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Henry Thomas Hunt

Henry Thomas Hunt was the mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio from 1912 to 1913. Hunt, 33 years old when he took office, quickly became known as the Boy Mayor. Failing to win re-election, he moved to New York City where he became a successful attorney.

Early life
Henry and his younger brother, Philip Woodward Hunt (born November 15, 1882), were born to Samuel Hunt (born August 7, 1848), president of the Cincinnati, Portsmouth & Virginia Railroad Company, and Martha Trotter Hunt who were Quakers. After graduating from Yale University in 1900, Henry Hunt received a law degree from Cincinnati Law School in 1903. ==Political career==
Political career
Hunt began his political career by joining the Committee of Nine, a group of young, idealistic neophytes bent on reforming a corrupt political system that had controlled Cincinnati and Hamilton County for decades. George B. Cox, known far and wide as Boss Cox, ran the entrenched political machine. • Settling a street railway strike and a strike of ice men • Introducing inspections of tenement houses • Appointing school nurses • Providing for food inspection and dental service for school children • Separating the dependent children from the delinquents in the House of Refuge • Providing that all the children had a chance to go to school and to Sunday school • Confronting the loan sharks until they were driven from Cincinnati • Rooting out many abuses and sources of disease in the densely populated parts of the city • Increased regulation and control of the corrupt administration under Boss Cox • Suppressing gambling and closing many gambling resorts • Rerouting the street railway lines and constructing a terminal boulevard and belt line of surface cars • Abolishing dangerous grade crossings • Introducing a plan to improve city sewers • Opposing the corrupt and powerful Republican organization dominated by Boss Cox One summer afternoon, Hunt saved a teenager's life: ==Later career==
Later career
After losing a bid for re-election as mayor, Hunt enlisted in the Army and served during World War I, reaching the rank of major. In 1922, Henry Hunt entered the practice of law in New York City. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Henry T. Hunt married Thomasa Haydock (born September 22, 1885), daughter of Thomas T. Haydock of Cincinnati. They had three children: Barbara Carter Hunt (September 26, 1908 - July 4, 1952), Henry Thomas Hunt (born c. November, 1909) and Samuel Pancoast Hunt (born August 7, 1911). On May 8, 1920, Mrs. Thomasa Haydock Hunt filed suit in Cincinnati for a divorce from Henry T. Hunt. In September, 1925, Henry T. Hunt married Eleanor M. Phelps (May 15, 1899–September 22, 1983). They lie buried beside each other in Arlington National Cemetery. ==References and notes==
References and notes
The New York Times, April 29, 1912. • Miller, Zane L. (1968). ''Boss Cox's Cincinnati: urban politics in the progressive era''. Oxford University Press, LC #68-29722. Reprint: Ohio State University Press (2000) ==External links==
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