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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 21, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
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CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
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Wednesday, June 21, 2006
Local Elections in Pelham in 1843
In 1843, local elections in Pelham attracted attention when the Town voted
Whigs into office, rejecting several Locofoco candidates. The Locofocos
began in the mid-1830s as an anti-Tammany Hall faction of the Democratic
party. The faction existed for about a decade. By 1840, Whigs routinely
applied the "Locofoco" label to the entire Democratic party. Locofocos
typically supported free trade and circulation of coined money versus
paper money. They supported unions and opposed "financial speculation".
They supported such political figures as Andrew Jackson and Martin Van
Buren.
Whigs, on the other hand, was the principal political party that opposed
the Democratic party founded by Andrew Jackson. It existed from 1832 until
the mid-1850s. The Whig party was suspicious of a strong Executive Branch
and believed in the supremacy of the Legislative Branch of the federal
government. Their platform included economic development and
modernization. Whigs supported such political figures as William Henry
Harrison, Zachary Taylor, Daniel Webster, Winfield Scott and Henry Clay.
John Hunter of Hunter's Island in Pelham was a State Senator and a noted
Locofoco. For years, it seems, the people of Pelham elected Locofocos to
local office -- until 1843. That year, the Town elected James L. Townsend,
a Whig, to serve as Town Supervisor. He won by the slim margin of two
votes. Additionally, the Town elected two Whig Justices, a Whig tax
Collector, Whig Commissioners of highways, Whig Commissioners and
Inspectors of Schools, and Whig Inspectors of Elections.
Whigs throughout the state were elated. The Hudson River Chronicle
published an article about the Whig victories in Pelham. The text of that
article appears immediately below.
"Sound the trumpet, beat the drums,
The little town of Pelham comes!!
It is even so. The town of Pelham, which, though not much larger than a
johnny cake board, contains the princely domains of Senator John Hunter,
and several other splendid abodes of Locofoco aristocracy, and which has
been Locofoco so long that the memory of the oldest woman in the town
runneth not to the contrary, at the town meeting, on Tuesday last elected
James L. Townsend, Esq., the Whig candidate, Supervisor, by the
handsome majority of two votes. This majority of two may
seem small to those who are accustomed to count their majorities by
hundreds and thousands, but it is just as good as two hundred for our
friend Townsend. It tells well for Pelham; it is carrying the war into
Africa, and it is a splendid forerunner of things to come. We know our
Locofoco friends will turn up their aristocratic noses, and say, 'Who
cares for little Pelham!' But, gentlemen, is not Pelham a town in and of
herself? Have you not always claimed her as a 'town,' when, in times past,
she set her weight in your scale of the political balance? Does she not
count one in the board of Supervisors? Has she not an equal voice
with Mount Pleasant in electing Poor House officers, and in assisting to
roll up a mighty great tax for the larger towns to pay? Have you not
always wrote her down a town when it has been necessary to send
an expression of Supervisors to Albany to control legislation? She is a
town, every inch of her, and never more a town than since the last town
meeting; and now, as the Whigs have got her right, we hope our friend
Townsend will set his weight upon her and keep her so.
But, to the glorious result, which is as follows: For Supervisor, J. L.
Townsend, Whig, had two majority over Mr. Ogden, Locofoco. This is glory
enough for one year; but to swell the tide of triumph, and to cover
themselves all over with glory, the Whigs of Pelham went the entire
figure, electing two Justices, their Collector by 10 majority,
Commissioners of highways, Commissioners and Inspectors of Schools,
Inspectors of Elections, and so on and so forth, all through.
Some of the Locofocos of Pelham pretend they let the Election go by
default, because Gov. Bouck differs with Senator Hunter about the County
appointments!! This is all gammon, and put forth only to cover the
mortification of defeat. The Locos of Pelham never fought harder in the
world, but all to no purpose. There is a change; a most radical change, in
Pelham, and neither Hunter nor Gov. Bouck can mend it. Townsend, the
Supervisor elect, is a thorough, out and out Whig; in favor of a Tariff
for Protection to American Industry and Labor; in favor of a Sound
National Currency, the Distribution of the Proceeds of the Public Lands,
the protection of the State Works, and the maintenance of the State
Credit, and is opposed to Calhoun, Tyler, Van Buren, Broken Banks,
swindling Office Holders, sloping Sub Treasurers, Repudiation and Sam.
Young. Ogden, his opponent, is a Locofoco of 'the real ignorant kind;'
goes in for Suspension, Low Wages, Broken Banks, Bad Currency, Bad
Government, Repudiation, and Direct Taxation, and, like many other Locos,
supports Tyler for the offices and Van Buren for the Presidency! These
questions were brought directly home to the people of Pelham at the late
town meeting -- Senator Hunter's votes and speeches in favor of the
measures and principles which Ogden supports, were freely circulated among
the Electors, and the result is, that the Locos of Pelham, have discovered
the error into which such leaders, Senators and Representatives, have led
them, and have triumphantly come out on the side of Townsend, Clay, and
Democratic Whig Principles. We welcome the Electors of Pelham into the
great Whig family, and give them thirty cheers for their gallant and
glorious victory."
Source: Sound the Trumpet, Beat the Drums, The Little Town of Pelham
Comes!!, The Hudson River Chronicle, Apr. 11, 1843, Vol. 6, No.
26, p. 2, col. 6.
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Historic Pelham
Web Site
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http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:54 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 21, 2006.
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