Number: | 122nd |
Start: | January 1 |
End: | December 31, 1899 |
Vp: | Lt. Gov. Timothy L. Woodruff (R) |
Pro Tem: | Timothy E. Ellsworth (R) |
Speaker: | S. Frederick Nixon (R) |
Senators: | 50 |
Reps: | 150 |
S-Majority: | Republican (27-23) |
H-Majority: | Republican (88-62) |
Sessionnumber1: | 1st |
Sessionstart1: | January 4 |
Sessionend1: | April 28, 1899 |
Previous: | 121st |
Next: | 123rd |
The 122nd New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 4 to April 28, 1899, during the first year of Theodore Roosevelt's governorship, in Albany.
Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1894, 50 Senators and 150 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 (twelve districts), Kings County (seven districts), Erie County (three districts) and Monroe County (two districts). The Assembly districts were made up of contiguous area, all within the same county.
At this time there were two major political parties: the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. The Socialist Labor Party, the Prohibition Party and the Citizens Union also nominated tickets.
The New York state election, 1898 was held on November 8. Theodore Roosevelt was elected Governor; and Lt. Gov. Timothy L. Woodruff was re-elected; both Republicans. The other five statewide elective office up for election were also carried by the Republicans. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote for Governor, was: Republican 662,000; Democratic 644,000; Socialist Labor 24,000; Prohibition 18,000; and Citizens Union 2,000.
The Legislature met for the regular session at the State Capitol in Albany on January 4, 1899; and adjourned on April 28.
S. Frederick Nixon (R) was elected Speaker.
Timothy E. Ellsworth (R) was re-elected President pro tempore of the State Senate.
On January 17, the Legislature elected Chauncey M. Depew (R) to succeed Edward Murphy Jr. (D) as U.S. Senator from New York, for a six-year term beginning on March 4, 1899.
Note: In 1897, New York County (the boroughs of Manhattan and Bronx), Kings County (the borough of Brooklyn), Richmond County (the borough of Staten Island) and the Western part of Queens County (the borough of Queens) were consolidated into the present-day City of New York. The Eastern part of Queens County (the non-consolidated part) was separated in 1899 as Nassau County. Parts of the 1st and 2nd Assembly districts of Westchester County were annexed by New York City in 1895, and became part of the Borough of the Bronx in 1898.
The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Thomas H. Cullen, David Floyd Davis, Henry Marshall, Thomas F. Donnelly, Richard H. Mitchell, William J. Graney, Louis F. Goodsell and William W. Armstrong changed from the Assembly to the Senate.
District | Senator | Party | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | John L. Havens | Democrat | ||
2nd | James Norton | Democrat | ||
3rd | Thomas H. Cullen | Democrat | ||
4th | David Floyd Davis | Republican | ||
5th | Michael J. Coffey | Democrat | re-elected | |
6th | William J. La Roche | Democrat | ||
7th | Patrick H. McCarren | Democrat | re-elected | |
8th | Henry Marshall | Republican | ||
9th | Joseph Wagner | Democrat | ||
10th | John F. Ahearn | Democrat | re-elected | |
11th | Timothy D. Sullivan | Democrat | re-elected | |
12th | Samuel J. Foley | Democrat | re-elected | |
13th | Bernard F. Martin | Democrat | re-elected | |
14th | Thomas F. Grady | Democrat | re-elected; Minority Leader | |
15th | Nathaniel A. Elsberg | Republican | ||
16th | Louis Munzinger | Democrat | re-elected | |
17th | George W. Plunkitt | Democrat | ||
18th | Maurice Featherson | Democrat | re-elected | |
19th | John Ford | Republican | re-elected | |
20th | Thomas F. Donnelly | Democrat | ||
21st | Richard H. Mitchell | Democrat | ||
22nd | William J. Graney | Democrat | ||
23rd | Louis F. Goodsell | Republican | ||
24th | Henry S. Ambler | Republican | ||
25th | Jacob Rice | Democrat | ||
26th | William L. Thornton | Republican | ||
