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James Duane

James Duane (February 6, 1733 – February 1, 1797) was an American Founding Father, attorney, jurist, and American Revolutionary leader from New York. He served as a delegate to the First Continental Congress, the Second Continental Congress and the Congress of the Confederation, a New York state senator, the 44th Mayor of New York City, the 1st post-colonial Mayor of New York City and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of New York. Duane was a signatory of the Continental Association and the Articles of Confederation.

James Duane
portrait by John Trumbull
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New York
In office
September 26, 1789 – March 17, 1794
Appointed byGeorge Washington
Preceded bySeat established by 1 Stat. 73
Succeeded byJohn Laurance
44th Mayor of New York City
In office
1784–1789
Preceded byDavid Mathews
Succeeded byRichard Varick
Personal details
Born(1733-02-06)February 6, 1733
New York City,
Province of New York,
British America
DiedFebruary 1, 1797(1797-02-01) (aged 63)
Schenectady, New York
Resting placeChrist Episcopal Church
Duanesburg, New York
42°46′08″N 74°09′19″W / 42.76896°N 74.15517°W / 42.76896; -74.15517
Political partyFederalist
Parent
RelativesGeorge W. Featherstonhaugh Jr.
James Chatham Duane

Early life edit

 
Coat of Arms of James Duane

Duane was born on February 6, 1733, in New York City, in the Province of New York, to Anthony Duane and his second wife, Althea Ketaltas. Anthony Duane was a Protestant Irishman from County Galway who first came to New York as an officer of the Royal Navy in 1698. Duane's surname is from the Irish O'Dubhain. In 1702, Anthony Duane left the navy to marry Eva Benson, daughter of Dirck Benson, a local merchant. They had two sons, Abraham and Cornelius. Duane prospered and bought land for investment, rental, and future development. After his wife's death, Anthony married Althea Ketaltas (Hettletas), the daughter of a wealthy Dutch merchant.[1] By the time of James' birth, his father had become a wealthy colonial settler.[2]

Duane's mother died in 1736, and his father married a third time in 1741 to Margaret Riken (Rycken).[1] When Anthony died in 1747, James became the ward of Robert Livingston, the 3rd Lord of Livingston Manor,[3] where he completed his early education.

Career edit

Duane completed preparatory studies and read law in 1754, with James Alexander.[4] He had an impressive command of the law and was admitted to the bar on August 3, 1754.[5] He maintained a private practice in New York City from 1754 to 1762, when he became a clerk of the Chancery Court of New York.[6]

Duane was acting attorney general of the Province of New York in 1767[7] and a boundary commissioner in 1768 (and again in 1784), before returning to private practice in New York City in 1774 and 1775. He was a delegate to the New York Convention which ratified the United States Constitution in 1788.[8] Duane was a member of the Federalist Party.[7]

Law practice and other activities edit

Duane represented Trinity Church in the very protracted legal action brought by heirs of Anneke Jans, who claimed that they, and not the church, were the lawful owners of much of lower Manhattan, a tract which had been given to the church by the British crown.[9]

By the early 1770s, his practice earned him 1,400 pounds annually.[2] At the height of his success, Duane had a house in Manhattan, one in the country, and an estate near Schenectady, New York, of 36,000 acres (15,000 ha) and 253 tenants.[2] He was a vestryman of Trinity Church, was appointed one of the church's nine trustees during a post-war crisis about the church's Tory leanings,[10] and was also a trustee of Kings College, the precursor to Columbia University.[7]

In 1761, Duane acquired from Gerardus Stuyvesant a farm known as Krom Mesje ("little crooked knife") in reference to a small brook that flowed into the East River. He named it "Gramercy Seat". In addition to the farm, Duane also had a house on King Street (later changed to Pine Street).[11] In 1765, he was granted a patent for land in Schenectady County, which became the township of Duanesburg.

