List of mayors of Saint John, New Brunswick

The Mayor of the City of Saint John is the head of the elected municipal council of Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada. Saint John Common Council consists of a mayor (chair) and 10 councillors. The city has a ward system with four of roughly equal population. This municipal arrangement was first adopted in the 2008 municipal election after a plebiscite held October 9, 2007. The mayor is directly elected along with two councillors that run at large. Since 2021, the deputy mayor has been chosen by Common Council after each election, having previously been the councillor at large who gained a plurality of votes. The current deputy mayor is John MacKenzie. Each ward elects two councillor.

Mayor of Saint John
Incumbent
Donna Reardon
since June 7, 2021
StyleYour Worship
Term length4 years (Since 2004)
Inaugural holderGabriel George Ludlow
FormationMay 18, 1785
Salary$88 000 ($18 000 additional allowance), 2012[1]
WebsiteCity of Saint John

Since the incorporation of Saint John in 1785, the mayor has served as the chief representative of the city. Officeholders were first appointed by the Governor of New Brunswick, under an order in council. By the end of the end of the nineteenth century, the mayor was elected by the alderman of Common Council. In 1854, the office was directly elected by Saint John residents. As head of the largest city in New Brunswick, many mayors have served as elected officials at the federal and provincial level both before and after their tenure.

Since 1785, 67 individuals have held the office of mayor. Notably, Samuel Davis, 1977-1980, served as the first elected Jewish Mayor of Saint John. In 1983 Elsie Wayne was elected the first woman mayor. She served until 1993. While serving only two years, Thomas J. Higgins was the first Catholic Mayor of Saint John. The former, Don Darling, was elected May 9, 2016. Donna Reardon, incumbent, was elected May 25, 2021.

List of Mayors

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Appointed by Governor-In-Council
No. Mayor Term in office Notes
1 Gabriel George Ludlow
(1736-1808)[2]
May 18, 1785[3] – 1795[4]
2 William Campbell
(1742-1823)
1795[5] – 1816[4]
3 John Robinson
(1762–1828)
1816 – 1828 Died in office
4 William Black

1828 – 1829
5 Lauchlan Donaldson
(?-1873)[6]
1829 – 1832
6 William Black

1832 – 1833
7 John M. Wilmot
(1775-1847)
1833 – 1834
8 Benjamin L. Peters

1834 – 1835
9 William H. Street

1835 – 1836
10 John Robertson
(1799-1876)
1836 – 1837
11 Robert F. Hazen

1837 – 1840
12 William Black

1840 – 1843
13 Lauchlan Donaldson
(?-1873)[6]
1843 – 1847
14 John R. Partelow
(1795-1865)
1847 – 1848
15 William H. Street

1848 – 1849
16 Robert D. Wilmot
(1809-1891)
1849 – 1850
17 Henry Chubb

1850 – 1851
Elected indirectly by Common Council
No. Mayor Term in office Notes
18 Thomas Harding

1851 – 1852
19 William O. Smith

1852 – 1853
20 James Olive

1853 – 1854
Elected directly by residents
No. Mayor Term in office Notes
21 James Olive

1854 – 1855
22 William O. Smith

1855 – 1859
23 Thomas Mcavity

1859 – 1863
24 Isaac Woodward

1863 – 1866
25 Aaron Alward
(1828-1886)
1866 – 1870
26 Thomas M. Reed

1870 – 1874
27 A. Chipman Smith

1864 – 1877
28 Sylvester Z. Earle
(1822-1888)
1877 – 1879
29 Charles R. Ray

1879 – 1881
30 Simeon Jones

1881 – 1884
31 J. Mcgregor Grant

1884 – 1885
32 J.S. Boies Deveber
(1829-1908)
1885 – 1887
33 Henry J. Thorne

1887 – 1889
34 George A. Barker

1889 Died in office
35 I. Allen Jack

July 7, 1889 – August 9, 1889 As Recorder Under City Charter
36 W. Albert Lockhart

1889 – 1891
37 Thomas W. Peters

1891 – 1894
38 George Robertson

1894 – 1898
39 Edward Sears

1898 – 1900
40 John Waterhouse Daniel
(1845-1933)
1900 – 1902
41 Walter W. White
(1862-1952)
1902 – 1906
42 Edward Sears

1906 – 1908
43 Thomas H. Bullock

1908 – 1910
44 James H. Frink
(?-1933)[7]
1910 – 1916
45 Robert T. Hayes

April 24, 1916[8][9] – 1920
46 E. Allen Schofield

1920 – 1922
47 H. R. McLellan
(1865-1939)
1922 Recalled following a by-election
48 G. Frederick Fisher

