1897 New York City Council President election
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An election was held in New York City to election the President of its Council on November 2, 1897. The charter of the new City of Greater New York had created a bicameral Municipal Assembly, comprising an upper Council and a lower Board of Aldermen. The Council president was elected citywide while the Board of Aldermen elected its own president.[1]
November 2, 1897
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General election
Candidates
- R. Ross Appleton,[2] cotton goods broker and banker (Republican)
- Randolph Guggenheimer, philanthropist (Democratic)
- John H. Schumann, manufacturer and banker[3] (Citizens Union and National Democratic)
- Jerome O'Neill, secretary of the Central Labor Union[4] (Jeffersonian Democracy)
Schumann was a member of the Republican Party running on the Citizens Union ticket. He was a German-born resident of Brooklyn.[3]
Results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Randolph Guggenheimer | 226,979 | 47.88% | |
| Republican | R. Ross Appleton | 114,769 | 24.21% | |
| Citizens Union | John H. Schumann | 110,807 | 23.37% | |
| Jeffersonian Democracy | Jerome O'Neill | 21,513 | 4.54% | |
| Total votes | 474,068 | |||
Aftermath
The bicameral Municipal Assembly would prove to be short-lived, and it was replaced with a unicameral Board of Aldermen in 1901, whose President was elected citywide.[6]