Mayors of New Brunswick, New Jersey
Mayors of New Brunswick, New Jersey:[1]
Term of office | Mayor | Born and died | Notes and references |
---|---|---|---|
1991– | James M. Cahill | 62nd mayor | |
1979–1991 | John A. Lynch, Jr. | (born 1938) | 61st mayor |
1978–1978 | Gilbert L. Nelson | Appointed | |
1975–1978 | Richard J. Mulligan | Resigned | |
1974–1975 | Aldrage B. Cooper II | Appointed | |
1967–1974 | Patricia Q. Sheehan | Last under Mayor Commission and first under Mayor Council. He resigned | |
1955–1967 | Chester W. Paulus | ||
1951–1954 | John A. Lynch, Sr. | (1908–1978) | [2] |
1943–1951 | Chester W. Paulus | ||
1942–1943 | Harry W. Dwyer | ||
1939–1942 | Richard V. Mulligan | ||
1935–1939 | Frederick F. Richardson | ||
1918–1935 | John J. Morrison | [3] | |
1915–1918 | Edward Farrington (mayor) | (?-1918) | He died in office.[3] |
1914–1915 | Austin Scott | (1848–1922) | [3][4] |
1910–1914 | John J. Morrison | [3] | |
1908–1910 | W. Edwin Florance | [3] | |
1906–1908 | Drury W. Cooper | [3] | |
1904–1906 | William S. Meyers | [3] | |
1902–1904 | George A. Viehmann | [3] | |
1895–1902 | Nicholas Williamson | [3] | |
1889–1895 | James H. VanCleef | [3] | |
1881–1889 | William S. Strong | [3] | |
1879–1881 | T. DeWitt Reiley | [3] | |
1877–1879 | Lyle van Nuis | [3] | |
1875–1877 | Isaiah Rolfe | [3] | |
1873–1875 | Thomas M. deRussey | [3] | |
1871–1873 | Garrett Conover | b. 1817 | [3] Some sources use the years 1874-1875. |
1869–1871 | George J. Janeway | [3] | |
1867–1869 | Miles Ross | (1827–1903) | [3] |
1865–1867 | John T. Jenkins | [3] | |
1865–1865 | Augustus T. Stout | (1816-1865) | He died in office shortly after being elected.[3] |
1863–1865 | Richard McDonald (mayor) | He was the first mayor under the seventh city charter of 1863.[3] | |
1861–1863 | Lyle van Nuis | ||
1860–1861 | Ezekiel M. Patterson | ||
1859–1860 | Peter C. Onderdonk | ||
1858–1859 | Tunis V.D. Hoagland | ||
1857–1858 | John Bayard Kirkpatrick | ||
1856–1857 | Lyle van Nuis | ||
1855–1856 | Abraham V. Schenk | ||
1853–1855 | John B. Hill | ||
1851–1852 | Peter N. Wyckoff | ||
1849–1851 | David Fitz Randolph | ||
1848–1849 | Augustus R. Taylor | He was a physician. | |
1847–1848 | Martin A. Howell | ||
1846–1847 | John Van Dyke | (1807–1878) | |
1845–1846 | William H. Leupp | ||
1843–1845 | John Acken | ||
1842–1843 | Fitz Randolph Smith | ||
1841–1842 | Littleton Kirkpatrick | (1787–1859) | |
1840–1841 | David W. Vail | (?-1842) | |
1838–1840 | Augustus R. Taylor | (1782-?) | He was a physician.[5] |
1829–1838 | C. L. Hardenbergh | ||
1824–1829 | Augustus R. Taylor | He was a physician. | |
1821–1824 | James Schureman | (1756–1824) | He died in office. |
1813–1821 | James Bennett (mayor) | (?-1821) | He died in office. |
1801–1813 | James Schureman | (1756–1824) | |
1796–1801 | Abraham Schuyler | ||
1794–1796 | John Bubenheim Bayard | (1738–1807) | |
1793–1794 | Lewis Dunham (mayor) | He was a physician. Other sources use the term 1792-1794 | |
1790–1793 | James Schureman | (1756–1824) | Other sources put Bayard in this term |
1784–1790 | Azariah Dunham | (1718–1790) | |
... | |||
1757 | James Hude | Building of Presbyterian Church | |
1730–1747 | Thomas Farmar | First Mayor of New Brunswick, New Jersey | |
References
- ↑ "Mayors of New Brunswick, New Jersey". Political Graveyard. Retrieved 2011-10-25.
