175th New York State Legislature

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175th New York State Legislature



174th 176th

The facade of the New York State Capitol building in bright daylight

New York State Capitol (2009)

Overview
Jurisdiction
New York, United States
TermJanuary 1 – December 31, 1965
Senate
Members58
PresidentLt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson (R)
Temporary President
Joseph Zaretzki (D)
Party controlDemocratic (33–25)
Assembly
Members150
Speaker
Anthony J. Travia (D)
Party controlDemocratic (88–62)
Sessions


1stJanuary 6 – June 23, 1965

The 175th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 6 to June 23, 1965, during the seventh year of Nelson Rockefeller's governorship, in Albany.




Contents





  • 1 Background


  • 2 Elections


  • 3 Sessions


  • 4 State Senate

    • 4.1 Districts


    • 4.2 Senators


    • 4.3 Employees



  • 5 State Assembly

    • 5.1 Assembly members


    • 5.2 Employees



  • 6 Notes


  • 7 Sources




Background


Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1938, re-apportioned in 1953, 58 Senators and 150 assembly members were elected in single-seat districts for two-year terms. The senatorial districts consisted either of one or more entire counties; or a contiguous area within a single county. The counties which were divided into more than one senatorial district were Kings (nine districts), New York (six), Queens (five), Bronx (four), Erie (three), Nassau (three), Westchester (three), Monroe (two) and Onondaga (two). The Assembly districts consisted either of a single entire county (except Hamilton Co.), or of contiguous area within one county.


In 1964, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down several decisions establishing that State legislatures should follow the One man, one vote rule to apportion their election districts. A special Federal Statutory Court declared the New York apportionment formulae for both the State Senate and the State Assembly unconstitutional, and the State Legislature was ordered to re-apportion the seats by April 1, 1965. The court also ruled that the 1964 legislative election should be held under the 1954 apportionment, but those elected could serve only for one year (in 1965), and an election under the new apportionment should be held in November 1965. Senators John H. Hughes and Lawrence M. Rulison (both Rep.) questioned the authority of the federal court to shorten the term of the 1964 electees,[1] alleging excessive costs for the additional election in an off-year.[2]


At this time there were two major political parties: the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. The Liberal Party, the Conservative Party, the Socialist Labor Party, and the Socialist Workers Party also nominated tickets. At the New York state election, 1964, on November 3, Democratic majorities were elected to both the State Senate and the State Assembly for the session of 1965.


The lame-duck Legislature of 1964 met for a special session at the State Capitol in Albany from December 15 to 31, 1964, to re-apportion the legislative districts for the election in November 1965, gerrymandering the districts according to the wishes of the Republican majority before the Democrats would take over the Legislature in January.[3][4] The number of seats in the State Senate was increased to 65, and the number of seats in the Assembly to 165. County representation was abandoned in favor of population-proportional districts which could lie across county lines, and the new Assembly districts were numbered from 1 to 165.



Elections


The New York state election, 1964, was held on November 3. The only statewide elective office up for election was a U.S. Senator from New York. Democrat Robert F. Kennedy defeated the Republican incumbent Kenneth B. Keating. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote for U.S. Senator, was: Democrats 3,540,000; Republicans 3,104,000; Liberals 285,000; Conservatives 212,000; Socialist Labor 7,000; and Socialist Workers 4,000.


Three of the four women members of the previous legislature—State Senator Constance Baker Motley, a lawyer of Manhattan; and Assembly Members Constance E. Cook (Rep.), a lawyer of Ithaca, and Aileen B. Ryan (Dem.), a former school teacher of the Bronx—were re-elected. Shirley Chisholm (Dem.), a preschool teacher of Brooklyn; and Dorothy H. Rose (Dem.), a high-school teacher and librarian of Angola, were also elected to the Assembly.



Sessions


The Legislature met for the regular session (the 188th) at the State Capitol in Albany on January 6, 1965;[5] and adjourned on June 23.[6]


Due to the split of the Democratic majorities in both Houses into followers of Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Jr. and U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy, neither House could be organized, and a month of deadlock ensued.


