Edward Hoos

Edward Hoos (August 31, 1850 – October 24, 1912) was the 26th Mayor of Jersey City, New Jersey from May 3, 1897 to December 31, 1901.

Edward Hoos
26th Mayor of Jersey City
In office
May 3, 1897  December 31, 1901
Preceded byPeter Farmer Wanser
Succeeded byMark M. Fagan
Personal details
BornAugust 31, 1850
Neuwied am Rhine, Germany
DiedOctober 24, 1912(1912-10-24) (aged 62)
Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
Political partyDemocrat
Spouse(s)Dora Wilkins & Marie Renz
ChildrenEdward H.Hoos, Dora M.Hoos, Arthur, Elizabeth (Elsa)Hoos, Anna B. Hoos, Laura Hoos, Adele L. Hoos, Robert J. Hoos, Alfred Hoos, Herbert Hoos, Georgina M. E. Hoos, Milton V. Hoos and Thelma Hoos.
ResidenceJersey City, New Jersey

Biography

Hoos was born in Neuwied am Rhine, Germany on August 31, 1850. He was an upholsterer who, after immigrating to the United States, he started a furniture business in Jersey City. His wife Dora Wilkins, of Hanover, Germany, died in 1890. In 1897, he was pushed by Democratic political boss, Robert Davis, to run for Mayor of Jersey City.

The mayoral election of 1897 was very controversial. The Republican controlled state legislature passed the McArthur Act which postponed Jersey City and Newark's elections from the Spring to November to make them coincide with the state elections. The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that this was unconstitutional.[1] The Republicans appealed the Supreme Court's decision to the New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals. Since the decision was under appeal, the Republicans claimed that the elections planned for April 14 should not be held at that time until the court ruled on their appeal and if they were held then their results would not be valid until after the appeal was ruled on. The Democrats claimed they would be held and their results would be valid.[2] Hoos won the election against Republican J. Herbert Potts, 15,264 votes to 12,018.[3] however, Mayor Peter F. Wanser refused to vacate the mayor's office claiming the election was not valid until their appeal was heard in court. Hoos had to formally demand Wanser to leave the office on May 3, 1897.[4] The New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals ruled in September in favor of Hoos.[5][6]

Hoos won re-election over Republican Edward M. Watson by an even bigger margin of 7,000 votes on April 11, 1899.[7] Hoos had served two terms (May 3, 1897 to December 31, 1901), but Boss Davis knew the voters wanted a change and dumped Hoos from the ticket in 1901 in favor of Edward L. Young, son of Edward Faitoute Condict Young (Davis' financial backing). It did not matter to the voters who swept in Republican Mark M. Fagan as mayor.

Hoos died on October 24, 1912 and was buried in Bayview – New York Bay Cemetery in Jersey City alongside his wife and three of his children.

gollark: Should I also lower the time limit on bee polls?
gollark: How's that?
gollark: Hold on.
gollark: How about:Create a new section "Bees" %bees.Create a rule "Bee utilization part 1" (%bees-1) in %bees:> If bees are deployed, they may be used against any player, if a Bee Poll indicating this target player is passed. The deployment status of bees is to be considered part of the Game State. If bees are used on a player they lose 1 point. Bees are not considered a resource and if they are deployed an unlimited amount of bee-related actions may be taken.Create a rule "Bee Poll" (%bee-poll) in %polls:> A Bee Poll is required to authorize bees to perform actions, as described in %bees. The default allowed reactions for a Bee Poll are 👍 (representing a vote for) and 👎 (representing a vote against). Bee Polls may be ended if they have existed for 12 hours, rather than the usual 24. When a Bee Poll ends, if there are more votes for the Bee Poll than against it, the Bee Poll passes. Players are permitted to use multiple reactions on a Bee Poll.
gollark: What? I'm going to just cancel the existing proposal and make one creating the bee section and bee rules section 1.

References

See also

Political offices
Preceded by
Peters F. Wanser
Mayor of Jersey City
19081913
Succeeded by
Mark M. Fagan
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