The 1834
Boston mayoral election saw the election of incumbent
Theodore Lyman II. It was held on December 8, 1834.[1]
Incumbent mayor Lyman was a
Democrat.[2][3] Both the Democrats and the
Whigs nominated Lyman, leaving him formally unopposed.[2][4] He was also supported by other tickets such as the "Grocer's Ticket".[5] The decision for the Whigs not to put forth their own candidate came despite their dominance in the city's other municipal races in coinciding election.[6]
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abCurry, Leonard P. (1997), The Corporate City: The American city as a Political Entity, 1800-1850, Westport, Ct: Greenwood Press, p. 96,
ISBN0-313-30277-4