Mayor of Nelson | |
---|---|
Style | His/Her Worship |
Seat | Civic House, 110 Trafalgar Street, Nelson |
Term length | Three years |
Inaugural holder | Joseph Dodson |
Formation | 1874 |
Deputy | Rohan O'Neill-Stevens |
The mayor of Nelson is the head of the municipal government of Nelson, New Zealand, and presides over the Nelson City Council. The mayor is directly elected using a single transferable vote electoral system. [1] The current mayor is Nick Smith, who was elected in September 2022. [2]
Joseph Dodson was elected as the first mayor of Nelson on 1 May 1874 [3] by the city councillors under the Municipal Corporations Act 1867. He was unanimously elected to the position. Dodson was a former member of the Nelson Board of Works. Councillor Fell noted that Dodson had taken great interest in the welfare of Nelson and was an upright gentleman with integrity.
The new council came into immediate conflict with the provincial government over finances. Nelson went bankrupt, the mayor resigned on 8 January 1875, and so did most of the councillors. [4] [5] A special meeting of the remaining Councillors was held on 12 January 1875 to appoint a new mayor but no one was forthcoming. A public meeting was held on the Friday to determine the wishes of the ratepayers. [6]
Despite the meeting it was not until 26 February 1875 that a new mayor, Joseph Levien was appointed. [7] Levien is credited with having set systems in place and employed capable staff that the financial crisis was able to be overcome. [4] [5] Levien died after only a short time in office on 7 June 1876.
Edward Everett was the third mayor. He was elected unopposed on 16 June 1876 [8] and resigned on 1 September 1877 in order to travel to England. William Reid Waters was appointed by the councillors to fill the vacancy left by Everett. Waters was mayor until 19 December 1877 when Joseph Dodson was elected for a second time in his place. [5]
When Dodson retired on 22 November 1881 Everett was elected mayor for a second term. Everett was mayor until 1882. [5]
Charles Fell was mayor for five years until 1887. His second wife was a daughter of the Arthur Atkinson. Fell was a painter. [5] [9]
John Sharp succeeded Fell. Sharp had previously represented the City of Nelson electorate in Parliament. [5] [10]
Francis Trask was mayor for nine years (1890–1899). During his tenure, Rocks Road (now part of State Highway 6) was built along the coast, and Queens Gardens were established. [4]
Trask was succeeded by Joseph Auty Harley, who was installed on 20 December 1899. [11] Harley was succeeded by Henry Baigent, who was mayor in 1901–1904 and again in 1905–1906. [12]
Jesse Piper was mayor in 1904–1905. He lost the mayoralty in 1905 to Baigent, [12] but succeeded again in 1906 [13] over the candidate put forward by Baigent. [14] In the 1910 election Piper stood against Thomas Pettit and lost by 768 votes to 969. [15]
Thomas Field was mayor from 1911 to 1913. [4] From the following year, he was MP for Nelson for one term. [16]
William Lock replaced Thomas Field as mayor after a fairly terse campaign against William Snodgrass in 1913. The following year he won again with only a 5-vote majority, but lost in 1915 to Charles Harley. Harley did not stand in 1917 and Snodgrass was elected.
Lock had continued to campaign for the mayoralty and was re-elected in 1921, ousting Snodgrass. Lock remained mayor until 1927 when Walter Moffatt came to power. Moffat retired in 1935 due to ill health and George Page was elected in his place. In the early 1940s, Page suffered from a prolonged period of ill health and was replaced by Edgar Neale, the deputy mayor, in 1941.
Edgar Neale was mayor from 1941 to 1947. He resigned after he became the Member of Parliament for Nelson. [17]
Joseph Auty Harley was mayor from 1947 to 1956. [18] He was succeeded by Stanley Russell. Russell was mayor from 1956 to 1962.
Douglas Strawbridge then served as mayor from 1962 to 1968. He was succeeded by Trevor Horne who served for one term from 1968 to 1971, and two subsequent terms as Deputy Mayor from 1974 to 1980. [19]
Civil engineering contractor and former National Secretary of the New Zealand Contractors Federation Roy McLennan became mayor from 1971 to 1980. [20]
McLennan was followed by Peter Malone who had unsuccessfully stood as the National Party candidate for the Nelson electorate in 1963, 1976 and 1978 and in the Tasman electorate in 1975. He served under McLennan as a councillor from 1974 to 1980 and then served four terms as mayor from 1980 to 1992.
Former Labour Party Member of Parliament for Nelson Philip Woollaston then served as mayor from 1992 to 1998.
