Vincent Richard Impellitteri, 101st Mayor, 1950-1953 Robert Ferdinand Wagner, 102nd Mayor, 1954-1965 John Vliet Lindsay, 103rd Mayor, 1966-73 Abraham David Beame, 104th Mayor, 1974-1977 Edward Irving Koch, 105th Mayor, 1978-1989 David Norman Dinkins, 106th Mayor, 1990-1993 Rudolph William Giuliani, 107th Mayor, 1994-2001 Michael Rubens Bloomberg, 108th Mayor, 2002-?
Vincent R. Impellitteri: August 31, 1950 - December 31, 1953 (Democrat)
Robert F. Wagner, Jr.: January 1, 1954 - December 31, 1965 (Democrat)
John V. Lindsay: January 1, 1966 - December 31, 1973 (Republican/Liberal until 1969, Liberal from 1969 to 1970, and Democratic/Liberal from 1970 to 1973)
Abraham D. Beame: January 1, 1974 - December 31, 1977 (Democrat)
Edward I. Koch: January 1, 1978 - December 31, 1989 (Democrat)
David N. Dinkins: January 1, 1990 - December 31, 1993 (Democrat)
Rudolph W. Guiliani: January 1, 1994 - December 31, 2001 (Republican/Liberal)
Michael R. Bloomberg: January 1, 2002 - present (Republican until 2007, Independent since 2007)
For more information on New York City's mayors, see the Related Link below.
Abraham D. Beame: January 1, 1974 through December 31, 1977
Edward I. Koch: January 1, 1978 through December 31, 1989
David N. Dinkins: January 1, 1990 through December 31, 1993
Rudolph W. Guiliani: January 1, 1994 through December 31, 2001
Michael R. Bloomberg: January 1, 2002 through the present (today is August 10, 2010)
the mayor of what city?
Gracie Mansion
There are many thousands of mayors in the US. You would need to specify the city and state to get a correct answer.
Mayors run cities not states. You would need to specify a city to get an answer.
David Dinkins (January 1, 1990 through December 31, 1993) is probably the answer you're looking for, but there have been two other New York City mayors named David: David Provost (1699 to 1700) and David Matthews (1776 to 1783).
There are many thousands of mayors in the US. You would need to specify the city and state to get a correct answer.
New York City.
Both are correct; the "state" in New York State, like the "city" in New York City, are only included in the name so people don't get confused about which one you're referring to. Both have the same name, so the words "state" and "city" are added to distinguish between them, just like Washington State and Washington, D.C. People often don't use the "state" and "city" when it's obvious which one you're referring to, for example, "the mayor of New York" or "the governor of New York." Only cities have mayors, and only states have governors, so in those cases, you don't need to say, "New York City" and "New York State."
The 'York' in the name New York refers to the city of York in Northern England.
New York, New York. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Jersey City, New Jersey.
The city name is New York; it's in New York state.
New York City