Robert W. White
2nd Mayor of Scarborough, Ontario
In office
1969–1972
Preceded byAlbert Campbell
Succeeded byPaul Cosgrove
Personal details
Born1922
Scarborough, Ontario
Died1985 (aged 64)
NationalityCanadian
SpouseEdna
Children4

Robert W. White (1922 — 1985) was mayor of Scarborough, Ontario from 1969 until 1972; the second person to hold the office.[1]

White was a businessman who operated a florist business, James White & Sons, founded by his grandfather in 1920 and still operated by the White family as of 2022.[2]

He was elected a school trustee in 1956 before being elected to Scarborough Township Council in 1959. When Scarborough mayor Ab Campbell was appointed Metro Chairman in 1969, Scarbrough council acclaimed White to succeed him as mayor and he went on to be elected outright in the 1969 municipal election.[1][3]

During his tenure in office, the Scarborough Civic Centre and Scarborough Town Centre were planned and built.[1]

White was embroiled in a scandal when he accepted a free flight from a land developer so that he would return to Scarborough from Halifax, Nova Scotia in time to vote for a public housing project in which the developer was involved. Earlier, in 1960 when he was a town councillor, White proposed a bylaw that zoned an area that included his florist business' two acre Kennedy Street property for apartment buildings and failed to declare a conflict of interest. This vote also became an issue during the 1972 election.[4] The controversies led to his defeat in the 1972 mayoral election by Paul Cosgrove.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "R.W. White was ex-mayor of Scarborough". Toronto Star. January 18, 1985. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  2. "Send Funeral Flowers to Funeral Homes in Scarborough Toronto & the GTA".
  3. "Scarborough gets Robert White as successor to Mayor Campbell". Globe and Mail. October 5, 1969. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  4. "No conflict, White declares". Globe and Mail. September 7, 1972. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.