Jump to content

Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mayor of Kansas City
Flag of Kansas City, Missouri
Incumbent
Quinton Lucas
since August 1, 2019
StyleHis Honor
ResidencePrivate residence
Term lengthFour years
Inaugural holderWilliam S. Gregory
Formation19th century
WebsiteOffice of the Mayor
Number of mayors of Kansas City by party affiliation[A]
Party Mayors
Democratic 37
Republican 20
Whig 1

The mayor of Kansas City, Missouri is the highest official in the Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Government.

Since the 1920s the city has had a council-manager government in which a city manager runs most of the day-to-day operations of the city. Unlike most cities of its size, by charter Kansas City has a "weak-mayor" system, in which most of the power is formally vested in the city council. However, the mayor is very influential in drafting and guiding public policy. The mayor presides over all city council meetings and has a vote on the council. Due to these combined factors the mayor, in fact, holds a significant amount of de facto power in the city government.

Since 1946, mayors of Kansas City have been elected by the voters of Kansas City to four-year terms and are limited to two terms under the city's charter. Mayors initially served one-year terms until 1890 when they began serving two-year terms. According to the City Charter, city elections are non-partisan, meaning that the mayor and city council run without nominal political affiliation. The mayor of Kansas City occupies an office on the 29th floor of the Kansas City City Hall, the building's highest floor. Eleven of Kansas City's mayors are interred in Elmwood Cemetery. The current mayor of Kansas City is Quinton Lucas, who was elected in 2019.


Mayors

[edit]
The Mayor of Kansas City has his office on the 29th floor of the Kansas City City Hall which is the highest occupiable floor in the building
James A. Reed, George M. Shelley, Darius A. Brown, Leander J. Talbot, Thomas T. Crittenden Jr., Frank Cromwell, George H. Edwards Jr., and Samuel B. Strother at the 1923 funeral of Webster Davis
Charles B. Wheeler Jr.
Richard L. Berkley
Emanuel Cleaver
Mark Funkhouser
Sly James
# Name Took office Left office Party Terms[B]
1 William S. Gregory April 18, 1853[1] February 1854 Whig 56
2 Johnston Lykins February 1854 April 1855 Democratic 1 16
3 John Johnson April 1855 1855 Democratic 12[C]
4 Milton J. Payne 1855 1860 Democratic 412
5 George M.B. Maughs 1860 1861 Democratic 1
6 Robert T. Van Horn 1861 1862 Republican 1
4 Milton J. Payne 1862 1863 Democratic 1
7 William Bonnifield 1863 1863 Democratic 12
6 Robert T. Van Horn 1863 1865 Republican 112
8 Patrick Shannon 1865 1866 Democratic 1
9 Alexander L. Harris 1866 1867 Democratic 1
10 Edward H. Allen 1867 1868 Republican 1
9 Alexander L. Harris 1868 1869 Democratic 1
11 Francis R. Long 1869 1870 Republican 1
12 Elijah M. McGee 1870 1871 Democratic 1
13 William Warner 1871 1872 Republican 1
14 Robert H. Hunt 1872 1873 Republican 1
15 Edward Lowe Martin 1873 1874 Democratic 1
16 Smith D. Woods 1874 1875 Democratic 1
17 Turner A. Gill 1875 1877 Democratic 2
18 James W. L. Slavens 1877 1878 Republican 1
19 George M. Shelley 1878 1880 Democratic 2
20 Charles A. Chace 1880 1881 Republican 1
21 Daniel A. Frink 1881 1882 Republican 1
22 Thomas B. Bullene 1882 1883 Republican 1
23 James Gibson 1883 1884 Democratic 1
24 Leander J. Talbott 1884 1885 Democratic 1
25 John W. Moore 1885 1886 Democratic 1
26 Henry C. Kumpf 1886 1889 Republican 3
27 Joseph J. Davenport 1889 1890 Republican 1
28 Benjamin Holmes 1890 1892 Democratic 1[D]
29 William S. Cowherd 1892 1894 Democratic 1
30 Webster Davis 1894 1896 Republican 1
31 James M. Jones 1896 1900 Republican 2
32 James A. Reed 1900 1904 Democratic 2
33 Jay H. Neff 1904 1906 Republican 1
34 Henry M. Beardsley 1906 1908 Republican 2
35 Thomas T. Crittenden Jr. 1908 1910 Democratic 1
36 Darius A. Brown 1910 1912 Republican 1
37 Henry L. Jost 1912 1916 Democratic 2
38 George H. Edwards 1916 1918 Republican 1
39 James Cowgill 1918 1922 Democratic 112[E]
40 Sam B. Strother 1922 1922 Democratic 12
41 Frank H. Cromwell 1922 1924 Democratic 1
42 Albert I. Beach 1924 1930 Republican 3
43 Bryce B. Smith 1930 January 5, 1940 Democratic 412[F]
44 Charles S. Keith 1940 1940 Democratic 12
45 John B. Gage 1940 1946 Democratic 3
46 William E. Kemp 1946 1955 Democratic 3[G]
47 H. Roe Bartle 1955 1963 Democratic 2
48 Ilus W. Davis 1963 1971 Democratic 2
49 Charles B. Wheeler Jr. 1971 1979 Democratic 2
50 Richard L. Berkley 1979 1991 Republican 3
51 Emanuel Cleaver 1991 1999 Democratic 2
52 Kay Barnes 1999 2007 Democratic 2
53 Mark Funkhouser 2007 2011 Democratic 1
54 Sly James 2011 2019 Democratic 2
55 Quinton Lucas 2019 Current Democratic

Notes

[edit]
  • A. ^ 45 people have served as mayor, three twice; the table includes these non-consecutive terms as well.
  • B. ^ The fractional terms of some mayors are not to be understood absolutely literally; rather, they are meant to show single terms during which multiple mayors served, due to resignations, deaths and the like.
  • C. ^ Johnson resigned after only 35 days in office.
  • D. ^ Per the new city charter, Holmes was the first mayor to serve a two-year term.
  • E. ^ Died in office.
  • F. ^ Smith resigned from office.[2]
  • G. ^ Kemp served one two-year term, one three-year term, and one four-year term.


See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
General
  • "Mayors of Kansas City Past & Present". Kansas City, Missouri. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
  • Green, George Fuller (1968). A Condensed History of the Kansas City Area. Kansas City, MO: Lowell Press. OCLC 40731.
Charters
Specific
  1. ^ Green, George Fuller (1968). A Condensed History of the Kansas City Area: Its Mayors and Some V.I.P.s. Kansas City: The Lowell Press.
  2. ^ Larsen, Lawrence Harold; Hulston, Nancy J. (1997). Pendergast!. University of Missouri Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-8262-1145-3. OCLC 37432817. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
[edit]