List of mayors of Salem, Massachusetts
Appearance
Mayor of Salem | |
---|---|
Incumbent since May 27, 2023Dominick Pangallo | |
Style | His/Her Honor |
Type | Chief executive |
Member of | School Committee[1] Board of Library Trustees[2] Board of Trust Fund Commissioners[3] |
Residence | None official |
Seat | Salem City Hall |
Nominator | Nominating petition |
Appointer | Popular vote |
Term length | Four years[4] |
Constituting instrument | Salem City Charter |
Precursor | Salem Board of Selectmen (1629-1836) |
Formation | 1836 |
First holder | Leverett Saltonstall |
Salary | $150,000 (2023)[5] |
Website | www |
The mayor of Salem is the head of municipal government of Salem, Massachusetts. There was no mayor of Salem until its city charter was accepted on March 23, 1836, prior to which Salem was still incorporated as a town.
List
[edit]# | Mayor | Picture | Term | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Leverett Saltonstall | 1836–1838 | Whig | First mayor under the original city charter, (which included a bicameral legislative body). From 1836 to 1856 the Municipal year ended on the second Monday in March. | |
2nd | Stephen C. Phillips | 1838–1842 | Whig | ||
3rd | Stephen Palfrey Webb | 1842–1845 | Whig | Also served as the twelfth Mayor of Salem. From 1854 to 1855 Webb served as the sixth Mayor of San Francisco, California | |
4th | Joseph S. Cabot | 1845–1849 | Whig | ||
5th | Nathaniel Silsbee, Jr. | 1849–1851 | Whig | ||
6th | David Pingree | 1851–1852 | Independent | ||
7th | Charles Wentworth Upham | 1852–1853 | Whig | ||
8th | Asahel Huntington | 1853–1854 | Know Nothing | ||
9th | Joseph Andrews | 1854–1856 | Know Nothing | From 1856 to 1874 inclusive the Municipal year ended on the Fourth Monday in January. | |
10th | William S. Messervy | 1856–1858 | Democratic | ||
11th | Nathaniel Silsbee, Jr. | 1858–1859 | Republican | ||
12th | Stephen Palfrey Webb | 1860–1862 | Republican | Second time as Mayor of Salem. From 1854 to 1855 Webb served as the sixth Mayor of San Francisco, California | |
13th | Stephen G. Wheatland | 1863–1864 | Democratic | ||
14th | Joseph B. F. Osgood | 1865–1865 | Republican | ||
15th | David Roberts | January 1866 – September 26, 1867 | Republican | Roberts resigned as a result of disagreement with the Board of Aldermen. | |
16th | William Cogswell | September 26, 1867–1869 | Republican | ||
17th | Nathanial Brown | 1870–1871 | None | ||
18th | Samuel Calley | 1872–1872 | Republican | ||
19th | William Cogswell | 1873–1875 | Republican | From 1875 on the Municipal year ends on the First Monday in January. | |
20th | Henry Laurens Williams | 1875–1876 | None | ||
21st | Henry K. Oliver | 1877–1880 | Republican | ||
22nd | Samuel Calley | 1881–1882 | Republican | ||
23rd | William M. Hill | 1883–1884 | None | ||
24th | Arthur L. Huntington | 1885–1885 | None | ||
25th | John M. Raymond | 1886–1887 | None | ||
26th | Robert S. Rantoul | 1890–1893 | Democratic | ||
27th | James H. Turner | 1894–1897 | None | ||
28th | David P. Waters | 1898–1898 | None | ||
29th | James H. Turner | 1899–1899 | None | ||
30th | David M. Little | 1900–1900 | None | ||
31st | John F. Hurley | 1901–1902 | None | ||
32nd | Joseph N. Peterson | 1903–1905 | Republican | ||
33rd | Thomas G. Pinnock | 1906–1907 | Republican | ||
34th | John F. Hurley | 1908–1909 | None | ||
35th | Arthur Howard | 1910–1910 | None | ||
36th | Rufus D. Adams | 1911–1912 | Republican | Last mayor under the Original (1836) city charter. | |
37th | John F. Hurley | 1913–1915 | First Mayor under the second city charter adopted in November 1912. Was Recalled by the voters December 29, 1914. | ||
38th | Mathias J. O'Keefe | 1915–1915 | Elected to finish out John F. Hurley's three-year term in the December 29, 1914 election that recalled Mayor Hurley. | ||
39th | Henry P. Benson | 1916–1917 | Last Mayor under the second (1912) city charter (Commission form of Government). | ||
40th | Denis J. Sullivan | 1918–1923 | Republican[6] | First Mayor under the January 3, 1916 (Plan B) city charter. | |
41st | George J. Bates | 1924–1937 | Republican | Served in U.S. House from January 3, 1937 – November 1, 1949. | |
42nd | Edward A. Coffey | 1938–1947 | Republican | ||
43rd | Joseph B. Harrington | 1948–1949 | Democratic | ||
44th | Francis X. Collins | 1950–1969 | Democratic | ||
45th | Samuel Edward Zoll | 1970–1973 | Democratic | ||
46th | Jean A. Levesque | 1973–1983 | Republican | ||
47th | Anthony V. Salvo | 1984–1989 | Democratic | ||
48th | Neil J. Harrington | 1990–1997 | Democratic | ||
49th | Stanley J. Usovicz, Jr. | 1998–2005 | Democratic | ||
50th | Kim Driscoll | January 2006 – January 4, 2023 | Democratic | Elected Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts in the 2022 election | |
51st | Bob McCarthy | January 4, 2023 – May 27, 2023 | Elected by Salem City Council as Acting Mayor following resignation of Mayor Kim Driscoll. | ||
52nd | Dominick Pangallo | May 27, 2023 – Present | Democratic | Elected Mayor in special election on May 16, 2023, to complete Mayor Kim Driscoll's term. |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Code of Ordinances City of Salem, Massachusetts". library.municode.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ City of Salem. "Board of Public Library Trustees". salemma.gov. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ "Code of Ordinances City of Salem, Massachusetts". library.municode.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ "Code of Ordinances City of Salem, Massachusetts". library.municode.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ Luca, Dustin (24 March 2022). "Council offers, then rejects mayor raise". The Salem News (Salem, Mass.). Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ A Souvenir of Massachusetts Legislators. Stoughton, Mass.: A. M. Bridgman. 1916. p. 89.