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List of mayors of Detroit

This is a list of mayors of Detroit, Michigan. See History of Detroit, for more information about the history of the incorporation of the city.

Mayor of the City of Detroit
Seal of the City of Detroit
Flag of the City of Detroit
Incumbent
Mike Duggan
since January 1, 2014
ResidenceManoogian Mansion
Term lengthFour years
Constituting instrumentDetroit City Charter
Formation1824
First holderJohn R. Williams
WebsiteMayor's Office

The current mayor is Mike Duggan,[1] who was sworn into office on January 1, 2014.

History of Detroit's executive authority edit

During the earliest part of its history, Detroit was a military outpost, and executive authority was wielded by first French, then British military commandants. Soon after the Detroit area was taken over by American forces, civil authority became more prominent, and executive authority was placed in the hands of a series of appointed officials, elected boards, and elected officials. This included a brief stint in 1806–1809 with a largely ceremonial mayor.

Detroit's current strong mayor system dates from the city's 1824 charter. From 1824 to 1857, mayors were elected to terms of one year; from 1858 to 1953 the term was increased to two years, and after 1953 mayoral terms were four years.[2]

Early French and British leadership edit

During the early part of Detroit's existence, local authority was vested in French and British military commandants. French commandants included:[3]

Seventeen British commandants led Detroit between 1760 and 1796.[4]

Early American leadership edit

When Detroit was turned over to the Americans in 1796, Colonel Jean François Hamtramck was named commander of Detroit, a position he held until his death in 1803.[5]

The first local rule of Detroit was established in 1802, when Detroit was incorporated as a town.[6] The original incorporation provided for a board of trustees to govern the town, the chairman of which was the highest governmental position.[7] The first chairman of the Board, appointed on February 9, 1802, was James Henry. Henry was elected to the position later in the year. Subsequent elections were held in May of each year, with the chairmen of the Board of Trustees being:[6]

  • James Henry (1802–1803)
  • James May (1803–1804)
  • Solomon Sibley (1804–1805)
  • Joseph Wilkinson (elected 1805)

1806 charter edit

In 1805, a massive fire destroyed the town and effectively eliminated the government. Governor William Hull and Judge Augustus Woodward dissolved the original incorporation, replacing it in 1806 with a government headed by an appointed mayor.[6] However, the position was largely honorary, and the two men who held it (Solomon Sibley and Elijah Brush) each quickly resigned upon realizing the lack of power in the office.[7] The legislation creating this mayoral position was repealed in 1809,[7] after which de facto political power still resided with Hull and Woodward, and Detroit was without either a mayor or board of trustees until after the War of 1812.[6]

Second Board of Trustees edit

After the war, a legislative act in 1815 ended the interregnum and returned political control to the citizens of Detroit through a Board of Trustees, elected yearly. In October of that year, Solomon Sibley was elected as the first chair.[7] The chairs elected yearly to this Board included:[6]

  • Solomon Sibley (1815–1816)
  • George McDougall (1816–1817)
  • Abraham Edwards (1817–1818)
  • John R. Williams (1818–1819)
  • James McCloskey (1819–1820)
  • James Abbott (1820–1821)
  • Andrew G. Whitney (1821–1822)
  • James Abbott (second term, 1823–1824)
  • Andrew G. Whitney (second term, 1822–1823)

1824 charter edit

In 1824, John R. Williams drew up a new city charter that provided for the first time for a directly elected mayor, with significantly increased executive powers.[7] Following approval by the state legislature, Williams became the City of Detroit's first elected mayor.

1918 charter and nonpartisan elections edit

In June 1918 Detroit's first home-rule city charter came into effect, following passage by city voters in a referendum. The new charter mandated that all Detroit public offices be non-partisan, and that elections to those positions would be held on a non-partisan basis, with no party designations on the ballot. These provisions have been continued through all subsequent city charter revisions.

Since 1918, all mayoral elections in Detroit have been held on a non-partisan basis, and mayors have officially served unaffiliated with any political party. Thus, the party affiliations given in the chart below for mayors elected after 1918 are not official and are based on the inferences of editors based on available historic information.

Official residence edit

Since 1966, the official residence of the Mayor of Detroit has been the Manoogian Mansion, located on Dwight Street in the Berry Subdivision Historic District, facing the Detroit River on the city's east side. The mansion was donated to the city by industrialist Alex Manoogian, founder of the Masco Corporation.

First incorporation edit

Two mayors served under the 1806 charter.[7]

# Name Term Party Notes
1   Solomon Sibley 1806 Democratic[8] Solomon Sibley was the author of Detroit's first city charter in 1806, and became the city's first mayor under the charter.[7] However, when he found the office powerless in the face of the entrenched governor and judges, he resigned.[7] Sibley went on to serve as chair of Detroit's board of trustees during the time between mayoral control,[7] and later as a delegate to the United States House of Representatives and as a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court.
2   Elijah Brush 1806 Elijah Brush was appointed to the mayor's chair after Sibley's resignation, but like Sibley found the position powerless and soon resigned himself.[7] He owned the ribbon farm immediately adjacent to Detroit, along which Brush Street now runs. Brush served as a lieutenant colonel in the Territorial Militia, and was taken prisoner during the War of 1812; he died soon after returning to Detroit in 1814.[7]

Reincorporation edit

The following mayors served under the stronger executive mayoral system begun in the 1824 charter:[9]

