Sam McBride
Sam McBride | |
---|---|
Picture of McBride's portrait painted by J. Russell | |
41st Mayor of Toronto | |
In office 1928–1929 | |
Preceded by | Thomas Foster |
Succeeded by | Bert Wemp |
In office 1936–1936 | |
Preceded by | James Simpson |
Succeeded by | William D. Robbins |
Personal details | |
Born | Samuel McBride July 13, 1866 Toronto, Ontario |
Died | November 10, 1936 70) Toronto, Ontario | (aged
Profession | Businessman (lumber industry) |
Religion | Protestant |
Sam (Samuel) McBride (July 13, 1866 – November 10, 1936) was a two-time Mayor of Toronto serving his first term from 1928 to 1929 and his second term in 1936 which ended prematurely due to his death.
Politics
He was born in Toronto to an Irish Protestant family (his grandfather came from County Antrim) and was a committed Orangeman. He made his fortune in the lumber industry. He became an alderman in the early 1900s and served on Toronto City Council for 30 years. He lived at 351 Palmerston Boulevard and on the Toronto Island.
He ran unsuccessfully for mayor three times before being elected in the 1928 election, defeating incumbent Thomas Foster. He was then defeated by Bert Wemp in the 1930 election. He returned to the mayor's office in the 1936 election defeating incumbent James Simpson.
Among his accomplishments are helping to create the Toronto Transit Commission, building the Coliseum at the Canadian National Exhibition and overseeing early development of the city's waterfront. He was considered a candidate of the workers and was supported by the left-leaning Toronto Daily Star and opposed by the more conservative Toronto Telegram during his time in politics. On city council he was one of the main proponents of an eight-hour work week and giving women the vote.[1]
He served for many years on the city's police commission. Professor Michiel Horn of York University attributes the Commission's decision to ban all public meetings held in languages other than English to McBride and his concern about Jewish trade union and socialist organizers holding meetings in Yiddish in Toronto's Garment District. "Like all mayors at that time", says Horn, "McBride was strongly pro-British and anti-communist." [2]
Harness racing
McBride was also a harness racing enthusiast and was a founding member and charter director of the Canadian Standardbred Horse Society in 1909 and served as the society's president in 1919 and 1920. He was also a founding director of the Canadian National Trotting and Pacing Harness Horse Association. In 1907, McBride drove his King Bryson to a world record of 2:19½ for trotters over a half-mile track on ice at Plattsburg, New York.
Toronto Island
McBride had a cottage on the Toronto Island and represented the Island as its Alderman.[3] Nathan Phillips recalled that as an alderman, McBride had a terrible temper. He once got into a fist fight with a fellow alderman and once threw a can of beans at alderman Joe Beamish, missing Beamish, but leaving a dent in the panelling of the council chamber.[4] In 1935, he was instrumental in stopping the building of a tunnel to the Toronto Island that was intended to facilitate an Island Airport.[5] After his death, the City built the Island Airport, without a tunnel, served by ferries ever since.
In recognition of his service to the Toronto Island community, one of the ferries operating from downtown Toronto to the Toronto Island was named after him in 1939, and is still in service as of 2013.
Death
McBride was the first Toronto mayor to die in office. He is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto. He was 70 years old.
Notes
- ↑ "McBride Deserves to be Mayor." Toronto Daily Star. January 2, 1928. pg. 6
- ↑ "Non-English meetings banned in Depression-era Toronto". YFile. November 2003. Archived from the original on 2011-12-02. Retrieved 2011-12-02.
- ↑ Gibson(1984), p.134
- ↑ Gibson(1984), p.150
- ↑ Gibson(1984), pp. 192-193
References
- Gibson, Sarah (1984). More Than an Island. Toronto, Canada: Irwin Publishing. ISBN 0-7720-1446-9.