Raymond Tucker
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Raymond Tucker (December 4, 1896 in St. Louis, Missouri - November 23, 1970 in St. Louis, MO) was the forty-second Mayor of Saint Louis (from 1953 to 1965).
[edit] Personal Life and Early Career
Tucker received degrees from Columbia University and Washington University in St. Louis. He married the former Mary Edythe Leiber in 1928 and they raised a son and daughter. From 1921 to 1934 he taught mechanical engineering at Washington University, and was chairman of the department from 1942 to 1951.
Tucker served in Mayor Bernard F. Dickmann's administration from 1934 to 1937, suring which time he served as City Smoke Commissioner. From 1939 to 1941 he was secretary to Mayor Dickmann's Survey and Audit Committee which sponsored the Griffenhagen Report on St. Louis City Government. In part of 1940 and 1941 he was Director of Public Safety.
Mr. Tucker was a member of the committee appointed to write the City's first Civil Service Ordinance in 1940. He headed the 1949 Charter Board of Freeholders whose plan was defeated at the polls in August, 1950. St. Louis Civil Defense was his responsibility from January, 1951 to February, 1953. The St. Louis Newspaper Guild gave him the 'Page One Award' for civic achievement in 1952, and in 1956 he received the 'St. Louis Award' for rallying citizens to work for civic improvement.
[edit] Term as Mayor
In 1953 Tucker won the Democratic nomination for Mayor in a primary election against Mark D. Eagleton, and was elected in April 1953. During his first term the Earnings Tax was made a permanent part of the City's financial system. A $1,500,00 Plaza Bond Issue was passed in September, 1953 and in May of 1955 a $110,000,000 Bond Issue, providing for 23 types of City improvements, was also passed. The City's water supply underwent fluoridation in September, 1955. Tucker supported the adoption of the plan for the Metropolitan Sewer District in 1954.
Mayor Tucker ran for re-election successfully in 1957. He backed the proposed City Charter that was defeated August 6, 1957. The increase in the Earnings Tax from one-half percent to one percent became effective August 1, 1959. He opposed the Metropolitan District Plan of 1959, and the Borough Plan of 1962; each would have restructured the relationship between St. Louis City and St. Louis County. The American Municipal Association (now renamed, National League of Cities) made him president in 1959, and he headed the United States Conference of Mayors from December, 1963 to April 20, 1965. The City Charter was amended in August, 1960, to raise the City salary limit from $10,000 to $25,000. In 1956 the Mayor had appointed a committee of building industry people to draw up a new Building Code, which he signed into law March 31, 1961.
In April 1961, Tucker was elected to a third term as Mayor. Significant Civil Rights Legislation was passed in the City durin his third term. The Public Accommodations Ordinance came in 1961 and Fair Employment legislation in 1963. In March 1965, Tucker lost to Alfonso J. Cervantes, in the Democratic Primary, in his bid for an unprecedented fourth term as mayor.
[edit] Later life
Following his service as mayor, Tucker became professor of urban affairs at Washington University in 1965. He died in St. Louis on November 23, 1970, just less than two weeks prior to what would have been his 74th birthday.
Source: Much of the original content for this article was based on the brief biographies of St. Louis Mayors found at the St. Louis Public Library's Website: http://exhibits.slpl.lib.mo.us/mayors/mayors4.asp
Preceded by Joseph Darst |
Mayor of St. Louis 1953–1965 |
Succeeded by Alfonso J. Cervantes |