Robert Lawrence Moran | |
---|---|
9th President of the New York City Board of Aldermen | |
In office January 1, 1919 – December 31, 1920 |
|
Preceded by | Alfred E. Smith |
Succeeded by | Fiorello H. LaGuardia |
3rd Bronx County Clerk | |
In office January 1, 1920 – December 31, 1929 |
|
Preceded by | Joseph Callahan |
Succeeded by | Lester Patterson |
Sheriff of Bronx County | |
In office January 1, 1930 – December 31, 1933 |
|
Preceded by | Lester W. Patterson |
Succeeded by | John J. Hanley |
Bronx Commissioner of Public Works | |
In office January 1, 1934 – May 9, 1942 |
|
Preceded by | William J. Flynn |
Succeeded by | Arthur V. Sheridan |
Personal details | |
Born | October 3, 1884 Manhattan, New York City, New York |
Died | August 19, 1954 The Bronx, New York |
(aged 69)
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Eileen Kelly |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Robert Lawrence Moran (October 3, 1884 – August 19, 1954), was a Bronx politician who served as President of the Board of Alderman of New York City from 1918 to 1920, filling a vacancy left by Alfred E. Smith after Smith’s election as governor of New York. Nominated by the Democratic Party to succeed himself as board president, Moran faced Republican Representative Fiorello H. La Guardia in the election of 1919, losing by a plurality of 1,363 votes. Mr. Moran has the distinction of being the only citizen of The Bronx to ever exercise the authority of mayor of New York City, even though this honor came to him only in his capacity as acting mayor during Mayor Hylan’s absences from the city.[1]
Contents |
Moran was born on October 3, 1884 in Manhattan on East Twenty-First Street.[2] He was the second of six children born to Eugene (b.1856) and Delia Moran (formerly Fitzpatrick) (b. 1860). His father, a native of Greenwich Village and for many years a sergeant in the New York Parks Police Department, died in the typhoid epidemic of 1912.[3] After Eugene’s death, the family moved to 1486 St. Lawrence Street in The Bronx. The family would later move to 1565 Leland Avenue in The Bronx, where Moran would reside until his death in 1954.[2]
Robert Moran was educated in the public schools of his native city.[4] As a young man he attended Public School 100 in The Bronx before leaving to take a factory job. He took real estate courses at the Young Men’s Christian Association and attended night school at New York University for two years. Moran entered the real estate business in The Bronx and among the many operations with which he was connected was the construction of the Theodore Roosevelt Apartments on the Grand Concourse.[3]
Moran entered municipal politics in 1913, when Bronx Democrats selected him to run against the Fusionists in an aldermanic contest, which he won.[2] When Frank L. Dowling succeeded George McAneny as president of the Board of Aldermen, Moran was chosen to fill Mr. Dowling’s place as majority leader.[4] When Alfred E. Smith, later Governor of New York, was elected president of the Board of Alderman in 1916, Mr. Moran was made vice-chairman by the votes of his fellow-members and was re-elected to this position upon the reorganization of the board in 1917.[3] Moran automatically became president of the Board on January 1, 1918, when Mr. Smith resigned this position to assume the office of governor.[4]
As president of the Board of Aldermen, Mr. Moran was acting mayor on many occasions.[2] During his tenure, Moran organized the League for the Preservation of Sunday Recreation [5] and presided over the amending of the New York City Code of Ordinances to allow for the playing of baseball games and showing of movies on Sunday.[6] He made possible the condemnation and acquisition by the City of the principle street-surface railroad companies[7] and he opposed the introduction of "transfer charges" and higher subway fares.[8] He created the Bureau of Steam Heat Supply and established a municipal steam heating plant to supply heat at reasonable prices to the citizens of New York.[9] Moran was also instrumental in approving construction of the 125th Street Bridge in Harlem,[10] the construction of a public boathouse at Central Park, as well as public bathhouses at Pelham Bay Park and Coney Island;[11]
He retained the Daylight Saving Law in New York City after it was repealed as a federal measure,[12] amended the code of ordinances relating to prices charged by public carts and cartmen,[4] prevented the erection of a garbage disposal plant in The Bronx and played a significant role on the Committee Appointed to Welcome Homecoming Troops of the American Expeditionary Force and to ensure the re-employment of returning servicemen.[13]
