Richard Hackett

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Richard_Hackett an entity of type: Thing

ريتشارد هاكيت (بالإنجليزية: Richard Hackett)‏ هو سياسي أمريكي، ولد في 21 يوليو 1949. انتخب Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee ‏. rdf:langString
Richard Cecil "Dick" Hackett (born July 21, 1949) was mayor of the city of Memphis, Tennessee from 1982 to 1991. He also served as Shelby County (Tennessee) Clerk from 1978 to 1982. At the time that he took office as mayor, he was 33 years old and was the youngest mayor of a major U.S. city. He is best known for his defeat in the historic 1991 election that saw the victory of the first African-American mayoral candidate in the city's history, W. W. Herenton. Hackett's nephew is Relay FM co-founder Stephen M. Hackett. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Richard Hackett
rdf:langString ريتشارد هاكيت
rdf:langString Richard C. Hackett
rdf:langString Richard C. Hackett
xsd:integer 12044493
xsd:integer 1107913770
xsd:date 2007-09-27
rdf:langString Mayor of Memphis
xsd:integer 1991
xsd:integer 1982
rdf:langString Press release announcing Hackett's appointment as Children's Museum CEO
xsd:integer 1982
rdf:langString ريتشارد هاكيت (بالإنجليزية: Richard Hackett)‏ هو سياسي أمريكي، ولد في 21 يوليو 1949. انتخب Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee ‏.
rdf:langString Richard Cecil "Dick" Hackett (born July 21, 1949) was mayor of the city of Memphis, Tennessee from 1982 to 1991. He also served as Shelby County (Tennessee) Clerk from 1978 to 1982. At the time that he took office as mayor, he was 33 years old and was the youngest mayor of a major U.S. city. He is best known for his defeat in the historic 1991 election that saw the victory of the first African-American mayoral candidate in the city's history, W. W. Herenton. Despite his incredibly narrow loss to Herenton (172 votes out of slightly over 248,000 cast), Hackett was a fairly popular mayor during his nine years in office. He ran and won three times, claiming victory in a 1982 special election as well as in the 1983 and 1987 general elections. His percentage of the vote increased each time, culminating in a lopsided victory in 1987 in which he garnered over 58% of the vote, including nearly 20% of the black vote. Despite this, by 1991 Hackett had become vulnerable due to changing demographics (because of continued white flight to the suburbs and an increasing black population, the city was nearly 55% African-American by 1991) as well as controversies during his second full term, including Holiday Inn's corporate headquarters leaving the city for Atlanta, serious problems with the Memphis Housing Authority and embarrassing issues involving the financing of the Pyramid Arena in downtown. During Hackett's nine years as mayor, tourism, downtown redevelopment, business growth and non-profit institutional development were his main priorities. He was considered a fiscal conservative, with property taxes increasing only once while he was in office (in 1985) and the city's debt level remaining well under control. On the issue of race, Hackett was seen by many as a moderate, especially in comparison to his predecessors J. Wyeth Chandler (1972–82) and Henry Loeb (1968–71). He appointed many African-Americans as division directors, most notably James Ivey as police director and Greg Duckett as chief administrative officer. After his 1991 defeat, Hackett worked for several non-profit agencies over the next 15 years. In July 2006, he became the CEO/director of the Children's Museum of Memphis. Hackett's nephew is Relay FM co-founder Stephen M. Hackett.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4055

data from the linked data cloud