The room where it happens
The room where it happens . . .
That hardly makes me unique but the other day I actually got to be in the room where it happens! I had left some documents at Boston City Hall for the mayor’s signature, and when I went back to pick them up his secretary noticed my curious glances down towards his office. She kindly offered me a quick tour (knowing he was in China for a few days, I could accept without worrying he would appear and find me gawking) and when she told me the mayor uses former Mayor Curley’s desk I was enthralled. “Sit down; I’ll take your picture,” she offered.
For those who don’t know, James Michael Curley (1874-1958) was a legendary four-time mayor of Boston (and one term governor of Massachusetts) whose popularity reflected the increased influence of the Irish community. Accused of campaign bribery, among other things, he was indicted twice but was still reelected to a fourth term. During his fourth term, he actually went to jail. John Hynes (grandfather of goalie John Hynes who took Shakespeare with me in college, now a big developer) served loyally as acting mayor, until Curley returned from jail in Connecticut, greeted by enthusiastic crowds and a brass band. Not the kind of person I would like in real life but intriguing to any historian!
James Michael Curley |
There was no fifth term for Curley. An outraged Hynes ran against Curley and won in a very close race, portraying Curley as out of touch and corrupt. As James Aloisi says in CommonWealth, also cited above, this election was a conscious choice by Boston voters to put aside nostalgia and elect someone who would move the city forward. Much later, Hynes' grandson was in my Shakespeare class in college!
(Apparently, it's not uncommon to get a tour of the mayor's office - his secretary wasn't breaking any rules. But it still made me feel extremely special!)
3 comments:
Politics has definitely become more 'dirty tricks' over time. I like the image of the little campaign ad -- only to show he has 'heart' and not to attack his opponent. :)
Vote often and early!
Now we need a review of The Last Hurrah! Caught the end of the movie with Spencer Tracy on TCM in March - wish I'd seen the whole thing.
I did start reading Advise and Consent the other day - isn't there a story that it was so popular in 1960 that JFK and Nixon ran into each other during the campaign and both had it tucked under an arm?
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