New York state election, 1920

New York state election, 1920

The 1920 New York state election was held on November 2, 1920, to elect the Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Secretary of State, the State Comptroller, the Attorney General, the State Treasurer, the State Engineer, two judges of the New York Court of Appeals and a U.S. Senator, as well as all members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate.

Contents

History

In August 1919, Judge William H. Cuddeback died, and Abram I. Elkus was appointed to fill the vacancy temporarily. Judge Frederick Collin would reach the constitutional age limit at the end of the year. Thus there were two vacancies on the Court of Appeals to be filled at the state election.

The primaries were held on September 14.

Republican primary

1920 Republican primary results
Office
Governor Nathan L. Miller George F. Thompson
Lieutenant Governor Jeremiah Wood William M. Bennett[1]
Secretary of State John J. Lyons Robert R. Lawson
Comptroller James A. Wendell
Attorney General Charles D. Newton (unopposed)
Treasurer N. Monroe Marshall Theodore T. Baylor[2] John P. Donahue
State Engineer Frank M. Williams (unopposed)
Judge of the Court of Appeals Emory A. Chase (unopposed)
Judge of the Court of Appeals Frederick E. Crane (unopposed)
U.S. Senator James W. Wadsworth, Jr. Ella A. Boole George Henry Payne

Republican State Senator (47th District) George F. Thompson lost the primary to Miller, but ran on the Prohibition ticket, as did Temperance activist Ella A. Boole.

Democratic primary

1920 Democratic primary results
Office
Governor Alfred E. Smith (unopposed)
Lieutenant Governor George R. Fitts (unopposed)
Secretary of State Harriet May Mills (unopposed)
Comptroller Charles W. Berry (unopposed)
Attorney General Frank H. Mott (unopposed)
Treasurer John F. Healy (unopposed)
State Engineer Paul McLoud (unopposed)
Judge of the Court of Appeals Abram I. Elkus
Judge of the Court of Appeals Frederick E. Crane (unopposed)
U.S. Senator Harry C. Walker George R. Lunn

All Prohibition and Socialist candidates were nominated unopposed in the primaries.

Result

The whole Republican ticket was elected.

The incumbents Smith and Elkus were defeated. The incumbents Newton, Williams and Wadsworth were re-elected. Judges Chase and Crane moved from additional to regular seats on the Court of Appeals.

1920 state election results
Office Republican ticket Democratic ticket Socialist ticket Farmer-Labor ticket Prohibition ticket Socialist Labor ticket
Governor Nathan L. Miller 1,334,540 Alfred E. Smith 1,260,335 Joseph D. Cannon 171,907 Dudley Field Malone 68,477 George F. Thompson 35,509 John P. Quinn 5,015
Lieutenant Governor Jeremiah Wood George R. Fitts Jessie W. Hughan Robert E. Haffey Edward G. Dietrich 30,901 Jeremiah D. Crowley[3]
Secretary of State John J. Lyons Harriet May Mills[4] Charles W. Noonan[5] William H. Auyer Irene B. Taylor 33,531 May Phalor[6]
Comptroller James A. Wendell Charles W. Berry A. Philip Randolph Helen Hamlin Fincke William C. Gray 32,408 John E. DeLee
Attorney General Charles D. Newton Frank H. Mott Darwin J. Meserole F. R. Serri William H. Burr[7] 35,042 John Donahue[8]
Treasurer N. Monroe Marshall John F. Healy Hattie F. Kreuger Joseph E. Cronk John McKee 30,095 John A. Withers
State Engineer Frank M. Williams Paul McLoud Vladimir Karapetoff (none) Arthur S. Light 29,578 Charles C. Crawford
Judge of the Court of Appeals Emory A. Chase Abram I. Elkus Leon A. Malkiel Swinburne Hale Coleridge A. Hart[9] 36,487 (none)
Judge of the Court of Appeals Frederick E. Crane Frederick E. Crane Jacob Axelrod Thomas F. Dwyer Francis E. Baldwin[10] 31,205 (none)
U.S. Senator James W. Wadsworth, Jr. 1,405,944 Harry C. Walker 885,061 Jacob Panken 151,246 Rose Schneiderman 15,086 Ella A. Boole 159,623 Harry Carlson 6,522

Obs.: There is much confusion about the exact numbers of votes in this election, every source has a different set of figures, with a wide range for some candidates (notably George F. Thompson, between 16,000 and 37,000). Most of the numbers stated here were published in December 1920 by the New York Times. The Prohibition candidates's votes were transcribed from the New York Red Book. The official result might differ slightly, but it is unclear where the much different numbers originated.

Notes

  1. ^ William M. Bennett, also defeated in primary for Governor in 1916 and for Lieutenant Governor in 1918
  2. ^ Theodore T. Baylor, also defeated in primary in 1918
  3. ^ Jeremiah D. Crowley, of Marcellus, ran also for State Engineer in 1910; for Lieutenant Governor in 1912 and 1914; and for Governor in 1916
  4. ^ Harriet May Mills, see Harriet May Mills House
  5. ^ Charles W. Noonan, ran also for Comptroller in 1914 and 1916; and for Treasurer in 1918
  6. ^ May Phalor, ran also in 1922
  7. ^ William H. Burr, ran also in 1917
  8. ^ John Donahue, ran also in 1918
  9. ^ Coleridge Allen Hart (b. July 11, 1852 Peekskill), lawyer, of Brooklyn, ran also for Attorney General in 1889, and for the Court of Appeals in 1907, 1908, 1914, 1916 and 1917
  10. ^ Francis E. Baldwin, ran also for Governor in 1894; for Chief Judge in 1897; for Attorney General in 1910; and for U.S. Senator in 1914

Sources

See also