# Mayor Term Party Notes
1   John R. Williams 1824–1825 Democratic[10] John R. Williams wrote the City Charter and served from 1824 to 1825 as the first mayor under the re-incorporation.[7] He also served a second time in 1830, and a third in 1844–1846. He was a successful merchant, and served in a number of other capacities, including as one of the first trustees of the University of Michigan, was president of the Detroit Board of Education, and was a delegate to the first Michigan Constitutional Convention.[11]
2   Henry Jackson Hunt 1826 Democratic[10] Henry Jackson Hunt was a successful merchant, and served in various political offices, including county judge, city assessor, and trustee of the University of Michigan.[7] He was the uncle and namesake of Civil War General Henry Jackson Hunt. Hunt died while in office on September 15, 1826.[9]
3   Jonathan Kearsley 1826 Democratic[12] Jonathan Kearsley served in the War of 1812, and was wounded badly enough to have his leg amputated.[13] He moved to Detroit in 1819 to become of Receiver of Public Monies, a post he held for 30 years. Kearsley was mayor twice, being appointed once in 1826 to fill Henry Jackson Hunt's term after his death, and being elected himself in 1829.[7][9]
4   John Biddle 1827–1828 Whig[14] Major John Biddle was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1792, the son of Charles Biddle, former Vice President of Pennsylvania,[15] He was in the US Army during the War of 1812, and was active in Detroit politics and civic life. He went on to serve as Michigan Territory delegate to the United States House of Representatives. His summer estate, "Wyandotte," was expanded into the current city of Wyandotte, Michigan.[15]
5   Jonathan Kearsley 1829 Democratic[10] (see above)
6   John R. Williams 1830 Democratic[10] (see above)
7   Marshall Chapin 1831 Whig[10] Marshall Chapin trained as a medical doctor, and established the first drugstore in Detroit in 1819,[13] which endured well after Chapin's death and on into the 1880s.[7] He served twice as mayor (in 1831 and 1833) and was appointed City Physician during the cholera epidemics of 1832 and 1834.[13]
8   Levi Cook 1832 Whig[16] Levi Cook served in multiple positions in the government of Detroit and Michigan, including as Representative to the State House, Treasurer of the Michigan Territory, and mayor of Detroit in 1832, 1835, and 1836.[13]
9   Marshall Chapin 1833[13] Whig[10] (see above)
10   Charles Christopher Trowbridge 1834 Whig[17] Trowbridge moved to Detroit in 1819, at 19 years of age. In 1820, he served on the Lewis Cass expedition, led by Lewis Cass, so impressing Cass that the latter made Trowbridge his private secretary.[18] In 1821, Trowbridge helped negotiate a treaty between the US government and the Winnebago and Menominee Indians, and was later appointed assistant secretary in the local Indian department.[18] In 1833, Trowbridge became an alderman of the city of Detroit,[18] and briefly served as Mayor during the cholera epidemic of 1834, resigning his position soon after.[19] In 1837, he ran as the Whig candidate for governor of Michigan, and was defeated by Stevens T. Mason.
11   Andrew Mack 1834 Democratic[20] A cholera epidemic broke out in 1834 during Mayor Charles Christopher Trowbridge's term; when the epidemic had subsided, Trowbridge resigned.[13] Andrew Mack won the ensuing special election on September 24 with 91 votes.[21] He later represented Wayne County in the Michigan Legislature.[13]
12   Levi Cook 1835–1836 Whig[10] (see above)
13   Henry Howard 1837 Democratic[22] Henry Howard moved to Detroit in 1827 to manage Howard and Wadhams, a commercial lumber venture. In his brief tenure in Detroit, he served as an alderman and mayor for one term, as well as the treasurer and auditor general of the state of Michigan. In 1840, Howard moved to Buffalo, New York to become treasurer of the Buffalo Savings Bank.[22]
14   Augustus Seymour Porter 1838 – March 14, 1839 Whig[23] Augustus Porter was the nephew of Peter Buell Porter; he practiced law for 20 years in Detroit, acting as city Recorder in 1830 and elected mayor in 1838.[24] He resigned on March 14, 1839 to serve as United States Senator for Michigan.[9] In 1846 he moved to Niagara Falls, New York.[24]
15   Asher B. Bates March 15, 1839 – April 18, 1839[25][26] Whig Asher Bates came to Detroit in 1831, and served as Justice of the Peace and City Attorney.[13] After Porter resigned, Bates was acting mayor for the remainder of Porter's term.[9] He later served as Attorney General for the Kingdom of Hawaii[13] and died in 1873 in San Francisco of leprosy contracted in Hawaii.[27]
16   De Garmo Jones 1839 Whig[28] De Garmo Jones came to Detroit from Albany, New York, and was involved in many business ventures, including the Michigan Central Railroad.[13] In addition to serving as mayor, he was a city alderman multiple times, as well as state senator.[13]
17   Zina Pitcher 1840–1841 Whig[29] Zina Pitcher was a medical doctor, and began his career as a surgeon in the United States Army, eventually becoming president of the Army Medical Board in 1835.[13] After leaving the Army, he came to Detroit in 1836 and served in various positions, including both city and county physician, Regent of the University of Michigan, and three terms as mayor( 1840, 1841, and 1843).[13] While Regent, Pitcher took an active role in establishing the medical school at the University.[13]
18   Douglass Houghton 1842 Democratic[10] Douglass Houghton was educated as a medical doctor, but after coming to Michigan served as the state geologist from 1833 until his death in 1845, and as a geology professor at the University of Michigan.[13] He was also a member of the National Institute in Washington DC and the Boston Society of Natural History, an honorary member of the Royal Antiquarian Society of Copenhagen, and a member of many other scientific and literary associations.[13] Houghton died in 1845 in a storm on Lake Superior near Eagle River, Michigan.[13] Houghton County, Michigan is named in his honor.[13]
19   Zina Pitcher 1843 Whig[29] (see above)
20   John R. Williams 1844–1846 Democratic[10] (see above)
21   James A. Van Dyke 1847 Whig[30] James A. Van Dyke was a lawyer by profession, served as City Attorney for Detroit, Wayne County prosecuting attorney, city alderman, and mayor.[13] In addition, he was heavily influential in early organization of the Detroit Fire Department, serving as president of the department from 1847 to 1851.[30]
22   Frederick Buhl 1848 Whig[10] Frederick Buhl moved to Detroit in 1833 and, with his brother Christian H. Buhl, began a business in hats and furs.[13] The business was large and successful, and Frederick Buhl remained at the helm until 1887, when he sold the business to his son. In addition to his furrier business, Frederick Buhl was the director of two banks, the president of Harper Hospital, and one of the original directors of the Merchant's Exchange and Board of Trade.[13] He also served on the city council as well as being mayor, and later in life joined the Republican Party.[31]
23   Charles Howard 1849 Whig[10] Charles Howard moved to Detroit in 1840 as an agent for the shipping and forwarding firm of Bronson, Crocker, and Company, and branched out into railroad construction and other endeavors.[13] He was simultaneously president of the Farmer's and Mechanics Bank and the Peninsular Bank,[32] and in 1848 he was elected mayor of Detroit.[13] Howard moved to New York City after the Panic of 1857 caused the Peninsular Bank to fail.[33]
24   John Ladue 1850 Democratic[34] In 1847, Ladue moved to Detroit, and began in the business of manufacturing leather and purchasing wool.[13] He was popular among the business community, and in 1850 was elected mayor.[13] He died only a few years after in 1854.
25   Zachariah Chandler 1851 Whig[35] Zachariah Chandler arrived in Detroit in 1833 and opened a dry goods store.[13] After serving as mayor of Detroit, Chandler spent 18 years in the United States Senate, and was also the United States Secretary of the Interior under Ulysses S. Grant.
26   John H. Harmon 1852–1853 Democratic[13] John Harmon came to Detroit in 1838, as a member of the Hunter Patriots, a group dedicated to ridding North America of the British Empire.[36] In December 1838, Harmon took part in the Battle of Windsor, personally burning the British barracks and the steamer Thames.[36] After the battle, Harmon stayed in Detroit, taking a job at the Detroit Free Press, and eventually purchasing the paper.[13] Harmon served as an alderman of the city of Detroit in 1847 and two years as mayor,[13] as well as representing Michigan on the 1848 Democratic National Committee,[37] and serving as Collector for the Port of Detroit. After he left the office of Collector, Harmon spent much of his time in Washington, DC, during congressional sessions.[38]
27   Oliver Moulton Hyde 1854 Whig[13] Oliver Moulton Hyde moved to Detroit in 1838 and opened a hardware store on Woodward Avenue.[13] Hyde branched out in business, opening a foundry and machine shop, and began manufacturing marine engines and other steamboat hardware, and later began a dry dock business.[13] Hyde was elected to the city council numerous times, and served as mayor of Detroit in 1854, 1856, and 1857. He was also appointed Collector for the Port of Detroit under presidents Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore.[13]
28   Henry Ledyard 1855 Democratic[39] Henry Ledyard was the son of prominent New York lawyer Benjamin Ledyard and Susan French Livingston (the daughter of Revolutionary War Colonel and US Supreme Court justice Brockholst Livingston and granddaughter of New Jersey governor William Livingston).[13] When Lewis Cass was appointed Minister to France, Ledyard accompanied him to Paris, eventually becoming chargé d’affaires of the embassy and marrying Cass's daughter Mildred.[13] Ledyard returned to the United States in 1844 and moved to Detroit, serving as a member of the Board of Education, an alderman of the city, one of the original commissioners on the Board of Water Commissioners, mayor in 1855, and state senator in 1857.[13] When Lewis Cass was appointed Secretary of State under James Buchanan, Ledyard accompanied him to Washington, DC, and remained there until 1861,[13] briefly serving as assistant secretary of state.[39] Afterwards, he moved to Newport, Rhode Island, where he lived for the rest of his life and was the first president of the Newport Hospital and the president of the Redwood Library.[13]
29   Oliver Moulton Hyde 1856–1857 Whig (see above)
