Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand
Encyclopedia
The Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand is the head of the municipal government of Hamilton
, New Zealand
, and presides over the Hamilton City Council.
In the 2010 Local Government elections
, Julie Hardaker
was elected as mayor, defeating incumbent Bob Simcock
.
Note: Mayoral elections were held annually 1878–1915, and have been triennial since 1935. Elections were held in December, after 1901 in April or May, and since 1947 have taken place in either October or November.
Hamilton, New Zealand
Hamilton is the centre of New Zealand's fourth largest urban area, and Hamilton City is the country's fourth largest territorial authority. Hamilton is in the Waikato Region of the North Island, approximately south of Auckland...
, New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses and numerous smaller islands. The country is situated some east of Australia across the Tasman Sea, and roughly south of the Pacific island nations of New Caledonia, Fiji, and Tonga...
, and presides over the Hamilton City Council.
In the 2010 Local Government elections
New Zealand local elections, 2010
The 2010 New Zealand local elections were triennial elections to select local government officials and district health board members. All elections are conducted by postal ballot, with election day being Saturday 9 October 2010.Elected were:...
, Julie Hardaker
Julie Hardaker
Julie Hardaker is the Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand. Born in New Zealand, she was self-employed in Australia in the 1980s. After graduating from the University of Waikato, she joined the Hamilton law firm McCaw Lewis Chapman and eventually became a partner and held senior management roles. She...
was elected as mayor, defeating incumbent Bob Simcock
Bob Simcock
Robert Simcock is a New Zealand politician. He was a Member of Parliament and then Mayor of Hamilton.-Early career:Simcock attended St John's College before graduating from the University of Waikato with a M Soc Sci ....
.
History
In May 2007, the Hamilton City Council elected Bob Simcock to replace Michael Redman who resigned to become the city's chief executive. Simcock was confirmed to stand for the position in the October 2007 local body elections. He was defeated in 2010 by Julie Hardaker.List of Mayors of Hamilton
Name | Entered Office | Left Office | Reason for leaving office | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Isaac Richardson Vialou | February 1878 | December 1878 | Did not contest the following election |
2 | John Blair Whyte John Blair Whyte John Blair Whyte was a 19th century Member of Parliament and Mayor in the Waikato Region of New Zealand.He was the Mayor of Hamilton from December 1878 to December 1879, when he resigned.... |
December 1878 | December 1879 | Did not contest the following election |
3 | Thomas Dawson | December 1879 | March 1880 | Resigned |
4 | Dr Charles Beale | March 1880 | December 1880 | Did not contest the following election |
5 | John Knox | December 1880 | December 1883 | Did not contest the following election |
6 | Robert Peat | December 1883 | December 1884 | Defeated |
7 | William Australia Graham | December 1884 | May 1887 | Resigned |
8 | Charles John Wright Barton | June 1887 | January 1888 | Resigned |
9 | Isaac Coates | January 1888 | October 1889 | Resigned |
10 | William Jones | October 1889 | December 1889 | Did not contest the following election |
Isaac Coates, 2nd period | December 1889 | December 1892 | Did not contest the following election | |
11 | John Parr | December 1892 | December 1893 | Did not contest the following election |
12 | William Dey | December 1893 | December 1899 | Did not contest the following election |
13 | George Edgecumbe | December 1899 | May 1901 | Did not contest the following election |
14 | Robert William Dyer | May 1901 | May 1903 | Did not contest the following election |
Charles John Wright Barton, 2nd period | May 1903 | October 1903 | Resigned | |
William Dey, 2nd period | October 1903 | May 1905 | Did not contest the following election | |
15 | James Shiner Bond | May 1905 | May 1909 | Did not contest the following election |
