Mayor of Stamford, Connecticut explained

Post:Mayor
Body:Stamford, Connecticut
Incumbent:Caroline Simmons
Incumbentsince:2021
Type:Mayor
Termlength:4 years
Formation:1894
First:Charles H. Leeds

The mayor of Stamford, Connecticut, United States, is the city's chief executive.

History of the mayoralty

See main article: History of Stamford, Connecticut. Before 1945, the city charter of the City of Stamford divided the city into two separate political jurisdictions: a central city with a "strong mayor" form of government and a town which employed the traditional town meeting form of government.[1] From the 1930s, reformers began seeking to change this system on the grounds that it accorded too much power to the mayor and that the separation of the town and city for some purposes but not others "was an outmoded and inefficient way to govern a modern city."[1]

In 1946, the Charter Consolidation Inquiry Commission, created by the Connecticut General Assembly, issued recommendations for Stamford government to unify under a single jurisdiction led by a strong mayor, and with a city council (called the Board of Representatives) of forty members, with two elected from twenty districts.[1] These recommendations were approved by Stamford voters and the new system took effect on April 15, 1949.[1]

Stamford retains its strong-mayor form of government today.[1] The mayor appoints the departments heads, acts as chief executive officer of the city, and is responsible for presenting the budget to the board of finance, city council, and planning board.[1] The city council approves the budget and passes ordinances and resolutions.[1] Both the mayor and the city council serve four-year terms, and there are no term limits.[1]

List of mayors of Stamford

The following table lists the mayors of Stamford, as well as their dates in office, their dates of birth, and (if deceased) their dates of death.[2] [3]

NameServedPartyDate of birthDate of deathNotes
Charles H. Leeds1894-1895 January 9, 1834 November 6, 1914
Edwin L. Scofield1895-1897June 18, 1852January 14, 1918
William J. H. Bohannan1897-1899March 9, 1865August 29, 1947
Edward J. Tupper1899-1900September 19, 1853October 2, 1922
Homer Stille Cummings1900-1902DemocratApril 30, 1870September 10, 1956
Charles H. Leeds 1902-1904January 6, 1873February 7, 1967
Homer Stille Cummings1904-1906DemocratApril 30, 1870September 10, 1956Subsequently Attorney General of the United States (1933-1939)
Edward J. Tupper1906-1910September 19, 1853October 2, 1922
Charles E. Rowell1911-1913 May 3, 1849March 29, 1914
Walter G. Austin1913-1915 December 9, 1853January 14, 1937
John M. Brown1915-1915November 7, 1856December 10, 1915
John J. Treat1916-1922 June 10, 1873February 7, 1928
Alfred N. Phillips, Jr.1923-1924 DemocratApril 23, 1894January 18, 1970
John F. Keating1924-1926September 8, 1876September 15, 1946
Alfred N. Phillips, Jr.1927-1928DemocratApril 23, 1894January 18, 1970
William W. Graves1928-1930 October 28, 1868December 26, 1965
John F. Keating1934-1935September 8, 1876September 15, 1946
Joseph P. Boyle1930-1934 1883 May 25, 1948
Alfred N. Phillips, Jr.1935-1936DemocratApril 23, 1894January 18, 1970Subsequently representative from Connecticut's 4th congressional district
Edward A. Gonnoud1936-1938DemocratSeptember 12, 1892June 26, 1951
Charles E. Moore1938-1940RepublicanJune 29, 1884 June 22, 1967
Edward A. Gonnoud1940-1942DemocratSeptember 12, 1892June 26, 1951
Charles E. Moore1942-1949RepublicanJune 29, 1884 June 22, 1967
George T. Barrett1949-1951 RepublicanNovember 29, 1884October 11, 1954
Thomas F. J. Quigley1951-1957 DemocratApril 19, 1903November 9, 1996
Webster C. Givens1957-1959 Republican[4] December 23, 1898September 7, 1968
James Walter Kennedy1959-1963 DemocratJune 8, 1912June 26, 1977Subsequently Commissioner of the NBA (1963–1975)
William F. Hickey Jr.1963-1963 DemocratMay 28, 1929July 21, 2016
Thomas C. Mayers1963-1967 Republican[5] March 21, 1909December 20, 1997
Bruno E. Giordano 1967-1969 DemocratJuly 29, 1929May 27, 2016
Julius Morris Wilensky1969-1973Republican[6] October 10, 1916October 25, 2004
Frederick P. Lenz, Jr.1973-1975Democrat
Louis A. Clapes1975-1983Republican[7] April 10, 1917November 20, 1990
Thom Serrani1983-1991Democrat[8] 1948 - Elementary school redistricting plan sent South Field Village Housing Projects children to Cove Schools
Stanley J. Esposito 1991-1995 -
Dannel Patrick "Dan" Malloy1995-2009DemocratJuly 21, 1955 - Subsequently governor of Connecticut
Michael Pavia2009-2013Republican -
David R. Martin2013–2021DemocratFebruary 23, 1953 -
Caroline Simmons2021–PresentDemocratFebruary 10, 1986 - First female mayor in Stamford history

External links

Notes and References

  1. Peter F. Burns, Electoral Politics Is Not Enough: Racial and Ethnic Minorities and Urban Politics (State University of New York Press, Albany, 2006), pp. 25-26.
  2. http://www.boardofreps.org/stamford-mayors.aspx Stamford Mayors
  3. http://www.fergusonlibrary.org/information-research/stamford-history-genealogy/stamford-mayors Stamford Mayors
  4. Web site: More of a Long Story .
  5. News: Former Stamford mayor Bruno Giordano dies at 86. Stamford Advocate . 30 May 2016.
  6. News: Democrat Elected in Stamford, Beating 2-Term C. O. P. Mayor. The New York Times. 7 November 1973.
  7. News: Louis Clapes, 73, Dies; Ex-Mayor of Stamford. The New York Times. 25 November 1990.
  8. News: Stamford, Hoping for Growth, Chooses a Mayor. The New York Times. 27 October 1991. Judson. George.