Mayor of Trenton, New Jersey

List of mayors

# Mayor Term in office Length of service Party affiliation Previous office
1 Moore Furman[1]
(1728–1808)
1792

1794
2 years   [data unknown/missing] Deputy Quartermaster-General and Forage Master of New Jersey
2 Aaron Woodruff[1]
(1762–1817; aged 54)
1794

1797
3 years   Federalist Attorney General of New Jersey
3 James Ewing[1]
(1744–1823)
1797

1803
6 years [data unknown/missing] New Jersey Assemblyman
4 Joshua Wright[1] 1803

1806
3 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
5 Stacy Potts[1] 1806

1814
8 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
6 Robert McNealy[1] 1814

1832
18 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
7 Charles Burroughs[1] 1832

1847
15 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
8 Samuel R. Hamilton[1] 1847

1849
2 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
9 William C. Howell[1] 1849

1850
1 year [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
10 William Napton[1] 1850

1852
2 years [data unknown/missing] New Jersey Assemblyman
11 John R. Tucker[1] 1852

1854
2 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
12 William Napton[1] 1854

1855
1 year [data unknown/missing] Former Mayor of Trenton
13 William P. Sherman[1] 1855

1855
under 1 year [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
14 John R. Tucker[1] 1855

1856
1 year [data unknown/missing] Former Mayor of Trenton
15 Joseph Wood[1] 1856

1859
3 years   Democratic [data unknown/missing]
16 Franklin S. Mills[1] 1859

1861
2 years [data unknown/missing] New Jersey Assemblyman
17 William R. McKean[1] 1861

1863
2 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
18 Franklin S. Mills[1] 1863

1867
4 years [data unknown/missing] Former Mayor of Trenton
19 Alfred Reed[1]
(1839–1918)
1867

1868
1 year [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
20 William Napton[1] 1868

1871
3 years [data unknown/missing] Former Mayor of Trenton
21 John Briest[1] 1871

1875
4 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
22 Wesley Creveling[1] 1875

1877
2 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
23 Daniel R. Bodine[1] 1877

1879
2 years [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
24 William Rice[1] 1879

1881
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
25 Garrett D. W. Vroom[1]
(b. 1843)
1881

1884
3 years   Democratic [data unknown/missing]
26 Richard Grant Augustus Donnelly[2]
(1841–1905; aged 63)
1884

1886
2 years   Democratic New Jersey
Assemblyman
27 John Woolverton[1] 1886

1887
1 year   [data unknown/missing] Former New Jersey
Senator
28 Frank A. Magowan[1] 1887

1889
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
29 Anthony A. Skirm[1] 1889

1891
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
30 Daniel J. Bechtel[1] 1891

1893
2 years   Democratic [data unknown/missing]
31 Joseph B. Shaw[1] 1893

1895
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
32 Emory Neal Yard[1] 1895

1897
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
33 Welling G. Sickel[3][1]
(b. 1858)
1897

1899
2 years   Republican Vice President of
United Globe Rubber Co.
34 Frank Obadiah Briggs[4]
(1851–1913; aged 61)
1899

1902
3 years   Republican Member of the
Trenton School Board
35 Frank S. Katzenbach, Jr.[5]
(1868–1929; aged 60)
1902

1906
4 years   Democratic Alderman At-large
36 Frederick W. Gnichtel[1]
(b. 1860)
1906

1908
2 years   Republican [data unknown/missing]
37 Walter Madden[1]
(b. 1873)
1908

1911
3 years   Democratic [data unknown/missing]
38 Frederick William Donnelly[2]
(1866–1935; aged 68)
1911

1932
21 years   Democratic [data unknown/missing]
Acting1 Edward Lee 1932

1932
under 1 year   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
39 George LaBarre 1932

1934
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
40 William J. Connor[1]
1935

1939
4 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
41 Leo Rogers
1939

1941
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
42 Ward Lee
1941

1941
under 1 year   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
43 John Hartman
1941

1943
2 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
44 Andrew Duch
1943

1947
4 years   [data unknown/missing] [data unknown/missing]
45 Donal J. Connolly
(1909–1995; aged 86)
1947

1959
12 years   Democratic State Assemblyman
46 Arthur J. Holland
(1918–1989; aged 71)
1959

1966
6 years   Democratic City Councilman
47 Carmen Armenti
(1929–2001; aged 72)
1966

1970
4 years   Democratic City Councilman, North Ward
48 Arthur J. Holland
(1918–1989; aged 71)
1970

November 9, 1989
20 years   Democratic Former Mayor of Trenton
Acting2 Carmen Armenti
(1929–2001; aged 72)
November 9, 1989

July 1, 1990
234 days   Republican City Council President
49 Douglas Palmer[6][7]
(born in 1951; aged 68)
July 1, 1990

July 1, 2010
20 years   Democratic Mercer County Freeholder
50 Tony F. Mack[6]
(born in 1966; aged 54)
July 1, 2010

February 26, 2014
3 years, 67 days   Democratic Mercer County Freeholder
Acting3 George Muschal[8] February 26, 2014

July 1, 2014
125 days   Unaffiliated City Councilman, South Ward
51 Eric Jackson
(born in 1959; aged 61)
July 1, 2014

July 1, 2018
4 years   Democratic Trenton Director
of Public Works
52 Reed Gusciora
(born in 1960; aged 60)
July 1, 2018

Incumbent
767 days   Democratic New Jersey Assemblyman

References

  1. "Mayors of Trenton, New Jersey". Political Graveyard. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  2. "F. Donnely Dead. 21 Years as Mayor. Trenton Leader Resigned in 1932 Because of Health. His Father Mayor 1884-86". New York Times. September 26, 1935. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
  3. "New Jersey Elections". Baltimore Sun. Apr 14, 1897. Welling G. Slckol, republican, was elected mayor of Trenton over Henry Vandeveer
  4. "Ex-Senator Briggs Dead in Trenton". New York Times. May 19, 1913. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  5. "Justice Katzenbach Dies in Hospital. Blood Transfusion Fails to Save New Jersey Jurist Whose Leg Was Infected. Twice Mayor of Trenton. Ran Unsuccessfully for Governorship on Democratic Ticket in 1906. On Bench Eight Years. Eulogized by Federal Judges. Once Ran for Governor". New York Times. March 14, 1929. Retrieved 2011-09-22. Supreme Court Justice Frank S. Katzenbach of this city died at Mercer Hospital here at 5 o'clock this morning, after an illness of ten days due to septicaemia. He was 60 years old.
  6. "Former county Freeholder Tony Mack is elected Trenton mayor". Associated Press. June 16, 2010. Retrieved 2011-09-24. Former county Freeholder Tony Mack rolled to a landslide runoff election win Tuesday over opponent Manny Segura, giving Trenton its first new mayor in 20 years, a report in the Times of Trenton said. ... Mack replaces Doug Palmer, who served for five terms. ...
  7. "Douglas Palmer". City Mayors. Retrieved 2010-03-22. Douglas Palmer was born in Trenton and attended Trenton Public Schools. He then graduated from Bordentown Military Institute in Bordentown, New Jersey. He is a graduate of Virginia’s private black college Hampton University, where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Management in 1973. ...
  8. Pizzi, Jenna (February 26, 2014). "Trenton Council president sworn in as mayor". The Times of Trenton. Retrieved February 26, 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.