80th New York State Legislature

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80th New York State Legislature
79th 81st
Old State Capitol at Albany NY.jpg
The Old State Capitol (1879)
Overview
Legislative bodyNew York State Legislature
JurisdictionNew York, United States
TermJanuary 1 – December 31, 1857
Senate
Members32
PresidentLt. Gov. Henry R. Selden (R)
Temporary PresidentMark Spencer (D), from January 24
Party controlRepublican (17-9-4)
Assembly
Members128
SpeakerDeWitt C. Littlejohn (R)
Party controlRepublican (81-38-8)
Sessions
1stJanuary 6 – April 18, 1857

The 80th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 6 to April 18, 1857, during the first year of John A. King's governorship, in Albany.

Background[]

Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1846, 32 Senators were elected in single-seat senatorial districts for a two-year term, the whole Senate being renewed biennially. The senatorial districts (except those in New York City) were made up of entire counties. 128 Assemblymen were elected in single-seat districts to a one-year term, the whole Assembly being renewed annually. The Assembly districts were made up of entire towns, or city wards, forming a contiguous area, all in the same county. The City and County of New York was divided into four senatorial districts, and 16 Assembly districts.

At this time there were two major political parties: the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. The Know Nothing movement ran in the election as the "American Party."

Elections[]

The New York state election, 1856 was held on November 4. Republicans John A. King and Henry R. Selden were elected Governor and Lieutenant Governor. The other three statewide elective offices were also carried by the Republicans. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote on Governor was: Republican 265,000; Democratic 198,000; and American 130,000.

Sessions[]

The Legislature met for the regular session at the Old State Capitol in Albany on January 6, 1857; and adjourned on April 18.

DeWitt C. Littlejohn (R) was again elected Speaker with 79 votes against 35 for David R. Floyd-Jones (D), and 7 for Joseph B. Varnum, Jr. (A). (R) was elected Clerk of the Assembly with 78 votes against 37 for (D) and 7 for G. M. Stevens (A).

On January 24, Mark Spencer (D) was elected president pro tempore of the State Senate.

On February 3, the Legislature elected Preston King (R) to succeed Hamilton Fish as U.S. Senator from New York for a six-year term beginning on March 4, 1857.

On April 7, the Legislature elected Henry H. Van Dyck (R) to succeed Victor M. Rice as State Superintendent of Public Instruction.

On April 13, the Legislature re-apportioned the Senate districts, and the Assembly seats per county. Cayuga, Dutchess, Genesee, Greene, Montgomery, Onondaga, Orange, Otsego, Schoharie and Tompkins counties lost one seat each; New York, Oswego, Queens, Ulster and Westchester counties gained one seat each; Kings County gained four seats; and the new Schuyler County was apportioned one seat.[1]

On April 15, the Legislature passed "An Act to establish a Metropolitan Police District, and to provide for the government thereof." This act re-organized, and unified, the police forces in New York City, Staten Island, Kings County and Westchester County. The Metropolitan Police was headed by a Board consisting of five Commissioners (appointed by the Governor, and confirmed by the Senate) and the Mayors of New York City and Brooklyn.[2] At first, Mayor Fernando Wood did not recognize the Metropoplitan Police, and refused to disband the Municipal Police. The struggle led to the New York City Police Riot, but after the New York Court of Appeals upheld the Legislature's police law, Mayor Wood quietly agreed to abide by it.

State Senate[]

Districts[]

  • 1st District: Queens, Richmond and Suffolk counties
  • 2nd District: Kings County
  • 3rd District: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th wards of New York City
  • 4th District: 7th, 10th, 13th and 17th wards of New York City
  • 5th District: 8th, 9th and 14th wards of New York City
  • 6th District: 11th, 12th, 15th, 16th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd wards of New York City
  • 7th District: Putnam, Rockland and Westchester counties
  • 8th District: Columbia and Dutchess counties
  • 9th District: Orange and Sullivan counties
  • 10th District: Greene and Ulster counties
  • 11th District: Albany and Schenectady counties
  • 12th District: Rensselaer County
  • 13th District: Saratoga and Washington counties
  • 14th District: Clinton, Essex and Warren counties
  • 15th District: Franklin and St. Lawrence counties
  • 16th District: Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer and Montgomery counties
  • 17th District: Delaware and Schoharie counties
  • 18th District: Chenango and Otsego counties
  • 19th District: Oneida County
  • 20th District: Madison and Oswego counties
  • 21st District: Jefferson and Lewis counties
  • 22nd District: Onondaga County
  • 23rd District: Broome, Cortland and Tioga counties
  • 24th District: Cayuga and Wayne counties
  • 25th District: Seneca, Tompkins and Yates counties
  • 26th District: Chemung and Steuben counties
  • 27th District: Monroe County
  • 28th District: Genesee, Niagara and Orleans counties
  • 29th District: Livingston and Ontario counties
  • 30th District: Allegany and Wyoming counties
  • 31st District: Erie County
  • 32nd District: Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties
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.

Party affiliations follow the vote on U.S. Senator and Regent of the University.

