The National Democratic (in the press referred to as Hards) state convention met in July and nominated Greene Bronson for governor as well as candidates for the other down-ballot offices. They informed the nominees by letter on July 12 of their nominations. Their letters of acceptance were published on September 11 in the New-York Daily Times.[1]
The Democratic (in the press referred to as Softs) state convention met on September 6 at Wieting Hall in Syracuse. Lorenzo B. Shepard was Temporary Chairman until the choice of William H. Ludlow as President. The convention appointed a Democratic State Central Committee which included John Cochrane and Horatio Ballard, and then adjourned. On September 7, the convention passed a resolution approving the Kansas–Nebraska Act, which led to the eventual withdrawal of delegates Preston King, Charles G. Myers, Abijah Mann, Philip Dorsheimer and few more Barnburners, all of whom would be the next year among the founders of the Republican Party. Governor Horatio Seymour was re-nominated "by acclamation" with a few contrary votes. William H. Ludlow was nominated for Lieutenant Governor on the first ballot (vote: Ludlow 234, Philip H. Crook 28, Oakley 14, Albert Lester 7, Isaiah Rynders 2, Preston King 2). Jason Clark was nominated for Canal Commissioner by acclamation. W. R. Andrews was nominated for Inspector of State Prisons on the first ballot (vote: Andrews 92, Amos Pilsbury 56, Henry Storms [incumbent] 27).[2]
The Free-Soil Democratic state convention met on September 25 in Auburn.[3]
The Anti-Nebraska state convention met on September 26 in Auburn. Myron H. Clark was nominated for Governor by acclamation. Henry J. Raymond was nominated for Lieutenant Governor on the first ballot (Raymond 127, Bradford R. Wood 84). After this vote, a minority of about 20 seceded from the convention and re-assembled at the Court House and nominated their own ticket.[4]
The Temperance state convention met on September 27 in Auburn. Myron H. Clark was nominated for Governor by acclamation. Henry J. Raymond was nominated for Lieutenant Governor on the first ballot (Raymond 163, Bradford R. Wood 112).[5]
The Liberty state convention met on September 28 at the Market Hall in Syracuse.[6]
The Anti-Rent state convention met on October 26 at Beardsley's Hall in Albany.[7]
Results
Due to the split of the Democratic Party, the whole Whig ticket was elected. The American Party (ridiculed and referred to as the Know Nothings in the press) showed surprising strength. Myron H. Clark won this election with the lowest percentage in any New York gubernatorial election. The incumbent Governor Seymour was defeated, the incumbent Fitzhugh was re-elected.
82 Whigs, 26 Softs, 16 Hards and 3 Temperance man were elected for the session of 1855 to the New York State Assembly. "Know Nothings are sprinkled miscellaneously among Whigs, Hards and Softs; and exactly how many there are of these gentry in the Assembly Nobody Knows."[8]
^The number of votes stated at the candidates' names is the total of all votes received on all tickets on which the candidate was nominated. At the time, the ballots did no mention the party at all, so that it can not be ascertained how many votes each candidate received on which ticket.
^Williams declined to be a candidate about two weeks before the election. The party managers then placed Hard-shell Democrat Clark Burnham on the Know Nothing ticket. Due to slow communications, Williams still received a large vote, but a majority of the Know Nothing electorate voted for Burnham.
Sources
Result in "Official Canvass 1854". New-York Daily Times. December 21, 1854. pp. 6–7. (The votes of Wood, Goodell, Ward, Harrington, Wheaton, Macomber and Shapcott were stated among the "scattering votes".)
1854 Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855) 1854 Tōkai earthquake 1854 Town of Nelson by-election 1854 Frome by-election 1854 Liverpool Town Council election Epirus Revolt of 1854 1854 City of Auckland by-election Oxford University Act 1854 1854 Atlantic hurricane season Miao Rebellion (1854–1873) 1854 New York state election 1854 United States elections 1854 in the United States 1854 Cardiganshire by-election 1854 Iga–Ueno earthquake 1854 Waimea by-election 1854 in sports 1854 United States House of Representatives election in Florida 1854 in the United Kingdom 1854–55 United States Senate …
elections 1854 Nankai earthquake 1854 Mexican presidential referendum Act of Consolidation, 1854 1854 Massachusetts legislature Dénes Pázmándy (1781–1854) William Thompson (1792–1854) Austin Expedition of 1854 December 1854 Boston mayoral election 1854–55 United States House of Representatives elections 1854 Luxembourg general election 1854 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election Bath, Maine, anti-Catholic riot of 1854 Red Turban Rebellion (1854–1856) Miss Nightingale at Scutari, 1854 Eidsvoll Station (1854–1998) 1854 Maryland constitutional referendum James Cocks (1773–1854) Gazelle (1854 sidewheeler) SMS Radetzky (1854) 1854 Maltese general election Princess Marie of Saxe-Altenburg (1854–1898) James Browne (1793–1854) Robert Clive (1789–1854) Preston strike of 1853–1854 Jógvan Poulsen (1854–1941) 1854 Belgian general election USS Pulaski (1854) Small nucleolar RNA psi18S-1854 Concordat of 1854 1854 United States House of Representatives elections in New York 1854 Cape Colony parliamentary election 1854 in philosophy James Hope (1807–1854) Henry Augustus Muhlenberg (1823–1854) Henri Paret (cyclist, born 1854) Gorges Lowther (1769–1854) Richard Harris (1