- Arthur Whitney (politician)
Arthur Whitney (
July 5 ,1871 –November 19 ,1942 ) was an American politician who served in both houses of theNew Jersey Legislature and was the Republican nominee forGovernor of New Jersey in 1925.Whitney was born in 1871 in
Morris Plains, New Jersey , to Stephen and Josephine Whitney. He was educated at St. Paul's School inConcord, New Hampshire , before leaving to work at an iron plant inHarrisburg, Pennsylvania . In 1902 he became a partner at the New York brokerage firm of Goadby & Co. He left the firm in 1916 to enter New Jersey politics. [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F50E10FC3C5C1B7B93C2AB178AD95F468485F9 "Arthur Whitney, an Ex-Legislator"] , "The New York Times ",November 20 ,1942 . AccessedJune 15 ,2008 .]From his base in Morris County, Whitney was elected to the
New Jersey General Assembly in 1916 and was reelected the following year. He was elected to theNew Jersey Senate in 1918, serving until 1925. In the Senate he was chairman of the Joint Legislative Committee on Appropriations. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=vdgDAAAAYAAJ "Scannell's New Jersey First Citizens, 1919-1920"] . J.J. Scannell, 1919.]Whitney won the Republican nomination for
Governor of New Jersey in 1925 over former Attorney GeneralThomas F. McCran , who had the support of SenatorWalter Evans Edge and the regular Republican organization. In the general election Whitney faced Democratic candidateA. Harry Moore . Moore ran on a "wet" anti-Prohibition platform against Whitney, who had the support of theAnti-Saloon League . The Republican campaign focused on the undue influence of Democratic party bossFrank Hague in state government. Though Moore carried only three of the state's 21 counties, Hague secured a sizable plurality of nearly 104,000 votes in his home county of Hudson, thus ensuring Whitney's defeat. [ [http://www.njstatelib.org/NJ_Information/Digital_Collections/Governors_of_New_Jersey/GMOOR.pdf Biography of A. Harry Moore (PDF)] ,New Jersey State Library .]After his defeat in the gubernatorial race, Whitney retired to private life in Mendham. In 1938 he and his wife, the former Florence Wyckoff, deeded the historic Phoenix House to the Borough of Mendham for use as a borough hall and community house. He died at his Mendham home in 1942 at the age of 71.
References
External links
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/whitney.html#00N1CQCLX Biographical information for Arthur Whitney] from
The Political Graveyard
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