The 1821 United States House of Representatives elections in New York were held from April 24 to 26, 1821, to elect 27 U.S. Representatives to represent the State of New York in the United States House of Representatives of the 17th United States Congress.
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All 27 New York seats to the United States House of Representatives | |||||||||||||||||||
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Background
27 U.S. Representatives had been elected in April 1818 to a term in the 16th United States Congress beginning on March 4, 1819, and ending on March 3, 1821. The previous congressional elections were held usually in even-numbered years, about ten months before the term would start on March 4 of the next year, and about a year and a half before Congress actually met in the following December. This time the congressional elections were moved a year forward, and were held together with the State elections in late April 1821, after the congressional term already had begun, but about half a year before Congress actually met on December 3, 1821.
Congressional districts
Except for the split of the 21st District, the geographical area of the congressional districts remained the same as at the previous elections in 1818. Five new counties had been created. Hamilton Co. was split from Montgomery Co. inside the 14th District. Oswego Co. was created from parts of Oneida and Onondaga counties, but the parts remained in their previous congressional districts. On March 9, 1821, the New York State Legislature divided the 21st District in two districts: Ontario Co. and the newly created Monroe Co. remained as the 21st District; the remainder became the new 22nd District, including the new counties of Erie and Livingston.
- The 1st District (two seats) comprising the 1st and 2nd Ward of New York County, and Kings, Queens, Suffolk and Richmond counties.
- The 2nd District (two seats) comprising the other eight wards of New York County.
- The 3rd District comprising Westchester and Rockland counties.
- The 4th District comprising Dutchess County, except the towns of Rhinebeck and Clinton; and Putnam County.
- The 5th District comprising Columbia County; and Rhinebeck and Clinton in Dutchess County.
- The 6th District comprising Orange County.
- The 7th District comprising Ulster and Sullivan counties.
- The 8th District comprising Delaware and Greene counties.
- The 9th District comprising Albany County.
- The 10h District comprising Rensselaer County.
- The 11th District comprising Saratoga County.
- The 12th District (two seats) comprising Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Washington and Warren counties.
- The 13th District comprising Schenectady and Schoharie counties.
- The 14th District comprising Montgomery County and the Town of Danube in Herkimer County.
- The 15th District (two seats) comprising Chenango, Broome and Otsego counties.
- The 16th District comprising Oneida County and the ex-Oneida part of Oswego County.
- The 17th District comprising Herkimer County, except the Town of Danube; and Madison County.
- The 18th District comprising St. Lawrence, Jefferson and Lewis counties.
- The 19th District comprising Onondaga and Cortland counties, and the ex-Onondaga part of Oswego County.
- The 20th District (two seats) comprising Tioga, Steuben, Cayuga, Seneca and Tompkins counties.
- The 21st District comprising Ontario and Monroe counties.
- The 22nd District comprising Genesee, Allegany, Niagara, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Erie and Livingston counties.
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
15 Bucktails and 12 Clintonian/Federalists were declared elected. Cadwallader D. Colden (Fed.) successfully contested the election of Peter Sharpe (Buckt.), so that New York was represented by 19 Democratic-Republicans and 8 Federalists in the 17th Congress. The incumbents Wood, Van Rensselaer, Dickinson, Taylor, Pitcher and Tracy were re-elected; the incumbents Gross, Monell, Hall, Richmond and Allen (all Clintonians) were defeated.
