• Source: 1951 Toronto municipal election
    • Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on December 3, 1951. Allan Lamport defeated incumbent Hiram E. McCallum in the mayoral election.


      Toronto mayor


      Lamport had challenged McCallum the previous year but had lost by a narrow margin. McCallum had originally planned on retiring and being succeeded by Controller John Innes, but Innes died unexpectedly during the year. The 1951 also saw an attempt at the mayoralty by alderman Nathan Phillips, who finished a distant third. In Phillips' autobiography he states that he expected fellow Conservative McCallum to retire, but that their both running split to vote and allowed Lamport to become the first Liberal elected to run the city since 1909. Lamport ran under the slogan "Toronto needs a fighting mayor."

      Results

      Allan Lamport - 72,648
      Hiram E. McCallum - 59,492
      Nathan Phillips - 24,811


      Board of Control


      The only new arrival on the Board of Control was Ford Brand, secretary of the Toronto and District Labour Council. John Innes had died in office and his replacement Alfred Cowling decided to contest the 1951 Provincial Election. Former Controller and avowed Communist Stewart Smith made another attempt to return to the board, but finished a distant fifth.

      Results
      Leslie Saunders (incumbent) - 95,838
      Ford Brand - 92,725
      David Balfour (incumbent) - 91,474
      Louis Shannon (incumbent) - 87,440
      Stewart Smith - 31,317
      Frederick Vacher - 20,039


      City council



      Ward 1 (Riverdale)
      John McMechan (incumbent) - acclaimed
      William Allen (incumbent) - acclaimed
      Ward 2 (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
      Joseph Cornish (incumbent) - 7,777
      Beverley Sparling (incumbent) - 6,659
      Perry - 3,809
      Ward 3 (West Downtown and Summerhill)
      Howard Phillips (incumbent) - 5,248
      John McVicar - 4,494
      Wilson - 1,257
      Feeley - 929
      Trottier - 750
      Smith - 722
      Ward 4 (The Annex, Kensington Market and Garment District)
      Francis Chambers (incumbent) - 6,412
      Allan Grossman - 4,381
      Norman Freed - 4,250
      Campbell - 3,290
      Garfunkel - 1,573
      Darell Draper - 1,377
      Reeves - 404
      Ward 5 (Trinity-Bellwoods and Little Italy)
      Philip Givens 7,240
      Ernest Bogart - 7,122
      Harold Menzies - 6,600
      Charles Sims - 5,612
      Segal - 1,526
      Ward 6 (Davenport and Parkdale)
      May Robinson - 12,086
      George Granell (incumbent) - 9,497
      Frank Clifton - 8,993
      Lester Nelson - 5,690
      Ferguson - 3,696
      Wilson - 2,141
      Patrick McKeown - 1,282
      Ward 7 (West Toronto Junction)
      William Davidson (incumbent) - 8,546
      David Sanderson (incumbent) - 7,602
      John Kucherepa- 4,531
      Ward 8 (The Beaches)
      Ross Lipsett (incumbent) - 13,837
      Alex Hodgins (incumbent) - 11,736
      McNulty - 4,018
      William Probert - 3,399
      Banks - 3,290
      Hoolans - 2,200
      John Square - 758
      Ward 9 (North Toronto)
      Roy E. Belyea (incumbent) - acclaimed
      Leonard Reilly - acclaimed
      Results taken from the December 4, 1951 Toronto Star and might not exactly match final tallies.


      Changes


      Ward 7 Alderman David Sanderson died on March 25, 1952; John Kucherepa was appointed Alderman on March 31.


      Outside Toronto




      = North York

      =
      Nelson A. Boylen re-elected as reeve.


      = Scarborough

      =
      Oliver E. Crockford re-elected as reeve.


      References


      Election Coverage. Toronto Star. December 4, 1951

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: