Background
Campbell was born in Vancouver, where he became a lawyer
Campbell was born in Vancouver, where he became a lawyer
In 1962, he joined Vancouver City Council as an alderman, representing the Non-Partisan Association (Non Performing Asset), a conservative civic party. Running as an independent, Campbell beat out William Rathie in the 1966 election, ending the Non Performing Asset"s long, unbroken domination of city hall. As mayor, "Tom Terrific" (as he was both affectionately and derisively called) proved to be brash, confrontational, and controversial.
During his term, the City held a referendum which authorized the then-controversial development of an underground shopping mall and office towers, now known as Pacific Centre, Vancouver"s largest development.
As Greater Vancouver"s population topped one million, Campbell took an assertively pro-development stance, advocating a freeway that would cut through a large part of the downtown east side, the demolition of the historic Carnegie Centre, and the construction of a luxury hotel at the entrance of Stanley Park (the Bayshore Inn) and another at the north foot of Burrard in which it turned out the mayor had invested (it is now an apartment building and never became a hotel). Campbell was a vocal supporter of the Social Cr government of Premier West.A.C. Bennett.
Campbell was re-elected in the 1968 and 1970 elections by large majorities. lieutenant is, however, Campbell"s confrontations with the city"s burgeoning youth counterculture for which he is best remembered.
These included attempts to suppress and shut down the alternative newspaper, The Georgia Straight, whose editor Dan McLeod was repeatedly beaten by city police, and the blocking of the final concert of the 1970 Festival Express rock"n"roll tour, which was held in Calgary rather than risk a confrontation with the Vancouver mayor"s stated intention to use police to stop the festival.
There was even an incident in August, 1971, when Vancouver police charged on horseback into a group of about a thousand hippies having a "smoke-in" on the streets of Gastown. This came to be known as the Gastown Riots and led to the arrests of 79 people, of whom 38 were charged with various offences. A judicial inquiry later criticized the action, characterizing it as a police riot.
Campbell chose not to run for re-election in November 1972 and returned to private life and legal practice.
He died in 2012.