Mayor of Tuscaloosa: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Patriarca12 (talk | contribs) m (→References: +Categories) |
|||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
* [[Robert Blair]] | * [[Robert Blair]] | ||
* [[Obediah Berry]], [[1873]]–[[1874]] | * [[Obediah Berry]], [[1873]]–[[1874]] | ||
* [[John Harris]], [[1874]]–[[1876]] | * [[John Harris (Tuscaloosa)|John Harris]], [[1874]]–[[1876]] | ||
* Obediah Berry, [[1877]]–[[1880]] | * Obediah Berry, [[1877]]–[[1880]] | ||
* [[William Jemison]], [[1880]]–[[1890]] | * [[William Jemison]], [[1880]]–[[1890]] |
Revision as of 16:22, 24 August 2013
The Mayor of Tuscaloosa is elected by the city at-large and serves four-year terms. The mayor is not term-limited and is bipartisan. Tuscaloosa is Alabama's fifth-largest city, and was incorporated on December 13, 1819, making it one day older than the state itself.
The mayor administers the day-to-day operations of the city, including overseeing the various city departments, over whom he has hiring and firing power. The mayor also acts as ambassador of the city. The mayor sits in city council meetings and has a tie-breaking vote.
Mayors of Tuscaloosa
- William Bolling, 1828–
- John Owen
- William R. Smith, 1837–
- D. Henry Robinson
- Robert Blair
- Joseph Guild, 1850–1854
- Obediah Berry, 1864–1865
- Joseph Guild, 1866–
- S.B. Smith
- John S. Garvin
- Joseph Pegues
- Tolliver F. Samuels
- Robert Blair
- Obediah Berry, 1873–1874
- John Harris, 1874–1876
- Obediah Berry, 1877–1880
- William Jemison, 1880–1890
- Henry Foster, 1890–1894
- William Jemison, 1894–1900
- William Cochrane, 1900–1904
- Frank Gamble Blair, 1904–1906
- W.M. Faulk, 1906–1910
- Zimri Shirley, 1910–1911
- ___ 1911–1914
- D. Beatty Robertson, 1914–1926
- Luther Davis, Sr., 1926–1949
- James Robertson, 1949–1953
- Hal McCall, 1953–1956
- George Van Tassel, 1956–1969
- Snow Hinton, 1969–1976
- Ernest Collins, 1976–1981
- Alvin A. DuPont, 1981–2005
- Walter Maddox, 2005–present
References
- Ochoa, Mandy (July 3, 1985) "Election to add chapter to history". p. 1 The Tuscaloosa News