145th New York State Legislature

















































145th New York State Legislature




144th 146th

The facade of the New York State Capitol building in bright daylight

New York State Capitol (2009)

Overview
Jurisdiction
New York, United States
Term January 1 – December 31, 1922
Senate
Members 51
President Lt. Gov. Jeremiah Wood (R)
Temporary President
Clayton R. Lusk (R)
Party control Republican (39–11–1)
Assembly
Members 150
Speaker
H. Edmund Machold (R)
Party control Republican (96–53–1)
Sessions









1st January 4 – March 17, 1922
2nd August 28 – 29, 1922

The 145th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 4 to August 29, 1922, during the second year of Nathan L. Miller's governorship, in Albany.




Contents






  • 1 Background


  • 2 Elections


  • 3 Sessions


  • 4 State Senate


    • 4.1 Districts


    • 4.2 Members


    • 4.3 Employees




  • 5 State Assembly


    • 5.1 Assemblymen


    • 5.2 Employees




  • 6 Notes


  • 7 Sources





Background


Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1894, re-apportioned in 1917, 51 Senators and 150 assemblymen were elected in single-seat districts; senators for a two-year term, assemblymen for a one-year term. The senatorial districts consisted either of one or more entire counties; or a contiguous area within a single county. The counties which were divided into more than one senatorial district were New York (nine districts), Kings (eight), Bronx (three), Erie (three), Monroe (two), Queens (two) and Westchester (two). The Assembly districts were made up of contiguous area, all within the same county.


At this time there were two major political parties: the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. The Socialist Party also nominated tickets.



Elections


The New York state election, 1921, was held on November 8. The only statewide elective office up for election was a judgeship on the New York Court of Appeals which was carried by Republican William Shankland Andrews. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote for Judge of the Court of Appeals, was: Republicans 1,146,000; Democrats 1,081,000; and Socialists 146,000.


The only assemblywoman of 1921, Marguerite L. Smith (Rep.), an athletics teacher, of Harlem, was defeated for re-election, and no women were elected to the Legislature of 1922.



Sessions


The Legislature met for the regular session at the State Capitol in Albany on January 4, 1922; and adjourned on March 17.


H. Edmund Machold (Rep.) was re-elected Speaker.


The Legislature met for a special session at the State Capitol in Albany on August 28 and 29, 1922.[1] This session was called to deal with the shortage of coal. The Legislature created the office of State Fuel Administrator, and William H. Woodin was appointed by Governor Miller to the post.[2] Woodin resigned on January 8, 1923, and Governor Al Smith appointed George W. Goethals to succeed.[3] The post was abolished by Smith, effective on April 1, 1923.[4]



State Senate



Districts




  • 1st District: Nassau and Suffolk counties

  • 2nd and 3rd District: Parts of Queens County, i.e. the Borough of Queens

  • 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th District: Parts of Kings County, i.e. the Borough of Brooklyn

  • 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th District: Parts of New York County, i.e. the Borough of Manhattan

  • 21st, 22nd and 23rd District: Parts of Bronx County, i.e. the Borough of the Bronx

  • 24th District: Richmond County, i.e. the Borough of Richmond (now the Borough of Staten Island), and Rockland County

  • 25th District: Part of Westchester County

  • 26th District: Cortlandt, Greenburgh, Mount Pleasant, Ossining and part of Yonkers; in Westchester County

  • 27th District: Orange and Sullivan counties

  • 28th District: Columbia, Dutchess and Putnam counties

  • 29th District: Delaware, Greene and Ulster counties

  • 30th District: Albany County

  • 31st District: Rensselaer County

  • 32nd District: Saratoga and Schenectady counties

  • 33rd District: Clinton, Essex, Warren and Washington counties

  • 34th District: Franklin and St. Lawrence counties

  • 35th District: Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer and Lewis counties

  • 36th District: Oneida County

  • 37th District: Jefferson and Oswego counties

  • 38th District: Onondaga County

  • 39th District: Madison, Montgomery, Otsego and Schoharie counties

  • 40th District: Broome, Chenango and Cortland counties

  • 41st District: Chemung, Schuyler, Tioga and Tompkins counties

  • 42nd District: Cayuga, Seneca and Wayne counties

  • 43rd District: Ontario, Steuben and Yates counties

  • 44th District: Allegany, Genesee, Livingston and Wyoming

  • 45th and 46th District: Monroe County

  • 47th District: Niagara and Orleans counties

  • 48th, 49th and 50th District: Erie County

  • 51st District: Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties




Members


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature.


