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List of mayors of Richmond, Virginia

List of mayors of Richmond, Virginia

The Mayor of Richmond is the chief executive of the government of Richmond, Virginia, as stipulated by the city's charter.

This list includes mayors who were appointed by the Richmond City Council as well as those who were elected by popular vote.

The current Mayor of Richmond, (and 80th in the sequence of regular mayors), is Democrat Levar Stoney who succeeded Dwight C. Jones, a Baptist pastor and former member of the Virginia House of Delegates in 2016. Jones was first elected in 2008, he won a second term in November 2012.[5]

Mayor of Richmond
StyleThe Honorable
Term lengthFour years (since 2005)
Inaugural holderWilliam Foushee, Sr.
FormationJuly 2, 1782
WebsiteOffice of the Mayor [8]

History

Richmond's original City Hall building, used from 1814 to 1874

Richmond's original City Hall building, used from 1814 to 1874

William Foushee, a physician, was the first mayor of Richmond, Virginia

William Foushee, a physician, was the first mayor of Richmond, Virginia

The City of Richmond was founded in 1737 by William Byrd II.

In May 1782, Virginia General Assembly expressed desire to move inland, to a place less exposed to British incursions than Williamsburg. Richmond had been made the temporary capital after urging from Thomas Jefferson years earlier, and it was soon decided to make the move permanent.

Two months later, on July 2nd, a charter was written up, and the city was incorporated. Twelve men were to be elected from the City at-large and were to select one of their own to act as Mayor, another to serve as Recorder and four to serve as Aldermen. The remaining six were to serve as members of the Common Council. All positions had term limits of three years, with the exception of the mayor who could only serve one year consecutively. A vote was held at a meeting the following day, and Dr. William Foushee, Sr. was chosen as the first mayor.

In March 1851, the decision was made to replace the original Richmond City Charter. It was decided that all city officials were to be popularly elected. After the 12-year tenure of William Lambert and his short-term replacement by recorder Samuel C. Pulliam, elections were held, with Joseph C. Mayo coming out on top.

Mayo was deposed in April 1865, weeks before the end of the American Civil War, when Union forces captured the city.

The system set forth by the Second City Charter worked as long as the City was small and most voters knew personally, the qualifications of the men for whom they were voting and the requirements for the jobs to which they were elected.

Beginning in 1948, Richmond eliminated the popularly elected mayor's office, and instituted a council-manager form of government. This lasted until 2004, when the City Charter was changed once again, bringing back the popularly elected mayor. Former Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder was elected mayor that year. Of Virginia's 38 cities, only Richmond does not have a council-manager form of government.

List of mayors

Appointed mayors (1782-1853)

MayorPolitical PartyTerm startTerm end
1William Foushee, Sr.No partyJuly 3, 1782June 30, 1783
2John J. BeckleyNo partyJuly 1, 1783July 6, 1784
3Robert MitchellNo partyJuly 7, 17841785
4John HarvieNo party17851786
5William PennockNo partyDecember 10, 17861786
6Richard Adams, Jr.No party1786February 21, 1788
7John J. BeckleyNo partyFebruary 22, 1788March 9, 1789
8Alexander McRobertNo partyMarch 10, 1789March 9, 1790
9Robert BoydMarch 10, 17901790
10George Nicolson1790December 12, 1790
11Robert MitchellDecember 13, 17901791
12John Barrett17911792
13Robert Mitchell17921793
14John Barrett17931794
15Robert Mitchell17941795
16Andrew Dunscomb17951796
17Robert Mitchell17961797
18James McClurg17971798
19John Barrett17981799
20George Nicholson17991800
21James McClurg18001801
22William Richardson18011802
23John Foster18021803
24James McClurg18031804
25Robert Mitchell18041805
26William DuVal18051806
27Edward Carrington18061810
28David Bullock18101811
29Benjamin Tate18111812
30Thomas Wilson18121813
31John Greenhow18131814
32Thomas Wilson18141815
33Robert Gamble18151816
34Thomas Wilson18161817
35William H. Fitzwhylson18171818
36Thomas Wilson1818May 4, 1818
37Francis Wicker (acting)May 5, 18181819
38John Adams18191826
39Joseph Tate18261839
40Francis Wicker18391840
41William LambertDemocratic1840March 24, 1852
42Samuel C. PulliamDemocraticMarch 25, 18521853

Popularly-elected mayors (1853-1948)

