Carole Smitherman

Carole Catlin Smitherman (born 1952) is a Birmingham City Councilor. Smitherman served briefly in 2009 as the 31st Mayor of Birmingham, Alabama.

As President of the Birmingham City Council, she assumed the office of Mayor when Larry Langford was convicted of 60 counts of bribery and related charges on October 28, 2009.[1] A month later, she then lost the position when the new council convened on November 24, 2009, and elected Roderick Royal as council president on a 5-4 vote, thus automatically making Royal the acting Mayor. Smitherman later lost her election bid as mayor in a special election following Langford's conviction.[2]

Carole Smitherman was Birmingham's first African American female mayor. She also was the first African American woman hired as a Deputy District Attorney in Jefferson County and first African American female Municipal and Circuit Court Judge in Birmingham. Smitherman also served as a municipal prosecutor for the city of Irondale, Alabama.

Smitherman grew up in Birmingham. She and her brother were raised by her grandmother, an instructor at Lawson State Community College. Smitherman often touts her childhood friendship with former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.[3] She graduated from Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia in 1973. She went on to earn her Juris Doctor at Miles Law School, graduating first in her class in 1979. Smitherman is married to Alabama State Senator Rodger Smitherman. They are the parents of four children and maintain a law practice in downtown Birmingham.

Carole Smitherman was first elected to the Birmingham City Council in 2001 and has been re-elected twice. She campaigned unsuccessfully for the mayor's office in 2003, 2007, and 2009.

Preceded by
Larry Langford
Mayor of Birmingham, Alabama
October 2009 - November 2009
Succeeded by
Roderick Royal

References