Nelson Howarth (Springfield mayor)

Nelson Howarth (1911-91) was the colorful, combative mayor of Springfield for three terms between 1955 and 1971.

Nelson Howarth (Sangamon Valley Collection)

Nelson Howarth (Sangamon Valley Collection)

During his administrations, Springfield was named an All American city, city boundaries were greatly expanded, and the city initiated construction of a new Municipal Building. Springfield also took its first steps toward city planning and urban development under Howarth. He created the first city historic sites commission, and in his last week in office, Howarth testified before Congress as part of the ultimately successful effort to create the Lincoln Home National Historic Site.

Howarth, however, is probably best remembered for his civil rights efforts – as mayor, he integrated the Municipal Band and desegregated Oak Ridge Cemetery, expanded the number of African-Americans on the Springfield Police Department, ordered taverns and restaurants to admit blacks and established a city human rights commission.

Born in Indiana, Howarth grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. He earned his law degree from the University of Illinois and came to Springfield in 1934 to work in real estate title research for the Prudential insurance company. After U.S. Navy service during World War II – Howarth, a lieutenant, earned six battle stars as fighter director on the U.S. Lexington – he returned to Springfield.

On his first night back from the war, Howarth “went out on the town” with two friends, he told State Journal-Register reporter Mary Nolan for an article published on Oct. 2, 1988.

I had never seen anything as bad in all my travels during the war as I saw here in Springfield.

Bookies with a loudspeaker had taken over the corner of Fifth and Monroe streets. Cops took prostitutes to doctors to be checked, slot machines were as common as today’s cigarette machines in the lobbies of restaurants.

The night turned into a debate on cleaning up the city. My two pals said there’s no way to get rid of prostitution in Springfield. I believed it could be done.

In short order, Howarth became involved in the Good Government League, a reform group whose leaders included a number of young war veterans like Howarth, and became president of the Springfield Junior Chamber of Commerce.

When reform candidate George P. Coutrakon was elected Sangamon County state’s attorney in 1948, Howarth was named assistant state’s attorney. The two quickly found they had to personally lead vice raids, Howarth told Nolan.

“We couldn’t trust the police,” he said. “They would tip off tavern owners and the operators of houses of ill fame.”

After 16 months with Coutrakon’s office, Howarth went back into private practice of law, but other members of the Jaycees convinced Howarth to run for Springfield mayor in 1951. He lost that race to John MacWherter, but Howarth ran again in 1955 and easily defeated Dwight O’Keefe. Howarth ultimately would go three-for-six in mayoral races, winning in 1955, 1963 and 1967, but losing in 1951, 1959 (to Lester Collins) and 1975 (to William Telford).

Howarth’s collected papers are held in the archives of Brookens Library at the University of Illinois Springfield (they are not online). Howarth also was interviewed twice, in 1973 and 1987, for the UIS Oral History Collection; however, the interviews initially were restricted, and neither appears to be available online.

Here is UIS’s biographical note on Howarth.

As mayor he was a champion of civil rights and impartial law enforcement. In his first term he promptly began to desegregate the police department, the fire department, and the municipal band and choir. He informed Springfield restaurant owners who refused to serve blacks that they were in danger of losing their liquor licenses.

Howarth urged the annexation of the burgeoning subdivisions surrounding Springfield, adding 10,000 acres to the city during his three terms. Under his leadership, the city expanded Capital Airport, built the Prairie Capital Convention Center, and added Riverside Park and Lincoln Greens Golf Course to the park system. He also played a major role in the development of the Old Capitol Plaza, the establishment of Sangamon State University, and the creation of the Lincoln Home National Historic Site.

He persuaded the City Council to create Commissions for Human Relations, City Planning, Historic Site Development, and Urban Renewal. During his final term as mayor Springfield won the All-American City Award.

The late Dr. Edwin Lee, a prominent member of Springfield’s black community, is quoted in Howarth’s obituary in the State Journal-Register (October 17, 1991): “Civil rights made the greatest strides in Springfield since Lincoln’s time under his regime. What he did was unheard of. It lifted the hearts and souls of many people in the so-called minority community.”

Mayor Ossie Langfelder is quoted: “He was, in my estimation, probably the most outstanding mayor Springfield ever had.”

Many of Howarth’s initiatives were controversial – Howarth told Nolan in 1988, for instance, that his civil rights efforts were the reason he lost to Collins in 1959. (However, Illinois State Journal political columnist Ken Watson wrote prior to the 1963 election that Howarth’s fiery temper was his “unquestioned handicap” in 1959. “He appears to have licked this problem,” Watson added.)

Howarth took pride in his administration’s efforts to improve conditions for black residents, and he believed those efforts helped prevent violence in Springfield following the assassination in 1968 of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

“I have every hope that we will continue to have racial harmony in Springfield, even though the discord is all around us,” Howarth said in a statement following King’s death, “but we also must produce. We can expect the advice of reasonable people to be followed only as long as it produces reasonable progress.”

Nelson and his wife Mary are buried at Homewood Memorial Gardens, Homewood, Ill.schs logo (2)

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This entry was posted in African Americans, Crime and vice, Law enforcement, Lincoln Home, Local government, Politics, Prominent figures, Springfield. Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to Nelson Howarth (Springfield mayor)

  1. Virgil Howarth says:

    My brother Nelson was an inspiration to me all my life.

    • editor says:

      Thanks for reading, Mr. Howarth.

      • Nick Penning says:

        Wonderful story, Mike. I wish I’d met him, but I certainly remember Howarth as mayor. I think an unfair and misleading campaign against him in 1975 used a catchy slogan to paint him as a “part time mayor, part time lawyer and part time state employee” in the public’s mind; not the hard working mayor who made us a fairer and cleaner city.

        As just an aside, I remember at the end of the game when Springfield High won the state basketball championship in 1959 (?), the play by play announcers interviewed our mayor about a big parade that would welcome the team home. But they pronounced his name Hore-with, instead of How-earth! Embarrassing for him and for the folks back home.

  2. Ms. Jones says:

    Very interesting read. These are the kind of people who need to talked about on a regular. Thanks for sharing.

  3. Frank Hoover says:

    I have so many good memories of Nelson Howarth. He was the best story teller . I attended many parties (as a child) at Nelson and Mary’s house on State street. I even remember his parents that also lived on State street. My mom (Dorothy Hoover) was Nelson’s secretary for 35 years. Nelson was the grandfather I never had. I loved him dearly.

    Frank Hoover

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