Tripti Joshi (Editor)

John T David

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
J. Frank Colbert

Succeeded by
  
Jasper Goodwill


Nationality
  
American

Name
  
John David

John T. David

Preceded by
  
At-large in Ward 4: Leland G. Mims Frank Krouse Frank B. Treat, Sr. Floyd Kennon, Sr.

Succeeded by
  
At-large in Ward 4: Leland G. Mims W. Nick Love James Tenney "Jim" Branch, Jr. A. G. "Ike" Kirkikis

Born
  
August 30, 1897 Minden, Louisiana (
1897-08-30
)

Died
  
April 5, 1974(1974-04-05) (aged 76) Minden, Louisiana

John Thomas David, Sr. (August 30, 1897 – April 5, 1974), was a businessman who from 1946 to 1955 was the Democratic mayor of city of Minden, the seat of government of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana. After being convicted for selling liquor illegally, he was forced from the mayor's office. He served three terms from 1956 to 1968 on the Webster Parish Police Jury.

Contents

Career

David ran for mayor in 1946 and won a runoff election, in which he prevailed, 1,064-844. In 1950, David narrowly won his third term as mayor in a runoff, again, against C. O. Holland, 1,172 to 1,039 votes. A 27-year-old attorney, A. Eugene Frazier, had been eliminated in the first round of primary voting. In 1952, David again was a narrow winner for another two-year mayoral term. In the runoff election on May 13, David defeated A. Eugene Frazier, who made a second mayoral bid, 1,593 (56 percent) to 1,250 (44 percent). Frazier ran this time on a platform calling for fluoridation of municipal water. A third candidate eliminated in the primary was another young lawyer, Henry Grady Hobbs (1923-2012), a Sarepta native who subsequently served eighteen years as the Minden city attorney.

On July 1, 1954, David was sworn into his fifth two-year term as mayor. He had defeated by 87 votes, 1,969 to 18,896, furniture store owner Paul Wallace (1,896 to 1,969), a former member of the Minden City Council. The tally in the April 6 Democratic primary had been 1,437 (51.6 percent) for David to 1,350 (48.4 percent) for Wallace. In his last successful race for mayor, David ran an advertisement in the local newspaper proclaiming himself as "Fair, Courteous, Impartial, Independent." He pointed to widened streets new sidewalks, street lights, a second fire station, a baseball park, swimming pool, and water tank as landmarks of his administration. David advocated a four-year term for the office of mayor, a change approved by the Louisiana State Legislature.

Resignation and jailing

On February 23, 1955, David resigned as mayor when the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld his conviction of two misdemeanors for illegal liquor sales in his Minden drugstore; Minden was a prohibition city. David was arrested with two others after an undercover operation. He was sentenced to a $600 fine and 120 days at the Webster Parish Penal Farm. His resignation was confirmed in February 1955.

On April 7, 1962, David attempted a comeback in the Democratic primary for mayor but lost to incumbent Frank T. Norman, 1,536 to 578. A third candidate, W. O. Cook, polled 236 votes.

After he left the office of mayor, David served three terms on the parish police jury, but he was unseated in the Democratic runoff election held on December 16, 1967.

References

John T. David Wikipedia