List of mayors of London, Ontario explained

Post:Mayor
Body:London
Flag:Flag of London, Ontario, Canada.svg
Flagcaption:Flag of London
Incumbent:Josh Morgan
Incumbentsince:November 15, 2022
Style:
Member Of:London City Council
Reports To:London City Council
Residence:London
Seat:London City Hall
Appointer:Directly elected by residents of London
Salary: (2013)[1]
Termlength:Four years, renewable
Inaugural:Simeon Morrill
Website:Mayor's Office

The mayor of London is head of London City Council. The 65th and current mayor of the city is Josh Morgan. London was incorporated as a town in 1848, and became a city in 1855. Originally, mayors were elected on January 1 for one-year terms.

The following is a list of mayors of London:

Chain of office

Since 1957, each sitting mayor has been honoured and presented with the chain of office to wear during their term of office. The chain of office is to be worn by the mayor during council sessions and other official occasions, including opening and closing ceremonies such as London's hosting of national and international sports and athletic competitions. The chain contains medallions engraved with subjects of local significance. The chain is also engraved with the names of the mayors who have worn it since it was commissioned. There are currently eleven names of previous mayors engraved on the chain.[2]

Town of London

!Name!Term Start!Term End
Simeon Morrill18481848
Thomas C. Dixon18491849
Simeon Morrill18501851
Edward Adams18521853
Marcus Holmes18541854

City of London

!Name!Term Start!Term End!Notes
Murray Anderson18551855
William Barker18561856
Elijah Leonard, Jr.18571857
David Glass18581858
William McBride18591859
James Moffatt 18601860
Francis Evans Cornish18611864
David Glass18651866
Frank Smith18671867
William Simpson Smith 18681868
John Christie18691869
Simpson Hackett Graydon18691870
James Mitchell Cousins18711871
John Campbell18721872
Andrew McCormick18731873
Benjamin Cronyn, Jr.18741875Fled Canada for Vermont due to fraud; he is related to actor Hume Cronyn
Duncan Cameron Macdonald18761876
Robert Pritchard18771877
Robert Lewis18781879
John Campbell18801881
Edmund Meredith18821883
18841884
Henry Becher 18851885
Thomas Daniel Hodgens18861886
James Cowan18871888
George Taylor18891891
William Melville Spencer18921892
Emanuel Thomas Essery18931894
John William Little18951897
John Dolway Wilson18981899
19001901
Adam Beck19021904
19051905
19061907
Samuel Stevely19081909
John Henry Alfred Beattie19101911
Charles Milton Richardson Graham19121914
Hugh Allan Stevenson19151915
William Moir Gartshore19161916
Hugh Allan Stevenson19161917
19181919
Edgar Sydney Little19201921
John Cameron Wilson19211922
George Albert Wenige19231925
John Mackenzie Moore19261927
George Albert Wenige19281928
William John Kirkpatrick19291930
Edwy George Hayman19311932
Ferrier Baker Kilbourne19331933
George Albert Wenige19341935
Thomas Kingsmill19361938
Joseph Allan Johnston19391940
William J. Heaman19411945
Frederick George McAlister19461946
George Albert Wenige19471948
Ray Ameredith Dennis19491949
George Albert Wenige19501950
Allan Johnson Rush 19511955
George Ernest Beedle19551955
Ray Ameredith Dennis 19551957
Joseph Allan Johnston19581960
Gordon Stronach19611968
Herbert Joseph McClure19681971
James Frederick Gosnell19721972
Jane Elizabeth Bigelow19721978
Martin Alphonse Gleeson19791985
Thomas Charles Gosnell19861994
Dianne Haskett19942000
Anne Marie DeCicco-Best20002010
Joe Fontana20102014
Joni Baechler20142014
Matt Brown20142018
20182022
Josh Morgan2022

2017 reform

In spite of some controversy about this move, London was the first city in Canada (in May 2017) to decide to move a ranked choice ballot for municipal elections starting in 2018. Voters will mark their ballots in order of preference, ranking their top three favourite candidates. An individual must reach 50 per cent of the total to be declared elected; in each round of counting where a candidate has not yet reached that target, the person with the fewest votes is dropped from the ballot and their second or third choice preferences reallocated to the remaining candidates, with this process repeating until a candidate has reached 50 per cent.[3]

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: London council hikes its pay 1.5%. 3 March 2014. London Free Press. 16 April 2013.
  2. Web site: Chain of Office. City of London. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20141027211337/https://www.london.ca/city-hall/mayors-office/Pages/Chain-of-Office.aspx. 2014-10-27.
  3. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/london-ranked-ballot-1.4095014 "London, Ont., votes to become 1st Canadian city to use ranked ballots"