John Bubenheim Bayard 1790 James Schureman 1801-13 James Bennett 1813-21 James Schureman 1821-24 Augustus R. Taylor 1824-29 C. L. Hardenbergh 1829-38 Augustus R. Taylor 1838-40 David M. Vail 1840-41 Littleton Kirkpatrick 1841-42 Fitz Randolph Smith 1842-43 John Acken 1843-45 William H. Leupp 1845-46 John Van Dyke 1846-47 Martin A. Howell 1847-48 Augustus F. Taylor 1848-49 David F. Randolph 1849-51 Peter N. Wyckoff 1851-52 John Van Dyke 1852-53 John B. Hill 1853-55 Abraham V. Schenck 1855-56 Lyle Van Nuis 1856-57 John B. Kirkpatrick 1857-58 Tunis V. D. Hoagland 1858-59 Peter C. Onderdonk 1859-60 Ezekiel M. Peterson 1860-61 Lyle Van Nuis 1861-63 Richard McDonald 1863-65 Augustus T. Stout 1865 John T. Jenkins 1865-67 Miles Ross 1867-69 George J. Janeway 1869-71 Garret Conover 1871-73 Thomas M. De Russy 1873-75 Isaiah Rolfe 1875-77 Lyle Van Nuis 1877-79 T. De Witt Reiley 1879-81 William S. Strong 1881-82 James H. Van Cleef 1892 John J. Morrison 1932 John A. Lynch 1951-55 James M. Cahill 2007
- ↑ "John A. Lynch, Senator in Jersey. Mayor of New Brunswick, 1951-55". New York Times. 1978-03-04. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
John A. Lynch, a former Mayor of New Brunswick and a 22-year veteran of the New Jersey Senate, died today at Whitestone Hospital in Queens. He was 69 years old, and had fought a losing battle with cancer for the last four years.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 History of Middlesex County, New Jersey. 1921. p. 298.
New Brunswick was to receive her seventh city charter in 1863. Legislation, however, did not greatly affect the provisions of the previous charter. The term of office of the mayor was made two years. The first mayor under the new charter was Richard McDonald; his successors have been as follows: Augustus T. Stout, 1865; John T. Jenkins, 1865-67; Miles Ross, 1867-69; Dr. George J. Janeway, 1869-71; Garret Conover, 1871-73; Thomas DeRussy, 1873-75; Isaiah Rolfe, 1875-77; Dewitt T. Reiley, 1879-81; William S. Strong, 1881-89; James H. Van Cleef, 1889-95; Nicholas Williamson, 1895-1902; George A. Viehmann, 1902-04; William S. Myers, 1904-06; Drury W. Cooper, 1906-08; W. Edwin Florance, 1908-10; John J. Morrison, 1910-14; Austin Scott, 1914-15; Edward F. Farrington, 1915-18; John J. Morrison, 1918. New Brunswick adopted the commission form of government March 7, 1915, under the State law for governing cities, passed by the legislature of 1914.
- ↑ "Austin Scott (1891-1906)". Rutgers University. Retrieved 2010-12-21.
An eminent and influential teacher, Dr. Austin Scott (1848-1922), was Professor of History, Political Economy, and Constitutional Law in Rutgers College when the Trustees elected him to succeed Merrill Gates as president in 1891. He was born in Maumee, near Toledo, Ohio, graduated from Yale College in 1869, and spent a year at the University of Michigan, where in 1870 he received a master of arts degree. ...
- ↑ "Augustus R. Taylor". Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey. Medical Society of New Jersey. September 1, 1916. Retrieved 2011-11-01.
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