With his boyhood friend James De Lancey, Duane was one of the Socialborough Proprietors, holding an area obtained by grant in 1771 and located on both sides of Otter Creek in the present towns of Pittsford and Rutland, Vermont.[12]

American Revolution edit

Duane was politically conservative.[2] Until his marriage to Mary Livingston, he had been a member of James De Lancey's political faction,[7] which opposed to the Crown's policies but did not endorse the use of mob violence to protest British measures. His efforts to support resistance in New York led to his being chosen with others to represent the Province of New York at the Congressional meetings in Philadelphia. He remained active in both capacities.

Duane was a delegate to the First Continental Congress held in Philadelphia during the autumn of 1774 in reaction to the British Navy's blockade of Boston Harbor and the passage of the Intolerable Acts by Parliament in response to the December 1773 Boston Tea Party. He was one of the many who were most disposed to reconciliation with Britain and supported the Galloway Plan of Union, which was rejected by the majority of the delegates. Upon his return to New York, he was named to the Committee of Sixty, a committee of inspection formed in the City and County of New York (Manhattan, New York City) in 1775, to enforce the Continental Association, a boycott of British goods enacted by the First Continental Congress.[13]

He was a delegate to the Provincial Convention held in New York City on April 20, 1775, where delegates were elected to the Second Continental Congress. It included the delegates to the First Congress as well as five new members. The scope of the Provincial Convention did not extend beyond electing delegates, who dispersed on April 22, the day before news of the Battles of Lexington and Concord arrived. The Second Continental Congress convened its first session on May 10. Duane served as a delegate from 1775 to 1781. Alexander Hamilton, an aide to General George Washington, wrote Duane to ask him to get Congress to expedite supplies.[14]

The Committee of Sixty was replaced by a more representative Committee of One Hundred on May 1, 1775. The Committee still considered itself loyal to the British Crown but was opposed to the laws of the Parliament of Great Britain, which it considered unconstitutional because the colonies had no representation in it. The Committee of One Hundred was officially replaced by the New York Provincial Congress which first convened on May 23, 1775. Despite initial reservations regarding independence, he later supported the Declaration of Independence. Because of his service with the Provincial Congress, Duane was not in Philadelphia to sign the Declaration.[11]

When the British occupied New York in late summer 1776, he withdrew his wife and family to the relative safety of her father's home at Livingston Manor. He was a member of the New York Constitutional Convention which assembled at White Plains, New York, on Sunday evening, July 10, 1776, for the purpose of drafting a constitution to replace the colonial charter.

In July 1778 he signed the Articles of Confederation in Philadelphia.[5] Duane was a member of the Congress of the Confederation from 1781 to 1783. He remained active as a political leader throughout the war and returned home to Gramercy Seat in 1783. He commented that his home looked "as if they had been inhabited by wild beasts".[15]

Post war activities edit

He was Mayor of New York City from 1784 to 1789,[6] appointed by the Council of Appointment.[16] As mayor, one of Duane's first acts was to donate to the poor the money usually spent on entertainment for his inauguration, about 20 guineas.[16] During his time in office, he strove to help the city revive itself after the damage done by the war and the British occupation, but he was unable to maintain the city's status as the capital of the United States.[7] As head of the Mayor's Court, he heard the landmark case of Rutgers v. Waddington, handing down a Solomonic decision that pleased neither party. After he was called before the State Assembly to explain his thinking, he was censured by that body.[17]

He was a member of the New York State Senate from 1782 to 1785, and from 1788 to 1790. In 1785, Duane was one of 32 prominent New Yorkers who met to create the New York Manumission Society, which was intended to put pressure on the state of New York to abolish slavery, as every state in the north had done except New York and New Jersey.[18]

He was chosen a member of the Annapolis Convention in 1786 but did not attend.