30   John Patton 1858–1859 Democratic[40] John Patton was a carriagemaker born in County Down, Ireland. He emigrated to the United States as a boy, and later came to Detroit and established a factory.[40] He held many positions in the city, including chief engineer of the Fire Department, the Department president, city alderman, mayor, county auditor, Wayne County, Michigan sheriff, Justice of the Peace, and United States consul at Amherstburg, Ontario.[40]
31   Christian H. Buhl 1860–1861 Republican[41] Christian H. Buhl moved to Detroit in 1833 and, with his brother Frederick Buhl, began a business in hats and furs.[13] The business was large and successful, and in 1855, Christian retired from the fur trade and started a wholesale hardware firm. Buhl was also part owner of the Sharon Iron Works, the Detroit Locomotive Works (later the Buhl Iron Works),[13] and organized Detroit Copper and Brass Company and the Peninsular Car Company.[41] He was an alderman as well as mayor of Detroit.
32   William C. Duncan 1862–1863 Democratic[42] William C. Duncan moved to Detroit in 1849 and set up shop as a brewer.[13] He quickly became popular, and in 1852 was elected city alderman. He also served as the first council president,[42] mayor, and state senator.[13] Ill-health in the mid-1860s forced his retirement from business and politics, and Duncan died, childless, in 1877.[13]
33   Kirkland C. Barker 1864–1865 Democratic[10] Barker was born in Schuyler, New York, and worked in the shipping business before coming to Detroit and establishing the successful tobacco business of KC Barker & Company.[13] An avid outdoorsman, Barker was also the presiding officer of the Horse Association of America, and was elected Commodore of the Great Lakes Yacht Club.[43] He died in a boating accident near his home on Grosse Ile, Michigan.[13]
34   Merrill I. Mills 1866–1867 Democratic[13] Mills, born in Canton, Connecticut, originally planned to start a general store in Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1845. However, early closing of navigation that year left Mills with his stock in Detroit, and, sensing an opportunity, he set up shop there instead.[13] Barker soon began trading in furs, then went into tobacco manufacturing as well as other pursuits.[13] In addition to being mayor, he served two years as head of the Democratic State Committee, and was a delegate to the 1876 Democratic National Convention.[13]
35   William W. Wheaton 1868–1871 Democratic[13] Wheaton was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1833.[13] He came to Detroit in 1853 and built a successful wholesale grocery business.[13] He was elected mayor in 1868, and later served as the chair of the Democratic State Convention.[13]
36   Hugh Moffat 1872–1875 Republican[13] Moffat was born in 1810 in Coldstream, Scotland, and made his way to Detroit in 1837.[13] He began work as a carpenter, built up a successful and profitable business and expanded into the lumber trade by purchasing a sawmill and forested land.[13] Moffat was elected mayor for two terms; his administration was marked by a fractious relationship with the Detroit City Council, but his integrity earned him the moniker "Honest Hugh Moffat."[13]
37   Alexander Lewis 1876–1877 Democratic[13] Alexander Lewis was born in Windsor, Ontario and came to Detroit when he was 14 to work as a clerk.[13] He eventually started his own forwarding & commission business, then moved onto wholesale trade and other businesses. In addition to being mayor, he served as Police Commissioner and a board member of the Detroit Public Library.[13]
38   George C. Langdon 1878–1879 Democratic[44] George C. Langdon began work as a clerk, and eventually went into the business of brewing and malting, amassing a considerable fortune.[45] After his stint in the mayor's office, he suffered some reversals of fortune, and was forced to return to clerking at the City Hall.[45]
39   William G. Thompson 1880–1883 Republican[46] Thompson was a Republican while serving as mayor, and a delegate to both the 1876 and 1880 Republican National Convention.[46] However, in 1884 he switched parties to become a Democrat. He ran once more for mayor in 1891, being defeated by the then-incumbent Hazen S. Pingree.[47] He also served as a state senator, being elected in 1894.[48][49] In 1888, Thompson was party to a sensational and public fight, where Thompson was considerably pummeled, with his broth-in-law Daniel Campau, where the latter warned Thompson that "he must not talk about his wife hereafter in barrooms and other public places, as he had been doing."[50] William G. Thompson died in 1904 of injuries received after being knocked down by a bicycle.[48]
40   Stephen Benedict Grummond 1884–1885 Republican[13] Stephen Benedict Grummond was born in Marine City, Michigan, and made his fortune in the shipping and marine industry.[13] Grummond was originally a Democrat, but joined the Republican Party when it was established, and served on the Board of Estimates, the Detroit City Council, and one term as mayor.[13]
41   Marvin H. Chamberlain 1886–1887 Democratic[13] Marvin H. Chamberlain was a wholesale liquor distributor.[51] He served as president of the Detroit City Council before being elected mayor.[13] In 1898, Chamberlain patented a "liquid separating process" for reduction of garbage, and received the contract to collect garbage in Detroit under the company name of Detroit Liquid Separating Co.[52] He later built similar plants in other cities.[51]
42   John Pridgeon, Jr. 1888–1889 Democratic[10] John Pridgeon, Jr. was born in Detroit on August 1, 1852, the son of Captain John Pridgeon.[13] In 1871, he joined as a clerk his father's business of buying, selling, and operating sailing ships and tugs.[13] Pridgeon was a member of the first Park Commission, serving from 1879 to 1883.[53] He was elected to the city council in 1885, and in 1887 was elected mayor of Detroit, serving one term in 1888–1889.[13] He later served as a member of the Police Commission from 1891 to 1892.[53] After his stint as mayor, Pridgeon diversified his business interests, and in the years 1890–1900 served variously as president of the State Transportation Company, president of the Pridgeon Transportation Company, vice-president of the White Star Line, vice-president of the Red Star Line, and vice-president of the River Savings Bank.[53]
43   Hazen S. Pingree 1890–1897 Republican[10] Hazen Pingree was born in Denmark, Maine, and worked for several years in a shoe factory before enlisting in the Union Army to serve in the Civil War.[54] Following the war, Pingree moved to Detroit and there established the Pingree and Smith Shoe Co., which eventually had sales of over $1,000,000 per year.[55] Pingree was elected mayor of Detroit in 1889 on a platform of exposing and ending corruption in city paving contracts, sewer contracts, and the school board.[55] During the depression of 1893, Pingree expanded the public welfare programs, initiated public works for the unemployed, built new schools, parks, and public baths.[55] He gained national recognition through his "potato patch plan," a systematic use of vacant city land for gardens which would produce food for the city's poor.[55] Pingree was elected mayor four times, and in 1896 was elected Governor of Michigan.[54] However, his right to hold the two offices simultaneously was contested, and after the Michigan Supreme Court ruled against him, Pingree resigned as mayor on March 22, 1897.[9][55] During his four years in office, the direct election of U.S. senators was promoted; an eight-hour workday was endorsed; a regulated income tax was supported; and railroad taxation was advocated.[56]
44   William Richert March 22, 1897 – April 5, 1897 Republican[57] William Richert served on the Detroit City Council for eight years, and as president of the body in 1895 and 1897.[58] Richert served as acting mayor from March 22 to April 5, 1897, after Pingree was declared ineligible to serve as both mayor and governor.[9]
45   William C. Maybury 1897–1904 Democratic[10] Maybury served as the city attorney for Detroit during the 1870s, and was twice elected to the United States House of Representatives, in 1882 and 1884.[59] He was elected mayor of Detroit in 1897 to complete Hazen S. Pingree's term, and was elected twice thereafter. In 1900, Maybury ran unsuccessfully for Governor of Michigan.[59]
46   George P. Codd 1905–1906 Republican[10] George P. Codd studied as a lawyer and was admitted to the bar in 1892.[60] He was assistant city attorney from 1894 to 1897, a member of the board of aldermen from 1902 to 1904, mayor of Detroit from 1905 to 1906, a regent of the University of Michigan in 1910 and 1911, circuit judge of Wayne County from 1911 to 1921 and 1924 to 1927, and a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1921 to 1923.[60]
47   William Barlum Thompson 1907–1908 Democratic[10] William Barlum Thompson served as an alderman for two terms, from 1891 to 1894, and was elected for a third term in 1896.[61] He resigned his seat as an alderman in 1897 after being elected city treasurer, and served as mayor for two terms, in 1907–1908 and 1911–1912.[61]
48   Philip Breitmeyer 1909–1910 Republican[10] After finishing school, Breitmeyer joined the family florist business, John Breitmeyer & Sons, and after his father's death bought out his brothers to become sole owner of the firm.[62] The business grew rapidly, and Breitmeyer was one of the organizers, and served as president, of Florists' Telegraph Delivery (now Florists' Transworld Delivery, or FTD).[62] Breitmeyer was appointed by George P. Codd as Commissioner of Parks and Boulevards for the city of Detroit.[63] So well did he perform that he was nominated as the candidate for mayor, and was elected for a term in 1909–1910.[63] Breitmeyer ran again for mayor in 1933, but was soundly defeated by James Couzens's son Frank.[64]
49   William Barlum Thompson 1911–1912 Democratic[10] (see above)
50   Oscar Marx 1913–1918 Republican[10] Oscar Marx was born on July 14, 1866, in Wayne County, Michigan, the son of German immigrants.[65] As Detroit and Hamtramck, Michigan grew, the encroaching cities swallowed the Marx farm; when Oscar Marx's father sold the farm, he gave Oscar several thousand dollars, which he used to buy into a bankrupt optical firm, the Michigan Optical Company.[65] Marx steered the company to become one of the largest in the region.[65] In 1895 he was elected as an alderman, a position he held for eight years.[66] In 1910, he was appointed City Assessor, and two years later saw his first of three terms as Detroit's mayor.[65] Marx was friends with Robert Oakman and John Dodge, and the three men controlled the Republican Party in Southeast Michigan for much of the 1910s.[67] Marx appointed James J. Couzens, the man who would become the next mayor, to take over the Detroit police force,[67]

