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Louis J. Wilde

Louis J. Wilde
Louis J Wilde.jpg
17th Mayor of San Diego
In office
May 7, 1917 – May 2, 1921
Preceded by Edwin M. Capps
Succeeded by John L. Bacon
Personal details
Born July 16, 1865
Iowa City, Iowa
Died April 18, 1924 (aged 58)
Los Angeles, California
Nationality United States American
Political party Republican
Profession banker

Louis J. Wilde (July 16, 1865 – April 18, 1924) was an American banker and Republican politician from California. Wilde was born in Iowa City, Iowa in 1865. After living in Rochester, NY, Philadelphia, and St. Paul, Minnesota, he moved to San Diego in 1903.

He intended to spend only a winter in San Diego, but liked it so well that he stayed and went into the real estate and banking businesses. In San Diego he organized four banks, built the city's first modern apartment house, built the Pickwick Theatre, raised money to complete unfinished U. S. Grant Hotel, and in 1914 successfully argued for renaming D Street to Broadway.

He served as mayor of San Diego during 1917–1921. The 1917 race was a classic growth-vs.-beautification debate. Wilde argued for more business development; his opponent, department store owner George Marston, argued for better city planning with more open space and grand boulevards. Wilde called Marston "Geranium George", painting him as unfriendly to business. Wilde's campaign slogan was "More Smokestacks", and during the campaign he drew a great smokestack belching smoke on a truck through the city streets. The phrase "smokestacks vs. geraniums" is still used in San Diego to characterize this type of debate. Wilde won, with the support of unions and business, and was re-elected two years later,.

As mayor, Wilde was outspoken and not afraid to say what he thought, and had a sense of humor. Whenever he spoke, he drew crowds. During a council meeting in 1920 he grabbed a gavel and lunged at a councilman, scolding him for bereating a reporter, and mashed his own finger and injured his leg. After that date he refused to enter city hall. He conducted business through a messenger from the U. S. Grant Hotel.

In 1920 Wilde organized the Community Oil Well Company to drill for oil in San Diego County. No oil was found, and the San Diego Sun's investigation accused the venture of improper spending.


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