Former Nashville mayor, Richard Fulton dies

Richard Fulton

Former Nashville Mayor, Richard Fulton, has passed away. He was 91.

Fulton, a Democrat, was elected to seven terms in Congress and served 12 years as mayor of Metro Nashville.

According to officials, former Nashville chief operating officer Richard Riebeling, who once was an aid in Fulton’s mayoral office who remained a longtime friend of the family confirmed his death last Wednesday.

Fulton was elected to Congress in 1962 and was a rare Southern supporter of the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act and Medicare. He left Congress to serve three terms as mayor of Metro Nashville from 1975 through 1987. While mayor, Fulton was president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Tennessee Municipal League.

He ran for governor in 1978 and 1986, but lost in the primary to Jake Butcher in the first race and to Ned McWherter in the second.

Fulton, who was born and raised in Nashville, also served a stint in the U.S. Navy and was a state senator from 1956 to 1960.

He ran for Nashville mayor again in 1999 but lost to Bill Purcell, saying after he lost that a new generation of politicians had emerged.

After leaving politics, Fulton helped launch the Bank of Nashville and worked in his family’s real estate business. In October 2011, a complex of city offices was named in his honor.

As mayor, he helped spearhead the approval of the Nashville Convention Center, a downtown park on the banks of the Cumberland River and development along the river and elsewhere downtown.

Offering his condolences, current Nashville Mayor David Briley said Fulton was the right man at the right time to lead the city forward.

“Richard Fulton helped make modern-day Nashville what it is with his leadership as mayor, and he helped America live up to its promises by creating new freedoms with his votes for civil rights, voting rights, health care and fair housing in Congress,” Briley said on Twitter.

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