Order1: | 27th |
Office1: | Governor of New York |
Term Start1: | January 1, 1880 |
Term End1: | December 31, 1882 |
Lieutenant1: | George G. Hoskins |
Predecessor1: | Lucius Robinson |
Successor1: | Grover Cleveland |
Office2: | Speaker of the New York State Assembly |
Term Start2: | January 1, 1873 |
Term End2: | December 31, 1873 |
Predecessor2: | Henry Smith |
Successor2: | James W. Husted |
State Assembly3: | New York |
District3: | New York County, 11th |
Term Start3: | January 1, 1873 |
Term End3: | December 31, 1873 |
Preceded3: | Rush C. Hawkins |
Succeeded3: | Knox McAfee |
Birth Name: | Alonzo Barton Cornell |
Birth Date: | January 22, 1832 |
Birth Place: | Ithaca, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Ithaca, New York, U.S. |
Party: | Republican |
Profession: | Politician, Businessman |
Parents: | Ezra Cornell Mary Ann Wood Cornell |
Spouse: | |
Signature: | Signature of Alonzo Barton Cornell.png |
Alonzo Barton Cornell (January 22, 1832 – October 15, 1904) was a New York politician and businessman who was the 27th governor of New York from 1880 to 1882.
Cornell was born in Ithaca, New York, on January 22, 1832. He was the eldest son of Ezra Cornell (1807–1874), the founder of Cornell University, and Mary Ann (née Wood) Cornell (1811–1891). Among his siblings was his brother Franklin C. Cornell.[1] He attended the common schools of Ithaca and graduated from Ithaca Academy.[2]
At the age of fifteen, he began a career in the field of telegraphy, later working as a manager in a telegraph office in Cleveland, Ohio. Afterwards, he owned steamboats on Cayuga Lake from 1862 to 1863. From 1864 to 1869, he was a cashier and vice president of the First National Bank of Ithaca. He was a director of the Western Union Telegraph Company, which had been co-founded by his father, from 1868 to 1876, and was its vice president from 1870 to 1876.
He was town supervisor of Ithaca in 1864–5. From 1858 until 1866, he was chairman of the Tompkins County Republican committee, and in 1866-7 was a member of the Republican state committee. He was one of the first commissioners for the erection of the new state capitol at Albany from 1868 until 1871. He was the Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1868, but was defeated by the Democrat, Allen C. Beach. He was appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant as Surveyor of the Port of New York.
From 1870 to 1878, he was chairman of the state Republican Party. He resigned his position as Surveyor of the Port of New York to become a member of the New York State Assembly (New York Co., 11th D.) in 1873, and was elected Speaker, one of the very few times a first-term member was chosen. He was influential at the 1876 Republican National Convention which nominated Rutherford B. Hayes. In January 1877, he was appointed naval officer of the Port of New York by Grant.
Hayes, upon becoming president, directed the Treasury Department to notify Cornell that he must resign from the state and national Republican committees as a condition of remaining naval officer. Regarding this as an invasion of his civil and political rights, Cornell declined to obey the mandate, whereupon a successor was nominated, but was rejected by the Senate. After the adjournment of the Senate in July 1878, Hayes suspended both the collector (Chester A. Arthur) and the naval officer, and their successors were finally confirmed. At the subsequent elections, Cornell was chosen Governor of New York and Arthur became Vice President of the United States.
Cornell was governor from 1880 to 1882, elected in 1879. His administration was noted for economy in public expenditures, and his vetoes of appropriation bills were beyond all precedent. Upon his recommendation, a state board of health and the state railroad commission were created, women were made eligible for school officers, a reformatory for women established, and the usury laws were modified.
The resignation of the New York senators from the U. S. Senate in 1881 provoked a bitter contest for the succession, by which the Republican Party was divided into hostile factions, the Stalwarts and the Half Breeds. Cornell's opponents prevented his re-nomination for governor.
During his latter years, Cornell lived in New York City, where he had a mansion built in the 1870s at 616 Fifth Avenue on the west side of the avenue between 49th and 50th Streets,[3] and wrote a biography of his father in 1884.[4]
On November 9, 1852, Cornell married Ellen Augusta Covert (1834–1893). She was the daughter of George P. Covert, a lifelong friend of his father, and Esther Elizabeth (née Bassett) Covert. Together, they were the parents of:[4]
After the death of his first wife in 1893, he remarried on June 8, 1894, to her younger sister, Esther Elizabeth Covert (1839–1923), a native of Auburn, New York.
After suffering a stroke of apoplexy followed by Bright's disease in August 1904,[11] Cornell died on October 15, 1904, in Ithaca, aged 72.[12] He was interred with his father and mother in Sage Chapel on the Cornell University campus.[13]
Cornell's papers are held in Cornell University Library's Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections.[14]