1812 United States House of Representatives elections in New York explained

Election Name:United States House of Representatives elections in New York, 1812
Country:New York
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:United States House of Representatives elections in New York, 1810
Previous Year:1810
Next Election:United States House of Representatives elections in New York, 1814
Next Year:1814
Seats For Election:All 27[1] New York seats to the United States House of Representatives
Election Date:December 15–17, 1812
Party1:Federalist Party (United States)
Last Election1:5
Seats1:19
Seat Change1: 14
Popular Vote1:74,401
Percentage1:53.2%
Party2:Democratic-Republican Party
Last Election2:12
Seats2:8
Seat Change2: 4
Popular Vote2:65,350
Percentage2:46.8%

The 1812 United States House of Representatives elections in New York were held from December 15 to 17, 1812, to elect 27 U.S. Representatives to represent the State of New York in the United States House of Representatives of the 13th United States Congress. At the same time, a vacancy was filled in the 12th United States Congress.

Background

17 U.S. Representatives had been elected in April 1810 to a term in the 12th United States Congress beginning on March 4, 1811. The representatives' term would end on March 3, 1813. Although the U.S. census of 1810 showed that New York would be entitled to more seats in the House, the New York State Legislature adjourned on March 27, 1812, without re-apportioning the congressional districts. Congressional elections were held, as usual, together with the State elections from April 28 to 30, 1812, but these were subsequently declared void.

1812 annulled United States House election result
DistrictDemocratic-RepublicanFederalistClintonian
1
2Gurdon S. MumfordPeter A. Jay
Silvanus Miller[2] Peter Mesier
3Jonathan FiskRichard Valentine Morris
4
5Abraham J. HasbrouckWilliam Fraser[3]
6
7William K. FullerJohn Lovett
8Melancton SmithElisha I. Winter
9
10Perley KeyesMoss Kent
11
12
13
14J. L. RichardsonElijah MillerEbenezer Hewitt[4]
15Peter B. PorterMyron HolleyMicah Brooks

On May 6, 1812, Robert Le Roy Livingston resigned his seat to fight in the War of 1812, leaving a vacancy in the 6th District.

The State Legislature reconvened on May 21, 1812, and re-apportioned the congressional district by an Act passed on June 10, 1812. The number of seats was increased to 27, and the date of the elections was set for December 15 to 17. At the same time the vacancy in the former 6th District was to be filled.

Congressional districts

Due to the increase in seats, the previously eliminated 16th and 17th D. were re-established, and four more districts were created. Six districts had two members, elected districtwide on a general ticket.

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.

Result

19 Federalists and 8 Democratic-Republicans were elected to the 13th Congress, and one Federalist to fill the vacancy in the 12th Congress. The incumbents Sage and Avery were re-elected; the incumbent Van Cortlandt was defeated. Grosvenor was elected to fill the vacancy, and to succeed himself in the next Congress.

1812 United States House election result
District colspan="2" Federalist colspan="2" Democratic-Republican colspan="2" Federalist colspan="2" Democratic-Republican
1stPeter A. Jay3,446John Lefferts3,515
Benjamin B. Blydenburgh3,437Ebenezer Sage3,508
2ndEgbert Benson3,938John Ferguson3,737
Jotham Post, Jr.3,922William Irving3,732
3rdRichard V. Morris[5] 1,269Peter Denoyelles1,404Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr.569
4thThomas J. Oakley1,995Theodorus R. Van Wyck[6] 1,489
5thThomas P. Grosvenor1,856
6thJohn Bradner[7] 609Jonathan Fisk1,102Anthony Davis[8] 431
7thAbraham T. E. De Witt[9] 1,486Abraham J. Hasbrouck1,631
8thSamuel Sherwood2,303John Ely1,990
9thJohn Lovett1,253
10thHosea Moffitt2,147
11thSamuel Stewart[10] 1,974John W. Taylor2,209
12thZebulon R. Shipherd3,981Melancton Smith[11] 3,237William Livingston406
Elisha I. Winter3,918Roger Skinner3,209
13thAlexander Boyd1,722John Gebhard1,434Jesse Shephard208
14thJacob Markell2,490James McIntyre[12] 1,987
15thJoel Thompson4,479Robert Roseboom[13] 3,946
William Dowse4,418Amos Patterson3,924
16thMorris S. Miller2,710George Brayton[14] 1,573
17thWilliam S. Smith2,606Hubbard Smith1,971
18thMoss Kent2,194Jacob Brown1,389
19thJames Geddes1,634John Miller1,297
20thElijah Miller2,359Oliver C. Comstock4,357
Vincent Mathews2,356Daniel Avery4,323
21stNathaniel W. Howell4,428Chauncey Loomis[15] 3,618Micah Brooks74
Samuel M. Hopkins4,426Stephen Bates[16] 3,511
Old 6th SpecialThomas P. Grosvenor

Note: The Anti-Federalists called themselves "Republicans." However, at the same time, the Federalists called them "Democrats" which was meant to be pejorative. After some time both terms got more and more confused, and sometimes used together as "Democratic Republicans" which later historians have adopted (with a hyphen) to describe the party from the beginning, to avoid confusion with both the later established and still existing Democratic and Republican parties.

Aftermath, special elections and contested elections

Thomas P. Grosvenor took his seat in the 12th United States Congress on January 29, 1813.