Paul Matheson successfully beat Woollaston on his second attempt in 1998, having lost to him in 1992. [21] He served 3 terms as mayor, and later re-stood as a Councillor and served for three terms from 2010 to 2019 including two as deputy mayor under Rachel Reese. [22]
Matheson was succeeded by former Richmond Borough Council and inaugural Tasman District Council mayor Kerry Marshall who served for one term from 2007 to 2010. [23] Aldo Miccio won the 2010 mayoralty, with the incumbent getting third place. [24] Rachel Reese won the 2013 mayoralty, becoming Nelson’s first woman mayor. [25] Two-term councillor Reese had been Deputy Mayor for Kerry Marshall. [26] Her deputy mayor from 2013 to 2019 was former Mayor Paul Matheson. [27] In 2019, Reese appointed Judene Edgar as deputy mayor, the first time Nelson had a woman mayor and deputy mayor. [28] Edgar, a first-term Nelson City councillor had previously been a three-term councillor for neighbouring Tasman District Council. [29]
The list below shows all mayors of Nelson since the first Nelson City Council meeting in April 1874. [30]
Name | Portrait | Term | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Joseph Dodson | 1874–1875 | [31] | |
2 | Joseph Levien | 1875–1876 | [32] | |
3 | Edward Everett | 1876–1877 | [32] | |
4 | William Waters | 1877 | ||
Joseph Dodson | 1877–1881 | 2nd period | ||
Edward Everett | 1881–1882 | 2nd period | ||
5 | Charles Yates Fell | 1882–1887 | [32] | |
6 | John Sharp | 1887–1890 | [32] | |
7 | Francis Trask | 1890–1899 | [32] | |
8 | Joseph Auty Harley | 1899–1901 | [32] | |
9 | Henry Baigent | 1901–1904 | [32] | |
10 | Jesse Piper | 1904–1905 | [32] | |
Henry Baigent | 1905–1906 | 2nd period | ||
Jesse Piper | 1906–1910 | 2nd period | ||
11 | Thomas Pettit | 1910–1911 | ||
12 | Thomas Field | 1911–1913 | [33] | |
13 | William Lock | 1913–1915 | ||
14 | Charles Harley | 1915–1917 | ||
15 | William Snodgrass | 1917–1921 | ||
William Lock | 1921–1927 | 2nd period | ||
16 | Walter Moffatt | 1927–1935 | ||
17 | George Page | 1935–1941 | ||
18 | Edgar Neale | 1941–1947 | ||
19 | Joseph Auty Harley | 1947–1956 | ||
20 | Stanley Russell | 1956–1962 | ||
21 | Douglas Strawbridge | 1962–1968 | ||
22 | Trevor Horne | 1968–1971 | ||
23 | Roy McLennan | 1971–1980 | ||
24 | Peter Malone | 1980–1992 | ||
25 | Philip Woollaston | 1992–1998 | ||
26 | Paul Matheson | 1998–2007 | ||
27 | Kerry Marshall | 2007–2010 | ||
28 | Aldo Miccio | 2010–2013 | ||
29 | Rachel Reese | 2013–2022 | ||
30 | Nick Smith | 2022–present [2] |
Name | Term | Mayor |
---|---|---|
Thomas Field | 1910 [34] | Pettit |
Edgar Neale | 1933–1941 [35] | Moffatt |
Page | ||
Joseph Auty Harley | 1944–1947 [36] | Neale |
Edgar Neale | 1947–1950 [37] | Harley |
Frederick John Lock | 1950–1953 [36] | |
Robert Francis Stenhouse | 1953–1956 [36] | |
Betsy Eyre | 1959–1962 [38] | Russell |
Stan Whitehead | 1962–1965 [39] | Strawbridge |
Betsy Eyre | 1965–1971 [40] | |
Horne | ||
Trevor Horne | 1974–1980 | McLennan |
Pat Tindle | 1980–1986 [36] | Malone |
Darcy Blair | 1986–1989 [36] | |
Seddon Marshall | 1989–1992 [36] | |
Leonard Ardell | 1992–1995 [41] | Woollaston |
Tui France | 1995–1998 [36] | |
Jo Raine | 1998–2001 [36] | Matheson |
Gail Collingwood | 2001–2007 [42] | |
Rachel Reese | 2007–2010 [43] | Marshall |
Alison Boswijk | 2010–2013 [44] | Miccio |
Paul Matheson | 2013–2019 [45] | Reese |
Judene Edgar | 2019–2022 [46] | |
Rohan O'Neill-Stevens | 2022–present [47] | Smith |
Nelson is a consolidated city and unitary authority on the eastern shores of Tasman Bay at the top of the South Island of New Zealand. It is the oldest city in the South Island and the second-oldest settled city in the country; it was established in 1841 and became a city by British royal charter in 1858. It is the only consolidated city-region in the nation.
