Charles Wheeler (politician)

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Charles Bertan Wheeler, Jr.
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Dr. Charles Wheeler
49th Mayor of Kansas City
In office
April 10, 1971 – April 10, 1979
Preceded by Ilus W. Davis
Succeeded by Richard L. Berkley
Personal details
Born (1926-08-10) August 10, 1926 (age 98)
Kansas City, Missouri
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Marjorie Martin Wheeler
Children Gordon, Mark, Marion, Graham, Nina
Residence Kansas City, Missouri

Charles Bertan Wheeler, Jr. (born August 10, 1926) is a former Missouri state senator and a former mayor of Kansas City, Missouri from 1971 to 1979, in addition to having held other elected offices.

Life

Born at Trinity Lutheran Hospital on August 10, 1926, Wheeler graduated from Westport High School in 1942. A third generation physician,[1] Wheeler entered Kansas City Junior College in 1942, transferring to University of Louisville in 1944 and earned a B.A. in 1946. From March 1944 through February 1946, Wheeler was simultaneously serving in the US Navy. In 1946, he entered the University of Kansas, earning an M.D. in 1950. His internship was at Charity Hospital in New Orleans in 1950.

He joined the US Air Force in July 1950, serving until July 1953 as a Captain and Flight Surgeon to the original group of the Thunderbirds, the Air Force aerial acrobatic team.[2]

He did his pathology residency at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri from 1953 to 1955. At the same time, he began studying at night for a law degree at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, which he completed in 1959.

In 1957, he became an Associate Pathologist and Director of Laboratories at Kansas City General Hospital, followed by stints at Kansas City Research Hospital, North Kansas City Memorial Hospital, and the Independence Sanitarium and Hospital. He founded Wheeler Medical Laboratories in 1963.[2]

Dr. Wheeler began his public career when he was elected Coroner of Jackson County, Missouri in January 1965. He served in that office until January 1967, when he was elected as Judge of the Western District of the Jackson County Court until January 1971.[3]

Kansas City mayor

In 1971 he was elected to two consecutive terms as mayor of Kansas City. Although the office of mayor does not have a formal party affiliation in Kansas City, Wheeler is Democrat. During his tenure he oversaw the financing and construction of both the Kemper Arena and the Bartle Hall Convention Center. The combination of the two[4] enabled the city to host the 1976 Republican National Convention.[5]

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Many regard this as the last golden age of Kansas City

— Ingram's Magazine

Towards the end of his second term, Kansas City gained international attention hosting a work by the artist Christo, the 2.5 mile long Wrapped Walk Ways in Loose Park. Wheeler presented Christo and his partner Jeanne-Claude with the key to the city.[6]

Kansas City International Airport opened in 1972 during his watch. It replaced the Kansas City Downtown Airport, which is now formally named for him. So much successful development happened during Wheeler's two terms as mayor that a 2002 profile in the conservative Kansas city business magazine Ingram's said: "Many regard this as the last golden age of Kansas City with the construction of KCI, Worlds of Fun, Crown Center, and the Truman Sports Complex."[1]

Wheeler ran for the U.S. Senate in 1976 and garnered less than 2% of the vote[7] in the Democratic primary in a race that was won by Jerry Litton, who died in a plane crash en route to the victory party in Kansas City. John C. Danforth ultimately won the position.

Wheeler ran for mayor of Kansas City one additional time in 2011,[8] but his candidacy did not survive the primary.

State Senator

Wheeler defeated Rep. Henry Rizzo in the Aug. 6 Democratic primary, and his other opponent Rep. Tom Hoppe did not collect enough signatures to run as an Independent. No Republican ran in the election, and he elected to the State Senate from the 10th District.[9]

He opposed a bill to outlaw the morning after pill, explaining that "From Monday through Saturday, we have to work in a secular world",[10] and was a co-sponsor of Missouri Senate Bill 458, the "Patient Protection Act" that would compel a pharmacist to fill any prescription.[11]

He did not concurrently seek re-election to the senate and was succeeded by Democrat Jolie Justus in the 10th district seat.

In 2006, at the age of 79, Wheeler ran for Jackson County Executive, but was defeated in the Democratic primary by county prosecutor Mike Sanders.[12]

In 2008, Wheeler ran for the Democratic nomination for Missouri State Treasurer. He placed fourth behind the nominee Clint Zweifel, Andria Simckes and Mark Powell.[13]

On March 28, 2016, Wheeler filed to run for Governor of Missouri.[14]

Doctor in Politics

Wheeler was the only physician in the Missouri State Senate. Having authored "Doctor in Politics" in 1974, Wheeler is a frequent lecturer and speaker. He has served as Assistant Clinical Professor of Pathology, University of Kansas Medical School, as well as adjunct professor and consultant to the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine and the Henry W. Bloch School of Business and Public Administration.

Wheeler is an American Diplomat of the Board of Pathology, certified in Pathologic Anatomy and Clinical Pathology, and, Forensic Pathology. He is recipient of the American Medical Association's Benjamin Rush Award (1971), the University of Missouri-Kansas City Lifetime Achievement Award (1984), and the Kansas University Medical Distinguished Alumnus Award (1997).

References

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External links

Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri
1971—1979
Succeeded by
Richard L. Berkley
Missouri Senate
Preceded by Missouri State Senator from the 10th District
2003—2007
Succeeded by
Jolie Justus