Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

William Emmett Dever

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American mayor (1862–1929)

William Emmett Dever
Dever in 1923
42nd[1] Mayor of Chicago
In office
April 16, 1923 – April 18, 1927
Preceded byWilliam Hale Thompson
Succeeded byWilliam Hale Thompson
Justice ofIllinois' First District Appellate Court
In office
1916–1923
Justice of theSuperior Court of Cook County
In office
December 1910 – April 14, 1923
Succeeded byJesse Holdom
Alderman of theChicago City Council
In office
April 1902 – December 1910
Serving with [note 1] Lewis D. Sitts
Preceded byFrank Oberndorf
Succeeded byStanley S. Walkowiak
Constituency17th ward
Personal details
Born(1862-03-13)March 13, 1862
DiedSeptember 3, 1929(1929-09-03) (aged 67)
PartyDemocratic
SpouseKatherine Conway Dever
Residence(s)Chicago,Illinois

William Emmett Dever (March 13, 1862 – September 3, 1929) was an American politician. He was the mayor ofChicago from 1923 to 1927. He had previously served as a judge and before that analderman. As an alderman and judge he would work to become the Democratic candidate for mayor for over two decades.

Born in Massachusetts but moving to Chicago in young adulthood, William Dever became an alderman and prominently supported municipal ownership of mass transit. He was a member of theDunne wing of the local Democratic party.

As mayor, he focused on reform and infrastructure during his tenure. Later he would turn his attention to the enforcement ofProhibition despite his personal opposition to it. Such enforcement was initially effective, but indifference from government at other levels limited its efficacy and the lower amount of alcohol increased violence among bootleggers, souring Chicagoans' view on it. Losing toWilliam Hale Thompson in1927 over the issue, he is the last Democratic nominee in a partisan Chicago mayoral election to lose. Never in particularly good health, he retired from politics after the election and would die ofpancreatic cancer two years later.

Early life

[edit]

Dever was born inWoburn, Massachusetts and entered his family'sleather tanning business when he was fifteen. He left Woburn in 1882 and moved toBoston, where he was based while he traveled ontannery business for two years. During this time Dever met Katherine E. Conway and they married in 1885.[2] The two would go on to adopt two sons during their marriage.[2] When Kate noticed an ad stating that leather tanners could make good money in Chicago, the couple moved west.

Upon arriving in Chicago in 1887, Dever got a job working at a leather tannery onGoose Island and he also began taking law courses at night at theChicago College of Law. Upon his graduation in 1890,[2] Dever opened his own law practice.

Aldermanic career

[edit]

Dever ran foralderman in 1900, but was defeated.[citation needed] He was encouraged byGraham Taylor to run again for alderman, and, in 1902, was elected alderman of the 17th Ward.[2][3][4] Dever was elected as a steadfast supporter of municipal ownership of the city's streetcar services amid theChicago Traction Wars.[3][5] He would maintain this position throughout his aldermanic tenure, and continue it into his later mayoralty.[3]

Dever was regarded as an "honest" alderman.[6] He had a clean voting record and was frequently endorsed by theMunicipal Voters League in his runs for reelection.[6]

Dever became one of the most influential aldermen during the first mayoralty ofCarter Harrison IV[3] Dever got heavy buzz as a potential Democratic mayoral candidatein 1905, but did not run.[3] Dever became a key ally of pro-municipal ownership mayorEdward Fitzsimmons Dunne, who was elected in 1905.[3] While affiliated with the Dunne wing of the Democratic Party as an alderman, Dever was on good terms with the Harrison andSullivan wings.[3]

In 1906, Dever faced an atypically challenging race for reelection. In retaliation for his vote in support of raising saloon license fees, saloons in his ward raised beer prices and told patrons that the new "Dever tax" was to blame.[3] Active campaigning on his part and strong support from Mayor Dunne secured Dever reelection with a comfortable margin.[3]

In 1906, Dever ran in the inaugural election of theMunicipal Court of Chicago.[3] To provide for staggered future elections, the race saw separate elections divided by the duration of terms, with separate elections being held for sets of two-year, four-year, and six-year seats.[3] Dever ran in the race for the six-year seats.[3] Low turnout in these judicial races coupled with the spoiler effect ofWilliam Randolph Hearst (who was engaged in a brief feud with Dunne Democrats) running his own Independence League slate hurt Democratic chances.[3] Dever received 94,380 votes, the most of any Democratic candidate for the Municipal Court.[3] However, he placed 20,000 votes behind the last Republican in the six-year field.[3] He had received more votes thanFerdinand L. Barnett, a Republican candidate to a two-year seat who had received only around 90,000 votes.[3][7] This led some to contend that Dever should be seated to a two-year seat in his place, arguing that holding separate elections for the different durations had been unconstitutional.[3] Dever rejected the effort to seat him in place of Barnett, feeling that it was fueled by prejudice against Barnett (anAfrican American), and therefore refused to challenge Barnett's appointment to the court.[3]

