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Mayor of Palmerston North

Mayor of Palmerston North

FieldValue
postMayor
bodyPalmerston North
insigniaFile:Palmerston North coat of arms.png
insigniasize100
insigniacaptionCoat of arms of Palmerston North
imageMayor Grant Smith (cropped).jpg
imagecaptionMayor Grant Smith in July 2015
incumbentGrant Smith
incumbentsince2015
inauguralGeorge Snelson
styleHis/Her Worship
termlengthThree years, renewable
formation1877
websiteOfficial website
deputyDebi Marshall-Lobb

The mayor of Palmerston North is the head of the municipal government of Palmerston North, New Zealand, and presides over the Palmerston North City Council. The current mayor is Grant Smith, who became mayor in a February 2015 by-election. This resulted from the resignation of Jono Naylor in October 2014 after his election to the House of Representatives. Since the 2013 election, Palmerston North is one of the few councils that uses the single transferable vote electoral system for the election of mayor.

Voting system

Council elections were annually at first, and biennial since 1914. The mayor is directly elected using a single transferable vote electoral system, starting with the 2013 election, and with a first past the post system earlier. Elections are held every three years.

History

The Borough Council was established on 12 July 1877. At the time, Palmerston North was an isolated village in the midst of a native forest that covered inland Manawatu. The population was approximately 800 people. The first elections on 9 August 1877 returned a council with nine members, including George Snelson as the first mayor. Snelson is regarded as the founding father of Palmerston North.

On 1 August 1930, Palmerston North was officially gazetted as a city, the 7th settlement in New Zealand to have reached the then-threshold of 20,000 inhabitants. With that, the Borough Council became a city council.

Jono Naylor was first elected mayor in 2007, and resigned that position after being elected to the House of Representatives in the as a list MP for the National Party. Grant Smith was elected in his place in 2015, with the previous deputy mayor Jim Jefferies having been acting mayor in the intervening period.

There have been 29 holders of the position. The longest-serving was Gus Mansford, who held the post for 16 years. Jill White was the first female mayor in 1998, since followed by Heather Tanguay in 2004.

Three mayors have held non-consecutive terms:

  • George Snelson (4 separate periods)
  • James Linton
  • William Thomas Wood

Five mayors also served as members of Parliament:

  • William Thomas Wood (1902–1908)
  • Jimmy Nash (1918–1935)
  • Blair Tennent (1945–1954; 1957–1964)
  • Jill White (1993–1998)
  • Jono Naylor (2014–2017)

Of those, Nash and Tennent have fulfilled the role of mayor and member of parliament concurrently:

  • Nash for five years (1918–1923)
  • Tennent for two years (1957–1959)

List of mayors of Palmerston North

6th Mayor, Solomon Abrahams with his wife in {{circa}} 1910
15th Mayor, [[Jimmy Nash]], in 1928

The following persons have served as mayor of Palmerston North:

NameTerm
1George Snelson
2James Linton
3Frits Jenssen
George Snelson, 2nd time
James Linton, 2nd time
4Alexander Ferguson
5Ludolph Georg West
6Solomon Abrahams
George Snelson, 3rd time
7Robert Edwards
8William Park
9William Thomas Wood
10Henry Haydon
George Snelson, 4th time
William Thomas Wood, 2nd time
11Charles Dunk
12Edward Orr Hurley
13Maurice Cohen
14Richard Essex
15Jimmy Nash
16Frederick Joseph Nathan
17Archibald James Graham
18Gus Mansford
19Geoffrey Tremaine
20Blair Tennent
21Gilbert Rennie
22Desmond Barry Black
23Brian Elwood
24Paul Rieger
25Jill White
26Mark Bell-Booth
27Heather Tanguay
28Jono Naylor
29Grant Smith

List of deputy mayors of Palmerston North

Died in office

NameTermMayor
Solomon Abrahams1906–1907Cohen
Unknown1907–1921
Stephen Lancaster1921–1923Nash
Frederick Jackson1923–1925Nathan
Archibald James Graham1925–1927
Unknown1927–Graham
Meldrum Alfred Eliott1930
Joe HodgensAtkinsonNeill4h31Hodgens, Joseph29 December 2025}}Mansford
Geoffrey Tremaine1936–1947
Unknown1947–Tremaine
F.G. Opie1950
Unknown
David Thomas Spring1958–1970Tennent
Rennie
Black
Unknown–1974
Gordon Brown1974–1976Elwood
Unknown1976–
Gordon Robert Kear–1983
Unknown1983–1985
Bernard John Forde1985–1998Rieger
Jim Jefferies1998–2001White
Alison Wall2001–2004Bell-Booth
John Hornblow2004–2010Tanguay
Naylor
Jim Jefferies2010–2015
Duncan McCann2015–2016Smith
Tangi Utikere2016–2020
Aleisha Rutherford2020–2022
Debi Marshall-Lobb2022–present

