Results navigation
2. New York 1806 Assembly, Montgomery County
3. New York 1806 Assembly, New York County
4. New York 1806 Assembly, Rensselaer County
5. New York 1807 Assembly, Rensselaer County
6. New York 1809 Alderman, New York, Ward 6
7. New York 1809 Alderman, New York, Ward 7
8. New York 1809 Alderman, New York, Ward 8
9. New York 1809 Assistant Alderman, New York, Ward 6
10. New York 1812 Assembly, Cayuga County
11. New York 1812 Assembly, New York County
12. New York 1812 State Senate, Southern District
13. New York 1812 U.S. House of Representatives, District 14
14. New York 1812 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2
15. Ohio 1812 Governor
16. New York 1817 Assembly, New York County
17. New York 1817 Assembly, Onondaga County
18. New York 1817 Assembly, Orange County
19. New York 1818 Assembly, Cayuga County
20. New York 1818 Assembly, Kings County
21. New York 1818 Assembly, Montgomery County
22. New York 1818 Assembly, New York County
23. New York 1818 Assembly, Onondaga County
24. New York 1818 Assembly, Orange County
25. New York 1818 Assembly, Otsego County
26. New York 1818 Assembly, Richmond County
27. New York 1818 Assembly, Saint Lawrence County
28. New York 1818 Assembly, Seneca County
29. New York 1818 Assembly, Tioga County
30. New York 1818 Assembly, Westchester County
31. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1
32. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 15
33. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 16
34. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 17
35. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 18
36. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2
37. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3
38. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4
39. New York 1818 U.S. House of Representatives, District 5
40. New York 1819 Assembly, Albany County
41. New York 1819 Assembly, Chenango County
42. New York 1819 Assembly, Clinton and Franklin Counties
43. New York 1819 Assembly, Columbia County
44. New York 1819 Assembly, Dutchess County
45. New York 1819 Assembly, Essex County
46. New York 1819 Assembly, Genesee County
47. New York 1819 Assembly, Greene County
48. New York 1819 Assembly, Madison County
49. New York 1819 Assembly, New York County
50. New York 1819 Assembly, Orange County
51. New York 1819 Assembly, Rockland County
52. New York 1819 Assembly, Saratoga County
53. New York 1819 Assembly, Schoharie County
54. New York 1819 Assembly, Seneca County
55. New York 1819 Assembly, Suffolk County
56. New York 1819 Assembly, Sullivan and Ulster Counties
57. New York 1819 Assembly, Tioga County
58. New York 1819 Assembly, Tompkins County
59. New York 1819 Assembly, Westchester County
60. New York 1819 Assistant Alderman, New York, Ward 3
61. New York 1819 Collector, New York, Ward 3
62. New York 1819 Constable, New York, Ward 3
63. New York 1819 State Senate, Middle District
64. New York 1819 State Senate, Southern District
65. New York 1819 State Senate, Western District
66. New York 1820 Alderman, New York, Ward One
67. New York 1820 Assembly, Allegany and Steuben Counties
68. New York 1820 Assembly, Cattaraugus, Chautauque and Niagara Counties
69. New York 1820 Assembly, Cayuga County
70. New York 1820 Assembly, Chenango County
71. New York 1820 Assembly, Columbia County
72. New York 1820 Assembly, Cortland County
73. New York 1820 Assembly, Delaware County
74. New York 1820 Assembly, Dutchess County
75. New York 1820 Assembly, Greene County
76. New York 1820 Assembly, Jefferson County
77. New York 1820 Assembly, Kings County
78. New York 1820 Assembly, Madison County
79. New York 1820 Assembly, Montgomery County
80. New York 1820 Assembly, New York County
81. New York 1820 Assembly, Oneida and Oswego Counties
82. New York 1820 Assembly, Onondaga County
83. New York 1820 Assembly, Ontario County
84. New York 1820 Assembly, Orange County
85. New York 1820 Assembly, Otsego County
86. New York 1820 Assembly, Queens County
87. New York 1820 Assembly, Rensselaer County
88. New York 1820 Assembly, Richmond County
89. New York 1820 Assembly, Saint Lawrence County
90. New York 1820 Assembly, Saratoga County
91. New York 1820 Assembly, Schenectady County
92. New York 1820 Assembly, Seneca County
