2. New York 1818 Assembly, Seneca County
3. New York 1819 Assembly, Dutchess County
4. New York 1819 Assembly, Essex County
5. New York 1819 Assembly, Jefferson County
6. New York 1819 Speaker of the Assembly
7. New York 1819 Speaker of the Assembly, Ballot 2
8. New York 1819 Speaker of the Assembly, Ballot 3
9. New York 1819 Speaker of the Assembly, Ballot 4
10. New York 1819 Speaker of the Assembly, Ballot 5
11. New York 1820 Assembly, Columbia County
12. New York 1820 Assembly, Otsego County
13. New York 1820 Assembly, Rensselaer County
14. New York 1821 Alderman, Hudson, Ward 1
15. New York 1821 Alderman, Hudson, Ward 2
16. New York 1821 Assembly, Cortland County
17. New York 1821 Assembly, Herkimer County
18. New York 1821 Assembly, Sullivan and Ulster Counties
19. New York 1821 Assessor, Hudson, Ward 1
20. New York 1821 Assessor, Hudson, Ward 2
21. New York 1821 Assessor, New York, Ward 3
22. New York 1821 Assistant Alderman, Hudson, Ward 1
23. New York 1821 Collector, Hudson, Ward 1
24. New York 1821 Collector, Hudson, Ward 2
25. New York 1821 Collector, New York, Ward 3
26. New York 1821 Constable, Hudson, Ward 1
27. New York 1821 Constable, Hudson, Ward 2
28. New York 1821 Constitutional Convention, Orange County
29. New York 1821 Road Master, Hudson, Ward 1
30. New York 1821 Road Master, Hudson, Ward 2
31. New York 1821 Sealer of Weights and Measures, Hudson, Ward 1
32. New York 1821 Sealer of Weights and Measures, Hudson, Ward 2
33. New York 1821 Supervisor, Hudson, Ward 1
34. New York 1821 Supervisor, Hudson, Ward 2
35. New York 1821 Supervisor, New York City, Ward 3
36. New York 1822 Assembly, Montgomery County
37. New York 1823 Assembly, Allegany County
38. New York 1823 Assembly, Cattaraugus County
39. New York 1823 Assembly, Chautauque County
40. New York 1823 Assembly, Erie County
41. New York 1823 Assembly, Kings County
42. New York 1823 Assembly, Lewis County
43. New York 1823 Assembly, Livingston County
44. New York 1823 Assembly, Montgomery County
45. New York 1823 Assembly, Niagara County
46. New York 1823 Assembly, Oneida County
47. New York 1823 Assembly, Tioga County
48. New York 1823 State Senate, District 5
49. New York 1823 State Senate, District 7
50. New York 1823 State Senate, District 8
51. New York 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 28, Special
52. New York 1824 Alderman, Albany, Ward 2
53. New York 1824 Alderman, Albany, Ward 4
54. New York 1824 Assembly, Allegany County
55. New York 1824 Assembly, Cayuga County
56. New York 1824 Assembly, Chautauque County
57. New York 1824 Assembly, Orange County
58. New York 1824 Assembly, Rensselaer County
59. New York 1824 Assembly, Schoharie County
60. New York 1824 Assembly, Seneca County
61. New York 1824 Assembly, Suffolk County
62. New York 1824 Assembly, Ulster County
63. New York 1824 Assistant Alderman, Albany, Ward 2
64. New York 1824 Assistant Alderman, Albany, Ward 4
65. New York 1824 Governor, Nomination
66. New York 1824 Lieutenant Governor, Nomination
67. New York 1824 State Senate, District 1
68. New York 1824 State Senate, District 2
69. New York 1824 State Senate, District 3
70. New York 1824 State Senate, District 4
71. New York 1824 State Senate, District 5
72. New York 1824 State Senate, District 6
73. New York 1824 State Senate, District 7
74. New York 1824 State Senate, District 8
Bucktail
Also referred to as the Anti-Clintonians, the Bucktails, lead by Martin Van Buren, became a potent political force in New York arising in the Hudson River Valley in the late 1810's and early 1820's. The Bucktails would coalesce around the candidacy of William Crawford as a presidential candidate in 1824.
"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).
Against the Bolingbrokean essence of Clintonianism, which centred on the magistrate as the artificer of social and political harmony and of prosperity, the regulars pitted the notion of harmonious party order. The Van Burenite regulars, the organizing force within Bucktailisim worked to articulate systematic party processes that reached out from three engines of power: the legislative caucus, the junto of managers that became known as the Albany Regency, and the Albany Argus, the newspaper that stood at the centre of an extensive press network. Commending 'regular nominations' and defining which local nominations were regular, the Bucktail press eroded Clinton's Republican following and ultimately his hold on patronage, including the many judicial office holders whom Ambrose Spencer oversaw." (Hanyan, p 10-11)
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.