109:’s 1884 presidential campaign in Hamilton County. He set up the Young Men’s Blaine Club, which became his main base of political operations. Cox took pride in running an orderly organization. He maintained decorum in city conventions, eliminated multiple voting, and accepted the nomination and election of reform business candidates for mayor, who usually won election. Cox’s coalition was “able to bring positive government to Cincinnati and to mitigate the chaos which accompanied the emergence of the new city.” With some justification, Cox boasted of his “achievement of taking the schools, Police, and Fire Departments out of politics” and insisted that “a boss is not necessarily a public enemy.” On the other hand
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Cox was elected to the city council in 1879, serving two terms. He served most notably on the
Decennial Equalization Board where he was able to fix the tax rate for prominent properties like the Shubert Theater, in which he became an investor. He also served significantly on the Board of Public
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made a speech against Cox in 1905, saying "the government under the machine is constantly described as a very corrupt one" which significantly damaged the Cox ticket. But Taft spoke in favor of Cox in 1908 when his political opponent
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Known as a ward boss who delivered his delegation as promised, he became the executive chairman of the local chapter of the
Republican Party. He ran unsuccessfully for
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Turner, George Kibbe. “The Thing above the Law: The Rise and Rule of George B. Cox, and His
Overthrow by Young Hunt and the Fighting Idealists of Cincinnati,”
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Cox was the namesake of the George B. Cox
Memorial Theater downtown on Seventh Street. Built in 1920, it closed in 1954 and was demolished in 1976.
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Cox was the son of
British immigrants. As a teen during the Civil War years, he supported his widowed mother as an errand boy. Later he drove a
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from 1902 to 1927 and is known as the Father of the World Series. He influenced many local elections, including the nomination
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Clerk in 1884 and 1888, being the only candidate on his party's ticket to lose in the latter year. He managed
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As a young man, Cox acquired a saloon at the corner of
Longworth and John, "Dead man's corner".
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82:. In these days he was already noted for being a physically strong and closed-mouthed man.
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Miller, Zane L. "Boss Cox’s
Cincinnati: A Study in Urbanization and Politics, 1880–1914,"
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401:. (Oxford University Press, 1968). Reprint: Ohio State University Press (2000)
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on
November 6, 1973. The Cox House has been converted into a branch of the
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During his heyday, Cox had influence over all local newspapers save the
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and the
President of the Board of the New Water works Commissioners,
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at the corner of
Brookline and Ludlow avenues was listed on the
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Stepping Out in Cincinnati: Queen City Entertainment 1900-1960
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Boss Cox's Cincinnati: urban politics in the progressive era
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Boss Cox’s Cincinnati: Urban Politics in the Progressive Era
74:. Finally, he assisted his brother-in-law by operating the
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456:"Henry T. Hunt and civic reform in Cincinnati, 1903-1913"
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Boyden, H.P. "Cincinnati's Battle With the Boss System",
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Felix Winternitz & Sacha DeVroomen Bellman (2007).
133:. His chief lieutenants were Deputy County Treasurer
460:Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly
212:15 May 1911 as reported in Judith Spraul-Schmidt,
156:George Cox died after suffering a stroke in 1916.
458:- Landon Warner's scholarly article published in
428:Steffens, Lincoln. “Ohio: A Tale of Two Cities,”
225:Steffens, Lincoln. “Ohio: A Tale of Two Cities,”
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338:Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
174:Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
94:Affairs in this turbulent era of the notorious
404:Spraul-Schmidt, Judith. "Cox, George Barnes"
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170:National Register of Historic Places
141:. Herrmann became President of the
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356:. Arcadia Publishing. p. 20.
260:. F.A. Munsey & Company. 1912.
244:. F.A. Munsey & Company. 1912.
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16:American politician (1853–1916)
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340:, 2015. Accessed 2015-10-15.
298:Insiders' Guide to Cincinnati
276:digital.cincinnatilibrary.org
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301:. Globe Pequot. p. 34.
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406:American National Biography
389:Journal of American History
214:American National Biography
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149:, who became the youngest
486:American political bosses
391:54#4 (Mar. 1968): 823–38
350:Singer, Allen J. (2005).
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432:June 1905, pp. 293–311;
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78:portion of the latter's
442:Mar. 1912, pp. 575–91.
272:"Bossism in Cincinnati"
229:June 1905, pp. 293–311.
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126:was up for election.
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210:Cincinnati Enquirer,
440:McClure’s Magazine,
430:McClure’s Magazine,
227:McClure’s Magazine,
166:George B. Cox House
151:mayor of Cincinnati
60:William Howard Taft
58:, and associate of
23:George Cox in 1911.
332:2015-09-23 at the
147:Julius Fleischmann
54:, a member of the
38:(1853–1916) was a
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257:Munsey's Magazine
241:Munsey's Magazine
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491:Ohio Republicans
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119:William H. Taft
107:James G. Blaine
103:Hamilton County
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113:, a famous
31:Cox's house
470:Categories
369:9 December
314:2013-05-08
281:2021-06-25
66:Early life
44:Cincinnati
115:muckraker
330:Archived
216:(2000).
195:Miller,
408:(2000)
444:online
434:online
410:online
393:online
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199:p. 239
160:Legacy
80:casino
183:Notes
371:2013
358:ISBN
303:ISBN
164:The
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