Recorder of New York City
{{Short description|Former municipal officer of New York City}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
The recorder of New York City was a municipal officer of New York City from 1683 until 1907. He was at times a judge of the Court of General Sessions, the Court of Special Sessions, and the New York Court of Common Pleas; Vice-President of the Board of Supervisors of New York County; Vice-President of the Board of Aldermen of New York City; Deputy Mayor of New York City; a director of the Bank of the Manhattan Company; a commissioner of the city's Sinking fund; a commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Board; and a member of the board of many charitable organizations. The Recorder was not a recorder of deeds, these were kept by the Register of New York City.
History
The first recorders were appointed by the colonial governor, and held the office "during the Governor's pleasure", meaning that there was no defined term of office.
Under the State Constitution of 1777, the recorder was appointed by the Council of Appointment, and held the office "during the Council's pleasure", there being still no defined term of office.
From 1787 to 1875, the recorder was also a member of the Board of Supervisors of the County of New York, which consisted of the mayor, the recorder and the aldermen of New York City. In the absence of the mayor, the recorder presided over the Board.
Under the State Constitution of 1821, the recorder was appointed by the Governor of New York, and confirmed by the New York State Senate, and held the office until the appointment of a successor.
On December 15, 1847, the City Charter was amended, providing for the election of the recorder by popular ballot at the same time of the general elections (the Tuesday after the first Monday in November), to take office on January 1 next for a term of three years.
In 1857, when the New York Metropolitan Police was created, the recorder became one of the commissioners of the Police Board.
The recorder's term was extended to six years during John K. Hackett's first term. After the adoption of the "Judicial Article" in 1869, the Recorder was not considered a municipal officer any more, but a judicial officer. He ceased to be a member of the Board of Supervisors, and his term was extended to 14 years, to match the term length of the other judges and justices of the New York courts.
The recorder remained one of the judges of the Court of General Sessions (the New York City court of general jurisdiction in criminal cases) until the office was abolished in 1907.
List of Recorders
class="wikitable"
! width = "18%" | Recorder ! width = "16%" | Took office ! width = "16%" | Left office ! Party ! Notes |
James Graham
|1683 |1689? | |Attorney General of Province of New York, 1685 |
(vacant)
|1689? |1691? | | |
William PinhorneDunlap, William, [https://books.google.com/books?id=pgouAAAAYAAJ History of the New Netherlands, province of New York, and state of New York, to the adoption of the federal Constitution], New York : Carter & Thorp, 1839. Cf, [https://books.google.com/books?id=pgouAAAAYAAJ&dq=William+Pinhorne&pg=PA215 p. 215].
|1691 |1693 | |New York Supreme Court judge, 1691. New Jersey Supreme Court judge, c.1698. C-in-C New Jersey, 1709. |
James Graham
|1693 |1701 | |Attorney General of Province of New York, 1685 |
Abraham Gouverneur
|1701 |1703 | | |
Sampson Shelton Broughton
|1703 |1705 | |Attorney General of Province of New York, 1701 |
John Tudor
|1705 |1709 | | |
May Bickley
|1709 |1712 | |also acting Attorney General of Province of New York, 1708–12 |
David Jamison
|1712 |1725 | |acting Attorney General of Province of New York, 1712 |
Francis Harison
|1725 |1735 | | |
Daniel Horsmanden
|1736 |1747 | |also Supreme Court judge, 1737–1747. Chief Justice, 1763. |
Simon Johnson
|1747 |1769 | | |
Thomas Jones
|November 19, 1769 |October 13, 1773 | | |
Robert R. Livingston
|October 13, 1773 |1774 | |Supreme Court judge, 1763 |
John Watts
|1774 |February 20, 1784 | |last recorder appointed by the colonial governor, remained in office until the capture of New York City by the revolutionary forces |
Richard Varick
|February 20, 1784 |September 29, 1789 | |in 1787 and 1788 also Speaker of the New York State Assembly, and from April 1788 to September 1789 also New York State Attorney General; left both offices upon appointment as Mayor of New York City |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|September 29, 1789 |March 28, 1797 |Federalist |appointed New York State Comptroller |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|March 28, 1797 |February 15, 1798 |Federalist |appointed to the New York Supreme Court |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|February 15, 1798 |August 25, 1801 |also United States Attorney for the District of New York from 1789 to 1801 |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|August 25, 1801 |November 10, 1804 |Dem.-Rep. |appointed to the Superior Court of the Territory of Orleans |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|November 10, 1804 |March 26, 1806 |Dem.-Rep./Lewisite | |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|March 26, 1806 |February 16, 1807 |Dem.-Rep./Clintonian | |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|February 16, 1807 |February 8, 1808 |Dem.-Rep./Lewisite |second tenure |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|February 8, 1808 |February 13, 1810 |Dem.-Rep./Clintonian |second tenure |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|February 13, 1810 |February 19, 1811 | |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|February 19, 1811 |February 8, 1813 |Dem.-Rep./Clintonian |third tenure |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|February 8, 1813 |March 6, 1815 |Federalist |second tenure |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|March 6, 1815 |April 6, 1819 |Dem.-Rep./Clintonian; | |
{{Party shading/Federalist}}
|April 6, 1819 |March 6, 1821 |Federalist | |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|March 6, 1821 |1823 |Dem.-Rep./Bucktail |second tenure |
Samuel Jones
|1823 |1824 | |son of the previous Recorder of the same name |
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}
|1824 |1838 |Dem.-Rep./Bucktail; |third tenure |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|1838 |1841 |Democrat |removed from office by Gov. William H. Seward, but elected Mayor of New York City |
{{Party shading/Whig}}
|1841 |1846 |Whig | |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|1846 |December 31, 1848 |Democrat | |
{{Party shading/Whig}}
|January 1, 1849 |December 31, 1851 |Whig |second tenure; first recorder elected by popular ballot |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|January 1, 1852 |December 31, 1854 |Democrat | |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|January 1, 1855 |December 31, 1857 |Democrat | |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|January 1, 1858 |December 31, 1860 |Democrat | |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|January 1, 1861 |December 31, 1865 |Democrat |elected Mayor of New York City during his second term |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|March 6, 1866 |December 26, 1879 |Democrat |elected by the Board of Supervisors to fill vacancy; then elected as a Democrat to two terms (1867–69 and 1870–75); in 1875 elected on Republican and Anti-Tammany tickets; died in office |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|December 31, 1879 |1894 |Democrat |elected by the Board of Supervisors to fill vacancy; in 1880 elected to full 14-year term |
{{Party shading/Fusion}}
|January 1, 1895 |December 31, 1906 |Goff was an Anti-Tammany Democrat, elected on a fusion ticket nominated by numerous organizations, including the Republicans |elected to the New York Supreme Court |
{{Party shading/Democratic}}
|January 22, 1907 |December 31, 1907 |Democrat |elected by the Board of Aldermen, to fill vacancy; office abolished |
References
Sources
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=E3sFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA928 The New York Civil List] compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (page 428; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858)
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=07IF9RMUR2IC&pg=PA896 Courts and Lawyers of New York: A History, 1609-1925] by Alden Chester & E. Melvin Williams (Vol. II, page 896)
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=OE9DAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA11 Historical Ssketch of the Board of Supervisors of the County of New York] (pages 11ff)
- [https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1866/01/12/90432610.pdf THE RECORDERSHIP] in NYT on January 12, 1866
{{NYC Recorder}}
Category:Government of New York City