Mayor of Whanganui explained

The mayor of Whanganui (previously Wanganui) is the head of the Whanganui District Council. Since 1872, there have been 29 mayors. Andrew Tripe is the current mayor.

History

The Wanganui Town Board was first formed in 1862, and its first chairman was J Handley, who served in that capacity until 1864. The board became a borough council in 1872 until 1924, when Wanganui was granted city status and the mayor was the head of the Wanganui City Council. It continued as a city council until 1989, when Wanganui's city charter was cancelled. Local government reform of 1989 amalgamated various city and council councils – Wanganui District Council includes the old Wanganui City Council, Wanganui County Council and a part of the Waitotara County Council. The motto of the then Wanganui City, and now Wanganui District Council, is 'Sans Dieu Rien' ('Without God, we are nothing').

The first meeting of the Wanganui Council was held on 14 February 1872. Councillor Francis Williamson, who was the last chairman of the town board,[1] proposed councillor William Hogg Watt as the first mayor, which was seconded by councillor Nathan and carried unanimously. Other councillors who attended this first meeting were John Duthie, Jones and Bett.[2] At the end of the first term, Watt was re-elected for another term.[3] [4] Watt resigned from the role on 12 September 1873.[5]

Five days later, councillor William Hutchison was elected the second mayor of Wanganui.[6] Hutchison resigned on 6 February 1874, as he had moved to Wellington to start another newspaper there. He remained in his seat as a Councillor.[7]

Several weeks and many attempted council meetings went by without a new mayor being elected, mostly because some councillors stayed away so that there was no quorum. Finally, on 10 April 1874, Robert Pharazyn was elected as the third mayor of Wanganui.[8]

Edward Churton retired from his mayoralty on 15 December 1875.[9] Churton died on 25 July 1885.[10]

Watt succeeded Churton in 1875 and started the second period of his mayoralty.[11]

James Laird was mayor from 1886 to 1888. He died on 3 September 1902.[12]

Alfred John Parsons was mayor for two separate periods, first from 1888 to 1890[13] and then in 1891–1892.[14] Parsons died on 15 July 1900.[15] [16] Henry Nathan was mayor between the two periods covered by Parsons.

Edward Liffiton was mayor in 1912. In 1916, a modifying order was gazetted so that he could be buried at Heads Road Cemetery. He died in 1923.[17]

Wanganui's most controversial mayor, by far, was well regarded lawyer Charles MacKay who was found guilty of the attempted murder of poet D'Arcy Cresswell – a charge stemming from an attempt to allegedly blackmail Mayor MacKay for homosexual advances. MacKay was arrested, pleaded guilty and imprisoned. He was released from prison in 1927, travelled to England and became a journalist. He was killed in 1929 during riots in Munich, Germany whilst reporting the civil unrest.[18]

Edward Alan Millward OBE was mayor from 1953 to 1962. He retired in 1962. He was succeeded by Reg Andrews OBE of the Labour Party; Andrews retired in 1974. Ron Russell QSO succeeded him and retired in 1983.

The 1983 mayoralty was won by Doug Turney, with Chas Poynter coming second. Poynter was made deputy mayor in 1983 as a consequence. Poynter had served on the Wanganui council from 1977. In 1986, Poynter challenged Turney and was successful, winning with a majority of 1529 votes.[19] In 1989, Poynter increased his majority, defeating challenger John Blaikie by almost 6,000 votes. This was the first election under the new local government boundaries, with Wanganui City incorporating Wanganui County and some of Waitotara County. Blaikie was the chairman of the Wanganui County Council prior to the reorganisation. The new territorial authority was named Wanganui District Council.

In 1992, Poynter was challenged by Wanganui greengrocer Randhir Dahya, a popular Indian businessman. His majority was cut to just 939 votes.[20] Dahya challenged him twice more, in 1995 and 1998, but Poynter easily resisted these challenges, assisted by his handling of the Moutoa Gardens occupation of 1995 and the unfortunate death of his wife, Joy, four months prior to the 1998 election. By 2001, the writing was on the wall, and he regained the mayoralty with just 27% of the vote, warding off four councillor challengers. In 2004, he stood again and was defeated, polling third behind media personality Michael Laws and businessman John Martin with just 20% of the vote.

Laws did not stand again in the 2010 local elections, and Annette Main was elected, to take office in October 2010. Main narrowly defeated Dot McKinnon, who had been deputy-mayor under Laws.[21] Main is the 27th mayor of Wanganui and the first woman to hold the office.[22]

List of mayors

The following list shows the 29 mayors of Wanganui:[23]

