James Gray (mayor)

James Gray (February 18, 1862 – September 8, 1916) was a journalist and the 19th mayor of Minneapolis.

James Gray
19th Mayor of Minneapolis
In office
January 2, 1899  January 7, 1901
Preceded byRobert Pratt
Succeeded byA. A. Ames
Personal details
BornFebruary 18, 1862
Falkirk, Scotland
DiedSeptember 8, 1916(1916-09-08) (aged 54)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Resting placeLakewood Cemetery
44°56′11″N 93°17′56″W
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Grace Farrington
ChildrenPhilip Farrington Gray
MotherElizabeth Ronald
FatherJohn Gray
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota
ProfessionJournalist
Known forWar correspondent during Spanish–American War

Life and career

Gray was born in Falkirk, Scotland to John Gray and Elizabeth Ronald. Gray's family emigrated to the United States in 1866, settling in Iowa. He attended schools in Dubuque County, Iowa and Jackson County, Iowa. After working as a teacher for a year, Gray moved to Minneapolis in 1880. He attended the University of Minnesota, graduating as valedictorian in 1885. After graduating, he began working with the Minneapolis Tribune as a reporter. When the Minneapolis Times was founded in 1889, he moved there to work as an editor. He was later promoted to managing editor and also served as a special correspondent in Washington, DC during the run up to the Spanish–American War. Based partially on the name recognition he gained from his work as a correspondent, Gray ran as the Democratic nominee for mayor of Minneapolis in 1898 and won. He ran for re-election in 1900 but was defeated by A. A. Ames.[1] After leaving politics he became an editor with the Minneapolis Journal.[2]

Gray died on September 8, 1916. He is buried in Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis.[3]

Electoral history

  • Minneapolis Mayoral Election, 1898
    • James Gray 16,066
    • Edward E. Webster 9,494
    • Albert Alonzo Ames 5,266
    • William J. Dean 923
    • Frank A. Malmquist 599
  • Minneapolis Mayoral Election, 1900
    • Albert Alonzo Ames 17,292
    • James Gray 12,732
    • William J. Dean 9,140
    • Ole B. Olson 227
    • Asa Kingsbury 217
gollark: Broadly speaking, yes.
gollark: ++remind "september 24" it is already too late
gollark: Nobody needed those environment variables anyway, because it didn't crash.
gollark: Apparently you used to be able to use some internal Python API to get the location of argv/argc but they broke it.
gollark: I read somewhere that the environment list thing was near argv in memory, so it finds a common environment variable's location using `getenv`, scans backward until it finds `python3`, then randomly overwrites things.

References

  1. "Career of James S. Gray". Minnesota Election Trends Project.
  2. Hudson, Horace Bushnell, ed. (1908). A Half Century of Minneapolis. Minneapolis: Hudson Pub. Co. p. 501.
  3. "Newspapermen are pallbearers at funeral". Bemidji Daily Pioneer. United Press. September 12, 1916.
Political offices
Preceded by
Robert Pratt
Mayor of Minneapolis
1899–1901
Succeeded by
A. A. Ames
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