1922 – 1924
49 Frank L. Potts
(1867-1926)
1924 – 1926 Died in office
50 Walter W. White
(1862-1952)
1926 – 1932
51 James W. Brittain
(?-1961)[10]
April 11, 1932[11] – 1936
52 David Laurence MacLaren
(1893-1960)
1936 – 1940
53 Charles R. Wasson
(?-1967)[12]
1940 – 1944
54 James D. McKenna
(1874-1949)[13]
1944 – 1948
55 Ernest W. Patterson

1948 – 1950
56 George E. Howard

1950 – 1952
57 Ernest W. Patterson

October 20, 1952[14] – 1954
58 Gilbert B. Peat

1954 – 1956
59 William W. Macaulay

October 15, 1956[15] – 1958
60 David Laurence MacLaren
(1893-1960)
1958 – September 7, 1960 Died in office
61 James A. Whitebone

September 7, 1960 – October 17, 1960 Completed MacLaren's mayoral term as Deputy Mayor[16]
62 Eric Teed
(1926-2010)
1960 – 1964
63 Stephen Weyman
(1922-1997)
1964 – 1966
64 Arthur L. Gould

1966
64 Arthur L. Gould

January 1967 – June 1967
65 Joseph A. Macdougall

1967 – 1969
66 H. Avard Loomer
(1915-1969)
June 22 – July 18, 1969[17] Died in office
67 James E. Calvin

October 6, 1969 – 1971
68 Bob Lockhart
(1931-2023)
June 1971[18] – 1974
69 Edis A. Flewwelling

June 10, 1974[19] – 1977
70 Samuel Davis
(1914-1996)
1977 – 1980
71 Bob Lockhart
(1931-2023)
1980 – 1983
72 Elsie Wayne
(1932-2016)
1983 – 1993
73 Thomas J. Higgins
(1931-1995)
1994 – 1995
74 Shirley McAlary

1995 – May 11, 2004[20]
75 Norman McFarlane

2004 – 2008
76 Ivan Court

2008 – 2012
77 Mel Norton

2012 – 2016
78 Don Darling

2016 – 2021
79 Donna Reardon

2021 – present

References

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  1. ^ "New Brunswick Mayors' Salaries and Expenses". CBC News NB. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  2. ^ "Biography – LUDLOW, GABRIEL GEORGE – Volume V (1801-1820)". www.biographi.ca. Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  3. ^ "Descendants sought;trees to honour mayors". Telegraph-Journal. February 28, 2000. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  4. ^ a b Hopkins, J. Castell (John Castell) (1898). Canada: an encyclopædia of the country; the Canadian dominion considered in its historic relations, its natural resources, its material progress and its national development, by a corps of eminent writers and specialists. Toronto : Linscott Pub. Co. p. 297. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  5. ^ "1785". The Saint John Centennial Advertiser. October 1, 1883. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  6. ^ a b Smith, Hilary Paige (July 20, 2011). "Ceremony to honour 19th century mayor". Telegraph-Journal. Retrieved April 19, 2024.
  7. ^ "Dr. James H. Frink Dead". The Gazette. March 1, 1933. p. 9. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  8. ^ "St. John, N.B." Morning Sentinel. April 25, 1916. p. 3. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  9. ^ "Hayes Is Elected Mayor of St. Johns". The Bangor Daily News. April 25, 1916. p. 15. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  10. ^ "J. W. Brittain". The Canadian Press. The Toronto Star. March 13, 1961. p. 39. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  11. ^ "Brittain Elected Saint John Mayor". The Gazette. April 12, 1932. p. 15. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  12. ^ "C. R. Wasson". The Gazette. August 29, 1967. p. 33. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  13. ^ "James D. McKenna Dies in Saint John". Canadian Press. The Ottawa Journal. March 16, 1949. p. 36. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  14. ^ "Saint John Elects Mayor". Canadian Press. The Kingston Whig-Standard. October 21, 1952. p. 13. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  15. ^ "Saint John Mayor". Canadian Press. The Windsor Star. October 16, 1956. p. 11. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  16. ^ "Will Serve As Mayor Until Oct. 17 Voting". The Evening Times-Globe. September 14, 1960. p. 17. Retrieved September 27, 2024.
  17. ^ "Saint John mayor named". Canadian Press. The Hamilton Spectator. October 7, 1969. p. 54. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  18. ^ "Parachuting Mayor". The Sault Star. September 22, 1971. p. 42. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  19. ^ "3 new mayors in N.B. cities". Canadian Press. The Montreal Star. June 11, 1974. p. 58. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  20. ^ "Election full of tight races; Miramichi mayoral race bounces back and forth; Saint John ousts veteran mayor Shirley McAlary". Times & Transcript. May 11, 2004. ProQuest 422861767. Retrieved April 28, 2024.