149th New York State Legislature

















































149th New York State Legislature




148th 150th

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, 1926
Senate
Members 51
President Lt. Gov. Seymour Lowman (R)
Temporary President
John Knight (R)
Party control Republican (29–22)
Assembly
Members 150
Speaker
Joseph A. McGinnies (R)
Party control Republican (91–59)
Sessions



1st January 6 – April 23, 1926

The 149th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 6 to April 23, 1926, during the fourth year of Al Smith's second tenure as Governor of New York, 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.



Elections


The New York state election, 1925, was held on November 3. No statewide elective offices were up for election.


Assemblywoman Rhoda Fox Graves (Rep.), of Gouverneur, a former school teacher who after her marriage became active in women's organisations and politics, was re-elected, and remained the only woman legislator.



Sessions


The Legislature met for the regular session at the State Capitol in Albany on January 6, 1926; and adjourned on April 23.[1]


Joseph A. McGinnies (Rep.) was re-elected Speaker.



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
on November 2, 1926, elected Register of Queens Co.
4th

Philip M. Kleinfeld*
Democrat

5th

Daniel F. Farrell*
Democrat

6th

James A. Higgins*
Democrat

7th

John A. Hastings*
Democrat

8th

William L. Love*
Democrat

9th
vacant

Frank E. Johnson was elected on November 3, 1925, to the Municipal Court

Charles E. Russell
Democrat
elected on January 7 to fill vacancy[2]
10th

Jeremiah F. Twomey*
Democrat

11th

Daniel J. Carroll*
Democrat

12th
vacant

Jimmy Walker was elected on November 3, 1925, as Mayor of New York City

Elmer F. Quinn
Democrat
elected on January 7 to fill vacancy[3]
13th

Thomas F. Burchill*
Democrat

14th

Bernard Downing*
Democrat
Minority Leader
15th

Nathan Straus, Jr.*
Democrat

16th

Thomas I. Sheridan*
Democrat

17th

Courtlandt Nicoll*
Republican

18th

Martin J. Kennedy*
Democrat

19th

Duncan T. O'Brien*
Democrat

20th

Michael E. Reiburn*
Democrat

21st

Henry G. Schackno*
Democrat

22nd

Benjamin Antin*
Democrat

23rd

John J. Dunnigan*
Democrat

24th

Thomas J. Walsh*
Democrat

25th

Walter W. Westall*
Republican

26th

Seabury C. Mastick*
Republican

27th

Caleb H. Baumes*
Republican

28th

J. Griswold Webb*
Republican

29th

Arthur F. Bouton*
Republican

30th

William T. Byrne*
Democrat

31st

John F. Williams*
Republican

32nd

Thomas C. Brown*
Republican

33rd

Mortimer Y. Ferris*
Rep./Dem.

34th

Warren T. Thayer*
Republican

35th

Jeremiah Keck*
Republican

36th

Henry D. Williams*
Republican

37th

Perley A. Pitcher*
Republican

38th

George R. Fearon*
Republican

39th

Willis Wendell*
Republican

40th

B. Roger Wales*
Republican

41st

James S. Truman*
Republican

42nd

Charles J. Hewitt*
Republican

43rd

Ernest E. Cole*
Rep./Soc.
on July 1, 1926, appointed Counsel to the State Education Dept.
44th

John Knight*
Rep./Dem./Soc.
Temporary President
45th

James L. Whitley*
Republican

46th

Homer E. A. Dick*
Republican

47th

William W. Campbell*
Rep./Dem.

48th

William J. Hickey*
Republican

49th

Leonard R. Lipowicz*
Republican

50th

Leonard W. H. Gibbs*
Republican

51st

Leigh G. Kirkland*
Rep./Soc.



