1898 New York gubernatorial election
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The 1898 New York gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1898. Incumbent Republican Governor Frank S. Black was defeated for re-nomination by Theodore Roosevelt, the former United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy and a returning hero of the SpanishâAmerican War. In the general election, Roosevelt narrowly defeated judge Augustus Van Wyck.
November 8, 1898
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County results Roosevelt:
40â50%
50â60%
60â70%
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Roosevelt outmaneuvered party bosses, particularly U.S. senator Thomas C. Platt, by leveraging his personal popularity and a threat to run as an independent reform candidate. After cornering the bosses, he secured the Republican nomination over incumbent Frank S. Black at the state convention.
As governor, Roosevelt pursued progressive reforms and continued to present an obstacle to boss rule. To remove him from Albany, Platt maneuvered to have Roosevelt nominated as President William McKinley's running mate in 1900, against the governor's wishes. He was elected and became president on September 14, 1901 after McKinley was assassinated.
Republican and Citizens Union nomination
Candidates
- Frank S. Black, incumbent Governor since 1895
- Theodore Roosevelt, former United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy and New York City Police Commissioner
Campaign
Returning from Cuba as a war hero, Theodore Roosevelt had popular approval but lacked support from the state's Republican political machine, which he had opposed as a member of the State Assembly and Police Commissioner. Instead of directly approaching Republican bosses Thomas C. Platt and Benjamin Odell, Roosevelt first approached the Citizens Union, a good government organization, and suggested the nomination of a state ticket. The Citizens' Union Executive Committee endorsed the Roosevelt plan with only three dissenting votes.[1] An "Independent Citizens' Committee" was formed, and six thousand signatures were gathered on a petition to file a ticket, with the signers believing that Roosevelt headed the ticket and that the Citizens Union backed it.[2]
Facing uncertain prospects of a three-cornered election against Roosevelt and the Democratic Party, the Republican bosses instead offered Roosevelt the nomination against the wishes of Governor Frank S. Black. On September 24, three days ahead of the Republican state convention, Roosevelt suddenly declined to run on the independent ticket.
Results
The state convention met on September 27 at Saratoga Springs, New York. Sereno E. Payne was Temporary Chairman until the choice of Horace White as Permanent Chairman. Theodore Roosevelt was nominated for governor on the first ballot.[3]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Theodore Roosevelt | 753 | 77.55% | |
| Republican | Frank S. Black (incumbent) | 218 | 22.45% | |
| Total votes | 971 | 100.00% | ||
Aftermath
On September 30, Robert Fulton Cutting and a majority of the Citizens Union Executive Committee rejected the idea of a state ticket as "not only inconsistent with, but actually opposed to the fundamental principles and objects of the Citizens' Union."[5] However, the Independent Citizens' Committee declared the next day that they would proceed with nominations.[6] The petition to file an independent ticket with Roosevelt as its nominee was filed with the Secretary of State on October 12. Roosevelt immediately sent a letter to the Secretary of State declining to run on the independent ticket, which would have threatened Republican candidates for lower offices.[7]
The Independent Citizens' Committee substituted Theodore Bacon, a lawyer of Rochester, on the ticket, and Cutting, despite his earlier rejection of the state ticket idea per se, campaigned for the ticket.[8][9]
Democratic nomination
Candidates
- James Kennedy McGuire, mayor of Syracuse
- John B. Stanchfield, New York City attorney and former Assemblyman and mayor of Elmira
- Robert C. Titus, judge of the New York Supreme Court and former State Senator from Buffalo
- Augustus Van Wyck, judge of the New York Supreme Court from Brooklyn and brother of Mayor of New York City Robert A. Van Wyck
Results
The Democratic ticket was a compromise between the three biggest Democratic bosses: David B. Hill from upstate, Richard Croker of Tammany Hall, and Hugh McLaughlin of Brooklyn.[10] The Democratic state convention met on September 28 and 29 at Syracuse, New York.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Augustus Van Wyck | 351 | 78.00% | |
| Democratic | John B. Stanchfield | 41 | 9.11% | |
| Democratic | Robert C. Titus | 39 | 8.67% | |
| Democratic | James Kennedy McGuire | 19 | 4.22% | |
| Total votes | 450 | 100.00% | ||
Aftermath
The day after the Democratic convention, the National Democratic Party state committee met on September 30 at 52 William Street, New York City. The committee resolved not to call a convention or endorse any candidates.[12]
General election
Candidates
- Theodore Bacon, Rochester attorney (Independent Citizens')
- Benjamin Hanford (Socialist Labor)
- John Kline (Prohibition)
- Theodore Roosevelt, former United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy and New York City Police Commissioner (Republican)
- Augustus Van Wyck, judge of the New York Supreme Court from Brooklyn brother of Mayor of New York City Robert A. Van Wyck (Democratic)
Results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Theodore Roosevelt | 661,707 | 49.02% | |
| Democratic | Augustus Van Wyck | 643,921 | 47.70% | |
| Socialist Labor | Benjamin Hanford | 23,860 | 1.77% | |
| Prohibition | John Kline | 18,383 | 1.36% | |
| Independent | Theodore Bacon | 2,103 | 0.16% | |
| Total votes | 1,349,974 | 100.00% | ||