Federal judicial service edit

Duane was nominated by President George Washington on September 25, 1789, to the United States District Court for the District of New York, to a new seat authorized by 1 Stat. 73.[6] He was confirmed by the United States Senate on September 25, 1789, and received his commission on September 26, 1789.[6] He resigned on March 17, 1794, because of ill health.[6]

Personal life edit

 
Mary Livingston

On October 21, 1759, Duane married Mary Livingston (1738–1821),[19] the eldest living daughter of his former guardian Robert.[20] Their children were:[21]

Duane's grandchildren included George W. Featherstonhaugh Jr. (1814–1900),[27] Robert Livingston Pell (1811–1880), James Duane Pell (1813–1881), George W. Pell (1820–1896), and Richard Montgomery Pell (1822–1882).[23] His great-grandchildren included Alfred Duane Pell (1864–1937) and James Chatham Duane (1824–1897).[24]

Death and legacy edit

Duane died on February 1, 1797, in Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York.[Note 1][8][6] He was interred under Christ Church in Duanesburg.[8]

Duane Street in Manhattan was named in his honor.[9] Duane Park, at the corner of Duane and Hudson streets is named for him.[28] The Fire Department of New York operated a fireboat named James Duane from 1908 to 1959.[29] The town of Duanesburg, New York, in the western part of Schenectady County, is named for James Duane, who held most of it as an original land grant.[30][31]

The Northern District of New York Federal Court Bar Association presents the annual Judge James Duane Award upon "...a distinguished member of the bar who has carried on Judge Duane’s legacy of excellence in the practice of law, unwavering integrity, and a tireless commitment to the legal profession."[32] James Joseph Duane, an American law professor at the Regent University School of Law, is a living descendant of James Duane who has received online attention for his video lecture "Don't Talk To Police".

Ed Jewett portrayed Duane in the 2008 John Adams miniseries directed by Tom Hooper. He appeared in episode 2 "Independence."

Notes edit

  1. ^ He may have died in New York City, according to his Congressional Biography.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Finding aid to the Duane Family and Duanesburg Patent Land Papers, 1734–1835". New York State Library. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 221
  3. ^ "Robert Livingston Jr. (1708–1790)". nyhistory.org. New-York Historical Society. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  4. ^ Lamb, Martha Joanna; Harrison, Mrs Burton (2005). History of the City of New York: Its Origin, Rise, and Progress. Cosimo, Inc. p. 701. ISBN 9781596052840.
  5. ^ a b "James Duane", Historical Society of the New York Courts
  6. ^ a b c d e f James Duane at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  7. ^ a b c d e Vorhees, David William. "Duane, James" in Jackson, Kenneth T., ed. (2010). The Encyclopedia of New York City (2nd ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11465-2., p. 380
  8. ^ a b c United States Congress. "James Duane (id: D000508)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  9. ^ a b Moscow, Henry (1978). The Street Book: An Encyclopedia of Manhattan's Street Names and Their Origins. New York: Hagstrom Company. ISBN 978-0-8232-1275-0., p. 45
  10. ^ Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 269
  11. ^ a b Pine, John B., "Gramercy Park", Valentine's Manual of Old New York, No. 4, (Henry Collins Browne, ed.), New York. Valentine's Manual Inc., 1920, p. 194   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. ^ Flick, Alexander Clarence. New York History: Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association, 1999, Volume 80; Volume 97, p. 197
  13. ^
  14. ^ "Alexander Hamilton to James Duane, 14 May 1780", Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
  15. ^ Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 265
  16. ^ a b Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 267
  17. ^ Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 278
  18. ^ Burrows & Wallace (1999), p. 285
  19. ^ "Gallery of Peers: Mrs. James Duane". The New-York Historical Society. 2004. Retrieved June 16, 2009.
  20. ^ Rees, John. "Sewalls of Coventry: James Duane". Retrieved June 16, 2009.
  21. ^ Johnson, William (1883). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of New York: Johnson v.1-20. Albany, NY: Banks & Brothers Law Publishers.
  22. ^ "Christ Church Duanesburg History". christchurchduanesburg.org. Christ Church Duanesburg. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  23. ^ a b "Robert Livingston Pell" (PDF). The New York Times. February 14, 1880. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  24. ^ a b Harrison, Bruce (2005). The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort. Kamuela, HI: Millisecond Publishing Company, Inc.[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ Collections of the New York Historical Society for the Year. New York: Order of the Society. 1871.
  26. ^ Dolan, Megan. "Guide to the Duane Family Papers 1700-1945 MS 179". dlib.nyu.edu. New-York Historical Society. Retrieved September 16, 2016.
  27. ^ a b "Growing With Schenectady – American Locomotive Company". The story of a century of locomotive building in Schenectady. The Schenectady Digital History Archive. 1972. Retrieved November 27, 2006.
  28. ^ "Duane Park", New York City Department of Parks & Recreation
  29. ^ Clarence E. Meek (July 1954). "Fireboats Through The Years". Retrieved June 28, 2015.
  30. ^ Duanesburg Historical Society (2005). "Introduction". Duanesburg and Princetown. Images of America. Arthur Willis, Duanesburg, New York Town Historian; Irma Mastrean, Princetown, New York Town Historian. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 7–8. ISBN 0-7385-3803-5
  31. ^ The Colonial Laws of New York. James B. Lyon (State of New York). 1894. p. 383. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
  32. ^ "Annual Dinner …", Northern District of New York Federal Court Bar Association, November 29, 2012

