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1869 United States Senate election in New York

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FieldValue
election_name1869 United States Senate election in New York
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1863 United States Senate election in New York
previous_year1863
next_election1875 United States Senate election in New York
next_year1875
election_dateJanuary 19, 1869
image_sizex160px
votes_for_electionMajority vote of each house needed to win
1blankSenate
2blankPercentage
3blankHouse
4blankPercentage
image1File:Reuben Fenton (portrait by Asa Twitchell).png
nominee1Reuben Fenton
party1Republican Party (US)
1data115
2data157.69%
3data173
4data161.34%
image2File:Henry Cruse Murphy.jpg
nominee2Henry Cruse Murphy
party2Democratic Party (US)
1data210
2data238.46%
3data246
4data238.66%
titleSenator
before_electionEdwin D. Morgan
before_partyRepublican Party (US)
after_electionReuben Fenton
after_partyRepublican Party (US)

The 1869 United States Senate election in New York was held on January 19, 1869, by the New York State Legislature. Incumbent Senator Edwin D. Morgan stood for a second term in office, but lost the support of the Republican legislative caucus in favor of Reuben Fenton.

Background

Republican Edwin D. Morgan had been elected in February 1863 to this seat, and his term would expire on March 3, 1869.

At the State election in November 1867, 17 Republicans and 15 Democrats were elected for a two-year term (1868–1869) in the State Senate. At the State election in November 1868, Democrat John T. Hoffman was elected Governor, and 75 Republicans and 53 Democrats were elected for the session of 1869 to the Assembly. The 92nd New York State Legislature met from January 5 to May 11, 1869, at Albany, New York.

Candidates

Republican caucus

The caucus of Republican State legislators met on January 16, Assemblyman John H. Selkreg presided. All 92 legislators were present. They nominated Ex-Governor Reuben E. Fenton for the U.S. Senate. The incumbent U.S. Senator Edwin D. Morgan was very keen on his re-election, but was voted down. Speaker Truman G. Younglove had held back the appointments to the standing Assembly committees until after the caucus, and subsequent election, of a U.S. Senator, and was accused by the Morgan men to have made a bargain to favor the Fenton men with appointments after the election was accomplished. After the caucus, comparing notes, the assemblymen discovered that some of the most important committee chairmanships had been promised to a dozen different members by Speaker Younglove.

CandidateFirst ballotSecond ballot
Reuben E. Fenton(50)52
Edwin D. Morgan(42)40
blank(1)

Note: On the first ballot, 93 votes were cast, one too many, and it was annulled without announcing the result. The above stated result transpired unofficially. The blank vote caused some debate if the result was really invalidated by it, but it was finally agreed to take a second ballot.

Democratic caucus

The caucus of the Democratic State legislators met on January 18. State Senator Henry C. Murphy was again nominated, like in 1867.

Election

In the Assembly, Republicans DeWitt C. Hoyt (Saratoga Co.) and James O. Schoonmaker (Ulster Co.); and Democrats James Irving (NYC), Lawrence D. Kiernan (NYC), Harris B. Howard (Rensselaer Co.), James B. Pearsall (Queens), John Tighe (Albany Co.) and Moses Y. Tilden (Columbia Co.); did not vote.

In the State Senate, Republicans Matthew Hale (16th D.) and Charles Stanford (15th D.); and Democrats Cauldwell, Thomas J. Creamer, Michael Norton (5th D.) and John J. Bradley (7th D.); did not vote.

Result

Reuben E. Fenton was the choice of both the Assembly and the State Senate, and was declared elected.

HouseRepublicanDemocraticDemocratic
State Senate
(32 members)Reuben E. Fenton15Henry C. Murphy
State Assembly
(128 members)Reuben E. Fenton73Henry C. Murphy

Notes:

  • The vote for Ex-Secretary of State Randall was cast by Henry C. Murphy.
  • The votes were cast on January 19, but both Houses met in a joint session on January 20 to compare nominations, and declare the result.

Aftermath

Fenton served one term, and remained in office until March 3, 1875.

Sources

Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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