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Mayor of Chicago

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Elected chief executive of city government
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Mayor of Chicago
since May 15, 2023
Government of Chicago
Style
  • His Honor
  • The Honorable
Term length4 years
Inaugural holderWilliam B. Ogden
Formation1837
SuccessionVice mayor of Chicago
Salary$216,210
WebsiteOfficial website

Themayor of Chicago is thechief executive of citygovernment inChicago, Illinois, thethird-largest city in theUnited States. The mayor is responsible for the administration and management of various city departments, submits proposals and recommendations to theChicago City Council, is active in the enforcement of the city's ordinances, submits the city's annual budget and appoints city officers, department commissioners or directors, and members of city boards and commissions.

During sessions of the city council, the mayor serves as the presiding officer. The mayor is not allowed to vote on issues except in certain instances, most notably where the vote taken on a matter before the body results in a tie.

The office of mayor was created when Chicago became a city in 1837.

History

[edit]
William B. Ogden was the first mayor of Chicago.
U.S. Secretary of StateJohn Kerry leaving "The Fifth Floor" office of the mayor in 2016

The first mayor wasWilliam B. Ogden (1837–1838). Forty-six men and two women (Jane Byrne, 1979–1983, andLori Lightfoot, 2019–2023), have held the office. Two sets of father and son have been elected Mayor of Chicago:Carter Harrison III (1879–1887, 1893) andCarter Harrison IV (1897–1905, 1911–1915), as well asRichard J. Daley (1955–1976) andRichard M. Daley (1989–2011). Carter Harrison IV was the first mayor to have been born in the city.

As an interim mayor,David Duvall Orr (1987) held the office for one week, the shortest time period. Richard M. Daley was elected six times becoming Chicago's longest-serving mayor, his 22 years surpassing his father's record of 21 years.[1]

The first Irish Catholic mayor wasJohn Patrick Hopkins (1893–1895), andRahm Emanuel (2011–2019) is the only Jewish American to have served as mayor.

Harold Washington (1983–1987) was the first African American mayor. Lightfoot (2019–2023) was the city's first African American woman and firstLGBT mayor.Brandon Johnson (2023–present) is the fourth African American mayor,Eugene Sawyer (1987–1989) having been selected by the council after Washington died in office.

Appointment powers

[edit]

The mayor appoints the commissioner of theChicago Fire Department, the superintendent of theChicago Police Department and the heads of other departments,[2] the largest of which are the Water Management Department (formed by the consolidation of the former Water Department and Sewer Department underRichard M. Daley), and the Streets & Sanitation Department. The mayor also appoints members to the boards of severalspecial-purpose governmental bodies includingCity Colleges of Chicago,Chicago Park District,Chicago Public Library,Chicago Housing Authority,Chicago Transit Authority, and theMetropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority. UnderRichard M. Daley, theIllinois legislature granted the mayor power to appoint the governing board and chief executive officer of theChicago Public Schools and subordinated the district to the mayor; the district had long been an independent unit of government.

TheChicago City Clerk andCity Treasurer of Chicago are elected separately, as are the 50 alderpersons who form the city council. The mayor is empowered, however, to fill vacancies in any of these 52 elected offices by appointment. In turn, the city council elects one of its own to fill a mayoral vacancy.

By charter, Chicago has a "weak-mayor" system, in which most of the power is vested in the city council. In practice, however, the mayor of Chicago has long been one of the most powerful municipal chief executives in the nation. Unlike in most other weak-mayor systems, the mayor has the power to draw up the budget. For most of the 20th century, beforethe decline of patronage and the mayor's office becoming officially nonpartisan in 1999, the mayor was thede facto leader of the city's Democratic Party, and had great influence over the ward organizations.[3] Located inCity Hall, "the fifth floor" is sometimes used as ametonym for the office and power of the mayor.[4]

Election and succession

[edit]
Main article:Mayoral elections in Chicago

The mayor of Chicago is elected by popular vote every four years, on the last Tuesday in February. A run-off election, in case no candidate garners more than fifty percent of the vote, is held on the first Tuesday in April. The election is held on anon-partisan basis. Chicago is the largest city in the United States not tolimit the term of service for its mayor.