16 | James Alexander Young James Alexander Young James Alexander Young was a New Zealand politician of the Reform Party.He was Mayor of Hamilton from 1909 to 1912.He then represented the Waikato electorate from 1911 to 1922, and then the Hamilton electorate from 1922 to 1935, when he was defeated.He was Minister of Health from 1926 to 1928 in... |
May 1909 | May 1912 | Did not contest the following election (was elected as MP for Waikato, 1911) |
17 | Arthur Edward Manning | May 1912 | November 1915 | Resigned |
18 | John Edwin Hammond | December 1915 | June 1916 | Died in office |
19 | John Robert Fow John Robert Fow John Robert Fow was Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand for four terms: June 1916 to May 1917, August 1918 to May 1919, May 1920 to May 1931, and May 1933 to May 1938.... |
June 1916 | May 1917 | Did not contest the following election |
20 | John William Ellis | May 1917 | August 1918 | Died in office |
John Robert Fow, 2nd period | August 1918 | May 1919 | Did not contest the following election | |
21 | Percy Harold Watts | May 1919 | April 1920 | Resigned |
John Robert Fow, 3rd period | May 1920 | May 1931 | Defeated | |
22 | Dr Frances Dewsbury Pinford | May 1931 | May 1933 | Defeated |
John Robert Fow, 4th period | May 1933 | May 1938 | Did not contest the following election | |
23 | Harold David Caro | May 1938 | November 1953 | Defeated |
24 | Roderick Alastair MacDonald Braithwaite | November 1953 | December 1959 | Did not contest the following election |
25 | Dennis Rogers Dennis Rogers Denis Rogers was a doctor , and latterly the Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand from 1959 to 1968, elected for three terms. During his mayorship, he campaigned for the poor and for an international airport to be built in Hamilton... |
December 1959 | October 1968 | Defeated |
26 | Michael John Minogue | October 1968 | May 1976 | Resigned |
27 | Bruce Craig Beetham Bruce Beetham Bruce Craig Beetham was an academic and politician from New Zealand, whose career spanned the 1970s and early 1980s.A lecturer at Hamilton's University of Waikato and at the Hamilton Teacher's Training College, he was elected leader of the Social Credit Party in 1972, at a time when the party was... |
May 1976 | October 1977 | Did not contest the following election |
28 | Sir Ross Malcolm Jansen Ross Malcolm Jansen Sir Ross Malcolm Jansen was mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand from 1977 to 1989.-Biography:Jansen was born on 6 September 1932 in Carterton, and was educated in the Wairarapa and at Victoria University... |
October 1977 | November 1989 | Defeated |
29 | Margaret Anne Evans Margaret Evans Margaret Evans was the Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand from 1989 to 1998, succeeding Ross Malcolm Jansen. She is the chairman of Skycity Hamilton.-References:... |
November 1989 | November 1998 | Retired |
30 | Russell Matthew Rimmington | November 1998 | November 2001 | Defeated |
31 | David Joseph Braithwaite | November 2001 | November 2004 | Defeated |
32 | Michael Redman | November 2004 | May 2007 | Resigned to take up position as CEO of Hamilton City Council |
33 | Bob Simcock Bob Simcock Robert Simcock is a New Zealand politician. He was a Member of Parliament and then Mayor of Hamilton.-Early career:Simcock attended St John's College before graduating from the University of Waikato with a M Soc Sci .... |
23 May 2007 | 31 October 2010 | Named interim Mayor until local government elections in October, then elected. Defeated in 2010 Elections. |
34 | Julie Hardaker Julie Hardaker Julie Hardaker is the Mayor of Hamilton, New Zealand. Born in New Zealand, she was self-employed in Australia in the 1980s. After graduating from the University of Waikato, she joined the Hamilton law firm McCaw Lewis Chapman and eventually became a partner and held senior management roles. She... |
1 November 2010 |
Note: Mayoral elections were held annually 1878–1915, and have been triennial since 1935. Elections were held in December, after 1901 in April or May, and since 1947 have taken place in either October or November.
Sources
- Gibbons, P.J. (1977), Astride the River. Published for the Hamilton City Council by Whitcoulls Limited, pp317–318 and Hamilton City Council Annual Plans.
- Hamilton City Council Annual Statement of Accounts and Waikato Times index at Hamilton City Libraries.
- Darryl Pike, Archivist, Hamilton City Libraries (Personal communication).