1924 New York state election explained

Election Name:1924 New York gubernatorial election
Country:New York
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1922 New York state election
Previous Year:1922
Next Election:1926 New York state election
Next Year:1926
Election Date:November 4, 1924
Image1:Unsuccessful 1928.jpg
Nominee1:Al Smith
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:1,627,111
Percentage1:49.96%
Nominee2:Theodore Roosevelt Jr.
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:1,518,552
Percentage2:46.63%
Governor
Before Election:Al Smith
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Al Smith
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1924 New York state election was held on November 4, 1924, to elect the governor, the lieutenant governor, the Secretary of State, the state comptroller, the attorney general, the state treasurer and the state engineer, as well as all members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate.

History

The Socialist state convention met on July 27 at Finnish Hall (at Fifth Avenue/Twelfth Street) in New York City. They nominated Rev. Norman Thomas for Governor and Charles Solomon for lieutenant governor.[1]

The initially frontrunner for the Republican party was assembly speaker H. Edmund Machold, who quickly ruled himself out of the election.[2] The Republican state convention met on September 25 in Rochester, New York. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., was nominated for governor on the first ballot.[3]

The Democratic state convention met on September 25 in Syracuse, New York, and re-nominated all incumbent state officers.

Result

Almost the whole Republican ticket was elected, only the incumbent Democratic Governor Smith managed to stay in office.

The incumbent Smith was re-elected. The incumbents Lunn, Hamilton, Fleming, Sherman, Shuler and LaDu were defeated.

The Democratic, Republican and Socialist parties maintained automatic ballot access (necessary 25,000 votes for governor), the Socialist Labor Party did not re-attain it, and the Workers Party did not attain it.

Florence E. S. Knapp was the first woman elected to a statewide office in New York. She remained the only one for fifty years, until Mary Anne Krupsak was elected lieutenant governor in 1974.

1924 state election results
OfficeDemocratic ticketRepublican ticketSocialist ticketWorkers ticketSocialist Labor ticket
GovernorAlfred E. Smith1,627,111Theodore Roosevelt Jr.1,518,552Norman Thomas99,854James P. Cannon6,395Frank E. Passanno4,931
Lieutenant GovernorGeorge R. Lunn1,430,321 Seymour Lowman1,526,849Charles Solomon126,679Franklin P. Brill8,925Milton Weinberger8,377
Secretary of StateJames A. Hamilton1,397,804Florence E. S. Knapp1,530.763Frank R. Crosswaith136,278Lilly Lore9,983Frank Gorney Jr.7,930
ComptrollerJames W. Fleming1,362,092Vincent B. Murphy1,524,670Theresa B. Wiley142,312Abraham Epstein16,866
Attorney GeneralCarl Sherman1,362,585Albert Ottinger1,541,166Louis Waldman140,424Arthur S. Leeds9,502 Joseph Brandon 8,111
TreasurerGeorge K. Shuler1,325,695Lewis H. Pounds1,568,965John H. VandenBosch134,039Edward Lindgren9,826John E. DeLee8,747
State EngineerDwight B. LaDu1,296,954Roy G. Finch1,568,965Vladimir Karapetoff138,182Richard J. Verhagen9,567Simeon Bickwheat7,934

This was the last election of a Secretary of State, a Treasurer and a State Engineer. The Secretary of State has been appointive since January 1927, the other two offices were abolished. The duties of the Treasurer were transferred to the Comptroller, those of the State Engineer to the Superintendent of Public Works which has been always an appointive office.

References

  1. https://www.nytimes.com/1924/07/28/archives/socialists-name-thomas-as-head-of-state-ticket-former-assistant.html "Socialists Name Thomas as Head of State Ticket"
  2. Madaras . Lawerence H. . October 1966 . THEODORE ROOSEVELT, JR. VERSUS AL SMITH: THE NEW YORK GUBERNATORIAL ELECTION OF 1924. New York History . 47 . 4 . 376-377.
  3. https://www.nytimes.com/1924/09/26/archives/roosevelt-wins-easily-he-is-chosen-on-the-first-ballot-with-60.html "Roosevelt Wins Easily"

Sources

See also

New York gubernatorial elections