In accordance with Illinois law,[5][6] the city council elects a vice mayor who serves as interim mayor in the event of a vacancy in the office of the mayor or the inability of the mayor to serve due to illness or injury, until the city council elects one of its membersacting mayor or until the mayoral term expires.[6][7] However, if a vacancy occurs in the office of mayor with more than 28 months remaining in the mayoral term and at least 130 days before the next general municipal election, then a special election must be held to choose a new mayor to serve out the remainder of the term at that general municipal election; if a vacancy occurs with fewer than 28 months remaining in the mayoral term or fewer than 130 days before the next general municipal election, then the acting mayor serves as mayor until the mayoral term expires.

The order-of succession involving the vice mayor was made concrete following disputes that arose in the aftermath of the death in office ofRichard J. Daley, and was subsequently implemented following the death in office ofHarold Washington, which saw Vice MayorDavid Orr become acting mayor.[8] Prior to this, the city had vague succession laws which indicated that the president pro tempore of the City Council would succeed as mayor. This was not followed after the death of Daley, and the city council appointedMichael Bilandic acting mayor instead of having pro temporeWilson Frost become mayor,[9] due to City Corporation Counsel William R. Quinlan ruling that, since the city did not have a statute specifically outlining succession, the City Council would need to elect the interim mayor.[10]

Six instances have seen the City Council appoint either an acting mayor, acting mayor pro tempore, or interim mayor.

In the absence of the mayor during meetings of the city council, the president pro tempore of the city council, who is a member of and elected by the city council, acts as presiding officer. Unlike the mayor, the president pro tempore can vote on all legislative matters. If neither the mayor nor pro tempore can preside, the vice mayor presides.[11]

List of mayors

[edit]

Between 1833 and 1837, Chicago was incorporated as a town and headed by town presidents. Since 1837, it has been incorporated as a city and headed by mayors.

The mayoral term in Chicago was one year from 1837 through 1863, when it was changed to two years. In 1907, it was changed again, this time to four years. Until 1861, municipal elections were held in March. In that year, legislation moved them to April. In 1869, however, election day was changed to November, and terms expiring in April of that year were changed. In 1875, election day was moved back to April by the city's vote to operate under theCities and Villages Act of 1872.

