Bernard J. McKenna
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Bernard J. McKenna | |
|---|---|
Portrait of Bernard J. McKenna, c. 1893–1895 | |
| 36th Mayor of Pittsburgh | |
| In office 1893–1896 | |
| Preceded by | Henry I. Gourley |
| Succeeded by | Henry P. Ford |
| Personal details | |
| Born | February 16, 1842 |
| Died | June 18, 1903 (aged 61) |
| Spouse | Mary McShane (m. 1872) |
| Children | Kate (McKenna) McNulty, Frank McKenna, William B. McKenna |
Bernard J. McKenna (February 16, 1842 – June 18, 1903) was the Mayor of Pittsburgh from 1893 to 1896.[1][2][3] His nickname was "Barney."[4]
Born on February 16, 1842, on Penn Avenue near Ninth Street in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the building in which he would later conduct his duties as a city alderman during his adult years, McKenna was a son of labor activist and politician James McKenna and grandson of Hugh McKenna, who had emigrated from Tyrone, Ireland to Quebec, Canada, and then on foot to Pittsburgh during the early 1800s.[5][6]
Educated in Pittsburgh's third and fourth ward public schools, as well as the school at St. Paul's Cathedral, he was subsequently hired as an apprentice by John C. Parry & Co., where he learned the iron molding trade.[7][8]
Sometime around 1862, while just twenty years old, he was elected to the post of captain of the Allegheny Volunteer Fire Company; he would go on to become one of the first volunteers to be given a paid job with the company.[9] McKenna reportedly also served on a gunboat during the American Civil War.[10]
After returning home to Pittsburgh, he worked in the iron industry, eventually organizing and becoming treasurer of the Iron Molders' Union, No. 11.[11]
In 1872, he married Mary McShane.[12]