Källinformation

New York State Archives
Ancestry.com. New York, USA, verkställande beslut angående straffomvandling, benådningar, strafflindring, och uppskov, 1845-1931 [webbaserad databas]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013.
Originaldata:

New York (State) Department of State. Executive restorations of citizenship rights, 1869–1931, Series B0046 (8 volumes). New York State Archives, Albany, New York.


New York (State). Executive clemency application status ledgers, 1883-1899, Series A0626 (5 volumes). New York State Archives, Albany, New York.


New York (State). Executive clemency and pardon application ledgers and correspondence, 1849-1903, Series A0629 (41 volumes). New York State Archives, Albany, New York.


New York (State) Department of State. Respites and commutations, 1854-1931, Series B0048 (5 volumes). New York State Archives, Albany, New York.


New York (State) Department of State. Executive orders for commutations, pardons, restorations, and respites, 1840-1929, Series B0049 (27 volumes). New York State Archives, Albany, New York.


 New York, USA, verkställande beslut angående straffomvandling, benådningar, strafflindring, och uppskov, 1845-1931

En fällande dom kunde innebära förlust av vissa medborgerliga rättigheter, inklusive rätten att rösta, rätten att inneha vapen och att sitta i en jury. Under större delen av 1800-talet i New York nekades den som begått ett "skändligt brott" rätten att rösta. Guvernören hade emellertid rätt att återställa de medborgerliga rättigheterna. Den här samlingen innehåller åtta volymer med beslut där guvernören i New York har återgett dömda brottslingar deras medborgerliga rättigheter.

A felony conviction can mean loss of some citizenship rights, including the right to vote, possess firearms, and serve on a jury. Throughout much of the nineteenth century in New York, the right to vote was denied to anyone convicted of an “infamous crime,” but citizenship rights could be restored at the governor’s discretion. This collection includes eight volumes of restorations to citizenship that New York governors issued to convicted felons.

Each record includes the felon’s name, crime, date and county of conviction, sentence, and prison. Signatures on the records can include the governor, secretary of state, and/or deputy secretary of state.

Updates:
7 Apr 2020: Added 39,246 new records of executive clemency application ledgers and correspondence.