- Source: 1856 New York gubernatorial election
- 1856 New York gubernatorial election
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- 1856 New York state election
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The 1856 New York gubernatorial election was held on November 4, 1856. Incumbent Governor Myron Clark did not run for re-election to a second term in office. In the race to succeed him, John A. King defeated Amasa J. Parker and Erastus Brooks to become the first Republican elected Governor of New York.
Democratic nomination
= Background
=In the 1840s, the New York Democratic Party split between its anti-slavery "Barnburner" wing and its conservative "Hunker" wing, culminating in the nomination of Martin Van Buren for president on a Barnburner "Free Soil" ticket in 1848.
Following the Compromise of 1850, the two wings initially reconciled, though there was a further split in the Hunker camp between "Hard Shell" men who opposed reconciliation and "Soft Shell" men, who favored it. After the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed, renewed attention on the issue of slavery broke this fragile truce, and all factions were once again at odds. The Hards, who believed that anti-slavery men no longer had any place in the Democratic Party, broke off to form their own "National Democratic" ticket, while many radical anti-slavery men also broke from the Democrats to join the Anti-Nebraska and Free Soil parties in 1854. Following their disastrous defeat in the 1854 election, the national Democratic Party, led by presidential nominee James Buchanan, urged the wings of the New York party to reconcile once more and unite behind a single candidate.
= Candidates
=John W. Brown, Justice of the New York Supreme Court and former U.S. Representative from Newburgh
Orestes Brownson, Catholic intellectual
Erastus Corning, former mayor of Albany and State Senator
Daniel S. Dickinson, former U.S. Senator and Lieutenant Governor
Samuel Fowler
Addison Gardiner, former Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals and Lieutenant Governor (withdrawn following third ballot)
Amasa J. Parker, former Justice of the New York Supreme Court and U.S. Representative from Delhi
Porter[data missing]
Henry W. Rogers (withdrawn following first ballot)
Augustus Schell, attorney and chair of the Democratic State Committee (withdrawn following third ballot)
David L. Seymour, former U.S. Representative from Troy
John Vanderbilt, former State Senator from Flatbush
Fernando Wood, mayor of New York City (withdrawn following third ballot)
Declined to be drafted
Horatio Seymour, former Governor (following first ballot)
= Results
=The Soft Shell state convention met on July 30 at Market Hall in Syracuse. The Hard Shell Democratic state convention met at the same time at Corinthian Hall in the same city. The Soft delegates adopted a resolution to unite with the Hards and marched to Corinthian Hall where both factions assembled together.
On the first ballot, Addison Gardiner led with 69 votes against 45 for David L. Seymour. Horatio Seymour received twenty-one votes, but announced that he was not a candidate for nomination and that no possible situation could induce him to accept the nomination. Henry Rogers was also removed from consideration. John Kelly, the boss of Tammany Hall, gave a speech urging the nomination of Fernando Wood, and a motion was passed to require a bare majority of votes to elect a nominee.
Gardiner also led the second and third ballots. On the final ballot, the names of Schell, Gardiner and Wood were withdrawn; Gardiner delegates endorsed Parker for the nomination. With the other leading candidates out of the race, Parker received a clear majority on the fourth ballot, and his nomination was made unanimous.
American nominations
The American Party state convention met on September 23 and 24 at Rochester, New York. Erastus Brooks, the editor of the New York Express was nominated for Governor by acclamation.
The North American Party, which had seceded from the American Party earlier in the year and which had considered joining the Republicans, met on the same day at the Court House in the same city. In the afternoon, after some debate, they marched to the American convention and re-united, endorsing their ticket and declaring support for the American presidential candidates Millard Fillmore and Andrew Jackson Donelson.
General election
= Candidates
=Erastus Brooks, editor of the New York Express (American)
John A. King, former U.S. Representative from Jamaica and son of Rufus King (Republican)
Amasa J. Parker, former Justice of the New York Supreme Court and U.S. Representative from Delhi (Democratic)
Gerrit Smith, former U.S. Representative from Peterboro (Liberty)
= Results
=Notes
References
= Bibliography
=Dearstyne, Bruce W. (2015). The Spirit of New York: Defining Events in the Empire State's History. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-4384-5659-1 – via Google Books.
See also
New York gubernatorial elections
1856 United States elections