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."



























































































































































































































































































































District
Senator
Party
Notes
1st

George L. Thompson*
Republican

2nd

John L. Karle*
Republican

3rd

Peter J. McGarry*
Democrat

4th

Maxwell S. Harris*
Republican

5th

Daniel F. Farrell*
Democrat

6th

William T. Simpson*
Republican

7th

Charles C. Lockwood*
Republican

8th

Alvah W. Burlingame, Jr.*
Republican

9th

George M. Reischmann*
Republican

10th

Jeremiah F. Twomey*
Democrat

11th

Abraham L. Katlin*
Republican

12th

Jimmy Walker*
Democrat
Minority Leader
13th

John J. Boylan*
Democrat
on November 7, 1922, elected to the 68th U.S. Congress
14th

Bernard Downing*
Democrat

15th

Nathan Straus, Jr.*
Democrat

16th

Thomas I. Sheridan
Democrat
elected to fill vacancy, in place of Martin G. McCue
17th

Schuyler M. Meyer*
Republican

18th

Salvatore A. Cotillo*
Democrat

19th

William Duggan*
Republican

20th

Ward V. Tolbert*
Republican

21st

Henry G. Schackno*
Democrat

22nd

Edmund Seidel*
Socialist

23rd

John J. Dunnigan*
Democrat

24th

C. Ernest Smith*
Republican

25th

George T. Burling*
Republican

26th

Holland S. Duell*
Republican

27th

Caleb H. Baumes*
Republican

28th

James E. Towner*
Republican

29th

Charles W. Walton*
Republican

30th

Frank L. Wiswall*
Republican

31st

Frederick E. Draper*
Republican

32nd

Frederick W. Kavanaugh*
Republican

33rd

Mortimer Y. Ferris*
Republican

34th

Warren T. Thayer*
Republican

35th

Theodore Douglas Robinson*
Republican

36th

Frederick M. Davenport*
Republican

37th

Fred B. Pitcher*
Republican

38th

George R. Fearon*
Republican

39th

Allen J. Bloomfield*
Republican

40th

Clayton R. Lusk*
Republican
Temporary President
41st

Seymour Lowman*
Republican

42nd

Charles J. Hewitt*
Republican

43rd

William A. Carson*
Republican

44th

John Knight*
Republican

45th

James L. Whitley*
Republican

46th

Homer E. A. Dick
Rep./Proh.
elected to fill vacancy, in place of John B. Mullan
47th

William W. Campbell*
Republican

48th

Parton Swift*
Republican

49th

William E. Martin*
Republican

50th

Leonard W. H. Gibbs*
Republican

51st

DeHart H. Ames*
Republican



Employees



  • Clerk: Ernest A. Fay

  • Sergeant-at-Arms:

  • Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms:

  • Principal Doorkeeper:

  • First Assistant Doorkeeper:

  • Stenographer:



State Assembly



Assemblymen


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."








































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assemblymen
Party
Notes

Albany
1st

Edgar C. Campbell*
Republican

2nd

John T. Merrigan*
Democrat

3rd

James M. Gaffers*
Republican
Chairman of Public Institutions

Allegany

William Duke, Jr.*
Republican
Chairman of Codes

Bronx
1st

Nicholas J. Eberhard
Democrat

2nd

Lester W. Patterson
Democrat

3rd

Benjamin Antin*
Democrat

4th

Louis A. Schoffel
Dem./Rep.

5th

William Lyman*
Dem./Rep.