On February 1, the United States Supreme Court confirmed the Federal Statutory Court's order to elect a new New York Legislature in November 1965.[7]


On February 3, Joseph Zaretzki (Dem.) was elected Temporary President of the State Senate with the votes of the Wagner Democrats and the Republicans.[8]


On February 4, Anthony J. Travia (Dem.) was elected Speaker.[9]


On April 14, the New York Court of Appeals declared the apportionment of December 1964 as unconstitutional, citing that the New York Constitution provides expressly that the Assembly shall have 150 seats, not 165 as were apportioned. The court also held that, although the constitutional State Senate apportionment formula provides for additional seats, the increase from 58 to 65 was unwarranted.[10]


On May 10, the Federal Statutory Court ordered that the election on November 2, 1965, be held under the December 1964 apportionment, and that the Legislature thus elected re-apportion the seats again by February 1, 1966.[11]


On August 24, the Federal Statutory Court clarified that, if the Governor and Legislature should not have enacted a new apportionment by February 1, 1966, then the Court would draft a new apportionment for the next election.[12]


On October 11, the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed four appeals against the ruling of the Federal Statutory Court, and upheld the election of a new New York Legislature on November 2.[13]



State Senate



Districts



  • 1st District: Suffolk County

  • 2nd, 3rd and 4th District: Parts of Nassau County

  • 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th District: Parts of Queens County, i.e. the Borough of Queens

  • 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th District: Parts of Kings County, i.e. the Borough of Brooklyn

  • 19th District: Richmond County, i.e. the Borough of Richmond (now the Borough of Staten Island)

  • 20th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th and 25th District: Parts of New York County, i.e. the Borough of Manhattan

  • 26th, 27th, 28th and 29th District: Parts of Bronx County, i.e. the Borough of the Bronx

  • 30th, 31st and 32nd District: Parts of Westchester County

  • 33rd District: Orange and Rockland counties

  • 34th District: Delaware, Greene, Sullivan and Ulster counties

  • 35th District: Columbia, Dutchess and Putnam counties

  • 36th District: Albany County

  • 37th District: Rensselaer and Washington counties

  • 38th District: Schenectady and Schoharie counties

  • 39th District: Essex, Saratoga and Warren counties

  • 40th District: Clinton, Franklin and St. Lawrence counties

  • 41st District: Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer and Montgomery counties

  • 42nd District: Oneida County

  • 43rd District: Jefferson, Lewis and Oswego

  • 44th and 45th District: Parts of Onondaga County

  • 46th District: Chenango, Cortland, Madison and Otsego counties

  • 47th District: Broome County

  • 48th District: Cayuga, Tioga and Tompkins counties

  • 49th District: Chemung and Steuben counties

  • 50th District: Ontario, Schuyler, Seneca, Wayne and Yates counties

  • 51st and 52nd District: Parts of Monroe County

  • 53rd District: Allegany, Genesee, Livingston, Orleans and Wyoming counties

  • 54th District: Niagara County

  • 55th, 56th and 57th District: Parts of Erie County

  • 58th District: Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties



Senators


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Bernard G. Gordon, Robert Watson Pomeroy, William S. Calli and Kenneth R. Willard changed from the Assembly to the Senate.


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."














































































































































































































































District
Senator
Party
Notes
1st

Elisha T. Barrett*
Republican

2nd

Norman F. Lent
Republican

3rd

Henry M. Curran*
Republican

4th

Edward J. Speno*
Republican

5th

Jack E. Bronston*
Democrat
Chairman of Affairs of Cities
6th

Irving Mosberg*
Democrat
Chairman of General Laws
7th

Seymour R. Thaler*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Health
8th

Thomas A. Duffy*
Democrat
Chairman of Codes
9th

Thomas J. Mackell*
Democrat
Chairman of Affairs of the City of New York
10th

Simon J. Liebowitz*
Democrat
Chairman of Motor Vehicles
11th

William C. Thompson
Democrat
Chairman of National Defense
12th

Jeremiah B. Bloom*
Democrat
Chairman of Banks
13th

Guy James Mangano*
Democrat
Chairman of Corporations
14th

William T. Conklin*
Republican

15th

Irwin Brownstein*
Democrat
Chairman of Commerce and Navigation
16th

William Rosenblatt*
Democrat
Chairman of Judiciary
17th

Samuel L. Greenberg*
Democrat
Chairman of Finance
18th

Edward S. Lentol*
Democrat
Chairman of Civil Service
19th

John J. Marchi*
Republican

20th

Frederic S. Berman
Democrat

21st

Constance Baker Motley*
Democrat
Chairwoman of Penal Institutions;
on February 23, 1965, elected Borough President of Manhattan
22nd

Jerome L. Wilson*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Welfare
23rd

Joseph Zaretzki*
Democrat
elected Temporary President; Chairman of Rules
24th

Paul P. E. Bookson
Democrat
Chairman of Agriculture
25th

Manfred Ohrenstein*
Democrat
Chairman of Mental Hygiene
26th

Harry Kraf*
Democrat
Chairman of Taxation
27th

Ivan Warner*
Democrat
Chairman of Education
28th

Abraham Bernstein*
Democrat
Chairman of Excise
29th

Joseph E. Marine*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Service
30th