District Senator Party Notes
1st James Rider* Republican
2nd Cyrus P. Smith* Republican
3rd Daniel E. Sickles* Democrat unsuccessfully contested by Thomas J. Barr (D);[3]
on November 4, 1856, elected to the 35th U.S. Congress
4th Joseph H. Petty* American
5th Mark Spencer* Democrat on January 24, elected president pro tempore
6th Erastus Brooks* American
7th John W. Ferdon* American
8th William Kelly* Democrat
9th Edward M. Madden* Republican
10th George S. Nichols* American
11th * American
12th * American
13th Justin A. Smith* American
14th * American
15th Zenas Clark* Republican resigned, due to ill health, on February 13
Republican elected to fill vacancy, seated on March 12
16th Frederick P. Bellinger* Republican
17th Joseph H. Ramsey* Republican
18th * American
19th * Republican
20th M. Lindley Lee* Republican
21st * Republican
22nd James Noxon* Republican
23rd George W. Bradford* Republican
24th * Republican
25th * Republican
26th John K. Hale* American
27th John E. Paterson* Republican
28th Alonzo S. Upham* Republican
29th * American
30th John B. Halsted* Republican
31st James Wadsworth* Democrat
32nd John P. Darling Republican elected to fill vacancy, in place of Roderick White

Employees[]

  • Clerk:
  • Sergeant-at-Arms: Samuel R. Tuell
  • Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms: George W. Bedell
  • Doorkeeper: William Coppernall
  • Assistant Doorkeeper: Henry W. Shipman
  • Second Assistant Doorkeeper: Victor M. Dearborn

State Assembly[]

Assemblymen[]

The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued as members of this Legislature. Richard U. Sherman, the Clerk of the Assembly during the previous Session, was elected a member.

Party affiliations follow the vote for Speaker.

District Assemblymen Party Notes
Albany 1st Democrat
2nd Republican
3rd Democrat took his seat on February 25
4th Franklin Townsend Democrat
Allegany 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Broome Republican
Cattaraugus 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Cayuga 1st Republican
2nd Theodore M. Pomeroy Republican
3rd Republican
Chautauqua 1st * Republican
2nd Republican
Chemung Republican
Chenango 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Clinton Republican
Columbia 1st Democrat
2nd John T. Hogeboom Republican
Cortland Republican
Delaware 1st Republican
2nd American
Dutchess 1st John H. Ketcham* Republican
2nd Republican
3rd Democrat
Erie 1st Republican
2nd Democrat
3rd Horace Boies Republican
4th Republican
Essex Ralph A. Loveland Republican
Franklin Democrat
Fulton and Hamilton Democrat
Genesee 1st Seth Wakeman* Republican
2nd Republican
Greene 1st Democrat
2nd Republican
Herkimer 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Jefferson 1st Republican
2nd Republican
3rd Republican
Kings 1st John Hanford* Democrat
2nd Democrat
3rd Democrat
Lewis Republican
Livingston 1st Republican
2nd Alfred Bell Republican
Madison 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Monroe 1st Republican
2nd Republican
3rd Republican
Montgomery 1st Republican
2nd Republican
New York 1st * Democrat
2nd Democrat
3rd Democrat
4th * Democrat
5th * Democrat
6th Democrat
7th American
8th Democrat
9th * Democrat
10th Democrat
11th Democrat
12th Democrat
13th Joseph B. Varnum, Jr. American
14th Democrat
15th * Democrat
16th Democrat
Niagara 1st Republican
2nd * Republican
Oneida 1st Richard U. Sherman Republican
2nd Republican died on April 2, 1857
3rd Republican
4th Republican
Onondaga 1st Republican
2nd Republican
3rd Elias W. Leavenworth Republican
4th Republican
Ontario 1st * Republican
2nd Republican
Orange 1st Democrat
2nd Republican
3rd Democrat
Orleans Almanzor Hutchinson Republican
Oswego 1st DeWitt C. Littlejohn Republican elected Speaker
2nd Republican
Otsego 1st Democrat
2nd Republican
3rd Republican
Putnam Republican
Queens David R. Floyd-Jones Democrat
Rensselaer 1st Democrat
2nd Volney Richmond Republican
3rd American
Richmond Democrat
Rockland Democrat
St. Lawrence 1st * Republican
2nd * Republican
3rd Republican
Saratoga 1st George G. Scott* Democrat
2nd Republican
Schenectady Republican
Schoharie 1st Democrat
2nd Democrat
Seneca Republican
Steuben 1st Robert B. Van Valkenburgh Republican
2nd Republican
3rd Solon O. Thacher Republican
Suffolk 1st American
2nd Democrat
Sullivan American
Tioga Republican
Tompkins 1st did not take his seat, due to illness
2nd Republican
Ulster 1st American
2nd American
Warren Republican took his seat on January 14
Washington 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Wayne 1st Republican
2nd Republican
Westchester 1st Republican
2nd Edmund G. Sutherland Democrat
Wyoming Republican
Yates Abraham V. Harpending Republican

Employees[]

  • Clerk: [4]
  • Sergeant-at-Arms: Norman P. Hitchcock
  • Doorkeeper: Nathan Newhafer
  • First Assistant Doorkeeper: Patrick Farrell
  • Second Assistant Doorkeeper: John Lewis

Notes[]

  1. ^ see The Revised Statutes of the State of New York (1859; Senate pg. 149f, Assembly pg. 452f)
  2. ^ see Laws of the State of New York (80th Session) (1857; pg. 200–219)
  3. ^ The decision on the contested seat was postponed during the previous session, and decided in favor of Sickles on January 28, 1857.
  4. ^ William Richardson (1822–1893), later an alderman in Brooklyn, and owner of the Atlantic Avenue Railroad; see Biography

Sources[]

Retrieved from ""