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| align="center"| '''Preceded by:'''<br>[[Ralston Westlake|W. Ralston Westlake]]
| align="center"| '''Preceded by:'''<br>[[Ralston Westlake|W. Ralston Westlake]]
| align="center"| [[List of mayors of Columbus, Ohio|Mayor of Columbus, Ohio]]<br>1964-1972
| align="center"| [[List of Mayors of Columbus, Ohio|Mayor of Columbus, Ohio]]<br>1964-1972
| align="center"| '''Succeeded by:'''<br>[[Tom Moody]]
| align="center"| '''Succeeded by:'''<br>[[Tom Moody]]
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Revision as of 20:45, 3 September 2004

Maynard E. "Jack" Sensenbrenner (born Sept. 18, 1902, in Circleville, Ohio; died 1991) was an American politician of the Democratic party, who served as a populist mayors of Columbus, Ohio.

Sensenbrenner was born the son of a jeweler in Circleville, Ohio, in the countryside directly southward of Columbus on the highway U.S. 23. He earned his nickname, "Jack," as an abbreviation of "jackass" because he was known as a child to enjoy donkeys and demanded to be photographed with them.

Sensenbrenner graduated from Circleville High School and attended a Bible school in Los Angeles, wishing to follow his twin brother Marion into the ministry, but he did not complete the course. Sensenbrenner worked in a variety of jobs, inlcuding working in oil fields and for the advertising department of the Los Angeles Times. During the Great Depression, he worked as a Fuller Brush salesman in southern California.

In 1934, he returned to Circleville and started working sales. Soon he moved to Columbus, where he became a partner in a religious bookstore.

In 1953, Sensenbrenner, then a stranger to politics (although he had been active in the Columbus community) surprised the Franklin County Democratic Committee with a visit and announced his ambition to run for mayor of Columbus. The party was without any strong hopefuls -- Columbus had not had a Democratic mayor since 1935 -- and they went with Sensenbrenner, who surprised everyone with his success. That success might have largely been due to Sensenbrenner's decision to campaign on local television, which was uncommon at the time.

Sensenbrenner was unseated temporarily from 1960 to 1963 by Republican W. Ralston Westlake, but won back his seat. He served as Columbus's mayor from 1954 to 1960 and from 1964 to 1972. He laid the groundwork for the massive growth of Columbus in the late 20th century by requiring all neighborhoods that accepted city water service to be annexed into the city.

Sensenbrenner was a popular political character in Columbus, known for throwing around terms like "spizzerinctum," which, he said, was the quality that made "Columbus, the United States of America, the Boy Scouts of America ... absolutely dynamic." (He picked up the term from his high school football coach.) He habitually wore a straw skimmer hat and at the drop of a hat would perform an old-fashioned shuffle dance.

Sensenbrenner's wife, the former Mildred Harriet Sexauer, was the neice of a former mayor of Lancaster, Ohio. The were married in 1927. His grandson, Richard Sensenbrenner, has served as a member of the Columbus city council.


Preceded by:
Robert T. Oestreicher
Mayor of Columbus, Ohio
1954-1960
Succeeded by:
W. Ralston Westlake
Preceded by:
W. Ralston Westlake
Mayor of Columbus, Ohio
1964-1972
Succeeded by:
Tom Moody