85th New York State Legislature
85th New York State Legislature | |||
The Old State Capitol (1879) | |||
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Duration: January 1 – December 31, 1862 | |||
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President of the State Senate: | Lt. Gov. Robert Campbell (R) | ||
Temporary President of the State Senate: | James A. Bell (U), from February 11 | ||
Speaker of the State Assembly: | Henry J. Raymond (U) | ||
Members: | 32 Senators 128 Assemblymen | ||
Senate Majority: | Union (25-7) | ||
Assembly Majority: | Union (90-38) | ||
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Sessions | |||
1st: January 7 – April 23, 1862 | |||
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The 85th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 7 to April 23, 1862, during the fourth year of Edwin D. Morgan's governorship, in Albany.
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 (four districts) and Kings County (two districts). The Assembly districts were made up of entire towns, or city wards, forming a contiguous area, all within the same county.
At this time there were two major political parties: the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. The Democrats split over the civil war issue. The War Democrats nominated an "Independent People's" ticket which was almost completely endorsed by the Republicans, and became known as the Union ticket; the rump Democratic Party, favoring a compromise with the South and later known as Copperheads, nominated an opposing ticket. In New York City the Democrats were split into two factions: Tammany Hall and Mozart Hall.
Elections
The New York state election, 1861 was held on November 5. Of the nine statewide elective offices up for election, eight were carried by Union men, and one by a Democrat. The approximate party strength at this election, as gathered from the vote for Secretary of State and the short-term Canal Commissioner was: Democrats 190,000; Republicans 180,000; and War Democrats 117,000.
Sessions
The Legislature met for the regular session at the Old State Capitol in Albany on January 7, 1862; and adjourned on April 23.
Henry J. Raymond (U) was elected again Speaker with 88 votes against 36 for Horatio Seymour (D).
On January 30, the Legislature elected Victor M. Rice to succeed Henry H. Van Dyck as Superintendent of Public Instruction.
On February 11, James A. Bell was elected President pro tempore of the State Senate.
State Senate
Districts
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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. Richard B. Connolly, Hezekiah D. Robertson, Joseph H. Ramsey, Charles C. Montgomery, James A. Bell, Allen Munroe and Lyman Truman were re-elected. Christian B. Woodruff, Richard K. Sanford and Wilkes Angel changed from the Assembly to the Senate.
Party affiliations as published by the New York Tribune;[1] those marked "Republican" were elected in opposition to "Union" candidates. Senate officers and a Regent of USNY were elected without opposition.
District | Senator | Party | Notes |
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1st | Monroe Henderson | Union | due to ill health, absent from January 31 |
2nd | Jesse C. Smith | Union | |
3rd | Henry C. Murphy | Fusion | elected unopposed |
4th | Christian B. Woodruff* | Democrat | |
5th | Charles G. Cornell | Democrat | from December 3, 1862, also New York City Street Commissioner |
6th | John J. Bradley | Democrat | |
7th | Richard B. Connolly* | Democrat | |
8th | Hezekiah D. Robertson* | Union | |
9th | Henry R. Low | Union | |
10th | Jacob S. Freer | Democrat | |
11th | William H. Tobey | Union | |
12th | Ralph Richards | Union | |
13th | John V. L. Pruyn | Democrat | |
14th | Joseph H. Ramsey* | Union | |
15th | John Willard | Fusion | elected unopposed; died on August 31, 1862 |
16th | Russell M. Little | Union | |
17th | Charles C. Montgomery* | Union | |
18th | James A. Bell* | Union | on February 11, elected President pro tempore |
19th | Alexander H. Bailey | Union | |
20th | George A. Hardin | Republican | |
21st | Richard K. Sanford* | Fusion | elected unopposed |
22nd | Allen Munroe* | Republican | |
23rd | Henry A. Clark | Union | |
24th | Lyman Truman* | Union | |
25th | Chauncey M. Abbott | Republican | |
26th | Charles J. Folger | Union | |
27th | Charles Cook | Union | |
28th | Lysander Farrar | Fusion | elected unopposed |
29th | Almanzor Hutchinson | Union | |
30th | Wilkes Angel* | Republican | |
31st | John Ganson | Democrat | on November 4, 1862, elected to the 38th U.S. Congress |
32nd | Horace C. Young | Republican | |
Employees
- Clerk: James Terwilliger
- Sergeant-at-Arms: Richard U. Owens
- Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms: Caleb S. Babcock
- Doorkeeper: Orville Griffin
- First Assistant Doorkeeper: Charles Johnson
- Second Assistant Doorkeeper: Sanders Wilson
- Third Assistant Doorkeeper: Giles H. Holden
State Assembly
Assemblymen
The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued as members of this Legislature.
