New York 1810 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3

Office:
U.S. House of Representatives (Federal)
Title:
U.S. Congressman
Jurisdiction:
Federal
Label:
New York 1810 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3
Date:
1810
State:
New York
Type:
General
Iteration:
First Ballot
Office/Role:
U.S. House of Representatives/U.S. Congressman
Candidates:
Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr., John Bradner, Jonathan Fisk, John Broome, Nicholas Fish, Robert Graham, Richard Hatfield, Benjamin Isaacs, Thomas T. Lawrence, Abraham Odell, Jonas Platt, William Stubbs, Daniel D. Tompkins, James Ward, Ebenezer White
Candidates: Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr.[1]John BradnerJonathan FiskJohn BroomeNicholas FishRobert GrahamRichard HatfieldBenjamin IsaacsThomas T. LawrenceAbraham OdellJonas PlattWilliam StubbsDaniel D. TompkinsJames WardEbenezer White
Affiliation:RepublicanFederalistFederalistFederalist
Final Result: [2][3][4][5]394422265111111111111
District of Three394422265111111111111
Orange County[6][7]2311811---------1---
Town of Bloomingrove[8]14617-------------
Town of Cornwall8642-------------
Town of Deerpark[9]11224-------------
Town of Goshen[10]25383-------------
Town of Minisink30858-------------
Town of Montgomery[11]268189-------------
Town of Munroe[12]10434-------------
Town of New Windsor16039-------------
Town of Newburgh33987-------------
Town of Wallkill[13]31973-------------
Town of Warwick[14]14617-------------
Westchester County[15]16331415511111111111-
Town of Cortlandt22668-------------
Town of Eastchester[16]5164-11111111-111

Notes:

[1]Elected.
[2]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 246 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt, 1 vote as Pero Van Cortlandt and 1 vote as Philip Van Cortlandt.
[3]John Bradner received 39 votes as John Broder and 24 votes as John Brader.
[4]Daniel D. Tompkins and Jonas Platt were candidates for Governor. John Broome and Nicholas Fish were candidates for Lieutenant Governor. Richard Hatfield and Ebenezer White were candidates for State Senator. Abraham Odell, Robert Graham and Benjamin Isaacs were candidates for Assembly.
[5]"The following statement shows the result of the Congressional election throughout the state...MAJORITY...7th Con. district. Westchester and Orange,-- Pierre Van Cortland[sic], Junior 1779." The Advertiser (Ballston Spa, NY). July 10, 1810.
[6]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 98 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[7]John Bradner received 39 votes as John Broder and 24 votes as John Brader.
[8]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 16 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[9]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 11 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[10]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 8 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[11]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 3 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[12]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 3 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[13]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 33 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[14]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 24 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.
[15]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 148 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt and 1 vote as Pero Van Cortlandt.
[16]Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr. received 10 votes as Pierre Van Cortlandt.

References:

The Albany Register (Albany, NY). May 4, 1810.
Utica Patriot (Utica, NY). May 8, 1810.
American Citizen (New York, NY). May 12, 1810.
The Columbian (New York, NY). May 12, 1810.
Columbian Gazette (Utica, NY). May 22, 1810.
The Columbian (New York, NY). June 4, 1810.
The Albany Register (Albany, NY). June 19, 1810.
New-York Evening Post (New York, NY). June 21, 1810.
The Balance, and New-York State Journal (Albany, NY). June 22, 1810.
The Advertiser (Ballston Spa, NY). July 10, 1810.
Miscellaneous Records of the Town of Eastchester New York, 1794-1834. 111-113.

Page Images

handwritten notes
Phil's original notebook pages that were used to compile this election. These notes are considered a draft of the electronic version. Therefore, the numbers may not match. To verify numbers you will need to check the original sources cited. Some original source material is available at the American Antiquarian Society).

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