This article needs additional citations for verification .(June 2016) |
Mayor of Columbia | |
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Style | His Honor |
Term length | Four years |
Inaugural holder | John Taylor |
Formation | 19th century |
Elections in South Carolina |
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The mayor of Columbia, South Carolina is elected at large for a four-year term. The duties of the mayor is to create policy and enact laws, rules and regulations for the city of Columbia. Daniel Rickenmann, who assumed office on January 4, is the current mayor of Columbia. [1] [2]
No. | Term | Mayor | Intendant |
---|---|---|---|
1 | May 1806–April 1807 | John Taylor | |
2 | April 1807–June 1807 | Abraham Nott | |
3 | June 1807–April 1808 | Claiborne Clifton | |
4 | April 1808–July 1808 | John Hooker | |
5 | July 1808–April 1809 | Daniel Faust | |
6 | 1809 | Simon Taylor | |
7 | 1810 | Robert Stark | |
8 | 1811 | Simon Taylor | |
9 | 1812–1815 | Daniel Faust | |
10 | 1815 | William E. Hayne | |
11 | 1816 | James Gregg | |
12 | 1817 | Daniel Morgan | |
13 | 1818–1822 | James Taylor Goodwyn | |
14 | 1822 | David James McCord | |
15 | 1823 | James Taylor Goodwyn | |
16 | 1824 | David James McCord | |
17 | 1825 | James Taylor Goodwyn | |
18 | 1826–1828 | William Ford de Saussure | |
19 | 1828–1830 | Ezekiel Hopkins Maxcy | |
20 | 1830 | William Campbell Preston | |
21 | 1831 | William C. Clifton | |
22 | 1832 | Ezekiel Hopkins Maxcy | |
23 | 1833–1836 | Dr. M. H. DeLeon | |
24 | 1836–1839 | John Bryce | |
25 | 1839–1841 | Dr. Robert Wilson Gibbes | |
26 | April 1841–September 1841 | Col. Benjamin T. Elmore | |
27 | September 1841–April 1842 | Col. Robert Howell Goodwyn | |
28 | 1842–1845 | William Mills Myers | |
29 | 1845–December 1846 | William Byrd Stanley | |
30 | December 1846–April 1847 | Joel Stevenson | |
31 | 1847–1850 | Edward Sill | |
32 | 1850–1851 | Henry Lyons | |
33 | 1851–1853 | Col. Adley Hogan Gladden | |
34 | 1853–1855 | William Maybin | |
35 | 1855–1857 | Edward J. Arthur | |
36 | 1857–1859 | James D. Tradewell | |
37 | 1859–1861 | Allen J. Green | |
38 | 1861–1863 | John Henry Boatwright | |
39 | 1863–1865 | Thomas Jefferson Goodwyn | |
40 | May 1865–April 1866 | James Guignard Gibbes | |
41 | April 1866–July 1868 | Theodore Stark | |
42 | July 1868–August 1868 | Col. Francis Luther Guenther | |
43 | August 1868–November 1868 | Cyrus H. Baldwin | |
44 | November 1868–1870 | John McKenzie | |
45 | 1870–1878 | John Alexander | |
46 | 1878–1880 | Capt. William B. Stanley | |
47 | 1880–1882 | Capt. Richard O'Neale Jr. | |
48 | 1882–1890 | John Taylor Rhett | |
49 | 1890–1892 | Col. Fitz William McMaster | |
50 | 1892–1894 | Dr. Walter Coles Fisher | |
51 | 1894–1898 | William McBurney Sloan | |
52 | 1898–1900 | Col. Thomas J. Lipscomb | |
53 | 1900–1904 | Dr. Fort Sumter Earle | |
54 | 1904–1908 | Thomas Hasell Gibbes | |
55 | 1908–1910 | William S. Reamer | |
56 | 1910–1914 | Wade Hampton Gibbes, Jr. | |
57 | 1914–1918 | Dr. Lewie A. Griffith | |
58 | 1918–1922 | R. Johnson Blalock | |
59 | 1922–1926 | William A. Coleman | |
60 | 1926–1941 | Dr. Lawrence Beacham Owens | |
61 | 1941–1946 | Fred D. Marshall | |
62 | 1946–1950 | Dr. Frank C. Owens | |
63 | 1950–1954 | J. Macfie Anderson | |
64 | 1954–1958 | J. Clarence Dreher | |
65 | 1958–1970 | Lester L. Bates | |
66 | 1970–1978 | John T. Campbell | |
67 | 1978–1986 | Kirkman Finlay, Jr. | |
68 | 1986–1990 | T. Patton Adams | |
69 | 1990–2010 | Robert D. "Bob" Coble | |
70 | 2010–2022 | Stephen K. Benjamin | |
71 | 2022–present | Daniel Rickenmann |
Columbia is the capital city of the U.S. state of South Carolina. With a population of 136,632 at the 2020 census, it is the second-most populous city in South Carolina. The city serves as the county seat of Richland County, and a portion of the city extends into neighboring Lexington County. It is the center of the Columbia, SC Metropolitan Statistical Area, which had a population of 829,470 in 2020 and is the 7th-most populous urban center in the Deep South and the 72nd-most populous metropolitan statistical area in the nation. The name Columbia is a poetic term used for the United States, derived from the name of Christopher Columbus, who explored for the Spanish Crown. Columbia is often abbreviated as Cola, leading to its nickname as "Soda City".
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The 2018 South Carolina gubernatorial election was held on November 6, 2018, to elect the Governor of South Carolina. Incumbent Republican Governor Henry McMaster, who took office after Nikki Haley resigned to become U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, ran for election to a full term. The primary was held on June 12, with the Democrats nominating State Representative James E. Smith Jr. McMaster failed to win a majority of the vote, and then defeated John Warren in the Republican runoff on June 26. In the general election, McMaster defeated Smith, winning election to a full term.
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