Non-partisan elections edit

A new city charter went into effect in 1918, which required that all city offices be non-partisan. The following mayors were elected in non-partisan elections with no party designations on the ballot, and served on a non-partisan basis with no official party affiliation:[68] This provision has been repeated in the subsequent city charters of 1974, 1997, and 2012:[69] So, the party affiliations shown below are based on information from each mayor's personal and/or political history and do not represent any official status.

# Mayor Term Party Notes
51   James J. Couzens 1919–1922 Republican[10] Couzens began his career working for the New York Central Railroad, then became a clerk for coal dealer Alexander Y. Malcomson.[70] In 1903, Malcomson helped bankroll Henry Ford in his new venture, the Ford Motor Company. Couzens borrowed heavily and invested $2500 in the new firm, and took over the business side of the operation.[70] Ford Motor Company became immensely profitable, paying Couzens large dividends; when he finally sold his stock to Ford in 1919, Couzens received $30,000,000.[70] In the 1910s, Couzens was appointed street railway commissioner and police commissioner for Detroit.[71] In 1919, he took the step to elected office, being twice elected mayor of Detroit.[71] Couzens resigned on December 5, 1922, after being appointed as the United States Senator for Michigan, replacing the disgraced Truman H. Newberry.[9][71] Couzens was re-elected twice more, and served in the Senate until his death in 1936.[71] His son Frank served as Detroit mayor in the 1930s.[72]
52   John C. Lodge December 5, 1922 – April 9, 1923 Republican[10] John C. Lodge served for over 30 years on the Detroit City Council, many of them as its president.[73][74] In that, capacity, Lodge served as acting mayor twice: once after James J. Couzens's resignation in 1922 and once after Joseph A. Martin's resignation in 1924.[9] Lodge was later elected in his own right as mayor for one term in 1928–1930,[9] after which he was re-elected to a seat on the City Council.[9] After Lodge's death in 1950, the John C. Lodge Freeway (M-10) in Detroit was named after him.[75]
53   Frank Ellsworth Doremus April 9, 1923 – June 10, 1924 Democratic[10] Doremus was a newspaperman and lawyer.[76] He served in the United States House of Representatives from 1911 to 1921,[76] including a stint as chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.[77] Doremus was elected mayor in 1923, but resigned on June 10, 1924, due to ill-health.[9][78]
54   Joseph A. Martin June 10, 1924 – August 2, 1924 Republican Joseph A. Martin was Commissioner of Public Works for Detroit from 1920 to 1923.[79] He served as acting mayor in 1924 after Frank Ellsworth Doremus resigned for health reasons.[78] Martin resigned to concentrate on running for mayor, but lost a three-way race to John W. Smith (with Charles Bowles as the write-in candidate).[80] Joseph A. Martin died in 1928.[81]
55   John C. Lodge August 2, 1924 – November 21, 1924 Republican[10] (see above)
56   John W. Smith November 21, 1924 – January 9, 1928 Republican[10] In 1911, Smith was appointed Deputy State Labor Commissioner by Governor Chase S. Osborn.[82] He was elected to the Michigan State Senate in 1920, and was appointed postmaster of Detroit by Warren G. Harding in 1922.[82] In 1924, Smith won election as Detroit mayor after Frank Ellsworth Doremus's resignation,[82] continuing in the office until 1928.[9] Smith later served on the Detroit City Council for most of the time from 1932 until his death in 1942.[74] He served one more time as mayor in 1933, acting to fill out the end of Frank Murphy's term,[9] after the latter had resigned and his successor, Frank Couzens, also resigned to concentrate on running for election as mayor.[83]
57   John C. Lodge January 10, 1928 – January 14, 1930 Republican[10] (see above)
58   Charles Bowles January 14, 1930 – September 22, 1930 Republican[10] In 1925, Charles Boles rose from obscurity to run for the mayoral seat vacated by Frank Ellsworth Doremus, with heavy support from the Ku Klux Klan.[84] He ran third in the primary election behind John W. Smith and Joseph A. Martin,[85] but continued his campaign as a write-in candidate, and narrowly lost only after 15,000 write-in ballots were disqualified.[84] Bowles ran again in 1929, this time defeating both Smith and John C. Lodge to win the election.[86] Bowles had campaigned as an anti-crime reformer, but when he fired Police Commissioner Harold Emmons after the latter had ordered a series of raids, he was accused of "tolerating lawlessness" and a recall election was instituted barely six months after he had entered office.[86][87] The recall was successful,[87] and Bowles lost the special election called to replace him to Frank Murphy on September 22, 1930.[9][88]
59   Frank Murphy September 23, 1930 – May 10, 1933 Democratic[10] Frank Murphy was a recorder's court judge in the 1920s;[89] his one-man grand jury investigation into city corruption raised his profile in the public's eye.[90] He ran against Charles Bowles after the latter was recalled in 1930 and was elected, and was re-elected for a full term the following year. Frank Murphy resigned the mayorship in 1933 when Franklin D. Roosevelt named him Governor-General of the Philippines.[89] He later went on to become Governor of Michigan, Attorney General of the United States, and finished his career as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.[89]
60   Frank Couzens May 10, 1933 – September 8, 1933 Republican[10] Frank Couzens was the son of James J. Couzens.[72] After a stint on the Detroit Street Railways Commission,[91] Couzens ran for a seat on the Detroit City Council, and garnered enough votes to become council president.[91] When Frank Murphy resigned in 1933 to become governor of the Philippines, Couzens became acting mayor.[91] He resigned the mayor's office on September 8, 1933, to concentrate on receiving the Republican nomination for the office.[92] He was then elected mayor twice, filling out four years in office.[91]
61   John W. Smith September 8, 1933 – January 2, 1934 Republican[10] (see above)
62   Frank Couzens January 2, 1934 – January 3, 1938 Republican[10] (see above)
63   Richard Reading January 4, 1938 – January 1, 1940 Republican[10] Reading was appointed City Assessor in 1921, moved to City Controller in 1924, and was elected City Clerk in 1926.[93] He stayed in the office of clerk until 1939, when he ran for mayor, ultimately defeating Patrick H. O'Brien by nearly two-to-one.[94] However, once in the office, Reading engaged in graft, selling protection to numbers racketeers and promotions to police officers.[95] This corruption was exposed as the campaign for the next mayoral election was gearing up,[95] and Reading was crushed by Edward Jeffries.[96][95] Shortly after leaving office, Reading was indicted on charges of accepting bribes and conspiring to protect Detroit's gambling rackets, and was sentenced to four to five years in prison.[97]
64   Edward Jeffries January 2, 1940 – January 5, 1948 Republican[10] Edward Jeffries was the son of Recorder's Court Judge and civic servant Edward Jeffries Sr.[98] The younger Jeffries ran for Detroit City Council in 1932, and served on that body for four terms, from 1932 to 1940, serving the last two as City Council president.[74] In 1940, Jeffries moved to the mayors office, winning four consecutive terms before losing to Eugene Van Antwerp in 1947. Jeffries was elected once more to serve on the City Council, beginning in 1950, but died in office shortly thereafter.[74]
65   Eugene Van Antwerp January 6, 1948 – January 2, 1950 Democratic[10] Eugene Van Antwerp was a civil engineer and a captain in the United States Army Corps of Engineers during World War I.[99] He served in the Detroit City Council from 1932 to 1948, when he moved to the mayor's office.[74] During that time, he also served a stint as the commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1938–39.[100] Van Antwerp served a single term as mayor, moving back to the council in a special election in 1950 and remaining on the council until his death in 1962.[74]
66   Albert Cobo January 3, 1950 – September 12, 1957 Republican[10] Albert Cobo worked for Burroughs Corporation when, in 1933, the company "loaned" him to the city of Detroit to help with their financial crisis.[101] Cobo never returned to Burroughs, instead running for the position of city treasurer in 1935, and serving seven consecutive terms.[101] In 1949, he ran for mayor, winning that election and the next two (the last for a four-year term).[101] Cobo ran for governor in 1956, but was handily beaten by G. Mennen Williams, his first loss after ten successful citywide campaigns.[102] He declined to run for a fourth term as mayor, but died in office near the end of his term.[9]
67   Louis Miriani September 12, 1957 – January 2, 1962 Republican[103] Louis Miriani was elected to the Detroit City Council in 1947, and was council president from 1949 to 1957.[74] After Albert Cobo died in office, Miriani served as acting mayor for the remainder of Cobo's term and was elected himself beginning in 1958.[9] He served until 1961, when he was defeated for reelection by Jerome Cavanagh in an upset fueled largely by African-American support for Cavanagh.[104] Miriani was again elected to the City Council in 1965.[103] In 1969, he was convicted of federal tax evasion and served approximately 10 months in prison.[103] He retired from politics after his conviction.[103] Most recent Republican to serve as mayor of Detroit.
68   Jerome Cavanagh January 2, 1962 – January 5, 1970 Democratic[10] The 1961 mayoral race was the first campaign undertaken by the young Jerome Cavanagh.[104] He was perceived as an easy opponent for incumbent Louis Miriani, but with the backing of the city's African-American community, Cavanagh pulled off a stunning upset.[104] Cavanagh was initially a popular mayor, appointing a reformer to be chief of police and marching arm-in-arm with Martin Luther King Jr. down Woodward Avenue. Cavanagh was reelected overwhelmingly in 1965, and in 1966 was elected president of both the United States Conference of Mayors and the National League of Cities.[104] However, his reputation was dimmed by the 1967 riots, and he declined to run for a third term. In 1974, Cavanagh ran for Governor of Michigan, but lost in the primary. In 1979, he died from a heart attack, at age 51.[104]
69   Roman Gribbs January 6, 1970 – January 1, 1974 Democratic[10] Gribbs served as an assistant prosecutor from 1956 to 1964 and as sheriff of Wayne County in 1968 and 1969 before deciding to run for mayor.[105] Gribbs served a single term as mayor, declining to seek re-election.[106] After leaving office, he served as a circuit court judge from 1975 to 1982 and on the Michigan Court of Appeals from 1982 until his retirement in 2000.[105][106]
70   Coleman Young January 1, 1974 – January 3, 1994 Democratic[10] Coleman Young was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, but moved to Detroit when he was five.[107] During World War II, Young served as one of the Tuskegee Airmen, and returned to Detroit at the end of the war.[107] He ran for state representative in 1959 but lost; in 1963 he ran for state senate and won.[107] He served in the senate until 1974 when he moved into the mayor's office, becoming the city's first African-American mayor.[107] Young remained as mayor for a record five terms, becoming the longest-serving mayor in city history.[107] During his tenure, Young was the vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 1977 to 1981 and chair of the Democratic National Convention Platform Committee in 1980. He also led the United States Conference of Mayors and the National Conference of Democratic Mayors at various times.[107] With his health deteriorating, Young declined to seek a sixth term.[107]
71   Dennis Archer January 3, 1994 – December 31, 2001 Democratic[108] Dennis Archer practiced law privately and as a law professor before being named to the Michigan Supreme Court in 1985 by Michigan governor James Blanchard.[109] The following year, Archer was elected to a full eight-year term.[109] He served two terms as mayor of Detroit, during which he was president of the National Conference of Democratic Mayors and president of the National League of Cities.[108] Archer declined to seek a third term.[108] After stepping down from the mayor's office, he was elected chair of Dickinson Wright and served a year as president of the American Bar Association.[109]
72   Kwame Kilpatrick January 1, 2002 – September 18, 2008 Democratic[110] Kwame Kilpatrick is the son of former county commissioner Bernard Kilpatrick and former Michigan legislator and United States congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick.[110] The younger Kilpatrick began his political career by running for the Michigan House seat his mother vacated in 1996,[111] and was minority leader in the state house by 2001.[110] Kilpatrick was twice elected mayor, but resigned office in 2008 after a corruption scandal; he was later sentenced to 28 years in prison.[112]
73   Kenneth Cockrel, Jr. September 18, 2008 – May 11, 2009 Democratic.[113] Ken Cockrel is the son of the late Kenneth Cockrel Sr., a civil rights activist and Detroit City Council member.[114] The younger Cockrel also ran for city council, and was first elected in 1997.[114] Cockrel was elected council president in 2005,[114] and assumed the mayorship after Kwame Kilpatrick's resignation in 2008.[115][116] However, Cockrel lost the ensuing special election to Dave Bing, and returned to his seat on the city council.[113] Cockrel was re-elected to the city council later in the year.[117]
74   Dave Bing May 11, 2009 – December 31, 2013 Democratic[113] Dave Bing played 12 seasons in the National Basketball Association (9 with the Detroit Pistons) and was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame.[113] After retiring from basketball, Bing started an auto parts manufacturing business, the Bing Group.[113][118] He moved to Detroit specifically to run for mayor,[118] and won the special election in May 2009 to fill the remainder of Kwame Kilpatrick's term,[113] and was elected to a full term later in the year.[119]
75   Mike Duggan January 1, 2014 – present Democratic Mike Duggan served as the deputy County Executive and prosecutor for Wayne County, and was president and CEO of the Detroit Medical Center from 2004 to 2012. He resigned to run for Detroit mayor;[120] after failing to qualify for the primary ballot, he waged a successful write-in campaign to qualify for the run-off election,[121] where he beat Benny Napoleon. Duggan is the first white mayor since Roman Gribbs, who served when the city was still predominantly white.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "In Detroit, the end of blight is in sight; What happens when a city accustomed to bad government elects a good one". Economist.com. September 16, 2017. Retrieved September 19, 2017.
  2. ^ Clarke Historical Library; Historical Society of Michigan (1986), The Michigan historical review, vol. 12–13, Central Michigan University, p. 14
  3. ^ "People of Detroit: French Commandants of Fort Ponchartrain du Detroit". Detroit History. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  4. ^ "People of Detroit: British Commandants of Fort Detroit". Detroit History. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  5. ^ "Hamtramck, Colonel John". Encyclopedia of Detroit. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e Silas Farmer (1884), The history of Detroit and Michigan: or, the metropolis illustrated; a chronological cyclopaedia of the past and present, including a full record of territorial days in Michigan, and the annals of Wayne county, S. Farmer & Co., pp. 133–135
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County, Michigan: 1701 to 1907, historical and biographical, 1907, pp. 24–56, ISBN 9780598455529
  8. ^ Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, p. 588
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q . Detroit Public Library. 2006. Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved September 7, 2010. Note: Term dates come from this DPL citation, save for Mayors Cockrel and Bing, and the second term of Mayor Chapin.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Clarke Historical Library; Historical Society of Michigan (1986), The Michigan historical review, Volumes 12–13, Central Michigan University, p. 14
  11. ^ "John R. Williams, 1818–1829". State of Michigan Department of Military and Veteran's Affairs. Retrieved September 8, 2010.
  12. ^ Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, p. 385
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp Silas Farmer (1889), THE HISTORY OF DETROIT AND MICHIGAN, pp. 1031–1050
  14. ^ Carlisle, Fred, ed. (1890), Chronography of Notable Events in the History of the Northwest Territory and Wayne County, Detroit: O.S. Gulley, Bornman, pp. 236–237, OCLC 13694600
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  17. ^ Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, pp. 643–644
  18. ^ a b c James V. Cambell, "Biographical Sketch of Charles C. Trowbridge," read June 3, 1883, published in Pioneer Collections: Report of the Pioneer Society of the State of Michigan, 1907, pp. 478–491
  19. ^ Charles Trowbridge House 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine from the city of Detroit
  20. ^ Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, p. 427
  21. ^ Ross, Robert B.; Catlin, George B (1898). Landmarks of Detroit: A History of the City. Evening News Association. p. dcccxxv.
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  23. ^ Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, p. 530
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  26. ^ Most references imply that both Porter and Bates served as mayor only in 1838; however, the DPL states an end date of March 14, 1839. Ross states that mayoral elections were held on the "first Monday in April," and thus Bates's short term in 1839 could be thought of as filling out Porter's "1838" term.
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  29. ^ a b Stephen D. Bingham (1888), Early history of Michigan: with biographies of state officers, members of Congress, judges and legislators, Thorp & Godfrey, state printers, p. 527
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  46. ^ a b "Mr. Hill's Lieutenants" (PDF). New York Times. March 3, 1892.
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  49. ^ "DIED AT YONKERS". Detroit Free Press. Jul 21, 1904.
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  65. ^ a b c d "Oscar B. Marx dies; ex-Detroit mayor". Ludington Daily News. Nov 23, 1923.
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External links edit