Party affiliations follow the vote for Speaker.
District | Assemblymen | Party | Notes | |
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Albany | 1st | vacant | Assemblyman-elect John Vanderzee died on December 3, 1861 | |
Willet Serls[2] | Democrat | elected to fill vacancy; seated on February 6 | ||
2nd | Almerin J. Cornell | Union | ||
3rd | A. Bleecker Banks | Democrat | ||
4th | William Doyle | Democrat | ||
Allegany | 1st | Alvah E. Cruttenden | Union | |
2nd | Edward D. Loveridge | Union | ||
Broome | George Bartlett | Union | ||
Cattaraugus | 1st | Andrew L. Allen | Union | |
2nd | Addison G. Rice | Union | ||
Cayuga | 1st | William A. Halsey | Union | |
2nd | Smith Anthony* | Union | ||
Chautauqua | 1st | Emry Davis | Union | |
2nd | Henry C. Lake | Union | ||
Chemung | Tracy Beadle | Union | ||
Chenango | 1st | David B. Parce | Union | |
2nd | Francis B. Fisher | Union | ||
Clinton | Lemuel Stetson | Union | ||
Columbia | 1st | Jacob Ten Broeck | Democrat | |
2nd | Samuel Wilbor | Union | ||
Cortland | Thomas Barry | Union | ||
Delaware | 1st | Nelson K. Wheeler | Union | |
2nd | Daniel Waterbury* | Union | ||
Dutchess | 1st | John B. Dutcher* | Union | |
2nd | Edmund Green | Union | ||
Erie | 1st | John W. Murphy | Democrat | |
2nd | Horatio Seymour | Democrat | ||
3rd | Ezra P. Goslin | Union | ||
4th | John A. Case | Union | ||
Essex | Palmer E. Havens | Union | ||
Franklin | Albert Andrus | Union | ||
Fulton and Hamilton | James H. Burr* | Union | ||
Genesee | Benjamin Pringle | Union | ||
Greene | Jonathan B. Cowles | Democrat | ||
Herkimer | 1st | Orson Moore | Union | |
2nd | George Springer | Union | ||
Jefferson | 1st | Jonathan M. Ackley | Union | |
2nd | George W. Hazelton | Union | ||
3rd | William Dewey | Union | ||
Kings | 1st | Andrew J. Provost* | Union | |
2nd | Richard J. Lalor | Democrat | ||
3rd | William M. Thomas | Union | ||
4th | James Darcy* | Democrat | ||
5th | Charles L. Benedict | Union | ||
6th | Samuel T. Maddox | Union | ||
7th | Edgar McMullen | Union | ||
Lewis | Henry D. H. Snyder Jr. | Union | ||
Livingston | 1st | Matthew Wiard* | Union | |
2nd | Samuel Skinner | Union | ||
Madison | 1st | William H. Brand | Union | |
2nd | Albert G. Purdy | Union | ||
Monroe | 1st | George E. McGonegal | Union | |
2nd | Eliphaz Trimmer | Democrat | ||
3rd | Benjamin R. Wells* | Union | ||
Montgomery | Nicholas Newkirk | Democrat | ||
New York | 1st | John Callahan* | Democrat | |
2nd | Daniel Leamy | Democrat | ||
3rd | George L. Loutrel | Democrat | ||
4th | William J. C. Kenny* | Democrat | ||
5th | James W. Bush | Union | ||
6th | William J. Coey | Democrat | ||
7th | Henry J. Raymond | Union | elected Speaker | |
8th | William G. Olvany | Democrat | ||
9th | Alexander McLeod | Union | ||
10th | Daniel M. O'Brien | Democrat | ||
11th | Noah A. Childs | Union | ||
12th | Andrew Smith | Democrat | ||
13th | Alexander Ward | Democrat | ||
14th | Royal Phelps | Union | ||
15th | David S. Coddington | Democrat | ||
16th | Dennis McCabe | Union | ||
17th | Edward Jones[3] | Democrat | ||
Niagara | 1st | Benjamin H. Fletcher | Democrat | |
2nd | Peter A. Porter | Union | ||
Oneida | 1st | Charles M. Scholefield | Union | |
2nd | Eli Avery | Union | ||
