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1951: Charlotte Whitton becomes Canada's first big city woman mayor
• After 1941, Whitton championed women's equality, although she opposed more liberal divorce laws and criticized married women who worked. She became famous for her quote, "Whatever women do they must do twice as well as men to be thought half as good. Luckily, this is not difficult."
• An outspoken and controversial mayor, Whitton constantly sparred with her male colleagues, verbally and sometimes physically. The Globe and Mail reported on Nov. 14, 1962 that Whitton had flailed a fellow controller "with her fists in a wild board of control meeting." She was re-elected mayor of Ottawa in 1952, 1954, 1960 and 1962. Defeated in 1964, she continued as an alderman until retiring from politics in 1972.
• Whitton was born in Renfrew, Ont., on March 8, 1896. She attended Queen's University during the First World War, graduating in 1917 with academic medals in history and English. She was the first woman editor of the Queen's Journal and played on the women's field hockey, ice hockey and basketball teams. Dr. Charlotte Whitton died on Jan. 25, 1975, in Ottawa, Ontario.
• In 1936, several years before Whitton became a big city mayor, the town of Webbwood in northern Ontario elected Barbara Hanley as mayor, making her the first female mayor anywhere in Canada.
Program: CBC News Roundup
Broadcast Date: Oct. 2, 1951
Host: Bill Reid
Reporter: Frank Swanson
Duration: 2:32
Photo: National Archives: PA-121981
Last updated: July 5, 2012
Page consulted on May 8, 2013
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