Samuel
Milton "Golden Rule" Jones (1846 - 1904) was a Progressive Era
Mayor of Toledo, Ohio from 1897 to until
the time of his death in 1904. Jones was famous for his outspoken advocacy of
the proverbial Ethic of reciprocity or "Golden Rule," hence his
nickname. Jones was an influential advocate of municipal reform and oversaw
implementation of a series of humane modifications of the city of Toledo's
administration during his tenure as mayor.
Based
on his belief in the Golden Rule, Jones:
·
opened free kindergartens,
·
developed a park system,
·
established playgrounds for children,
·
established free public baths,
·
instituted an eight-hour day for city workers,
·
took away truncheons from the police,
·
reformed the city government.
In 1899, Jones was not renominated by the
Republicans to run as mayor of Toledo. He ran as an independent instead under
the slogan "Principle Before Party" winning a second term with 70 percent of the vote.
In the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, famous American entrepreneurs such as J.C. Penney,
Samuel Jones and Arthur Nash made the Golden Rule an integral policy in their
companies. Golden Rule and Business Ethics
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