District | Democratic-Republican/Bucktails | Clintonian/Federalist | also ran | |||
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1st | Joshua Smith | 3,326 | Silas Wood | 3,960 | "Cadwallader Colden" | 395 |
Peter Sharpe | 3,369 | Cadwallader D. Colden | 3,339 | "Cadwallader D. Colder" | 220 | |
2nd | John J. Morgan | 6,645 | Henry Eckford | 2,813 | ||
Churchill C. Cambreleng | 3,975 | |||||
3rd | Jeremiah H. Pierson | 1,863 | John T. Smith | 1,330 | Peter S. Van Orden (Buckt.) | 331 |
4th | William W. Van Wyck | 2,795 | William Taber | 2,125 | ||
5th | Philip J. Schuyler | 2,523 | Walter Patterson | 3,467 | ||
6th | Selah Tuthill | 2,156 | James W. Wilkin | 1,340 | ||
7th | 2,139 | Charles H. Ruggles | 2,577 | |||
8th | Jacob Haight | 1,812 | Richard McCarty | 2,592 | ||
9th | Harmanus Bleecker | 1,793 | Solomon Van Rensselaer | 2,393 | ||
10th | James L. Hogeboom | 2,181 | John D. Dickinson | 2,852 | Simon Newcomb | 102 |
11th | 2,044 | John W. Taylor | 2,346 | |||
12th | Reuben H. Walworth | 5,300 | John Crary | 4,451 | ||
Nathaniel Pitcher | 4,951 | Ezra C. Gross | 4,264 | |||
13th | William Mann | 2,229 | John Gebhard | 2,321 | ||
14th | John Herkimer | 2,426 | Alfred Conkling | 2,672 | ||
15th | James Hawkes | 5,363 | Robert Monell | 4,188 | ||
Samuel Campbell | 5,222 | Alvan Stewart | 4,036 | |||
16th | Nathan Williams | 2,774 | Joseph Kirkland | 3,608 | ||
17th | Thomas H. Hubbard | 3,235 | David Woods | 3,103 | ||
18th | Perley Keyes | 3,228 | Micah Sterling | 3,568 | ||
19th | Elisha Litchfield | 3,208 | George Hall | 3,032 | ||
20th | William B. Rochester | 7,562 | Jonathan Richmond | 6,104 | ||
David Woodcock | 6,306 | Herman Camp | 5,579 | |||
21st | Elijah Spencer | 4,798 | Nathaniel Allen | 4,692 | Daniel W. Lewis (Clintonian/Republican) | 160 |
22nd | Benjamin Ellicott | 6,789 | Albert H. Tracy | 7,020 |
Note: It is difficult to ascertain the party affiliation of some of the fusion candidates: At this time the Democratic-Republican Party was already split into two opposing factions: on one side, the supporters of DeWitt Clinton and his Erie Canal project; on the other side, the Bucktails (including the Tammany Hall organization in New York City), led by Martin Van Buren. At the same time, the Federalist Party had already begun to disintegrate, and many of its former members joined either the Bucktails or the Clintonians. However, in Congress both Bucktails and Clintonians aligned with the Democratic-Republicans from the other States. Wood, Colden, Patterson, Ruggles, Van Rensselaer, Dickinson, Kirkland and Sterling were Federalists; Wilkin, McCarty, Taylor, Gross, Gebhard, Monell, Hall, Richmond, Camp, Allen and Tracy were Clintonians.
Aftermath, special elections and contested election
Selah Tuthill, elected in the 6th District, died on September 7, 1821, before Congress met. A special election to fill the vacancy was held from November 6 to 8, and was won by Charles Borland, Jr.
District | Democratic-Republican | Democratic-Republican | ||
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6th | Charles Borland, Jr. | 1,277 | John Duer | 1,097 |
The House of Representatives of the 17th United States Congress met for the first time at the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C., on December 3, 1821, and 24 of the representatives took their seats. Ruggles and Sterling took their seats later, and Peter Sharpe did not appear.
On December 6, 1821, a petition on behalf of Cadwallader D. Colden was presented to contest the election of Peter Sharpe in the 1st District. On December 11, the Committee on Elections submitted its report. They found that in the town of Brookhaven 220 votes had been returned for Cadwallader D. Colden, but the final letter of the name "n" had been misread as an "r" when the election certificate was viewed in the office of the Secretary of State of New York. They also found that in the town of Hempstead 395 votes were returned for "Cadwallader Colden" by mistake, the Queens County Clerk having omitted the middle initial although all these votes had in fact been given for "Cadwallader D. Colden". The Secretary of State of New York, receiving the abovementioned result, issued credentials for Sharpe who never took or claimed the seat. On December 12, the House declared Colden entitled to the seat, and he took it.
On January 14, 1822, Solomon Van Rensselaer resigned his seat to accept an appointment as Postmaster of Albany to replace Solomon Southwick whose financial affairs were in such a messy state that he had defaulted the post-office monies. To fill the vacancy, a special election was held from February 25 to 27, and was won by Stephen Van Rensselaer defeating Ex-Postmaster Southwick. Stephen Van Rensselaer took his seat on March 12, 1822.
