William Harold Malkin: Difference between revisions

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Malkin was responsible for the construction of the Malkin Bowl in Stanley Park, and named it for his wife, Marion.
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He presided over a newly expanded Greater Vancouver which formed by merging the existing city of Vancouver with the municipalities of Point Grey and South Vancouver.<ref>{{cite news | publisher=[[The Vancouver Sun]] | date=30 November 2002 | page=B4 | first=John | last=Mackie | title=The mayors of Vancouver }}</ref>
He presided over a newly expanded Greater Vancouver which formed by merging the existing city of Vancouver with the municipalities of Point Grey and South Vancouver.<ref>{{cite news | publisher=[[The Vancouver Sun]] | date=30 November 2002 | page=B4 | first=John | last=Mackie | title=The mayors of Vancouver }}</ref>

Malkin was responsible for the construction of the [[Malkin Bowl]] in [[Stanley Park]], and named it for his wife, Marion.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 11:04, 23 September 2015

Mayor Malkin, right, with Vice-Admiral Vernon Haggard on the occasion of the visit of HMS Despatch and HMS Dauntless at Vancouver, August 1930

William Harold Malkin (30 July 1868 – 11 October 1959) was the 21st mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia from 1929 to 1930, after serving as chairman of the Vancouver Board of Trade in 1902. He was born in Burslem, Staffordshire, England.

He presided over a newly expanded Greater Vancouver which formed by merging the existing city of Vancouver with the municipalities of Point Grey and South Vancouver.[1]

Malkin was responsible for the construction of the Malkin Bowl in Stanley Park, and named it for his wife, Marion.

References

  1. ^ Mackie, John (30 November 2002). "The mayors of Vancouver". The Vancouver Sun. p. B4.

External links

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