Employees



  • Clerk: Ernest A. Fay

  • Sergeant-at-Arms: Charles R. Hotaling



State Assembly



Assemblymen


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



































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assemblymen
Party
Notes

Albany
1st

William J. Snyder
Democrat

2nd

John P. Hayes*
Democrat

3rd

Frederick B. Linen*
Republican


Allegany

Cassius Congdon*
Republican


Bronx
1st

Nicholas J. Eberhard*
Democrat

2nd

William F. Smith
Democrat

3rd

Julius S. Berg*
Democrat

4th

Herman M. Albert
Democrat

5th

Harry A. Samberg*
Democrat

6th

Thomas J. McDonald*
Democrat

7th

John F. Reidy*
Democrat

8th

Joseph E. Kinsley*
Democrat


Broome
1st

Edmund B. Jenks*
Republican
Chairman of Codes
2nd

Forman E. Whitcomb*
Republican


Cattaraugus

James W. Watson*
Republican


Cayuga

Sanford G. Lyon*
Republican


Chautauqua
1st

Adolf F. Johnson*
Republican

2nd

Joseph A. McGinnies*
Republican
re-elected Speaker

Chemung

Hovey E. Copley*
Republican


Chenango

Bert Lord*
Republican


Clinton

Ezra Trepanier
Republican


Columbia

Henry M. James
Republican


Cortland

Irving F. Rice*
Republican


Delaware

Ralph H. Loomis*
Republican


Dutchess
1st

Howard N. Allen*
Republican

2nd

John M. Hackett*
Republican


Erie
1st

John S. N. Sprague*
Republican

2nd

Henry W. Hutt*
Republican

3rd

Frank X. Bernhardt*
Republican

4th

John J. Meegan*
Democrat

5th

Ansley B. Borkowski*
Republican

6th

Charles A. Freiberg*
Republican

7th

Edmund F. Cooke*
Republican

8th

Nelson W. Cheney*
Republican


Essex

Fred L. Porter*
Republican
Chairman of State Re-Organization

Franklin

John E. Redwood
Republican


Fulton and Hamilton

Eberly Hutchinson*
Republican
Chairman of Ways and Means

Genesee

Charles P. Miller*
Republican


Greene

Ellis W. Bentley*
Republican


Herkimer

Theodore L. Rogers*
Republican


Jefferson

Jasper W. Cornaire*
Republican


Kings
1st

Charles F. Cline*
Democrat

2nd

Murray Hearn*
Democrat

3rd

Michael J. Gillen
Democrat

4th

George E. Dennen
Democrat

5th

John J. Cooney
Democrat

6th

George Blumberg
Republican

7th

John J. Howard*
Democrat

8th

Michael J. Reilly*
Democrat

9th

Richard J. Tonry*
Democrat

10th

William C. McCreery
Democrat

11th

Edward J. Coughlin*
Democrat

12th

Marcellus H. Evans*
Democrat

13th

William Breitenbach*
Democrat

14th

Harry Landau
Democrat

15th

Edward P. Doyle
Democrat

16th

Maurice Z. Bungard*
Democrat

17th

Edward E. Fay*
Republican

18th

Irwin Steingut*
Democrat

19th

Jerome G. Ambro*
Democrat

20th

Frank A. Miller*
Democrat

21st

Emory F. Dyckman
Republican

22nd

Jacob H. Livingston
Democrat

23rd

Joseph F. Ricca*
Republican


Lewis

Clarence L. Fisher*
Republican


Livingston

Lewis G. Stapley*
Republican


Madison

John W. Gates*
Republican


Monroe
1st

Arthur T. Pammenter*
Republican

2nd

Simon L. Adler*
Republican
Majority Leader
3rd

Cosmo A. Cilano*
Republican

4th

Fred J. Slater*
Republican

5th

W. Ray Austin*
Republican


Montgomery

Samuel W. McCleary*
Republican


Nassau
1st

Edwin W. Wallace*
Republican

2nd

F. Trubee Davison*
Republican
in July 1926, appointed as Asst. Secretary of War for Air

New York
1st

Peter J. Hamill*
Democrat

2nd

Frank R. Galgano*
Democrat

3rd

Sylvester A. Dineen*
Democrat

4th

Samuel Mandelbaum*
Democrat

5th

Frank A. Carlin*
Democrat

6th

Morris Weinfeld*
Democrat

