New York Young Republican Club
New York Young Republican Club | |
---|---|
President | Gavin Wax |
Founded | 1911 |
Headquarters | New York, NY |
Ideology | Conservatism Fiscal conservatism Social conservatism |
Mother party | Republican Party |
National affiliation | Young Republican National Federation (YRNF) |
Website | https://nyyrc.com |
The New York Young Republican Club (NYYRC) is an organization for members of the Republican Party of the United States between the ages of 18 and 40 in New York City. The New York Young Republican Club is the oldest and largest chapter in the United States,[1][2] founded in 1911 with predecessor organizations going back to 1856.[3] The Club is affiliated with and officially recognized by the New York State Young Republicans [4] and the Young Republican National Federation, as well as the county,[5] state, and national Republican committees.
History
In the Spring of 1911, thirty-two young men, led by a young Manhattan lawyer Benjamin M. Day, along with, Philip J. McCook, Lloyd Carpenter Griscom, Frederick Paul Keppel, Henry W. Goddard, Edward R. Finch, Alfred Conkling Coxe Jr., and Albert S. Bard noted the lack of any Republican association especially appealing to younger Republicans in New York City. They sought a forum for expressing views which might on occasion be at variance with those of the party leaders as expressed in the local assembly district Clubs and in The Republican Club of the City of New York. In order to work within and for the Republican Party, yet be free to criticize party policies and leaders and to champion candidates and causes independent of organization control when the occasion so warranted, these young men formed the New York Young Republican Club in April 1911. This was an offshoot of the earlier New York Young Men’s Republican Club which was founded in 1879, which itself was a descendant of the even earlier New York Young Men’s Republican Union founded in 1856.
The Club’s first public appearance was a dinner held in December, 1911. The guest of honor was the President of the United States, William Howard Taft, and the principal speaker was Idaho Senator William Borah. The Club’s auspicious debut was attended by the leading politicians and office-holders of the day and was well publicized.
On February 8, 1912, the New York Young Republican Club, Inc. filed for a Certificate of Incorporation with the Secretary of State with the following objectives:
“To promote and maintain the principles of the Republican Party; to foster within the Republican Party and make practical in service of the municipality, state and nation, the idealism characteristic of youth; to correct in our own party that tendency of all parties to make organization an end rather than a means; to develop sound principle and public spirit in party politics; to promote honest and fair electoral methods, to the end that the expression of the popular will by whatever party or body, shall be as free, untrammeled and equal as possible; to resist and expose political corruption; to advocate merit rather than partisan service as entitling to public office; to watch legislation and to encourage public attention to and efficiently criticize the conduct of government.”
Leadership
- President: Gavin Wax of Manhattan
- Vice President: Vish Burra of Staten Island
- Treasurer: Angela Van Buuren of Manhattan
- Recording Secretary: Jaclyn Dolinsky of Manhattan
- Corresponding Secretary: Alexandra Fasulo of Brooklyn
- Activism Chair: Gabriel Montalvo of Queens
- Advisory Chair: Jose Freijo of Brooklyn
- Campaigns Chair: Zach Lountzis of Manhattan
- Design Chair: Jonathan Doucette of Queens
- Events Chair: Kristi De Vita of Brooklyn
- Finance Chair: Gary Metaxas of Queens
- Fundraising Chair: Elizabeth Holland of Manhattan
- Law Chair: Tyler Grant of Manhattan
- Membership Chair: Ilana Marcus of Manhattan
- Outreach Chair: Fernando Acosta of The Bronx
- Policy Chair: Iulia Lupse of Manhattan
- Rules Chair: Nathan Berger of Manhattan
Notable New York Young Republican Club Alumni
- Thomas E. Dewey, Governor of New York
- Nelson Rockefeller, Governor of New York
- John Lindsay, Mayor of New York City
- John Marshall Harlan (1899–1971), Supreme Court Justice
- John Foster Dulles, United States Secretary of State
- Herbert Brownell Jr., United States Attorney General
- Jacob Javits, Senator from New York
- Kenneth Keating, Senator from New York
- Stewart L. Woodford, Lieutenant Governor of New York
- David Rockefeller, CEO of Chase Manhattan
- Winthrop W. Aldrich, Ambassador to The United Kingdom
- John Hay Whitney, Ambassador to The United Kingdom