Dame Kerry Leigh Prendergast is a New Zealand politician who served as the 33rd Mayor of Wellington between 2001 and 2010, succeeding Mark Blumsky. She was the second woman to hold the position, after Fran Wilde.
The Mayor of Invercargill is the head of the municipal government of Invercargill, New Zealand, and leads the Invercargill City Council. The mayor is directly elected using a First Past the Post electoral system every three years. The current mayor is Nobby Clark. Invercargill also has a deputy mayor that is chosen from the council. There have been 44 mayors so far.
The Mayor of Porirua is the head of the municipal government of Porirua, New Zealand, and presides over the Porirua City Council. The mayor is directly elected using the single transferable vote electoral system. There have been six mayors since the establishment of the borough council in 1962: the current mayor is Anita Baker, who was elected in October 2019.
Joseph Reid Dodson JP, was the first Mayor of Nelson in New Zealand from 1874. He was a prominent brewer and Resident Magistrate in Nelson and his sixth generation descendants still operate a brewery in the city.
Edward Everett was the Mayor of Nelson in the 19th century for two periods.
Paul Kenneth Matheson is a New Zealand politician. He was mayor of Nelson from 1998 to 2007, and was subsequently a Nelson city councillor from 2010 to 2019.
Cataldo (Aldo) Miccio is a New Zealand former local-body politician. He was the Mayor of Nelson for one term from 2010 to 2013.
The Mayor of New Plymouth is the head of municipal government of New Plymouth District, New Zealand. Since the 2022 local elections, the mayor is elected directly using the single transferable vote electoral system; prior to that, first-past-the-post voting was used. The current mayor is Neil Holdom.
Rachel Hadley Reese is a New Zealand local-body politician. She was the mayor of Nelson from 2013 to 2022. She was Nelson's first female mayor.
William Raymond Wallace is a New Zealand politician. He served as mayor of Lower Hutt from 2010 to 2019.
The mayor of Tasman is the head of the municipal government of Tasman District, New Zealand. The mayor is directly elected using the first-past-the-post electoral system.
The 2016 New Zealand local elections were triennial local elections to select local government officials and District Health Board members. Under section 10 of the Local Electoral Act 2001, a "general election of members of every local authority or community board must be held on the second Saturday in October in every third year" from the date the Act came into effect in 2001, meaning 8 October 2016.
The 2016 Wellington City mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections and was held on 8 October to determine the next Mayor of Wellington. The incumbent was Celia Wade-Brown, who was first elected in the 2010 mayoral election. Wade-Brown did not seek re-election. Her title was pursued by her deputy, Justin Lester, councillors Jo Coughlan, Andy Foster, Helene Ritchie and Nicola Young, former mayor of Porirua City Nick Leggett and independent candidates Keith Johnson and Johnny Overton.
The 2019 New Zealand local elections were triennial elections to select local government officials and district health board members. Under section 10 of the Local Electoral Act 2001, a "general election of members of every local authority or community board must be held on the second Saturday in October in every third year" from the date the Act came into effect in 2001, meaning 12 October 2019.
Tahere Paul Eagle is a New Zealand politician and former member of the New Zealand House of Representatives for the Rongotai electorate from 2017 to 2023. He was a Wellington City Councillor from 2010 to 2017 and was the first person of Māori descent to be Deputy Mayor of Wellington, but was defeated in a landslide when he sought the mayoralty as an independent candidate in 2022.
The 2019 Nelson mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections that were held on 12 October 2019 to elect the Mayor of Nelson, New Zealand.
The mayor of Richmond was the head of the municipal government of Richmond, New Zealand. The position existed from 1891, when the Borough of Richmond was formed, until the borough was amalgamated into Tasman District in the 1989 local government reforms.
The 2022 Invercargill mayoral election took place on 8 October 2022 as part of the New Zealand local elections. Incumbent mayor Tim Shadbolt unsuccessfully sought a tenth term against nine other candidates, losing to his deputy Nobby Clark.
Rohan Tomas Sean O'Neill-Stevens is a New Zealand politician and deputy mayor of Nelson City Council. In 2019, he was elected as the youngest councillor of Nelson City Council. He is a member of the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, convened their 2023 general election campaign, and previously served as the Co-convenor of the party's youth wing.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)