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The 2029 Indianapolis mayoral election took place on November 5, 1929, and saw Democrat Reginald H. Sullivan winning in a landslide victory. Incumbent mayor, Democrat Lemuel Ertus Slack, had been appointed mayor in 1927 following the resignation of Republican John L. Duvall after he was charged with corruption by the state.
Duvall had been elected mayor in 1925 with the support of the Ku Klux Klan, and the Marion County Republican Party had close Klan ties. The City Council and school board both were composed of Klan-supported members. Opposition arose by 1929 to both the Klan and to the corruption in the city government. Sullivan's victory was seen as a rebuke of the Ku Klux Klan.
The Republican nominee was businessman Alfred M. Glossbrenner.
Sullivan spent much of the campaign in a hospital bed after being injured in an airplane crash. Sullivan received strong support from African American and Catholic voters.
Coinciding mayoral elections across the state also saw Klan-supported, generally Republican, mayors voted out and replaced by new, generally Democratic, mayors. Anderson, Elkhart, Evansville, Fort Wayne, Lafayette, Muncie, and Terre Haute all replaced Klan-supported Republicans with Democratic mayors in what the New York Times hoped would be, "The dawn of a more liberal and cleaner political day in Indiana".
References
- ^ Madison, James H. (1982). Indiana Through Tradition and Change: A History of the Hoosier State and Its People, 1920-1945. Indiana Historical Society. pp. 73 and 74.
- "Image 24 of [Broadsides, tickets, leaflets, sample official ballots, etc. 1929]". Library of Congress. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Hamlett, Ryan (September 10, 2013). "Lake Reginald Sullivan". Historic Indianapolis | All Things Indianapolis History. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
(1928←) 1929 United States elections (→1930) | |
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U.S. House | |
Governors | |
Mayors |
Preceded by 1925 |
Indianapolis mayoral election 1929 |
Succeeded by 1933 |