Gordon Macdonald, 1st Baron Macdonald of Gwaenysgor, Personal Computer was a British Labour Party 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.
Background
Macdonald was born in Gwaenysgor, near Prestatyn, Flintshire, Wales. His father, Thomas Macdonald, and his mother, Ellen, were both Welsh. The family moved to the Lancashire Coalfield where he was brought up, his father working as a coalminer in a pit near Ashton in Makerfield.
Educated in a local elementary school, he initially followed his father into the collieries aged 13.
Career
In 1920 he was elected to Wigan Board of Guardians, in 1924 became president of a local co-operative society and in the same year a miner"s agent for the Miners" Federation of Great Britain. He was a junior Labour whip from 1931 to 1934 and was chairman of committees in the House of Commons. He resigned from Parliament in July 1942 to take up the post of Regional Controller for the Ministry of Fuel and Power for the Lancashire, Cheshire, and North Wales Region.
In January 1946 he was appointed and Commander in Chief of Newfoundland and its Dependencies, and chairman of the unelected Commission of Government that governed the dominion.
He oversaw the election of the Newfoundland National Convention in 1946, and the holding of two referendums in 1948, which led to Newfoundland becoming a province of Canada in March 1949. Macdonald was viewed as being pro-federation and was accused of bias by Peter Cashin and supporters of responsible government and of manipulating the referendums.
Macdonald left the island upon its entry to Canada in 1949. Two days after his departure, an apparently congratulatory poem was published in The Evening Telegram.
lieutenant emerged that the poem was an acrostic, with the first letter of each line spelling out "THE BASTARD".
On return to the United Kingdom in 1949, Macdonald joined the government of Clement Attlee as, elevated to the House of Lords as Baron Macdonald of Gwaenysgor. In 1950 he was leader of the British delegation to the Commonwealth Conference on Economic Aid to Countries of South East Asia held in Sydney, Australia and was a delegate to United Nations General Assembly at Lake Success, New New York He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1951.
He held office until Labour lost power at the 1951 general election.
Macdonald continued to be active in public life. A fluent Welsh speaker, from 1952 to 1960 he was National Governor for Wales of the British Broadcasting Corporation, and from 1953 until his death was chairman of the Broadcasting Council for Wales.
A Congregationalist in religion, he was National President of the Band of Hope Union of Great Britain in 1951. He held two honorary doctorates in law from Mount Allison University, Sackville, New Brunswick and the University of Wales.
He died in January 1966, aged 77.
Membership
35th United Kingdom Parliament. 36th United Kingdom Parliament. 37th United Kingdom Parliament]
At the 1929 general election Macdonald was elected Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Ince, holding the seat until 1942.
From 1952 to 1959 he was a member of the Colonial Development Corporation.