Max Berking
Democrat

31st

Bernard G. Gordon*
Republican

32nd

Royden A. Letsen
Democrat
Chairman of Highways
33rd

D. Clinton Dominick III*
Republican

34th

E. Ogden Bush*
Republican

35th

Robert Watson Pomeroy*
Republican

36th

Julian B. Erway*
Democrat
Chairman of Insurance
37th

F. Warren Travers
Democrat
Chairman of Internal Affairs
38th

Owen M. Begley*
Democrat
Chairman of Conservation
39th

Nathan Proller
Republican

40th

John E. Quinn
Democrat

41st

Dalwin J. Niles
Republican

42nd

William S. Calli*
Republican

43rd

Hugh Douglas Barclay
Republican

44th

Earl E. Boyle
Democrat

45th

John H. Hughes*
Republican

46th

Leighton A. Hope*
Republican

47th

Warren M. Anderson*
Republican

48th

George R. Metcalf*
Republican

49th

William T. Smith
Republican

50th

Bryce Barden
Republican

51st

Frank E. Van Lare*
Republican

52nd

Thomas Laverne*
Republican

53rd

Kenneth R. Willard*
Republican

54th

Earl W. Brydges*
Republican
Minority Leader
55th

John H. Doerr
Democrat

56th

Frank J. Glinski*
Democrat
Chairman of Labor
57th

Bertrand H. Hoak
Democrat
Chairman of Affairs of Villages
58th

Jeremiah J. Moriarty*
Republican


Employees


  • Secretary:

    • Albert J. Abrams (Rep.), holding over until February 9


    • George H. Van Lengen (Dem.), from February 9[14]


  • Sergeant-at-Arms: John F. O'Hagen, from February 9


State Assembly



Assembly members


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Walter E. Cooke changed from the Senate to the Assembly.


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."














































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assembly members
Party
Notes

Albany
1st

Frank P. Cox*
Dem./Lib.
Chairman of Public Printing
2nd

Harvey M. Lifset*
Dem./Lib.
Chairman of Cities

Allegany

Don O. Cummings*
Republican


Bronx
1st

Donald J. Sullivan*
Democrat
Chairman of Revision
2nd

Seymour Posner
Democrat

3rd

Jerome Schutzer*
Democrat

4th

Eugene Rodriguez
Democrat

5th

Melville E. Abrams*
Democrat
Chairman of Social Welfare and Relief
6th

Murray Lewinter*
Democrat

7th

John T. Satriale*
Democrat
Chairman of Ways and Means
8th

Alexander Chananau*
Democrat
Chairman of Canals and Waterways
9th

Burton Hecht*
Democrat

10th

Ferdinand J. Mondello*
Democrat

11th

Aileen B. Ryan*
Democrat
Chairwoman of Charitable and Religious Societies;
on November 2, 1965, elected to the New York City Council
12th

Fred W. Eggert, Jr.*
Democrat
Chairman of Aviation

Broome
1st

Daniel S. Dickinson, Jr.*
Rep./Cons.

2nd

George L. Ingalls*
Republican
Minority Leader

Cattaraugus

James F. Hastings*
Republican


Cayuga

George M. Michaels*
Democrat
Chairman of Affairs of Villages

Chautauqua

A. Bruce Manley*
Republican


Chemung

L. Richard Marshall*
Republican


Chenango

Guy L. Marvin*
Republican


Clinton

Louis Wolfe
Democrat


Columbia

Willard C. Drumm*
Republican


Cortland

Louis H. Folmer*
Republican


Delaware

Edwyn E. Mason*
Republican


Dutchess

Victor C. Waryas
Democrat


Erie
1st

Stephen R. Greco*
Democrat
Chairman of Pensions
2nd

F. James Kane, Jr.
Democrat

3rd

Arthur Hardwick, Jr.
Democrat

4th

Francis J. Griffin*
Democrat

5th

John B. Lis*
Democrat
Chairman of Motor Vehicles
6th

Albert J. Hausbeck*
Democrat

7th

Julius Volker*
Republican

8th

Dorothy H. Rose
Democrat


Essex

Grant W. Johnson*
Republican


Franklin

James Edward LaPan
Democrat


Fulton and Hamilton

Glenn H. Harris
Republican


Genesee

James A. Carmichael, Jr.
Democrat


Greene

Clarence D. Lane*
Republican


Herkimer

Donald J. Mitchell
Republican


Jefferson

Orin S. Wilcox*
Republican


Kings
1st

Max M. Turshen*
Democrat
Chairman of Judiciary
2nd

Noah Goldstein*
Democrat

3rd

Joseph J. Dowd*
Democrat

4th

Harold W. Cohn*
Democrat
Chairman of Internal Affairs
5th

Leonard E. Yoswein*
Democrat

6th

Bertram L. Baker*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Education
7th