6th

Thomas J. McDonald*
Democrat

7th

Joseph V. McKee*
Democrat

8th

Edward J. Walsh*
Democrat


Broome
1st

Edmund B. Jenks*
Republican

2nd

Forman E. Whitcomb*
Republican
Chairman of Soldiers' Home

Cattaraugus

Leigh G. Kirkland*
Republican


Cayuga

L. Ford Hager*
Republican
Chairman of Internal Affairs

Chautauqua
1st

Judson S. Wright*
Republican

2nd

Joseph A. McGinnies*
Republican
Chairman of Ways and Means

Chemung

John J. Richford*
Republican
Chairman of General Laws

Chenango

Charles L. Banks
Republican


Clinton

Charles M. Harrington*
Republican


Columbia

Roscoe C. Waterbury
Republican


Cortland

Irving F. Rice*
Republican
Chairman of Revision

Delaware

Lincoln R. Long*
Republican
Chairman of Excise

Dutchess
1st

J. Griswold Webb*
Republican
Chairman of Charitable and Religious Societies
2nd

John M. Hackett
Republican


Erie
1st

William J. Hickey
Republican

2nd

John W. Slacer*
Republican

3rd

August Seelbach*
Republican

4th

Andrew T. Beasley*
Democrat

5th

Alexander A. Patrzykowski
Dem./Rep./Proh.

6th

George H. Rowe*
Republican
Chairman of Judiciary
7th

Herbert A. Zimmerman*
Republican
Chairman of Canals
8th

Nelson W. Cheney*
Republican
Chairman of Banks

Essex

Fred L. Porter*
Republican


Franklin

Anson H. Ellsworth*
Republican


Fulton and Hamilton

Eberly Hutchinson*
Republican
Chairman of Insurance

Genesee

Charles P. Miller*
Republican
Chairman of Labor and Industries

Greene

George W. Osborn
Republican


Herkimer

Frederic S. Cole
Republican


Jefferson

H. Edmund Machold*
Republican
re-elected Speaker; Chairman of Rules

Kings
1st

Francis J. Cronin
Democrat

2nd

Edmund H. Alexander
Republican

3rd

Frank J. Taylor*
Democrat

4th

Peter A. McArdle*
Democrat

5th

James H. Caulfield, Jr.*
Republican
Chairman of Commerce and Navigation
6th

John R. Crews*
Republican

7th

John J. Howard
Democrat

8th

Michael J. Reilly*
Democrat

9th

Richard J. Tonry
Democrat

10th

Bernard F. Gray
Democrat

11th

James F. Bly*
Republican
Chairman of Social Welfare
12th

Marcellus H. Evans
Democrat

13th

John J. Wackerman*
Democrat

14th

Andrew B. Yacenda
Democrat

15th

John J. McLoughlin*
Democrat

16th

Philip M. Kleinfeld
Democrat

17th

Frederick A. Wells*
Republican
Chairman of Military Affairs
18th

Irwin Steingut
Democrat

19th

Charles L. Fasullo
Democrat

20th

Frank A. Miller
Democrat

21st

Walter F. Clayton*
Republican

22nd

Howard C. Franklin
Democrat

23rd

Joseph F. Ricca
Rep./Dem.


Lewis

Miller B. Moran*
Republican


Livingston

Lewis G. Stapley
Republican


Madison

J. Arthur Brooks*
Republican


Monroe
1st

James A. Harris*
Republican
Chairman of Public Education
2nd

Simon L. Adler*
Republican
Majority Leader
3rd

Vincent B. Murphy
Republican

4th

Gilbert L. Lewis*
Republican

5th

Franklin W. Judson*
Republican
Chairman of Taxation and Retrenchment

Montgomery

Samuel W. McCleary*
Republican


Nassau
1st

Thomas A. McWhinney*
Republican
Chairman of Affairs of Villages
2nd

F. Trubee Davison
Republican


New York
1st

Peter J. Hamill*
Democrat

2nd

Frank R. Galgano*
Democrat

3rd

Thomas F. Burchill*
Democrat

4th

Samuel Dickstein*
Democrat
on November 7, 1922, elected to the 68th U.S. Congress
5th

Charles D. Donohue*
Democrat
Minority Leader
6th

Sol Ullman*
Republican

7th

Victor R. Kaufmann
Republican

8th

Henry O. Kahan
Democrat

9th

Edward R. Rayher*
Republican

10th

Bernard Aronson*
Republican

11th

Samuel I. Rosenman
Democrat

12th

John J. O'Connor*
Democrat

13th

John P. Nugent
Democrat

14th

Frederick L. Hackenburg*
Democrat

15th

Joseph Steinberg*
Republican
Chairman of Claims
16th

Maurice Bloch*
Democrat

17th

Murray Felenstein
Democrat
contested; seat vacated on February 27[5]

