Theodore McKeldin
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Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin (November 20, 1900Template:Spaced ndashAugust 10, 1974) was an American politician. A member of the Republican Party, McKeldin served as mayor of Baltimore twice, from 1943 to 1947 and again from 1963 to 1967, and as Governor of Maryland from 1951 to 1959.<ref name="archives1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=archives2>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Early life
McKeldin was born in Baltimore as one of eleven children. His father had worked as a stonecutter and later was a Baltimore City police officer. McKeldin attended high school at Baltimore City College in the evenings while working as a bank clerk during the day. He later graduated from the University of Maryland Law School at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and was admitted to the Maryland bar.
Two years later, he began his political ascent as a secretary to Mayor William F. Broening, one of the few Republican mayors of the predominantly Democratic city.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> McKeldin also served as vice president of the local chapter of the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce. In 1934, he co-founded the charity Santa Claus Anonymous.
Political career
McKeldin challenged Democratic mayor of Baltimore Howard W. Jackson in the 1939 election, but was defeated. He subsequently challenged the incumbent governor of Maryland, Democrat Herbert R. O'Conor, in 1942, but lost by five points.
McKeldin would ultimately be elected mayor of Baltimore in 1943 on his second attempt. During his first term, he oversaw the construction of Friendship Airport, now Baltimore-Washington International Airport, in Anne Arundel County. McKeldin ran for governor again in 1946, challenging William Preston Lane Jr., but was defeated again, by a wider margin than in 1942.
He ran for governor a third time in 1950, defeating Lane in a rematch. As governor, McKeldin endeavored to improve the state highway system by establishing the Baltimore Beltway (now Interstate 695), the Capital Beltway (Interstate 495), and the John Hanson Highway portion of U.S. Route 50. He was a staunch supporter of interstate cooperation, saying once: "I rode by train over several state borders. I carried no passports. No one asked me to identify myself. No one had the right to. This is America." He was also an advocate for civil rights for African Americans, and received the Sidney Hollander Award for his pro-civil rights efforts.<ref name=MHS>Maryland Historical Society: Sidney Hollander Collection 1926–1972</ref> He was also a supporter of Israel.
In 1952, McKeldin was a major figure among moderate Republicans who campaigned for Dwight D. Eisenhower to receive the Republican nomination for President, and would deliver the principal nominating speech for Eisenhower at the 1952 Republican National Convention in Chicago.
In 1954, McKeldin was re-elected governor against the president of the University of Maryland, College Park, Harry C. "Curley" Byrd, who had controversially resisted desegregating the university. After his second term in Government House, McKeldin returned to his law practice in Baltimore; he was succeeded as Governor by Democrat J. Millard Tawes.
In 1963, McKeldin returned to public service after being narrowly elected to a second non-consecutive term as mayor of Baltimore. In his second term, his administration focused on the urban renewal of the city's Inner Harbor. In 1964, he decided to support Democratic candidate Lyndon B. Johnson over Republican Barry M. Goldwater in the presidential election, due to Goldwater's opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1964.<ref>Baltimore GOP Mayor Says Goldwater Made Tacit Deal for Extremist Help; The Harvard Crimson, November 9, 1965</ref> In 1966, the city council voted to condemn and demolish 700 homes in the Rosemont neighborhood to build the Interstate 170 "highway to nowhere" that McKeldin had conceived with urban planner Robert Moses in 1941.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> McKeldin's second term as mayor ended in 1967, and he did not seek re-election.
McKeldin remains the last Republican mayor of Baltimore to date; indeed, he is the last Republican mayoral candidate to win even one-third of the vote in the city. He was the first Republican governor of Maryland to be re-elected, and the only one until Larry Hogan was re-elected in 2018.
Personal life
McKeldin married Honolulu Claire Manzer on October 17, 1924. They had two children.<ref>"Clara Ziegler Obituary". The Washington Post. October 20, 2005.</ref>
McKeldin died on August 10, 1974, and is buried in Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore.
Dedications
- McKeldin Center at Morgan State University [1]
- McKeldin Library and McKeldin Mall at the University of Maryland, College Park [2]
- Theodore McKeldin Gymnasium at Bowie State University [3]
- McKeldin Building at Springfield Hospital Center
- McKeldin Beltway (Interstate 695)
- McKeldin Area, Patapsco Valley State Park [4]
- McKeldin Planetarium at St. John's College
References
General references
- Theodore R. McKeldin biography from the Maryland State Archives. Accessed Oct 25, 2004.
- Theodore R. McKeldin papers, at University of Maryland Libraries.
External links
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- 1900 births
- 1974 deaths
- Activists for African-American civil rights
- Republican Party governors of Maryland
- Mayors of Baltimore
- Politicians from Baltimore
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law alumni
- Baltimore City College alumni
- 20th-century American Episcopalians
- 20th-century mayors of places in Maryland