In 1907, Dever ran to fill the vacancy on theSuperior Court of Cook County left after JudgeJoseph E. Gary's death in office.[3][8] This election was to a partial term of four years.[8] With Dunne's support, he received the Democratic nomination.[3] Dever tied his candidacy to Dunne's re-election effort inthe coinciding mayoral election and to the municipal ownership/traction issue.[3] His Republican opponent wasWilliam H. McSurely.[8][9] McSurely refused to take a stance on the traction issue, due to the fact that the court might soon review theSettlement Ordinances.[3] Dever lost by a margin of roughly 13,000 of the nearly 340,000 votes cast, a result mirroring that of the coinciding mayoral race.[3]

In the spring of 1908, Dever ran a spirited race against seven candidates in the Democratic primary forCook County state's attorney.[3] He was supported by the Dunne wing of the party.[3] Dever's key opponents were Sullivan wing candidate J.J. Kern (former State's Attorney) and Harrison wing candidateMaclay Hoyne.[3] Kern won the primary with 28% of the vote, defeating Dever (who came second) by several thousand votes.[3]

During Dever's 1910 aldermanic reelection campaign,Stanley H. Kunz,political boss of the neighboring Sixteenth Ward and Chicago's most prominentPolish American politician, slated prominent Polish American lawyer Stanley Walkowiak to primary Dever in an effort to expand Polish American political influence in the city.[3] Dever narrowly won this primary.[3] After this, Kunz initially attempted to get the Republicans to replace their nominee, C.J. Ryberg, with a Polish American colleague of his, before instead deciding to have Walkowiak run as an independent.[3] Dever was backed by Carter Harrison IV, Edward F. Dunne,J. Hamilton Lewis, John Traeger, Joseph Le Buy (president of the Polish Businessmen's Democratic Club), the Chicago Commons caucus, and the Municipal Voters League.[3] Dever won with 2,692 votes (44%) to Walkowiak's 1,886 (31%) and Ryberg's 1,483 (25%).[3]

Judicial career

[edit]
Photograph of Dever as a judge

Dever had been considering running for mayor in the then-upcoming1911 Chicago mayoral election before being slated byRoger Charles Sullivan on the Democratic ticket for Superior Court of Cook County in the 1910 elections.[3] It took some persuading for Sullivan to convince Dever to run for judge.[3] Dever was elected, resigning from City Council to assume his judgeship.[3]

Dever declined calls to run for mayorin 1915.[3]

In 1916, due to the duration of a trial ofWilliam Lorimer for misappropriation of funds and conspiracy to defraud, which lasted two months before reaching acquittal, Dever had only three weeks to run a reelection campaign.[3] Nevertheless, he won handily.[3] Dever was re-elected[10] receiving more than 98,000 votes.[11]

Several months into his third term on the Cook County Superior Court, Dever was appointed to fill a vacancy on theAppellate Court.[3] and served two partial terms on the Appellate Court, eventually becoming its presiding judge.[3] Despite serving on the Appellate Court, Dever officially remained a judge of the Cook County Superior Court, and was re-elected in 1922. After being elected mayor, he resigned from the Cook County Superior Court on April 14, 1923[10] and also resigned from the Appellate Court. Jesse Holdom won aspecial election to finish Dever's unexpired term on the Cook County Superior Court.[10]

Dever was assigned the initial case against those involved in theBlack Sox Scandal. Thearraignment began in February 1921. In March 1921, Dever rejected the prosecution's motion to indefinitely postpone proceedings and set a prompt peremptory trial date.[12][13][14][15] This resulted inRobert E. Crowe, the Cook County state's attorney, opting to instead administratively dismiss the charges (nolle prosequi) and opted instead to present the case to agrand jury again for newindictments, to buy more time to put together a case and gather evidence. The new trial instead landed before judgeHugo Friend.[14][15]

Mayoralty

[edit]

1923 mayoral election

[edit]
Main article:1923 Chicago mayoral election

In 1923, Democraticparty bossGeorge E. Brennan selected Dever as having the best chance of defeating the incumbent, MayorWilliam "Big Bill" Thompson. Dever ran on a reform platform and Thompson withdrew from the race, with Republicans instead nominatingArthur C. Lueder, who was easily defeated by Dever.[16]

Mayoral term

[edit]
Dever circa 1924

Dever was sworn in on April 16, 1923.[17]

