Philip Hone
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Philip Hone (October 25, 1780 – May 5, 1851) was mayor of New York City from 1826 to 1827. He was most notable for a detailed diary he kept from 1828 until the time of his death in 1851. His recorded diary is said to be the most extensive and detailed of his time in 19th century America.
Son of a German immigrant carpenter, Hone became wealthy in the auction business. He was elected Mayor on the Whig ticket in 1826, but served only one term. A somewhat elitist Whig, Hone was increasingly out of touch with political power in the city, then (as now) mostly controlled by the Democratic Party. He became a man of great prominence in New York society, for his wealth, sophistication, extensive travel and good taste, and was good friends with most of the political, artistic and scientific leaders of his day. Most notable among them were: Washington Irving, Samuel Morse, Daniel Webster, John Jacob Astor and U.S. Presidents John Quincy Adams and Martin Van Buren.
Hone's diary records not only his society engagements and the major events and spectacles in the city in the first half of the century, but also his view of a changing city: his disapproval of Jacksonian Democracy; the disconcerting effects of the city's constant construction; and his utter disgust with most Irish immigrants.
He was a successful merchant and a founder of the Mercantile Library Association and he was the first President of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company in 1825 and 1826. Hone lived in an elegant town house at 235 Broadway, opposite City Hall Park. Today, Honesdale, Pennsylvania, is named in honor of Philip Hone.
Preceded by: nobody |
President of Delaware and Hudson Canal Company 1825 – 1826 |
Succeeded by: John Bolton |
Preceded by: William Paulding Jr. |
Mayor of New York City 1826 – 1827 |
Succeeded by: William Paulding Jr. |