No.[12]PortraitMayorTerm startTerm endTenureElectionPartyVice Mayor
Town Presidents
1Thomas Jefferson Vance Owen
(1801–1835)
August 12, 1833August 11, 1834364 daysNonpartisanPosition not yet established
2John H. Kinzie
(1803–1865)
1834May 18373 yearsWhig
Mayors
1William B. Ogden
(1805–1877)
May 1837March 183810 months1837DemocraticPosition not yet established
2Buckner Stith Morris
(1800–1879)
183818391 year1838Whig
3Benjamin Wright Raymond
(1801–1883)
1st time
183918401 year1839Whig
4Alexander Loyd
(1805–1872)
March 9, 1840March 4, 1841360 days1840Democratic
5Francis Cornwall Sherman
(1805–1870)
1st time
March 4, 1841March 7, 18421 year, 3 days1841Democratic
6Benjamin Wright Raymond
(1801–1883)
2nd time
March 7, 1842March 7, 18431 year, 0 days1842Whig
7Augustus Garrett
(1801–1848)
1st time
March 7, 1843April 2, 18441 year, 26 days1843Democratic
March
1844
[a]
8Alson Sherman
(1811–1903)
April 2, 1844March 10, 1845342 daysApril
1844
Independent Democratic
9Augustus Garrett
(1801–1848)
2nd time
March 10, 1845March 3, 1846358 days1845Democratic
10John Putnam Chapin
(1810–1864)
March 3, 1846March 9, 18471 year, 6 days1846Whig
11James Curtiss
(1806–1859)
1st time
March 9, 1847March 14, 18481 year, 5 days1847Democratic
12James Hutchinson Woodworth
(1804–1869)
March 14, 1848March 12, 18501 year, 363 days1848Independent Democratic
1849
13James Curtiss
(1806–1859)
2nd time
March 12, 1850March 11, 1851364 days1850Democratic
14Walter S. Gurnee
(1813–1903)
March 11, 1851March 7, 18531 year, 361 days1851Democratic
1852
15Charles McNeill Gray
(1807–1885)
March 7, 1853March 15, 18541 year, 8 days1853Democratic
16Isaac Lawrence Milliken
(1813–1889)
March 15, 1854March 13, 1855363 days1854Democratic
17Levi Boone
(1808–1882)
March 13, 1855March 11, 1856364 days1855American
18Thomas Dyer
(1805–1862)
March 11, 1856March 10, 1857364 days1856Democratic
19John Wentworth
(1815–1888)
1st time
March 10, 1857March 2, 1858357 days1857Republican
20John Charles Haines
(1818–1896)
March 2, 1858March 22, 18602 years, 20 days1858Republican
1859
21John Wentworth
(1815–1888)
2nd time
March 22, 1860May 6, 18611 year, 45 days1860Democratic
22Julian Sidney Rumsey
(1823–1886)
May 6, 1861May 5, 1862364 days1861Republican
23Francis Cornwall Sherman
(1805–1870)
2nd time
May 5, 1862May 3, 18652 years, 363 days1862Democratic
1863
24John Blake Rice
(1809–1874)
May 3, 1865December 6, 18694 years, 217 days1865Republican
1867
25Roswell B. Mason
(1805–1892)
December 6, 1869December 4, 18711 year, 363 days1869Citizens
26Joseph Medill
(1823–1899)
December 4, 1871August 22, 18731 year, 261 days1871Republican
(Dry)
Lester L. Bond
(1829–1903)
Acting
August 22, 1873December 1, 1873101 daysRepublican
27Harvey Doolittle Colvin
(1815–1892)
December 1, 1873July 24, 18762 years, 236 days1873People's
Thomas Hoyne
(1817–1883)
Disputed
Election invalidated;
tenure annulled
April
1876
[b]
Independent Democratic
28Monroe Heath
(1827–1894)
July 24, 1876April 28, 18792 years, 278 daysJuly
1876
Republican
1877
29Carter Harrison III
(1825–1893)
1st time
April 28, 1879April 18, 18877 years, 355 days1879Democratic
1881
1883
1885
30John A. Roche
(1844–1904)
April 18, 1887April 15, 18891 year, 362 days1887Republican
31DeWitt Clinton Cregier
(1829–1898)
April 15, 1889April 27, 18912 years, 12 days1889Democratic
32Hempstead Washburne
(1851–1918)
April 27, 1891April 17, 18931 year, 355 days1891Republican
33Carter Harrison III
(1825–1893)
2nd time
April 17, 1893October 28, 1893[†]194 days1893Democratic
34George Bell Swift
(1845–1912)
Pro tempore
1st time
November 9, 1893December 27, 189348 daysRepublican
35John Patrick Hopkins
(1858–1918)
December 27, 1893April 8, 18951 year, 102 days1893 specialDemocratic
36George Bell Swift
(1845–1912)
2nd time
April 8, 1895April 15, 18972 years, 7 days1895Republican
37Carter Harrison IV
(1860–1953)
1st time
April 15, 1897April 10, 19057 years, 360 days1897Democratic
1899
1901
1903
38Edward Fitzsimmons Dunne
(1853–1937)
April 10, 1905April 15, 19072 years, 5 days1905Democratic
39Fred A. Busse
(1866–1914)
April 15, 1907April 17, 19114 years, 2 days1907Republican
40Carter Harrison IV
(1860–1953)
2nd time
April 17, 1911April 26, 19154 years, 9 days1911Democratic
41William Hale Thompson
(1869–1944)
1st time
April 26, 1915April 16, 19237 years, 355 days1915Republican
1919
42William Emmett Dever
(1862–1929)
April 16, 1923April 18, 19274 years, 2 days1923Democratic
43William Hale Thompson
(1869–1944)
2nd time
Campaign
April 18, 1927April 9, 19313 years, 356 days1927Republican
44Anton Cermak
(1873–1933)
April 9, 1931March 6, 1933[†]1 year, 331 days1931Democratic
45Frank J. Corr
(1877–1934)
Acting
March 15, 1933April 8, 193324 daysDemocratic
46Edward Joseph Kelly
(1876–1950)
April 17, 1933April 15, 194713 years, 363 daysApp.Democratic
1935
1939
1943
47Martin H. Kennelly
(1887–1961)
April 15, 1947April 20, 19558 years, 5 days1947Democratic
1951
48Richard J. Daley
(1902–1976)
April 20, 1955December 20, 1976[†]21 years, 244 days1955Democratic
1959
1963
1967
1971
1975
49Michael A. Bilandic
(1923–2002)
December 20, 1976April 16, 19792 years, 117 daysApp.DemocraticCasey Laskowski
1977 special
50Jane Byrne
(1933–2014)
April 16, 1979April 29, 19834 years, 13 days1979DemocraticRichard Mell
51Harold Washington
(1922–1987)
April 29, 1983November 25, 1987[†]4 years, 210 days1983Democratic
1987David Orr
52David Orr
(born 1944)
Acting

