1922 election: Difference between revisions
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==Charlottesville== | ==Charlottesville== | ||
There were three open seats for City | There were three open seats for City Commissioner in 1922. | ||
{{Election results | {{Election results | ||
|[[ J. R. Morris]] | 914 | | |[[ J. R. Morris]] | 914 | |
Revision as of 01:35, 6 March 2018
Charlottesville
There were three open seats for City Commissioner in 1922.
Candidates | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
J. R. Morris | 914 | |
E. A. Joachim | 899 | |
J. Y. Brown | 843 | |
W. W. King | 320 | |
A. V. Conway | 269 | |
H. K. Hawthorne | 220 | |
Annie W. Walker | 91 |
|
Source: Daily Progress[1] |
Each voter could vote for up to three candidates. On Tuesday, June 13, 1922, the voters choose three candidates to serve as commissioner. Referred to as the “First Ticket” the three candidates named by the “Committee of Fifty-Five”, J.R. Morris, E.A. Joachim, and J.Y. Brown, carried each of the four Wards by a margin of three-to-one, followed by candidates W.W. King, A.V. Conway, Hawthorne, and Mrs. Walker. Later that year, on September 1, 1922, the city was taken over by the Commission-Manager form of government.
- ↑ Web. [ Morris, Joachim and Brown the Winners BY THREE-TO-ONE VOTE]