27th | Hobart Krum | Republican | re-elected | |
28th | Edgar T. Brackett | Republican | re-elected | |
29th | Curtis N. Douglas | Democrat | ||
30th | Frank M. Boyce | Democrat | ||
31st | George Chahoon | Republican | re-elected | |
32nd | George R. Malby | Republican | re-elected | |
33rd | James D. Feeter | Republican | ||
34th | Henry J. Coggeshall | Republican | re-elected | |
35th | Elon R. Brown | Republican | re-elected | |
36th | Horace White | Republican | re-elected | |
37th | Nevada N. Stranahan | Republican | re-elected | |
38th | William Elting Johnson | Republican | re-elected | |
39th | Benjamin M. Wilcox | Republican | re-elected | |
40th | Charles T. Willis | Republican | ||
41st | Franklin D. Sherwood | Republican | ||
42nd | John Raines | Republican | re-elected | |
43rd | Cornelius R. Parsons | Republican | re-elected | |
44th | William W. Armstrong | Republican | ||
45th | Timothy E. Ellsworth | Republican | re-elected; re-elected President pro tempore | |
46th | Lester H. Humphrey | Republican | re-elected | |
47th | William F. Mackey | Democrat | ||
48th | Samuel J. Ramsperger | Democrat | ||
49th | George Allen Davis | Republican | re-elected | |
50th | Frank W. Higgins | Republican | re-elected | |
District | Assemblymen | Party | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albany | 1st | William L. Coughtry | Republican | ||
2nd | James B. McEwan | Republican | |||
3rd | George T. Kelly | Democrat | |||
4th | Henry M. Sage | Republican | |||
Allegany | Almanzo W. Litchard | Republican | |||
Broome | 1st | James T. Rogers | Republican | ||
2nd | Edgar L. Vincent | Republican | |||
Cattaraugus | 1st | George A. Stoneman | Republican | ||
2nd | Albert T. Fancher | Republican | |||
Cayuga | 1st | Elias Q. Dutton | Republican | ||
2nd | George S. Fordyce | Republican | |||
Chautauqua | 1st | J. Samuel Fowler | Republican | ||
2nd | S. Frederick Nixon | Republican | elected Speaker | ||
Chemung | David N. Heller | Democrat | |||
Chenango | Jotham P. Allds | Republican | Majority Leader | ||
Clinton | Edmund J. Pickett | Democrat | |||
Columbia | Lester J. Bashford | Democrat | |||
Cortland | George S. Sands | Republican | |||
Delaware | Delos Axtell | Republican | |||
Dutchess | 1st | John T. Smith | Republican | ||
2nd | William A. Tripp | Republican | |||
Erie | 1st | Anthony J. Boland | Democrat | ||
2nd | Henry W. Hill | Republican | |||
3rd | Anthony P. Barrett | Democrat | |||
4th | John C. Mohring | Democrat | |||
5th | Henry Streifler | Democrat | |||
6th | Michael J. Kane | Democrat | |||
7th | John K. Patton | Republican | |||
8th | E. Freeman Baker | Republican | |||
Essex | Orlando Beede | Republican | |||
Franklin | Thomas A. Sears | Republican | |||
Fulton and Hamilton | Daniel Hays | Republican | |||
Genesee | John J. Ellis | Republican | |||
Greene | D. Geroe Green | Republican | |||
Herkimer | Erwin E. Kelley | Republican | |||
Jefferson | 1st | Morgan Bryan | Republican | ||
2nd | Charles O. Roberts | Republican | |||
Kings | 1st | William L. Sandford | Republican | ||
2nd | John McKeown | Democrat | |||
3rd | James J. McInerney | Democrat | |||
4th | Charles H. Cotton | Republican | |||
5th | Abram C. DeGraw | Republican | |||
6th | Valentine J. Riedman | Democrat | |||
7th | Francis P. Gallagher | Democrat | |||
8th | Thomas J. Farrell | Democrat | |||
9th | John J. Cain | Democrat | |||
10th | Edward L. Collier | Republican | |||
11th | Joseph A. Guider | Democrat | |||
12th | Charles C. Schoeneck | Democrat | |||
13th | George Siems | Democrat | |||
14th | August F. Schmid | Democrat | |||
15th | Charles Juengst | Democrat | |||
16th | Edward C. Brennan | Republican | |||
17th | Harris Wilson | Republican | |||
18th | Henry A. Ball | Democrat | |||
19th | Frederick Schmid | Democrat | |||
20th | Joseph Wingenfeld | Democrat | |||
21st | Herman H. Torborg | Democrat | |||
Lewis | Addison L. Clark | Republican | |||
Livingston | Otto Kelsey | Republican | |||
