Joseph Schubert (politician)
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Joseph Schubert | |
|---|---|
| Acting Mayor of Montreal | |
| In office August 29, 1927 – November 1927 | |
| Preceded by | J.B. Rochon |
| Montreal City Councillor | |
| In office 1924–1939 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1889 |
| Died | March 7, 1952 (aged 62–63) Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
| Party | Labour Party |
| Occupation | Labour leader |
Joseph Schubert (1889 - 7 March 1952)[1] was a Canadian politician, who served on Montreal City Council from 1924 to 1939.[2] Originally from Romania, Schubert was a prominent labour unionist in the city,[3] and was the only Labour Party representative on Montreal's city council.[2] One of his first prominent actions as a city councillor was a speech protesting police harassment of participants in the city's 1924 May Day parade.[4]
In 1931, he built a public bathhouse at the corner of Bagg and St. Lawrence, which still stands today as the Schubert Bath (official French name: Bain Schubert).[5]
He served for three months as the city's acting mayor, commencing August 29, 1927, under mayor Médéric Martin.[6] (Despite the title "acting mayor", however, he was never the city's official leader; in modern terms, his role would be more accurately understood as that of a deputy mayor or a mayor pro tem.) Until the appointment of Michael Applebaum as interim mayor in 2012, he was the highest ranking Jewish official in the history of Montreal's municipal government.