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Alexander, Edward. Revolutionary Conservative: James Duane of New York; New York: AMS Press, 1978. ISBN 0-404-00321-4.
  • Randall, Willard Sterne, 2011. Ethan Allen: His Life and Times, W.W. Norton & Co., New York and London.

External links edit

  • James Duane, The Irish American Who Rebuilt New York
Political offices
Preceded by 44th Mayor of New York City
1784–1789
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by
Seat established by 1 Stat. 73
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New York
1789–1794
Succeeded by

james, duane, other, uses, disambiguation, february, 1733, february, 1797, american, founding, father, attorney, jurist, american, revolutionary, leader, from, york, served, delegate, first, continental, congress, second, continental, congress, congress, confe. For other uses see James Duane disambiguation James Duane February 6 1733 February 1 1797 was an American Founding Father attorney jurist and American Revolutionary leader from New York He served as a delegate to the First Continental Congress the Second Continental Congress and the Congress of the Confederation a New York state senator the 44th Mayor of New York City the 1st post colonial Mayor of New York City and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of New York Duane was a signatory of the Continental Association and the Articles of Confederation James Duaneportrait by John TrumbullJudge of the United States District Court for the District of New YorkIn office September 26 1789 March 17 1794Appointed byGeorge WashingtonPreceded bySeat established by 1 Stat 73Succeeded byJohn Laurance44th Mayor of New York CityIn office 1784 1789Preceded byDavid MathewsSucceeded byRichard VarickPersonal detailsBorn 1733 02 06 February 6 1733New York City Province of New York British AmericaDiedFebruary 1 1797 1797 02 01 aged 63 Schenectady New YorkResting placeChrist Episcopal ChurchDuanesburg New York42 46 08 N 74 09 19 W 42 76896 N 74 15517 W 42 76896 74 15517Political partyFederalistParentAnthony DuaneRobert Livingston guardian father RelativesGeorge W Featherstonhaugh Jr James Chatham Duane Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Law practice and other activities 2 2 American Revolution 2 3 Post war activities 2 4 Federal judicial service 3 Personal life 4 Death and legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Coat of Arms of James Duane Duane was born on February 6 1733 in New York City in the Province of New York to Anthony Duane and his second wife Althea Ketaltas Anthony Duane was a Protestant Irishman from County Galway who first came to New York as an officer of the Royal Navy in 1698 Duane s surname is from the Irish O Dubhain In 1702 Anthony Duane left the navy to marry Eva Benson daughter of Dirck Benson a local merchant They had two sons Abraham and Cornelius Duane prospered and bought land for investment rental and future development After his wife s death Anthony married Althea Ketaltas Hettletas the daughter of a wealthy Dutch merchant 1 By the time of James birth his father had become a wealthy colonial settler 2 Duane s mother died in 1736 and his father married a third time in 1741 to Margaret Riken Rycken 1 When Anthony died in 1747 James became the ward of Robert Livingston the 3rd Lord of Livingston Manor 3 where he completed his early education Career editDuane completed preparatory studies and read law in 1754 with James Alexander 4 He had an impressive command of the law and was admitted to the bar on August 3 1754 5 He maintained a private practice in New York City from 1754 to 1762 when he became a clerk of the Chancery Court of New York 6 Duane was acting attorney general of the Province of New York in 1767 7 and a boundary commissioner in 1768 and again in 1784 before returning to private practice in New York City in 1774 and 1775 He was a delegate to the New York Convention which ratified the United States Constitution in 1788 8 Duane was a member of the Federalist Party 7 Law practice and other activities edit Duane represented Trinity Church in the very protracted legal action brought by heirs of Anneke Jans who claimed that they