Meredith P. Snyder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meredith Pinxton Snyder (1859–April 7, 1937) was four times mayor of Los Angeles, California, USA, serving 1896–1898, 1900–1904 and 1919–1921. He was president of the California Guarantee Corporation and the Texas Gasoline Company.
Snyder was nicknamed "Pinkie." He and his wife, May Ross Snyder, had a child, Ross Snyder, who died as a captain during World War I.
A Democrat, he was a city councilman from 1894 to 1896 and then was mayor for three terms before moving to a farm in the San Joaquin Valley. He "was almost as well known in San Francisco as he was in Los Angeles," the Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express wrote on April 8, 1937. [1] The former mayor was urged during the 1913 California gubernatorial race to run as the Democratic nominee. In 1919 he was elected to his final term in Los Angeles City Hall, and in that period he was awarded a medal of the Order of Leopold II by the Belgian King and Queen, Albert I and Elisabeth. Snyder died April 7, 1937, of a heart attack in his Jonathan Club residence.
See contemporary newspaper obituaries of Snyder from the Los Angeles in the 1900s Web site.
Preceded by Daniel Innes |
'Los Angeles Common Council 2nd ward' 1894—1896 |
Succeeded by Fred L. Baker |
Preceded by Frank Rader |
Mayor of Los Angeles, California 1896—1898 |
Succeeded by Fred Eaton |
Preceded by Fred Eaton |
Mayor of Los Angeles, California 1900—1904 |
Succeeded by Owen McAleer |
Preceded by Frederick T. Woodman |
Mayor of Los Angeles, California 1919—1921 |
Succeeded by George E. Cryer |
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