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diff --git a/40531-0.txt b/40531-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..00115bb --- /dev/null +++ b/40531-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1589 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40531 *** + +[Transcriber's Note: Every effort has been made to replicate this +text as faithfully as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings +and other inconsistencies. Text that has been changed to correct an +obvious error is noted at the end of this ebook.] + + + + + 1797 A Century in the + TO Comptroller's + 1897 Office + + + State of New York + + BY + + JAMES A. ROBERTS + + COMPTROLLER + + ALBANY + JAMES B. LYON, PRINTER + 1897 + + + + +[Illustration: _STATE HALL_] + + + + +A CENTURY IN THE COMPTROLLER'S OFFICE. + + +On the 17th of February, 1897, occurred the one hundredth anniversary of +the establishment of the office of Comptroller of the State of New York. + +The present incumbent of the office trusts it will not be considered +unwarranted pride which has led him to collect and transcribe, in honor +of its one hundredth birthday, such general facts relating more or less +directly to the office, or to the former incumbents thereof, as he has +gathered from unsystematic reading and in the performance of his duties. + +An office which has without scandal managed the financial affairs of +this great State, and has otherwise borne a conspicuous part in its +government for a century; an office from the thirty incumbents of which +have been chosen a Vice-President and a President of the United States, +two United States Senators, four Governors of the State, one Chief +Justice and one Chief Judge of its Court of Appeals--to say nothing of +others who have achieved distinction in less conspicuous civil +positions--would seem entitled to something more than a passing notice +on its centennial anniversary. + +The office, as created, and from time to time enlarged, is a unique +feature in our State government. There are Auditors in nearly all of the +States of the Union; but the duties of Comptroller are far broader, +comprehending largely the ordinary duties of a State Treasurer as well +as many others. There had been Auditors in the Colony of New York from +1680 down to the time of its organization as an independent State, and +that office was continued in the State until it was merged in the office +of Comptroller. There have been Treasurers of New York with varying +duties from 1706 down to the present time. From the time of the +organization of the State government the offices of Treasurer and +Auditor had not been found to work harmoniously or satisfactorily. Bills +might be audited which the Treasurer did not wish to pay, and the +Treasurer might wish to pay bills which the Auditor would not pass, so +in a tentative, experimental way in 1797 the office of Comptroller was +created to combine the power to audit and the power to pay. The act +creating it was framed by Samuel Jones, a man of note in his time (for +whom Samuel Jones Tilden, the distinguished Governor of this State, was +named), and on the 17th of February, 1797, it became law by the +signature of that distinguished patriot, Governor John Jay. + +[Illustration: Samuel Jones (signature) + +_1st COMPTROLLER_] + +The appointment of Comptroller upon the creation of the office fell to +the "Council of Appointment," as was the case at that time with all +State, county and municipal officers, except the Governor, +Lieutenant-Governor and members of the Legislature. The "Council of +Appointment" was an anomaly in government. The article (XXIII of the +Constitution of 1777) establishing this "Council" was framed by three as +pure, patriotic and disinterested statesmen as New York has ever +produced, John Jay, Robert R. Livingston and Gouverneur Morris, and was +designed to prevent a dangerous centralization of power in the hands of +the Governor. It provided "that all officers, other than those who by +this Constitution are directed to be otherwise appointed, shall be +appointed in the manner following, to wit: The Assembly shall once in +every year openly nominate and appoint one of the Senators from each +great district" (then four in number), "which Senators shall form a +council for the appointment of officers, of which the Governor, for the +time being, or the Lieutenant-Governor, or the President of the Senate +(when they shall respectively administer the government), shall be +president, and have a casting vote, but no other vote." + +Under the power thus conferred this council appointed the heads of the +various State departments; all Judges, as well as Justices of the Peace, +District Attorneys, Sheriffs, County Clerks, Mayors, and other officers +throughout the entire State. + +The cautious and anxious gentlemen who framed this provision in 1777 +could by no means have foreseen the disastrous and disgraceful spoils +system that grew up under it. It remained in full effect until a +disgusted people abolished it by an amendment to the Constitution in +1821. At that time its power had so grown that there were 6,663 civil +and 8,287 military offices which it controlled. The modern political +boss must experience a feeling of profound regret as he realizes that +this rich harvest can no longer be garnered by his sickle. + +Chapter 21 of the Laws of 1797, which created the office of State +Comptroller, provided, among other things, that "all matters and things +theretofore required to be done by the Auditor of the State should be +done by the Comptroller, and that the salary and wages of all +legislative, executive, judicial and ministerial officers of the +government of this State, and all moneys directed by law to be paid to +any other person, should be paid by the Treasurer on the warrant of the +Comptroller;" that the Comptroller should keep an account between the +State and the Treasurer; that he might lend out moneys in the treasury +not otherwise appropriated, and that when money was directed to be paid, +and not sufficient money in the treasury to satisfy the same, he might +"in the name, and on behalf of the People of this State, borrow a sum +sufficient for that purpose of a bank of New York, or bank of Albany." + +Thus the important powers which have distinguished the Comptroller's +office--the power of audit; to draw warrants for all payments from the +treasury; to keep its books of financial transactions; to invest its +funds, and to borrow money--were embodied in the first act. The +powers thus granted infringed so largely upon the ordinary rights and +duties of a Treasurer, and so largely upon those which had been +theretofore exercised by the Treasurer of this State, that it is not +strange the then Treasurer, Gerardus Bancker, who had held the office +from April 1, 1778, resigned in disgust. His feeling was, as Lossing has +stated in his "Empire State," that the Comptroller was made "the highest +financial officer of the State, and the Treasurer merely a clerk to +him." + +[Illustration: John V. Henry (signature) + +_2d COMPTROLLER_] + +The early history of the office is an illustration of the cautious and +doubtful temper of the Legislatures of the time--so unlike those of the +present day. It is a well-known fact that while the Legislature of the +State met for the first time at Albany, in the same year, 1797, in which +the office of Comptroller was created, it was not then made a permanent +location for the Capitol; and that city was maintained for upwards of +twenty years as the Capitol simply by the adjournment of the Legislature +at the end of each session to meet again at the city of Albany. The +original act creating the Comptroller's office provided that it should +continue in force for a period of three years. On the 28th day of +February, 1800, eleven days after the office had expired by limitation, +chapter 11 of that year went into effect, which re-established the +office for another period of three years. Chapter 22 of the Laws of 1803 +extended the office, with the powers and duties then prescribed by law, +to February 28, 1805. By chapter 60 of the Laws of 1805, passed March +30th, the office was continued to February 28, 1808, and the acts of the +then Comptroller, between the 28th day of February, 1805, and the day +when this act went into effect, were ratified and confirmed. On March +11, 1808, chapter 34 of that year was passed, which continued the office +to February 28, 1812, with a like confirmatory clause. The act of +February 28, 1812, at last made permanent the Comptroller's office, with +the powers theretofore conferred upon it. By chapter 31 of the Laws of +1797 the office of Comptroller was to be located either in Albany or +Watervliet. + +The Council of Appointment chose for the first Comptroller Samuel Jones, +of Oyster Bay, Queens county. This was done by the casting vote of +Governor John Jay, the four senatorial members of the council being a +tie. He was a lawyer of high standing at the time of his appointment, a +Federalist in politics, and had held with credit a number of civil +positions. In 1775 he had been a member of the Provisional War +Committee, and had performed arduous services on that committee. He was +a member of the convention that adopted the Federal Constitution, and +voted for it. He was a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1778; a +Member of Assembly from Queens county in 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789 and +1790; a State Senator from the southern district from 1791 to 1799. + +The honors which he had won and worthily worn were supplemented in his +son who, as the Chancellor of this State (succeeding Nathan Sanford and +succeeded by Reuben H. Walworth), and as Chief Judge of the New York +Superior Court, won for himself enviable renown in our legal annals. +Comptroller Jones was the author of the "Act for the amendment of law +and better advancement of Justice," passed in 1789, which was a valuable +contribution and addition to our law. He was also the author of many +other of the best statutes placed upon our books in those early years. +He was distinguished throughout his career as an upright and useful man, +though he was sometimes accused of a little uncertainty in politics. He +is said to have replied to a question from Judge Spencer as to how he +managed to secure his elections from Queens county whatever party might +be in the ascendant, that "If my troops will not follow me, I follow my +troops." + +The Comptroller's salary was fixed by the act at $3,000, and this was to +include all clerk hire and ordinary expenses connected with the office. +In 1800 the compensation was reduced to $2,500, and in consequence of +this action Mr. Jones resigned the office. He had faithfully +performed its duties, and his resignation terminated his public career. + +[Illustration: Elisha Jenkins (signature) + +_3d COMPTROLLER_] + +During his term, in 1799, the Legislature prohibited the payment of any +money from the treasury except upon the warrant of the Comptroller, and +required all receipts to be countersigned by him, and this has remained +a part of the duties of the Comptroller from that time to this. + +On March 12, 1800, John V. Henry, an eminent Albany lawyer and a +Federalist, was chosen Comptroller. There are some still living who +know, at least by oral tradition, his great influence at the bar, and +Albanians have a just pride in his high reputation. He was a member of +the convention called in 1801 