
Daniel Page (5 March 1790-29 April 1869) was the Whig Mayor of St. Louis from 1829 to 1833, succeeding William Carr Lane and preceding John W. Johnson.
Biography[]
Daniel Page was born in Parsonsfield, Maine in 1790, and he trained as a baker in Portland and set up his own shop in Boston. He went on to become a tobacco trader in New Orleans and in St. Louis, and he served as its Whig mayor from 1829 to 1833. Page oversaw the grading and paving of St. Louis' streets, the establishment of a night watch, and the beginning of street cleaning and refuse collection. He focused on his business interests after leaving office, and he died in 1869.