District | Clintonian/Federalist | Democratic-Republican | ||
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9th | Stephen Van Rensselaer | 2,266 | Solomon Southwick | 499 |
Notes
- Brig. Gen. Peter S. Van Orden (b. ca. 1762), of Rockland Co., assemblyman 1810, 1811, 1812, 1812-13, 1814 and 1814-15; presidential elector for Monroe/Tompkins in 1816
- De Witt Clinton and the Rise of the People's Men by Craig & Mary L. Hanyan (page 258)
- William Taber, of Dover, assemblyman 1798-99, 1800 and 1804; state senator 1812-1815
- William G. Gillespie, assemblyman 1820-21; First Judge of the Sullivan County Court 1835-1844
- Guert Van Schoonhoven, ran also as a Federalist in 1802
- William Mann, Surrogate of Schoharie Co. 1822-1832; presidential elector in 1824; canal appraiser 1836-1839
- Alvan Stewart (1790-1849), ran for Gov. of New York on the Liberty ticket in 1842 and 1844
- Herman Camp, Sheriff of Seneca Co. Jan-Aug 1817; Sheriff of Tompkins Co. April–June 1817; assemblyman from Tompkins Co. 1820
- Abridgment of the Debates in Congress (Vol. VII; page 215)
- Cases of Contested Elections in Congress 1789 to 1834 compiled by Matthew St. Clair Clarke and David A. Hall (Washington, D.C., 1834; Case XLVII, pages 369ff)
- Southwick had been a Clintonian, but when pressed to pay over the post-office monies, changed sides and joined the Bucktails; soon after he left the Democratic-Republican Party and became an Independent and later an Anti-Mason
- Solomon Southwick, Clerk of the State Assembly 1803, 1804, 1804-05, 1806, part of 1807 and part of 1808; ran for Gov. of New York as an Independent in 1822, and on the Anti-Masonic ticket in 1828
Sources
- The New York Civil List compiled in 1858 (see: pg. 66 for district apportionment; pg. 71 for Congressmen)
- Members of the Seventeenth United States Congress
- Election result 1st D. at project "A New Nation Votes", compiled by Phil Lampi, hosted by Tufts University Digital Library [gives 3,961 for Wood; 3,958 for Colden; 3,369 for Sharpe; and 3,326 for Smith; the newspaper editor was not aware of the county clerks mistakes]
- Election result 2nd D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 3rd D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 4th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 5th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 6th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 7th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 8th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 9th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 10th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 11th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 12th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 13th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 14th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 15th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 16th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 17th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 18th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 19th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 20th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 21st D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Election result 22nd D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- Special election result 6th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
- 1822 Special election result 9th D. at "A New Nation Votes"
Author: www.NiNa.Az
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The 1821 United States House of Representatives elections in New York were held from April 24 to 26 1821 to elect 27 U S Representatives to represent the State of New York in the United States House of Representatives of the 17th United States Congress United States House of Representatives elections in New York 1821 1818 April 28 30 1821 1822 All 27 New York seats to the United States House of Representatives Majority party Minority party Party Democratic Republican Federalist Last election 21 6 Seats won 19 8 Seat change 2 2Background27 U S Representatives had been elected in April 1818 to a term in the 16th United States Congress beginning on March 4 1819 and ending on March 3 1821 The previous congressional elections were held usually in even numbered years about ten months before the term would start on March 4 of the next year and about a year and a half before Congress actually met in the following December This time the congressional elections were moved a year forward and were held together with the State elections in late April 1821 after the congressional term already had begun but about half a year before Congress actually met on December 3 1821 Congressional districtsExcept for the split of the 21st District the geographical area of the congressional districts remained the same as at the previous elections in 1818 Five new counties had been created Hamilton Co was split from Montgomery Co inside the 14th