John Alexander Mathieson
John Alexander Mathieson (
May 19,
1863 –
January 7,
1947) was a
Prince Edward Island politician and jurist. He was a schoolmaster and lawyer before entering politics with his election to the province's
legislature as a
Conservative in
1900. Mathieson sat on the
opposition benches becoming
leader of the opposition and the Conservative Party in
1903. In December
1911, the Liberal government resigned when
Premier H. James Palmer was defeated in a
by-election which also caused the governing
Liberals to lose their
majority in the legislature. The
lieutenant-governor asked Mathieson, as
leader of the opposition to form a government which he did going on to win a mandate in the
1912 general election.
Mathieson's government pressed the federal government to fulfill the terms on which Prince Edward Island joined
Canadian confederation in
1873. He succeeded in persuading Ottawa to provide an improved annual subsidy to the province and, in
1915, Ottawa announced the creation of a year round ferry service to connect the island to the mainland. The ferries began operating between PEI and
New Brunswick in
1917.
The province was also at risk of losing representation in the
Canadian House of Commons due to population shifts. PEI had six
MPs when it joined confederation in 1873, this was reduced to four and was to be cut further as a result of the 1911 census. Mathieson persuaded the federal government to agree to an amendment to the
British North America Act guaranteeing the province a minimum of four MPs in perpetuity.
In 1917, Premier Mathieson left politics to accept an appointment as
Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island and served in that position until he retired in
1943.