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  1. Between 1833 and 1837, Chicago was incorporated as a town and headed by town presidents. Since 1837, it has been incorporated as a city and headed by mayors. The mayoral term in Chicago was one year from 1837 through 1863, when it was changed to two years.

    • Edward J. Kelley. Video: Richard J. Daley’s Bridgeport Roots. Born to an Irish and German family in 1876, Edward Joseph Kelly was the first in a series of mayors that hailed from Bridgeport.
    • Martin Kennelly. Martin Kennelly was the machine’s next choice for Chicago mayor. Kennelly was another Irish Catholic born in Bridgeport in 1887. He grew up in a family of modest means, served in World War I, led the Chicago Red Cross, and later became a successful businessman.
    • Richard J. Daley. Daley may not have created the Chicago Democratic machine, but he certainly fine-tuned it. Born in 1902 and raised in Bridgeport, Daley was an only child born to Irish Catholic parents.
    • Michael Bilandic. Following Mayor Daley’s unexpected death, Michael A. Bilandic was appointed mayor. Bilandic was born to Croatian immigrant parents in Chicago, served in World War II, and was a graduate of DePaul University’s law school.
  2. Nov 26, 2018 · For the first 90 years during which Chicago had a mayor, voters elected mayors from a variety of parties; Democrats, Republicans, Whigs and more all held the city's top position. That changed after 1927, the year Chicagoans elected their last non-Democratic mayor for at least 90 years.

  3. Mar 1, 2023 · A runoff election between Paul Vallas and Brandon Johnson will determine the city's 57th mayor. The first mayor of Chicago was William Ogden, who took office in 1837.

  4. Oct 12, 2018 · In 1833, Chicago was a wilderness outpost of just 350 residents, clumped around a small military fort on soggy land where the Chicago River trickled into Lake Michigan. The site was known to...

  5. He was the first man elected to successive terms as mayor of Chicago. He tried literally to clean up the city and proposed a complete sewer system for Chicago (population 20,000) to help fight the scourge of cholera. As mayor, he presided over the opening of the Illinois-Michigan Canal.

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  7. Sep 7, 2018 · Chicago’s first mayor, a real estate and railroad mogul from New York, arrived in the brand-new town called Chicago in 1835. Shortly after the city was incorporated in 1837, Ogden defeated John...

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