"Old City Hall" is a duplex style structure with the original Maricopa County Courthouse, designed in 1928 by Lescher & Mahoney and Edward Nield, whose main entrance faces Washington Street.
Tim Mahoney | William B. Mahoney | Steve Mahoney | John Mahoney | Jock Mahoney | Bernard O'Mahoney | Richard Mahoney | Lescher & Mahoney | Joan Mahoney | Joanie Mahoney |
Cynthia L. Mahoney was born in Camden, South Carolina to Dallas John Mahoney, Jr. and (the late) Elizabeth Jennings Mahoney.
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Sister Cindy summoned David Worby, the lawyer representing thousands of ailing "Ground Zero" workers, to her Aiken, South Carolina hospice and requested that he act as her guardian and fulfill her dying wish by overseeing her autopsy after she's gone ... she suffered post-traumatic stress syndrome, Worby said.
He had previously been a justice of the peace and a member of the Kenosha County, Wisconsin School Board.
He ran for Governor of Maryland in 1966 as an Independent after the Democratic Party nominated conservative Democrat and segregationist George P. Mahoney as its candidate.
Born in New York City, Joan Mahoney is the daughter of writer William B. Mahoney.
He was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses (March 4, 1885 - March 3, 1889); was not a candidate in 1888 for reelection to the Fifty-first Congress; became ill while attending the inauguration ceremonies of President Benjamin Harrison March 4, 1889, and died in Washington, D.C., March 27, 1889 at the age of 40.
Mahoney wrote and edited several books, including The United States in World History (co-written with J. B. Rae) and a number of works on the life and thought of philosopher and statesman Edmund Burke.
Eventually he moved to Berkeley, California, and finally, in the early 1990s, to Miami, remaining involved with AA—and sponsoring scores of other alcoholics on their road to sobriety—wherever he lived.
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His two younger daughters, Joan Mahoney and Martha R. Mahoney, are widely published legal scholars.
Mahoney was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses and served from March 4, 1901, until his death in Chicago, Illinois, December 27, 1904.
William B. Mahoney (1912–2004), U.S. journalist and writer who had a successful late-in-life second career as a substance-abuse counselor