[13]
November 25, 1987December 2, 19877 daysDemocraticHimself
53Eugene Sawyer
(1934–2008)
December 2, 1987April 24, 19891 year, 143 daysApp.DemocraticDavid Orr
Terry Gabinski
54Richard M. Daley
(born 1942)
April 24, 1989May 16, 201122 years, 22 days1989 specialDemocratic
1991
1995
1999Nonpartisan[c]
(Democratic)
Bernard Stone
2003
2007
55Rahm Emanuel
(born 1959)
May 16, 2011May 20, 20198 years, 4 days2011Nonpartisan[c]
(Democratic)
Ray Suarez
2015Brendan Reilly
56Lori Lightfoot
(born 1962)
May 20, 2019May 15, 20233 years, 360 days2019Nonpartisan[c]
(Democratic)
Tom Tunney
57Brandon Johnson
(born 1976)
May 15, 2023Incumbent2 years, 194 days2023Nonpartisan[c]
(Democratic)
Walter Burnett Jr.

Notes

[edit]
^† Died in office
  1. ^TheMarch 1844 mayoral election was voided by theCommon Council on the grounds that clerks in wards had been unqualified to vote. Seehere for more information.
  2. ^TheApril 1876 mayoral election (and thus Hoyne's tenure as mayor) was annulled after it was ruled by theCircuit Court of Cook County that the election had been illegitimate. Seehere andhere for more information.
  3. ^abcdSince1999, mayoral elections have officially been nonpartisan. A 1995 Illinois law stipulated that "candidates for mayor ... no longer would run under party labels in Chicago". However, Daley, Emanuel, Lightfoot, and Johnson are known to be Democrats.[14]

Vice mayor

[edit]
Vice mayor of Chicago
Incumbent
Vacant
since August 7, 2025
Inaugural holderCasey Laskowski
Formation1976
Salary$0[15]

In accordance with Illinois law, the city council elects a vice mayor who serves as interim mayor in the event of a vacancy in the office of the mayor or the inability of the mayor to serve due to illness or injury, until the city council elects one of its membersacting mayor or until the mayoral term expires. The vice mayoralty is currently vacant following the resignation ofWalter Burnett Jr. on August 7, 2025.

The position was created by a state law that was passed in response to the power struggle that took place over succession followingRichard J. Daley's death in office.[9][15][16]

If neither the mayor nor president pro tempore can preside over a City Council meeting, then the vice mayor presides.[11]

The position was long considered to be largely ceremonial.[17][18][19] However, in 2023, MayorBrandon Johnson successfully championed a resolution that gave the office a $400,000 budget. He also had his vice mayor, Burnett, act as an official community liaison for the mayoral administration.[20]

List of vice mayors

[edit]
No.Vice MayorTook officeLeft officePartyMayor(s) served under
1Casey Laskowski
(1918–2003)
[21][22]
19761979DemocraticMichael A. Bilandic
2Richard Mell
(born 1938)
[23]
April 16, 1979April 24, 1987DemocraticJane Byrne
Harold Washington
3David Orr
(born 1944)
[8][24][25]
April 1987May 1988DemocraticHarold Washington
Himself(acting)
Eugene Sawyer
4Terry Gabinski
(born 1938)
[24][26]
19881998DemocraticEugene Sawyer
Richard M. Daley
5Bernard Stone
(1927–2014)
[25][27][28]
19982011DemocraticRichard M. Daley
6Ray Suarez
(born 1946)
[17][18]
May 16, 2011May 20, 2015UnknownRahm Emanuel
7Brendan Reilly
(born 1971)
[29][30]
May 18, 2015May 20, 2019DemocraticRahm Emanuel
8Tom Tunney
(born 1955)
[7]
May 20, 2019May 15, 2023DemocraticLori Lightfoot
9Walter Burnett Jr.
(born 1963)
[31]
May 15, 2023August 7, 2025DemocraticBrandon Johnson

