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1856 New York state election

1856 New York gubernatorial election

← 1854 November 4, 1856 1858 →
 
Nominee John Alsop King Amasa J. Parker Erastus Brooks
Party Republican Democratic Know Nothing
Popular vote 264,400 198,616 130,870
Percentage 44.52% 33.44% 22.04%

County Results

Governor before election

Myron Clark
Whig

Elected Governor

John Alsop King
Republican

The 1856 New York state election was held on November 4, 1856, to elect the governor, the lieutenant governor, a Canal Commissioner, an Inspector of State Prisons and the Clerk of the Court of Appeals, as well as all members of the New York State Assembly.

History

After losing the elections of 1853, 1854 and 1855 due to the split of the Party and running separate tickets, the national organization of the Democratic Party urged the factions to re-unite. The Soft state convention met on July 30 at Market Hall in Syracuse, New York, Gouverneur Kemble was Temporary Chairman. The Hard state convention met at the same time at Corinthian Hall in the same city, Samuel Fowler was Temporary Chairman. The Soft delegates adopted a resolution to unite with the Hards and marched to Corinthian Hall where both factions assembled together. William C. Crain was chosen President, William M. Tweed was one of the secretaries. Judge Amasa J. Parker (a Soft) was nominated for Governor on the fourth ballot (first ballot:Addison Gardiner 69, David L. Seymour 46, Parker 33, Fernando Wood 25, John Vanderbilt 21, Horatio Seymour 21, Augustus Schell 11, E. Corning 9, Judge Brown 8, Henry W. Rogers 7, Daniel S. Dickinson 1, Samuel Fowler 1, Brownson 1, Porter 1; second ballot: Gardiner 78, D. L. Seymour 67, Parker 39, Wood 26, Schell 22, Vanderbilt 18, Corning 3, Fowler 1; third ballot: Gardiner 80, D. L. Seymour 60, Parker 39, Schell 30, Wood 22, Vanderbilt, 15; then the names of Schell, Gardiner and Wood were withdrawn). The convention then adjourned and re-assembled the next day to complete the ticket with John Vanderbilt (a Hard) for Lieutenant Governor, and John Leslie Russell (the father of later Attorney General Leslie W. Russell) for Canal Commissioner.[1]

The American state convention met on September 23 and 24 at Rochester, New York, J. W. Barker presided. Erastus Brooks, the editor of the New York Express, was nominated for Governor by acclamation. Lyman Odell was nominated for Lieutenant Governor on the first ballot (the other candidates were Jesse C. Dann and Goodwin Denniston). Amos H. Prescott was nominated for Canal Commissioner. Alexander Mann, of Monroe County, was nominated for Clerk of the Court of Appeals.[2]

The North American state convention, a secession from the American Party which had considered joining the Republicans, met on the same day at the Court House in the same city, F. W. Walker presided. In the afternoon, after some debate, they marched into the American convention and re-united, endorsing their ticket, and declaring support of the American presidential candidates Millard Fillmore and Andrew Jackson Donelson.[3]

Result

The whole Republican ticket was elected. None of the incumbents ran for re-election.

81 Republicans, 31 Democrats and 8 Americans were elected for the session of 1857 to the New York State Assembly.

1856 state election results
Office Republican ticket Democratic ticket American ticket Liberty ticket
Governor John Alsop King 264,400 Amasa J. Parker 198,616 Erastus Brooks 130,870 Gerrit Smith 155
Lieutenant Governor Henry R. Selden 266,991 John Vanderbilt 197,811 Lyman Odell 128,913
Canal Commissioner Charles H. Sherrill 267,220 John Leslie Russell 196,471 Amos H. Prescott 129,642
Inspector of State Prisons Wesley Bailey 265,969 Matthew T. Brennan 196,848 James P. Sanders[4] 129,881
Clerk of the Court of Appeals Russell F. Hicks 267,061 Horatio G. Warner 197,116 Alexander Mann 129,438

Notes

  1. ^ The Soft, Hard and Consolidated Shell's state conventions in NYT on July 31, 1856
  2. ^ The American State Convention in NYT on September 25, 1856
  3. ^ The American and North American state conventions in NYT on September 24, 1856
  4. ^ ran also in 1854

Sources

See also

New York gubernatorial elections

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