A. J. Barnes

A. J. Barnes was the first person to represent the 12th district of the Los Angeles City Council under the new charter in 1925. He served until 1927.

A.J. Barnes,
sketched by
Henry Major, 1925

Barnes, a contractor[1] and real-estate man[2] who had lived in Los Angeles since 1904,[3] was elected to the City Council in 1925, but failed in a re-election bid in 1927, when he lost the primary election to Douglas Eads Foster and Clarence W. Horn by just seven votes, determined only after a recount was held. Barnes was known as a supporter of Mayor George E. Cryer, and he was endorsed by organized labor.[4][5] The 12th District at that time was bounded by Main Street, Sunset Boulevard, Temple Street, Fountain Avenue and Hoover Street.[6]

Barnes ran unsuccessfully for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors two times.[7] After his City Council service, he became a field secretary for Supervisor J. Don Mahaffey.[8]

In 1932 he was active in a protest movement against a proposal to give the University of Southern California preferential rights to use the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum during the football season.[9]

In 1934, Barnes was secretary of the Progressive Party State Central Committee and caused a stir when he resigned his position in protest of the party's support of Raymond L. Haight in the gubernatorial election that year and urged support for Governor Frank Merriam in order to avoid giving the election to Upton Sinclair, the End Poverty in California candidate.[10] Barnes ran as the Progressive Party's candidate for the state Board of Equalization later that year and came in third.[11]

References

Other sources

  • Chronological Record of Los Angeles City Officials: 1850–1938, compiled under the direction of the Municipal Reference Library, City Hall, Los Angeles, March 1938 (reprinted 1966)

Preceded by
Los Angeles City Council
12th District

1925–1927
Succeeded by
Douglas Eads Foster
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