List of mayors of Brampton
Mayor of Brampton | |
---|---|
Member of | City Council |
Reports to | City Council |
Seat |
Brampton City Hall (Brampton, Ontario, Canada) |
Appointer | Direct election by the residents of Brampton |
Precursor | Reeve of Brampton |
Formation | 1874 |
First holder | John Haggert |
Salary | $148,371 (2013)[1] |
Website | Office of the Mayor |
This list of the mayors of Brampton, Ontario includes the 38+ unique politicians holding such position.
List
- John Haggert, 1874-February 1877
- John Golding, 1877–1879
- William A. McCulla, 1880–1882
- Matthew M. Elliott, 1883–1884
- Thomas Milner, 1886-1887 (died in office)
- A. F. Campbell, 1887–1888
- Thomas Holtby, 1889–1890
- Manton Treadgold, 1891–1892
- John T. Mullin, 1893–1894
- Edwin O. Runians, 1895–1896
- Edward H. Crandell, 1897–1898
- William Edwin Milner, 1899–1900
- Thomas Thauburn, 1901–1902
- Benjamin Franklin Justin, 1903–1905
- William Edwin Milner, 1906–1907
- Samuel Charters, part of 1907
- William Edwin Milner, part of 1907
- J. Golding, 1908–1909
- Thomas Thauburn, 1910–1911
- Samuel Charters, 1911–1912
- T. W. Duggan, 1912–1913
- Thomas Mara, 1914–1915
- A. H. Milner, 1916–1917
- L. J. C. Bull, 1918–1919
- W. J. Beatty, 1920–1921
- J. S. Beck, 1922
- H. W. Dawson, 1923–1924
- Franklin W. Wegenast, 1925–1928
- George Akehurst, 1929–1930
- Franklin W. Wegenast, 1930–1931
- George Akehurst, 1931–1932
- J. S. Beck, 1933–1934
- E. W. McCulloch, 1935–1936
- W. J. Abell, 1937–1938
- Robert P. Worthy, 1939–1942
- W. A. Bates, 1943–1944
- Bartholomew H. Bull, 1945–1946
- J. S. Beck, 1946–1948
- Harold R. Lawrence, 1949–1951
- Bartholomew H. Bull, 1952–1954
- Nance Horwood, 1955-1958 (born Annie Horwood)[2]
- C. C. Core, 1959–1962
- R. E. Prouse, 1963–1966
- W. H. Brydon, 1967–1969
- James E. Archdekin, 1970–1982
- Ken Whillans, 1982-September 1990, died in office
- Paul Biesel, 1990–1991, Whillans' appointed replacement
- Peter Robertson, 1991–2000
- Susan Fennell, 2000-2014
- Linda Jeffrey, 2014–Present
Note that some publications credit C. A. Irvine as a Mayor; he never served in this capacity.
Acting mayors
- C. A. Irvine, as of July 19, 1907[3]
- Bob Crowley, circa 1980s[4]
- Linda Jeffrey, as of May 2001[5]
- John Sprovieri, as of July 2001[6]
- John Hutton, as of September 2002[7]
- John Sprovieri, as of November 2004[8]
- Paul Palleschi, as of July 2007[9]
- John Sprovieri, May 2009[10]
- Sandra Hames, as of June 2010[11]
- Sandra Hames, April 2011[12][13]
- Gael Miles, May 2011[12][13]
- Elaine Moore, June 2011[13]
- Paul Palleschi, November 2014, at the final meeting of the 2010-2014 Brampton City Council[14]
- Garnett Manning, unknown, multiple times[15]
Roads named after the mayors
By neighbourhood:
- Eldomar Heights: Golding Avenue, Milner Road, Beatty Avenue, Core Crescent, Lawrence Crescent
- Flowertown area: Holtby Avenue, Campbell Drive, Pereira Crescent, and Horwood Drive.
- Haggert Avenue, Treadgold Road (Humber West Parkway and Castlemore), McCulla Avenue (near Agnes Taylor P.S.), Elliott Street, Charters Road (Hansen and Vodden), Duggan Drive (Charolais and Chingaucousy), Mara Crescent (at Ken Whillians Drive), Dawson Crescent (Centre at Kennedy), Bates Court (Queen and Chinguacousy), Prouse Drive (Williams Parkway and Centre), Brydon Crescent (Queen and Chinguacousy), Archdekin Road (at Rutherford Road, near Vodden), Ken Whillans Drive (Vodden to Church St.), Peter Robertson Boulevard (Great Lakes Drive to Torbram Road)
- Abell Drive (Williams Parkway and Kennedy)
- In Peel Village, there is Bartley Bull Parkway (Steeles & Hurontario)
Runians, Thauburn, Irvine, Beck, Wegenast, Akehurst, McCulloch, Biesel and Fennell do not have roads named after them as yet.
The names last names of mayors Mullin, Justin, and Worthy were all rejected at one point or another. There is a Crandall Court, a different spelling than Mayor Crandell.
Statistics
- Shortest term as mayor
- S. Charters at four months was preceded and succeeded by William Edwin Milner
- Longest term as mayor
- Susan Fennell, fourteen years (as of August 2014)
- Mayors who died in office
- Thomas Milner in 1887
- James E. Archdekin in 1982 (died from heart attack)
- Ken Whillans in 1989 (died on vacation)
- First female mayor
- Nance Horwood (1955–1958); the next (Susan Fennell) would take office in 2000
References
- ↑ "Compensation Rates for the Mayor" (PDF). Office of the Mayor. City of Brampton. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
- ↑ "HORWOOD - Annie "Nance"". Brampton Times. Brampton, Ontario. November 24, 1986. p. 20.
- ↑ "Brampton Cemetery receipt, purchase of two lots, N. Carter", collection of the Region of Peel Archives at the Peel Heritage Complex, 2010.145.
- ↑ https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=jH0xAAAAIBAJ&sjid=iKUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1180,2511310&dq=brampton+city+hall&hl=en
- ↑ "School Children Launch Emergency Preparedness Week - 2001", City of Brampton press release, May 10, 2001.
- ↑ "City Of Brampton Begins Industrial Street Sweeping", City of Brampton press release, July 19, 2001.
- ↑ "City of Brampton: Brampton Fire Welcomes 17 New Graduates", City of Brampton press release, September 20, 2002.
- ↑ "City of Brampton: Sandalwood Parkway Now Open To Traffic", City of Brampton press release, November 19, 2004.
- ↑ "Brampton Launched Elliott House Heritage Build", Habitat for Humanity Brampton press release, July 23, 2007.
- ↑ C.J. LaFrance, "A new season", The Brampton Guardian, May 22, 2009.
- ↑ "Sheridan Convocation 2010 Sees Record Number of Graduates", Sheridan College press release, June 11, 2010.
- 1 2 "Mayor in knee rehab", The Brampton Guardian, April 20, 2011.
- 1 2 3 http://www.brampton.ca/en/City-Hall/meetings-agendas/Committee%20of%20Council%202010/20110420cw_Ag.pdf
- ↑ Belgrave, Roger (13 November 2014). "Hutton and Callahan spared council sanctions despite conduct breach". The Brampton Guardian. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
- ↑ http://www.garnettmanning.com/about.php
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