1, 1898



Sources



  • The New York Red Book compiled by Edgar L. Murlin (published by James B. Lyon, Albany NY, 1897; see pg. 133–177 for senators' bios; between pg. 136 and 137 for senators' portraits; pg. 404 for list of senators; and pg. 712–716 for senate districts)


  • Official New York from Cleveland to Hughes by Charles Elliott Fitch (Hurd Publishing Co., New York and Buffalo, 1911, Vol. IV; see pg. 338f for assemblymen; and 364 for senators)


  • Public Service by James S. Barcus (The Globe Publishing Co., New York, 1898; see pg. 164 for senators; 165–168 for assemblymen; 168 for senate employees; and 169 for assembly employees; has also maps of senate and assembly districts)


  • THE DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS in NYT on January 5, 1898







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