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Daley now Chicago mayor 1 day longer than father"Archived 2011-01-01 at theWayback MachineAssociated Press December 26, 2010
  2. ^Pratt, Gregory (May 22, 2018)."Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot announces key hires for her new administration, some Rahm Emanuel appointees will stay".Chicago Tribune. RetrievedMay 22, 2019 – via MSN.
  3. ^"Government, City of Chicago".Encyclopedia of Chicago.Archived from the original on August 15, 2011. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
  4. ^Shepard, Steven (February 26, 2019)."Black women make history in Chicago mayoral election".Politico. RetrievedApril 6, 2021.
  5. ^"65 ILCS 20/21-5.1".Illinois General Assembly. Government of Illinois. RetrievedMarch 1, 2020.
  6. ^ab"About City Government & the Chicago City Council".City Clerk of Chicago. September 21, 2015. Archived fromthe original on March 5, 2020. RetrievedMarch 1, 2020.
  7. ^abSpielman, Fran (May 17, 2019)."Lightfoot shakes up the City Council".Chicago Sun-Times.Archived from the original on May 22, 2019. RetrievedMay 29, 2019.
  8. ^abPratt, Gregory (May 7, 2018)."Wilson Frost remembered: 'He should've been Chicago's first black mayor'".chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. RetrievedMarch 1, 2020.
  9. ^abKing, Seth S. (December 29, 1976)."Bilandic, Lawyer and Daley Friend, Named Acting Mayor of Chicago".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  10. ^Harold, the People's Mayor: The Biography of Harold Washington by Dempsey Travis, Agate Publishing, Dec 12, 2017
  11. ^abKrebs, Timothy B."MONEY AND MACHINE POLITICS An Analysis of Corporate and Labor Contributions in Chicago City Council Elections"(PDF). RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  12. ^"Chicago Mayors".Chicago Public Library.Archived from the original on March 22, 2019. RetrievedMarch 23, 2019.
  13. ^"Chicago Mayors, 1837-2007".Encyclopedia of Chicago.Archived from the original on July 7, 2012. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
  14. ^Hardy, Thomas (July 7, 1995)."Gov. Edgar To End City Partisan Votes". Chicago Tribune.Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2011.
  15. ^abDevlin, Hugh (March 29, 2010)."Another City Council Stealth Budget". Chicago Talks. RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  16. ^"65 ILCS 20/21-5.1".Illinois General Assembly. RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  17. ^abSpielman, Fran (May 20, 2015)."City Council shuffle rewards Emanuel allies". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived fromthe original on December 7, 2015.
  18. ^abDumke, Mick (May 18, 2011)."The first meeting of the new mayor and City Council is nothing if not efficient".Chicago Reader. RetrievedMarch 1, 2020.
  19. ^Dumke, Mick (January 5, 2006)."A Million Here, a Million There . . ".Chicago Reader. RetrievedApril 17, 2020.
  20. ^Multiple sources
  21. ^"CASIMIR LASKOWSKI, 84".chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. August 18, 2013. RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  22. ^Colby, Peter W.; Peter W. Colby and Paul Michael Green, Paul Michael (February 1979)."The vote power of Chicago Democrats from Cermak to Bilandic The consolidation of clout".Illinois Issues: 20. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  23. ^"Chicago City Council: Richard Mell".NBC Chicago. November 11, 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  24. ^abDold, R. Bruce (May 26, 1988)."COUNCIL REPLACES ORR AS VICE MAYOR".chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  25. ^abSimpson, Dick (2018).Rogues, Rebels, And Rubber Stamps: The Politics Of The Chicago City Council, 1863 To The Present. Routledge.ISBN 978-0-429-97719-0. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  26. ^Tribune, Chicago (May 5, 1988)."GABINSKI'S TOP AIDE LIKELY TO SUCCEED HIM".chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  27. ^"Chicago's Vice Mayor".Chicago Tonight.WTTW. April 10, 2010. RetrievedJuly 8, 2015.
  28. ^Geiger, Kim; Washburn, Gay (December 22, 2014)."Former Chicago Alderman Bernie Stone dead at 87".chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. RetrievedApril 15, 2020.
  29. ^Sullivan, Emmet."What Would Actually Happen if Rahm Resigns".ChicagoMag.org. Chicago Magazine. RetrievedMarch 24, 2019.
  30. ^Pratt, John Byrne, Juan Perez Jr, Gregory."Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot aces first test of her power: City Council overhaul approved".chicagotribune.com. RetrievedMay 29, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  31. ^Spielman, Fran (June 1, 2023)."Inside the political survival of Chicago City Council dean".Chicago Sun-Times.