  • The Early Government of Detroit

list, mayors, detroit, this, list, mayors, detroit, michigan, history, detroit, more, information, about, history, incorporation, city, mayor, city, detroitseal, city, detroitflag, city, detroitincumbentmike, duggansince, january, 2014residencemanoogian, mansi. This is a list of mayors of Detroit Michigan See History of Detroit for more information about the history of the incorporation of the city Mayor of the City of DetroitSeal of the City of DetroitFlag of the City of DetroitIncumbentMike Duggansince January 1 2014ResidenceManoogian MansionTerm lengthFour yearsConstituting instrumentDetroit City CharterFormation1824First holderJohn R WilliamsWebsiteMayor s Office The current mayor is Mike Duggan 1 who was sworn into office on January 1 2014 Contents 1 History of Detroit s executive authority 1 1 Early French and British leadership 1 2 Early American leadership 1 3 1806 charter 1 4 Second Board of Trustees 1 5 1824 charter 1 6 1918 charter and nonpartisan elections 1 7 Official residence 2 First incorporation 3 Reincorporation 4 Non partisan elections 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory of Detroit s executive authority editDuring the earliest part of its history Detroit was a military outpost and executive authority was wielded by first French then British military commandants Soon after the Detroit area was taken over by American forces civil authority became more prominent and executive authority was placed in the hands of a series of appointed officials elected boards and elected officials This included a brief stint in 1806 1809 with a largely ceremonial mayor Detroit s current strong mayor system dates from the city s 1824 charter From 1824 to 1857 mayors were elected to terms of one year from 1858 to 1953 the term was increased to two years and after 1953 mayoral terms were four years 2 Early French and British leadership edit During the early part of Detroit s existence local authority was vested in French and British military commandants French commandants included 3 Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac 1701 1710 Francois de la Foret fr 1710 1714 Jacques Charles Renaud Dubuisson 1714 Pierre Alphonse de Tonty 1717 1727 Jean Baptiste de Saint Ours Deschaillons fr 1728 1729 Louis Henry Deschamps fr Sieur de Boishebert 1730 1733 Jacques Hugues Pean de Livaudiere fr 1733 1736 Pierre Jacques Payen de Noyan fr Sieur de Charvis 1739 1742 Pierre Joseph Celoron 1742 1744 Paul Joseph le Moyne Chevalier de Longueuil 1744 1748 Pierre Joseph Celoron second term 1750 1754 Jacques Pierre Daneau de Muy fr 1754 1758 Francois Marie Picote Sieur de Belestre 1758 1760 Seventeen British commandants led Detroit between 1760 and 1796 4 Major Robert Rogers 1760 Captain Donald Campbell 1760 1762 Major Henry Gladwin 1762 1764 Colonel John Bradstreet 1764 Lieutenant Colonel John Campbell 1765 1766 George Turnbull 1766 1769 Captain James Stephenson 1770 1772 Captain George Etherington 1772 Major Henry Bassett 1772 1774 Captain Richard Beringer Lernoult 1774 1779 Colonel Arent Schuyler de Peyster 1779 1784 Major William Ancrum 1785 1786 Thomas Bennett 1786 Captain Robert Matthews 1787 1788 Major Patrick Murray 1788 1790 Major John Smith 1790 1792 Colonel Richard England 1792 1796 Early American leadership edit When Detroit was turned over to the Americans in 1796 Colonel Jean Francois Hamtramck was named commander of Detroit a position he held until his death in 1803 5 The first local rule of Detroit was established in 1802 when Detroit was incorporated as a town 6 The original incorporation provided for a board of trustees to govern the town the chairman of which was the highest governmental position 7 The first chairman of the Board appointed on February 9 1802 was James Henry Henry was elected to the position later in the year Subsequent elections were held in May of each year with the chairmen of the Board of Trustees being 6 James Henry 1802 1803 James May 1803 1804 Solomon Sibley 1804 1805 Joseph Wilkinson elected 1805 1806 charter edit In 1805 a massive fire destroyed the town and effectively eliminated the government Governor William Hull and Judge Augustus Woodward dissolved the original incorporation replacing it in 1806 with a government headed by an appointed mayor 6 However the position was largely honorary and the two men who held it Solomon Sibley and Elijah Brush each quickly resigned upon realizing the lack of power in the office 7 The legislation creating this mayoral position was repealed in 1809 7 after which de facto political power still resided with Hull and Woodward and Detroit was without either a mayor or board of trustees until after the War of 1812 6 Second Board of Trustees edit After the war a legislative act in 1815 ended the interregnum and returned political control to the citizens of Detroit through a Board of Trustees elected yearly In October of that year Solomon Sibley was elected as the first chair 7 The chairs elected yearly to this Board included 6 Solomon Sibley 1815 1816 George McDougall 1816 1817 Abraham Edwards 1817 1818 John R Williams 1818 1819 James McCloskey 1819 1820 James Abbott 1820 1821 Andrew G Whitney 1821 1822 James Abbott second term 1823 1824 Andrew G Whitney second term 1822 1823 1824 charter edit In 1824 John R Williams drew up a new city charter that provided for the first time for a directly elected mayor with significantly increased executive powers 7 Following approval by the state legislature Williams became the City of Detroit s first elected mayor 1918 charter and nonpartisan elections edit In June 1918 Detroit s first home rule city charter came into effect following passage by city voters in a referendum The new charter mandated that all Detroit public offices be non partisan and that elections to those positions would be held on a non partisan basis with no party designations on the ballot These provisions have been continued through all subsequent city charter revisions Since 1918 all mayoral elections in Detroit have been held on a non partisan basis and mayors have officially served unaffiliated with any political party Thus the party affiliations given in the chart below for mayors elected after 1918 are not official and are based on the inferences of editors based on available historic information Official residence edit Since 1966 the official residence of the Mayor of Detroit has been the Manoogian Mansion located on Dwight Street in the Berry Subdivision Historic District facing the Detroit River on the city s east side The mansion was donated to the city by industrialist Alex Manoogian founder of the Masco Corporation First incorporation editTwo mayors served under the 1806 charter 7 Name Term Party Notes 1 nbsp Solomon Sibley 1806 Democratic 8 Solomon Sibley was the author of Detroit s first city charter in 1806 and became the city s first mayor under the charter 7 However when he found the office powerless in the face of the entrenched governor and judges he resigned 7 Sibley went on to serve as chair of Detroit s board of trustees during the time between mayoral control 7 and later as a delegate to the United States House of Representatives and as a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court 2 nbsp Elijah Brush 1806 Elijah Brush was appointed to the mayor s chair after Sibley s resignation but like Sibley found the position powerless and soon resigned himself 7 He owned the ribbon farm immediately adjacent to Detroit along which Brush Street now runs Brush served as a lieutenant colonel in the Territorial Militia and was taken prisoner during the War of 1812 he died soon after returning to Detroit in 1814 7 Reincorporation editThe following mayors served under the stronger executive mayoral system begun in the 1824 charter 9 Mayor Term Party Notes 1 nbsp John R Williams 1824 1825 Democratic 10 John R Williams wrote the City Charter and served from 1824 to 1825 as the first mayor under the re incorporation 7 He also served a second time in 1830 and a third in 1844 1846 He was a successful merchant and served in a number of other capacities including as one of the first trustees of the University of Michigan was president of the Detroit Board of Education and was a delegate to the first Michigan Constitutional Convention 11 2 nbsp Henry Jackson Hunt 1826 Democratic 10 Henry Jackson Hunt was a successful merchant and served in various political offices including county judge city assessor and trustee of the University of Michigan 7 He was the uncle and namesake of Civil War General Henry Jackson Hunt Hunt died while in office on September 15 1826 9 3 nbsp Jonathan Kearsley 1826 Democratic 12 Jonathan Kearsley served in the War of 1812 and was wounded badly enough to have his leg amputated 13 He moved to Detroit in 1819 to become of Receiver of Public Monies a post he held for 30 years Kearsley was mayor twice being appointed once in 1826 to fill Henry Jackson Hunt s term after his death and being elected himself in 1829 7 9 4 nbsp John Biddle 1827 1828 Whig 14 Major John Biddle was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in 1792 the son of Charles Biddle former Vice President of Pennsylvania 15 He was in the US Army during the War of 1812 and was active in Detroit politics and civic life He went on to serve as Michigan Territory delegate to the United States House of Representatives His summer estate Wyandotte was expanded into the current city of Wyandotte Michigan 15 5 nbsp Jonathan Kearsley 1829 Democratic 10 see above 6 nbsp John R Williams 1830 Democratic 10 see above 7 nbsp Marshall Chapin 1831 Whig 10 Marshall Chapin trained as a medical doctor and established the first drugstore in Detroit in 1819 13 which endured well after Chapin s death and on into the 1880s 7 He served twice as mayor in 1831 and 1833 and was appointed City Physician during the cholera epidemics of 1832 and 1834 13 8 nbsp Levi Cook 1832 Whig 16 Levi Cook served in multiple positions in the government of Detroit and Michigan including as Representative to the State House Treasurer of the Michigan Territory and mayor of Detroit in 1832 1835 and 1836 13 9 nbsp Marshall Chapin 1833 13 Whig 10 see above 10 nbsp Charles Christopher Trowbridge 1834 Whig 17 Trowbridge moved to Detroit in 1819 at 19 years of age In 1820 he served on the Lewis Cass expedition led by Lewis Cass so impressing Cass that the latter made Trowbridge his private secretary 18 In 1821 Trowbridge helped negotiate a treaty between the US government and the Winnebago and Menominee Indians and was later appointed assistant secretary in the local Indian department 18 In 1833 Trowbridge became an alderman of the city of Detroit 18 and briefly served as Mayor during the cholera epidemic of 1834 resigning his position soon after 19 In 1837 he ran as the Whig candidate for governor of Michigan and was defeated by Stevens T Mason 11 nbsp Andrew Mack 1834 Democratic 20 A cholera epidemic broke out in 1834 during Mayor Charles Christopher Trowbridge s term when the epidemic had subsided Trowbridge resigned 13 Andrew Mack won the ensuing special election on September 24 with 91 votes 21 He later represented Wayne County in the Michigan Legislature 13 12 nbsp Levi Cook 1835 1836 Whig 10 see above 13 nbsp Henry Howard 1837 Democratic 22 Henry Howard moved to Detroit in 1827 to manage Howard and Wadhams a commercial lumber venture In his brief tenure in Detroit he served as an alderman and mayor for one term as well as the treasurer and auditor general of the state of Michigan In 1840 Howard moved to Buffalo New York to become treasurer of the Buffalo Savings Bank 22 14 nbsp Augustus Seymour Porter 1838 March 14 1839 Whig 23 Augustus Porter was the nephew of Peter Buell Porter he practiced law for 20 years in Detroit acting as city Recorder in 1830 and elected mayor in 1838 24 He resigned on March 14 1839 to serve as United States Senator for Michigan 9 In 1846 he moved to Niagara Falls New York 24 15 nbsp Asher B Bates March 15 1839 April 18 1839 25 26 Whig Asher Bates came to Detroit in 1831 and served as Justice of the Peace and City Attorney 13 After Porter resigned Bates was acting mayor for the remainder of Porter s term 9 He later served as Attorney General for the Kingdom of Hawaii 13 and died in 1873 in San Francisco of leprosy contracted in Hawaii 27 16 nbsp De Garmo Jones 1839 Whig 28 De Garmo Jones came to Detroit from Albany New York and was involved in many business ventures including the Michigan Central Railroad 13 In addition to serving as mayor he was a city alderman multiple times as well as state senator 13 17 nbsp Zina Pitcher 1840 1841 Whig 29 Zina Pitcher was a medical doctor and began his career as a surgeon in the United States Army eventually becoming president of the Army Medical Board in 1835 13 After leaving the Army he came to Detroit in 1836 and served in various positions including both city and county physician Regent of the University of Michigan and three terms as mayor 1840 1841 and 1843 13 While Regent Pitcher took an active role in establishing the medical school at the University 13 18 nbsp Douglass Houghton 1842 Democratic 10 Douglass Houghton was educated as a medical doctor but after coming to Michigan served as the state geologist from 1833 until his death in 1845 and as a geology professor at the University of Michigan 13 He was also a member of the National Institute in Washington DC and the Boston Society of Natural History an honorary member of the Royal Antiquarian Society of Copenhagen and a member of many other scientific and literary associations 13 Houghton died in 1845 in a storm on Lake Superior near Eagle River Michigan 13 Houghton County Michigan is named in his honor 13 19 nbsp Zina Pitcher 1843 Whig 29 see above 20 nbsp John R Williams 1844 1846 Democratic 10 see above 21 nbsp James A Van Dyke 1847 Whig 30 James A Van Dyke was a lawyer by profession served as City Attorney for Detroit Wayne County prosecuting attorney city alderman and mayor 13 In addition he was heavily influential in early organization of the Detroit Fire Department serving as president of the department from 1847 to 1851 30 22 nbsp Frederick Buhl 1848 Whig 10 Frederick Buhl moved to Detroit in 1833 and with his brother Christian H Buhl began a business in hats and furs 13 The business was large and successful and Frederick Buhl remained at the helm until 1887 when he sold