1855 New York state election explained

The 1855 New York state election was held on November 6, 1855, to elect the Secretary of State, the State Comptroller, the Attorney General, the State Treasurer, the State Engineer, two judges of the New York Court of Appeals, a Canal Commissioner and an Inspector of State Prisons, as well as members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate.

Nominations

Both the Whig state convention and the Anti-Nebraska state convention met on September 26 at Syracuse, New York. John Alsop King presided at the Whig convention, Reuben E. Fenton at the Anti-Nebraska convention. After organizing the Whigs, the delegates decided to join the Anti-Nebraskans, and marched to their assembling place. There the two parties merged and adopted the name Republican Party, and continued as the Republican state convention with King and Fenton as co-chairmen.[1]

Results

Due to the chaotic political situation with the major parties split over the slavery question, a new party being founded by the fusion of factions of all previous parties, and four tickets competing, the American Party had the most surprising election victory in the history of the State of New York, winning eight of the nine state offices. Only the jointly nominated Democrat Henry L. Selden could defeat his American and Republican opponents. The incumbents Cook, Follett and Darius Clark were defeated.

16 Republicans, 11 Americans, four Democrats and one Temperance man were elected to a two-year term (1856–57) in the New York State Senate.

47 Democrats, 44 Americans, 35 Republicans and 2 Whigs were elected to the New York State Assembly of the 79th New York State Legislature.

1855 state election results
OfficeAmerican[2] ticketRepublican ticketDem./Soft ticketDem./Hard ticket
Secretary of StateJoel T. Headley 148,557Preston King136,698Israel T. Hatch91,336Aaron Ward59,353
ComptrollerLorenzo Burrows148,267James M. Cook138,748101,863Thomas B. Mitchell47,411
Attorney GeneralStephen B. Cushing148,695Abijah Mann, Jr.136,337101,369Josiah Sutherland44,357
TreasurerStephen Clark148,778Alexander B. Williams136,696Ariel S. Thurston91,871Joseph M. Lyon57,910
State EngineerSilas Seymour137,608George Geddes131,716John B. Jervis88,290John D. Fay56,293
Judge of the Court of Appeals (full term)William W. Campbell141,514Bradford R. Wood134,353Samuel L. Selden151,632[3] Samuel L. Selden
Judge of the Court of Appeals (short term)[4] George F. Comstock140,299Joseph Mullin132,019Nicholas Hill, Jr.106,511John Willard40,772
Canal CommissionerSamuel S. Whallon147,461Daniel H. Bissell135,918Curtis Hawley90,005Frederick Follett60,974
Inspector of State PrisonsWilliam A. Russell148,875Wesley Bailey136,993Patrick H. Agan100,702Darius Clark48,332

Sources

Notes

  1. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1855/09/28/76449797.pdf Conventions of the Whig and Republican Parties
  2. In the press usually referred to as the Know Nothings
  3. Total votes on Soft and Hard tickets
  4. To fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Charles H. Ruggles, a judge was elected for the remaining six years of the term.

See also