MayorPolitical PartyTerm startTerm end
43Joseph C. MayoDemocratic1853April 3, 1865
**
Fall of Richmond (April 3, 1865) - City under federal authority until appointment of David Saunders as mayor
**
44David J. SaundersDemocraticJuly 3, 1865April 6, 1866
45Joseph C. MayoDemocraticApril 7, 1866May 4, 1868
46George ChahoonRepublicanMay 6, 1868March 15, 1870
47Henry K. Ellyson[1]DemocraticMarch 16, 1870June 30, 1871
48Anthony M. KeileyDemocraticJuly 1, 1871June 30, 1876
49William C. CarringtonDemocraticJuly 1, 1876June 30, 1888
50James Taylor EllysonDemocraticJuly 1, 1888June 30, 1894
51Richard M. TaylorDemocraticJuly 1, 18941904
52Carlton McCarthyDemocraticSeptember 1, 1904August 31, 1908
53David C. RichardsonDemocraticSeptember 1, 1908September 3, 1912
54George AinslieDemocraticSeptember 4, 19121924
55John Fulmer BrightDemocratic19241940
56Gordon Barbour AmblerDemocratic19401944
57William C. HerbertDemocratic1944September 10, 1946
58Horace H. EdwardsDemocraticSeptember 11, 19461948

City Council appointed mayors (1948-2005)

MayorPolitical PartyTerm startTerm end
59W. Stirling KingDemocratic19481950
60T. Nelson ParkerDemocratic19501952
61Edward E. HaddockDemocratic19521954
62Thomas P. BryanDemocratic19541956
63F. Henry GarberDemocratic19561958
64A. Scott AndersonDemocratic19581960
65Claude W. WoodwardDemocratic19601962
66Eleanor P. Sheppard[2]DemocraticJuly 1, 1962June 30, 1964
67Morrill Martin CroweDemocraticJuly 1, 1964June 30, 1968
68Philip J. Bagley, Jr.DemocraticJuly 1, 1968June 30, 1970
69Thomas J. Bliley, Jr.DemocraticJuly 1, 1970March 7, 1977[3]
70Henry L. Marsh, III[4]DemocraticMarch 8, 1977June 30, 1982
71Roy A. WestDemocraticJuly 1, 1982June 30, 1988
72Geline B. WilliamsRepublicanJuly 1, 1988June 30, 1990
73Walter T. Kenney, Sr.DemocraticJuly 1, 1990June 30, 1994
74Leonidas B. Young, IIDemocraticJuly 1, 1994June 30, 1996
75Larry E. ChavisDemocraticJuly 1, 1996June 30, 1998
76Timothy M. KaineDemocraticJuly 1, 1998September 10, 2001
77Rudolph C. McCollum, Jr.DemocraticSeptember 11, 2001January 1, 2005

Popularly-elected mayors (since 2005)

PictureMayorPolitical PartyTerm startTerm end
78Douglas Wilder 2003 NIH.jpgDouglas WilderDemocraticJanuary 2, 2005January 1, 2009
79Dwight Clinton Jones 2015 (cropped).jpgDwight C. JonesDemocraticJanuary 1, 2009December 31, 2016
80Levar Stoney.jpgLevar StoneyDemocraticJanuary 1, 2017Incumbent

References

[1]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgAfter Ellyson's election, Mayor Chahoon challenged the new administration's legitimacy and refused to step down. The courts ruled in Ellyson's favor, and he was declared victor of the May election but refused the office because tainted by skullduggery. See Richmond's Municipal War.
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[2]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgSheppard was the first female City Council member in Richmond as well as the first female mayor.
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[3]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgBetween 1972 and 1976, city council elections were not held by order of the United States Department of Justice. See City of Richmond v. United States.
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[4]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgMarsh was the first African-American mayor of Richmond.
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[5]
Citation Linkwww.nbc12.com"Voters re-elect mayor, shake up Richmond's City Council". NBC12. November 16, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[6]
Citation Linkweb.archive.orgCity of Richmond: City Council 1948-Present
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[7]
Citation Linkpoliticalgraveyard.comPolitical Graveyard: Mayors of Richmond
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[8]
Citation Linkwww.richmondgov.comOffice of the Mayor
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[9]
Citation Linkwww.nbc12.com"Voters re-elect mayor, shake up Richmond's City Council"
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[10]
Citation Linkweb.archive.orgCity of Richmond: City Council 1948-Present
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[11]
Citation Linkpoliticalgraveyard.comPolitical Graveyard: Mayors of Richmond
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM
[12]
Citation Linken.wikipedia.orgThe original version of this page is from Wikipedia, you can edit the page right here on Everipedia.Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Additional terms may apply.See everipedia.org/everipedia-termsfor further details.Images/media credited individually (click the icon for details).
Sep 28, 2019, 10:17 PM