• Source: 1953 Toronto municipal election
    • Municipal elections were held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on December 7, 1953. Incumbent mayor Allan Lamport won an unexpectedly close race against school board chairman Arthur J. Brown. This election was the first for councils in the municipality of Metropolitan Toronto which would be created on January 1, 1954 and was composed of 14 municipalities: the City of Toronto, the towns of New Toronto, Mimico, Weston and Leaside; the villages of Long Branch, Swansea and Forest Hill, and the townships of Etobicoke, York, North York, East York, and Scarborough.
      A Metropolitan Toronto Council had come into being on April 15, 1953 and was made up of the Metro Chairman, Frederick Gardiner, who had been appointed by the province, the Mayor of Toronto, the City of Toronto's two most senior Controllers, nine senior aldermen from each of the City of Toronto (the top finisher in each ward), and the twelve suburban mayors and reeves.


      Toronto mayor


      Lamport had been elected mayor in 1951, and was expected to face no major opposition to his reelection after powerful Controller Leslie Saunders opted not to run. The final result ended up being closer than expected as Brown, who had never run for city council before, came within 10,000 votes. A central issue of the campaign was the introduction of rent control, which Lamport opposed and Brown favoured. Part way through his term, Lamport resigned and was succeeded by Saunders.

      Results

      Allan Lamport (incumbent) - 55,064
      Arthur J. Brown - 46,080


      Board of Control


      All four Board of Control members were reelected. Labour representative Ford Brand also campaigned on rent control, and increased his vote to almost win second place. Missing a seat was former Alderman Joseph Cornish on his second attempt for a Board seat. As a result of Saunders appointment as mayor alderman Ross Lipsett was appointed to the Board of Control. The unexpected death of Louis Shannon led to a second board appointment, this time of Alderman Roy E. Belyea. The most senior two Controllers in terms of votes also sat on Metro Toronto Council.

      Results
      Leslie Saunders (incumbent) - 62,397
      Louis Shannon (incumbent) - 57,635
      Ford Brand (incumbent) - 54,635
      David Balfour (incumbent) - 51,393
      Joseph Cornish - 46,701
      Harry Bradley - 18,686
      Harry Hunter - 14,194


      City council



      Due to the acclamation in Ward 1 City Council chose William Allen to represent the ward on Metro Council
      In each ward, the alderman with the most votes was declared the senior alderman and sat on both Metro Council and Toronto City Council

      Ward 1 (Riverdale)
      William Allen (incumbent) - acclaimed
      Ken Waters (incumbent) - acclaimed
      Ward 2 (Cabbagetown and Rosedale)
      William Dennison (incumbent) - 4,821
      Edgar Roxborough (incumbent) - 4,254
      C.M. Edwards - 2,547
      George Taylor - 1,761
      Ward 3 (West Downtown and Summerhill)
      Howard Phillips (incumbent) - 4,016
      John McVicar (incumbent) - 3,919
      Richard Newson - 1,062
      Ward 4 (The Annex, Kensington Market and Garment District)
      Allan Grossman (incumbent) - 5,380
      Herbert Orliffe - 4,600
      Robert Laxer - 1,507
      Bernard Levitt - 1,224
      Walton Rose - 956
      John Anture - 585
      Ward 5 (Trinity-Bellwoods and Little Italy)
      Joseph Gould (incumbent) - 7,809
      Philip Givens (incumbent) - 7,393
      Stewart Smith - 3,305
      Ward 6 (Davenport and Parkdale)
      May Robinson (incumbent) - 9,810
      Frank Clifton (incumbent) - 8,382
      Lester Nelson - 4,889
      Hector MacArthur - 2,437
      Patrick McKeown - 1,238
      Ward 7 (West Toronto Junction)
      William Davidson (incumbent) - 5,837
      John Kucherepa (incumbent) - 4,472
      John Duncan - 3,670
      John Weir - 968
      Ward 8 (The Beaches)
      Ross Lipsett (incumbent) - 10,470
      Alex Hodgins (incumbent) - 9,632
      William Probert - 3,149
      James Davis - 2,143
      William Square - 893
      Ward 9 (North Toronto)
      Roy E. Belyea (incumbent) - 12,485
      Leonard Reilly (incumbent) - 11,261
      David Burt - 5,444
      Frederick Vacher - 1,314
      George Rolland - 802
      Results are taken from the December 8, 1953 Toronto Star and might not exactly match final tallies.


