Howard W. Jackson Explained

Howard W. Jackson
Order:39th
Office:Mayor of Baltimore
Term Start:1931
Term End:1943
Predecessor:William Frederick Broening
Successor:Theodore McKeldin
Term Start1:1923
Term End1:1927
Predecessor1:William Frederick Broening
Successor1:William Frederick Broening
Birth Name:Howard Wilkinson Jackson
Birth Date:4 August 1877
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Party:Democratic

Howard Wilkinson Jackson (August 4, 1877August 31, 1960[1]) was the Mayor of Baltimore, Maryland for two separate mayoral administrations, the first of four years from 1923 to 1927 and the second administration of three terms of four years each (12 years) from 1931-1943, especially being influential during the "hard times" of economic upheaval of the "Great Depression", building and organizing a municipal social welfare system for the massive numbers of unemployed, homeless and destitute in Baltimore during along with the beginning of the defense build-up and war effort for World War II that transformed the City.

As a still, influential former mayor of the City, he later supported the racial integration of the student body of musicians at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in the Peabody Institute in 1949, the relatively smooth integration of the local Baltimore City Public Schools in September 1954, and added his support to later mayoral administrations of Mayors Thomas L.J. D'Alesandro, Jr., J. Harold Grady, and Board of School Commissioners efforts after the United States Supreme Court unanimous decision of May 1954, in Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas.

Under his first mayoralty, a large number of public schools were constructed, including several co-educational secondary schools including Forest Park High School in the northwestern City and a new "Castle on the Hill" landmark structure of Collegiate Gothic stone architecture for the "capstone of Baltimore's public education": The Baltimore City College, third oldest public high school in America, when ground was broken and cornerstone laid in 1924. When completed four years later it was the most expensive and elaborate high school built in America at the time

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Howard W. Jackson (1877-1960) . 18 December 2008.