Gordon Macdonald, 1st Baron Macdonald of Gwaenysgor (1885–1966) was a British politician and Newfoundland's final British governor as well as the last chairman of the Commission of Government serving from 1946 until the colony joined confederation in 1949 and became a province of Canada.
Macdonald was Labour Member of Parliament for Ince in the United Kingdom from 1929 to 1942 and then served as a regional controller for the Ministry of Fuel and Power in Wales until his appointment to Newfoundland in 1946. As governor, Macdonald openly campaigned for confederation, making him unpopular with those Newfoundlanders who opposed joining Canada. Anti-confederates cited Macdonald's interference in arguments to throw out the 1948 referendum results on joining Canada.
Macdonald left the island upon its entry to Canada in 1949. Two days after his departure, a congratulatory poem was published in The Evening Telegram on March 8, 1949:
It would be a matter of weeks before the editors of The Telegram would discover the poem was an acrostic.
After returning to Britain, Macdonald was elevated to the House of Lords as Baron Macdonald of Gwaenysgor. He then served as Paymaster-General.
1885 births | 1966 deaths | British MPs | UK Labour Party politicians | Barons in the Peerage of the United Kingdom | Newfoundland colonial leaders
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