Gerardus Wynkoop II
Gerrardus Wynkoop was a member of the Pennsylvania [House of Representatives] from Bucks County and served as speaker of the House in 1793.
State Assembly prior to 1790
Votes
- November 23, 1778 – due to a disputed election in Chester County, whether persons, other than those with an exception by law, who took the oath of allegiance between June 1, 1778, and the last election should be entitled to a vote: nay
- Before October 7, 1786 – creating a committee to draft a bill that would allow the Receiver General of the Land Office to obtain back payments and interest for land purchased before July 4, 1776: nay
- December 28, 1786 – reviving the charter of the Bank of North America: yea
- December 28, 1786 – clause to place restrictions on the Bank of North America: nay
- March 6, 1787 – moving the state capital to Harrisburg: nay
- March 28, 1788 – act to amend or explain portions of an act to gradually abolish slavery : yea
- February 19, 1789 – for a committee to create a bill to restore the property of the college/academy/free school of Philadelphia to its trustees: yea
Elections (Bucks County)
Wynkoop won elections as a representative to the Assembly in the following years. Names listed with him are the others from Bucks County who won.- 1779
- 1781
- 1786 – 975 votes
- 1787
- 1788
- 1789
Speaker
On December 22, 1786, at the resignation of Thomas Mifflin as speaker of the Assembly, Wynkoop was elected speaker. He received forty-five votes and was escorted to the chair by Daniel Clymer. The oath was administered by a Mr. Evans. By December 26, 1786, around noon, Wynkoop resigned as speaker and Mifflin was re-elected.Dissolving the Assembly
Before the Pennsylvania Constitution was adopted in 1790, the state had a unicameral legislature. Wynkoop was a member of that legislature. On Saturday, September 4, 1790, the Assembly made an address to the people of the state of Pennsylvania, indicating the body was resigning from power due to concerns that their authority had ceased at the adoption of the new state Constitution. The speaker of the Assembly, Richard Peters, declined to be seated. Wynkoop was instead seated in the speaker's chair for this address.Miscellaneous notes
Wynkoop, along with Jacob Hiltheimer, escorted Richard Peters to the speaker's chair after his election. Peters was the final speaker of the unicameral general assembly.According to Wynkoop's obituary, he served nineteen years in the Assembly. It also notes that he served as speaker for several of those years. However, he was elected Bucks County Assessor in 1771 and 1773, which puts this claim in dispute. It could be correct if the writer meant to include both the State Assembly and the House of Representatives, assuming Wynkoop won his first election to the Assembly in 1775.
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Elections (Bucks County)
- 1790 – 1,652 votes
- 1791
- 1792
- 1793
- 1794 – came in fifth place with 537 votes, losing the election
Speaker
Wynkoop served as Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1793.Other political offices/positions
Assessor for Bucks County- 1771
- 1773
Wynkoop chaired a meeting on September 20, 1792, in Lancaster to select candidates for Congressional seats and Presidential electors. The list of electors does not include his name. However, an article dated August 27, 1792, does list his name as a Presidential elector.