Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Dove Myer Robinson

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Preceded by
  
Keith Buttle

Nationality
  
New Zealand

Succeeded by
  
Colin Kay


Preceded by
  
Roy McElroy

Succeeded by
  
Roy McElroy

Name
  
Dove-Myer Robinson

Dove-Myer Robinson Sir DoveMyer Robinson transportblogconz


Died
  
August 14, 1989, Auckland, New Zealand

Sir Dove-Myer Robinson (15 June 1901 – 14 August 1989) was Mayor of Auckland City from 1959 to 1965 and from 1968 to 1980, the longest tenure of any holder of the office.

Contents

Dove-Myer Robinson Alex with Sir DoveMyer Robinson longest running

He was a colourful character and became affectionately known across New Zealand as "Robbie". He was one of several Jewish mayors of Auckland, although he rejected Judaism as a teenager and became a lifelong atheist. He has been described as a "slight, bespectacled man whose tiny stature was offset by a booming voice and massive ego".

Dove-Myer Robinson pantographpunchcomimagesold201207myerjpg

Life

Dove-Myer Robinson DoveMyer Robinson Auckland region Te Ara Encyclopedia

Born Mayer Dove Robinson in Sheffield, England, he was the sixth of seven children of Ida Brown and Moss Robinson. While his father described himself as a master jeweller, he actually sold trinkets and second-hand furniture, and the family was poor and often on the move. Robinson's mother influenced his upbringing by transmitting the strict values her rabbi father had taught her. His Jewish heritage ensured that he was often targeted by anti-semitic violence in the schools he attended. The family moved to New Zealand in 1914, where his father worked as a pawnbroker. Dove-Myer, as he later called himself (ignoring his Robinson family name), found New Zealand agreeable and lacking in the intermittent persecutions he had previously faced.

Dove-Myer Robinson Urban Legend An interview with DoveMyer Robinson39s

Robinson entered politics in the late 1940s when he led the opposition to a sewage dumping scheme that would have discharged untreated effluent into the Hauraki Gulf. When elected in 1953 as a councillor, he proposed and eventually realised a scheme to break down the sewage in oxidation ponds ('Robbie's ponds') near the Manukau Harbour. His success in the scheme later on helped him gain his first mayoralty of Auckland City. It was in his second term as Mayor that he led the push to found the Auckland Regional Council and he went on to be its first chairman.

Remembrance

Dame Barbara Goodman, former Auckland Mayoress and councillor, was his niece, and spearheaded a campaign for the Auckland City Council to build a statue of him in Aotea Square; the statue was completed in 2002.

Mayoral terms

Robinson lost the 1965 mayoral election by 1134 votes to Roy McElroy, the Citizens and Ratepayers candidate, but in the next election in 1968 he defeated McElroy by 6000 votes.

Death

Robinson died in Auckland on 14 August 1989.

References

Dove-Myer Robinson Wikipedia