Ken Whillans
Kenneth Gilmour 'Ken' Whillans | |
---|---|
46th Mayor of Brampton | |
In office 1982 – September 1990 | |
Preceded by | James E. Archdekin |
Succeeded by | Paul Biesel |
Personal details | |
Born |
August 8, 1927 Ottawa, Ontario |
Died |
August 24, 1990 Prince Edward Island |
Political party | Progressive Conservative |
Spouse(s) | Edna Whillans |
Children | 1 |
Kenneth Gilmour 'Ken' Whillans (8 August 1927 –24 August 1990) served as Mayor of the City of Brampton from 1982 to 1990.
Personal life and family
Whillans was born in Ottawa. He had a twin brother, Don.[1] Son Doug Whillans has run for public office on multiple ballots, was successful in 2014 and now serves at City Councillor for Wards 2 and 6.[2]
As Alderman
Whillans led efforts to revamp Citizens Advisory Committees while in office as an alderman.[3]
Mayor of Brampton
Whillans was elected mayor in 1982 following the death of James Archdekin, who died while in office of a heart attack. Whillans ran against Terry Miller in the two-man race. Leo Archdekin was favoured as a candidate by the local media[4] but chose not to run.[5]
The same election saw five aldermen win their seats by acclaimation.[6])
Possible replacement as for Davis as MPP
With Premier of Ontario William G. Davis announcing that he would not seek re-election in the 1985 Ontario general election, Whillans considered seeking the Progressive Conservative nomination in the Brampton riding against Bob Callahan, an alderman on Brampton city council since 1969, who had won the Liberal party nomination. uture Brampton mayor Peter Robertson would lose the nomination to Jeff Rice,[7] despite being favoured in polls.[8]
Rice ultimately lost to Callahan (45.6%) in the 1985 Ontario general election, as Frank Miller's PC party barely grasped to their power.
Death
Whillans drowning while vacationing with his family in Prince Edward Island, on 24 August 1990. He was replaced as mayor by alderman Paul Biesel. Biesel stood for re-election, but later dropped out of the running.
Legacy
Whillans has several landmarks named in his honour in Brampton:
- The Ken Whillans Resource Management Area which is a provincially significant wetland swamp stretching for 48 km from Terra Cotta to Palgrave, from the Caledon Trailway to the Credit River, on the eastern boundary of Inglewood village, and is officially part of the town of Caledon.
- Ken Whillans Square located at 2 Wellington Street West adjacent to Brampton City Hall of Brampton Ontario and houses the Brampton Cenotaph
- Ken Whillans Drive runs parallel to the Etobicoke Creek Trail between Vodden Street and Church Street.
- The Whillans Lake off of Highway 10 north of Brampton near Caledon, Ontario
- The ‘Butterfly’ is a 4 ft x 6 ft painting owned by the Corporation of the City of Brampton, and on view in their city hall. The butterfly in this work is symbolic of the late Ken Whillans; if the viewer blocks out the butterfly from their vision, the entire mood of the painting apparently changes, signifying the loss felt by the citizens of Brampton {www.lyndencowan.com/gallery/butterfly.html}.
- Whillans Gate is a 122 unit development built in 1991. It is located near the corner of Queen and Kennedy Streets in Brampton.
References
- ↑ Our new mayor(s)
- ↑ http://www.brampton.ca/EN/City-Hall/CouncilOffice/Doug-Whillans/Pages/Biography.aspx
- ↑ Whillans sparks talk of revamping CACs
- ↑ rchdekin keeping mum about his political future
- ↑ Archdekin not in race
- ↑ The race for council seats is on: five acclaimed for another term
- ↑ "Meet the Conservative hopefuls", Brampton Guardian, 20 Mar 1985, p. 5, column 1
- ↑ Robertson the leader, poll shows