The city of Poplar Bluff, Missouri, is the sixth-most populous city in Missouri's 8th congressional district and southeastern Missouri.
The town was started in 1850. The city was incorporated on February 9, 1870. [1]
Mayor | Took office | Left office | Additional information |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph T. Davison
| 1883 | Ohio-born Civil war veteran who served in the 68th Illinois Infantry and the 3rd Illinois Cavalry before moving to Poplar Bluff in 1874. [2] He had been a member of the Missouri House of Representatives. [3] | |
Thomas Hugh Moore
| 1887 | 1887 | In 1896, this general mercantile store operator was appointed Butler County collector by Governor William Stone. [5] |
James Robert Hogg
| 1897 | 1897 | Farmer, meat merchant, sheriff, and distillery owner originally from Indiana. [6] |
Dr. Alex W. Davidson
| c.1901 [7] | Alex W. Davidson was born 1853 in Hickman County, Tennessee, the eldest of eleven children. He studied medicine under his father and entered the American Medical College of St. Louis, graduating in 1876. [8] | |
Ed L. Abington
| c. 1902 [7] | He was born in St. Charles County, Missouri. He was president of the Bank of Poplar Bluff around 1949. [9] | |
John W. Berryman [10]
| c. 1909 | c. 1911 | |
Robert G. Felts [12]
| c. 1914 | ||
John W. Berryman
| c. 1917 | c. 1919 [13] | (He previously served as mayor.) |
Edgar G. Hammons [14]
| c. 1926 | ||
John W. Berryman [16]
| c. 1927 | (He previously served as mayor.) | |
Bayles Kennedy Flannery
| c. 1929 [17] He was born near Golconda, Illinois. [18] | ||
Dr. Zera Lee Stokely
| c. 1931 [19] Dentist and postmaster. [20] | ||
Clyde E. Richardson
| 1945 | A banker who previously resigned as mayor to join the Army Finance Corps during World War II. [22] | |
Arch W. Bartlett [23]
| 1945 | 1946 | |
Clyde E. Richardson
| 1947 | 1949 | (He previously served as mayor.) |
E. W. Robinson
| He died following surgery for a lung tumor. [24] | ||
Arch W. Bartlett [23]
| 1953 | 1953 | (He previously served as mayor.) |
E. W. Robinson
| 1954 | 1956 [25] | (He previously served as mayor.) |
John S. West
| 1957 [26] | 1963 | Former First Sergeant in US Army who served in the Pacific during World War II. Former co-owner of Bluff City Motors. [27] |
Walter F. Thies
| He served as a U.S. Navy fighter pilot during World War II. [28] | ||
Robert L. Odell | U.S. Navy veteran of World War II and the Korean War [29] | ||
J. C. Allen | 1963 | 1967 | |
Earl C. Porter
| 1967 | 1970 | |
Louie N. Snider
| 1970 | 1972 | The first mayor of the present form of city government. Snider served in the Battle of the Bulge under General Patton. [31] |
Harold Jackson | 1972 | 1973 | |
Bernard R. Wheetley
| 1973 | 1975 | Delegate to Republican National Convention from Missouri, 1964. [32] |
Paul Henry Hillis
| 1975 | 1975 | Hillis joined the Seabees during World War II. Dean of Three Rivers Community College. [34] |
Bill I. Foster
| 1979 | 1980 | Missouri state senator, 2001-2005; Missouri state representative, 1993-2001. Foster also served in the National Guard. [35] |
Gerald Lynn Rains
| 1980 | 1981 [37] | Former Butler County Clerk, 1982-1986. [38] He died at his home in Piedmont, Missouri. |
Bill Sparks | 1981 | 1982 | Sparks served on the planning commission for Russellville, Arkansas, for 17 years. [39] |
Thomas F. Allen
| 1983 | 1984 | Assistant Superintendent of Poplar Bluff public schools. [40] |
Bruce E. Holloway
| |||
Bill Sparks | 1985 | 1986 | (He previously served as mayor.) |
Robert P. MacDonald | 1987 | 1988 | |
Calvin M. Rutledge | 1988 | 1989 | Rutledge resigned during a later term to become director of the Black River Coliseum. [42] [43] |
Thomas J. Lawson
| Lawson has also served as Poplar Bluff city manager and as chairman of the Highway 67 Corporation Board and the Highway 67 Coalition. [44] | ||