principally to settle the question whether +the Governor alone could nominate persons for appointment, or whether +that power also lay in the Senators composing the Council of +Appointment. He was a Member of Assembly from Albany county in 1800, +1801 and 1802. During his term, by chapter 61 of the Laws of 1801, the +Comptroller was made _ex-officio_ a member of the State Board of +Canvassers, and by chapter 69 of the same year he was made one of the +Commissioners of the Land Office. + +In 1801 the Legislature also directed the Comptroller to sell lands for +the payment of taxes due to the State, and this power, variously +modified and enlarged, still remains in him. Under it sales were held in +1808, 1811, 1812, 1814, 1815, 1821, 1826, 1830, 1834, 1839, 1843, 1848, +1853, 1859, 1866, 1871, 1877, 1881, 1885, 1890 and 1895. + +In 1800 the Legislature authorized the Comptroller to settle the credits +of the State with the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. +The moneys derived from this source formed the basis of the general +fund. The Comptroller was made the custodian of this fund with power to +invest it. The fund was augmented from sales of land and other sources +until, in 1814, it had reached the sum of $4,396,943.97. The income of +the fund together with the salt and auction duties, it was believed, in +the early part of the century, would be sufficient to maintain the +government. And from 1814 to 1842 no money was raised in this State by +direct taxation except during the years in which the Erie and Champlain +canals were in process of construction. To avoid a direct tax, however, +it had been found necessary from time to time, to draw on the principal +of the fund, and in 1834 it disappeared altogether and with it the +bright dream of our forefathers of a commonwealth without taxation. +Before the adoption of the Constitution of 1846 the fund had been +succeeded by a general fund debt of $5,992,840.82. This was increased +before the breaking out of the Civil War to a total of $6,505,684.37. +This was the high-water mark of the general fund debt if we do not +include in it the bounty debt of 1865. The Constitution of 1846 made +provision for a sinking fund to meet this debt and its management and +investment were intrusted to the Comptroller. In this way the last of +the debt was paid in 1878. + +[Illustration: Arch. McIntyre (signature) + +_4th COMPTROLLER_] + +Mr. Henry was removed from his office August 10, 1801, by reason of +political changes in the Council of Appointment, and he then and there +renounced politics forever. At the time of his death, in 1829, the +leading Albany paper of the period spoke of Mr. Henry as "the idol of +his friends; the ornament of his native city; the pride of the bar; the +eloquent defender of the oppressed." + +Henry's successor in office was Elisha Jenkins, a merchant and a +Democrat (or Republican as the party was then called) of Hudson, who +held the office from August 10, 1801, to March 26, 1806. Previous to his +appointment as Comptroller he had served as Member of Assembly from +Columbia county for the years 1795 to 1798. After his service as +Comptroller he served three different periods as Secretary of State, to +wit: From March 16, 1806, to February 16, 1807; from February 1, 1808, +to February 1, 1810, and from February 1, 1811, to February 23, 1813. +During his term as Comptroller there was a defalcation in the office +of Treasurer, then held by Robert McClellan, and a more rigid system of +testing the correctness of accounts was adopted, many features of which +still survive. There was not much legislation affecting the office +passed during the period of his incumbency; but the work of the office +would seem to have been done in a systematic and business-like manner. + +[Illustration: John Savage (signature) + +_5th COMPTROLLER_] + +Mr. Jenkins was succeeded by Archibald McIntyre, a Democrat of the +Clintonian order, of Albany, who, besides the reputation of a most +excellent officer, has left behind him the record of a term of service +in the office longer than that of any person who has filled it. He was +appointed on March 26, 1806, and continued in office until February 12, +1821. He had previously served as Member of Assembly from Montgomery +county for the years 1798, 1799, 1800, 1801, 1802 and 1804. The duties +of the office had so far increased in 1811 as to render necessary the +services of a deputy, and by chapter 78 his appointment was authorized, +with substantially the same limitations which now exist. He cannot sign +warrants so long as the Comptroller is within the State; nor can he act +on the various boards. Comptroller McIntyre in 1817, under legislative +authority, procured the aggregate valuation of the real estate in the +several towns and wards of the State. By chapter 262 of the Laws of 1817 +the Board of Commissioners of the Canal Fund was created, and the +Comptroller made, _ex-officio_, a member of that board. This act +contained a curious provision to the effect that a majority of the +Commissioners, with the Comptroller, constitutes a quorum. No quorum of +that board has ever been possible without the presence of the +Comptroller. + +This board, from that time to 1848, received and disbursed all canal +moneys, audited the canal accounts, and in general transacted the +financial business of the canal department. In 1848 the canal funds were +turned over to the Treasurer and made subject to the warrant of the +Canal Auditor. By his audit and warrant all accounts against the canals +were paid; the management of the canal debt and sinking fund remaining, +as before, in the Commissioners of the Canal Fund. In 1883 the duties +devolving upon the Canal Auditor were transferred to the Comptroller's +office. The majority of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund signed all +checks on canal account prior to 1848. Since 1883, the Commissioners of +the Canal Fund have had no duties to perform except to designate banks +for the deposit of canal funds, and, ordinarily, to supervise the +issuing of canal bonds. + +The first canal debt bonds were issued in 1817 under legislative +authority, and their disposition and the management of the sinking fund +which was provided for their payment were put in the hands of the +Commissioners of the Canal Fund. The amount of the debt that year was +$200,000. As the canal system was extended, and later when the canals +were enlarged, this debt was from time to time increased until in 1860 +it reached the sum of $27,107,321.28. From that time it continuously +decreased through the payments to, and the application of, the sinking +fund, until on the 1st day of October, 1893, the last of this, the last +bonded debt of the State, was paid. Something of financial history may +be learned from a study of the rates of interest paid on these loans to +the State. On the loan of 1817 the rate of interest was six per cent. +From 1820 to 1830 the highest rate was six per cent and the lowest, +five. From 1830 to 1840 a rate of five was sufficient. From 1840 to 1850 +the rate advanced, the lowest being six and the highest seven per cent, +the latter rate being in about 1842, the period of uncertainty as to the +State's financial policy. From 1850 to 1860 the rate again fell to five +and six per cent. In 1861 a small loan was made at seven. From 1870 to +1880 the rate was six per cent. This was the last of the old canal loan. +By vote of the people in 1895 a loan of $9,000,000 was authorized to be +used in the enlargement of the canals. The amounts thus far borrowed +under that authority have been at the rate of three per cent. + +[Illustration: W. L. Marcy (signature) + +_6th COMPTROLLER_] + +Perhaps the most notable circumstance of Comptroller McIntyre's term, +and certainly one of the most notable in the whole history of the +office, was his controversy with Daniel D. Tompkins. During the War of +1812 Governor Tompkins had been the agent both of the State and of the +National Government, and in this dual capacity he had received and +disbursed very large sums of money. For much of this money he had taken, +or could produce, no vouchers, and, consequently, in 1819 he stood upon +the Comptroller's books a debtor, if not a defaulter, to the State in +the large amount of $120,000. He claimed, and his friends claimed for +him, that he had honestly disbursed all the money that he had received, +and that the apparent deficit was due to his acknowledged +unbusiness-like methods, and in his failure to keep books of account, +and to take vouchers. He was then Vice-President of the United States, +and it was thought by the "Bucktail" Republicans that he was the only +man who, in the State election of 1820, could beat Governor Clinton for +re-election. This unsettled balance, which had been standing for several +years on the books of the Comptroller, was a serious obstacle to the +execution of their plan. Accordingly, the Legislature of 1819 passed an +act requiring the Comptroller to settle the residue of the accounts of +Governor Tompkins, and in the settlement to allow him the same premium +on the amount of money borrowed by him "on his own responsibility" as +was allowed others for like service; and further requiring the +Comptroller to credit the Governor with sums paid by him, legally, to +any person, and to call upon such persons to account for the money. +Contrary, it was said, to what had been understood by those who had been +instrumental in passing the act of 1819, Vice-President Tompkins, +instead of presenting a claim for premium merely sufficient to offset +the claim of the State against him, presented one for $250,000, and +supported this claim by opinions both of experts and lawyers. This bill +furnishes a commentary on the credit of the State in the perilous times +of the War of 1812, or perhaps upon the value of the services of +financial agents at that time. The brokerage charged by Governor +Tompkins was at the rate of twenty-five per cent. The Comptroller, +feeling that this was not the legislative intent, and ever watchful as +he was of the State's interests, declined to allow the claim, on the +ground that the Governor had not borrowed the money "on his own +responsibility," but on the joint responsibility of the State and +himself. The Comptroller offered to submit the soundness of his position +to the Judges of the Supreme Court, and to join with the Judges, if it +was desired, the Chancellor or the Attorney-General. But this Mr. +Tompkins declined on the ground that all of these proposed referees were +politically hostile to him. Correspondence relating to the matter, and +marked by great bitterness of tone, took place between these eminent +officials; and in this the Comptroller showed not only a familiarity +with accounts, but a facility with the pen, which was a surprise to +those who had not known him intimately. This matter occupied much of the +attention of the Legislature for two years, and gave rise to protracted +and animated debates, and there is no doubt that it entered largely into +the defeat of Governor Tompkins by Clinton in 1820. The controversy was +finally settled under an act of the Legislature of 1820, which directed +the Comptroller to balance the accounts upon the filing of a release +from Governor Tompkins of all his claims against the State. It had +required no small amount of courage for Comptroller McIntyre to engage +in a trial of strength with this idol of the State. Daniel D. Tompkins +was four times elected Governor of the State, and twice elected +Vice-President. He was a man of great personal magnetism; with large +abilities, and he held a place in the affections of the people of +this State which has scarcely been equaled by any of our citizens +since his time. + +[Illustration: Silas Wright Jr (signature) + +_7th COMPTROLLER_] + +[Illustration: A. C. Flagg (signature) + +_8th COMPTROLLER_] + +At no time in the history of the State has the Comptroller's office been +more ably filled, and occupied a more prominent position, than during +the administration of Archibald McIntyre. He had the unbounded +confidence of all, and although there were several Councils of +Appointment during his term of service which were hostile to him, no one +seems to have thought of removing him. He was regarded as a public +servant whose services could not well be spared to the State. He was +held in a measure responsible for the defeat of Governor Tompkins, and, +although Clinton was elected, the Legislature and the Council of +Appointment were decidedly hostile both to Clinton and to him, and on +February 12, 1821, Mr. McIntyre was removed, and John Savage appointed +in his place. His removal would have created far greater dissatisfaction +than it did, although the dissatisfaction was considerable, had not his +successor been a man of concededly great ability. Mr. McIntyre was, the +year of his removal, nominated as the Clintonian candidate for Senator +from the middle district, and, although strenuous efforts were made to +defeat him, he was elected by a substantial majority. + +In 1822 he was, with John B. Yates, appointed agent for the State +lotteries. The Constitution of 1821 had forbidden any further lotteries +within the State, and authorized the Legislature to pass laws preventing +the sale of tickets except in the lotteries already established by law. +These were mostly instituted under the law of 1814 for the purpose of +aiding literary institutions. By the act appointing him, the agents were +invested with sole authority to issue and sell all lottery tickets +which, for the future, were to be issued to pay some hundreds of +thousands of dollars due various institutions. The legislative intent +was carried out by the agents to the satisfaction of the beneficiaries, +and also with satisfactory pecuniary results to the agents themselves. +Upon his retirement from his agency Mr. McIntyre was able to withdraw +both from politics and business. + +One would hardly expect to find in the books of account in the +Comptroller's office anything in the nature of a history of morals, but +the receipts from various lotteries forms a no inconsiderable part of +the receipts of the State for a number of years. This opens up a view +which almost shocks modern sensibility. Lotteries were not only +authorized by the State, but they were in the main devoted to beneficent +purposes. Union College owes no inconsiderable part of her early +usefulness to money derived from State lotteries. Indeed, the +institution of State lotteries in New York may almost be attributed to +the efforts of that truly great and good man, the Rev. Dr. Eliphalet +Nott. The first moneys ever appropriated by New York for the purposes of +free schools were raised by lottery. + +John Savage, of Salem, a lawyer, and a Democrat of the "Bucktail" stamp, +was the fifth Comptroller, and at the time of his appointment he was +not new to public life. He had been district attorney of the fourth +district from 1806 to 1811, and again from 1812 to 1813; Member of +Assembly from Washington county in 1814, and Member of the Fourteenth +and Fifteenth Congresses. He rounded out his official career with eight +years (from 1823 to 1831) of honored service as Chief Justice of the +Supreme Court. As a public official it has been said that "he exhibited +candor, industry, caution and excellent judgment." No higher qualities +can be given to any official. Later in life the positions of Chancellor +and Treasurer of the United States were offered to him but declined. +During his term of office there was no substantial change or enlargement +of the powers and duties of the office, aside from the power given to +invest money belonging to the common school fund. The common school fund +had its origin in 1805, and was, as the determination for free schools +became more manifest, an application to a school system of the Utopian +vision of the makers of the State, who sought to pay all the expenses +of maintaining the government by interest from its invested funds. The +common school fund has, unlike the general fund, steadily increased. By +the act of 1805 the proceeds of the first 500,000 acres of vacant and +unappropriated land sold by the Surveyor-General were appropriated as a +permanent fund for the support of common schools. Other sources of +revenue were from time to time turned into this fund, until from its +small beginning of $58,757.24 in 1805, it has now productive investments +aggregating $4,448,140.77. It is a noteworthy fact that no direct tax +for school purposes was laid by the State until 1853, the interest of +the fund alone being appropriated. How small a portion the income plays +in maintaining the schools of the State to-day can be seen in the fact +that the State for the year 1896 appropriated for educational purposes +$4,970,134.53, and this is not a quarter of the amount expended in the +State for the purpose of free schools, when the local contributions are +taken into account. Judge Savage was the last Comptroller who owed his +selection to the Council of Appointment. + +[Illustration: Bates Cooke (signature) + +_9th COMPTROLLER_] + +The Constitutional Convention of 1821, in deference to strong public +demand, had abolished that disgraceful anomaly, and by section 6 of +article 4 had provided that "the Secretary of State, Comptroller, +Treasurer, Attorney-General, Surveyor-General and Commissioner-General +shall be appointed as follows: The Senate and Assembly shall each openly +nominate one person for the said offices respectively; after which they +shall meet again, and if they shall agree in their nominations the +person so nominated shall be appointed to the office for which he shall +be nominated. If they shall disagree, the appointment shall be made by +the joint ballot of the Senators and Members of Assembly. The Secretary +of State, Comptroller, Treasurer, Attorney-General, Surveyor-General and +Commissioner-General shall hold their office for three years, unless +sooner removed by concurrent resolution of the Senate and Assembly." + +[Illustration: John A. Collier (signature) + +_10th COMPTROLLER_] + +The Legislature, on the 13th day of February, 1823, elected, in the +manner provided by law, William L. Marcy, a lawyer and a Democrat, of +Albany, to succeed Savage. There was a contest in the caucus over his +nomination, his opponent being Genl. James Tallmadge, a man of +conspicuous ability and influence in the Senate. The power of Mr. Van +Buren, however, turned the scale in Mr. Marcy's favor. The only public +position which he had previously held was Adjutant-General, but from +that time on his name is closely linked with the history of the State +and Union. He was Comptroller for six years, Judge of the Supreme Court +for two years, and United States Senator for two years. He was three +times elected Governor, and defeated in his fourth run for that office +by William H. Seward. He was appointed Secretary of War by President +Polk in 1845, and Secretary of State by President Pierce in 1853. He had +for years, under Mr. Van Buren, been a leader of that most influential +political body which has become known to history as the "Albany +Regency." The remaining members are understood to have been at that time +Silas Wright, Azariah C. Flagg, Edwin Croswell, John A. Dix, James +Porter and Benjamin Knower. The records of the State show that these +men, while building up a compact and powerful political organization, +did not neglect their own personal and political advancement. + +One of the vouchers in the Comptroller's office played a prominent part +in the last of Mr. Marcy's gubernatorial campaigns--a circumstance +which, Thurlow Weed says, Mr. Marcy pronounced the most disagreeable of +his entire public career. While serving as Supreme Court Judge, and on +Circuit in Niagara county, he included in his bill of expenses an item +as follows: "For mending my pantaloons, 50c." In the Seward campaign +Thurlow Weed, then the editor of the Albany _Evening Journal_, learned +of this fact and published the story. It was taken up by the press +generally throughout the State, and Mr. Marcy, with all his fine +organization and numberless friends, found himself for the time being, +like Spain's chivalry, "laughed away." + +[Illustration: Millard Fillmore (signature) + +_11th COMPTROLLER_] + +The item, however, exhibits the scrupulous exactness of the man. Instead +of presenting the bill with an indefinite amount of incidentals, he +itemized it thus particularly to his own disadvantage; but, as Mr. Weed +afterward admitted, it was a credit to his honesty. + +It was during Mr. Marcy's term that much of the work on the Erie canal +was done, and the careful scrutiny which the bills for this work +received was largely instrumental in keeping the cost within the +estimates. He took ground as chief financial officer of the State +against the construction of the Chenango and Genesee Valley canals, for +the reason that these canals would not, in his judgment, pay the +expenses of maintenance and the interest on the debt which would be +incurred in their construction. While friends of the measures endeavored +to convince the Legislature that the Comptroller was wrong in his +calculation, the result, when these works were finally completed, fully +justified the Comptroller's view. As Governor he made some friends, and +more enemies, by adhering to the same careful course he had maintained +as Comptroller. In 1826 the Legislature created the Canal Board, and the +Comptroller was made _ex-officio_ a member of it, and he has continued +to act as such member down to the present. + +On the 27th day of January, 1829, the Legislature elected as the +successor of Mr. Marcy a man who, in his time, made a great impression +upon State and National politics--Silas Wright, of Canton, a lawyer and +a Regency Democrat. He had previously been Surrogate of St. Lawrence +county, State Senator from the fourth district for the years 1824, 1825, +1826 and 1827, and a Member of the Twentieth and Twenty-first +Congresses. In the latter position he had achieved considerable +reputation. After his five years' service as Comptroller he held with +high honor, for nearly twelve years, the position of United States +Senator. During the term of Mr. Van Buren as President he was considered +to voice the administration in his public utterances. He served +faithfully and intelligently upon some of the most important committees. +He resigned to take the office of Governor, which office he held in 1845 +and 1846, and was defeated for re-election by John Young in November, +1846. Mr. Wright continued the careful and conservative policy of his +predecessor as to expenditures. He took strong ground against the +numerous and extensive raids on the treasury which were then organized. +His reports were always plain, business-like papers, which set out in +intelligible language the consequences of the rapidly-increasing +expenses. Mr. Wright in many ways was a remarkable man. The public +positions which he held were varied, and it was a great test of his +adaptability to be able to fill the duties of these various positions +with much more than ordinary success. In 1831 the financial law of the +State was revised, and the provisions relating to the powers and duties +of the Comptroller were codified and arranged. + +[Illustration: W. Hunt (signature) + +_12th COMPTROLLER_] + +Upon his election as United States Senator Mr. Wright resigned and was +succeeded by Azariah C. Flagg, of Plattsburgh, a lawyer and a Regency +Democrat, who was elected on January 11, 1834. He had been a Member of +Assembly from Clinton county in 1823 and 1824, and held the office of +Secretary of State from 1826 to 1833. He had run counter to public +opinion in 1823 as the leader of the Assembly opposition to the +Electoral law--a law designed to give to the people directly the power +of chosing the presidential electors, instead of leaving that power +vested in the Legislature, as had been the law theretofore. The Albany +Regency had determined to prevent any change, and succeeded in warding +off legislative action. The measure, however, met the cordial approval +of the people, and that fact, together with the removal of Governor +Clinton as Canal Commissioner--a position in which his uncompensated +services had been of the greatest value--swept Clinton, whose political +fortunes then seemed at their lowest ebb, triumphantly into the +gubernatorial chair. But it was a principle of the Albany Regency, and +of Martin Van Buren, then at its head, never to forget a man who had +fallen or suffered in their service; and it was in reward for Mr. +Flagg's unpopular opposition to the Electoral bill that in 1826 he was +chosen Secretary of State. Mr. Flagg has the distinction of having +served longer as Comptroller than any other incumbent of the office, +with the exception of Archibald McIntyre. He held the office from +January 11, 1834, to February 4, 1839, and again from February 7, 1842, +to November 7, 1847. During his first term he was a member of the +commission for the erection of the State Hall, and that building still +stands as a monument to the Commission's good judgment in architecture, +and in the adaptation of means to an end. Upon the completion of the +State Hall the old State Hall, corner of Lodge and State streets, was +sold by the Commission. By chapters 2 and 150 of the Laws of 1837 the +Comptroller was made the custodian of moneys received from the United +States, since known as the United States Deposit Fund. Theoretically +this money was not given to the several States, but was to be subject to +repayment whenever called for. The National Government will hardly, at +this late day, call for these moneys. If it did not feel compelled to do +so in the trying financial straits of the war it is not likely that it +will do so in times of peace. But these moneys have always been kept as +a separate fund, substantially as required by the act of 1837, and the +principal, through all changes of, and losses from, investment, has been +kept intact. + +[Illustration: P C Fuller (signature) + +_13th COMPTROLLER_] + +By chapter 260 of the Laws of 1838 the Comptroller, to guard against +counterfeiting, was authorized and required to have engraved and printed +in the best manner, circulating notes to be issued to the incorporated +banks of the State, and to countersign the same; and a system was +inaugurated for the deposit of securities in the Comptroller's office +which should be a guaranty for the notes issued by the banks--a system +very similar to that later adopted by the United States for National +banks. One feature which would be regarded as a most unwise one to-day +formed a part of this plan; the banks were authorized to deposit +one-half the security in bonds and mortgages. The bill also provided +that banking associations should file with the Comptroller a semi-annual +report of the transactions of the bank. This was practically the +inauguration of the supervision of the banks, which was later +transferred to the Banking Department. The Legislature had, in 1829, at +the time of the creation of the safety fund, authorized the appointment +of three Bank Commissioners, whose duty it was to visit the banks, +examine their condition, and report to the Legislature. The office of +Bank Commissioner was abolished in 1843, and the power of supervision +possessed by them was then transferred to the Comptroller, and he +continued to retain that power until 1851, when the Banking Department +was created. It was during Mr. Flagg's first term that the great +financial panic of 1837 took place, and the State's financial condition +at that time was not all that might be desired. There was a large debt, +mostly incurred in the construction of canals. The revenues had very +much decreased, and a new way of raising funds must be used to meet the +liabilities of the State and maintain her credit. Matters financial in +the State went from bad to worse. In 1842, after long debate, the +Legislature passed an act authorizing the laying of a tax of one mill +upon every dollar of real and personal property in the State, and +pledging the revenues of the State for the payment of its liabilities, +and suspending all public work, except where great loss would come to +the State by such suspension. In this manner the credit of the State was +made secure and its obligations met. This act was prepared and advocated +by Mr. Flagg. The significance of this legislation is found largely +in the fact that from 1826 to 1842 no State tax for general purposes had +been required. + +[Illustration: J. C. Wright (signature) + +_14th COMPTROLLER_] + +The long lease of power which the Democrats had held in this State was +broken in the fall of 1838 by the combined efforts of the Whigs and +Anti-Masons, and, accordingly, on the 4th of January, 1839, Mr. Flagg +was removed, and Bates Cook, of Lewiston, a lawyer and an Anti-Mason was +chosen by the Legislature in his place. Mr. Cook's only previous +official service of note had been as Member of the Twenty-second +Congress. His appointment was largely due to the influence and +representations of William H. Seward, then the Governor, and Thurlow +Weed. He had been associated with these gentlemen in the prosecution of +the abductors of William Morgan, and, like Mr. Seward and Mr. Fillmore, +received his political start from Anti-Masonic influence. Mr. Cook soon +had an opportunity to show Mr. Weed his appreciation of the favor done +him. Chapter 1 of the Laws of 1840 authorized the Comptroller and +Secretary of State to enter into a contract with Thurlow Weed to do the +printing for the Legislature, executive offices and various boards, at +prices not exceeding ordinary prices in Albany. + +This seems to have been the first time these officers were intrusted +with this responsibility, and it was not until 1846 that the general +power was definitely conferred upon them. Subsequent legislation has +added to the printing board then created the Attorney-General, so far as +legislative printing is concerned; but as to department printing, the +Secretary of State and the Comptroller are still clothed with the +authority of letting the contract. + +By chapter 295 of the Laws of 1840 the Comptroller was assigned quarters +in the State Hall, together with the other State officers, and that +building was made the headquarters of the Canal Board, and there both +still remain, although the Comptroller, from time to time, as the needs +have compelled, has taken to himself more rooms, so that his offices +now occupy the entire first floor of the building. + +[Illustration: J M Cook (signature) + +_15th COMPTROLLER_] + +On January 27, 1841, the Legislature elected John A. Collier, of +Binghamton, a leading lawyer and an Anti-Mason, to succeed Bates Cook. +He had previously served as District Attorney of Broome county from June +11, 1818, to February 22, 1822, and had served his district in the +Twenty-second Congress. After his retirement from the office of +Comptroller he was appointed, with Chancellor Walworth, to codify the +laws, but declined to serve. This was a high tribute to his ability. + +During 1841 the Comptroller's office was examined by a legislative +committee, to ascertain if warrants had been drawn in conformity with +the law, and the funds properly disbursed. The office was found able to +stand the fire of a rigid investigation. + +Mr. Collier had been a Federalist and a Clintonian, but it was as an +Anti-Mason that he was elected both to Congress and as Comptroller. He, +too, was largely indebted for his appointment as Comptroller to the +potent influence of Thurlow Weed. The administration was a short but +efficient one, and Mr. Collier proved himself through life an able and +discreet man. + +The Legislature, which for several years had been Whig, in 1842 became +Democratic, so that by concurrent resolution, on February seventh they +were enabled to remove John A. Collier and re-appoint Azariah C. Flagg. +During his second term Mr. Flagg performed the multiplying duties of the +office with his usual fidelity, and to the satisfaction of the people of +the State. There seems to have been no important enlargement of the +duties of the office during this period. By various statutes, passed +prior to the Constitution of 1846, the State had loaned its credit to a +number of corporations, mostly railroad, until, in 1845, the State debt +thus incurred, called the "contingent debt," amounted to $5,235,700. +Provision was made for a sinking fund, and the management of this fund +was placed with the Comptroller. Corporations have no souls, and, +consequently, we find that of the credit thus loaned the State lost +$3,665,700. From the additions to and accumulations of the sinking fund, +the last of the contingent debt was extinguished in 1877. + +[Illustration: L. Burrows (signature) + +_16th COMPTROLLER_] + +By chapter 350 of the Laws of 1847, passed during his term, the +Comptroller was required to make a report of the fiscal year before the +close of the calendar year, and to present the same to the Legislature +shortly after the commencement of its session. + +But at this point a new method of chosing a Comptroller was introduced +in the organic law. Section 1 of article 5 of the Constitution of 1846 +provides that "The Secretary of State, Comptroller, Treasurer and +Attorney-General shall be chosen at a general election, and shall hold +their offices for two years." The constitutional provision was +supplemented by chapter 240 of the Laws of 1846. The first man elected +by the people to the office was Millard Fillmore, of Buffalo, an able +lawyer and a Whig. He had been a Member of Assembly from Buffalo in +1829, 1830 and 1831, and a Member from his district to the Twenty-third, +Twenty-fifth, Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh Congresses. During his +term as Comptroller he was nominated and elected Vice-President on the +ticket with Zachary Taylor, and upon the latter's death, on July 9, +1850, he succeeded to the Presidency. As President he is, perhaps, more +distinguished as the signer of the "Fugitive Slave Law" than for any +other one thing. He was elected Comptroller and Vice-President as a +Whig, but by the signing of that obnoxious measure he alienated very +many of his old Whig associates. He was, however, a clean, able man. In +politics he was thought by many to have been a favorite of fortune. Some +one of his acquaintances is said to