and not the church were the lawful owners of much of lower Manhattan a tract which had been given to the church by the British crown 9 By the early 1770s his practice earned him 1 400 pounds annually 2 At the height of his success Duane had a house in Manhattan one in the country and an estate near Schenectady New York of 36 000 acres 15 000 ha and 253 tenants 2 He was a vestryman of Trinity Church was appointed one of the church s nine trustees during a post war crisis about the church s Tory leanings 10 and was also a trustee of Kings College the precursor to Columbia University 7 In 1761 Duane acquired from Gerardus Stuyvesant a farm known as Krom Mesje little crooked knife in reference to a small brook that flowed into the East River He named it Gramercy Seat In addition to the farm Duane also had a house on King Street later changed to Pine Street 11 In 1765 he was granted a patent for land in Schenectady County which became the township of Duanesburg With his boyhood friend James De Lancey Duane was one of the Socialborough Proprietors holding an area obtained by grant in 1771 and located on both sides of Otter Creek in the present towns of Pittsford and Rutland Vermont 12 American Revolution edit Duane was politically conservative 2 Until his marriage to Mary Livingston he had been a member of James De Lancey s political faction 7 which opposed to the Crown s policies but did not endorse the use of mob violence to protest British measures His efforts to support resistance in New York led to his being chosen with others to represent the Province of New York at the Congressional meetings in Philadelphia He remained active in both capacities Duane was a delegate to the First Continental Congress held in Philadelphia during the autumn of 1774 in reaction to the British Navy s blockade of Boston Harbor and the passage of the Intolerable Acts by Parliament in response to the December 1773 Boston Tea Party He was one of the many who were most disposed to reconciliation with Britain and supported the Galloway Plan of Union which was rejected by the majority of the delegates Upon his return to New York he was named to the Committee of Sixty a committee of inspection formed in the City and County of New York Manhattan New York City in 1775 to enforce the Continental Association a boycott of British goods enacted by the First Continental Congress 13 He was a delegate to the Provincial Convention held in New York City on April 20 1775 where delegates were elected to the Second Continental Congress It included the delegates to the First Congress as well as five new members The scope of the Provincial Convention did not extend beyond electing delegates who dispersed on April 22 the day before news of the Battles of Lexington and Concord arrived The Second Continental Congress convened its first session on May 10 Duane served as a delegate from 1775 to 1781 Alexander Hamilton an aide to General George Washington wrote Duane to ask him to get Congress to expedite supplies 14 The Committee of Sixty was replaced by a more representative Committee of One Hundred on May 1 1775 The Committee still considered itself loyal to the British Crown but was opposed to the laws of the Parliament of Great Britain which it considered unconstitutional because the colonies had no representation in it The Committee of One Hundred was officially replaced by the New York Provincial Congress which first convened on May 23 1775 Despite initial reservations regarding independence he later supported the Declaration of Independence Because of his service with the Provincial Congress Duane was not in Philadelphia to sign the Declaration 11 When the British occupied New York in late summer 1776 he withdrew his wife and family to the relative safety of her father s home at Livingston Manor He was a member of the New York Constitutional Convention which assembled at White Plains New York on Sunday evening July 10 1776 for the purpose of drafting a constitution to replace the colonial charter In July 1778 he signed the Articles of Confederation in Philadelphia 5 Duane was a member of the Congress of the Confederation from 1781 to 1783 He remained active as a political leader