Madison | Robert J. Fish | Republican | |||
Monroe | 1st | Merton E. Lewis | Republican | ||
2nd | Adolph J. Rodenbeck | Republican | |||
3rd | Richard Gardiner | Republican | |||
4th | Benjamin F. Gleason | Republican | |||
Montgomery | Richard Murphy | Republican | |||
New York | 1st | Daniel E. Finn | Democrat | on November 7, 1899, elected to the Municipal Court | |
2nd | James A. Rierdon | Democrat | |||
3rd | Michael T. Sharkey | Democrat | |||
4th | Patrick H. Roche | Democrat | |||
5th | Nelson H. Henry | Republican | |||
6th | Timothy P. Sullivan | Democrat | |||
7th | John F. Maher | Democrat | |||
8th | Charles S. Adler | Republican | |||
9th | N. Taylor Phillips | Democrat | |||
10th | Julius Harburger | Democrat | |||
11th | John J. O'Connor | Democrat | |||
12th | Leon Sanders | Democrat | |||
13th | Patrick F. Trainor | Democrat | |||
14th | Louis Meister | Democrat | |||
15th | James E. Smith | Democrat | |||
16th | Benjamin Hoffman | Democrat | |||
17th | John F. Brennan | Democrat | |||
18th | Charles P. Dillon | Democrat | |||
19th | Robert Mazet | Republican | |||
20th | Cornelius F. Collins | Democrat | |||
21st | Edward H. Fallows | Republican | |||
22nd | Joseph Baum | Democrat | |||
23rd | Thomas A. Mangin | Democrat | |||
24th | John B. Fitzgerald | Democrat | |||
25th | Frederick A. Ware | Republican | |||
26th | John J. O'Connell | Democrat | |||
27th | Gherardi Davis | Republican | |||
28th | Joseph I. Green | Democrat | |||
29th | Frank Bulkley | Republican | |||
30th | George W. Meyer Jr. | Democrat | |||
31st | Samuel S. Slater | Republican | |||
32nd | John Poth Jr. | Democrat | |||
33rd | John J. Egan | Democrat | |||
34th | Lyman W. Redington | Democrat | |||
35th | George J. Grossman | Democrat | |||
Niagara | 1st | John T. Darrison | Republican | ||
2nd | Jay S. Rowe | Republican | |||
Oneida | 1st | William J. Sullivan | Democrat | ||
2nd | Louis M. Martin | Republican | |||
3rd | John E. Mason | Republican | |||
Onondaga | 1st | William G. Cottle | Republican | ||
2nd | Edward G. Ten Eyck | Republican | |||
3rd | Edward B. Sabine | Republican | |||
4th | John T. Delaney | Republican | |||
Ontario | Jean L. Burnett | Republican | |||
Orange | 1st | James G. Graham | Republican | ||
2nd | Louis Bedell | Republican | |||
Orleans | Dennis W. Evarts | Republican | |||
Oswego | 1st | Thomas D. Lewis | Republican | ||
2nd | Thomas M. Costello | Republican | |||
Otsego | Leland M. Cowles | Republican | |||
Putnam | Adrian H. Dean | Democrat | |||
Queens | 1st | Charles C. Wissel | Democrat | ||
2nd | Cyrus B. Gale | Democrat | |||
3rd | George W. Doughty | Republican | |||
Rensselaer | 1st | Benjamin O. Brewster | Republican | ||
2nd | William Hutton Jr. | Democrat | |||
3rd | Michael Russell | Republican | |||
Richmond | Charles J. Kullman | Democrat | |||
Rockland | Irving Brown | Democrat | |||
St. Lawrence | 1st | Ira C. Miles | Republican | ||
2nd | Benjamin A. Babcock | Republican | |||
Saratoga | George H. West | Republican | |||
Schenectady | Andrew J. McMillan | Republican | |||
Schoharie | George M. Palmer | Democrat | Minority Leader | ||
Schuyler | Charles A. Sloane | Republican | |||
Seneca | Moses C. Gould | Democrat | |||
Steuben | 1st | Edward D. Cross | Republican | ||
2nd | Hyatt C. Hatch | Republican | |||
Suffolk | 1st | Joseph N. Hallock | Republican | ||
2nd | Regis H. Post | Republican | |||
Sullivan | Clarence A. Sprague | Republican | |||
Tioga | Daniel P. Witter | Republican | |||
Tompkins | Theron Johnson | Republican | |||
Ulster | 1st | Robert A. Snyder | Republican | ||
2nd | Solomon P. Thorn | Republican | |||
Warren | Charles H. Hitchcock | Republican | |||
Washington | Charles R. Paris | Republican | |||
Wayne | Marvin I. Greenwood | Republican | |||
Westchester | 1st | John J. Sloane | Democrat | ||
2nd | William Henderson Jr. | Democrat | |||
3rd | James K. Apgar | Republican | |||
Wyoming | Daniel P. Whipple | Republican | |||
Yates | Edward M. Sawyer | Republican | |||