D. Cady Herrick

D. Cady Herrick

D-Cady Herrick (April 12, 1846 Esperance, Schoharie County, New York - February 21, 1926) was an American lawyer and politician.

Name

He was baptized Cady Herrick, but his father thought it better to add an initial hyphened "D-" to the name to avoid class-room jokes, like calling the boy "Katie." Thus the initial did not stand for any given name, and the first name should be pronounced "Dee-CAY-dee." The press took a long time to get aware of the rather elaborate construction of the name, and printed mostly D. Cady Herrick, the initial with a period, which led to the general belief that the initial stood indeed for an abbreviated first name. Many people thought it was "Daniel," after Daniel Cady, and the New York Times printed in 1904 "Donald" Cady Herrick as the Democratic nominee for Governor. He was not the first New York politician to use an extra "D" which did not stand for any name, Daniel D. Tompkins added the middle initial to distinguish himself from another Daniel Tompkins while studying at Columbia College.

Life

He was the son of Jonathan Herrick, a merchant, and Harriet Herrick. In 1852, the family removed to Albany, New York.

He was graduated from the Albany Classical Institute, and then studied law in the office of Lyman Tremain and Rufus W. Peckham, Sr.. They sent him to Albany Law School where he was a classmate of William McKinley. He graduated in 1868, and was admitted to the bar. In 1874, he married Orissa H. Salisbury (d. 1925), and they had three children.

In 1877, Herrick was defeated for District Attorney of Albany County, but in 1880 was re-nominated and elected, and re-elected in 1883. At that time he became the chief lieutenant of Daniel Manning, the Democratic boss of Albany. When Manning removed to Washington, D.C. upon his appointment as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury in 1885, Herrick became the Democratic boss of Albany and continued as such even on the bench of the New York Supreme Court.

In 1886, Herrick resigned as District Attorney, and became Corporation Counsel of Albany. In 1888, he was Permanent Chairman of the Democratic state convention. In 1891, he was elected to a fourteen-year term on the New York Supreme Court (3rd District), defeating Republican John T. McDonough. He sat on the Appellate Division (Third Department) from 1896 to 1900.

In 1891, he fined the Democratic members of the State Board of Canvassers, among them Treasurer Elliott Danforth, in connection with their controversial certification of the election of a Democratic state senator in Dutchess County.

In 1897, he overruled the Republican Secretary of State John Palmer's decision to certify the nomination of a candidate for Chief Judge by the "United Democracy".

In 1904, he was nominated for Governor of New York, and resigned from the bench. He was defeated by Republican Frank W. Higgins, and afterwards resumed the practice of law at Albany and New York City.

He was buried at the Albany Rural Cemetery in Menands, New York.

Sources


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