the business to his son In addition to his furrier business Frederick Buhl was the director of two banks the president of Harper Hospital and one of the original directors of the Merchant s Exchange and Board of Trade 13 He also served on the city council as well as being mayor and later in life joined the Republican Party 31 23 nbsp Charles Howard 1849 Whig 10 Charles Howard moved to Detroit in 1840 as an agent for the shipping and forwarding firm of Bronson Crocker and Company and branched out into railroad construction and other endeavors 13 He was simultaneously president of the Farmer s and Mechanics Bank and the Peninsular Bank 32 and in 1848 he was elected mayor of Detroit 13 Howard moved to New York City after the Panic of 1857 caused the Peninsular Bank to fail 33 24 nbsp John Ladue 1850 Democratic 34 In 1847 Ladue moved to Detroit and began in the business of manufacturing leather and purchasing wool 13 He was popular among the business community and in 1850 was elected mayor 13 He died only a few years after in 1854 25 nbsp Zachariah Chandler 1851 Whig 35 Zachariah Chandler arrived in Detroit in 1833 and opened a dry goods store 13 After serving as mayor of Detroit Chandler spent 18 years in the United States Senate and was also the United States Secretary of the Interior under Ulysses S Grant 26 nbsp John H Harmon 1852 1853 Democratic 13 John Harmon came to Detroit in 1838 as a member of the Hunter Patriots a group dedicated to ridding North America of the British Empire 36 In December 1838 Harmon took part in the Battle of Windsor personally burning the British barracks and the steamer Thames 36 After the battle Harmon stayed in Detroit taking a job at the Detroit Free Press and eventually purchasing the paper 13 Harmon served as an alderman of the city of Detroit in 1847 and two years as mayor 13 as well as representing Michigan on the 1848 Democratic National Committee 37 and serving as Collector for the Port of Detroit After he left the office of Collector Harmon spent much of his time in Washington DC during congressional sessions 38 27 nbsp Oliver Moulton Hyde 1854 Whig 13 Oliver Moulton Hyde moved to Detroit in 1838 and opened a hardware store on Woodward Avenue 13 Hyde branched out in business opening a foundry and machine shop and began manufacturing marine engines and other steamboat hardware and later began a dry dock business 13 Hyde was elected to the city council numerous times and served as mayor of Detroit in 1854 1856 and 1857 He was also appointed Collector for the Port of Detroit under presidents Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore 13 28 nbsp Henry Ledyard 1855 Democratic 39 Henry Ledyard was the son of prominent New York lawyer Benjamin Ledyard and Susan French Livingston the daughter of Revolutionary War Colonel and US Supreme Court justice Brockholst Livingston and granddaughter of New Jersey governor William Livingston 13 When Lewis Cass was appointed Minister to France Ledyard accompanied him to Paris eventually becoming charge d affaires of the embassy and marrying Cass s daughter Mildred 13 Ledyard returned to the United States in 1844 and moved to Detroit serving as a member of the Board of Education an alderman of the city one of the original commissioners on the Board of Water Commissioners mayor in 1855 and state senator in 1857 13 When Lewis Cass was appointed Secretary of State under James Buchanan Ledyard accompanied him to Washington DC and remained there until 1861 13 briefly serving as assistant secretary of state 39 Afterwards he moved to Newport Rhode Island where he lived for the rest of his life and was the first president of the Newport Hospital and the president of the Redwood Library 13 29 nbsp Oliver Moulton Hyde 1856 1857 Whig see above 30 nbsp John Patton 1858 1859 Democratic 40 John Patton was a carriagemaker born in County Down Ireland He emigrated to the United States as a boy and later came to Detroit and established a factory 40 He held many positions in the city including chief engineer of the Fire Department the Department president city alderman mayor county auditor Wayne County Michigan sheriff Justice of the Peace and United States consul at Amherstburg Ontario 40 31 nbsp Christian H Buhl 1860 1861 Republican 41 Christian H Buhl moved to Detroit in 1833 and with his brother Frederick Buhl began a business in hats and furs 13 The business was large and successful and in 1855 Christian retired from the fur trade and started a wholesale hardware firm Buhl was also part owner of the Sharon Iron Works the Detroit Locomotive Works later the Buhl Iron Works 13 and organized Detroit Copper and Brass Company and the Peninsular Car Company 41 He was an alderman as well as mayor of Detroit 32 nbsp William C Duncan 1862 1863 Democratic 42 William C Duncan moved to Detroit in 1849 and set up shop as a brewer 13 He quickly became popular and in 1852 was elected city alderman He also served as the first council president 42 mayor and state senator 13 Ill health in the mid 1860s forced his retirement from business and politics and Duncan died childless in 1877 13 33 nbsp Kirkland C Barker 1864 1865 Democratic 10 Barker was born in Schuyler New York and worked in the shipping business before coming to Detroit and establishing the successful tobacco business of KC Barker amp Company 13 An avid outdoorsman Barker was also the presiding officer of the Horse Association of America and was elected Commodore of the Great Lakes Yacht Club 43 He died in a boating accident near his home on Grosse Ile Michigan 13 34 nbsp Merrill I Mills 1866 1867 Democratic 13 Mills born in Canton Connecticut originally planned to start a general store in Fort Wayne Indiana in 1845 However early closing of navigation that year left Mills with his stock in Detroit and sensing an opportunity he set up shop there instead 13 Barker soon began trading in furs then went into tobacco manufacturing as well as other pursuits 13 In addition to being mayor he served two years as head of the Democratic State Committee and was a delegate to the 1876 Democratic National Convention 13 35 nbsp William W Wheaton 1868 1871 Democratic 13 Wheaton was born in New Haven Connecticut in 1833 13 He came to Detroit in 1853 and built a successful wholesale grocery business 13 He was elected mayor in 1868 and later served as the chair of the Democratic State Convention 13 36 nbsp Hugh Moffat 1872 1875 Republican 13 Moffat was born in 1810 in Coldstream Scotland and made his way to Detroit in 1837 13 He began work as a carpenter built up a successful and profitable business and expanded into the lumber trade by purchasing a sawmill and forested land 13 Moffat was elected mayor for two terms his administration was marked by a fractious relationship with the Detroit City Council but his integrity earned him the moniker Honest Hugh Moffat 13 37 nbsp Alexander Lewis 1876 1877 Democratic 13 Alexander Lewis was born in Windsor Ontario and came to Detroit when he was 14 to work as a clerk 13 He eventually started his own forwarding amp commission business then moved onto wholesale trade and other businesses In addition to being mayor he served as Police Commissioner and a board member of the Detroit Public Library 13 38 nbsp George C Langdon 1878 1879 Democratic 44 George C Langdon began work as a clerk and eventually went into the business of brewing and malting amassing a considerable fortune 45 After his stint in the mayor s office he suffered some reversals of fortune and was forced to return to clerking at the City Hall 45 39 nbsp William G Thompson 1880 1883 Republican 46 Thompson was a Republican while serving as mayor and a delegate to both the 1876 and 1880 Republican National Convention 46 However in 1884 he switched parties to become a Democrat He ran once more for mayor in 1891 being defeated by the then incumbent Hazen S Pingree 47 He also served as a state senator being elected in 1894 48 49 In 1888 Thompson was party to a sensational and public fight where Thompson was considerably pummeled with his broth in law Daniel Campau where the latter warned Thompson that he must not talk about his wife hereafter in barrooms and other public places as he had been doing 50 William G Thompson died in 1904 of injuries received after being knocked down by a bicycle 48 40 nbsp Stephen Benedict Grummond 1884 1885 Republican 13 Stephen Benedict Grummond was born in Marine City Michigan and made his fortune in the shipping and marine industry 13 Grummond was originally a Democrat but joined the Republican Party when it was established and served on the Board of Estimates the Detroit City Council and one term as mayor 13 41 nbsp Marvin H Chamberlain 1886 1887 Democratic 13 Marvin H Chamberlain was a wholesale liquor distributor 51 He served as president of the Detroit City Council before being elected mayor 13 In 1898 Chamberlain patented a liquid separating process for reduction of garbage and received the contract to collect garbage in Detroit under the company name of Detroit Liquid Separating Co 52 He later built similar plants in other cities 51 42 nbsp John Pridgeon Jr 1888 1889 Democratic 10 John Pridgeon Jr was born in Detroit on August 1 1852 the son of Captain John Pridgeon 13 In 1871 he joined as a clerk his father s business of buying selling and operating sailing ships and tugs 13 Pridgeon was a member of the first Park Commission serving from 1879 to 1883 53 He was elected to the city council in 1885 and in 1887 was elected mayor of Detroit serving one term in 1888 1889 13 He later served as a member of the Police Commission from 1891 to 1892 53 After his stint as mayor Pridgeon diversified his business interests and in the years 1890 1900 served variously as president of the State Transportation Company president of the Pridgeon Transportation Company vice president of the White Star Line vice president of the Red Star Line and vice president of the River Savings Bank 53 43 nbsp Hazen S Pingree 1890 1897 Republican 10 Hazen Pingree was born in Denmark Maine and worked for several years in a shoe factory before enlisting in the Union Army to serve in the Civil War 54 Following the war Pingree moved to Detroit and there established the Pingree and Smith Shoe Co which eventually had sales of over 1 000 000 per year 55 Pingree was elected mayor of Detroit in 1889 on a platform of exposing and ending corruption in city paving contracts sewer contracts and the school board 55 During the depression of 1893 Pingree expanded the public welfare programs initiated public works for the unemployed built new schools parks and public baths 55 He gained national recognition through his potato patch plan a systematic use of vacant city land for gardens which would produce food for the city s poor 55 Pingree was elected mayor four times and in 1896 was elected Governor of Michigan 54 However his right to hold the two offices simultaneously was contested and after the Michigan Supreme Court ruled against him Pingree resigned as mayor on March 22 1897 9 55 During his four years in office the direct election of U S senators was promoted an eight hour workday was endorsed a regulated income tax was supported and railroad taxation was advocated 56 44 nbsp William Richert March 22 1897 April 5 1897 Republican 57 William Richert served on the Detroit City Council for eight years and as president of the body in 1895 and 1897 58 Richert served as acting mayor from March 22 to April 5 1897 after Pingree was declared ineligible to serve as both mayor and governor 9 45 nbsp William C Maybury 1897 1904 Democratic 10 Maybury served as the city attorney for Detroit during the 1870s and was twice elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1882 and 1884 59 He was elected mayor of Detroit in 1897 to complete Hazen S Pingree s term and was elected twice thereafter In 1900 Maybury ran unsuccessfully for Governor of Michigan 59 46 nbsp George P Codd 1905 1906 Republican 10 George P Codd studied as a lawyer and was admitted to the bar in 1892 60 He was assistant city attorney from 1894 to 1897 a member of the board of aldermen from 1902 to 1904 mayor of Detroit from 1905 to 1906 a regent of the University of Michigan in 1910 and 1911 circuit judge of Wayne County from 1911 to 1921 and 1924 to 1927 and a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1921 to 1923 60 47 nbsp William Barlum Thompson 1907 1908 Democratic 10 William Barlum Thompson served as an alderman for two terms from 1891 to 1894 and was elected for a third term in 1896 61 He resigned his seat as an alderman in 1897 after being elected city treasurer and served as mayor for two terms in 1907 1908 and 1911 1912 61 48 nbsp Philip Breitmeyer 1909 1910 Republican 10 After finishing school Breitmeyer joined the family florist business John Breitmeyer amp Sons and after his father s death bought out his brothers to become sole owner of the firm 62 The business grew rapidly and Breitmeyer was one of the organizers and served as president of Florists Telegraph Delivery now Florists Transworld Delivery or FTD 62 Breitmeyer was appointed by George P Codd as Commissioner of Parks and Boulevards for the city of Detroit 63 So well did he perform that he was nominated as the candidate for mayor and was elected for a term in 1909 1910 63 Breitmeyer ran again for mayor in 1933 but was soundly defeated by James Couzens s son Frank 64 49 nbsp William Barlum Thompson 1911 1912 Democratic 10 see above 50 nbsp Oscar Marx 1913 1918 Republican 10 Oscar Marx was born on July 14 1866 in Wayne County Michigan the son of German immigrants 65 As Detroit and Hamtramck Michigan grew the encroaching cities swallowed the Marx farm when Oscar Marx s father sold the farm he gave Oscar several thousand dollars which he used to buy into a bankrupt optical firm the Michigan Optical Company 65 Marx steered the company to become one of the largest in the region 65 In 1895 he was elected as an alderman a position he held for eight years 66 In 1910 he was appointed City Assessor and two years later saw his first of three terms as Detroit s mayor 65 Marx was friends with Robert Oakman and John Dodge and the three men controlled the Republican Party in Southeast Michigan for much of the 1910s 67 Marx appointed James J Couzens the man who would become the next mayor to take over the Detroit police force 67 Non partisan elections editA new city charter went into