Years served
|
Name
|
Party
|
Lived
|
Notes
|
1784–1793
|
Roger Sherman
|
Federalist
|
1721–1793
|
Signer of the Declaration of Independence. Later became a U.S. Senator.
|
1793–1803
|
Samuel Bishop
|
Democratic-Republican
|
1723–1803
|
Also probate judge
|
1803–1822
|
Elizur Goodrich
|
Federalist
|
1761–1849
|
Professor of law. Also served as a U.S. Congressman.
|
1822–1826
|
George Hoadley
|
Democratic-Republican
|
1781–1857
|
Bank president. Later became Mayor of Cleveland (1846–1847).
|
1826–1827
|
Simeon Baldwin
|
Federalist
|
1761–1851
|
Judge. Was previously a U.S. Congressman.
|
1827–1828
|
William Bristol
|
Democratic-Republican
|
1779–1836
|
Also State Senator
|
1828–1830
|
David Daggett
|
Federalist
|
1764–1851
|
Also U.S. Senator; CT House Speaker; Chief Justice of the CT Supreme Court
|
1830–1831
|
Ralph Ingersoll
|
Democrat
|
1789-1872
|
Also U.S. Congressman
|
1831–1832
|
Dennis Kimberly
|
Democrat
|
1790–1862
|
Lawyer. Also major general and member of Connecticut General Assembly. Was elected mayor again in 1833, but declined the office. Was chosen U.S. Senator in 1838.[3]
|
1832–1833
|
Ebenezer Seeley
|
Democrat
|
1793–1866
|
|
1833–1834
|
Noyes Darling
|
Whig
|
1782–1846
|
Judge. (Dennis Kimberly had been elected to fill this term, but declined to serve.)
|
1834–1839
|
Henry Collins Flagg
|
Whig
|
1792–1863
|
Lawyer, editor
|
1839–1842
|
Samuel Johnson Hitchcock
|
Whig
|
1786–1845
|
Lawyer, president of Yale Law School
|
1842–1845
|
Philip S. Galpin
|
Whig
|
1796–1872
|
Businessman (carpet manufacturing and insurance)
|
1846–1850
|
Henry E. Peck
|
Whig
|
1795–1867
|
Newspaper printer and publisher.[1]
|
1850–1854
|
Aaron N. Skinner
|
Whig
|
1800–1858
|
Classical boarding school headmaster
|
1854–1855
|
Chauncey Jerome
|
Whig
|
1793–1868
|
Clock manufacturer
|
1855-1856
|
Alfred Blackman
|
Democrat
|
1807-1880
|
[4]
|
1856–1860
|
Philip S. Galpin
|
Whig
|
1796–1872
|
Secretary of Mutual Security Insurance Company
|
1860–1863
|
Harmanus M. Welch
|
Democrat
|
1813–1889
|
Businessman who was founder and president of the New Haven Rolling Mill and president of the First National Bank.
|
1863-1865
|
Morris Tyler
|
Republican
|
1806–1876
|
[4]
|
1865–1866
|
Erastus C. Scranton
|
Republican
|
1808–1866
|
[4]
|
1866–1869
|
Lucien Wells Sperry
|
Democrat
|
1820−1890
|
Carpenter and merchant; committed suicide after embezzling trust funds; died $50,000 in debt.
|
1869-1870
|
William Fitch
|
Republican
|
1820-1877
|
[4]
|
1870-1877
|
Henry G. Lewis
|
Democrat
|
1820-1891
|
[4][5]
|
1877-1879
|
William R. Shelton
|
Democrat
|
1821-1892
|
Prosecuted by Republicans (as a Democratic ex-mayor) for his involvement in a scandal with a female employee[6][4]
|
1879-1881
|
Hobart B. Bigelow
|
Republican
|
1834–1891
|
Businessman, founder of the Bigelow Manufacturing Co.
|
1881-1883
|
John Brownlee Robertson
|
Democrat
|
1809-1892
|
[4]
|
1883-1885
|
Henry G. Lewis
|
Democrat
|
1820-1891
|
[4][5]
|
1885-1887
|
George F. Holcomb
|
Democrat
|
|
[4]
|
1887–1888
|
Samuel Amos York
|
Democrat
|
1839-1898
|
|
1889–1890
|
Henry Franklin Peck
|
Republican
|
1828-1911
|
|
1891–1894
|
Joseph B. Sargent
|
Democrat
|
1822–1907
|
Served three terms. Founder of Sargent & Co.
|
1895–1896
|
Albert C. Hendrick
|
Republican
|
1833-1912
|
ex-chief of the New Haven Fire Department
|
1897–1899
|
Frederick Benjamin Farnsworth
|
Republican
|
1851-1930
|
Presided over the enactment of a new city charter, which gave New Haven a unified administrative structure. Interred in Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven
|
1899–1901
|
Cornelius Thomas Driscoll
|
Democrat
|
1845–1931
|
born in Ireland, he was New Haven's first immigrant mayor
|
1901-1909
|
John Payne Studley
|
Republican
|
1846–1931
|
Used the police to stop performances of Bernard Shaw's play, "Mrs. Warren's Profession". Interred in Evergreen Cemetery, New Haven, CT
|
1910–1917
|
Frank J. Rice
|
Republican
|
1869–1917
|
Elected to four terms. Died in office.
|
1917
|
Samuel Campner
|
Republican
|
1887-1934
|
New Haven's first Jewish mayor
|
1918–1926
|
David E. FitzGerald
|
Democrat
|
1874-1942
|
|
1926-1928
|
John B. Tower
|
Republican
|
|
|
1929–1931
|
Thomas A. Tully
|
Republican
|
1886-1950
|
|
1932–1944
|
John W. Murphy
|
Democrat
|
1878–1964
|
Labor leader
|
1945–1953
|
William C. Celentano
|
Republican
|
1904-1972
|
Served eight years. First Italian-American mayor of New Haven, funeral director.
|
1954–1970
|
Richard C. Lee
|
Democrat
|
1916–2003
|
Served eight terms. Was New Haven's youngest mayor.
|
1970–1975
|
Bartholomew F. Guida
|
Democrat
|
1914–1978
|
|
1976–1979
|
Frank Logue
|
Democrat
|
1924–2010
|
Served two two-year terms as the city's chief executive. He won the office in the 1975 election, defeating incumbent Democratic mayor Bart Guida in a party primary.
|
1980–1989
|
Biagio "Ben" DiLieto
|
Democrat
|
1922–1999
|
Served five terms. Former police chief.
|
1990–1993
|
John C. Daniels
|
Democrat
|
1936–2015
|
First black mayor of New Haven.
|
1994–2013
|
John DeStefano, Jr.
|
Democrat
|
born 1955
|
New Haven's longest-serving mayor.
|
2014–2020
|
Toni Harp
|
Democrat
|
born 1949
|
First woman elected mayor and 2nd African American mayor of New Haven.
|
2020–present
|
Justin Elicker
|
Democrat
|
born 1975
|
|