Transit

[edit]

Early into his mayoralty, Dever had begun making plans to improve the city's public transit, which he had previously made a central issue in his mayoral election campaign.[18] A longtime advocate for municipal ownership (an issue which had been a hot-button topic in Chicago, particularly during theChicago Traction Wars), Dever initiated negotiations to purchaseChicago Surface Lines and theChicago Rapid Transit Company, making them city owned-and-operated services.[18] Dever began also formulating plans for transit expansions and the construction of a subway.[18]

Prohibition and crime

[edit]

In the autumn of 1923, the focus of Dever's administration shifted.[18] On September 7, 1923, a shootout occurred took place at a South Side cafe between two rival groups ofrum runners, killing one man.[18] A week later the same two groups had another shootout, killing two people.[18] He saw these shootings as an alarm that the city's bootlegging situation had become an epidemic.[18]

Dever himself opposed Prohibition; he was a "wet" Democrat. However, he observed that bootleggers had been making under-the-table payments to public officials and law enforcement, thereby corrupting the government.[18] Also, while he disagreed with the policy of Prohibition, it was his personal philosophy that disregard for one law could foster an erosion in the regard of other laws.[18] Because of his resolution to uphold the law, Dever became nicknamed "Decent Dever" by the press.[19]

Dever launched a major law-enforcement campaign to crack-down on bootlegging.[18] The media labeled his war on bootleggers as the "Great Beer War".[18] By the end of the year, within only one hundred days of the inauguration of this effort, Chicago was being hailed as the "driest" city in the nation.[18]

Dever's "Great Beer War" had earned him immense national recognition.[18] Some national media sources speculated he might be a potentialdark horse candidate forpresident of the United States. At the1924 Democratic National Convention he received serious discussion as a potential vice-presidential nominee.[18] By the end of 1924, media sources discussed him as a serious contender for the Democratic nomination for president in1928.[18]

As Chicago began to dry up, gangs of bootleggers had come into greater competition with one another. By early 1925, this led to the eruption of a massive gangland war.[18] While the vast majority of Chicagoans opposed Prohibition, they had initially supported his tactics to enforce the law.[18] However, subsequent to the onslaught of severe gang violence, the public quickly soured on it.[18] His tactics had also only been partially successful. While he had succeeded in organizing a city government which was largely committed to enforcing the law, other governments and their agencies, such as the county government, were still permissive towards bootlegging.[18] Additionally, certain ward politicians and police captains were still making under-the-table deals with gangs.[18]

While Chicago acquired a reputation as a "crime capital", a survey byAndrew A. Bruce (whose findings were unveiled in January 1927), contrarily, found that Chicago had no more crime than twenty other American cities the study looked at (includingKansas City,Los Angeles,Memphis, andSt. Louis).[20]

Infrastructure

[edit]

Dever's term in office saw many improvements to the city's infrastructure, including the completion ofWacker Drive,[2][21] the extension ofOgden Avenue, the straightening of theChicago River[2] and the construction of the city's first airport,Municipal Airport.[21]

Schools

[edit]
From left to right: Dever, Raymond P. Ensign (chairman of the Chicago Association of Commerce committee), and SuperintendentWilliam McAndrew at an event in March 1924

As mayor, Dever generally kept theChicago Board of Education independent from political interference.[22] This was in contrast to Dever's predecessor, William Hale Thompson, under whose previous mayoralty the schools had been tarnished by politics and fraud.[23]

Early into his mayoralty, Dever appointed seven new members to the Chicago Board of Education. The Dever-shaped school board sought to find a superintendent that would strengthen the educational authority of the office, cut fiscal waste, and improveeducational standards.[22] On January 9, 1924, the board voted to appointWilliam McAndrew asthe superintendent ofChicago Public Schools.[24][25]

On December 5, 1926, in a surprise move, Mayor Dever broke his neutrality amid a school board dispute, he sided with AldermanLeo M. Brieske's position that it would be preferable to see McAndrew replaced with a new superintendent. Dever declared that he believed the superintendent should instead be a native Chicagoan, declaring, "I am heartily in accord with Alderman Brieske's stand that Chicagoans should fill Chicago offices. We have plenty of capable persons at home, without bringing in outsiders".[26] McAndrew remained superintendent, however.