Further reading

[edit]

Secondary sources

[edit]
  • Banfield, Edward C. (1961).Political Influence. – covers major public issues 1957 to 1958 in Chicago
  • Becker, Richard Edward.Edward Dunn, Reform Mayor of Chicago: 1905-1907 (PhD thesis). The University of Chicago.
  • Bennett, Larry (2011). "The Mayor among His Peers: Interpreting Richard M. Daley". In Judd, Dennis R.; Simpson, Dick (eds.).The City, Revisited: Urban Theory from Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 242–272.ISBN 978-0-8166-6575-4.JSTOR 10.5749/j.cttts735.14.
  • Biles, Roger (2018).Mayor Harold Washington: Champion of Race and Reform in Chicago. University of Illinois Press.doi:10.5406/j.ctvvnhdn.ISBN 978-0-252-05052-7.
  • Biles, Roger (1984).Big City Boss in Depression and War: Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago.
    • Biles, William Roger (1981).Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago: Big City Boss in Depression and War (PhD thesis). University of Illinois at Chicago.
  • Bradley, Donald S.; Zald, Mayer N. (1965). "From commercial elite to political administrator: The recruitment of the mayors of Chicago".American Journal of Sociology.71 (2):153–167.doi:10.1086/224030.JSTOR 2774548.
  • Bradley, Donald S. (1963).The historical trends of the political elites and metropolitan Central City: the Chicago mayors.
  • Bukowski, Douglas (1998).Big Bill Thompson, Chicago, and the Politics of Image.
  • Bukowski, Douglas (1978). "William Dever and Prohibition: The mayoral election of 1923 and 1927".Chicago History.7 (2):109–118.
  • Carl, Jim (2009). "'Good Politics Is Good Government': The Troubling History of Mayoral Control of the Public Schools in Twentieth-Century Chicago".American Journal of Education.115 (2):305–336.doi:10.1086/595666.
  • Cohen, Adam; Taylor, Elizabeth (2001).American pharaoh: Mayor Richard J. Daley, his battle for Chicago and the nation. Little, Brown.ISBN 0316834890.
  • Fehrenbacher, Don E. (1957). "Lincoln and the Mayor of Chicago".Wisconsin Magazine of History.40 (4):237–244.JSTOR 4633136. – aboutLong John Wentworth
  • Gottfried, Alex (1962).Boss Cermak of Chicago: A Study of Political Leadership. University of Washington Press.
  • Green, Paul M.; Holli, Melvin G. (2013).The Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition (4th ed.). – scholarly biographies about Medill, Harrison II, Dunne, Busse, Thompson, Dever, Cermak, Kelly, Kennelly, both Daleys, Bilandic, Byrne, Washington, and Emanuel. [)online
  • Holli, Melvin G., and Paul M. Green.A View from Chicago's City Hall: Mid-Century to Millenium (Arcadia Publishing, 1999).online
  • Holli, Melvin G.; Jones, Peter d'A., eds. (1981).Biographical Dictionary of American Mayors, 1820-1980. Greenwood Press. – short scholarly biographies each of the city's mayors 1820 to 1980; see index at p. 408 for list
  • Holli, Melvin G., ed,The American Mayor: The Best & The Worst Big-City Leaders (Penn State Press, 1999), compares all mayor of major citiesonline.
  • Johnson, Claudius O. (1928).Carter Henry Harrison I: Political Leader.
  • Jones, Gene Delon (1974). "The Origin of the Alliance Between the New Deal and the Chicago Machine".Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.67:253–274.
  • Kleppner, Paul (1985).Chicago Divided: The Making of a Black Mayor.
  • Lydersen, Kari (2013).Mayor 1%: Rahm Emanuel and the Rise of Chicago's 99%. Haymarket Books.
  • Koeneman, Keith (2013).First Son: The Biography of Richard M. Daley. University of Chicago Press.
