- John Kent (Newfoundland politician)
John Kent (1805 –
September 1 ,1872 ) was premier of Newfoundland 1858 – 1861.John Kent Rank: Second 1858-1861 Date of Birth: 1805 Place of Birth: Wexford ,Ireland Emigrated: 1820 Profession :Politician and Campaigner Political Party: Liberal Party Predecessor: Philip Francis Little Successor: Hugh W. Hoyles Kent was born in
Wexford ,Ireland in 1805, arrived in Newfoundland in 1820 and started working for his unclePatrick Morris . He was influential in establishing a large Irish population on the island. He was elected to the first House of Assembly in 1832 as a Liberal. John Kent was a champion ofCatholic rights on an island that was deeply divided along religious lines. He worked for the reform movement along withWilliam Carson and Morris that successfully persuaded the BritishColonial Office to instituteresponsible government in Newfoundland. Kent became Colonial Secretary underPhilip Francis Little .From 1848 to 1855 he was Speaker of the Newfoundland House of Assembly.
He became Premier after Little resigned in 1858. He won the election of 1859 but his government was engulfed by crisis in 1861 when it tried to lower the salary of (mostly Protestant) government officials, including judges who sued the government. In the
legislature Kent accused Governor SirAlexander Bannerman and the opposition Conservatives of conspiring with the judges against the government. Bannerman responded by dismissing the Kent's government and installingHugh Hoyles as Premier of a Conservative government.The Liberals defeated the Conservative government in a
Motion of No Confidence resulting in an election campaign that was fought along sectarian lines withCatholic s largely voting Liberal andProtestant s largely voting Conservative. The ProtestantConservative Party of Newfoundland narrowly defeated Kent's Liberals and riots erupted in CatholicHarbour Grace when the governor cancelled voting there essentially denying the Liberals two seats in the legislature and allowing the Conservatives to have a legislative majority.Kent later joined Sir
Frederick Carter 'scoalition government that attempted to heal the rifts and create a cross denominational compromise that allowed power sharing between Catholics and Protestants, the funding of all denominational schools and the creation of political parties that included members of all denominations.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5074 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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