John Walter Jones

For the First Chief Executive of the Welsh Language Board, see John Walter Jones (Wales).
John Walter Jones
20th Premier of Prince Edward Island
In office
May 11, 1943  May 25, 1953
Monarch George VI
Elizabeth II
Lieutenant Governor Bradford W. LePage
Joseph A. Bernard
T. William L. Prowse
Preceded by Thane A. Campbell
Succeeded by Alex W. Matheson
Leader of the Prince Edward Island Liberal Party
In office
1943–1953
Preceded by Thane Campbell
Succeeded by Alex W. Matheson
Personal details
Born April 14, 1878
Pownal, Prince Edward Island
Died March 31, 1954 (aged 75)
Ottawa
Nationality Canadian
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Katherine Francis Bovyer (m. 1909)
Children Lois, Vimy, Flelen, Bovyer, Bernard (“Bus”)
Residence Bunbury, Prince Edward Island
Alma mater Acadia University
Occupation farmer, scientist, and teacher
Profession Politician
Cabinet Minister of Public Welfare and Minister in Charge of Air Raid Precautions (1943–1944)
Minister of Agriculture (1944–1945)
Minister of Education (1945–1950) (1951–1953)
Minister of Reconstruction (1945–1949)
Provincial Secretary-Treasurer (1949–1950)
Minister of Public Works and Highways (1950)
Religion Baptist
J. Walter Jones (3rd to the left) at the Dominion-Provincial Conference on Reconstruction

John Walter Jones (April 14, 1878 March 31, 1954) was a politician and farmer in Prince Edward Island, Canada. An agronomist, he was instrumental in introducing the potato crop to the island, which was to become a staple of the economy. In 1935, he received the King George V medal as the best farmer in the province.

Born in Pownal, he first ran for public office in the 1921 federal election as a Farmer-Progressive candidate, but failed to win a seat in the Canadian House of Commons.

He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island as a Liberal in 1935. In 1943, he became the 20th Premier of the province when Thane A. Campbell was appointed Chief Justice of the PEI Supreme Court.

The government of "Farmer Jones" repealed strict prohibition, and created the PEI Liquor Control Commission to regulate the sale of liquor. He had to proceed by order-in-council because the lieutenant governor, as a prohibitionist, refused to give Royal Assent to the necessary legislation. In 1947, his government broke a strike at Canada Packers, a meat-packing plant, by seizing the plant, employing strike-breakers and outlawing trade union affiliation with national or international unions in the name of "protect(ing) the farm interest".

He left provincial politics in 1953 to accept an appointment to the Canadian Senate.

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