- John C. Bowen
John Campbell Bowen (
October 3 ,1872 –January 2 ,1957 ) was aclergy man and was the longest-servingLieutenant-Governor ofAlberta in the history of the province.Born in
Metcalfe, Ontario , the son of Peter Bowen and Margaret Poaps, he grew up inOttawa, Ontario . After a career in the insurance business Bowen entered politics serving first as analderman in Edmonton during the 1920s. He ran formayor in 1928 but was defeated. In 1921 he was elected to the provinciallegislative assembly as a Liberal MLA and became House Leader but was defeated in the 1926 provincial election.In 1937 he was appointed by Governor General John Buchan, Baron Tweedsmuir, on the advice of Prime Minister
William Lyon Mackenzie King , asLieutenant Governor of Alberta , two years after the Social Credit came to power underWilliam Aberhart . He became involved in aconstitutional crisis when he refused to giveRoyal Assent to three government bills. Two of the bills would have put the province's banks under the control of the provincial government while a third, the "Accurate News and Information Act", would have forced newspapers to print government rebuttals to stories the provincialcabinet objected to. All three bills were later declared unconstitutional by theSupreme Court of Canada and theJudicial Committee of the Privy Council . In 1938, Bowen even threatened to dismiss Aberhart's government, which would have been an extraordinary use of hisreserve powers . The Social Credit government remained immensely popular with the Albertan people, however, so the threat was not carried out.The premier cut out John Bowen's power and heat because of his refusal to sign the bills. They also got rid of his car.
During
World War II , Bowen spent a lot of his time promoting the sale ofwar bond s and otherwise helping the war effort.He served as Lieutenant-Governor until 1950.
On October 25, 1906, he married Edith Oliver. They had two daughters, Margaret Gwendolyn and Emma Ruth.
Bowen died on
January 2 ,1957 , in Edmonton, and was buried in the Edmonton Cemetery.External links
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