      Changes


      Controller Louis Shannon died on February 16, 1954. On February 23 Controller Ford Brand was appointed Metro Councillor; Ward 9 Alderman Roy E. Belyea was appointed Controller; Ward 9's remaining Alderman Leonard Reilly was appointed Metro Councillor and David Burt was appointed Alderman.
      Mayor Allan Lamport resigned on June 28, 1954 to become Vice-Chairman of the Toronto Transit Commission. Council accepted his resignation by a vote of 19-2 and then unanimously elected Controller Leslie Howard Saunders as Mayor. On July 7 Controller David Balfour was appointed Metro Councillor; Ward 8 Alderman Ross Lipsett was appointed Controller; Ward 8's remaining Alderman Alex Hodgins was appointed Metro Councillor and William Probert was appointed Alderman.


      Suburbs




      = East York

      =
      Reeve
      (incumbent)Harry G. Simpson 5,564
      Marie Taylor 3,556
      Source: "Suburbs Vote Light, Few Changes Result", The Globe and Mail (1936-Current); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]07 Dec 1953: 1


      = Etobicoke

      =
      Reeve
      Beverley Lewis - acclaimed
      Deputy Reeve
      Edward A. Horton - acclaimed
      Councillors
      Ward 1 (2 elected)

      William H.M. Laughlin - acclaimed
      Murray Johnson - acclaimed
      Ward 2 (2 elected)

      Irene Beatie - 1,566
      William R. Hodgson - 1,367
      Andrew MacDonald - 1,135
      Irene Beatie is the first woman ever elected to Etobicoke Town Council.
      Ward 3 (2 elected)

      Charles Devlin - acclaimed
      Gerald Daub - acclaimed
      Ward 4 (1 elected)

      John M. Allen - 554
      James P. Holmes - 353
      (source: The Globe and Mail; Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]08 Dec 1953, pg 9)


      = Forest Hill, Toronto

      =
      Reeve
      Charles O. Bick (acclaimed)
      Source: "Last Ballot Dec. 11: No Changes So Far In Metro Council Slate", The Globe and Mail (1936-2016); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]07 Dec 1953: 5


      = Leaside

      =
      Mayor
      Howard T. Burrell - 1,694
      D.E. Brown - 1,033
      Arthur Donahue - 642
      Council (4 elected at large)
      Joseph Banigan - 2,176
      Howard Dickinson - 2,112
      Richard Clarke - 1,982
      Charles H. Hiscott - 1,956
      E. Shipley Birrell - 1,449
      Leonard Hart - 1,335


      = Long Branch

      =
      Reeve
      Marie Curtis (acclaimed)
      Deputy Reeve
      Crawford Bell (acclaimed)
      Source: "Suburbs Vote Light, Few Changes Result", The Globe and Mail (1936-Current); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]07 Dec 1953: 1


      = Mimico

      =
      Mayor
      Archibald D. Norris (acclaimed)
      Source: "Mimico Mayor Sets a Record With 12 Terms", The Globe and Mail (1936-2016); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]04 Dec 1953: 4.


      = New Toronto

      =
      Mayor
      John L. (Jack) Strath 1,279
      Harold Trickett 574
      New Toronto's election occurred on December 12.
      Source: "Strath Wins Mayoralty In New Toronto Vote", The Globe and Mail (1936-Current); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]14 Dec 1953: 5.


      = North York

      =
      Reeve
      (incumbent)Fred J. McMahon - acclaimed


      = Scarborough

      =
      Reeve
      Oliver E. Crockford (incumbent) - 8,605
      George Mason - 4,071
      George Barker - 1,673


      = Swansea

      =
      Reeve
      (incumbent)Dorothy Hague (acclaimed)


      = Weston

      =
      Mayor
      (incumbent)Richard C. Seagrave 1,404
      John P. Allan 723
      Source: "Suburbs Vote Light, Few Changes Result", The Globe and Mail (1936-Current); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]07 Dec 1953: 1


      = York

      =
      Reeve
      (incumbent)Frederick W. Hall 9,604
      Charles McMaster 3,921
      Source: "Suburbs Vote Light, Few Changes Result", The Globe and Mail (1936-Current); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]07 Dec 1953: 1


      References



      Election Coverage. Toronto Star. December 8, 1953

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