Home / Full timeline / Several Blacks are elected mayors of major cities.
Several Blacks are elected mayors of major cities.
1989 (Nov 7)
Several Black Americans were elected or re-elected mayors in major American cities during general elections. They included Michael White in Cleveland, Ohio; Coleman Young in Detroit, Michigan; Chester Jenkins in Durham, North Carolina; John Daniels in New Haven, Connecticut, and Norm Rice in Seattle, Washington. In Cleveland, White, a city councilman, became the city's second Black mayor. He defeated a fellow Black American, city council president George Forbes, 89,829 to 68,167. In Detroit, Young won an unprecedented fifth term, defeating business executive Tom Barrow (a nephew of boxing champion Joe Louis), 138,175 to 107,195. In Durham, Jenkins won the mayor's office over Nelson Strawbridge, 19,381 to 17,118, In New Haven, Daniels captured 19,302 votes (69 percent) in his win over two opponents to become the city's first Black mayor. In Seattle, Rice, a Democrat, defeated a Republican, Doug Jewett, by a margin of 93,901 to 67,575 to become the first Black mayor of a city with only a 9.5 percent Black population.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.