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・ Bernard Elgey Leake
・ Bernard Epton
・ Bernard Erhard
・ Bernard Esterhuizen
・ Bernard Etkin
・ Bernard Etxepare
・ Bernard Evans
・ Bernard Evans (architect)
・ Bernard Evans (footballer)
・ Bernard Evans Ward
・ Bernard Evslin
・ Bernard Eyston
・ Bernard Ezi IV
・ Bernard F. Burke
・ Bernard F. Conners Prize for Poetry
Bernard F. Dickmann
・ Bernard F. Fisher
・ Bernard F. Grabowski
・ Bernard F. Martin
・ Bernard F. Mathiowetz
・ Bernard F. Meyer
・ Bernard F. Schutz
・ Bernard F. Sliger
・ Bernard Fagg
・ Bernard Falk
・ Bernard Fanning
・ Bernard Fantus
・ Bernard Farcy
・ Bernard Farebrother
・ Bernard Farrell


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Bernard F. Dickmann : ウィキペディア英語版
Bernard F. Dickmann
Bernard Francis Dickmann (September 7, 1888 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA – December 9, 1971 in Collins, Mississippi) was the thirty-fourth mayor of St. Louis (from 1933 to 1941).
==Biography==
Dickmann started work at the age of 16, working for a lumber company in St. Louis. During World War I he enlisted in the Marine corps. His later business career was in real estate. He was active in the St. Louis Real Estate Exchange, serving on the board of directors, and serving as its president in 1931.
In April 1933, Dickmann was elected Mayor of St. Louis. The United States was suffering from the effects of the Great Depression, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt had just been elected president. Dickmann's election marked the first time in 24 years that a Democrat had been elected Mayor of St. Louis. It also marked the first time a Democrat was elected with the support of a formidable African American political organization: The Co-operative Civic Association led by Jordan Chambers. Dickmann kept black support by building a long-promised modern hospital for the black community, which Republican Mayor Henry Kiel had promised would be paid for by the $87 million 1923 bond issue. By fulfilling his promise, Dickmann helped transform St. Louis from majority Republican to majority Democrat.
During Mayor Dickmann's administration, the city acquired and cleared the land along the riverfront that would become the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial and be developed with the Gateway Arch. During Mayor Dickmann's administration, the city also enacted a smoke ordinance, and took steps to reduce the air pollution created by the extensive use of coal for home heating and industrial use in the city.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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