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Louis Denison “L. D.” Taylor

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Louis Denison “L. D.” Taylor

Birth
Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Michigan, USA
Death
4 Jun 1946 (aged 88)
Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
Burial
Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Michigan, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block 54 Lot 11 - (cremation) no marker but cemetery records confirm burial here with mother Amy and sister Florence Taylor.
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Gustavus Adolphus Taylor (1818-1895)
and Amy Lydia Denison (1822-1904). Louis
had three siblings: Florence E. (Feb.11,1845-
July 4, 1868) unmarried; Kate (May 14,1850-
May 5, 1931) who married Eugene F. Cooley;
and an unknown who likely died young.

Louis was married twice:
(1) Annie Louise Pierce (born June 9,1867
in Maine and died Dec.2,1928 in California) on
May 26,1892 in Chicago. They had two sons,
Theodore Pierce "Ted" and Kenneth Osborne.
They were divorced in 1916.
After their separation in 1906, Annie took
the two sons to CA and lived there with her
parents - Osborne James Pierce (1839-1912)
and Caroline Little Twitchell (1847-1936).

(2) On June 8, 1916 in Vancouver Louis
married Alice Helena (Miller) Berry
(1871-1919), a widow with three sons.

.....................................................
City of Vancouver Archives -

Louis Denison Taylor (L.D.) was born to Gustavus and Amy (nee Denison) Taylor on July 22, 1857 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He was educated in Ann Arbor and brought up a Congregationalist. After graduating from high school, L.D. served a position at the University of Michigan Library. In the mid-1880s, he was a partner in a truss company and bicycle business in Ann Arbor, and a teller at the First National Bank. In 1891 he moved to Chicago to work as an assistant auditor for the Wabash Railroad.
The following year, on May 26, L.D. married Annie Louise Pierce, the daughter of Osborne and his wife Caroline Pierce. L.D. began work as an accountant at a lumber company. In August 1896, L.D. was arrested for charges of embezzlement relating to his partnership in the North and Taylor Bank on West Madison Avenue in Chicago, and fled north to Canada. He arrived in Vancouver on Sept. 8, 1896.
Due to lack of job opportunities in Vancouver, L.D. left the city in early 1897 in search of work, travelling to California, Texas and Colorado, where he found employment selling newspaper subscriptions. By spring he returned to British Columbia to do some prospecting at Harrison Lake and the Cassiar District. Unsuccessful with these ventures, he secured a job as a baggage clerk with the Canadian Pacific Railway in Revelstoke. In May 1898 he left for the Klondike to try prospecting a second time; unsuccessful in his efforts, he returned to Vancouver in the fall and acquired a job as a freight handler with the CPR.
In 1899 L.D. secured employment with The Daily Province as manager of its circulation department. He lived across the street from the newspaper, in a boarding house on Hastings Street, until he purchased a home in Fairview, at approximately 8th Avenue and Willow Street, in 1899.
L.D.'s first son, Theodore (Ted) Pierce Taylor, was born on Sept. 6, 1896 in Chicago. Annie and Ted joined L.D. in Vancouver, from Chicago, in 1901 and the family settled in the Fairview house. A second son, Kenneth (Ken) Osborne Taylor was born in 1902 in Vancouver. In 1906 L.D. and Annie separated; Annie left Vancouver with Ted and Ken to live with her parents in Los Angeles. After residing for a short time in the West End, L.D. moved into the Granville Mansions apartments at 715 Robson Street in 1909.
