Thirman Milner
Thirman Leonard Milner was an American politician from Hartford, Connecticut. A Democrat, he served as the 62nd Mayor of Hartford from 1981 to 1987 and was the first popularly elected black mayor in New England.
Life and career
Thirman Milner was born in Hartford, Connecticut's North End. Milner was the sixth child born out of seven children. Milner's father died when Milner was young. Milner largely grew up on Hartford's South End, though he spent some parts of his youth living in Asylum Hill.During his childhood his mother, Grace Milner, who was working to support her family, went on welfare.
During part of his childhood, he lived in Glastonbury, Connecticut, with a relative that operated a summer camp. While living in Glastonbury, Milner became a member of Future Farmers of America, worked as a camp counselor, and attended high school at Glastonbury High School, which he dropped out of during his junior year.
In the early 1950s, he received a high school equivalency diploma while serving in the United States Air Force.
Milner attended New York University, initially wanting to major in pharmacy. While in college, a speech by Martin Luther King Jr. inspired Milner to pursue a life of public service.
Milner worked as a hospital orderly, a clerk at a drug store, an insurance salesman, an anti-poverty worker, and a civil rights activist.
In 1976, he ran a primary campaign against Connecticut state representative Clyde Billington Jr. He lost the primary to Billington by only five votes. In 1978, he challenged Billington again, and won election.
In 1978, he worked on the mayoral campaign of George A. Athanson.