District Oswego Co was created from parts of Oneida and Onondaga counties but the parts remained in their previous congressional districts On March 9 1821 the New York State Legislature divided the 21st District in two districts Ontario Co and the newly created Monroe Co remained as the 21st District the remainder became the new 22nd District including the new counties of Erie and Livingston The 1st District two seats comprising the 1st and 2nd Ward of New York County and Kings Queens Suffolk and Richmond counties The 2nd District two seats comprising the other eight wards of New York County The 3rd District comprising Westchester and Rockland counties The 4th District comprising Dutchess County except the towns of Rhinebeck and Clinton and Putnam County The 5th District comprising Columbia County and Rhinebeck and Clinton in Dutchess County The 6th District comprising Orange County The 7th District comprising Ulster and Sullivan counties The 8th District comprising Delaware and Greene counties The 9th District comprising Albany County The 10h District comprising Rensselaer County The 11th District comprising Saratoga County The 12th District two seats comprising Clinton Essex Franklin Washington and Warren counties The 13th District comprising Schenectady and Schoharie counties The 14th District comprising Montgomery County and the Town of Danube in Herkimer County The 15th District two seats comprising Chenango Broome and Otsego counties The 16th District comprising Oneida County and the ex Oneida part of Oswego County The 17th District comprising Herkimer County except the Town of Danube and Madison County The 18th District comprising St Lawrence Jefferson and Lewis counties The 19th District comprising Onondaga and Cortland counties and the ex Onondaga part of Oswego County The 20th District two seats comprising Tioga Steuben Cayuga Seneca and Tompkins counties The 21st District comprising Ontario and Monroe counties The 22nd District comprising Genesee Allegany Niagara Chautauqua Cattaraugus Erie and Livingston counties 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 Result15 Bucktails and 12 Clintonian Federalists were declared elected Cadwallader D Colden Fed successfully contested the election of Peter Sharpe Buckt so that New York was represented by 19 Democratic Republicans and 8 Federalists in the 17th Congress The incumbents Wood Van Rensselaer Dickinson Taylor Pitcher and Tracy were re elected the incumbents Gross Monell Hall Richmond and Allen all Clintonians were defeated 1821 United States House election result District Democratic Republican Bucktails Clintonian Federalist also ran 1st Joshua Smith 3 326 Silas Wood 3 960 Cadwallader Colden 395 Peter Sharpe 3 369 Cadwallader D Colden 3 339 Cadwallader D Colder 220 2nd John J Morgan 6 645 Henry Eckford 2 813 Churchill C Cambreleng 3 975 3rd Jeremiah H Pierson 1 863 John T Smith 1 330 Peter S Van Orden Buckt 331 4th William W Van Wyck 2 795 William Taber 2 125 5th Philip J Schuyler 2 523 Walter Patterson 3 467 6th Selah Tuthill 2 156 James W Wilkin 1 340 7th 2 139 Charles H Ruggles 2 577 8th Jacob Haight 1 812 Richard McCarty 2 592 9th Harmanus Bleecker 1 793 Solomon Van Rensselaer 2 393 10th James L Hogeboom 2 181 John D Dickinson 2 852 Simon Newcomb 102 11th 2 044 John W Taylor 2 346 12th Reuben H Walworth 5 300 John Crary 4 451 Nathaniel Pitcher 4 951 Ezra C Gross 4 264 13th William Mann 2 229 John Gebhard 2 321 14th John Herkimer 2 426 Alfred Conkling 2 672 15th James Hawkes 5 363 Robert Monell 4 188 Samuel Campbell 5 222 Alvan Stewart 4 036 16th Nathan Williams 2 774 Joseph Kirkland 3 608 17th Thomas H Hubbard 3 235 David Woods 3 103 18th Perley Keyes 3 228 Micah Sterling 3 568 19th Elisha Litchfield 3 208 George Hall 3 032 20th William B Rochester 7 562 Jonathan Richmond 6 104 David Woodcock 6 306 Herman Camp 5 579 21st Elijah Spencer 4 798 Nathaniel Allen 4 692 Daniel W Lewis Clintonian Republican 160 22nd Benjamin Ellicott 6 789 Albert H Tracy 7 020 Note It is difficult to ascertain the party affiliation of some of the fusion candidates At this time the Democratic Republican Party was already split into two opposing factions on one side the supporters of DeWitt Clinton and his Erie Canal project on the other side the Bucktails including the Tammany Hall organization in New York City led by Martin Van Buren At the same time the Federalist Party had already begun to disintegrate and many of its former members joined either the Bucktails or the Clintonians However in Congress both Bucktails and Clintonians aligned with the Democratic Republicans from the other States Wood Colden Patterson Ruggles Van Rensselaer Dickinson Kirkland and Sterling were Federalists Wilkin McCarty Taylor Gross Gebhard Monell Hall Richmond Camp Allen and Tracy were Clintonians Aftermath special elections and contested electionSelah Tuthill elected in the 6th District died on September 7 1821 before Congress met A special election to fill the vacancy was held from November 