Betty Absheer | Betty Absheer was the first woman to serve as Mayor of Poplar Bluff. She was appointed to the City Council in 1989 and subsequently elected to a full term. She retired from the City Council in 2016. [45] | ||
Ron Black | 1996 | ||
Chris Rustin | 1998 | ||
Reid Forrester [46]
| 2000 | Poplar Bluff City Council, 1996-2002. In 2005, he was appointed to the Board of Probation and Parole. [47] Chief of Staff to Lieutenant Governor Peter D. Kinder since 2015. [48] | |
Calvin Rutledge | 2000 | 2000 | (He previously served as mayor, 1988-1989.) |
Johnny Brannum | 2000 [42] | ||
Scott Faughn
| 2002 | 2005 | Faughn was elected the city's youngest mayor at age 22. [49] |
Loyd Lee Matthews
| Matthews served 3 years as mayor and 12 years on the city council. He served 4 years in the U.S. Navy around the time of the Korean War. | ||
Susan Williams-McVey [50] | c. 2007 | ||
Ed DeGaris [44] | 2011 | 2014 | Retired police lieutenant who was elected to the City Council in 2009. [51] |
Angela Pearson
| 2014 | 2015 | The city's youngest female mayor. [53] [54] |
Betty Absheer | 2015 | 2016 | With Councilwoman Angela Pearson absent for health reasons, the city council was deadlocked and unable to elect a mayor. All council members' names were put in a cup, and Ms. Absheer's name was drawn out of the cup by city attorney Robert L. Smith. Thus, she became the mayor for the 2015-2016 term. [55] |
Ed DeGaris
| 2016 | (He previously served as mayor, 2011-2014.) | |
Robert Smith [56] | 2019 | First African-American mayor. | |
Butler County is a county located in the southeast Ozark Foothills Region in the U.S. state of Missouri. As of the 2020 Census, the county's population was 42,130. The largest city and county seat is Poplar Bluff. The county was officially organized from Wayne County on February 27, 1849, and is named after former U.S. Representative William O. Butler (D-Kentucky), who was also an unsuccessful candidate for Vice President of the United States. The first meeting in the Butler County Courthouse was held on June 18, 1849.
Jackson is a city in and the county seat of Cape Girardeau County, Missouri, United States. It is a principal city of the Cape Girardeau–Jackson, MO-IL Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population of Jackson was 15,481 at the 2020 census.
Poplar Bluff is a city in Butler County in southeastern Missouri, United States. It is the county seat of Butler County and is known as "The Gateway to the Ozarks" among other names. The population was 16,225 at the 2020 census. The Poplar Bluff Micropolitan Statistical Area consists of all of Butler County. The city is at the crossroads of U.S. Route 60 and U.S. Route 67.
Kennett is a city in and the county seat of Dunklin County, Missouri, United States. The city is located in the southeast corner of Missouri, 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Arkansas and 20 miles (32 km) from the Mississippi River. It had a population of 10,515 at the 2020 census. Kennett is the largest city in the Bootheel, a mostly agricultural area.
Cape Girardeau is a city in Cape Girardeau and Scott Counties in the U.S. state of Missouri. At the 2020 census, the population was 39,540. The city is one of two principal cities of the Cape Girardeau-Jackson, MO-IL Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses Alexander County, Illinois, Bollinger County, Missouri and Cape Girardeau County, Missouri and has a population of 97,517. The sliver of the city located in Scott County is part of the Sikeston Micropolitan Statistical Area, and the entire city forms the core of the Cape Girardeau-Sikeston Combined Statistical Area.
Southeast Missouri State University is a public university in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. In addition to the main campus, the university has four regional campuses offering full degree programs and a secondary campus housing the Holland College of Arts and Media. The university is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.