NamePortraitTerm
Mayor of the Borough of Wanganui
align=center 1William Hogg Watt1872–1873
align=center 2William Hutchison1873–1874
align=center 3Robert Pharazyn1874
align=center 4Edward Churton1874–1875
align=center (1)William Hogg Watt1875–1878
align=center 5Thomas Bamber1878–1880
align=center (1)William Hogg Watt1880–1881[24]
align=center 6Gilbert Carson1881–1884[25]
align=center 7Frederick Morris Spurdle 1884–1886
align=center 8James Laird1886–1888
align=center 9Alfred John Parsons1888–1890
align=center 10Henry Nathan1890–1891[26]
align=center (9)Alfred John Parsons1891–1892
align=center 11Freeman Jackson1892–1896[27]
align=center 12James Lockhart Stevenson1896–1897
align=center 13Alexander Hatrick1897–1904
align=center 14Arthur Bignell1904–1906
align=center 15Charles Mackay1906–1912
align=center 16Edward Liffiton1912
align=center (15)Charles Mackay1912–1913
align=center 17Tom Williams1913–1915
align=center (15)Charles Mackay1915–1920
align=center (17)Tom Williams1920–1924
Mayor of Wanganui City
align=center 18Hope Gibbons1924–1927
align=center 19Bill Rogers1927–1931
align=center 20Norman Graham Armstrong1931–1935
align=center (19)Bill Rogers1935–1953
align=center 21Edward Millward1953–1962
align=center 22Reg Andrews1962–1974
align=center 23Ron Russell1974–1983
align=center 24Doug Turney1983–1986
align=center 25Chas Poynter1986–1989
Mayor of Wanganui District
align=center 25Chas Poynter1989-2004
align=center 26Michael Laws2004–2010
Mayor of Whanganui District
align=center 27Annette Main2010–2016
align=center 28Hamish McDouall2016–2022
align=center 29Andrew Tripe2022–present[28]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Evening Herald. Tuesday, Feb. 6, 1872.. 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. V . 1387 . 6 February 1872. 2.
  2. News: Council Meeting . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. V . 13814 . 14 February 1872. 2.
  3. News: The Evening Herald. Monday, Dec. 16, 1872. . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. V . 1649 . 16 December 1872. 2.
  4. News: The Evening Herald. Saturday, March 1, 1873 . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. V . 1730 . 1 March 1873. 2.
  5. News: Borough Council . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. VI . 1859 . 13 September 1873. 2.
  6. News: The Evening Herald. Thursday, Sept. 18, 1873 . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. VI . 1900 . 18 September 1873. 2.
  7. News: Borough Council . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Chronicle. XVII . 6310 . 7 February 1874. 2.
  8. News: Borough Council . 30 May 2012 . Wanganui Chronicle . XVII . XVII . 11 March 1874 . 2.
  9. News: The Evening Herald. Tuesday, Dec. 14, 1875. . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. VIII . 2654 . 14 December 1875. 2.
  10. News: Death of Mr E. Churton . 1 June 2012. Wanganui Herald. XX . 5681 . 27 July 1885. 2.
  11. News: Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 . 30 May 2012. Wanganui Herald. VIII . 2656 . 16 December 1875. 3.
  12. News: Death of Mr James Laird . 1 June 2012 . Wanganui Chronicle. XXXXVII . 11727 . 4 September 1902. 4.
  13. News: A Popular Mayor . 1 June 2012. Wanganui Herald. XXIV . 7292 . 17 December 1890. 2.
  14. News: Installation of Mr A. J. Parsons, as Mayor. . 1 June 2012. Wanganui Herald. XXV . 7596 . 16 December 1891. 2.
  15. News: Death of Mr A. J. Parsons . 1 June 2012. Wanganui Chronicle . 16 July 1900. 15000. 2.
  16. News: Obituary . 1 June 2012. Wanganui Herald. XXXIV . 10087 . 16 July 1900. 2.
  17. News: Obituary. 2 June 2012. Hawera & Normanby Star. 26 April 1923. XLII. 6.
  18. Web site: Whanganui mayor shoots poet . New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage. 30 May 2012. 15 May 2012.
  19. News: Former Wanganui mayor Chas Poynter dies. 2 June 2012. The New Zealand Herald. 20 August 2007.
  20. Wanganui Chronicle, 20 October 1992
  21. News: McKinnon ponders life in wake of narrow defeat . 2 May 2020 . . 11 October 2010.
  22. Web site: Beaglehole . Diana . Whanganui region – Government . Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. 30 May 2012. 3 November 2011.
  23. Web site: Our History . www.whanganui.govt.nz . . 19 August 2024 . en-NZ.
  24. News: Installation of Mayor . 30 May 2012 . Wanganui Herald. XV . 4549 . 21 December 1881. 2.
  25. Book: The Cyclopedia of New Zealand – Wellington Provincial District . The Cyclopedia Company Limited . Wellington . 1897 . Borough of Wanganui . 26 April 2010.
  26. Web site: NEW ZEALAND: Miscellaneous data on HARRIS, LOMAX, NATHAN families . family tree circles . 17 October 2010 .
  27. Book: The Cyclopedia of New Zealand – Wellington Provincial District . The Cyclopedia Company Limited. Wellington. 1897. Ex-Mayors. 7 April 2010.
  28. Web site: Whanganui backs first-timer as new mayor . 9 October 2022 . RNZ . Moana . Ellis.