throughout the war and returned home to Gramercy Seat in 1783 He commented that his home looked as if they had been inhabited by wild beasts 15 Post war activities edit He was Mayor of New York City from 1784 to 1789 6 appointed by the Council of Appointment 16 As mayor one of Duane s first acts was to donate to the poor the money usually spent on entertainment for his inauguration about 20 guineas 16 During his time in office he strove to help the city revive itself after the damage done by the war and the British occupation but he was unable to maintain the city s status as the capital of the United States 7 As head of the Mayor s Court he heard the landmark case of Rutgers v Waddington handing down a Solomonic decision that pleased neither party After he was called before the State Assembly to explain his thinking he was censured by that body 17 He was a member of the New York State Senate from 1782 to 1785 and from 1788 to 1790 In 1785 Duane was one of 32 prominent New Yorkers who met to create the New York Manumission Society which was intended to put pressure on the state of New York to abolish slavery as every state in the north had done except New York and New Jersey 18 He was chosen a member of the Annapolis Convention in 1786 but did not attend Federal judicial service edit Duane was nominated by President George Washington on September 25 1789 to the United States District Court for the District of New York to a new seat authorized by 1 Stat 73 6 He was confirmed by the United States Senate on September 25 1789 and received his commission on September 26 1789 6 He resigned on March 17 1794 because of ill health 6 Personal life edit nbsp Mary Livingston On October 21 1759 Duane married Mary Livingston 1738 1821 19 the eldest living daughter of his former guardian Robert 20 Their children were 21 Mary Duane b 1762 who married Gen William North 1755 1836 on October 14 1787 22 Catharine L Duane citation needed Adelia Duane 1765 1860 who married merchant Alfred Sands Pell 23 James Chatham Duane 1769 1842 who married Mary Ann Bowers 1773 1828 24 Cornelius Duane 1774 1781 who died young 25 Sarah Duane 1775 1828 26 who married George W Featherstonhaugh 1780 1866 on November 6 1808 27 Duane s grandchildren included George W Featherstonhaugh Jr 1814 1900 27 Robert Livingston Pell 1811 1880 James Duane Pell 1813 1881 George W Pell 1820 1896 and Richard Montgomery Pell 1822 1882 23 His great grandchildren included Alfred Duane Pell 1864 1937 and James Chatham Duane 1824 1897 24 Death and legacy editDuane died on February 1 1797 in Duanesburg Schenectady County New York Note 1 8 6 He was interred under Christ Church in Duanesburg 8 Duane Street in Manhattan was named in his honor 9 Duane Park at the corner of Duane and Hudson streets is named for him 28 The Fire Department of New York operated a fireboat named James Duane from 1908 to 1959 29 The town of Duanesburg New York in the western part of Schenectady County is named for James Duane who held most of it as an original land grant 30 31 The Northern District of New York Federal Court Bar Association presents the annual Judge James Duane Award upon a distinguished member of the bar who has carried on Judge Duane s legacy of excellence in the practice of law unwavering integrity and a tireless commitment to the legal profession 32 James Joseph Duane an American law professor at the Regent University School of Law is a living descendant of James Duane who has received online attention for his video lecture Don t Talk To Police Ed Jewett portrayed Duane in the 2008 John Adams miniseries directed by Tom Hooper He appeared in episode 2 Independence Notes edit He may have died in New York City according to his Congressional Biography References edit a b Finding aid to the Duane Family and Duanesburg Patent Land Papers 1734 1835 New York State Library Retrieved September 4 2012 a b c d Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 221 Robert Livingston Jr 1708 1790 nyhistory org New York Historical Society Retrieved July 25 2019 Lamb Martha Joanna Harrison Mrs Burton 2005 History of the City of New York Its Origin Rise and Progress Cosimo Inc p 701 ISBN 9781596052840 a b James