John Francis Ahearn
Judge Thomas A. Aurelio
Jacob Barker Lt. Charles Becker
James Topham Brady
Aaron Burr
John Cochrane
William Bourke Cockran
Betty Compton
Senator Royal Copeland
Joseph Hodges Choate
Judge Joseph Force Crater
Richard Croker
Carmine De Sapio
Big Bill Devery
Grand Sachem Joseph Dowling
John Foley
Thomas F. "Big Tom" Foley
Andrew Freedman Judge Emil Fuchs
James Gaffney
Andrew J. "The Prince of Plasterers" Garvey
Mayor William J. Gaynor
Mayor Thomas S. Gilroy
Mayor Charles Gunter
Mayor Abraham Oakey Hall
Congressman Francis Burton Harrison
Mayor Abraham Hewitt
James J. Hines
Mayor John T. Hoffman
Mayor John F. "Red Mike" Hylan
John Kelly
Mayor George B. McClellan
Daniel McFarland
Senator Thomas J. "The McManus" McManus
John Morrissey
Charles Francis Murphy
Gustavus Myers' History of Tammany Hall
- Chapter 1: Resistance to Autocracy,1789-1798
- Chapter 2: Aaron Burr at the Helm, 1798-1802
- Chapter 3: Tammany Quarrels with DeWitt
Clinton, 1802-1809
- Chapter 4: Slow Recovery from Disaster, 1809-
1815
- Chapter 5: Tammany in Absolute Control, 1815-
1817
- Chapter 6: Clinton Maintains His Supremacy,
1817-1820
- Chapter 7: The Suffrage Contest, 1820-1822
- Chapter 8: Struggle of the Presidential Factions,
1822-1825
- Chapter 9: The Jackson Element Victorious,
1825-1828
- Chapter 10: The Workingmen's Party, 1829-1830
- Chapter 11: Tammany and the Bank Contest,
1831-1834
- Chapter 12: The Equal Rights Party, 1834-1837
- Chapter 13: Tammany Purified, 1837-1838
- Chapter 14: Whig Failure Restores Tammany to
Power, 1838-1840
- Chapter 15: Rise and Progress of the "Gangs,"
1840-1846
- Chapter 16: "Barnburners" and "Hunkers" 1846-
1850
- Chapter 17: Defeat and Victory, 1850-1852
- Chapter 18: "Hardshells" and "Softshells"
- Chapter 19: A Chapter of Disclosures,1853-1854
- Chapter 20: Fernando Wood's First
Administration, 1854-1856:
- Chapter 21: Wood's Second Administration,
1856-1859
- Chapter 22: The Civil War and After, 1859-1867:
- Chapter 23: The Tweed "Ring" 1867-1870
- Chapter 24: Tweed in His Glory, 1870-1871
- Chapter 25: Collapse and Dispersion of the
"Ring," 1871-1872
- Chapter 26: Tammany Rises from the Ashes,
1872-1874
- Chapter 27: The Dictatorship of John Kelly, 1874-
1886:
- Chapter 28: The Dictatorship of Richard Croker,
1886-1897
- Chapter 29: The Dictatorship of Richard Croker,
(concluded) 1897-1901
- Chapter 30: Tammany Under Absentee Direction,
1901-1902
- Chapter 31: Charles F. Murphy's Autocracy,
1902-1903
- Chapter 32: The Sway of Bribery and "Honest
Graft," 1903-1905
- Chapter 33: Tammany's Control Under Leader
Murphy, 1906-1909
- Chapter 34: Another Era of Legislative
Corruption, 1910-1911:
- Chapter 35: "Chief" Murphy's Leadership--further
details, 1912-1913
- Chapter 36: Governor Sulzer's Impeachment and
Tammany's Defeat, 1913-1914
- Chapter 37: Tammany's Present Status, 1914-
1917
Mayor John P. O'Brien
United States Senator James A. O'Gorman
Senator George Washington Plunkitt
Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst
Arnold Rothstein
Colonel Jacob Ruppert
Thomas Fortune Ryan
Augustus Schell
Judge Samuel Seabury
Governor Alfred E. Smith
Governor William Sulzer
Congressman Christopher D. Sullivan
Senator Timothy D. "Big Tim" Sullivan
Peter B. Sweeney
Tammany Hall (general)
Governor Samuel J. Tilden
Vice-President Daniel D. Tompkins
William Marcy "Boss" Tweed
Judge Albert Vitale
Senator Robert F. Wagner
Mayor James J. "Gentleman Jimmy" Walker
Mayor Fernando Wood
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