Levi Boone | |
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17th Mayor of Chicago | |
In office 1855–1856 |
|
Preceded by | Isaac Lawrence Milliken |
Succeeded by | Thomas Dyer |
Personal details | |
Born |
Kentucky |
December 6, 1808
Died | January 24, 1882 Chicago, Illinois |
(aged 73)
Political party | American Party (Know-Nothings) |
Spouse(s) | Louise M. Smith |
Children | 11 children |
Residence | Chicago, Illinois |
Alma mater | Transylvania University |
Profession | Medical Doctor |
Levi Day Boone (December 6, 1808 – January 24, 1882) served as mayor of Chicago, Illinois (1855–1856) for the American Party (Know-Nothings).
Boone was born near Lexington, Kentucky, the seventh son of Squire and Anna Grubbs Boone. His father, Squire, was a nephew of Daniel Boone's, making Levi Boone Daniel Boone's great-nephew. Young Levi lost his father at the age of 9 when Squire finally succumbed to wounds he suffered at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend.
Despite the poverty the family was plunged into by the death of Squire Boone, Levi graduated from the medical school of Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky in 1829 at the age of 21. He moved to Illinois and eventually established a practice in Hillsboro. In 1832, he served in the Black Hawk War, first in the cavalry and then as a surgeon. In 1833, Dr. Boone married Louise M. Smith, daughter of Theophilus W. Smith, Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court, with whom he had 11 children.
Arriving in Chicago in 1835, he helped organize the Cook County Medical Board and served as the organization's first secretary. Boone had a medical practice with Charles V. Dyer. He was elected the first president of the Chicago Medical Society in 1850.
In 1843, he contributed to the rift in the congregation of Chicago's First Baptist Church by giving a lecture on the scriptural basis of slavery.
Supported by a coalition of Know Nothings and temperance advocates, Boone was elected mayor on an anti-immigrant platform, along with 7 aldermen running on the same ticket. Although Boone won, there were claims that the votes of German and Irish immigrants in Bridgeport, which had only recently (1863) been incorporated into the city, had not been counted. He defeated incumbent Isaac Lawrence Milliken with nearly 53% of the vote.