Duane Historical Society of the New York Courts a b c d e f James Duane at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center a b c d e Vorhees David William Duane James in Jackson Kenneth T ed 2010 The Encyclopedia of New York City 2nd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11465 2 p 380 a b c United States Congress James Duane id D000508 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress a b Moscow Henry 1978 The Street Book An Encyclopedia of Manhattan s Street Names and Their Origins New York Hagstrom Company ISBN 978 0 8232 1275 0 p 45 Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 269 a b Pine John B Gramercy Park Valentine s Manual of Old New York No 4 Henry Collins Browne ed New York Valentine s Manual Inc 1920 p 194 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Flick Alexander Clarence New York History Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association 1999 Volume 80 Volume 97 p 197 New York Committee of Correspondence The new Committee of Sixty elected American Archives Series 4 Volume 1 P 330 Northern Illinois University Libraries Alexander Hamilton to James Duane 14 May 1780 Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 265 a b Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 267 Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 278 Burrows amp Wallace 1999 p 285 Gallery of Peers Mrs James Duane The New York Historical Society 2004 Retrieved June 16 2009 Rees John Sewalls of Coventry James Duane Retrieved June 16 2009 Johnson William 1883 Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of New York Johnson v 1 20 Albany NY Banks amp Brothers Law Publishers Christ Church Duanesburg History christchurchduanesburg org Christ Church Duanesburg Retrieved September 16 2016 a b Robert Livingston Pell PDF The New York Times February 14 1880 Retrieved August 27 2019 a b Harrison Bruce 2005 The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort Kamuela HI Millisecond Publishing Company Inc permanent dead link Collections of the New York Historical Society for the Year New York Order of the Society 1871 Dolan Megan Guide to the Duane Family Papers 1700 1945 MS 179 dlib nyu edu New York Historical Society Retrieved September 16 2016 a b Growing With Schenectady American Locomotive Company The story of a century of locomotive building in Schenectady The Schenectady Digital History Archive 1972 Retrieved November 27 2006 Duane Park New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Clarence E Meek July 1954 Fireboats Through The Years Retrieved June 28 2015 Duanesburg Historical Society 2005 Introduction Duanesburg and Princetown Images of America Arthur Willis Duanesburg New York Town Historian Irma Mastrean Princetown New York Town Historian Arcadia Publishing pp 7 8 ISBN 0 7385 3803 5 The Colonial Laws of New York James B Lyon State of New York 1894 p 383 Retrieved 2009 09 01 Annual Dinner Northern District of New York Federal Court Bar Association November 29 2012Sources editBurrows Edwin G and Wallace Mike 1999 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 195 11634 8 The Duane Family Papers 1700 1945 at the New York Historical Society United States Congress James Duane id D000508 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress James Duane at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges a publication of the Federal Judicial Center Portrait of James Duane James Duane Historic Marker Gramercy Park s Hawk Gets a Name Know Your MayorsFurther reading editAlexander Edward Revolutionary Conservative James Duane of New York New York AMS Press 1978 ISBN 0 404 00321 4 Randall Willard Sterne 2011 Ethan Allen His Life and Times W W Norton amp Co New York and London External links editJames Duane The Irish American Who Rebuilt New York Political offices Preceded byDavid Mathews 44th Mayor of New York City1784 1789 Succeeded byRichard Varick Legal offices Preceded bySeat established by 1 Stat 73 Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New York1789 1794 Succeeded byJohn Laurance Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Duane amp oldid 1192707059, wikipedia, 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