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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mary Zoghby
Member of the Alabama Legislature
In office
1978–1994
Preceded byNat Sonnier
Succeeded byChris Pringle
Personal details
Born (1933-07-23) July 23, 1933 (age 90)
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materUniversity of South Alabama

Mary Elizabeth Stephens Zoghby (born July 23, 1933) is an American nonprofit executive and Democratic Party politician in Alabama. She represented Mobile, Alabama in the Alabama Legislature for fifteen years (1978-1994).

Early and family life

Born Mary Elizabeth Stephens in Gulfport, Mississippi during the Great Depression, she had a sister Patricia Stephens and graduated from St. John's High School in Gulfport. In November, 1961, she married Mitchell P. Zoghby (1926-2003), one of the twin sons of Alex Zoghby, and whose grandmother Mrs. M. Salloum was from Gulfport.[1] The Zoghby family was well known in the Mobile area for department stores which grandfather Kaleel Zoghby and his sons had founded after emigrating from Lebanon via Canada and New York City, including one in Prichard, Alabama established in 1935. The Mitchell Zoghbys lived in Mobile and raised a family; Mary Zoghby later attended the newly established University of South Alabama. A woman with a similar name (Mary Jo Zoghby) was a relative through their husbands' family, married to Air Force veteran and lawyer (then Mobile County judge) Michael E. Zoghby (1933-1995).[2][3]

Career

Mary Zoghby had a career as an advertising executive and was active in a variety of charities, including the Historic Mobile Preservation Society, Theatre Guild and her Catholic church. Aligned with the Democratic Party, she had a seat on the state Democratic Executive Committee in April 1978, when she announced she would challenge incumbent Nathaniel G. ("Nat") Sonnier for a seat in the Alabama House of Representatives.[4] The previous year, Sonnier had allied with embattled Mobile School Board President Dan C. Alexander and introduced legislation requiring educational competency testing, but which did not resolve a long running school desegregation lawsuit, Birdie Mae Davis v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, which had resulted in numerous hearings and orders by U.S. District Judge Daniel Holcombe Thomas (and higher courts) before his retirement in 1971, and would continue under his successor U.S. District Judge William Brevard Hand until 1997.[5]

Zoghby won the September primary and was unopposed in the general election, as well as her first re-election contest in 1982. In 1985 Zoghby was the chief sponsor of legislation that permitted Mobile to switch from an at-large 3-commissioner system of city government, to a mayor/council form of government, but which also required that Mobile's budget be balanced and gave the mayor line-item veto authority.[6] Voter adoption of the mayor/council form of government helped resolve two decades of litigation involving black voter suppression, which had reached the U.S. Supreme Court in Mobile v. Bolden (1980) before the black plaintiffs found a 1909 "smoking-gun" letter from Congressman Frederick George Bromberg before a scheduled retrial before U.S. District Judge Virgil Pittman.[7]

After redistricting in 1983, Zoghby won election from the 97th district with 75.98% of the vote; won her fourth term in 1986 without any opponent, and easily won re-election to a fifth term in 1990 with 99.75% of the vote. However, following another census reapportionment, in 1994, Zoghby was moved to the 101st district, where the long-term Republican incumbent Ken Kvalheim had been unseated in the Republican primary. However, Zoghby lost to Republican Chris Pringle in 1994, winning only 38.68% of the vote to his 61.26%.[8]

That proved the end of her political career, but the beginning of her career directing local non-profit institutions. In 2016 Zoghby retired after two decades of service with the Boys and Girls Clubs of South Alabama, including six years as its Resource Development Director and 14 years as the executive director, and the Mobile County government issued a resolution of gratitude.[9] Meanwhile, Zoghby was named Mobile's First Lady in 1986 and Mobilian of the Year in 1996. She also received the Liberty Bell Award, and served on numerous charitable boards, including AltaPointe Health Systems, Catholic Social Services, the Mobile Lions Club, the Children's Policy Council and the Mobile Area Chamber of Commerce Local Government Services Air Service Task Force.[10]

In 2019, Mobile mayor Sandy Stimpson sued the Mobile City Council in a budget dispute, alleging violations of what Mobilians had long called the "Zoghby Act." In 2020, the Mobile County sheriff attempted to rescind the act's supermajority provision with respect to annexation and other ordinances.[11] Also in 2019, Zoghby's Department Store closed, although a school uniform company founded by a niece remained in business.[12]

References

  1. ^ "Zoghby-Stephens". Biloxi Daily Herald. November 11, 1961. p. 9.
  2. ^ William Kimbrough, Judge Zoghby in Alabama ,vol. 57 no. 3 (May 1996) p.189, available at https://www.alabar.org/assets/2014/08/The_Alabama_Lawyer_05-1996.pdf
  3. ^ Erickson, Ben, 1952- (2008). Mobile's legal legacy : three hundred years of law in the Port City. Mobile Bar Association. (1st ed.). Birmingham, Ala.: Association Pub. Co. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-9668380-8-4. OCLC 270237290.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Mary Zoghby seeking state House post" Mobile Register April 8, 1978 (clipping from Mobile Library)
  5. ^ Pride, Richard Alan (2002). The Political Use of Racial Narratives: School Desegregation in Mobile, Alabama, 1954-97. ISBN 9780252027666.
  6. ^ https://www.cityofmobile.org/pdf/zoghby_act.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  7. ^ Thomason, Michael. (2001). Mobile : the new history of Alabama's first city. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. p. 271. ISBN 0-8173-1065-7. OCLC 44926864.
  8. ^ "Our Campaigns - Candidate - Mary Zoghby". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  9. ^ 11 2016
  10. ^ zoghby
  11. ^ [1][dead link]
  12. ^ "Spirit of 1905: An Alabama retail dynasty closes down". al. 2018-07-03. Retrieved 2020-03-07.
This page was last edited on 27 February 2024, at 06:46
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