Windsor's oldest living mayor has a new home.
Elizabeth Kishkon has just moved to the city operated Huron Lodge.
She spoke to AM800 News about the highlights and challenges of her term in the city's 125th year. Kishkon recalls the city's infrastructure was in much worse shape when she was in office.
"The city needed so much in the way of renewal — and I wasn't obviously able to do all that," says Kishkon.
She says the city has come a long way since she left the mayor's office in 1985.
Kishkon is proud to have gotten the ball rolling on the issue of amenities for young people in the city.
"I think it needed far more for children, playgrounds, parks and that has gradually happened," says Kishkon. "We're now much better off."
Kishkon says the visit of Queen Elizabeth in 1984 was a major milestone in her time in the mayor's office.
"Having lunch with her and getting to meet some of the MPs that she travelled with that was a big moment," says Kishkon. "I still have a picture of she and myself. That sounds like bragging, it's not — I loved her."
Kishkon was Windsor's first and only female mayor, serving from 1983 to 1985. She encourages more women to get involved in running for office.