3rd | Thomas D. Penfield | Union | ||
4th | Jeremiah Sweet | Union | ||
Onondaga | 1st | Frederick A. Lyman | Union | |
2nd | Thomas G. Alvord | Union | ||
3rd | R. Nelson Gere | Union | ||
Ontario | 1st | David Picket | Union | |
2nd | Francis O. Mason | Union | ||
Orange | 1st | Daniel R. Hudson | Union | |
2nd | John Van Etten Jr. | Democrat | ||
Orleans | Nicholas E. Darrow | Union | ||
Oswego | 1st | Elias Root | Union | |
2nd | Willard Johnson | Democrat | ||
3rd | Benjamin E. Bowen | Union | ||
Otsego | 1st | LeRoy E. Bowe | Union | |
2nd | Cornelius A. Church | Union | ||
Putnam | Thomas H. Reed | Union | ||
Queens | 1st | Isaac Coles | Union | |
2nd | Henry D. Hall | Democrat | ||
Rensselaer | 1st | Charles J. Saxe* | Democrat | |
2nd | David G. Maxon | Union | ||
3rd | Sylvester Waterbury | Democrat | ||
Richmond | Smith Ely[4] | Democrat | ||
Rockland | James S. Haring | Democrat | ||
St. Lawrence | 1st | Elias P. Townsley | Union | |
2nd | James Redington | Union | ||
3rd | Calvin T. Hulburd | Union | on November 4, 1862, elected to the 38th U.S. Congress | |
Saratoga | 1st | John Fulton* | Union | |
2nd | Nathaniel M. Houghton | Union | ||
Schenectady | Simon J. Schermerhorn | Union | ||
Schoharie | William Lamont | Democrat | ||
Schuyler | Alvin C. Hause | Union | ||
Seneca | Peter J. Van Vleet | Democrat | ||
Steuben | 1st | Daniel B. Bryan* | Union | |
2nd | Henry Sherwood | Union | ||
3rd | Samuel M. Alley | Union | ||
Suffolk | 1st | John C. Davis | Union | |
2nd | John S. Havens | Democrat | ||
Sullivan | Benjamin L. Ludington | Union | ||
Tioga | Benjamin F. Tracy | Union | ||
Tompkins | Ezra Cornell | Union | ||
Ulster | 1st | Jesse F. Bookstaver | Democrat | |
2nd | George T. Pierce* | Union | ||
3rd | Ebenezer Westbrook | Democrat | ||
Warren | Thomas S. Gray | Democrat | ||
Washington | 1st | George H. Taylor | Union | |
2nd | Philip H. Neher | Union | ||
Wayne | 1st | Eron N. Thomas | Union | |
2nd | Abram Pryne | Union | ||
Westchester | 1st | Pierre C. Talman | Democrat | |
2nd | Newberry D. Halsted | Democrat | ||
3rd | Chauncey M. Depew | Union | ||
Wyoming | Lucius Peck | Union | ||
Yates | Darius A. Ogden | Union | ||
Employees
- Clerk: Joseph B. Cushman
- Sergeant-at-Arms: Levi M. Gano
- Doorkeeper: Norman B. Sprague
- First Assistant Doorkeeper: William H. Creed
- Second Assistant Doorkeeper: Thomas Miller
Notes
- ↑ see results in The Tribune Almanac (1862; pg. 58)
- ↑ Willet Serls (in Assembly Journal "Willett Searles"), Postmaster of Indian Fields, see Post Office Directory (1856; pg. 108)
- ↑ Edward Jones (born c. 1825 Roxbury, Mass.), brother of Jay Jarvis Jones, his predecessor in the Assembly
- ↑ Smith Ely (born c. 1802 New Jersey), uncle of Smith Ely, Jr.
Sources
- The New York Civil List compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough, Stephen C. Hutchins and Edgar Albert Werner (1867; see pg. 439 for Senate districts; pg. 443 for senators; pg. 450–462 for Assembly districts; and pg. 494ff for assemblymen)
- Journal of the Senate (85th Session) (1862)
- Journal of the Assembly (85th Session) (1862)
- Biographical Sketches of the State Officers and the Members of the Legislature of the State of New York in 1862 and '63 by William D. Murphy (1863)