Richard Lee

Born:  New Haven; March 12, 1916

Entry by Herbert F. Janick

During the 1950s a crop of bold young mayors took control of many American cities. Armed with ideas and Federal money, they sought to stem the flight of the middle class to the suburbs, to eliminate slums, and to stimulate the economy of the downtowns by vast highway and building construction programs. In the vanguard of the urban renewal movement was Richard Lee, the eight-term mayor of New Haven. Only thirty-seven when he took office in 1953, he made New Haven a showcase for imaginative solutions to urban problems. In 1969, however, he left office amidst racial tension, the most dramatic manifestation of which had been a week of rioting in the summer of 1967.

Described by an associate as a "cross between the New Frontier and the Last Hurrah," the energetic Lee brought impressive qualities to the job of mayor. As a result of many years as a city hall newspaper reporter, he knew the intricacies and personalities of city government. Nine years as director of the Yale News Bureau gave him sophistication and more valuable contacts, particularly one with his ally in urban rejuvenation, A. Whitney Griswold (1906-1963), Yale president from 1950 to 1962. He was able to inspire the loyalty of young professionals like brash Edward Logue who became the city's director of redevelopment. Lee's charisma helped him weld together the Citizen's Action Committee, a coalition of 4,000 business, professional, and Yale leaders to give him advice and support.

The Lee Administration transformed the face of New Haven. The Connecticut Turnpike was routed so as to best serve the commuting needs of suburbanites, and the Oak Street Connector, constructed on the site of a dilapidated slum area, provided direct automobile access to downtown. After much difficulty, the Church Street project was completed, giving the city a central shopping mall. Low income housing, fire-houses, and schools were built. During his term in office Lee attracted more than $130,000,000 in Federal aid to New Haven.

Human needs were not neglected. From 1962 to 1967 under the direction of Mitchell Svirdorff, former head of the state AFL-CIO, an anti-poverty agency, Community Progress Incorporated, spent twenty-two million dollars, including five million from the Ford Foundation, on a variety of experimental approaches in job-training, education, housing and child care. Many of these programs became models for President Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty." In recognition of his accomplishments, Lee was elected head of the National Conference of Mayors in 1962.

Lee's final years in office were difficult ones, highlighted by four days of rioting in August 1967. Compared to what took place in many other cities, the New Haven disorder was a minor outburst in which no lives were lost. That it should have happened in what Robert Weaver, Federal Housing and Home Finance administrator, described as the place that came "closest to our dream of a slumless city," was demoralizing to Lee and was, in part, responsible for his exit from office in 1969.

For Further Reading

New Haven renewal and Richard Lee have stimulated an avalanche of books and articles. The best are Allan Talbot, The Mayor's Game, Richard Lee and the Politics of Change (New York, 1967); Fred Powledge, Modern City: A Test of American Liberalism (New York, 1970); and Raymond Wolfingcr, The Politics of Progress (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1974).

* Entry under revision.

 

©2003 CT Heritage. Designed and Hosted by The Computer Company Inc