The Limbaugh family is a prominent political family from Missouri. Its members have served as attorneys, politicians, judges, and political commentators in Missouri and the United States. The most well-known member is former conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh. The first family member in America, Georg Friedrich Limbach was born in Germany circa 1737 and immigrated to the United States, arriving in 1753 to Berks County, Pennsylvania as a young man. In 1758, George married Anna Catharine Ritter and had six sons. George settled in Missouri Territory in 1800 with his youngest son Michael and 19 other families. The family developed ties to Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and served in a number of municipal capacities, including the governance of Southeast Missouri State University.
The Battle of Cape Girardeau was a military demonstration of the American Civil War, occurring on April 26, 1863 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. The conflict was part of the pursuit of US Brigadier General John McNeil through Southeast Missouri by Confederate Brigadier General John S. Marmaduke. Though the conflict to this day is known as a battle, it was a relatively small engagement whose primary importance was as the turning point that brought General Marmaduke's second Missouri raid to an end.
Houck Stadium is an 11,015-seat multi-purpose stadium in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. It opened in 1930 and was named after famous Missouri resident Louis Houck. Today it is home to the Southeast Missouri State University Redhawks football team and women's soccer team.
Stephen Nathaniel Limbaugh Sr. is a former United States District Judge who held concurrent appointments to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri and the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri from 1983 until his retirement in 2008. He was appointed by president Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s after a distinguished career as a trial lawyer in Missouri. Like his father Rush Limbaugh Sr. before him, Limbaugh served as president of the Missouri Bar from 1982 to his appointment to the bench. His son, Stephen N. Limbaugh Jr., is a federal judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
Three Rivers College is a public community college in Poplar Bluff, Missouri. It was founded in 1966 when voters in the counties of Butler, Carter, Ripley, and Wayne approved the taxing district of Butler, Carter, Ripley, and Wayne counties.
A special election for Missouri's 8th congressional district was held on June 4, 2013, following the resignation of Jo Ann Emerson on January 22, 2013, to head the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. The Republican and Democratic parties selected their own nominees without a primary.
Frank Paul Pellegrino was an American businessman. He was the longest-serving chairman and CEO of the International Hat Company. Pellegrino built numerous factories across Southeastern Missouri, managing the company into becoming the largest manufacturing employer in the region by the 1960s.
Maria Pellegrino Park is a municipal park in the western of portion of Marble Hill, Missouri, United States. The park is the largest of the five reserves in the municipality. Pellegrino Park features tennis courts, pavilions, playground equipment, picnic tables, restroom facilities, forest, and a two acre lake for fishing. The park began planning in 1969 and was established in 1972 on 31 acres of city owned land. The park was founded by Frank Pellegrino, the former president and chairman of the International Hat Company of St. Louis. The company operated one of its factories in Marble Hill until 1989, employing approximately 300 people. The park was built on land donated by the company located directly adjacent to International Hat's manufacturing plant. Pellegrino named the park in honor of his Italian-American mother, Maria Pellegrino. The plaque located at the entrance gate reads that the park is dedicated to her "as an expression of her concern for the betterment of her fellowman."
Albert M. Spradling Jr. was an American politician from Cape Girardeau, Missouri, who served in the Missouri Senate. He served as city attorney of Cape Girardeau from 1948 until 1952 when he was elected to the state senate. Spradling was educated in the Cape Girardeau public schools and at the local Southeast Missouri State College and at the University of Missouri. He served in the Missouri Senate for 25 years and as president pro tem for four years in the early 1960s. During World War II, Spradling worked as an FBI agent in California.
The 140th Infantry Regiment was an infantry formation of the Missouri National Guard.
The 1904 Cape Girardeau Normal football team represented the Missouri State Normal School—Third District—now known as Southeast Missouri State University—located in Cape Girardeau, Missouri during the 1904 college football season. The team did not have a coach and outscored their opponents 22–0 en route to an undefeated season.
Missouri Secretary of State official manuals