6 to 8 and was won by Charles Borland Jr 1821 United States House special election result District Democratic Republican Democratic Republican 6th Charles Borland Jr 1 277 John Duer 1 097 The House of Representatives of the 17th United States Congress met for the first time at the United States Capitol in Washington D C on December 3 1821 and 24 of the representatives took their seats Ruggles and Sterling took their seats later and Peter Sharpe did not appear On December 6 1821 a petition on behalf of Cadwallader D Colden was presented to contest the election of Peter Sharpe in the 1st District On December 11 the Committee on Elections submitted its report They found that in the town of Brookhaven 220 votes had been returned for Cadwallader D Colden but the final letter of the name n had been misread as an r when the election certificate was viewed in the office of the Secretary of State of New York They also found that in the town of Hempstead 395 votes were returned for Cadwallader Colden by mistake the Queens County Clerk having omitted the middle initial although all these votes had in fact been given for Cadwallader D Colden The Secretary of State of New York receiving the abovementioned result issued credentials for Sharpe who never took or claimed the seat On December 12 the House declared Colden entitled to the seat and he took it On January 14 1822 Solomon Van Rensselaer resigned his seat to accept an appointment as Postmaster of Albany to replace Solomon Southwick whose financial affairs were in such a messy state that he had defaulted the post office monies To fill the vacancy a special election was held from February 25 to 27 and was won by Stephen Van Rensselaer defeating Ex Postmaster Southwick Stephen Van Rensselaer took his seat on March 12 1822 1822 United States House special election result District Clintonian Federalist Democratic Republican 9th Stephen Van Rensselaer 2 266 Solomon Southwick 499NotesBrig Gen Peter S Van Orden b ca 1762 of Rockland Co assemblyman 1810 1811 1812 1812 13 1814 and 1814 15 presidential elector for Monroe Tompkins in 1816 De Witt Clinton and the Rise of the People s Men by Craig amp Mary L Hanyan page 258 William Taber of Dover assemblyman 1798 99 1800 and 1804 state senator 1812 1815 William G Gillespie assemblyman 1820 21 First Judge of the Sullivan County Court 1835 1844 Guert Van Schoonhoven ran also as a Federalist in 1802 William Mann Surrogate of Schoharie Co 1822 1832 presidential elector in 1824 canal appraiser 1836 1839 Alvan Stewart 1790 1849 ran for Gov of New York on the Liberty ticket in 1842 and 1844 Herman Camp Sheriff of Seneca Co Jan Aug 1817 Sheriff of Tompkins Co April June 1817 assemblyman from Tompkins Co 1820 Abridgment of the Debates in Congress Vol VII page 215 Cases of Contested Elections in Congress 1789 to 1834 compiled by Matthew St Clair Clarke and David A Hall Washington D C 1834 Case XLVII pages 369ff Southwick had been a Clintonian but when pressed to pay over the post office monies changed sides and joined the Bucktails soon after he left the Democratic Republican Party and became an Independent and later an Anti Mason Solomon Southwick Clerk of the State Assembly 1803 1804 1804 05 1806 part of 1807 and part of 1808 ran for Gov of New York as an Independent in 1822 and on the Anti Masonic ticket in 1828SourcesThe New York Civil List compiled in 1858 see pg 66 for district apportionment pg 71 for Congressmen Members of the Seventeenth United States Congress Election result 1st D at project A New Nation Votes compiled by Phil Lampi hosted by Tufts University Digital Library gives 3 961 for Wood 3 958 for Colden 3 369 for Sharpe and 3 326 for Smith the newspaper editor was not aware of the county clerks mistakes Election result 2nd D at A New Nation Votes Election result 3rd D at A New Nation Votes Election result 4th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 5th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 6th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 7th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 8th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 9th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 10th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 11th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 12th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 13th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 14th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 15th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 16th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 17th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 18th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 19th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 20th D at A New Nation Votes Election result 21st D at A New Nation Votes Election result 22nd D at A New Nation Votes Special election result 6th D at A New Nation Votes 1822 Special election result 9th D at A New Nation Votes