1797 United States Senate election in New York explained

Election Name:1797 United States Senate election in New York
Election Date:January 24, 1797
Vote Type:presidential
Country:New York (state)
Ongoing:no
Previous Year:1791
Previous Election:1791 United States Senate election in New York
Next Year:Jan. 1798
Next Election:January 1798 United States Senate special election in New York
Votes For Election:Majority approval in both houses needed to win
1Blank:Senate
3Blank:House
4Blank:House %
Image1:File:Schuyler.jpg
Candidate1:Philip Schuyler
Party1:Federalist Party
1Data1:Unanimous
3Data1:85
4Data1:98.8%
Before Election:Aaron Burr
Before Party:Democratic-Republican Party
After Election:Philip Schuyler
After Party:Federalist Party
U.S. senator
Posttitle:Elected U.S. Senator
Type:presidential

The 1797 United States Senate election in New York was held on January 24, 1797, by the New York State Legislature to elect a U.S. Senator (Class 1) to represent the State of New York in the United States Senate. Incumbent Senator Aaron Burr's name was not placed into nomination for a second term. Former Senator Philip Schuyler was elected.

Background

Democratic-Republican Aaron Burr had been elected in 1791 after the Assembly rejected incumbent Philip Schuyler.

At the State election in April 1796, Federalist majorities were elected to both houses of the 20th New York State Legislature which met from November 1 to 11, 1796, at New York City, and from January 3 to April 3, 1797, at Albany, New York.

Candidates

Ex-U.S. Senator (in office 1789–1791) Philip Schuyler, now a State Senator, ran again as the candidate of the Federalist Party.

Result

Schuyler was the choice of both the State Senate and the State Assembly, and was declared elected.

1797 United States Senate election result[1]
HousePhilip SchuylerJames Kent
State SenateUnanimous
State Assembly851

Aftermath

Schuyler resigned on January 3, 1798, because of ill health, and a special election to fill the vacancy was held on January 11, 1798.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787–1825. 6 July 2021. elections.lib.tufts.edu.