On March 28, 1927,The New York Times wrote that,

No work of Mayor Dever's Administration has been more praiseworthy than the improvement and extension of the public school system, the seat of enormous mismanagement and inefficiency under Thompsonism."[27]

1927 mayoral election

[edit]
An image of Dever atop the skyline of Chicago accompanied by the question "What kind of a city do you want to live in?" and paragraphs of text.
Ad run by the "Independent Republican Dever Committee" in theChicago Tribune in support of Dever's 1927 reelection campaign
Dever's grave at Calvary Cemetery
Main article:1927 Chicago mayoral election

Dever ran for re-election in 1927 against "Big Bill" Thompson, who defeated him by 83,000 votes.[16]

Dever's term as mayor ended April 18, 1927.[28]

Later years

[edit]

Dever went on to serve as a vice-president of a local bank, but took a leave of absence and died of cancer in 1929. He is buried inCalvary Cemetery in Evanston, Illinois.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Prior to 1923, each ward in Chicago elected two aldermen for staggered two-year terms

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Chicago Mayors".Chicago Public Library. RetrievedMarch 24, 2019.
  2. ^abcdef"Mayor William E. Dever Biography".www.chipublib.org. Chicago Public Library. RetrievedDecember 3, 2019.
  3. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanSchmidt, John R. (1989)."The Mayor Who Cleaned Up Chicago" A Political Biography of William E. Dever. DeKalb, Illinois: Northern Illinois University Press.
  4. ^Herrick, Mary J. (1971).The Chicago schools : a Social and Political History. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage Publications. p. 143.ISBN 080390083X.
  5. ^Chicago Record-Herald March 27, 1902
  6. ^abYarros, Victor S. (July 1926). "Sketches of American Mayors IV. William E. Dever of Chicago".National Municipal Review.XV (7).
  7. ^Finkelman, Paul (2009).Encyclopedia of African American History: 5-Volume Set. Oxford University Press, USA.ISBN 978-0-19-516779-5. RetrievedDecember 23, 2020.
  8. ^abcThe National Corporation Reporter. United States Corporation Bureau, Incorporated. 1907. p. 192. RetrievedMay 18, 2020.
  9. ^The Voter. Voter Company. 1907. p. 14. RetrievedMay 18, 2020.
  10. ^abc"Illinois Blue Book, 1927-1928". State of Illinois. 1927. pp. 768–769.
  11. ^The Chicago Daily News Almanac and Yearbook 1923.
  12. ^Lamb, Bill."Jury Nullification and the Not Guilty Verdicts in the Black Sox Case – Society for American Baseball Research".sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2022.
  13. ^"The Black Sox Trial: An Account".www.famous-trials.com. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2022.
  14. ^abPomrenke, Jacob (May 28, 2018)."The Boxer, The Ballplayer, and the Great Black Sox Manhunt".jacobpomrenke.com (originally published at TheNationalPastimeMuseum.com). RetrievedSeptember 8, 2022.
  15. ^abLamb, Bill."The Black Sox Scandal – Society for American Baseball Research".sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2022.
  16. ^abSchmidt, John R. (October 3, 2011)."William E. Dever: The Mayor Who Cleaned Up Chicago".Chicago History Today. WBEZ. Archived fromthe original on December 30, 2015. RetrievedMay 29, 2012.
  17. ^"Mayor William E. Dever Inaugural Address, 1923".www.chipublib.org. Chicago Public Library. RetrievedMarch 11, 2020.
  18. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstThe Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition, fourth edition by Paul M. Green, Melvin G. Holli SIU Press, Jan 10, 2013
  19. ^Grossman, Ron (February 26, 2023)."A hundred years ago, Chicago elected a reform mayor. He was voted out four years later".Chicago Tribune.Archived from the original on February 26, 2023.
  20. ^"Chicago Is Not Crime Capital, Survey Shows".Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. January 17, 1927. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2022.
  21. ^abKlaus, Robert (July 1990)."Mayor Dever: Chicago's 'marginal man'".Illinois Issues.35. RetrievedSeptember 15, 2022.
  22. ^abHerrick, Mary J. (1971).The Chicago Schools: A Social and Political History. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage Publications. p. 143.ISBN 080390083X.
  23. ^"For Mayor of Chicago".The New York Times. February 24, 1927. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2022.
  24. ^"Newly Elected Head of School System Talks".Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. January 10, 1924.Archived from the original on August 23, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2021.
  25. ^Proceedings of the Chicago Board of Education, January 9, 1924
  26. ^"Dever Openly Favors Ousting Of McAndrew".Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. December 5, 1926.Archived from the original on January 15, 2022. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2022.
  27. ^"The Same Old "Bill."".The New York Times. March 28, 1927. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2022.
  28. ^"Mayor William Hale Thompson Biography".www.chipublib.org. Chicago Public Library. RetrievedMarch 11, 2020.
Preceded byMayor of Chicago
1923–1927
Succeeded by
Elections
1 tenure as acting officeholder.    2 Election declared null and void.
International
National
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_Emmett_Dever&oldid=1329008434"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp