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John
Reed Mansell

Long
Beach City Auditor 1951 - 1961
John R. Mansell served as Long Beach City Auditor for 10 years. He was appointed by the City Council to fill the unexpired term of City Auditor Myrtelle Gunsul who had resigned. Prior to that appointment, Mansell had risen through the ranks at City Hall in accounting positions. In his early years as clerk in the Public Service Department, he was credited with setting up a new accounting system.
John Mansell was born in Chicago on February 12, 1920. While attending business college he held jobs as a cost accountant in Indiana, Illinois, and California. He joined the U.S. Navy in 1943 and during WWII he participated in the Okinawa and Iwo Jima invasions, the Leyte campaign and the Japanese occupation. In 1946, after his discharge from military service, he decided to permanently settle in Long Beach. John Mansell and his wife Madeline had a son, John Jr., who was born in 1958.
Public comments about Mansell as City Auditor were very favorable. Columnist L.A. Collins described City Auditor Mansell as “an honorable, courageous and capable public official.”
A Press Telegram editorial praised Mansell, “…no other man knows the city’s business quite as well as Mansell does. He is the man who audits the books. While most department heads are concerned largely with their own particular departments, it is Mansell’s business to know what all departments are doing.”
In 1961 John Mansell was appointed by the City Council to succeed City Manager Sam E. Vickers, a position he held for 15 years. When Mansell died in 2004 a Long Beach Press Telegram article said about him that he had been known as an excellent negotiator, talented orator and mathematical whiz.
John R. Mansell in his own words:
Philosophy about municipal spending:
“I
have no quarrel with a dollar being spent, but it
should be well spent.”
Independent, March 4, 1961
Recognition of natural assets of Long Beach:
“Our
future must rest on our God-given assets of the
seafront and the man-made programs of bringing new
industries, new hotels, new capital, new blood into
our community.
Independent, March 4, 1961
Importance of collaboration:
“The
city and citizens must realize our objective can
only be accomplished through cooperation, through
harmony, at all levels.”
Independent, March 4, 1961
Sources:
Press Telegram
Independent
Long Beach Press Telegram
Staff Contact:
You are encouraged to contact Olivia Silva Maiser, Director of Communications at
562-570-6434 or at
Olivia_Maiser@longbeach.gov

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