William Dowse, elected in the 15th D., died on February 18, 1813, before the begin of the congressional term. A special election to fill the vacancy was held at the time of the annual State election from April 26 to 28, and John M. Bowers, of the same party, was declared elected.

1813 United States House special election result
District colspan="2" colspan="2" Democratic-Republican
15thJohn M. Bowers4,287Isaac Williams, Jr.4,129Isaac Williams434

Note: One vote was given for "John M. Bowey", and 17 votes were scattered among other people. At the time, in the State of New York ballots with the name written by hand, or printed and distributed by the party machine men, were put in a box marked with the office the vote was intended for, like "Congress" or "Governor".

The House of Representatives of the 13th United States Congress met for the first time at the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C., on May 24, 1813, and Avery, Benson, Comstock, Denoyelles, Fisk, Geddes, Grosvenor, Kent, Lefferts, Lovett, Markell, Miller, Moffitt, Oakley, Post, Sage, Sherwood, Shiphard, Taylor, Thompson and Winter took their seats on this day. Boyd and Smith took their seats on May 25; Howell on May 26; Hopkins on June 4; Bowers on June 21; and Hasbrouck sometime before July 1.[17]

Two days after Bowers had taken his seat, on June 23, Jonathan Fisk presented a petition on behalf of Isaac Williams, Jr., contesting the election of John M. Bowers to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William Dowse. Williams, Jr., claimed that the votes returned for "Isaac Williams" were intended for him,[18] since there were only two candidates - Bowers and Williams, Jr. - and although there were two other men named Isaac Williams living in this district, neither of them was running for Congress. On July 2, the United States House Committee on Elections reported that it seemed the claim was justified, considering that in some towns apparently all votes were given for "Williams" and none for "Williams, Jr." Nevertheless, the committee were "of the opinion that further evidence was necessary, to form a correct decision" and postponed the matter "until the first Wednesday of the next session."[19]

On July 7, 1813, a petition on behalf of Peter A. Jay and Benjamin B. Blydenburgh was presented to the House, contesting the election of Ebenezer Sage and John Lefferts in the 1st D. On July 13, the Committee on Elections postponed this case also to the next session, but no further action was taken.[20]

Egbert Benson resigned his seat on August 2, 1813, at the end of the first session of the 13th Congress. A special election to fill the vacancy was held in the 2nd District from December 28 to 30, and was won by William Irving, of the opposing party. Irving took his seat on January 22, 1814.

1813 United States House special election result
District colspan="2" Democratic-Republican colspan="2"
2ndWilliam Irving3,895Peter A. Jay3,518

The second session of the 13th Congress began on December 6, 1813, and on December 13, Fisk asked the committee to submit its final report. On December 20, the Committee reported that in the towns of Exeter, Milford and Westford 322 votes were in fact given for "Isaac Williams, Jr.", but had been returned for "Isaac Williams" by the election inspectors "by mistake." The House declared unanimously Williams, Jr., entitled to the seat instead of Bowers. Williams, Jr., took his seat on January 24, 1814.[21]

Notes

  1. 10 new seats in reapportionment
  2. Silvanus Miller, assemblyman 1808
  3. William Fraser, of Greene Co., assemblyman 1814
  4. Ebenezer Hewitt, of Cayuga Co., assemblyman 1808-09 and 1811; DeWitt Clinton ran later in 1812 for President on a "Peace Ticket" supported by Federalists and "Clintonians", i.e. the minority of the Democratic-Republican Party opposed to the War of 1812; Hewitt apparently ran as a third candidate, neither the regular Dem.-Rep. nor Fed. nominee, but had the highest number of votes in Cayuga Co.: Hewitt 953; Miller (F) 941; Richardson (D-R) 928
  5. Richard Valentine Morris, assemblyman 1814
  6. Theodorus R. Van Wyck, assemblyman 1803 and 1804
  7. John Bradner, assemblyman 1786
  8. Anthony Davis, assemblyman 1808-09, 1811 and 1818
  9. Abraham Ten Eyck De Witt, assemblyman 1808
  10. Samuel Stewart, of Waterford, state senator 1814-17
  11. Melancton Smith (1780-1818), son of Melancton Smith, father of Melancton Smith (1810–1893)
  12. James McIntyre, assemblyman 1804-05, 1806, 1811 and 1822
  13. Robert Roseboom, of Otsego Co., assemblyman 1800, 1807, 1808, 1811, 1812 and 1814-15
  14. George Brayton, assemblyman 1804-05, 1806, 1807 and 1818
  15. Chauncey Loomis, of Genesee Co., assemblyman 1810 and 1811; state senator 1815-18
  16. Stephen Bates, of Canandaigua, state senator 1816-19
  17. https://books.google.com/books?id=o8YTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA15 Abridgment of the Debates in Congress
  18. Similar contested elections happened throughout the 19th century, until a ballot reform was finally enacted in 1890; see also New York state election, 1851#Contested election
  19. https://books.google.com/books?id=bQ8EfoaTBLsC&pg=PA263 Cases of Contested Elections in Congress 1789 to 1834
  20. https://books.google.com/books?id=bQ8EfoaTBLsC&pg=PA263 Cases of Contested Elections in Congress 1789 to 1834
  21. https://books.google.com/books?id=IiIZAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA43 Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States

Sources