In May 1905, L.D. purchased The Vancouver Daily World newspaper (also called The Daily World, The Vancouver World, and The World) with funds raised from investors. In 1912, having greatly boosted the newspaper's circulation, Taylor constructed the World Building at 500 Beatty Street, to house the newspaper's productions, and to provide commercial rental space. For two years, it was the tallest building in the British Empire. However due to an economic recession, Taylor was unable to rent the additional space. The paper went into debt, and he was forced to sell it in 1915.
While still living in Ann Arbor, L.D. had run unsuccessfully for Alderman. His political career in Vancouver began with a successful bid for one of two available positions of Licence Commissioner in 1902. In 1903, he was not successful and neither was he in his bids for alderman in 1904 and 1905. He was, however, appointed by Council to serve on the Library Board and the Building Committee of the Carneigie Library in 1903.
In 1909, while owner of The World, L.D. ran for Mayor of Vancouver but lost. He was elected the following year. This would be the first of nine mayoral election wins. Excluding the period of 1916-1921, L.D. ran for Mayor in every civic election until 1938; he was elected Mayor in 1910, 1911, 1915, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1930 and 1932 (a total of eleven years). In 1935 and 1937 he ran unsuccessfully for Alderman.
As Mayor, L.D.'s contributions included the construction of the Sea Island Airport, the establishment of a Town Planning Commission, The Greater Vancouver Water District board, a juvenile court, and an eight hour work day for civic employees; and the amalgamation of Vancouver with South Vancouver and Point Grey. L.D. also played leading roles in the construction of the Second Narrows, Burrard Street and Lion's Gate bridges, the development of False Creek, and the creation of a City Archives. As a champion of the "Single-Tax System", he introduced municipal tax revisions, and removed taxes on improvements. He was an advocate for universal suffrage and the working class.
In 1916 L.D. and Annie were divorced and Taylor married Alice Helena (Miller) Berry, a widow, who had been the Managing Director of The World for several years. She passed away in 1919 and Taylor never married again.
L.D. did not abandon the publishing business after the sale of The World. During his brief retirement from politics, he established several publications, including The Critic, The B.C. Mining News, and The Vancouver Oil and Mining Record. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, L.D. experienced some setbacks in his health. While exiting an airplane in 1928, he was seriously injured by the plane's propeller. The following year, he nearly drowned while boating in the Parsnip River. In July 1932, L.D. suddenly took ill and was unable to attend to his civic duties for five months.
After his last term in office in 1934, L.D. maintained a strong interest in Vancouver's political affairs. In 1937, he began publishing a small newspaper called The New Deal, which he used to comment on the current civic administration and to promote his aldermanic campaign platform.
In his private time, he was a member of several clubs and organizations, including The Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks (Elks Club), the Loyal Order of Moose, The Turf Club, and the Dramatic Order Knights of Khorassan.
L.D. passed away on June 4, 1946 at age 88.
His cremains were placed in the family plot in Forest Hill Cemetery in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Son of Gustavus Adolphus Taylor (1818-1895)
and Amy Lydia Denison (1822-1904). Louis
had three siblings: Florence E. (Feb.11,1845-
July 4, 1868) unmarried; Kate (May 14,1850-
May 5, 1931) who married Eugene F. Cooley;
and an unknown who likely died young.

