A City's Unseen Mayor: Is Zohran Mamdani Actually NYC's 112th, Not 111?
New York City officials are gearing up to welcome its newest mayor, Zohran Mamdani, who is set to take office on January 1. But a historian has raised eyebrows by claiming that the number of America's largest city mayors might be off by one – a discrepancy dating back over four centuries.
According to Paul Hortenstine, the error stems from Mayor Matthias Nicolls' second non-consecutive term in 1674-1675, which was overlooked in the official records. If true, this means that every subsequent mayor after Nicolls would have been miscounted by one spot – a domino effect that throws into question the identities of past mayors like Fiorella La Guardia and Eric Adams.
Hortenstine, a public policy and history writer, came across the discrepancy while researching the ties between early New York City mayors and slavery. He discovered that Nicolls' second term was referenced in documents from Edmund Andros, the colonial governor of New York, including an archive at the municipal archives titled "The Renascence of City Hall."
"It's a mind-boggling thought: 99 mayors misnumbered — most of them gone to the grave, secure in the knowledge of their place in history, but all of them numerically out of whack," noted Hortenstine. Historian Peter R. Christoph first brought this issue to light back in 1989.
Despite efforts by various individuals and groups to rectify the situation – including research at the New York Historical Society – the city's Department of Records has yet to acknowledge or correct the oversight in their official directory. The Green Book, a comprehensive guide to municipal government published annually, includes a list of mayors dating back to 1665 but fails to reflect Nicolls' second term.
While officials seem reluctant to confront this historical anomaly, some are left wondering whether the Adams administration will finally take steps to correct this glaring error in their official records.
New York City officials are gearing up to welcome its newest mayor, Zohran Mamdani, who is set to take office on January 1. But a historian has raised eyebrows by claiming that the number of America's largest city mayors might be off by one – a discrepancy dating back over four centuries.
According to Paul Hortenstine, the error stems from Mayor Matthias Nicolls' second non-consecutive term in 1674-1675, which was overlooked in the official records. If true, this means that every subsequent mayor after Nicolls would have been miscounted by one spot – a domino effect that throws into question the identities of past mayors like Fiorella La Guardia and Eric Adams.
Hortenstine, a public policy and history writer, came across the discrepancy while researching the ties between early New York City mayors and slavery. He discovered that Nicolls' second term was referenced in documents from Edmund Andros, the colonial governor of New York, including an archive at the municipal archives titled "The Renascence of City Hall."
"It's a mind-boggling thought: 99 mayors misnumbered — most of them gone to the grave, secure in the knowledge of their place in history, but all of them numerically out of whack," noted Hortenstine. Historian Peter R. Christoph first brought this issue to light back in 1989.
Despite efforts by various individuals and groups to rectify the situation – including research at the New York Historical Society – the city's Department of Records has yet to acknowledge or correct the oversight in their official directory. The Green Book, a comprehensive guide to municipal government published annually, includes a list of mayors dating back to 1665 but fails to reflect Nicolls' second term.
While officials seem reluctant to confront this historical anomaly, some are left wondering whether the Adams administration will finally take steps to correct this glaring error in their official records.