- Evan G. Galbraith, Ambassador to France
- Lloyd Carpenter Griscom, Ambassador to Italy
- Louis J. Lefkowitz, Attorney General of New York
- John C. Whitehead, United States Deputy Secretary of State
- Samuel Pierce, United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
- Theodore R. Kupferman, Congressman from New York
- Frederic René Coudert Jr., Congressman from New York
- Bruce Fairchild Barton, Congressman from New York
- Bill Green (New York politician), Congressman from New York
- Stuyvesant Wainwright, Congressman from New York
- Joseph C. Baldwin, Congressman from New York
- Roy M. Goodman, New York State Senator
- Murray Rothbard, Austrian School economist
- Robert Price (attorney), Deputy Mayor of New York City
- Charles Moerdler, MTA Board Member
- Robert W. Sweet, United States federal judge
- Charles Miller Metzner, United States federal judge
- William Bondy, United States federal judge
- J. Edward Lumbard, United States federal judge
- Henry W. Goddard, United States federal judge
- Lawrence Walsh, United States federal judge
- William Bernard Herlands, United States federal judge
- Alfred Conkling Coxe Jr., United States federal judge
- Archie Owen Dawson, United States federal judge
- Peter K. Leisure, United States federal judge
- Charles C. Nott, Chief Justice of the United States Court of Claims
- Roderic L. O'Connor, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs
- Thomas J. Curran, Secretary of State of New York
- Sidney Davidoff, One of 20 people on Nixon's Enemies List
- Henry Varnum Poor (Yale dean), Dean of Yale Law School
- F. Clifton White, Political Consultant
- Arthur Rock, Venture Capitalist
- E. Virgil Conway, Metropolitan Transportation Authority CEO
- William A. Rusher, Publisher of National Review
- Thomas C. Desmond, New York State Senator
- Benjamin F. Manierre, New York State Senator
- Whitney North Seymour Jr., New York State Senator
- Edward R. Finch, New York State Assemblyman
- MacNeil Mitchell, New York State Senator
- Cornelius Wendell Wickersham, Brigadier general (United States)
- Thomas Patrick Melady, Ambassador of the United States to the Holy See
- Thomas E. Stephens (politician), Secretary to the President of the United States
- Stanley M. Isaacs, Manhattan Borough president
- Edgar J. Nathan, Manhattan Borough president
- Allan Hoover, Son of Herbert Hoover
- Newbold Morris, President of the New York City Council
- S. E. Cupp, Conservative commentator
- David W. Peck, Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals of the Supreme Court in New York
- Alexander Morgan Hamilton, Great-great-grandson of Alexander Hamilton
- Albert S. Bard, Civic Activist
- Frederick Paul Keppel, United States Assistant Secretary of War
- Tom Stevens (politician), Founder of the Objectivist Party
- John A. Wells, Founding partner of Rogers & Wells
- F. Trowbridge vom Baur, General Counsel of the Navy
- Vito Marcantonio, Congressman from New York
- Karl Behr, Tennis player
- Watson Washburn, Tennis player
- Charles Evans Hughes Jr., United States Solicitor General
- George Walbridge Perkins Jr., Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs
- Phelps Phelps, Governor of American Samoa
- Raymond L. Wise, Board member of American Civil Liberties Union
- Joseph L. Searles III, First black floor member and floor broker in the New York Stock Exchange
- Stuart A. Summit, Former federal judicial nominee to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
- Harold H. Healy Jr., First American President of the Union Internationale des Avocats
- Karl G. Harr Jr., President of the Aerospace Industries Association of America
- Elmer E. Rasmuson, Mayor of Anchorage
- Charles Garside, President of State University of New York
- Edward Cochrane McLean, United States federal judge
- Samuel Hazard Gillespie Jr., United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York
- Deroy Murdock, Fox News contributor
- Ron Coleman (legal scholar), Legal scholar
See also
- Young Republicans
- College Republicans
- Teen Age Republicans
- Republicans Overseas
- Republican National Committee
- New York Republican State Committee
References
- ^ "About".
- ^ Surico, John (11 August 2015). "A Night Out in New York with the Young Republicans Supporting Donald Trump".
- ^ "The Young Men's Republican Union, organized in 1856 as the Young Men's Fremont and Dayton Central Union, have leased the old head quarters". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.
- ^ "Find Your Club". New York State Young Republicans.
- ^ "Links - Manhattan Republican Party". www.manhattanrepublicanparty.com.