Background
John Anson Ford (1883-1983) was a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
between 1934 and 1958 and was Chairman in 1952-1954 and again in 1957. He attended Beloit
College in Wisconsin, was first a history and economics teacher, then moved to Chicago to
become a newspaper writer. He worked on the Chicago Tribune as assistant
to the well-known columnist Henry M. Hyde; on the editorial board of Popular
Mechanics Magazine; and as a news-writer for the Department of Labor and
Agriculture in Washington, D.C. In 1920 he came to Los Angeles and entered the
advertising and publicity business. He was elected Supervisor of Los Angeles County in
1934. He was candidate for Mayor of Los Angeles in 1937 and was the first choice for
Mayor of the Recall Committee in the election that immediately followed in 1938. Instead
of accepting the nomination he chose to work for the election of Fletcher Bowron, who won
in a crusading campaign to bring honest and professional city government to the city of
Los Angeles. Ford was reelected to the office of County Supervisor in 1938 and in this
position for many years brought great cultural, educational, and social advances to the
Los Angeles area. After his retirement in 1958 John Anson Ford wrote regular newspaper
columns and continued to give service to the community at large.
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