Dwight Tillery

Dwight Tillery is an American politician of the Democratic Party who is active in local politics of Cincinnati, Ohio.

Tillery grew up in the city's West End and attended the University of Cincinnati in the 1960s, where he helped found the university's United Black Association and graduated with a degree in political science. He also holds a law degree from the University of Michigan Law School.

Tillery served as mayor of Cincinnati from 1991 to 1993. He briefly ran for the Democratic nomination for Congress in 1992 before dropping out of the race in order to focus on his mayoral duties. He was a member of the Cincinnati City Council for many years, until 1998, when term limits forced his retirement. He remains active in the Democratic Party, most notably working on public health issues and supporting the election campaigns of African American candidates.

Tillery's current achievement tops lists with input coming from Cincinnati Closing the Health Gap (CTHG). A non-profit organization graduating master volunteers from programs that have to do with foods, processing foods and living healthy lives. CTHG, to date, reaches into living situations grabing the attention of the average listener, reader and participant in volunteer programs across spectrums, socio-economic levels and backgrounds for engaging all that will in enrichment activities and course of programs meant to success a mission statement for reporting achievement. The style is making family of whole communities. The Tillery touch is truly something to experience...come one come all. The Tillery touch adds to the defining community building and in an age of Gen-Y achievement. We serve an on-time-God. How will "you" style complementary to and with respect for is a question the Cincinnatian can ask any whurl in a gust of wind building communities bottoms up.

Kim Klein is a good read in order to understand what the likes of Mayor Dwight Tillery has done and is doing. Comparable to Mayor Jerry Springer and Jim Mason of BeechAcres. One might conclude that Cincinnatians are not only experiencing the development of giants from the past but three gurus in the present. Span of time: at least 1977 - 2012? We can conclude better - the nation. The world. There is much more to life and living than troubles, dangers, toiling and strife. "Think on" is a cry. "Think on good things" is sound advice. Readers have is our honest statement created by a men, their women and children peculiar to Cincinnati, Ohio beginning with their ancestors. Submitted by Euroclydonlad. 6312. 1241AM EST.