Hiram E. McCallum Politician

Hiram Emerson McCallum (August 14, 1899 – January 13, 1989) was a mayor of Toronto, Ontario from 1948-1951. He was also a member of the Orange Order in Canada.Born in 1899 at East Caledon, Ontario, his first job was at The Mail and Empire newspaper as a clerk in the advertising department. From there, he started his own printing plant in 1931. Concern about pollution in Toronto's Eastern beaches caused McCallum to join a small group of other concerned citizens. Then in 1941, he became an alderman for Ward 8. From that start, he moved up (in 1946) to vice-chairperson of the city of Toronto's board of control. It was in 1948 that then mayor Bob Saunders resigned to become chairman of Ontario Hydro. McCallum thus became mayor.As mayor he started Toronto's Yonge Street line and worked towards a regional government. Then in 1950, some 10 years after becoming a politician, he opened a new sewage treatment plant that would reduce pollution in Toronto's Eastern Beaches – his original reason for becoming a politician.In 1952 he was made assistant general manager of the Canadian National Exhibition, then in 1964 made general manager. This would be a position he would hold until his retirement at age 65.

Personal facts

Hiram E. McCallum
Birth dateAugust 14, 1899
Birth place
Caledon Ontario
Date of deathJanuary 13, 1989
Place of death
Guelph

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Office holder

officeMayor of Toronto
successor
Allan A. Lamport

Hiram E. McCallum on Wikipedia