Samuel B. H. Vance (1814 – August 10, 1890) was an American politician and member of the
Republican Party. As president of the New York City Board of Aldermen from 1873 to 1874, he briefly became Acting
Mayor of New York City between the death of the elected mayor,
William Havemeyer, on November 30, 1874, and the inauguration of his elected successor,
William H. Wickham, on January 1, 1875.
Early life
He was born in 1814 to a distinguished family in Pennsylvania.
Career
He served as a captain of volunteers in the
Mexican–American War of 1846–1848. In 1854, Vance began participating in a series of firms making gas and electric lighting fixtures in New York City, twice succeeding company presidents who had died. He was elected to the
New York City Board of Education in 1860, and to the Board of Aldermen in 1871[1] and was then chosen to be the latter's president on January 7, 1873, leading in turn to his one-month tenure as acting mayor in December 1874.
In 1885, he was one of three commissioners appointed by the
New York Supreme Court to study surface transportation on lower
Broadway between
Union Square West and
The Battery (what is now New York's
Financial District). The commission recommended that, because of increased traffic and commercial density in this area, the
Broadway Surface Railroad Company be granted a franchise to start and operate a horse (rather than cable) drawn line along this route.[2] (While a horse-drawn line did start in 1885, a
traction cable was installed eight years later.)
Personal life
Vance was married to Augusta Blanche Hall. They lived in a mansion at 30 West 57th Street. Together, they were the parents of:
Nannie Mitchell Vance (1860–1912), who married
John Ellis Roosevelt (1853–1939) in 1879.[3] Although Vance was a Republican, the groom's father,
Robert B. Roosevelt, was a former
Democratic New York City alderman and congressman (and future ambassador) who was in turn an uncle of
Theodore Roosevelt, the future mayoral candidate and president.
Through his daughter Nannie, Samuel Vance was the grandfather of:
Anita Blanche "Pansy" Roosevelt (1882–1929),[7][8] who reportedly was "ill from nervous prostration in a sanitarium in New York" in 1903.[9]
Gladys Roosevelt (1889–1926), who married Fairman Rogers Dick (1885–1976), son of Evans Rogers Dick, in 1913. Fairman's sister, Isabelle Mildred Dick (1884–1972) was married to
Stuyvesant Fish, Jr. (1883–1952), and stood up in the wedding of Gladys and Fairman.[10] Gladys was killed in a
horse riding accident at the
Meadow Brook Hunt Club in 1926.[11][12]
For Mitchell, Vance & Company, see New York's Great Industries by Richard Edwards (1884), reprinted in 1973 by Ayer Publishing,
ISBN0-405-05086-0, pages 96–97, free preview retrieved on June 1, 2008 from Google Books at
https://books.google.com/books?id=ZJi9P1eCf3MC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96, according to which Mitchell, Vance in 1884 had showrooms on Broadway and factories on Tenth Avenue between 24th and 25th Streets.