Jess Lanier: Difference between revisions

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'''Jess "Big Daddy" Lanier''' (born c. [[1909]] in Lauderdale County - died [[June 20]], [[1978]]) was a former [[Mayor of Bessemer|mayor]] of [[Bessemer]].
[[Image:Jess Lanier.jpg|right|thumb|Jess Lanier]]
'''Jess "Big Daddy" Lanier''' (born c. [[1909]] in Lauderdale County; died [[June 20]], [[1978]]) was a former [[Mayor of Bessemer|mayor]] of [[Bessemer]].


Lanier, a former minor league baseball player for the Decatur Rinky-Dinks, moved to Bessemer in [[1942]] and founded a radio station. He made his first run for mayor in [[1954]], losing to [[Jap Bryant]] by 27 votes. When Bryant died two years later, Lanier won a special election to fill the vacancy. He kept the job through four more terms for a total of 18 years. During that time the city constructed new police and street department buildings as well as three fire stations, a hospital, a municipal golf course and five schools.
Lanier, a former minor league baseball player for the Decatur Rinky-Dinks, moved to Bessemer in [[1942]] and founded a radio station. He made his first run for mayor in [[1954]], losing to [[Jap Bryant]] by 27 votes. When Bryant died two years later, Lanier won a special election to fill the vacancy. He kept the job through four more terms for a total of 18 years. During that time the city constructed new police and street department buildings as well as three fire stations, a hospital, a municipal golf course and five schools.

Latest revision as of 21:01, 14 June 2013

Jess Lanier

Jess "Big Daddy" Lanier (born c. 1909 in Lauderdale County; died June 20, 1978) was a former mayor of Bessemer.

Lanier, a former minor league baseball player for the Decatur Rinky-Dinks, moved to Bessemer in 1942 and founded a radio station. He made his first run for mayor in 1954, losing to Jap Bryant by 27 votes. When Bryant died two years later, Lanier won a special election to fill the vacancy. He kept the job through four more terms for a total of 18 years. During that time the city constructed new police and street department buildings as well as three fire stations, a hospital, a municipal golf course and five schools.

In 1962 Lanier pushed for a bill in the Alabama legislature to divide Jefferson County in two, with the Bessemer Cutoff forming a new county. He served as a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions of 1964 and 1972.

Lanier died in 1978 following surgery for a malignant tumor. Jess Lanier High School, Jess Lanier Manor, and the Jess Lanier Building at Bessemer State Technical College were all named in his honor.

References

  • "Bessemer's Jess Lanier High School is named after a former Bessemer mayor; Internet petition circulating requesting new high school retain that name." (October 12, 2008) Birmingham News