The American Mayor offers a unique ranking of the nation's
big-city mayors by expert scholars. Although the mayoralty is one
of the most important political executive offices, it has escaped
the kind of evaluations by which scholars have ranked American
presidents. Now, thanks to Melvin Holli, we have a comparable
survey of the "best" and "worst" mayors, covering some 730 mayors
from the big-fifteen cities, from the beginning of the modern
office in 1820 to the 1990s. The poll of historians, biographers,
and social scientists produced a remarkably strong consensus.
Who were our best mayors? The list ranges from Boston's "Great
Mayor" Josiah Quincy (1823-1828) to New York City's Fiorello La
Guardia (1934-1945), who is first on the all-time-best list. La
Guardia, a stouthearted fireplug of a man, built modern New York,
fought Murder Incorporated, read the comics to children over the
air during a newspaper strike, and was a symbol of ethnic probity
and honesty. Sandwiched between Quincy and La Guardia are several
other outstanding mayors, including Cleveland's Tom Johnson
(1901-1909), Pittsburgh's David Lawrence (1946-1959), Detroit's
Hazen Pingree (1890-1897), and Los Angeles's Tom Bradley
(1973-1993).
Taking the first-worst prize among scoundrel mayors is Chicago's
William H. "Big Bill" Thompson (1915-1923, 1927-1931), one of the
most colorful mayors in the city's history, if not the most
corrupt. Big Bill, also known as "Kaiser Bill" for his pro-German
stand during World War I, accepted campaign funds from gangsters
including Al Capone. Also among the "worst" is another Chicago
mayor, Jane Byrne (1979-1983), the only woman on the list. Jersey
City's Frank Hague (1917-1947) and Philadelphia's Frank Rizzo
(1972-1980) are among the other notable rascals who have sat in
city halls.
The American Mayor presents complete findings of Holli's poll in
jargon-free fashion. Holli explains the results of the survey,
gives biographical sketches of the ten best mayors, as well as some
attention to the worst, and then uses the findings of modern
leadership studies to explore mayoral success and failure. He
concludes with a chapter titled "Pathways to Power," in which he
reviews the New York City political milieu that produced the
nation's "best" mayor, Fiorello La Guardia, and also examines the
career of the nation's most successful big-city mayor, Buffalo's
Grover Cleveland, the only mayor to become president of the United
States.
General
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