George Clinton (born July 26, 1739 in Little Britain, New York; died April 20, 1812 in Washington DC), the first Governor of New York, served between July 30, 1777 and July 1, 1795, including the whole of 1779.
George Clinton (born July 26, 1739 in Little Britain, New York; died April 20, 1812 in Washington DC), the first Governor of New York, served between July 30, 1777 and July 1, 1795, including the whole of 1784.
George Clinton (born July 26, 1739 in Little Britain, New York; died April 20, 1812 in Washington DC), the first Governor of New York, served between July 30, 1777 and July 1, 1795, including the whole of 1787.
Morgan Lewis (born October 16, 1754 in New York, New York; died April 7, 1844 in New York, New York) succeeded George Clinton as the third Governor of New York, serving between July 1, 1804 and July 1, 1807. Following the end of Lewis' term as Governor, Daniel D. Tompkins (born June 21, 1774 in Scarsdale, New York; died June 11, 1825 in Tompkinsville, Staten Island, New York) became the fourth Governor of New York, serving between July 1, 1807 and February 24, 1817.
DeWitt Clinton (born March 2, 1769 in Little Britain, New York; died February 11, 1828 in Albany, New York) succeeded John Tayler as the sixth Governor of New York, serving between July 1, 1817 and December 31, 1822, including the whole of 1819.
DeWitt Clinton (born March 2, 1769 in Little Britain, New York; died February 11, 1828 in Albany, New York) succeeded John Tayler as the sixth Governor of New York, serving between July 1, 1817 and December 31, 1822.
George Clinton (born July 26, 1739 in Little Britain, New York; died April 20, 1812 in Washington DC), the first Governor of New York, served between July 30, 1777 and July 1, 1795, including the whole of 1788.
George Clinton (born July 26, 1739 in Little Britain, New York; died April 20, 1812 in Washington DC), the first Governor of New York, served between July 30, 1777 and July 1, 1795, including the whole of 1793.
John Jay (born December 12, 1745 in New York, New York; died May 17, 1829 in Bedford, New York) succeeded George Clinton as the second Governor of New York, serving between July 1, 1795 and July 1, 1801, including the whole of 1799.
Yes he was. He was the governor of New York.
No, she is not. Additionally, she is not, and has never been, the governor of New York. The current governor of New York is David Paterson.
No, he was Governor of New York State. (New York City has a mayor, not a governor.) No, cities do not have governors. They have mayors. Thomas E. Dewey was the 47th Governor of New York State. He served from 1943 to 1954.
The current Lieutenant Governor of New York is Robert Duffy. Duffy assumed office as Lieutenant Governor of New York on January 1, 2011.who is the lieutenant governor of New York State
Kathy Hochul is the current Lieutenant Governor of New York.
Sir Edmund Andros was the autocratic governor of New York. He was also the Royal governor of the Dominion of New England.
No, he was Governor of New York State. (New York city has a mayor, not a governor.) No, cities do not have governors. They have mayors. Thomas E. Dewey was the 47th Governor of New York State. He served from 1943 to 1954.
David Paterson is no longer the Governor of New York. He left office in 2011 and Andrew Cuomo is now Governor of New York.
Joseph Clark - New York - was born in 1787.
The Governor of New York State is Andrew M Cuomo.
Eliot Spitzer was the governor of New York. He resigned in 2008.
I suppose you mean "governor". Anyway, it is David Patterson.