Home / Full timeline / The Joint Center for Political Studies reports that the 1984 elections increased the number of Black mayors serving in the United States to 286.
The Joint Center for Political Studies reports that the 1984 elections increased the number of Black mayors serving in the United States to 286.
1985 (Mar 21)
The Joint Center for Political Studies (JCPS), a Washington, D.C., research firm, reported that the 1984 elections increased the number of Black mayors serving in the United States to 286. Thirty-one new Black mayors were elected in 1984 in such cities as Battle Creek, Michigan; Gainesville, Georgia; Union Springs, Alabama; Pasco, Washington; Peekskill, New York; and Portsmouth and South Boston, Virginia. The increases in Black mayors during 1984 was the largest "one-year increase yet recorded." Since 1975, the number of Black mayors in the country had more than doubled from 135 to 286.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.