|
Mayor of Seattle |
|
|---|---|
![]() |
|
| Style | The Honorable |
| Term length | 4 years |
| Inaugural holder | Henry A. Atkins |
| Formation | 14
January 1865 2 December 1869 |
| Website | http://www.seattle.gov/mayor |
This is a list of Mayors of Seattle, Washington, USA.
On January 14, 1865, the Territorial Legislature approved the incorporation of the town of Seattle. However, following submission of a petition by several of the Town's citizens, Seattle was unincorporated on January 28, 1867.[1] Records of this two year period of municipal government did not survive. During this period, the city was governed by a board of trustees, with Charles C. Terry as its president.[1] The town (now a city) of Seattle was incorporated a second time on December 2, 1869.[1][2]
| Name | Picture | Elected | Term began | Term ended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henry A. Atkins | appointed December 2, 1869
elected July 11, 1870[3] |
1869 | 1871 | |
| John T. Jordan | elected July 10, 1871[4] | 1871 | 1872 | |
| Corliss P. Stone | elected July 8, 1872[5]
abandoned office: left for San Francisco February 23, 1873 after allegedly embezzling $15,000[6] |
|||
| John T. Jordan | appointed[6] | 1873 | 1873 | |
| Moses R. Maddocks | Elected[6] | 1873 | 1873 | |
| John Collins | ![]() |
elected July 14, 1873[7] | 1873 | 1874 |
| Henry Yesler | ![]() |
elected July 13, 1874[8] | 1874 | 1875 |
| Bailey Gatzert | elected August 2, 1875[9] | 1875 | 1876 | |
| Gideon A. Weed | ![]() |
elected July 10, 1876[10]
and July 9, 1877[11] |
1876 | 1878 |
| Beriah Brown | elected July 8, 1878[12] | 1878 | 1879 | |
| Orange Jacobs | ![]() |
elected July 14, 1879[13] | 1879 | 1880 |
| Leonard Purley Smith | elected July 12, 1880[14]
and July 11, 1881[15] |
1880 | 1882 | |
| Henry G. Struve | ![]() |
elected July 10, 1882[16]
and July 9, 1883[17] |
1882 | 1884 |
| John Leary |
![]() |
elected July 14, 1884[18] | 1884 | 1885 |
| Henry Yesler | ![]() |
elected July 13, 1885[19] | 1885 | 1886 |
| William H. Shoudy | elected July 12, 1886[20] | 1886 | 1887 | |
| Dr. Thomas T. Minor | ![]() |
elected July 11, 1887[21] | 1887 | 1888 |
| Robert Moran | ![]() |
elected July 9, 1888[22]
and July 8, 1889[23] |
1888 | 1890 |
| Harry White | ![]() |
elected July 14, 1890[24]
resigned under pressure November 30, 1891.[24] |
1890 | 1891 |
| George W. Hall | appointed December 9, 1891[25] | 1891 | 1892 | |
| James T. Ronald |
![]() |
elected March 8, 1892[26] | 1892 | 1894 |
| Byron Phelps | elected March 12, 1894[27] | 1894 | 1896 | |
| Frank D. Black | elected March 9, 1896[28]
resigned after three weeks in office[28] |
1896 | 1896 | |
| W. D. Wood | appointed April 6, 1896[29]
resigned July 1897[29] |
1896 | 1897 | |
| Thomas D. Humes | ![]() |
appointed November 19, 1897[30]
and elected March 13, 1900[31] |
1897 | 1904 |
| Richard A. Ballinger | ![]() |
elected March 8, 1904[32] | 1904 | 1906 |
| William Hickman Moore | elected March 6, 1906[33] | 1906 | 1908 | |
| John F. Miller | ![]() |
elected March 3, 1908[34] | 1908 | 1910 |
| Hiram C. Gill |
![]() |
elected March 8, 1910[35] | 1910 | 1911 |
| George W. Dilling | appointed February 10, 1911 | 1912 | ||
| George F. Cotterill | elected March 5, 1912[36] | 1912 | 1914 | |
| Hiram C. Gill |
![]() |
elected March 3, 1914[37] | 1914 | 1918 |
| Ole Hanson | ![]() |
elected March 5, 1918[38]
resigned August 28, 1919 after several months out of town[38] |
1918 | 1919 |
| C. B. Fitzgerald | appointed August 28, 1919[39] | 1919 | 1920 | |
| Hugh M. Caldwell | ![]() |
elected March 2, 1920[40] | 1920 | 1922 |
| Edwin J. Brown | elected May 2, 1922[41]
and March 4, 1924[42] |
1922 | 1926 | |
| Bertha Knight Landes |
![]() |
elected March 9, 1926[43] | 1926 | 1928 |
| Frank E. Edwards | elected March 6, 1928[44]
and March 4, 1930[45] recalled July 13, 1931[46] |
1928 | 1931 | |
| Robert H. Harlin | appointed July 14, 1931[46] | 1931 | 1932 | |
| John F. Dore | ![]() |
elected March 8, 1932[47] | 1932 | 1934 |
| Charles L. Smith | ![]() |
elected March 6, 1934[48] | 1934 | 1936 |
| John F. Dore | ![]() |
elected March 3, 1936[49]
became gravely ill and was relieved of office April 13, 1938, already a lame duck after the 1938 election. He died five days later.[1] |
1936 | 1938 |
| Arthur B. Langlie | elected March 8, 1938[50] appointed to take office early, April 27, 1938, after Dore's
death. |
1938 | 1941 | |
| John E. Carroll | appointed January 27, 1941[52] | 1941 | 1941 | |
| Earl Millikin | elected March 4, 1941[53] | 1941 | 1942 | |
| William F. Devin | ![]() |
elected March 3, 1942, [54] March 7, 1944,[55] March 5, 1946, [56] and March 2, 1948[57] | 1942 | 1952 |
| Allan Pomeroy | ![]() |
elected March 4, 1952[58] | 1952 | 1956 |
| Gordon S. Clinton | elected March 6, 1956[59]
and and March 8, 1960[60] |
1956 | 1964 | |
| James d'Orma Braman | ![]() |
elected March 10, 1964[61]
resigned March 23, 1969, to accept an appointment as an Assistant Secretary in the Department of Transportation in the Nixon administration. |
1964 | 1969 |
| Floyd C. Miller | appointed March 23, 1969[62] | 1969 | 1969 | |
| Wesley C. Uhlman | ![]() |
elected November 4, 1969[63]
and November 6, 1973[64] |
December 1, 1969 | January 1, 1978 |
| Charles Royer |
![]() |
elected November 8, 1977,[66] November 3, 1981,[67] and November 5, 1985[68] | January 1, 1978 | January 1, 1990 |
| Norman B. Rice | ![]() |
elected November 7, 1989[69] | January 1, 1990 | January 1, 1998 |
| Paul Schell |
![]() |
elected November 4, 1997[70] | January 1, 1998 | January 1, 2002 |
| Gregory J. Nickels | ![]() |
elected November 6, 2001[71]
and November 8, 2005[72] |
January 1, 2002 | January 1, 2010 |
| Michael McGinn |
![]() |
elected November 3, 2009[73] | January 1, 2010 |
|
|||||
|
|