have remarked, at the time of his +election as Vice-President, that he felt sorry for General Taylor, +because the General never could live out his term against Fillmore's +luck. Mr. Fillmore resigned the office of Comptroller on the 17th of +February, 1849, to assume the duties of Vice-President. + +The Legislature appointed Washington Hunt, a lawyer of prominence and a +Whig, of Lockport, to succeed him. Mr. Hunt had been County Judge of +Niagara county from 1836 to 1841, and had been a member of the +Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth Congresses. He was nominated +and elected Comptroller in the fall of 1849. In 1850 he was elected +Governor over Horatio Seymour, but in 1852 he was in turn defeated in +his run for the second term by Seymour. He made an excellent record as +Governor during the years 1851 and 1852. It was upon Mr. Hunt's +recommendation that the duties of supervising and superintending the +banking business of the State was transferred to the Banking Department, +specially created for the purpose. He felt that a greater burden of +responsibility was being imposed upon the office of Comptroller than +could be satisfactorily sustained. This is one of the rare +illustrations of a desire to surrender power. But what relief was gained +by the transfer of the supervision of the banks was replaced by the duty +which was imposed of superintending the business of insurance in this +State. + +All insurance companies, prior to 1846, had been incorporated by special +acts, but the Constitution of that year prohibited the creation of such +corporations, except under general laws. In 1849 the Legislature passed +a general law for the incorporation of insurance companies. By the terms +of the act the duty of organizing and regulating insurance companies in +this State, both domestic and foreign, was conferred upon the +Comptroller. This was the first State supervision of insurance. The duty +remained with the Comptroller until January 1, 1860, when the act +creating the Department of Insurance went into effect. + +The Comptroller's office feels proud of its two healthy and useful +children--the Banking Department and the Insurance Department, which +have been efficiently serving the State and protecting the interests +of its citizens for many years, and it ventures to believe that the +early tuition that they received from the parent department helped to +form their habits and prepare them for their career. + +[Illustration: S E Church (signature) + +_17th COMPTROLLER_] + +Mr. Hunt resigned the Comptrollership December 18, 1850, two weeks +before he was to enter upon his duties as Governor, and Philo C. Fuller, +a Whig, of Geneseo, was appointed in his place. Mr. Fuller had, in early +life, been a clerk in the land office of Mr. James Wadsworth. Thurlow +Weed met him at that time and recognized in him abilities of a high +order. It was probably at Mr. Weed's suggestion that he first entered +public life; it was certainly upon Mr. Weed's recommendation that he was +appointed Comptroller. It was one of the great secrets of Thurlow Weed's +long retention of political power that whenever he saw capability he +sought, and, to use a ranchman's expression, "corralled it." Mr. Fuller +was Member of Assembly from Livingston county in 1829 and 1830, State +Senator in 1831 and 1832, and Member of the Twenty-third and +Twenty-fourth Congresses. Later he moved to Michigan, and, being elected +to the Legislature, he was chosen Speaker. He was appointed Assistant +Postmaster-General in the Harrison administration, but, being unwilling +to follow President Tyler into the Democratic camp, he resigned, and +returned to New York. He performed the duties of his office of +Comptroller with ability, although doubt of his capacity was felt at the +time of his appointment. + +For the forty years from 1840 to 1880 the Comptroller's office was one +of difficulty. During the first half of that period there was seldom a +year when the expenditures did not exceed the appropriations, and when +the Comptroller was not obliged to report a deficit at the end of the +year. There was also during that same period a rapidly-increasing canal +debt, and the Comptroller was in duty bound to find a market for bonds +and the means to meet the interest when it became due. In the latter +half of this period it was the Comptroller's duty to see that the +means were at hand to pay the principal of this and other bonded debts, +and the increased expenditures caused by the war. + +[Illustration: Robert Denniston (signature) + +_18th COMPTROLLER_] + +Mr. Fuller was succeeded January 1, 1852, by John C. Wright, a Democrat +and lawyer, of Schenectady. He had been County Judge of Schoharie county +from 1833 to 1838, and State Senator from the third district in 1843, +1844, 1845 and 1846. He was an opponent of the Albany Regency during his +senatorial career. He was a ready debater but of impulsive temper, and +at one time engaged in a personal rencounter with Colonel Young on the +floor of the Senate chamber. His administration was unmarked by any +peculiar enlargement of the official power, or by distinguished +executive ability. That things run so smoothly that no attention is +attracted is oftentimes strong evidence of a successful working +machinery. By an act of the Legislature of 1851 the Comptroller was +authorized to borrow three millions per year for three years for the +completion of the canal enlargement. + +Mr. Wright served one term, and was succeeded, January 1, 1854, by James +M. Cook, a lawyer and a Whig, of Ballston. Mr. Cook was a member of the +Constitutional Convention of 1846, Senator from the thirteenth district +for 1848, 1849, 1850 and 1851, and from the fifteenth district in 1864 +and 1865. He served as State Treasurer during the years 1852 and 1853, +and was Bank Superintendent from January 30, 1856, to January 11, 1861. +He was thus continuously in the service of the State from 1848 to 1861, +a period of thirteen years. In 1854 the Comptroller was authorized to +appoint three commissioners to investigate the State prisons and report +on their financial condition, and also upon such laws as they deemed +proper for their better regulation. Under this abuses were corrected, +and the Comptroller was given closer supervision of the prisons. + +For a short time in 1858 the Whig leaders had under favorable +consideration the nomination of Mr. Cook for Governor, but +circumstances forced a change, and E. D. Morgan was nominated and +elected. + +[Illustration: L. Robinson (signature) + +_19th COMPTROLLER_] + +On January 1, 1856, Lorenzo Burrows, a banker and an "American" or "Know +Nothing," of Albion, became Comptroller. He had been a member of the +Thirty-first and Thirty-second Congresses. He later served as Regent of +the University by appointment made February 17, 1858, and in November, +1858, was one of the candidates of the "American party" for Governor +against E. D. Morgan. To the time of his death, many years afterward, he +never failed to make at least one visit yearly to the Comptroller's +office, and always maintained a lively interest in its affairs. + +After one term of service Mr. Burrows was succeeded by Sanford E. +Church, a lawyer and a Democrat, also of Albion. Mr. Church had been a +Member of Assembly from Orleans county in 1842; District Attorney of the +same county from 1846 to 1850; Lieutenant-Governor from 1850 to 1854. +He ran for re-election as Comptroller in 1859 and was defeated, and +again in 1863 and was also defeated. He was elected one of the +Delegates-at-Large to the Constitutional Convention in 1867, and was +Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals from May, 1870, to May 20, 1880, +when he died. In all these various positions Mr. Church showed a broad, +liberal spirit, and great mental force. His reports as Comptroller are +valuable State papers, expressed in clear, strong and forcible language. +It is sufficient to say of Judge Church, that, as Comptroller, he +brought the same care, attention and strong mental grasp to his duties +that afterward won for him eminence and fame as Chief Judge of our +highest court. + +Robert Denniston, a gentleman farmer and Republican, of Salisbury's +Mills, became Comptroller January 1, 1860, having been elected at the +November election of 1859 over Sanford E. Church. He had been +Assemblyman from Orange county in 1845, and Senator from the second +district in 1841, 1842, 1843, 1844, 1845, 1846 and 1847, and had been an +unsuccessful candidate against Mr. Church for the office of Comptroller +in November, 1857. He was thus Comptroller in the first year of the war, +at the inauguration of high taxes and the large expenditures of that +period. His administration was wise and conservative. + +On January 1, 1862, Lucius Robinson, an able lawyer of Elmira, assumed +the duties of the office. Mr. Robinson was a Democrat, but at the +breaking out of the war he was strongly for the Union cause, and it was +on the Union ticket that he was elected Comptroller, and he was +re-elected on the same ticket in 1863. At the close of the war, he +resumed his place in the Democratic party, from which he had never been +fully estranged. He ran as a Democrat against Thomas Hillhouse, in 1865, +and was beaten. He had been District Attorney of Greene county from 1837 +to 1839, and Member of Assembly from Chemung county in 1860 and 1861. He +was re-elected Comptroller in November, 1863, and again in November, +1875. He was a member of the Constitutional Commission of 1872, Governor +of this State for the years 1877, 1878 and 1879, and defeated for +re-election in November, 1879, by Alonzo B. Cornell. He was Comptroller +during the dark days of our Civil War. At no period, however, of its +history was the work of the office more carefully managed. For the six +years from 1860 to 1866, the canal and general fund debts were reduced +$8,000,000. In the four years of the war, the State expenditures for +arms, bounties, clothing, equipments and various military purposes were +upwards of $20,000,000. To meet these large and abnormal expenses, +required of the Comptroller resourceful ability. When specie was at a +high premium in 1863 and 1864, Mr. Robinson earnestly recommended the +payment of the State's bonded debt, both principal and interest, in +specie. The Legislature, however, disregarded the recommendation. There +was precedent in the office for such a course. Comptroller Flagg, upon +the suspension of specie payment in 1837, made good the difference +between the depreciated currency and coin. Comptroller Allen followed +the lead of Mr. Robinson, and urged the payment of these debts in coin. +This was not done, however, until 1870, when the State went into the +open market and bought coin to pay the interest on its bonds, and +continued this policy until the resumption of specie payment in 1879. +This course, however, was not pursued with reference to the bounty debt. +In 1865, against the advice and almost protest of the Comptroller, the +Legislature assumed the bounty debt of the various counties of the +State, and for that purpose it became necessary for the State to issue +its bonds to the amount of $27,644,000. The act authorizing the creation +of the debt provided for a sinking fund, and the managing of this fund +and the issuing of the bonds was given to the Comptroller. This debt was +extinguished year by year until it disappeared from the Comptroller's +books in 1877. It was during Mr. Robinson's term, in 1863, that $66,000 +were appropriated to purchase the lands adjoining the then Capitol, and +bounded by State, Hawk and Congress streets. This was probably the +first money expended on "That lofty pile where senates dictate laws." + +[Illustration: Tho Hillhouse (signature) + +_20th COMPTROLLER_] + +In 1862, the Legislature placed an item in the appropriation bill which +still remains law. It provides that the Comptroller shall not draw his +warrant, except for salaries and regular expenses, until the person +entitled to the money shall present a detailed account, verified by +affidavit as to services; and if for traveling expenses, a detailed +account specifying the distance and places from and to which, and +receipted vouchers for all disbursements. By chapter 419 of the Laws of +1864, the officers of all hospitals, orphan asylums, benevolent +associations, educational and charitable institutions were required to +report to the Comptroller their financial condition, with their receipts +and disbursements. The Comptroller was, by concurrent resolution of the +Legislature, the same year appointed, with the Governor and the +Secretary of State, to take action properly to receive the returning +veterans, and for the health of the recruits. Mr. Robinson was a man of +great executive force, strict honesty, and with the courage of his +convictions. + +He was succeeded by Thomas Hillhouse on the 1st of January, 1866, Mr. +Hillhouse having been elected in November, 1865. He was a gentleman +farmer and a Republican from Geneva, and had been Senator from the +twenty-sixth district in 1860 and 1861, and Adjutant-General of the +State from August 19, 1861, to January 1, 1863. He still survives as the +honored president of the Metropolitan Trust Company, of New York. +Thurlow Weed in his autobiography says: "For my direct responsibility in +the selection of Bates Cook, John A. Collier, Millard Fillmore, +Washington Hunt, Philo C. Fuller, James M. Cook, Robert Denniston and +Thomas Hillhouse, I look back with pardonable pride, for in few ways +could better service have been rendered to the State and people." Mr. +Hillhouse certainly deserved the confidence reposed in him. He was +careful, conservative and able. + +On January 1, 1868, Mr. Hillhouse gave way to William F. Allen, a +distinguished lawyer and a Democrat, of Oswego. Mr. Allen served as +Member of Assembly from Oswego in 1843 and 1844, and was appointed +United States District Attorney in 1845, and was appointed Judge of the +Supreme Court in the fifth district in 1847, and elected to the same +position in the fall election of 1855. He was re-elected Comptroller in +November, 1869, but resigned June 14, 1870, to accept an appointment as +Judge of the Court of Appeals. This latter place he held with great +distinction until his death, in June, 1878. In 1864 he was the slated +Democratic candidate for Governor. Horatio Seymour was then Governor, +and Mr. Allen's friends at least understood that Mr. Seymour wished a +renomination as a compliment, but would decline. To their consternation, +however, Mr. Seymour came before the convention, thanked its members for +the honor done him, and accepted. It was during Mr. Allen's +administration that the Comptroller was authorized to appoint an +agent to examine into the reports submitted to him by the various +charitable institutions. By chapter 281 of the Laws of 1870, the +Comptroller was made, _ex-officio_, a member of the State Commission of +Public Charities. Judge Allen was distinguished by talents of the +highest order, and his long public career was a useful one to the State. + +[Illustration: W F Allen (signature) + +_21st COMPTROLLER_] + +It is an interesting political fact that in the campaign of 1869 Judge +Allen had as his opponent in the run for Comptroller Horace Greeley. Mr. +Greeley's election was earnestly opposed by many of the leading +Republicans of the State. A letter of Thurlow Weed was made public, in +which he appealed very strongly to the people of the State to vote +against Mr. Greeley. He based his opposition quite largely upon the fact +that Mr. Greeley's time would have to be divided between his editorial +duties in New York and the Comptroller's office in Albany. He then went +on to say: "The office of Comptroller is most laborious and responsible. +I have known its incumbents for considerably more than half a century. +Among them were Archibald McIntyre, John Savage, William L. Marcy, Silas +Wright, Jr., Azariah C. Flagg, John A. Collier, Washington Hunt, Philo +A. Fuller, James M. Cook, Thos. Hillhouse and others, distinguished for +ability and industry, not one of whom have attempted to attend to any +other business, and all of whom found constant and full occupation, +physical and mental, in the discharge of their public duties. Without +regard to other reasons for withholding my vote from Mr. Greeley, I +consider those which I have stated sufficient. In his opponent, William +F. Allen, I found a capable and enlightened man, with some experience, +much industry and peculiar fitness for the duties of the office. I have +known him first, as an able and useful member of our Legislature, and +next as an eminently upright judge." + +Upon the resignation of Judge Allen, Asher P. Nichols, a lawyer and +Democrat, of Buffalo, was appointed, and, in the fall of the same +year, 1870, he was elected to fill the unexpired term. He had been +previously a State Senator from the thirty-first district in 1868 and +1869. He ran for the office of Comptroller in 1871 and again in 1873, +and was defeated both times by Nelson K. Hopkins. Mr. Nichols was a man +of ability, who commanded the highest respect of those who knew him. He +was distinguished somewhat for an old-time formal courtesy of manner. It +is fair to Mr. Nichols to say that the deficiency in the treasury which +Mr. Hopkins found upon his advent was not due to him, or to lack of +recommendations on his part, but rather to the attempt of the Tweed +_regime_ in the Legislature to make a tax rate that would continue them +in power. "Among the faithless, faithful only he." + +[Illustration: A. P. Nichols (signature) + +_22d COMPTROLLER_] + +Mr. Hopkins was a lawyer and a Republican from Buffalo, and he entered +upon the discharge of the duties of the office on January 1, 1872, and +continued therein for four years. This was the beginning and the end of +his career in State politics, but in those four years he left a record +of splendid and faithful work. He found upon his entry into office that +there had been for several years a growing deficiency in the general +fund. In 1869 the excess of appropriations over receipts was +$1,493,181.28; in 1870, $2,355,927.40; in 1871, $2,748,595.56; in 1872, +$1,785,762.97; in 1873, $254,253.53; making for the five years an +aggregate deficiency of $8,637,720.74. + +The money to the extent of this deficiency had been supplied to the +treasury by using the moneys from the bounty debt sinking fund. Heroic +treatment was necessary, so disregarding political effect Mr. Hopkins +advocated and secured the adoption of the highest tax rate in the +history of the State, to wit, nine and three-eighths mills on the +dollar, and three and one-half mills of this amount went to make up the +deficiency. In this way the bounty debt sinking fund was again made +good. In 1873 the Comptroller was given power to examine into the +affairs of the prisons, with the power of a court of record to +subpoena witnesses, etc., and the same year he was authorized in person, +or by agent, to visit the various State institutions and examine their +books, papers and vouchers, both of which powers are still inherent in +the Comptroller's office. The same year he was authorized to set aside +cancellations of tax titles made by him whenever it appeared that fraud, +misrepresentation or the suppression of a fact, or a mistake of fact, +had induced the cancellation. This power, with slight modification, +still remains. + +[Illustration: N K Hopkins (signature) + +_23d COMPTROLLER_] + +During Mr. Hopkins' four years of service the bounty debt was reduced +$14,401,700, and he was able to congratulate the Legislature and the +people of the State at the close of his term on the prospect of a +substantial reduction of tax. + +On the 1st of January, 1876, Lucius Robinson again assumed the office of +Comptroller, which he held one year. He had defeated in the election the +November preceding Francis E. Spinner, whose services and signature are +so well known as to make comment unnecessary. His second administration +of the office was distinguished by the same care-taking ability which +was manifest in the first. The reduction of the bounty debt and other +indebtedness of the State continued. He was elected Governor in 1876. + +The first official act of Governor Robinson was the appointment of +Frederic P. Olcott, of Albany, as Comptroller. It is a matter of secret +political history that Governor Tilden had desired to appoint Daniel +Magone to the office, and that for that reason Mr. Robinson would not +resign until it was too late for Governor Tilden to act. But he had to +act promptly, because, if no appointment were made before the +Legislature convened, the power to fill the vacancy would then be in +that body. Governor Robinson improved the fleeting moment. Mr. Olcott, +as the head of the firm of F. P. Olcott & Co., had been the State's +agent in transactions relating to the bounty debt, and, to Mr. +Robinson's mind, he had exhibited abilities which would make of him a +valuable Comptroller. That the Governor was not mistaken, Mr. Olcott's +career, both as Comptroller, and since his retirement from that office, +as president of the Central Trust Company, abundantly proves. He served +out Mr. Robinson's unexpired term, and was elected in November, 1877, +over C. V. R. Ludington, but was defeated for re-election in 1879 by +James W. Wadsworth. This was the only political office which he ever +held. Early in his term his attention was attracted to the abnormal +quantities of soft soap which one of the small State charitable +institutions was using, and he became satisfied that "soft soap," like +Pickwick's "warming pan," was a cover for something hidden. Among the +vouchers for May and June, 1875, were vouchers for seventy-eight barrels +of soft soap at a cost of $350, which, at the same rate, would make an +aggregate of $2,100 per year. The aggregate expenditure for soft soap +for the institution during the six years ending June 30, 1876, had been +$3,963.60. An investigation was instituted at the Comptroller's request +by the State Board of Charities, and it was found that "soft soap" in +that instance meant the laying out of roads and beautifying grounds to +an extent that the Comptroller's office would not have paid. The +designing institution learned to its surprise that the Comptroller could +not stand too much "soft soap." These revelations led the Comptroller to +ask the Legislature for power to investigate thoroughly all the +charitable institutions. This work was ably done by Edgar K. Apgar, who +made an admirable report, and this report was the means of establishing +a more thorough and systematic supervision of these institutions by the +Comptroller's department. In his report, transmitted to the Legislature +on the 1st of January, 1878, Mr. Olcott said: "Each of these +institutions is now separate and distinct from its fellows, and each is +governed by a local board of trustees. It is evident, therefore, that +there is no general system governing all, but each is a law unto itself. +There is no department of government which exercises any supervision +over their affairs or that has more than a superficial knowledge of the +manner in which they are conducted. * * * I would recommend for your +consideration the policy of abolishing all local boards of trustees and +the erection of a system by which the different institutions shall be +managed by one controlling power. As it is, the responsibility for +losses and expensive management is not centred in any one." + +[Illustration: F P Olcott (signature) + +_24th COMPTROLLER_] + +[Illustration: James Wadsworth (signature) + +_25th COMPTROLLER_] + +On the 2d of May, 1878 (the good faith of Olcott's work in handling the +bounty bonds having been called in question), he sent a communication to +the Legislature which more than proved the faithful and able manner in +which he had performed his duties in respect to these bonds. The report +was called out by a resolution of the Senate. Some strongly partisan +members believed that they could unearth thereby, if not crookedness, at +least large compensation for services performed. The attempt failed +signally. Mr. Olcott's administration of the office ranks with the +ablest. + +James W. Wadsworth, a gentleman farmer and Republican, from Geneseo, +became Comptroller January, 1, 1880, and was one of the youngest men who +have held the office. He had as a boy served with his father, the +gallant and lamented General James S. Wadsworth in the Civil War. He was +Member of Assembly from Livingston county in 1878 and 1879, and was +distinguished in the latter year as the only Republican in the +Legislature who would not vote for the return of Roscoe Conkling to the +United States Senate, and that, too, notwithstanding the fact that Mr. +Conkling had been duly nominated by a Republican caucus. Mr. Conkling +and he afterwards forgot differences and became quite warmly attached. +He ran again for Comptroller in 1885 but was defeated. He has faithfully +represented a discriminating constituency in the Forty-seventh, +Forty-eighth, Fifty-second, Fifty-third and Fifty-fourth Congresses, and +has been re-elected to the Fifty-fifth. Mr. Wadsworth took great +interest in the affairs of the office during his term, and his sterling +integrity and good judgment made him a most excellent officer. In 1880, +by chapter 100, the Comptroller was authorized to issue bonds in +anticipation of the State tax, payable on or before the fifteenth day of +May following, such bonds not to exceed in amount one-half of such tax. +It was necessary for Mr. Wadsworth to inaugurate the system of +collecting taxes on corporations. The original bill for that purpose was +passed in 1880. It has been amended from time to time, but the whole +duty of enforcing it has remained in the Comptroller. The number of +corporations taxed in 1881 was 954, and the amount collected +$1,539,864.27; the number in 1886 was 1,249, and the amount collected +$1,239,864.16. In 1892 there were 1,780 corporations paying, and the +amount collected was $1,430,719.86. In 1896 the number of corporations +was 4,401, and the amount collected was $2,165,610.12. The amount of +capital represented by these 4,401 corporations is believed to be fully +$766,000,000. + +Mr. Wadsworth gave place on January 1, 1882, to Ira Davenport, a +capitalist and a Republican of Bath. Mr. Davenport had represented the +twenty-seventh district in the State Senate in 1878, 1879, 1880 and +1881, and was elected Comptroller over G. H. Lapham. He was defeated for +re-election as Comptroller by Alfred C. Chapin, November 6, 1883. In +1885, he received the Republican nomination for Governor, but was +defeated by David B. Hill. He was a member of the Forty-ninth and +Fiftieth Congresses. On March 1, 1883, the duty of auditing the canal +accounts, after having been performed for thirty-five years by a +separate officer--the Canal Auditor--was placed in the Comptroller's +office, where it still remains. The confidence which the Republican +party had shown in Comptroller Davenport was not misplaced. He was a man +of high character and attainments, and performed the duties of the +office of Comptroller with success. + +[Illustration: M Davenport (signature) + +_26th COMPTROLLER_] + +Alfred C. Chapin, a lawyer and a Democrat, of Brooklyn, entered upon the +discharge of his duties January 1, 1884. He was Member of Assembly from +the eleventh Kings county district in 1882 and 1883, and in the latter +year was chosen Speaker of that body. He was re-elected Comptroller in +1885 over Mr. Wadsworth. He has, since his service as Comptroller, +served four years as Mayor of Brooklyn, from January 1, 1888, to January +1, 1892, and is now about ending a term as State Railroad Commissioner. +In 1891, he was a prominent candidate for Governor before the Democratic +convention, but was beaten by Roswell P. Flower. Mr. Chapin is an +educated and cultivated gentleman, and as Comptroller was not afraid to +run counter to established ideas. He strongly recommended, in a special +message to the Legislature in 1885, and subsequently in his annual +reports, the abolition of the common school fund, and its transfer to +the treasury. By chapter 483 of the Laws of 1885, the Legislature laid a +tax of five per cent upon collateral inheritances. This inaugurated a +system of taxing transfers at death, which has come now to yield +annually about $2,000,000. The Comptroller was largely intrusted with +the duties of enforcing this law. It was amended in 1891 by making a tax +of one per cent upon all direct inheritances. In 1886, the Comptroller +was authorized to approve the bonds of banks designated as depositories +of the funds of State institutions. The same year, the Comptroller was +directed to make assessments on the various companies liable therefor to +meet the expenses of the Subway Commissions in the cities of New York +and Brooklyn--a duty which still rests on the office. In 1887, he was +authorized to sell or exchange detached lands in certain counties of the +Forest Preserve, upon the recommendation of the Forest Commission and +the Attorney-General, the purpose being to consolidate the State's +holding of lands in the Adirondack Park. The same year a tax was laid on +racing associations for the benefit of agricultural societies to +improve the breed of horses, etc., and the collection of this tax has +since remained a part of the duty of the Comptroller, notwithstanding +the various vicissitudes through which racing and pool bills have +passed. + +At the November election, in 1887, Edward Wemple was elected Comptroller +over Jesse S. L'Amoreaux. Mr. Wemple was a manufacturer and Democrat, +residing at Fultonville. He was a Member of Assembly from Montgomery +county in 1877 and 1878, and a Member of the Forty-eighth Congress, but +was defeated for re-election to that office by George West. He served in +the State Senate from the eighteenth district in 1886 and 1887. He was +re-elected Comptroller in 1889 over Martin W. Cooke. + +In 1888 the Legislature passed an act requiring the agent and warden of +each of the State prisons to file with the Comptroller a bond, approved +by the Superintendent of State Prisons and Comptroller, in a penalty of +not less than $50,000, to be fixed by the Comptroller. The same year +the Legislature declared that the Board of Claims should have no +jurisdiction over private claims required to be presented to the +Comptroller for audit, until after his action on the claim. It further +required all public officials and other persons receiving or disbursing +moneys of the people of the State to deposit the same in some solvent +bank or banking institution, to be designated by the Comptroller, and +that every bank receiving such moneys should execute a bond to the +people, to be filed with and approved by the Comptroller. By chapter 586 +of the Laws of the same year the Comptroller, the Superintendent of +State Prisons, and the President of the State Board of Charities, were +constituted a board to fix the prices of all goods manufactured in the +penal institutions of the State for the use of other State institutions. +All these provisions of law are still in force, except that the board to +fix prices has been changed by the addition of the State Prison +Commission and Lunacy Commission, and by omitting the President of +the State Board of Charities. In 1889 the right of the Comptroller to +supervise the financial affairs of the prisons was enlarged, and the +agent and warden required to make monthly reports of receipts and +expenditures to him. He was also allowed to revise and readjust the +accounts theretofore settled under the Corporation Tax Law. In 1890 he +was made a member of the "Board for the Establishment of State Insane +Asylum Districts and other purposes," together with the State Commission +in Lunacy and President of the State Board of Charities. In 1891 an act +was passed requiring all institutions receiving moneys from the State +treasury for maintenance, in full or in part, to deposit their funds in +some responsible bank or banking house, to be designated by the +Comptroller. He was also authorized to appoint commissioners to hear +evidence and take proofs on applications for cancellation of title or +redemption of lands. + +[Illustration: Alfred C. Chapin (signature) + +_27th COMPTROLLER_] + +On January 1, 1892, Frank Campbell, a banker and Democrat, of Bath, +became Comptroller. He had been chosen in the previous election over +Arthur C. Wade. He had held no office previous to that time. He served +one term, ran for re-election in 1893 and was defeated. He has held no +office since. By chapter 651 of the Laws of 1892 the supervision of the +funds deposited in court was transferred from the General Term of the +Supreme Court to the Comptroller, and this work the Comptroller's office +has since performed; and by chapter 681 of the Laws of the same year he +was required to approve all official undertakings. + +In 1892 the authority was given to the Comptroller to license common +carriers. He was relieved from this duty by the new Excise Law of 1896. +By chapter 248 of the Laws of 1893 he, with the Secretary of State and +Treasurer, was directed, before the first day of January of each year, +to designate the State paper. The largest amount thus far collected in +any one year under the Inheritance Tax Law was $3,071,687.09, in 1893, +during Mr. Campbell's term. The amount collected under the +Corporation Tax Law was increased during his term. + +[Illustration: Edward Wemple (signature) + +_28th COMPTROLLER_] + +On January 1, 1894, James A. Roberts, a lawyer and Republican, of +Buffalo, became Comptroller. He had served as Member of Assembly from +the third district of Erie county in 1879, and from the fourth district +of the same county in 1880. He was unanimously renominated from the +fourth district in 1891, but declined. He was re-elected Comptroller in +1895 over John B. Judson. In 1894 the Comptroller was given power to +appoint appraisers in cases of tuberculosis and glanders. In the same +year the chancery fund, so called, which had been managed by the Clerk +of the Court of Appeals after the abolition of the Court of Chancery, +was turned over to the Comptroller. This fund, amounting to $169,935.52 +in securities and cash, besides real estate of the possible value of +$10,000, was the residue and remainder of moneys that had been deposited +in the old Court of