Home / Full timeline / Baltimore, Maryland, elects its first Black mayor; the Black mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is re-elected; and the Black mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina, is defeated.
Baltimore, Maryland, elects its first Black mayor; the Black mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is re-elected; and the Black mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina, is defeated.
1987 (Nov 3)
Baltimore, Maryland, elected its first Black mayor; the Black mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was re-elected; and the Black mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina, was defeated. In Baltimore, Kurt Schmoke, an attorney, prosecutor, and Rhodes Scholar, gained 100,923 votes (78.5 percent) to defeat his Republican challenger Samuel Culotta, who had 27,636 votes. In Philadelphia, Mayor W. Wilson Goode, the city's first Black mayor, gained 331,659 votes (51.1 percent) to defeat former mayor Frank Rizzo who had 317,331 votes (48 percent) with 99.13 percent of the vote counted. Goode scored heavily among Blacks who made up 40 percent of the 1.6 million residents of the nation's fifth largest city, despite lingering opposition to his decision to bomb a house occupied by MOVE, a radical Black group in 1985. The sixty-seven-year-old Rizzo continued to labor under accusations that he was a racist and had permitted police brutality against Blacks while he served as police commissioner and later as mayor. In Charlotte, Sue Myrick, a White Republican and former city councilwoman, defeated mayor Harvey Gantt, the first Black mayor of the city, 47,311 to 46,296. Myrick had accused Gantt of failing to solve the city's traffic congestion problems. Her campaign was also aided by the support of North Carolina Governor Jim Martin. Sixty-four percent of the registered voters in Charlotte were white at the time of the election.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.