- John Broome (politician)
"For persons with a similar name, see
John Broome "John Broome (1738
Staten Island -August 8 ,1810 ) was an American merchant and politician who was Lieutenant Governor of New York from 1804 to 1810.Biography
He studied law with
William Livingston , but about 1762 abandoned a legal career to join his brother Samuel in a partnership to import British goods. In 1769, he married Rebecca Lloyd (1747-bef. 1803) and they had several children, among them John Lloyd Broome (d. 1836) who was the father ofJohn L. Broome .He was a member of the
New York Provincial Congress from 1775 to 1777, and a delegate to theNew York State Constitutional Convention in 1777. He was an Alderman in 1783-84 and 1785-86, and New York City Treasurer in 1784.He was the president of the New York City
Chamber of Commerce from 1785 to 1794, and was engaged in the trade with India and China at that time.In August 1795, during an outbreak of
yellow fever , he was the chairman of the city's Health Committee, appointed by Governor George Clinton the previous year, and kept on by Clinton's rivalJohn Jay despite Broome's prominence at a partisan rally to oppose the treaty Jay had just negotiated with the British, since Health was not considered a partisan issue. The health committee denied there was an epidemic and played down the number of deaths, attributing them to other causes.Broome twice ran unsuccessfully for
U.S. Congress ; first in 1789 againstFederalist candidateJohn Laurance and then again in 1802 againstFederalist candidateJoshua Sands . Broome was a member fromNew York County of theNew York State Assembly in 1800-01 and 1802, and a member of theNew York State Senate in 1804.Broome was elected
Lieutenant Governor ofNew York three times, serving from July 1804 until his death in office in August 1810. He initially defeatedOliver Phelps in 1804, and then won re-election overThomas Storm in 1807 andNicholas Fish in 1810. He served under twoGovernors ofNew York -- first under Morgan Lewis (1804-1807), and then underDaniel D. Tompkins (1807-1810). Broome's death occurred a month into his third term, so that at first the President pro tempore of the State SenateJohn Tayler became acting lieutenant governor, and in April 1811DeWitt Clinton won a special election (defeatingNicholas Fish andMarinus Willett ) to serve for the remainder of the term.On July 9, 1806, he married Ruth Hunter (d. ca. 1840, widow of auctioneer George Hunter).
Broome's remains were initially buried in the churchyard of the
First Presbyterian Church in New York onWall Street inNew York City . However, they were moved in the 1840s when the church relocated to Fifth Avenue between 11th and 12th Streets inGreenwich Village inManhattan .Broome County, New York and the Town of Broome inSchoharie County, New York are named after him, as well as a street inManhattan inNew York City .ources
* [http://www.geocities.com/bobarnebeck/NY1795.html] New York yellow fever epidemic in 1795
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/brookshire-brough.html] Political Graveyard
* [http://www.fpcnyc.org/] First Presbyterian Church in New York City
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=rklx9c7MJFoC&pg=PA558&dq=john+broome+1738+1810&lr=&hl=pt-BR&sig=ACfU3U1m8bee3z_nWxu36xCkSTV4snsfkg "The Documentary History of the First Federal Elections, 1788-1790"] by Merrill Jensen, Robert A. Becker & Gordon DenBoer (University of Wisconsin Press, 1976, ISBN 0299106500 , ISBN 9780299106508 ; page 558)
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=E3sFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA32 Google Book] "The New York Civil List" compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (pages 32, 139 and 261; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858)
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=ajoQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA217&dq=john+broome+died+new+york&lr=&hl=pt-BR#PPA208,M1 "The Old Merchants of New York City"] by Joseph Alfred Scoville (Carleton, 1865; pages 208ff)
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