Jimmy Walker
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- This article is about the 1926 Mayor of New York. For similarly-named persons, see James Walker (disambiguation).
James John Walker, often known as Jimmy Walker and colloquially as Beau James (June 19, 1881 – November 18, 1946), was the mayor of New York City during the Jazz Age.
Walker was the son of Irish-born William H. Walker, a Democratic assemblyman and alderman from Greenwich Village, belying certain accounts of Walker's childhood that stated he grew up in poverty. Before entering politics, the young Jimmy Walker worked as a songwriter, his most popular composition being "Will You Love Me in December (as You Do in May)?"
He attended Xavier College and New York Law School. He was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1909 and the New York State Senate in 1914. He acted as majority leader of the state senate, in which capacity he was served by a young Robert Moses. In 1926 he became Mayor of New York City, having defeated incumbent John F. Hylan in the 1925 Democratic primary with the help of Governor Alfred E. Smith and Tammany Hall.
The initial years of his mayoralty were a prosperous time for the city, with many public works projects. However, Walker's term was also known for the proliferation of speakeasies during the Prohibition era. His affairs with "chorus girls" were widely known, and he left his wife, Janet, for showgirl Betty Compton without impairing his popularity. He managed to maintain the five-cent subway fare despite a threatened strike.
He won re-election by an overwhelming margin in 1929, defeating Republican Fiorello H. La Guardia and Socialist Norman Thomas. Walker's fortunes turned downward with the economy (due to the stock-market crash of 1929). Patrick Cardinal Hayes denounced him, implying that the immorality of the mayor, both personal and political in tolerating "girlie magazines" and casinos, was a cause of the economic downturn.
Increasing social unrest led to investigations into corruption within his administration, and he was eventually forced to testify before the investigative committee of Judge Samuel Seabury (the Seabury Commission). Facing pressure from Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Walker resigned from office on September 1, 1932, and promptly left for Europe until the danger of criminal prosecution appeared remote. There he married Betty Compton.
After his return to the United States, for a time Walker acted as head of Majestic Records. On his death, at the age of 65, in 1946, he was interred in the Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.
A romanticized version of Walker's tenure as mayor was presented in the 1957 film Beau James, starring Bob Hope. The film was based on a biography of Walker, also titled Beau James, written by Gene Fowler. This same book was also the basis for Jimmy, a stage musical about Walker that had a brief Broadway run from October 1969 to January 1970, starring Frank Gorshin as Walker and Anita Gillette as Betty Compton.
[edit] See also
New York City mayoralty elections
List of mayors of New York City
[edit] External links
Preceded by ? |
New York State Assembly, New York County 5th District 1910–1914 |
Succeeded by ? |
Preceded by ? |
New York State Senate, 13th District 1915–1918 |
Succeeded by ? |
Preceded by ? |
New York State Senate, 12th District 1919–1925 |
Succeeded by ? |
Preceded by James A. Foley |
Minority Leader of the New York State Senate 1919–1922 |
Succeeded by Clayton R. Lusk |
Preceded by Clayton R. Lusk |
Majority Leader of the New York State Senate 1923–1924 |
Succeeded by John R. Knight |
Preceded by Clayton R. Lusk |
Minority Leader of the New York State Senate 1925 |
Succeeded by Bernard Downing |
Preceded by John F. Hylan |
Mayor of New York City 1926—1932 |
Succeeded by Joseph V. McKee |
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