William Riggs
William Charles Riggs (September 21, 1896 – December 20, 1973) was a politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a CCF member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1943 to 1945 who represented the southwestern Ontario riding of Windsor—Walkerville. He was a long time municipal councillor and he briefly served as Mayor of Windsor in 1969. BackgroundRiggs was born in 1896 in Bournemouth, England,[1][2] but moved to Belleville, Ontario, where he was educated.[3] He joined the Canadian Field Artillery in 1915, and spent nearly three years in France during World War I.[3] Riggs trained as a printer in Belleville.[2] Riggs moved to Windsor in 1921,[3] where he worked for 42 years as a linotype printer at the Windsor Star, and retired in 1961. He was highly active as a trade unionist, holding many offices within the Windsor Typographical Union and the Windsor District Trades and Labor Council.[2][3] Riggs was one of the first members of Ontario's Labor Party in the 1930s.[3] In 1935, he accepted his first public position was on the Windsor Library Board.[2] Riggs was married to Gladys and had two sons and two daughters.[4][3] An apartment building in East Windsor is named after him: Riggs Manor at 4365 Wyandotte Street East. Provincial politicsRiggs was elected in a CCF sweep in 1943, defeating the Liberal candidate, David Croll.[3] As an MPP, he served on several Legislative Committees including Printing, Game and Fish, Municipal Law, Education, and Labour. He lost his seat in 1945 to the Progressive Conservative candidate Rev. M.C. Davies.[5][3] He was again selected as the CCF candidate for the Windsor-Walkerville riding in the 1948 Ontario election,[5] but lost again to Davies.[2] He subsequently ran for the CCF in the 1949 federal election in Essex East against cabinet minister Paul Martin, Sr.[2] In 1964 he finished second in a provincial election in the riding of Windsor-Sandwich.[2] Municipal politicsIn the 1940s, he was defeated in his first election for alderman in Windsor's Ward 4.[2] He was elected as alderman for Ward Three in Windsor in 1946 and was acclaimed in 1948 and 1950.[2] He was defeated in 1952 and 1954 elections for the Board of Control, but was re-elected as alderman in 1956, a position he held for the following 13 years.[2] When John Wheelton resigned as mayor of Windsor in 1969, Riggs replaced him for a period of five months. Four alderman received two votes each during the city council vote for a replacement. Riggs won the job by drawing a queen from a pack of cards, the method used to break the tie.[2][6] He was the first mayor to lead the Windsor Santa Claus Parade.[7] He was replaced by Frank Wansbrough at the beginning of 1970. References
External links |