A. Thomas Alsbury
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Albert Thomas Alsbury (1904 - 21 July 1990) was mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia from 1959 to 1962. He was born in Edinburgh, Scotland and in 1907 moved to Vancouver. He studied education at the University of British Columbia where he received a degree.[1] He was later a vice-principal at Grandview High School of Commerce in Vancouver, before the school and himself were relocated to Vancouver Technical Secondary School.[2]
Tom Alsbury defeated Frederick Hume by 11 000 votes to become mayor. He left this office after 1962 and then worked for the University of British Columbia, although by that time his policies led to the loss of support from the Non-Partisan Association.[3]
He formed the senior citizen advocacy group Pensioners for Action Now in 1972.[1]
[edit] Reference
- ^ a b Canadian Press. "Ex-Vancouver mayor formed senior's group", The Globe and Mail, 23 July 1990, p. D11.
- ^ "Grandview High to Be Closed Down". The Vancouver Sun. March 7, 1950. p.15
- ^ Mackie, John. "The mayors of Vancouver", The Vancouver Sun, 30 November 2002, p. B4.
[edit] External link
- Vancouver History: list of mayors, accessed 26 August 2006
Preceded by Frederick Hume |
Mayor of Vancouver 1959–1962 |
Succeeded by William Rathie |