August Claessens
Socialist
seated on February 28
18th

Owen M. Kiernan*
Democrat

19th

James Male
Democrat

20th

Louis A. Cuvillier
Democrat

21st

Horace W. Palmer
Republican

22nd

Michael E. Reiburn*
Democrat

23rd

George N. Jesse*
Republican


Niagara
1st

David E. Jeffery*
Republican

2nd

Frank S. Hall
Republican


Oneida
1st

Hartwell W. Booth*
Republican

2nd

Russell G. Dunmore
Republican

3rd

Chauncey J. Williams*
Republican


Onondaga
1st

Manuel J. Soule*
Republican
Chairman of Penal Institutions
2nd

Gardner J. Chamberlin*
Republican

3rd

Thomas K. Smith*
Republican


Ontario

Charles C. Sackett*
Republican


Orange
1st

Arthur E. Brundage*
Republican

2nd

George R. Farrell
Republican


Orleans

Frank H. Lattin*
Republican
Chairman of Public Health

Oswego

Ezra A. Barnes*
Republican


Otsego

Julian C. Smith*
Republican


Putnam

John R. Yale*
Republican
Chairman of Railroads

Queens
1st

Peter A. Leininger*
Democrat

2nd

Owen J. Dever
Democrat

3rd

Joseph V. Loscalzo
Democrat

4th

Joseph H. S. Thomas
Democrat

5th

William F. Brunner
Democrat

6th

Joseph E. Cosgrove
Democrat


Rensselaer
1st

John F. Rourke
Democrat

2nd

Arthur Cowee*
Republican


Richmond
1st

Thomas F. Cosgrove*
Democrat

2nd

William L. Vaughan
Democrat


Rockland

Pierre H. DePew
Republican


St. Lawrence
1st

William A. Laidlaw
Republican

2nd

Edward A. Everett*
Republican
Chairman of Conservation

Saratoga

Burton D. Esmond
Republican


Schenectady
1st

Charles T. Male
Republican

2nd

William W. Campbell*
Republican


Schoharie

Wallace H. Sidney
Democrat


Schuyler

Clarence W. Hausner*
Republican


Seneca

George A. Dobson*
Republican


Steuben
1st

Ernest E. Cole*
Republican
Chairman of Printed and Engrossed Bills
2nd

Leon F. Wheatley
Republican


Suffolk
1st

John G. Peck
Republican

2nd

Paul N. Westerbeke
Republican


Sullivan

Guernsey T. Cross
Democrat


Tioga

Daniel P. Witter*
Republican
Chairman of Agriculture

Tompkins

Casper Fenner*
Republican
Chairman of Electricity, Gas and Water Supply

Ulster

Simon B. Van Wagenen*
Republican


Warren

Milton N. Eldridge
Republican


Washington

Herbert A. Bartholomew*
Republican


Wayne

Charles H. Betts*
Republican
Chairman of Public Printing

Westchester
1st

Thomas Channing Moore*
Republican

2nd

Walter W. Westall*
Republican

3rd

Seabury C. Mastick*
Republican

4th

Russell B. Livermore
Republican

5th

George Blakely*
Republican
Chairman of Affairs of Cities

Wyoming

Webb A. Joiner
Republican


Yates

James M. Lown*
Republican



Employees


  • Clerk: Fred W. Hammond


Notes




  1. ^ LEGISLATURE GETS COAL BILL in NYT on August 29, 1922


  2. ^ WOODIN AND HYLAN AGREE ON COAL PLAN in NYT on September 8, 1922


  3. ^ GOETHALS BECOMES STATE FUEL HEAD WITH BROAD POWERS in NYT on January 10, 1923 (subscription required)


  4. ^ ENDS COAL DISTRIBUTION in NYT on March 28, 1923 (subscription required)


  5. ^ ASSEMBLY VOTES TO SEAT CLAESSENS in NYT on February 28, 1922



Sources




  • CITIZENS UNION GIVES LINE ON CANDIDATES in NYT on October 26, 1921


  • Journal of the Assembly (145th Session) (1922; Vol. II; from March 1 to 14)


  • ASSEMBLY COMMITTEES in The Troy Times, of Troy, on January 10, 1922


  • Members of the New York Assembly (1920s) at Political Graveyard









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