Louis Kalish*
Democrat
Chairman of Insurance
8th

William J. Ferrall*
Democrat

9th

Robert F. Kelly*
Republican

10th

Walter E. Cooke*
Democrat

11th

George A. Cincotta*
Democrat
Chairman of Excise
12th

Dominick L. DiCarlo
Republican

13th

Lawrence P. Murphy*
Democrat
Chairman of Mortgage and Real Estate
14th

Edward A. Kurmel*
Democrat

15th

Alfred A. Lama*
Democrat
Chairman of Banks
16th

Salvatore J. Grieco*
Democrat

17th

Shirley Chisholm
Democrat

18th

Stanley Steingut*
Democrat
Chairman of General Laws
19th

Joseph Kottler*
Democrat
Chairman of Penal Institutions
20th

Joseph R. Corso*
Democrat
Chairman of Codes
21st

Bertram L. Podell*
Democrat
Chairman of Local Finance
22nd

Anthony J. Travia*
Democrat
elected Speaker; Chairman of Rules

Lewis

Lawrence C. Byrnes
Republican


Livingston

James L. Emery
Republican


Madison

Harold I. Tyler*
Republican


Monroe
1st

Harold P. Garnham
Democrat

2nd

S. William Rosenberg*
Republican

3rd

James E. Powers
Democrat

4th

Charles F. Stockmeister*
Democrat
Chairman of Conservation

Montgomery

Donald A. Campbell*
Republican


Nassau
1st

Francis T. Purcell
Republican
on June 18, 1965, appointed as Supervisor of Hempstead
2nd

Jerome R. McDougal, Jr.
Democrat

3rd

John E. Kingston*
Republican

4th

Edwin J. Fehrenbach*
Republican

5th

Herbert Sachs
Democrat

6th

John S. Thorp, Jr.
Democrat


New York
1st

William F. Passannante*
Democrat
Chairman of Claims
2nd

Louis DeSalvio*
Democrat
Chairman of Military Affairs
3rd

Jerome Kretchmer*
Democrat

4th

Jerome W. Marks*
Democrat

5th

Albert H. Blumenthal*
Democrat

6th

Paul J. Curran*
Republican

7th

Daniel M. Kelly*
Democrat
Chairman of Taxation
8th

John M. Burns*
Republican

9th

S. William Green
Republican

10th

Carlos M. Rios*
Democrat

11th

Percy E. Sutton
Democrat

12th

Mark T. Southall*
Democrat

13th

Orest V. Maresca*
Democrat
Chairman of Affairs of the City of New York
14th

Jose Ramos-Lopez*
Democrat
Chairman of Printed and Engrossed Bills
15th

John J. Walsh*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Institutions
16th

Frank G. Rossetti*
Democrat
Chairman of Labor and Industries

Niagara
1st

Gregory J. Pope
Democrat

2nd

Donald J. O'Hara
Democrat


Oneida
1st

Paul A. Worlock*
Democrat
Democratic Whip; Chairman of Agriculture
2nd

John B. Cosgrove
Democrat


Onondaga
1st

James J. Barry
Democrat

2nd

John H. Terry*
Republican

3rd

Philip R. Chase*
Republican


Ontario

Frederick L. Warder*
Republican


Orange
1st

Daniel Becker*
Republican

2nd

Jack A. Schlosser
Democrat


Orleans

Alonzo L. Waters*
Republican


Oswego

Edward F. Crawford*
Republican


Otsego

Scott E. Greene
Republican


Putnam

Willis H. Stephens*
Republican


Queens
1st

Thomas V. LaFauci*
Dem./Lib.
Chairman of Civil Service
2nd

Thomas P. Cullen
Dem./Lib.

3rd

Robert E. Whelan*
Democrat

4th

Jules G. Sabbatino*
Dem./Lib.
Chairman of Commerce and Navigation
5th

Martin M. Psaty*
Dem./Lib.

6th

Michael G. Rice*
Democrat
Chairman of Public Health
7th

Moses M. Weinstein*
Dem./Lib.
Majority Leader
8th

Michael J. Capanegro*
Dem./Lib.

9th

Fred W. Preller*
Rep./Cons.

10th

Martin Rodell
Dem./Lib.

11th

Kenneth N. Browne
Dem./Lib.

