William H. Munro

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Preceded byoffice created
Succeeded byoffice abolished
William H. Munro
1st Mayor of the City of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
In office
April 16, 1912  January 13, 1913
Preceded byoffice created
Succeeded byThomas Edward Simpson
25th Mayor of the Town of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario
In office
January 9, 1911  April 16, 1912
Preceded byThomas Edward Simpson
Succeeded byoffice abolished
Personal details
Born(1860-08-07)7 August 1860
Appleton, Ontario, Canada
Died17 January 1918(1918-01-17) (aged 57)
SpouseCatherine Munro (nee Morrison)
Children2 sons (Gerald, Kenneth Harold)

William Hilliard Munro (August 7, 1860 – January 17, 1918) was a Canadian politician who was the first mayor of the city of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.

Munro was born August 7, 1860, in Appleton, Ontario — today, Mississippi Mills — the third son of John and Sarah Munro, Lanark County farmers.[1]

A machinist, he moved to Sault Ste. Marie in 1896 to serve as a mechanical advisor to industrialist Francis Clergue. For a time he was superintendent of Algoma Iron Works, a foundry and machine shop Clergue established to build equipment for his paper plant and other industries.[2][3] He was later employed as the district's inspector of public roads for the government of Ontario.[4] In this capacity, he brought the first large truck to Sault Ste. Marie, which played a role in its development by helping to move people and materials around the community.[5]

Municipal politics

Munro served seven one-year terms as a Sault Ste. Marie town councillor and two terms as its mayor.

He was first elected to town council in 1902 and reelected in 1903, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1909 and 1910.[6]

He was elected town mayor in 1911 and reelected in 1912.[7] In that role, he led the initiative to have the town incorporated as a city, petitioning the provincial government for the change.[8] The Act to incorporate the City of Sault Ste. Marie was assented to on April 16, 1912, and provided that the existing town council headed by Mayor Munro would become the first council of the new city until the end of its term early the following year.[9]

Munro served another four terms as a city alderman, being elected to one year terms in 1913, 1914, 1917 and 1918. He ran for mayor in the 1915 election but lost to John Alexander McPhail.[10]

Disappearance and death

Munro mysteriously vanished on an evening in early 1918. His disappearance captured newspaper headlines and resulted in an international search that involved police as far west as Alberta.

At around 7:30 p.m. on January 17, Munro left his home at 138 East Street for an evening out.[11] He was seen leaving the Franklin House hotel in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan for home later that night. Munro flagged down a bus and asked to be taken to the river where a row boat was operating as a ferry over a break in the ice during the winter months. The bus driver told him that the ferry had stopped operating for the night.[12] Munro was not seen again.

His disappearance alarmed the community. Fearing that he could have attempted to cross the river and fallen through the ice, a search party was organized by police on both sides of the river. There having been no witnesses to his disappearance or body found, he continued to be presumed missing. News of the former mayor's disappearance was carried through both countries and gripped readers of newspapers in Montreal,[13] Ottawa,[14] Lansing,[15] Battle Creek,[16] Brandon,[17] Kingston,[18] and Moncton.[19]

Eventually the search widened to Alberta, based on the idea that Munro could have had interests in the province. More than a week after his disappearance, the Edmonton Journal reported that a $100 reward had been posted and that police in the city were looking for Munro, described as “six feet tall, large stature and erect, and wearing a blue suit with a hairline white stripe” covered by a long black chinchilla overcoat and a peaked sealskin cap with ear flaps.[20] Another area newspaper wildly speculated that “the missing man may have lost his memory, wandered west and became ill from a nervous breakdown.”[21]

Three months having passed, in May 1918 the city council declared Munro's ward two seat vacant[22] and elected a replacement to fulfill the remainder of his term.[23]

On August 18, seven months after he went missing, a boater discovered Munro's remains on the St. Marys River. Still in his fur coat, Munro's body surfaced near the government dock on the Canadian side. The coroner, aided by Thomas Simpson, Munro's successor as mayor, and an undertaker himself, positively identified the partially decomposed body from his clothing and effects in his pockets.[24] The coroner listed Munro's cause of death as a drowning that occurred January 17, 1918.[25]

A funeral was held for him at city hall the morning following his body being recovered. Despite there having been no public announcement, the service was well attended by the community and officials.[26]

An editorial in The Sault Daily Star said "Mr. Munro occupied a unique place in the hearts of his townsmen, as was apparent from his practically continuous service on council since 1902, and the memories of his kindly nature as well as his eminent public services will not soon be forgotten."[27]

Munro was buried near his birthplace at St. Fillon's Cemetery in Beckwith, Lanark County, Ontario.[28]

Personal life

Electoral Results

References

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