effect in 1918 which required that all city offices be non partisan The following mayors were elected in non partisan elections with no party designations on the ballot and served on a non partisan basis with no official party affiliation 68 This provision has been repeated in the subsequent city charters of 1974 1997 and 2012 69 So the party affiliations shown below are based on information from each mayor s personal and or political history and do not represent any official status Mayor Term Party Notes 51 nbsp James J Couzens 1919 1922 Republican 10 Couzens began his career working for the New York Central Railroad then became a clerk for coal dealer Alexander Y Malcomson 70 In 1903 Malcomson helped bankroll Henry Ford in his new venture the Ford Motor Company Couzens borrowed heavily and invested 2500 in the new firm and took over the business side of the operation 70 Ford Motor Company became immensely profitable paying Couzens large dividends when he finally sold his stock to Ford in 1919 Couzens received 30 000 000 70 In the 1910s Couzens was appointed street railway commissioner and police commissioner for Detroit 71 In 1919 he took the step to elected office being twice elected mayor of Detroit 71 Couzens resigned on December 5 1922 after being appointed as the United States Senator for Michigan replacing the disgraced Truman H Newberry 9 71 Couzens was re elected twice more and served in the Senate until his death in 1936 71 His son Frank served as Detroit mayor in the 1930s 72 52 nbsp John C Lodge December 5 1922 April 9 1923 Republican 10 John C Lodge served for over 30 years on the Detroit City Council many of them as its president 73 74 In that capacity Lodge served as acting mayor twice once after James J Couzens s resignation in 1922 and once after Joseph A Martin s resignation in 1924 9 Lodge was later elected in his own right as mayor for one term in 1928 1930 9 after which he was re elected to a seat on the City Council 9 After Lodge s death in 1950 the John C Lodge Freeway M 10 in Detroit was named after him 75 53 nbsp Frank Ellsworth Doremus April 9 1923 June 10 1924 Democratic 10 Doremus was a newspaperman and lawyer 76 He served in the United States House of Representatives from 1911 to 1921 76 including a stint as chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee 77 Doremus was elected mayor in 1923 but resigned on June 10 1924 due to ill health 9 78 54 nbsp Joseph A Martin June 10 1924 August 2 1924 Republican Joseph A Martin was Commissioner of Public Works for Detroit from 1920 to 1923 79 He served as acting mayor in 1924 after Frank Ellsworth Doremus resigned for health reasons 78 Martin resigned to concentrate on running for mayor but lost a three way race to John W Smith with Charles Bowles as the write in candidate 80 Joseph A Martin died in 1928 81 55 nbsp John C Lodge August 2 1924 November 21 1924 Republican 10 see above 56 nbsp John W Smith November 21 1924 January 9 1928 Republican 10 In 1911 Smith was appointed Deputy State Labor Commissioner by Governor Chase S Osborn 82 He was elected to the Michigan State Senate in 1920 and was appointed postmaster of Detroit by Warren G Harding in 1922 82 In 1924 Smith won election as Detroit mayor after Frank Ellsworth Doremus s resignation 82 continuing in the office until 1928 9 Smith later served on the Detroit City Council for most of the time from 1932 until his death in 1942 74 He served one more time as mayor in 1933 acting to fill out the end of Frank Murphy s term 9 after the latter had resigned and his successor Frank Couzens also resigned to concentrate on running for election as mayor 83 57 nbsp John C Lodge January 10 1928 January 14 1930 Republican 10 see above 58 nbsp Charles Bowles January 14 1930 September 22 1930 Republican 10 In 1925 Charles Boles rose from obscurity to run for the mayoral seat vacated by Frank Ellsworth Doremus with heavy support from the Ku Klux Klan 84 He ran third in the primary election behind John W Smith and Joseph A Martin 85 but continued his campaign as a write in candidate and narrowly lost only after 15 000 write in ballots were disqualified 84 Bowles ran again in 1929 this time defeating both Smith and John C Lodge to win the election 86 Bowles had campaigned as an anti crime reformer but when he fired Police Commissioner Harold Emmons after the latter had ordered a series of raids he was accused of tolerating lawlessness and a recall election was instituted barely six months after he had entered office 86 87 The recall was successful 87 and Bowles lost the special election called to replace him to Frank Murphy on September 22 1930 9 88 59 nbsp Frank Murphy September 23 1930 May 10 1933 Democratic 10 Frank Murphy was a recorder s court judge in the 1920s 89 his one man grand jury investigation into city corruption raised his profile in the public s eye 90 He ran against Charles Bowles after the latter was recalled in 1930 and was elected and was re elected for a full term the following year Frank Murphy resigned the mayorship in 1933 when Franklin D Roosevelt named him Governor General of the Philippines 89 He later went on to become Governor of Michigan Attorney General of the United States and finished his career as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 89 60 nbsp Frank Couzens May 10 1933 September 8 1933 Republican 10 Frank Couzens was the son of James J Couzens 72 After a stint on the Detroit Street Railways Commission 91 Couzens ran for a seat on the Detroit City Council and garnered enough votes to become council president 91 When Frank Murphy resigned in 1933 to become governor of the Philippines Couzens became acting mayor 91 He resigned the mayor s office on September 8 1933 to concentrate on receiving the Republican nomination for the office 92 He was then elected mayor twice filling out four years in office 91 61 nbsp John W Smith September 8 1933 January 2 1934 Republican 10 see above 62 nbsp Frank Couzens January 2 1934 January 3 1938 Republican 10 see above 63 nbsp Richard Reading January 4 1938 January 1 1940 Republican 10 Reading was appointed City Assessor in 1921 moved to City Controller in 1924 and was elected City Clerk in 1926 93 He stayed in the office of clerk until 1939 when he ran for mayor ultimately defeating Patrick H O Brien by nearly two to one 94 However once in the office Reading engaged in graft selling protection to numbers racketeers and promotions to police officers 95 This corruption was exposed as the campaign for the next mayoral election was gearing up 95 and Reading was crushed by Edward Jeffries 96 95 Shortly after leaving office Reading was indicted on charges of accepting bribes and conspiring to protect Detroit s gambling rackets and was sentenced to four to five years in prison 97 64 nbsp Edward Jeffries January 2 1940 January 5 1948 Republican 10 Edward Jeffries was the son of Recorder s Court Judge and civic servant Edward Jeffries Sr 98 The younger Jeffries ran for Detroit City Council in 1932 and served on that body for four terms from 1932 to 1940 serving the last two as City Council president 74 In 1940 Jeffries moved to the mayors office winning four consecutive terms before losing to Eugene Van Antwerp in 1947 Jeffries was elected once more to serve on the City Council beginning in 1950 but died in office shortly thereafter 74 65 nbsp Eugene Van Antwerp January 6 1948 January 2 1950 Democratic 10 Eugene Van Antwerp was a civil engineer and a captain in the United States Army Corps of Engineers during World War I 99 He served in the Detroit City Council from 1932 to 1948 when he moved to the mayor s office 74 During that time he also served a stint as the commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1938 39 100 Van Antwerp served a single term as mayor moving back to the council in a special election in 1950 and remaining on the council until his death in 1962 74 66 nbsp Albert Cobo January 3 1950 September 12 1957 Republican 10 Albert Cobo worked for Burroughs Corporation when in 1933 the company loaned him to the city of Detroit to help with their financial crisis 101 Cobo never returned to Burroughs instead running for the position of city treasurer in 1935 and serving seven consecutive terms 101 In 1949 he ran for mayor winning that election and the next two the last for a four year term 101 Cobo ran for governor in 1956 but was handily beaten by G Mennen Williams his first loss after ten successful citywide campaigns 102 He declined to run for a fourth term as mayor but died in office near the end of his term 9 67 nbsp Louis Miriani September 12 1957 January 2 1962 Republican 103 Louis Miriani was elected to the Detroit City Council in 1947 and was council president from 1949 to 1957 74 After Albert Cobo died in office Miriani served as acting mayor for the remainder of Cobo s term and was elected himself beginning in 1958 9 He served until 1961 when he was defeated for reelection by Jerome Cavanagh in an upset fueled largely by African American support for Cavanagh 104 Miriani was again elected to the City Council in 1965 103 In 1969 he was convicted of federal tax evasion and served approximately 10 months in prison 103 He retired from politics after his conviction 103 Most recent Republican to serve as mayor of Detroit 68 nbsp Jerome Cavanagh January 2 1962 January 5 1970 Democratic 10 The 1961 mayoral race was the first campaign undertaken by the young Jerome Cavanagh 104 He was perceived as an easy opponent for incumbent Louis Miriani but with the backing of the city s African American community Cavanagh pulled off a stunning upset 104 Cavanagh was initially a popular mayor appointing a reformer to be chief of police and marching arm in arm with Martin Luther King Jr down Woodward Avenue Cavanagh was reelected overwhelmingly in 1965 and in 1966 was elected president of both the United States Conference of Mayors and the National League of Cities 104 However his reputation was dimmed by the 1967 riots and he declined to run for a third term In 1974 Cavanagh ran for Governor of Michigan but lost in the primary In 1979 he died from a heart attack at age 51 104 69 nbsp Roman Gribbs January 6 1970 January 1 1974 Democratic 10 Gribbs served as an assistant prosecutor from 1956 to 1964 and as sheriff of Wayne County in 1968 and 1969 before deciding to run for mayor 105 Gribbs served a single term as mayor declining to seek re election 106 After leaving office he served as a circuit court judge from 1975 to 1982 and on the Michigan Court of Appeals from 1982 until his retirement in 2000 105 106 70 nbsp Coleman Young January 1 1974 January 3 1994 Democratic 10 Coleman Young was born in Tuscaloosa Alabama but moved to Detroit when he was five 107 During World War II Young served as one of the Tuskegee Airmen and returned to Detroit at the end of the war 107 He ran for state representative in 1959 but lost in 1963 he ran for state senate and won 107 He served in the senate until 1974 when he moved into the mayor s office becoming the city s first African American mayor 107 Young remained as mayor for a record five terms becoming the longest serving mayor in city history 107 During his tenure Young was the vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 1977 to 1981 and chair of the Democratic National Convention Platform Committee in 1980 He also led the United States Conference of Mayors and the National Conference of Democratic Mayors at various times 107 With his health deteriorating Young declined to seek a sixth term 107 71 nbsp Dennis Archer January 3 1994 December 31 2001 Democratic 108 Dennis Archer practiced law privately and as a law professor before being named to the Michigan Supreme Court in 1985 by Michigan governor James Blanchard 109 The following year Archer was elected to a full eight year term 109 He served two terms as mayor of Detroit during which he was president of the National Conference of Democratic Mayors and president of the National League of Cities 108 Archer declined to seek a third term 108 After stepping down from the mayor s office he was elected chair of Dickinson Wright and served a year as president of the American Bar Association 109 72 nbsp Kwame Kilpatrick January 1 2002 September 18 2008 Democratic 110 Kwame Kilpatrick is the son of former county commissioner Bernard Kilpatrick and former Michigan legislator and United States congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick 110 The younger Kilpatrick began his political career by running for the Michigan House seat his mother vacated in 1996 111 and was minority leader in the state house by 2001 110 Kilpatrick was twice elected mayor but resigned office in 2008 after a corruption scandal he was later sentenced to 28 years in prison 112 73 nbsp Kenneth Cockrel Jr September 18 2008 May 11 2009 Democratic 113 Ken Cockrel is the son of the late Kenneth Cockrel Sr a civil rights activist and Detroit City Council member 114 The younger Cockrel also ran for city council and was first elected in 1997 114 Cockrel was elected council president in 2005 114 and assumed the mayorship after Kwame Kilpatrick s resignation in 2008 115 116 However Cockrel lost the ensuing special election to Dave Bing and returned to his seat on the city council 113 Cockrel was re elected to the city council later in the year 117 74 nbsp Dave Bing May 11 2009 December 31 2013 Democratic 113 Dave Bing played 12 seasons in the National Basketball Association 9 with the Detroit Pistons and was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame 113 After retiring from basketball Bing started an auto parts manufacturing business the Bing Group 113 118 He moved to Detroit specifically to run for mayor 118 and won the special election in May 2009 to fill the remainder of Kwame Kilpatrick s term 113 and was elected to a full term later in the year 119 75 nbsp Mike Duggan January 1 2014 present Democratic Mike Duggan served as the deputy County Executive and prosecutor for Wayne County and was president and CEO of the Detroit Medical Center from 2004 to 2012 He resigned to run for Detroit mayor 120 after failing to qualify for the primary ballot he waged a successful write in campaign to qualify for the run off election 121 where he beat Benny Napoleon Duggan is the first white mayor since Roman Gribbs who served when the city was still predominantly white See also edit nbsp Michigan portal Timeline of