Perry B. Duryea (state senator)
Perry Belmont Duryea (June 9, 1891 – November 9, 1968) was an American businessman and politician from New York.
Life
He was born on June 9, 1891, in New York City,[1] the son of Carll Smith Duryea (1859–1911) and Almyra J. Howell (1858–1913). He ran a seafood wholesale business in Montauk, New York. On January 2, 1920, he married Jane T. Stewart (1889–1978), and they had two children: Speaker of the New York State Assembly Perry B. Duryea (1921–2004) and Jane Duryea[2]
Duryea was elected on November 4, 1941, to the New York State Senate (1st D.), to fill the vacancy caused by the death of George L. Thompson, and took his seat in the 163rd New York State Legislature in January 1942. He was re-elected in 1942 and 1944, and remained in the State Senate until 1945, sitting in the 164th and 165th New York State Legislatures. He resigned his seat on April 11, 1945, and was appointed by Governor Thomas E. Dewey as New York State Commissioner of Conservation.[3] He remained in that office until the end of the Dewey administration in 1954; and was appointed by Dewey on December 31, 1954, as one of the employers' representatives to the New York State Advisory Council on Employment and Unemployment Insurance.[4]
He was an alternate delegate to the 1952 Republican National Convention.
He died on November 9, 1968, in South Oaks Hospital in Amityville, New York.[5]
Sources
- ↑ New York Red Book (1947; pg. 443)
- ↑ "Perry Belmont Duryea (1891–1968)" at Long Island Surnames
- ↑ P. B. DURYEA IN NEW POST; Dewey Names State Senator to Be Conservation Commissioner in the New York Times on April 12, 1945 (subscription required)
- ↑ DEWEY FILLS POSTS ON STATE COUNCILS in the New York Times on January 1, 1955 (subscription required)
- ↑ Perry Duryea Sr. Dies at 77 in the New York Times on November 10, 1968 (subscription required)
New York State Senate | ||
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Preceded by George L. Thompson |
New York State Senate 1st District 1942–1945 |
Succeeded by W. Kingsland Macy |