1959 Pittsburgh mayoral special election

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1959 Pittsburgh mayoral special election
Flag of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.svg
← 1957 November 3, 1959 1961 →
  Joseph M. Barr of Pittsburgh greet Mayo at the U.S. Conference of Mayor's Congressional Reception January 21 in the Mayflower Hotel, Washington (12775125494) (cropped).jpg 3x4.svg
Nominee Joseph M. Barr Paul Reinhold
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 124,501 71,202
Percentage 63.6% 36.4%

Mayor before election

Thomas Gallagher
Democratic

Elected Mayor

Joseph M. Barr
Democratic

The special Mayoral election of 1959 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was held on Tuesday, November 3, 1959. The winner of the 1957 election, Democrat David Lawrence, had resigned from his position in January 1959 because he was elected Governor of Pennsylvania. City Council President Tom Gallagher moved up to the position of mayor per the city charter. At 75 years old, he chose not to seek reelection. Joe Barr, also a Democrat, won the special election and the remainder of Lawrence's term. Barr, a powerful State Senator and a longtime Lawrence associate, defeated Republican Paul Reinhold, the president of a company that distributed road repair equipment.

Results[]

Pittsburgh special mayoral election, 1959
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Joe Barr 124,501 63.6
Republican Paul Reinhold 71,202 36.4
Turnout 195,703
Democratic hold Swing

References[]

  • "Republican mayoral candidates through the years". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 7 November 2007. Retrieved 18 September 2009.
Preceded by
1957
Pittsburgh special mayoral election
1959
Succeeded by
1961
Retrieved from ""