93. New York 1820 Assembly, Suffolk County
94. New York 1820 Assembly, Tioga County
95. New York 1820 Assembly, Tompkins County
96. New York 1820 Assembly, Warren and Washingnton Counties
97. New York 1820 Assembly, Westchester County
98. New York 1820 Lieutenant Governor
99. New York 1820 State Senate, Middle District
100. New York 1820 State Senate, Southern District
Results navigation
Clintonian
The followers of DeWitt Clinton (1769-1828, Governor of New York 1817-1822, 1825-1828), the Clintonians had a life that outlived any other "candidate party" other than the "Jeffersonians" (Republicans) and "Jacksonians" (Democrats). The term first came to use in the 1806 State Assembly elections in New York. "Within New York Republicanism, factional battles developed - first between the Clintonians and Burrites, and then between the Clintonians and Lewisites. In each struggle, Clinton's foes allied with Federalists, and in each the banking power of the Clintonians, exercised through the Manhattan Company, appeared critical to success, emphasizing the ties between Clinton and 'opulent men.' In 1807, Clinton compensated for his increasing distance from the farmers and mechanics who made up the mass of New York voters by backing Daniel D. Tompkins, 'the farmer's boy,' for governor. This step created a Republican alternative to which New York City mechanics and upstate farmers might look for Republican leadership - and an alternative with whom Southerners might ally." (De Witt Clinton and the Rise of the People's Men. Craig Hanyan with Mary L. Hanyan. Montreal, 1996, McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 8) The term found widespread use outside of New York state during the presidential election of 1812 as Clinton became a fusion candidate, running against James Madison with the support of dissident Republicans and Federalists who had no firm candidate of their own. Clinton, after being forced from any political office in 1815, maintained a considerable amount of political power as the primary supporter of the Erie Canal. In 1824, "heading the ticket offered by the People's Movement, he won in an electoral triumph that captured the governorship and almost two-thirds of the state assembly . . . The People's men of New York State launched the earliest broad-based reform movement of the new republic and won control of a state that had one-sixth of the United States' male population. Beginning their effort soon after the introduction of a new state constitution in 1822, the reformers came to power pledged to democratize New York's political process. They accomplished their ends after administering a sharp defeat to the regular Republicans of the State." (Hanyan, p. 4).
"During the campaign [of 1812], Clinton won support from Federalists who were discontented with the Madison administration's entry into a war with Britain that was bound to have devastating effects on the commerce of the United States; the country ought to have peace of adequate protection of its maritime trade." (Hanyan, p 9)
"The Clinton-[New York Chief Justice]-Spencer alliance held together, but over the next three years the tenuous peace within the New York Republican Party dissolved. Two elements fully emerged, each hoping to dominate the politics of New York in the name of true republicanism. Martin Van Buren stood out as the leader of a "Bucktail" opposition that increasingly emphasized the virtue of party regularity, while the Clintonians increasingly emphasized the iniquity of party as a potential vessel of conspiracy and oppression that would enhance the power of government at the expense of social harmony. (fn: Richard Hofstadter, The Idea of a Party System: The Rise of Legitimate Opposition in the United States, 1780-1850, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969, 219-23)" (Hanyan, p 10)
Additional Sources:
- The Concept of Jacksonian Democracy: New York as a Test Case. Lee Benson. Atheneum. New York. 1967.
- De Witt Clinton and the Rise of the People's Men. Craig Hanyan with Mary L. Hanyan. McGill-Queen's University Press. Montreal and Kingston. 1996.
- The Birth of Empire: DeWitt Clinton and the American Experience, 1769-1828. Evan Cornog. New York, Oxford University Press, 1998.