Detroit History of Detroit Decline of DetroitReferences edit In Detroit the end of blight is in sight What happens when a city accustomed to bad government elects a good one Economist com September 16 2017 Retrieved September 19 2017 Clarke Historical Library Historical Society of Michigan 1986 The Michigan historical review vol 12 13 Central Michigan University p 14 People of Detroit French Commandants of Fort Ponchartrain du Detroit Detroit History Retrieved April 7 2021 People of Detroit British Commandants of Fort Detroit Detroit History Retrieved April 7 2021 Hamtramck Colonel John Encyclopedia of Detroit Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c d e Silas Farmer 1884 The history of Detroit and Michigan or the metropolis illustrated a chronological cyclopaedia of the past and present including a full record of territorial days in Michigan and the annals of Wayne county S Farmer amp Co pp 133 135 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical 1907 pp 24 56 ISBN 9780598455529 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 588 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Mayors of the City of Detroit Detroit Public Library 2006 Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved September 7 2010 Note Term dates come from this DPL citation save for Mayors Cockrel and Bing and the second term of Mayor Chapin a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Clarke Historical Library Historical Society of Michigan 1986 The Michigan historical review Volumes 12 13 Central Michigan University p 14 John R Williams 1818 1829 State of Michigan Department of Military and Veteran s Affairs Retrieved September 8 2010 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 385 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp Silas Farmer 1889 THE HISTORY OF DETROIT AND MICHIGAN pp 1031 1050 Carlisle Fred ed 1890 Chronography of Notable Events in the History of the Northwest Territory and Wayne County Detroit O S Gulley Bornman pp 236 237 OCLC 13694600 a b Major John Biddle Elmwood Cemetery Retrieved September 10 2010 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 194 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers pp 643 644 a b c James V Cambell Biographical Sketch of Charles C Trowbridge read June 3 1883 published in Pioneer Collections Report of the Pioneer Society of the State of Michigan 1907 pp 478 491 Charles Trowbridge House Archived 2007 10 11 at the Wayback Machine from the city of Detroit Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 427 Ross Robert B Catlin George B 1898 Landmarks of Detroit A History of the City Evening News Association p dcccxxv a b Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers pp 356 357 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 530 a b United States Congress List of mayors of Detroit id P000437 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Ross Robert B Catlin George B 1898 Landmarks of Detroit A History of the City Evening News Association p dcccxxiv Most references imply that both Porter and Bates served as mayor only in 1838 however the DPL states an end date of March 14 1839 Ross states that mayoral elections were held on the first Monday in April and thus Bates s short term in 1839 could be thought of as filling out Porter s 1838 term William Stocking Gordon K Miller 1922 Clarence Monroe Burton ed The city of Detroit Michigan 1701 1922 Volume 2 The S J Clarke publishing company p 1173 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 380 a b Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 527 a b Robert B Ross 1907 The early bench and bar of Detroit from 1805 to the end of 1850 Winder s memories Richard P Joy and Clarence M Burton pp 205 206 Paul Leake 1912 History of Detroit a chronicle of its progress its industries its institutions and the people of the fair City of the straits Volume 3 The Lewis Publishing Company pp 925 926 Arthur M Woodford 1974 Detroit and its banks the story of Detroit Bank amp Trust Wayne State University Press p 74 ISBN 0 8143 1521 6 Lloyd Anton Frerer 2001 Bronson Howard dean of American dramatists Edwin Mellen Press pp 13 16 ISBN 0 7734 7667 9 Miami University Oxford Ohio 1980 The Old Northwest vol 6 Miami University p 164 Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers p 164 a b Samuel Alanson Lane 1892 Fifty years and over of Akron and Summit County Beacon Job Department pp 598 601 The Democratic National Committee 1830 1876 University of Wisconsin Madison 1919 p 63 F A Barnard 1878 American biographical history of eminent and self made men Michigan volume Part 1 Western biographical publishing co p 71 a b Stephen D Bingham 1888 Early history of Michigan with biographies of state officers members of Congress judges and legislators Thorp amp Godfrey state printers pp 410 411 a b c Clarence Monroe Burton William Stocking Gordon K Miller 1922 The city of Detroit Michigan 1701 1922 Volume 3 The S J Clarke publishing company pp 981 982 a b Compendium of History and Biography of the City of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan Henry Taylor amp Co 1908 pp 320 322 ISBN 9783849678371 a b Charles Richard Tuttle 1874 General history of the state of Michigan with biographical sketches portrait engravings and numerous illustrations A complete history of the Peninsular state from its earliest settlement to the present time R D S Tyler amp co p 714 F A Barnard 1878 American biographical history of eminent and self made men Michigan volume Part 1 Western biographical publishing co pp 9 10 Carlisle Fred ed 1890 Chronography of Notable Events in the History of the Northwest Territory and Wayne County Detroit O S Gulley Bornman p 416 a b The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical 1907 p 35 ISBN 9780598455529 a b Mr Hill s Lieutenants PDF New York Times March 3 1892 William Stocking Detroit News Stephen Bromley McCracken 1902 Detroit The Evening News Association p 71 a b The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical 1907 pp 35 36 ISBN 9780598455529 DIED AT YONKERS Detroit Free Press Jul 21 1904 Both Men Laid Up A fierce fight between two Detroit politicians PDF New York Times May 6 1888 a b David Lee Poremba 1998 Detroit 1860 1899 Arcadia Publishing p 59 ISBN 0 7385 3373 4 William Francis Morse 1908 The collection and disposal of municipal waste The Municipal Journal and Engineer p 373 a b c HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL COMPRISING A SYNOPSIS OF GENERAL HISTORY OF THE STATE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF MEN Western Publishing and Engraving Co 1900 pp 179 180 a b Western Publishing and Engraving Co 1900 CYCLOPEDIA OF MICHIGAN HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL COMPRISING A SYNOPSIS OF GENERAL HISTORY OF THE STATE ABD BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF MEN Western Publishing and Engraving Co pp 144 146 a b c d e Catlin George B 2005 1900 Chapters CI through CVII The story of Detroit Ann Arbor Mich University of Michigan Library pp 585 630 Retrieved 2006 06 15 Michigan Governor Hazen Stuart Pingree National Governors Association Retrieved October 30 2010 Detroit Mich City Clerk 1894 Municipal manual of the city of Detroit p 9 The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical illustrated Manusa amp Wieber 1907 pp 67 68 ISBN 9780598455529 a b United States Congress List of mayors of Detroit id M000280 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress a b United States Congress List of mayors of Detroit id C000579 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress a b The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical 1907 pp 52 55 ISBN 9780598455529 a b Clarence Monroe Burton William Stocking Gordon K Miller 1922 The city of Detroit Michigan 1701 1922 Volume 3 The S J Clarke publishing company pp 636 637 a b The government of the city of Detroit and Wayne County Michigan 1701 to 1907 historical and biographical 1907 pp 145 146 ISBN 9780598455529 In Detroit Couzens is Big Winner The Border Cities Star Nov 8 1933 a b c d Oscar B Marx dies ex Detroit mayor Ludington Daily News Nov 23 1923 Clarence Monroe Burton William Stocking Gordon K Miller 1922 The city of Detroit Michigan 1701 1922 Volume 3 The S J Clarke publishing company p 608 a b Charles K Hyde 2005 The Dodge brothers the men the motor cars and the legacy Wayne State University Press p 150 ISBN 0 8143 3246 3 Charter of the City of Detroit PDF 1918 Retrieved September 30 2015 permanent dead link City of Detroit Charters Through History 2012 Retrieved September 30 2015 a b c Ford Richardson Bryan 1993 Henry s lieutenants Wayne State University Press pp 67 73 ISBN 0 8143 3213 7 a b c d United States Congress List of mayors of Detroit id C000812 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress a b Modest rites for Couzens The Windsor Daily Star Nov 1 1950 In Detroit TIME magazine January 23 1928 Archived from the original on June 14 2009 a b c d e f g Detroit City Council 1919 to present Detroit Public Library Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved November 6 2010 Index to Politicians Lockyear to Lofvegren The Political Graveyard Retrieved November 6 2010 a b United States Congress List of mayors of Detroit id D000431 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress House Committee on Election of President Vice President and Representatives in Congress 1914 Soliciting or receiving assessments subscriptions or contributions for political purposes Govt print off p 3 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Municipal manual of the city of Detroit 1984 Sidney Fine 1975 Frank Murphy Volume 2 University of Michigan Press p 172 ISBN 0 472 32949 9 Robert Mark Warner C Warren Vander Hill 1974 A Michigan reader 1865 to the present Eerdmans p 175 ISBN 0 8028 7030 9 Former Detroit Official Killed The New York Times October 18 1928 a b c Philip Parker Mason 1987 Title The Ambassador Bridge a monument to progress Wayne State University Press pp 75 76 ISBN 0 8143 1840 1 KELLY WHEALAN PLEDGE HELP TO RECOVERY DRIVE Chicago Tribune Sep 9 1933 a b Victoria W Wolcott 2001 Remaking respectability African American women in interwar Detroit UNC Press Books p 141 ISBN 0 8078 4966 9 Kenneth T Jackson 1968 The Ku Klux Klan in the city 1915 1930 Oxford University Press m a b Wilma Wood Henrickson 1991 Detroit perspectives crossroads and turning points Wayne State University Press pp 340 344 ISBN 0 8143 2013 9 a b Bowles First Detroit Mayor To Be Recalled Lewiston Daily Sun Jul 24 1930 Bowles Loses But Wins Over Recall Crowd Sarasota Herald Sep 10 1930 a b c Biographical Directory of Federal Judges Murphy Frank Federal Judicial Center Retrieved November 8 2010 Sidney Fine 1975 Frank Murphy Volume 2 University of Michigan Press p 177 ISBN 0 472 32949 9 a b c d Following in the Footsteps of His Dad Spartanburg Herald Journal Nov 15 1935 Couzens To Make Mayoralty Drive Miami News Aug 6 1933 Who s Who in Detroit 1935 36 Walter Romig amp Co 1935 p 264 CIO Candidate is Defeated in Detroit Vote Pittsburgh Post Gazette Nov 3 1937 a b c Edward Jeffries Dominic J Capeci 1996 Detroit and the Good War the World War II letters of Mayor Edward Jeffries and friends University Press of Kentucky p 6 ISBN 0 8131 1974 X JEFFIES LIKELY WINNER Detroit Mayor Seeks Fifth Term New York Times Nov 2 1947 Kilpatrick among other Detroit officials who have faced legal trouble The Detroit News March 24 2008 Edward Jeffries Dominic J Capeci 1996 Edward Jeffries Dominic J Capeci eds Detroit and the Good War the World War II letters of Mayor Edward Jeffries and friends University Press of Kentucky pp 1 42 ISBN 0 8131 1974 X Who s Who in Detroit 1935 36 Walter Romig amp Co 1935 p 324 Past Commanders in Chief PDF Veterans of Foreign Wars Archived from the original PDF on June 17 2010 Retrieved November 12 2010 a b c Mayor Cobo Dies at 63 The Windsor Daily Star Sep 13 1957 Michigan s Governor Matches Ike s Victory Ottawa Citizen Nov 7 1956 a b c d Louis C Miriani 90 Former Detroit Mayor New York Times October 21 1987 a b c d e Joseph Turrini Nov Dec 1999 Phooie on Louie African American Detroit and the Election of Jerry Cavanagh PDF Michigan History a b JUDGES OF THE COURT OF APPEALS 1999 2000 Michigan Manual Legislative Council State of Michigan 1993 p 585 ISBN 1 878210 06 8 a b Biographies of Piast Institute Staff Directors and Fellows Hon Roman H Gribbs Piast Institute Archived from the original on November 26 2010 Retrieved November 18 2010 a b c d e f g Coleman A Young 79 Mayor of Detroit And Political Symbol for Blacks Is Dead New York Times November 30 1997 a b c Larry Jones April 30 2001 Detroit Mayor Dennis W Archer Decides Not to Seek Reelection US Mayor Newspaper Archived from the original on January 1 2011 Retrieved November 19 2010 a b c Biography DENNIS W ARCHER American Bar Association Retrieved November 7 2010 a b c DANNY HAKIM October 30 2001 Detroit Mayoral Rivals Wage Close Battle of Generations New York Times Beatty quits says she regrets devastation caused by scandal Detroit Free Press January 28 2008 Kwame M Kilpatrick Detroit Free Press Retrieved January 14 2014 a b c d e f NICK BUNKLEY May 6 2009 Detroit Chooses Political Newcomer for Mayor New York Times a b c The next in line Cockrel not eager but ready to be mayor if Kilpatrick leaves post Crain s Detroit Business February 11 2008 Nick Bunkley February 25 2009 Interim Leader and Novice to Face Off in Detroit Race Twitter New York Times New Detroit Mayor Ken Cockrel Jr Takes Oath of Office Fox News September 19 2008 Retrieved November 18 2010 Detroit Mayor Dave Bing faces tough problems after re election Charles Pugh promises new direction for council Detroit News November 4 2009 a b Dave Bing The New York Times Retrieved November 18 2010 IAN URBINA November 3 2009 In Virginia McDonnell Ends Democrats Streak New York Times Helms Matt 8 November 2012 Mike Duggan to step down as DMC chief in pursuit of Detroit mayoral bid Detroit Free Press How underdog story propelled Mike Duggan to top vote getter in Detroit primary Detroit Free Press 7 August 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2013 External links editThe Early Government of Detroit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of mayors of Detroit amp oldid 1220683310, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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