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・ John T. Towers
・ John T. Tozzi
・ John T. Traynor
・ John T. Wait
・ John T. Walker
・ John T. Walsh
・ John T. Walsh (Adventist)
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・ John T. Ward, Jr.
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John T. David
・ John T. Davies
・ John T. Deweese
・ John T. Dillon
・ John T. Dillon (actor)
・ John T. Downey
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・ John T. Elson
・ John T. Eversole
・ John T. Ewing
・ John T. Fanning
・ John T. Fesperman


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John T. David : ウィキペディア英語版
John T. David

John Thomas David, Sr. (August 30, 1897–April 5, 1974),〔Tombstone inscription at Minden Cemetery. David may have graduated from Minden High School c. 1914, but the author is unable to make confirmation of that point.〕 was a businessman who from 1946 to 1955 was the Democratic mayor of city of Minden, the seat of government of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana. After scandal forced him from the mayor's office, he remained the chief of the Minden Volunteer Fire Department (1934–1971), which he had first joined in 1926,〔 and he served three terms from 1956 to 1968 on the Webster Parish Police Jury (the equivalent to county commission in other states). As mayor, David sought to increase available housing in the post-World War II era when military personnel returned home, married, and started families.
==Mayoral tenure==

Mayor J. Frank Colbert, a former member of the Louisiana House of Representatives, did not seek reelection in 1946. David and three other candidates, insurance agent Castle Overstreet Holland (1895–1981), former Mayor David William Thomas, and businessman Homer D. Acklen, hence entered the Democratic primary. Holland, who had been a member of the United States Marine Corps during World War I, was active in the American Legion, the Minden Chamber of Commerce, and the Lions Club. He was later named president of the former People's Bank and Trust Company in Minden. Holland led David in the primary by 19 votes, and the two entered a May 7 runoff election, in which David prevailed, 1,064-844.〔''Minden Herald'', May 10, 1946, p. 1.〕
Once in office, David and the new streets and parks commissioner, Jack Batton, the younger brother of later Sheriff J. D. Batton and subsequently the mayor of Minden from 1978 to 1982, procured council passage of a plan to blacktop eight miles of dirt streets in the city. The project began with the link from Bayou Avenue to the Minden Cemetery. That initial phase was completed in three months.〔"Paving Program Announced by Mayor David", ''Minden Herald'', August 2, 1946, p. 1〕
In 1950, David narrowly won his third term as mayor in a runoff, again, against C. O. Holland, 1,172 to 1,039 votes.〔''Minden Herald'', May 19, 1950, p. 1〕 A 27-year-old attorney, A. Eugene Frazier, had been eliminated in the first round of primary voting.〔''Minden Herald'', April 14, 1950, p. 1〕 In 1952, David again was a narrow winner for another two-year mayoral term. In the primary, David led A. Eugene Frazier, who made a second mayoral bid, this time on a platform calling for fluoridation of municipal water, and another young lawyer, Henry Grady Hobbs (1923-2012), a Sarepta native who subsequently served eighteen years as the Minden city attorney.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Henry Hobbs obituary )〕 The tabulations were 1,257 to 1,171 to 296, respectively.〔''Minden Press'', April 11, 1952, p. 1〕 In the runoff election on May 13, David defeated Frazier, 1,593 to 1,250.〔''Minden Press'', election chart, May 16, 1952, p. 1〕
On July 1, 1954, David was sworn into his fifth two-year term as mayor. He had defeated by 87 votes, 1,969 to 18,896, furniture store owner Paul Wallace (1,896 to 1,969), a former member of the Minden City Council. The tally in the April 6 Democratic primary had been 1,437 (51.6 percent) for David to 1,350 (48.4 percent) for Wallace.〔''Minden Herald'', April 9, 1954, p. 1〕 In his last successful race for mayor, David ran an advertisement in the local newspaper proclaiming himself as "Fair, Courteous, Impartial, Independent."〔''The Minden Herald'', April 2, 1954, p. 7〕 David advocated a four-year term for the office of mayor, a change approved by the Louisiana State Legislature.〔''The Minden Herald'', February 5, 1954, p. 1〕
On February 23, 1955, David resigned as mayor when the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld his conviction of two misdemeanors for illegal liquor sales in his Minden drugstore, a common practice known as bootlegging in a prohibition city. State court Judge James E. Bolin, Sr., sentenced David to a $600 fine and 120 days at the Webster Parish Penal Farm. His resignation was confirmed in a February 23, 1955, letter to then Governor Robert F. Kennon, himself a former mayor of Minden.〔''Minden Herald'', February 24, 1955, p. 1〕 The penal farm is managed by the police jury, the body to which David was elected in 1956, 1960, and 1964. In his first term on the police jury, David served from the former Ward 4 with Leland G. Mims, W. Nick Love, and Claude R. Huckaby.〔''Respect for the Past: Webster Parish Centennial, 1971'', Webster Parish Police Jury, unnumbered pages〕
David served the second-longest tenure of any Minden mayor, surpassed only by Bill Robertson, who served from January 1991 until his death in office on June 27, 2013.〔City of Minden, List of Minden Mayors Since 1988〕
David had been allied with pro-Long elements within the Democratic Party but had not been an open enemy of the hometown Governor Kennon, then a leader of the anti-Long faction of the dominant party. Anti-Long elements in Minden sought to remove David as mayor, and the state police raid which netted David in November 1954 proved fortuitous from their standpoint.
Paul Wallace ran in the special election to complete David's term but was again defeated. Businessman Jasper Goodwill, descended from a pioneer Webster Parish family, prevailed over Wallace, 944 (52.4 percent) to 858 (47.6 percent).〔''Minden Herald'', May 12, 1955, p. 1〕
On April 7, 1962, David attempted a comeback in the Democratic primary for mayor but lost to incumbent Frank T. Norman, 1,536 to 578. A third candidate, W. O. Cook, polled 236 votes.〔''Minden Press'', April 9, 1962, p. 1〕

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