In addition, Moran led numerous attempts to dismantle the monopoly in milk production and distribution held by the upstate Co-operative Association of Farmers and Dairymen and advocated for the establishment of a Municipal Department of Milk Supply and Distribution to be run by the City.[4] He also testified before the Lockwood Committee of the Senate to relieve the housing situation and endorsed Governor Alfred E. Smith’s proposed legislation for the protection of workers, among them, for the establishment of a Minimum Wage Commission for women and minors and the creation of a health insurance system.[4]
While an alderman, Moran served on the Finance Committee, Rules Committee, Markets Committee, Salaries and Grades Committee and the Legislature Committee. In the Board of Estimate, he was the chairman of the Transit Committee, the Assessment Committee, and the Salaries and Grades Committee, and was a member of the Finance and Budget Committee, Franchise Committee, Sinking Committee and Armory Board.[14]
In 1919, Moran was chosen by Tammany to run as the Democratic candidate to succeed himself as president of the Board of Aldermen in the November election.[2] Moran’s republican opponent was United States Congressman and former Deputy New York Attorney General Fiorello H. LaGuardia.[4] Michael “Dynamite Mike” Kelly, the popular commander of New York’s Third “Shamrock” Battalion, also joined the race on the ticket of the Liberty Party.[15] Kelly was a war hero and recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross and Croix de Guerre. His campaign was supported by the notorious Jeremiah A. O'Leary and a small group of Irish Americans who opposed the League of Nations and advocated recognition of the Irish Republic. Tammany looked with alarm upon Kelly’s entrance into the campaign and tried to persuade him to withdraw his candidacy and throw his support behind Mr. Moran. When he refused, the Tammany chiefs went to the New York Supreme Court to keep Kelly’s name off the ballot, pointing out that 547 of the 3,491 signatories to Kelly’s nomination petition had failed to register or otherwise comply with election laws. The Supreme Court agreed and ordered that Kelly’s name be stricken from the ballot, a ruling later upheld by the Appellate Division.[4]
In the late summer of 1919, candidate Moran fell ill, attributing his abdominal pains to ptomaine poisoning. When the pain receded by late September, he assumed the ailment had passed and did not consult a physician.[3] But on September 30, upon returning home from the funeral of Manhattan Borough President Frank L. Dowling, Moran told his mother that he felt decidedly worse, and the next day was rushed to Lincoln Hospital where doctors discovered an acute gangrenous appendicitis.[4] Surgery was performed successfully by Moran's friend, the former health commissioner Dr. J. Lewis Amster[16] and Moran left the hospital on October 26, 1919, carrying over 15,000 cards and letters sent to him by friends during his illness.[17] He would recover completely, but the crucial last days of his election campaign against LaGuardia found him confined to a sickbed.[4]
Although Moran had been the heavy favorite going into the election[18] and despite the absence of Kelly’s name on the ballot, when Election Day arrived, more than 3,500 of Kelly’s supporters wrote his name on the ballot.[15] This number was sufficient to defeat Moran, who lost to LaGuardia by only 1,363 votes. The election of 1919 was devastating to Tammany, and brought defeat as well to Edward F. Boyle in the contest for the Manhattan Borough presidency.[19]
On January 1, 1920, Governor Smith appointed Moran county clerk of the Bronx to fill the unexpired term of Joseph Callahan who had been elected City Court Judge. Governor Smith appointed Moran with the undederstanding that Moran would become a candidate for a full term as County Clerk in the upcoming November election. Moran's supporters had been urging him to seek the democratic nomination to succeed the ailing Henry Bruckner as Bronx Borough President.[20] When Moran offered himself for re-election to a full term as County Clerk, he was elected by a large majority and was re-elected again in November, 1924.[3] It was during his tenure as Bronx County Clerk, that Moran married Ms. Eileen Kelly, the daughter of prominent Bronx Attorney Peter C. Kelly.
