The 1834 New York gubernatorial election was held from November 3 to 5, 1834 to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of New York. This was the first fall election in which the Whig Party participated.

Whig nomination

Candidates

  • Amos P. Granger, former Syracuse city trustee and president of Manlius
  • William H. Seward, State Senator from Auburn
  • Daniel C. Verplanck, former Dutchess County Court of Common Pleas judge and U.S. Representative (died March 29)

Results

Seward fought hard for the nomination; those considered included Amos P. Granger, Daniel C. Verplanck, and others. Eventually Seward, then 33 years old, emerged as the consensus choice.

General election

Candidates

  • William L. Marcy, incumbent Governor since 1833 and former U.S. Senator (Democratic)
  • William H. Seward, State Senator from Auburn (Whig)

Incumbent Governor William L. Marcy was re-nominated by the Democratic Party to run against the nominee of the Whig Party, future governor William H. Seward. The Democratic Party nominated the incumbent John Tracy for Lieutenant Governor.

The Whig Party nominated state assemblyman Silas M. Stilwell for Lieutenant Governor.

Campaign

During the campaign, the Democratic press charged that Seward was too young to serve; the Whig press countered by giving examples of famous people, including DeWitt Clinton, Napoleon, and Henry Clay who had served at young ages. Both sides utilized "slogans and songs," turning the race into a "lively affair."

Results

The Democratic ticket of Marcy and Tracy was elected.

Sources



New York Gubernatorial Election, 2018 (The More Things Changed

The 1884 Election Also Brought False GOP Claims of Voter Fraud New

New York gubernatorial election, 1994 (President of Princeton

1804 New York gubernatorial election Wikipedia

New York Election Of 1864 Photograph by Granger