  • McCarthy, Michael P. (1974). "Prelude to Armageddon: Charles E. Merriam and the Chicago Mayoral Election of 1911".Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.67 (5):505–518.JSTOR 40191143.
  • Mangeu, Xolela, et al.Chicago’s Modern Mayors: From Harold Washington to Lori Lightfoot (University of Illinois Press, 2024)online.
  • Mantler, Gordon K. (2023).The Multiracial Promise. Harold Washington's Chicago and the Democratic Struggle in Reagan's America. University of North Carolina Press.
  • Marshall, Jon; Connor, Matthew (2019). "Divided Loyalties: TheChicago Defender and Harold Washington's Campaign for Mayor of Chicago".American Journalism.36 (4):447–472.doi:10.1080/08821127.2019.1683405.
  • Morton, Richard Allen (1997).Justice and Humanity: Edward F. Dunne, Illinois Progressive. SIU Press.
    • Morton, Richard Allen (1988).Justice and humanity: The politics of Edward F. Dunne (PhD thesis). University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  • O'Malley, Peter Joseph. "Mayor Martin H. Kennelly of Chicago: A Political Biography" (PhD Dissertation. University of Illinois at Chicago; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  1980. 8023247).
  • Pacyga, Dominic A.Clout City: The Rise and Fall of the Chicago Political Machine (U of Chicago Press, 2025)online
  • Preston, Michael B. (1983). "The Election of Harold Washington: Black Voting Patterns in the 1983 Chicago Mayoral Race".PS.16 (3):486–488.doi:10.2307/418606.JSTOR 418606.
  • Rex, Frederick (1947).The mayors of the city of Chicago from 1837 to 1933.
  • Schottenhamel, George (1952). "How Big Bill Thompson Won Control of Chicago".Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.45 (1):30–49.JSTOR 40189189.
  • Schmidt, John R. (1989).The Mayor Who Cleaned up Chicago: A Political Biography of William E. Dever.
  • Shipps, Dorothy (2009). "Updating Tradition: The Institutional Underpinnings of Modern Mayoral Control in Chicago's Public Schools". In Viteritti, Joseph P. (ed.).Brookings Institution Press. Brookings Institution Press. pp. 117–147.ISBN 978-0-8157-9044-0.JSTOR 10.7864/j.ctt6wphgm.11.
  • Simpson, Dick (2018).Rogues, Rebels, and Rubber Stamps: The Politics of the Chicago City Council, 1863 to the Present.
  • Simpson, Dick; Mouritsen, Melissa; O'Shaughnessy, Betty (2014). "Chicago: The Election of Rahm Emanuel".Local Politics and Mayoral Elections in 21st Century America. Routledge. pp. 99–115.
  • Spirou, Costas (2016).Building the City of Spectacle: Mayor Richard M. Daley and the Remaking of Chicago. Cornell University Press.ISBN 978-1-5017-0683-7.JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt20d8b1h.
  • Tompkins, C. David (1963). "John Peter Altgeld as a Candidate for Mayor of Chicago in 1899".Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.56 (4):654–676.JSTOR 40189944.
  • Wendt, Lloyd; Kogan, Herman (1953).Big Bill of Chicago. – Popular biography of Big Bill Thompson
  • Zald, Mayer N.; Anderson, Thomas A. (1968). "Secular Trends and Historical Contingencies in the Recruitment of Mayors: Nashville as Compared to New Haven and Chicago".Urban Affairs Quarterly.3 (4):53–68.doi:10.1177/107808746800300403.

Primary sources

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  • Byrne, Jane (2004).My Chicago. Northwestern University Press.
  • Harrison, Carter Henry (1935).Stormy Years: The Autobiography of Carter H. Harrison, Five Times Mayor of Chicago.
  • Simpson, Dick (2017).The Good Fight: Life Lessons from a Chicago Progressive. Golden Alley Press.ISBN 978-0998442945.

External links

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