12th

J. Lewis Fox*
Dem./Lib.
Chairman of Public Service
13th

Frederick D. Schmidt
Dem./Cons.


Rensselaer

James A. Lombard
Democrat


Richmond
1st

Edward J. Amann Jr.*
Republican

2nd

Lucio F. Russo*
Republican


Rockland

Joseph T. St. Lawrence
Dem./Lib.


St. Lawrence

Verner M. Ingram*
Republican


Saratoga

Stanley L. Van Rensselaer*
Republican


Schenectady

John F. Kirvin
Democrat


Schoharie

Russell Selkirk*
Republican


Schuyler

John P. Callanan
Republican


Seneca

Theodore D. Day*
Republican


Steuben

Charles D. Henderson*
Republican


Suffolk
1st

Perry B. Duryea, Jr.*
Republican

2nd

Prescott B. Huntington*
Republican

3rd

John G. McCarthy*
Republican


Sullivan

Hyman E. Mintz*
Republican


Tioga

Richard C. Lounsberry*
Republican


Tompkins

Constance E. Cook*
Republican


Ulster

Kenneth L. Wilson*
Republican


Warren

Richard J. Bartlett*
Republican


Washington

Lawrence E. Corbett, Jr.
Republican


Wayne

Joseph C. Finley*
Republican


Westchester
1st

Thomas J. McInerney
Democrat

2nd

Lawrence A. Cabot
Dem./Lib.

3rd

George E. Van Cott*
Republican

4th

Anthony B. Gioffre*
Republican

5th

John J. S. Mead*
Republican

6th

Richard A. Cerosky
Republican


Wyoming

Frank Walkley
Republican


Yates

Paul R. Taylor*
Republican


Employees


  • Clerk:

    • Ansley B. Borkowski (Rep.), holding over until February 9


    • John T. McKennan (Dem.), from February 9


  • Sergeant-at-Arms:
    • Raymond J. Roche (Rep.), until March 2

    • William A. Wardlaw (Dem.), from March 2[15]


  • Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms: Raymond J. Roche, from March 2


Notes



  1. ^ 2 STATE SENATORS FIGHT TERM RULING in the New York Times on August 2, 1964


  2. ^ Two State Senators Fight Redisricting in the New York Times on August 25, 1964


  3. ^ ROCKEFELLER CALLS SESSION FOR DEC. 15; Legislature Told to Draw Redistricting Formula in the New York Times on December 2, 1964 (subscription required)


  4. ^ Reapportioning New York State in the New York Times on December 3, 1964


  5. ^ SESSION IS OPENED; Two Attempts to Elect Officers Fail in the New York Times on January 7, 1965 (subscription required)


  6. ^ ASSEMBLY PASSES CITY FISCAL BILLS in the New York Times on June 23, 1965 (subscription required)


  7. ^ HIGH COURT BACKS DISTRICTING EDICT in the New York Times on February 2, 1965 (subscription required)


  8. ^ ZARETZKI WINS AS G.O.P. STEPS IN, GIVING WAGNER MAN NEEDED VOTES in the New York Times on February 4, 1965 (subscription required)


  9. ^ TRAVIA ELECTED SPEAKER in the New York Times on February 5, 1965 (subscription required)


  10. ^ G.O.P. PLAN VOIDED; Constitution Is Cited as Requiring 150 Seats in Assembly State's Legislative Reapportionment in the New York Times on April 15, 1965 (subscription required)


  11. ^ DECISION IS 2 TO 1; ...that a legislative election be held Nov. 2 under a Republican reapportionment plan that had been invalidated by the State Court of Appeals in the New York Times on May 11, 1965 (subscription required)


  12. ^ Justice Gives Rockefeller a Deadline to Submit Formula, With Judicial Proposal as the Alternative in the New York Times on August 25, 1965 (subscription required)


  13. ^ SUPREME COURT CLEARS ELECTION FOR LEGISLATURE in the New York Times on October 12, 1965 (subscription required)


  14. ^ Legislature Wheels Turning in The Knickerbocker News, of Albany, on February 10, 1965


  15. ^ R. J. Roche Loses Post in Assembly in the Watertown Daily Times, of Watertown, on March 3, 1965



Sources



  • Complete List of Names, Addresses Of All Members Of '65 State Legislature in the Civil Service Leader (Vol. XXVI, No. 18, pg. 8f; issue of January 5, 1965)


  • Legislature Committee Chairman Named in the Civil Service Leader (Vol. XXVI, No. 26, pg. 8; issue of March 2, 1965)


  • Members of the New York Senate (1960s) at Political Graveyard


  • Members of the New York Assembly (1960s) at Political Graveyard






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