References

References

  1. "1910s". Palmerston North City Council.
  2. (4 February 2014). "Single Transferable Voting (STV)". Palmerston North City Council.
  3. "STV Information". The Department of Internal Affairs.
  4. "Elected members".
  5. "1870s". Palmerston North City Council.
  6. "1930s". Palmerston North City Council.
  7. Annabell, John B. (14 October 2007). "Election Results 2007". Palmerston North City Council.
  8. Townend, Lucy. (4 October 2014). "Naylor confirmed as MP". [[Manawatu Standard]].
  9. (10 February 2015). "Grant Smith elected". Manawatu Standard.
  10. (6 October 2014). "Mayoral by-election to be held in February 2015". [[Palmerston North City Council]].
  11. "1990s". Palmerston North City Council.
  12. "2000s". Palmerston North City Council.
  13. (1940). "A Dictionary of New Zealand Biography : A–L". [[Department of Internal Affairs (New Zealand).
  14. Matheson, Ian Roderick. (2003). "Council and community: 125 years of local government in Palmerston North 1877–2002". Palmerston North City Library.
  15. "1880s". Palmerston North City Council.
  16. "1890s". Palmerston North City Council.
  17. "1900s". Palmerston North City Council.
  18. "1920s". Palmerston North City Council.
  19. "1940s". Palmerston North City Council.
  20. "1950s". Palmerston North City Council.
  21. "1960s". Palmerston North City Council.
  22. "1970s". Palmerston North City Council.
  23. "1980s". Palmerston North City Council.
  24. (12 December 1913). "Personal Items". [[The Dominion (Wellington).
  25. (3 September 1931). "Obituary". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  26. (5 September 1931). "Obituary". [[Auckland Star]].
  27. (1940). "A Dictionary of New Zealand Biography : M–Addenda". [[Department of Internal Affairs (New Zealand).
  28. (27 April 1932). "Obituary". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  29. (14 March 1933). "Obituary". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  30. Cyclopedia Company Limited. (1897). "The Cyclopedia of New Zealand : Wellington Provincial District". [[The Cyclopedia of New Zealand]].
  31. (10 September 1906). "Untitled". [[Manawatu Standard]].
  32. "Solomon Abrahams, Mayor - Manawatū Heritage".
  33. (24 April 1923). "The Mayoralty". [[Manawatu Standard]].
  34. (21 August 1923). "The Mayor's Absence". [[Manawatu Times]].
  35. (21 April 1925). "The Mayor Entertains". [[Manawatu Times]].
  36. (26 April 1927). "Page 1 Advertisements Column 5". [[Manawatu Times]].
  37. (3 December 1926). "Page 1 Advertisements Column 4". [[Manawatu Times]].
  38. (11 November 1925). "Page 1 Advertisements Column 6". [[Manawatu Times]].
  39. (6 March 1930). "Canadian visitor has praise for New Zealand's social conditions". [[Manawatu Times]].
  40. {{DNZB. Atkinson. Neill. 4h31. Hodgens, Joseph. 29 December 2025
  41. "Geoffrey Tremaine, Mayor (1947-1956) - Manawatū Heritage".
  42. (27 June 1950). "Dominion News". [[Greymouth Evening Star]].
  43. (13 June 1970). "Civil". [[The Press]].
  44. Morgan, Karen J.. (2000). "'Brown, Gordon Alexander', Dictionary of New Zealand Biography".
  45. (6 August 1983). "Deputy Mayor dies". [[The Press]].
  46. "Ceremony to celebrate the Centenary of the Palmerston North Council - Manawatū Heritage".
  47. (17 June 1995). "Queen's Birthday Honours". [[The Press]].
  48. Elwood, Brian. ''Oral Interview - Brian Elwood''. 2 May 1985, [https://manawatuheritage.pncc.govt.nz/item/7d6d1146-f980-4032-af13-53d87ae82b10]https://manawatuheritage.pncc.govt.nz/item/7d6d1146-f980-4032-af13-53d87ae82b10. Accessed 27 Dec. 2025.
  49. (16 December 2016). "New Year Honours 2017 - Citations for the Queen's Service Medal".
  50. (25 October 2022). "Rangitāne councillor to be Palmerston North's deputy mayor". [[Stuff (website).
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