William Mills Ivins, Sr.

Ivins circa 1907

William Mills Ivins, Sr. (1851–1915) was a lawyer and Republican candidate for Mayor of New York City in 1905.

Ivins was one of New York City's famous reformers working on the improvement of the election law and fighting the widespread election fraud in New York City. He was the president of the Executive Committee of the Electoral Laws Improvement Association. Together with reformers like Albert S. Bard or William E. Curtis he tried to complete the introduction of the secret ballot (Australian Ballot) to fight corruption.[1] Ivins was also member of the Honest Ballot Association, the City Reform Club, and Ballot Reform Committee of Citizens Union.[2]

Ivins is the author of Machine Politics and Money in Elections in New York City. New York 1887.[3]

Ivins was the father of William Mills Ivins, Jr., curator of the department of prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

References

  1. Albert S. Bard Papers, 1896-1959, New York Public Library, Box 18, Folder 8: Elections 1906-1939.
  2. New York Times, Oct. 22, 1905http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F50F13F63D5A12738DDDAB0A94D8415B858CF1D3; Albert S. Bard Papers, 1896-1959, New York Public Library, Box 62, Folder 2+4.
  3. https://archive.org/details/machinepolitics01ivingoog
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