Chancery and never called for. By a rider on the +appropriation bill of that year the superintendent or other managing +officer of each State charitable institution or reformatory in the State +was required to estimate monthly, in detail, the articles required by +his institution for the ensuing month. The expenditures were to be +limited to the estimates, and the treasurers were required to make +monthly reports of their expenditures. This inaugurated substantially +the same system, with reference to the expenditures of other charitable +institutions, that was then used by the Lunacy Commission with reference +to the hospitals. In 1895 this last provision was made more definite and +explicit. The Comptroller was authorized the same year to appoint a +second deputy, who was to have the same powers as the Deputy +Comptroller. Twice before in the history of the office there had been a +second deputy, but, after the continuance of the office for a few years, +in each case it had been abolished. Chapter 79 of the Laws of 1895 +provided for the issuing of canal bonds and created a sinking fund +for their redemption. The issuing of the bonds and the care of the +sinking fund were intrusted to the Comptroller. The same year the +trustees of the Saratoga monument were authorized to transfer the +property held by them to the State, and the Comptroller was made +custodian of the monument. + +[Illustration: Frank Campbell (signature) + +_29th COMPTROLLER_] + +While in the hundred years there have been thirty Comptrollers, there +have been but eleven Deputy Comptrollers. Upon the passage of the act +authorizing the appointment of a deputy, in 1811, Comptroller McIntyre +appointed John Ely, Jr., and he held the position until 1822. He was +succeeded by Ephraim Starr, who continued in the position until 1828. In +1828 Mr. Marcy appointed as deputy Philip Phelps, and, with the +exception of two years, from February 28, 1840, to February 28, 1842, +this being substantially the administration of Bates Cook, when the +office was filled by W. W. Tredwell, Mr. Phelps held the place until +1876, or in all for forty-six years. It was long felt that his services +were indispensable, and while Comptrollers might come and Comptrollers +did go, the deputy seemed likely to go on forever. It is related that +late in his official career he found himself growing footsore and lame, +and no longer able to stand at his desk, as had been his custom, and +scarcely able to reach the office, and there was talk of his +resignation, and grave fears for the future finances of the State were +expressed. In this emergency an attentive clerk found that the floor +where the deputy had so long stood had been worn away so that an +obdurate nail protruded, and it was standing upon this nail which had +worked the woe. One blow of the hammer saved the State. Mr. Phelps was +an able man, and his services in the office made him invaluable to the +frequently-changing Comptrollers. At his death high testimonies to his +worth and character were given by Sanford E. Church, Thomas Hillhouse, +Wm. F. Allen, Robert H. Pruyn, John V. L. Pruyn, and many others. A +meeting of State officers was held, at which Wm. Dorsheimer, then +Lieutenant-Governor, presided, and resolutions expressing his great +worth and service were adopted. It was well said that "no prospect of +pecuniary advantage could swerve him from the strictest line of truth +and justice." + +Mr. Phelps was succeeded by Henry Gallien, who worthily filled the +office from 1876 to 1884, when he died. Thomas E. Benedict held the +office from 1884 to 1886. He has since been Deputy Secretary of State +and Public Printer at Washington, and in all positions has acquitted +himself as an able and upright man. Charles R. Hall succeeded to the +office for a little more than a year, and was himself succeeded by Zerah +S. Westbrook, who had the office for four years, from January 1, 1888, +to January 1, 1892. Calvin J. Huson was Deputy Comptroller during Mr. +Campbell's term. At the end of his term he was succeeded by Colonel +William J. Morgan, who still holds the office. + +The custom seems to have grown up in these degenerate times to make the +term of the deputy co-terminous with that of Comptroller. This is of +doubtful propriety. Too many men of tried integrity, familiar with their +duties, cannot be retained in such an office. But the danger which would +naturally be expected from a frequent change in both Comptroller and +deputy has thus far been avoided by the retention, through succeeding +administrations, of some of the most important clerks. Willis E. +Merriman has now been in service in the Comptroller's office for +thirty-one years, and, having worked up from the lowest to the highest +service in the department, is familiar with all its details, and his +services have thus become indispensable. Upon the creation of the office +of Second Deputy Comptroller, in 1895, he was appointed to that +position, and he has since discharged its duties with the fidelity and +intelligence with which every Comptroller for many years has found him +fortunately endowed. + +No sketch of the office is complete without mention of George H. +Birchall. He came into the office in 1883, at the time of the +abolition of the Canal Auditor's office. He had served seventeen years +in the last-named office. He has had charge of the canal accounts since +their transfer to the Comptroller's office, and has rendered most +efficient service. Messrs. Williams and Bliss came into the office in +1877, and Mr. Graham in 1882. Several employees have been in the +department's service for six or eight years or more, and no department +of the State government is better equipped with honest, faithful, public +servants than is the Comptroller's office. + +[Illustration: James A. Roberts (signature) + +_30th COMPTROLLER_] + +It can be seen from the foregoing that the duties of the Comptroller's +office are varied and important. The boards of which he is a member give +some indication of this fact. He is _ex-officio_ a member of the State +Board of Canvassers; of the Board of the Commissioners of the Land +Office; of the Board of the Commissioners of the Canal Fund; of the +Canal Board; of the State Commissioners of Charities; of the board to +fix prices for prison made products; of the board for the establishment +of State insane asylum districts, etc.; of the legislative printing +board; of the department printing board, and one of the officers to +designate the State paper. He manages the finances of the State so far +even as to supervise the expenditures of the State institutions. He +designates the banks in which funds of all institutions shall be +deposited. He levies and collects the tax on corporations; supervises +the collection of the transfer tax, and sells the lands of delinquent +taxpayers in the counties in which are included a part of the Forest +Preserve. He audits all accounts against the State; acts as a court in +applications for cancellations of tax deeds or sales, and in disputed +corporation tax matters; examines the court and trust funds deposited +with the treasurer of every county in the State, and regulates the form +of accounts and the manner of their investment, and performs many other +less important duties too numerous for mention. + +Of the men who have held the office of Comptroller nineteen were +lawyers; three were gentlemen farmers; three bankers; one a merchant; +one a manufacturer; one a capitalist, and two were business men. In +politics two were Federalists; fifteen Democrats (including under the +word Democrats original Republicans, whether Clintonians or otherwise); +four Whigs; two Anti-Masons; six Republicans, and one American or Know +Nothing. + +[Illustration: Philip Phelps (signature) + +_Deputy Comptroller, 46 Years._] + +The total expenditures of the State for each tenth year since the +establishment of the office were as follows: + + 1797 $322,831 37 + 1807 425,689 69 + 1817 1,296,590 88 + 1827 1,908,346 73 + 1837 4,926,449 04 + 1847 5,275,164 09 + 1857 10,176,939 70 + 1867 20,496,050 59 + 1877 [1]26,186,744 70 + 1887 16,771,448 98 + 1897 26,510,425 77 + ================ + +[1] Includes $10,453,805.95 bounty debt. + +Each of these would very nearly represent the average annual +expenditures for the decade which it ends. + +The total expenditures of the National Government for the year 1797 were +$8,625,877.37, and if we deduct from this the amounts paid for interest, +and payments upon the public debt, it leaves the amount of ordinary +expenditure but $2,836,110.52. The ordinary expenditures of the National +Government did not reach the amount expended in this State for the year +1896 until the year 1847, if we except the years 1813, 1814 and 1815, +when the expenditures were abnormal by reason of the War of 1812, and if +we except also the years 1837 and 1838, and in none of those excepted +years did the annual ordinary expenditures very greatly exceed this +State's expenditure for 1896. + +During the century, the State has expended for lands, construction, +enlargement or permanent improvement: + + Of its five canals $74,347,000 00 + Of its new Capitol 22,254,023 60 + Of the twelve hospitals erected by it $15,204,099 59 + Of its seventeen other charitable institutions 6,369,110 70 + Of its forty-five armories and arsenals 3,349,543 73 + Of its three State prisons 4,528,058 65 + Of its twelve normal schools 1,826,350 06 + -------------- + Making a total expenditure for those various + purposes of $127,878,186 33 + =============== + +[Illustration: Willis E. Merriman. (signature) + + _2d Deputy Comptroller_ + _Connected with the office 31 years_ + +] + +Far the greater part of this money has been handled by, and drawn on the +warrant of, the Comptroller, and no suspicion has ever arisen that this +duty was not honestly performed. Nearly all of the sinking funds of the +various bonded debts of the State have been managed by the Comptrollers, +who, in these 100 years, have never been the occasion of the loss of a +single dollar. + +Jenkins, in his political history of New York, says that the Comptroller +bears the same relation to the State that the Secretary of the Treasury +does to the National Government, and this is largely true. I cannot do +better in closing this brief sketch of the Comptroller's office than by +quoting from Thurlow Weed's autobiography. His opportunities for, and +keenness of, observation make his statement of peculiar value. He says: +"It seems proper to say, amid all the mutations of party, and the +liability under our form of popular government to occasionally find +unworthy men elevated to high places, our State has ever been singularly +fortunate in its highest financial officer. We have had unfaithful men +in almost every other department of the State Government. We have had, +in two or three instances, comparatively weak men in the office of +Comptroller, but as a rule its incumbents have been capable, firm and +incorruptible." + + * * * * * + +[Transcriber's Notes: + +The transcriber made these changes to the text to correct obvious +errors: + + 1. p. 19 Fom --> From + 2. p. 41 place, Mr. Cook's --> place. Mr. Cook's + 3. p. 70 James W. Wadworth --> James W. Wadsworth + 4. p. 82 protuded, --> protruded, + +End of Transcriber's Notes] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Century in the Comptroller's Office, +State of New York, 1797 to 1897, by James A. Roberts + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40531 *** |
