Susan Thompson
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Susan Ann Thompson Template:Post-nominals was the 40th mayor of Winnipeg, Manitoba. She was born on 12 April 1947.[1] She was the first and first to date only woman to serve as mayor of Winnipeg, serving two terms from 1992 to 1998.[2][3]
Thompson graduated with a BA from the University of Winnipeg in 1971.[1] Thompson worked at Eaton's and Hudson's Bay Company in Winnipeg, Calgary, and Montreal.[1] Because of her father's decline in health, she came back to Winnipeg in 1980 and bought the family's business Birt Saddlery.[1] While running Birt Saddlery, she worked hard to promote women in business and became involved in Rotary and the Chamber of Commerce.[1]
Thompson's second term saw the 1997 Flood of the Century; she was instrumental in directing the fight against the raging river.[1] She choose not to seek a third term, but in 1999 she became Canada's Consul General in Minneapolis, United States - the first woman to have this position in its thirty years of existence.[1] In this role she steadfastly promoted Canadian business and political interests.[1] In 2003, she became first and founding president and CEO of the University of Winnipeg Foundation.[1] She remained in this position until 2011.[1]
In 2014, Thompson made local headlines after a 30-minute speech she gave to the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce. In it she outlined her ideas for the city's future which included a laser pyramid Portage and Main.[4]
In 2017, a building at the Winnipeg City Hall Campus was renamed the Susan A. Thompson Building after her.[5]
The City of Winnipeg Archives has the Susan Thompson Fonds including of textual records, photograph albums, framed memorabilia, and artifacts.[1]
References
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