In 1929, Moran was elected sheriff of the Bronx, taking office on January 1, 1930.[21] As sheriff, Moran gained notoriety for refusing to jail members of the National Guard who had been sentenced to serve short prison terms for failing to appear at drill.[22] The jail’s lack of accommodations for non-criminal prisoners meant that guardsmen, some just 17 years old, would have to be confined with violent felons. Moran argued that “in time of peace and especially now, with distress and unemployment, the military law should not be enforced to extremes” and that no consideration had been given as to whether the boy prisoners were ill, had dependents or might lose their jobs.[4] So strongly did Moran object, that the situation could only be resolved by the issuance of a writ of mandamus compelling him to act.[4]
At one point, in April 1933, the Bronx jail held 17 prisoners all charged with First Degree Murder and all doomed to die in the electric chair. The most famous was Lottie Coll, the widow of gangland chief Vincent "Mad Dog" Coll who had been gunned down by a machine gun as he stood in an Eighth Avenue phonebooth.[23]
In January 1932, a civil injunction suit was filed against William J. Flynn, the Bronx Commissioner of Public Works since 1918, alleging that Flynn was using the influence of his office to steer city construction contracts to his political friends. The suit further alleged that Flynn, acting as Borough president during the frequent absences of Henry R. Bruckner, manipulated the issuance of construction contracts to establish himself as a “virtual dictator of the building trades in the Borough.”[24] One such contract was a $100,000 contract on the new Bronx County Municipal Building awarded to United Sand and Gravel, a company owned by Sheriff Moran, waterfront power-broker William J. McCormack (businessman) and former Assistant District Attorney, Edward J. Chapman.[25]
Although the civil suit was ultimately dismissed, the allegations led to a citywide investigation of borough governments by Samuel Seabury, counsel to the Hofstadter Committee.[24] Thousands of public officials were called before the Commission to testify. Following the testimony of New York County Sheriff Thomas M. Farley, Seabury convened a Grand Jury to investigate the alleged practice of retaining interest accrued on official deposits by county sheriffs. Farley and his predecessor Charles W. Culkin would stand accused of embezzling over $25,000 in interest.[4]
Despite assertions by the Democratic minority on the investigating committee that sheriffs everywhere had always helped themselves to the interests accruals, in a private interview Sheriff Moran told investigators that it was his practice to turn any such interest over to the city chamberlain for disbursement. Moran also produced the books of his office showing that no interest had accrued to the $1,400 in official deposits he had made in the past two years.[4] At the time, Seabury noted that Sheriff Moran appeared to be the only County Sheriff who doesn’t keep a tin box in his desk.[26]
The Seabury investigation would continue for two years and lead to the indictment of Deputy City Clerk James J. McCormick, the arrest of State Senator John A. Hastings, and the eventual resignation of Mayor James Walker.[27]
Moran was named Bronx Commissioner of Public Works by Borough President James J. Lyons on December 31, 1933.[28] As commissioner, Moran was instrumental in the dredging and straightening of the Hutchinson River,[29], the construction of a new Bronx House of Detention and the construction of Major Deagan Boulevard, the easterly approach to the Triborough Bridge, in time for the 1939 Worlds Fair.[30] This approach would later be expanded to become the Major Deagan Expressway.
Moran retired from his position as commissioner in May 1942, under fire from District Attorney Samuel J. Foley in the Edward J. Flynn paving job investigation.[31] Flynn, the Democratic National Chairman and Bronx party leader, had been nominated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to be ambassador to Australia. An investigation into his affairs revealed that timesheets of three employees of the Bronx Bureau of Sewer and Highway Maintenance had been altered to convey the impression that they were on “vacation” when in fact they were engaged in the construction of an antique Belgian courtyard at Flynn’s Lake Mahopac home, using second-hand city paving blocks.[32] A grand jury would later clear everyone involved in the matter of any wrongdoing[33]
After his resignation, Moran returned to his previous occupation in real estate. His offices were in the Busher Building, 349 East 149th Street.[3] Moran was an active member in The Bronx Board of Trade as well as The Bronx Catholic Club, The Knights of Columbus, The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and The Bronx Rotary Club, where he was elected President. He also served as a member of the New York State Home Rule Commission, and helped to frame laws establishing Home Rule for the municipalities of the State.[4]
Moran died in the Westchester Square Hospital on August 18, 1954 at the age of 69 and is buried in Queens, New York. He was survived by his wife and seven children.[2]