Walthall Robertson Joyner

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Walthall Robertson "Cap" Joyner (June 30, 1854  January 5, 1925)[1] was the 40th Mayor of Atlanta.

Biography

Born in Cobb County, Georgia, he moved to Atlanta at a young age and began as a volunteer firefighter at the age of 15. In 1872, at the age of 18, he was made assistant chief, the first of many promotions. He was fire chief of Atlanta from 1885 to 1906 until becoming mayor and the first southerner President of the International Association of Fire Chiefs.

He was Fire Chief when the Markham House burned to the ground.

He defeated Thomas Goodwin (incumbent mayor James G. Woodward didn't run) in 1907 and under his leadership a memorial was made of the Wren's Nest after Joel Chandler Harris's death. During the Great Atlanta fire of 1917, Joyner was the State Fire Marshal of Georgia and led the firefighters that came to assist from outlying cities.[2]

References

  • early career
  • Campbell, Steve B., "The Great Fire of Atlanta, May 21, 1917", Atlanta Historical Bulletin, Vol. XIII, No. 2 (June, 1968), p. 9-48

Notes

Preceded by
Matthew Ryan
Fire Chief of Atlanta
July 1, 1885  1906
Succeeded by
William B. Cummings
Preceded by
James G. Woodward
Mayor of Atlanta
January 1907  January 1909
Succeeded by
Robert F. Maddox


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