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Isaac L. Varian

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Isaac L. Varian
Isaac L. Varian, New York City Mayor
63rdMayor of New York City
In office
1839–1841
Preceded byAaron Clark
Succeeded byRobert Morris
Personal details
BornJune 25, 1793
New York, New York
DiedAugust 10, 1864(1864-08-10)(aged 71)
Peekskill, New York
SpouseCatharine Hopper Dusenbury
An 1838 cartoon, "How to Make theMareMayor Go ", depicts Varian (exiting stage left) and Clark (on a stalled mare). The Jew (right) suggests it's money that makes the mayor go.

Isaac Leggett Varian(June 25, 1793 – August 10, 1864) was aNew Yorkstate legislator and the 63rd Mayor ofNew York City.

Political career

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Varian was a prominentDemocratand ledTammany Hallfrom 1835 until 1842. He was a member of theNew York State Assembly(New York Co.) in1831,18321833;63rdMayor of New York Cityfrom 1839 to 1841; and a member of theNew York State Senate(1st D.) from 1842 to 1845, sitting in the65th,66th,67thand68th New York State Legislatures.

As Tammany Hall leader, Varian presided over a critical period in Democratic history, which saw the defection, and return of theLocofocofaction, which was in existence from 1835 until 1840, and was the decisive factor in the 1837 mayoral election won byWhigsagainst the divided Democrats.

Varian first ran for mayor in 1838, losing to WhigAaron Clarkby only 519 votes in an election tainted with allegations of massive Whig fraud and intimidation. In 1839, Varian beat Clark by 1,067 votes despite blatant electoral misconduct. During Varian's first term, the legislature passed a bill that mandatedvoter registrationand made it a lot harder to commitelectoral fraud.

Personal

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In 1811 Varian married Catharine Hopper Dusenbury (1789–1870). They had nine children, seven of whom survived infancy:

  • Andrew Hopper (1812–1826)
  • Tamar Letitia (b. 1813)
  • Isaac (1815–1816)
  • Matilda Campbell (b. 1817)
  • Mary Elizabeth (1819–1868)
  • Isaac (b. 1823)
  • Catharine Emeline (b. 1826)
  • Jacob Harsen (twin) (b. 1828)
  • Hannah (twin) (1828–1830)

In 1845 Varian quit politics and retired to Peekskill, where he died in 1864. He is buried in theNew York City Marble Cemetery.

The Valentine-Varian House

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The Valentine-Varian House (1758) is a historic farmhouse that still stands on what used to be the Varian dairy farm inthe Bronxalong the route fromNew York CitytoBoston.The Varian family occupied the house from 1791 until 1905. At present, the building houses theMuseum of Bronx History.A public park and an elementary school in the area are named after Varian.

Sources

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New York State Senate
Preceded by New York State Senate
First District (Class 3)

1842–1845
Succeeded by