Louis was married twice:
(1) Annie Louise Pierce (born June 9,1867
in Maine and died Dec.2,1928 in California) on
May 26,1892 in Chicago. They had two sons,
Theodore Pierce "Ted" and Kenneth Osborne.
They were divorced in 1916.
After their separation in 1906, Annie took
the two sons to CA and lived there with her
parents - Osborne James Pierce (1839-1912)
and Caroline Little Twitchell (1847-1936).

(2) On June 8, 1916 in Vancouver Louis
married Alice Helena (Miller) Berry
(1871-1919), a widow with three sons.

.....................................................
City of Vancouver Archives -

Louis Denison Taylor (L.D.) was born to Gustavus and Amy (nee Denison) Taylor on July 22, 1857 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He was educated in Ann Arbor and brought up a Congregationalist. After graduating from high school, L.D. served a position at the University of Michigan Library. In the mid-1880s, he was a partner in a truss company and bicycle business in Ann Arbor, and a teller at the First National Bank. In 1891 he moved to Chicago to work as an assistant auditor for the Wabash Railroad.
The following year, on May 26, L.D. married Annie Louise Pierce, the daughter of Osborne and his wife Caroline Pierce. L.D. began work as an accountant at a lumber company. In August 1896, L.D. was arrested for charges of embezzlement relating to his partnership in the North and Taylor Bank on West Madison Avenue in Chicago, and fled north to Canada. He arrived in Vancouver on Sept. 8, 1896.
Due to lack of job opportunities in Vancouver, L.D. left the city in early 1897 in search of work, travelling to California, Texas and Colorado, where he found employment selling newspaper subscriptions. By spring he returned to British Columbia to do some prospecting at Harrison Lake and the Cassiar District. Unsuccessful with these ventures, he secured a job as a baggage clerk with the Canadian Pacific Railway in Revelstoke. In May 1898 he left for the Klondike to try prospecting a second time; unsuccessful in his efforts, he returned to Vancouver in the fall and acquired a job as a freight handler with the CPR.
In 1899 L.D. secured employment with The Daily Province as manager of its circulation department. He lived across the street from the newspaper, in a boarding house on Hastings Street, until he purchased a home in Fairview, at approximately 8th Avenue and Willow Street, in 1899.
L.D.'s first son, Theodore (Ted) Pierce Taylor, was born on Sept. 6, 1896 in Chicago. Annie and Ted joined L.D. in Vancouver, from Chicago, in 1901 and the family settled in the Fairview house. A second son, Kenneth (Ken) Osborne Taylor was born in 1902 in Vancouver. In 1906 L.D. and Annie separated; Annie left Vancouver with Ted and Ken to live with her parents in Los Angeles. After residing for a short time in the West End, L.D. moved into the Granville Mansions apartments at 715 Robson Street in 1909.
In May 1905, L.D. purchased The Vancouver Daily World newspaper (also called The Daily World, The Vancouver World, and The World) with funds raised from investors. In 1912, having greatly boosted the newspaper's circulation, Taylor constructed the World Building at 500 Beatty Street, to house the newspaper's productions, and to provide commercial rental space. For two years, it was the tallest building in the British Empire. However due to an economic recession, Taylor was unable to rent the additional space. The paper went into debt, and he was forced to sell it in 1915.
While still living in Ann Arbor, L.D. had run unsuccessfully for Alderman. His political career in Vancouver began with a successful bid for one of two available positions of Licence Commissioner in 1902. In 1903, he was not successful and neither was he in his bids for alderman in 1904 and 1905. He was, however, appointed by Council to serve on the Library Board and the Building Committee of the Carneigie Library in 1903.
In 1909, while owner of The World, L.D. ran for Mayor of Vancouver but lost. He was elected the following year. This would be the first of nine mayoral election wins. Excluding the period of 1916-1921, L.D. ran for Mayor in every civic election until 1938; he was elected Mayor in 1910, 1911, 1915, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1930 and 1932 (a total of eleven years). In 1935 and 1937 he ran unsuccessfully for Alderman.
As Mayor, L.D.'s contributions included the construction of the Sea Island Airport, the establishment of a Town Planning Commission, The Greater Vancouver Water District board, a juvenile court, and an eight hour work day for civic employees; and the amalgamation of Vancouver with South Vancouver and Point Grey. L.D. also played leading roles in the construction of the Second Narrows, Burrard Street and Lion's Gate bridges, the development of False Creek, and the creation of a City Archives. As a champion of the "Single-Tax System", he introduced municipal tax revisions, and removed taxes on improvements. He was an advocate for universal suffrage and the working class.
In 1916 L.D. and Annie were divorced and Taylor married Alice Helena (Miller) Berry, a widow, who had been the Managing Director of The World for several years. She passed away in 1919 and Taylor never married again.
L.D. did not abandon the publishing business after the sale of The World. During his brief retirement from politics, he established several publications, including The Critic, The B.C. Mining News, and The Vancouver Oil and Mining Record. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, L.D. experienced some setbacks in his health. While exiting an airplane in 1928, he was seriously injured by the plane's propeller. The following year, he nearly drowned while boating in the Parsnip River. In July 1932, L.D. suddenly took ill and was unable to attend to his civic duties for five months.
After his last term in office in 1934, L.D. maintained a strong interest in Vancouver's political affairs. In 1937, he began publishing a small newspaper called The New Deal, which he used to comment on the current civic administration and to promote his aldermanic campaign platform.
In his private time, he was a member of several clubs and organizations, including The Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks (Elks Club), the Loyal Order of Moose, The Turf Club, and the Dramatic Order Knights of Khorassan.
L.D. passed away on June 4, 1946 at age 88.
His cremains were placed in the family plot in Forest Hill Cemetery in Ann Arbor, Michigan.


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