Lode Craeybeckx

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Lode Craeybeckx (24 November 1897 - 25 July 1976) served as Mayor of Antwerp, Belgium from 1947 until his death in 1976, becoming the longest serving mayor of the city in its history.

[edit] Biography

François Ferdinand Louis Craeybeckx, better known as Lode, was born in Antwerp in 1897. His father was a police man from Limburg, while his mother came from Liège. He studied at the Athenaeum of Antwerp before going to the new University of Ghent in 1917. For collaborating with the German occupiers during the First World War, he was sent to prison for five years, but he was released after two years.[1]

Lode Craeybeckx married Irma Lauwers in 1921. They had two children, Hilde and Herman. From 1925 until 1931, he works as a journalist for the newspaper De Volksgazet.[1]

In 1932, Craeybecks started to work as a lawyer and entered the world of politics. He became a councillor in Deurne for the Belgian Socialist Party. The same year, he entered the Belgian Parliament, where he would stay until 1968. He was the successor of Willem Eekelers as mayor of Antwerp in 1947, and remained in that position for nearly thirty years, a record for the city. Lode Craeybeckx dies in 1976.[1]

[edit] Achievements

During his run as mayor, Antwerp was massively changed. The RUCA university (1965) and the UIA university (1971) were founded (both were merged with the older UFSIA in the University of Antwerp in 2003). The Middelheim, an open air museum for modern sculptures, was created in 1951. The city got improved traffic infrastructure and the city and Port of Antwerp were massively expanded.[1]

During this period, many of the older buildings of the city, ranging from the Middle Ages to the 19th century, was replaced by modern high rise buildings, of which many have been criticized for being bland or ugly.[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e De Antwerpse Burgemeesters (Dutch). Gazet van Antwerpen. Retrieved on 2008-01-25.
Political offices
Preceded by
Willem Eekelers
Mayor of Antwerp
1947–1976
Succeeded by
Leo Delwaide