7th

John L. Buckley*
Democrat

8th

Henry O. Kahan*
Democrat

9th

John H. Conroy*
Democrat

10th

Phelps Phelps*
Republican

11th

Samuel I. Rosenman*
Democrat

12th

John A. Byrnes
Democrat

13th

John P. Nugent*
Democrat

14th

Frederick L. Hackenburg*
Democrat

15th

Samuel H. Hofstadter*
Republican

16th

Maurice Bloch*
Democrat
Minority Leader
17th

Meyer Alterman*
Democrat

18th

Vincent H. Auleta
Democrat

19th

Abraham Grenthal
Republican

20th

Louis A. Cuvillier*
Democrat

21st

Albert Grossman
Democrat

22nd

Joseph A. Gavagan*
Democrat

23rd

A. Spencer Feld*
Democrat


Niagara
1st

Mark T. Lambert*
Republican

2nd

Frank S. Hall*
Republican


Oneida
1st

Gordon C. Ferguson*
Republican

2nd

Russell G. Dunmore*
Republican

3rd

George J. Skinner*
Republican


Onondaga
1st

Horace M. Stone*
Republican
Chairman of Re-Apportionment
2nd

Willis H. Sargent*
Republican

3rd

Richard B. Smith*
Republican


Ontario

Robert A. Catchpole*
Republican


Orange
1st

DeWitt C. Dominick*
Republican

2nd

Alexander G. Hall
Republican


Orleans

Frank H. Lattin*
Republican


Oswego

Victor C. Lewis*
Republican


Otsego

Frank M. Smith*
Republican


Putnam

D. Mallory Stephens
Republican


Queens
1st

Henry M. Dietz*
Democrat

2nd

John T. Hammond
Democrat

3rd

Alfred J. Kennedy*
Democrat

4th

Jere F. Ryan
Democrat

5th

William F. Brunner*
Democrat

6th

Paul P. Gallagher
Democrat


Rensselaer
1st

Harry M. Brooks
Republican

2nd

William D. Thomas*
Republican
on November 2, 1926, elected Treasurer of Rensselaer Co.

Richmond
1st

William S. Hart*
Democrat

2nd

William L. Vaughan*
Democrat


Rockland

Walter S. Gedney*
Republican


St. Lawrence
1st

Rhoda Fox Graves*
Republican
Chairwoman of Public Institutions
2nd

Walter L. Pratt*
Republican


Saratoga

Burton D. Esmond*
Republican


Schenectady
1st

Charles W. Merriam*
Republican

2nd

William M. Nicoll*
Republican


Schoharie

Kenneth H. Fake*
Republican


Schuyler

Jacob W. Winters
Republican


Seneca

William H. Van Cleef*
Republican


Steuben
1st

Wilson Messer*
Republican

2nd

Leon F. Wheatley*
Republican


Suffolk
1st

John G. Downs*
Republican

2nd

John Boyle, Jr.*
Republican


Sullivan

J. Maxwell Knapp*
Republican


Tioga

Daniel P. Witter*
Republican


Tompkins

James R. Robinson*
Republican


Ulster

Millard Davis*
Republican


Warren

Richard J. Bolton*
Republican


Washington

Herbert A. Bartholomew*
Republican


Wayne

Harry A. Tellier*
Republican


Westchester
1st

Thomas Channing Moore*
Republican

2nd

Herbert B. Shonk*
Republican

3rd

Milan E. Goodrich*
Republican

4th

Alexander H. Garnjost*
Republican

5th

Arthur I. Miller
Democrat


Wyoming

Webb A. Joiner*
Republican


Yates

Edwin C. Nutt
Republican



Employees


  • Clerk: Fred W. Hammond


Notes




  1. ^ Governor Takes Ten-Day Rest in NYT on April 25, 1926 (subscription required)


  2. ^ SPECIAL ELECTION WON BY DEMOCRATS; C. E. Russell Chosen to Fill Seat of Justice Johnson in NYT on January 8, 1926 (subscription required)


  3. ^ SPECIAL ELECTION WON BY DEMOCRATS; Elmer F. Quinn to Succeed Walker in NYT on January 8, 1926 (subscription required)



Sources




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


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


  • 1926 COMMITTEE MEMBERS NAMED in The Cornell Daily Sun on January 12, 1926









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