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Kenneth Arthur Newton Jones

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kenneth Jones
Minister of Communications and Works
In office
1962 – 1964 (his death)
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterAlexander Bustamante
Personal details
Born
Kenneth Arthur Newton Jones

1 September 1924
Parish of Portland, Colony of Jamaica, British Empire
Died11 October 1964 (aged 40)
Parish of Saint James, Jamaica
Political partyJamaican Labour Party (JLP)
SpouseMarlene d'Auvergne Holtz
RelationsEvan Jones (brother)
ChildrenGladys Rebecca Jones
Parents
  • Frederick MacDonald Jones
  • Gladys Smith Jones
Military service
Branch/serviceRoyal Air Force (RAF)
Years of service1943–1945
RankFlight Sergeant
Battles/warsThe Second World War

The Hon. Kenneth Arthur Newton Jones (1 September 1924 – 11 October 1964), better known as Ken Jones, was a Jamaican Labour Party (JLP) politician and Minister of Communications and Works in the nation's first independent Cabinet from 1962 until his sudden and suspicious death in 1964.[1]

Biography

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Early life and military service

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Ken Jones and his twin brother Keith Frederick Newton Jones were born on 1 September 1924 in Portland, Jamaica. Their father, the Hon. Frederick McDonald Jones OBE, was a planter and a prominent member of the local Anglican Church.[1] Their mother, Gladys Jones MBE (née Smith), was a Quaker Missionary. She was a graduate of William Penn College in Oskaloosa, Iowa, and she arrived at Happy Grove School in Portland in 1918 for her mission. Gladys Jones played an important role in the school, including helping to initiate the transformation of the school into an academic high school. In 1959, she was awarded MBE by Elizebeth II. Jones was also the elder brother of Evan Jones, the influential Jamaican writer.

Jones attended Munro College, a boarding school for boys in St Elizabeth, Jamaica, between 1935 and 1942. Subsequently, he left Jamaica to attended Earlham College in Indiana. In 1943, however, he joined the Royal Air Force (RAF). Upon completion of his training in Canada, Jones served as a Flight Sergeant.[2] During the Second World War, an estimated 400 Jamaicans served as air crew in the RAF, of which Jones was one.[3]

Political Career

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In 1946, Jones returned to Jamaica, first working in the his family's business, Fred M. Jones Estates and in 1951, he was elected to the Portland Parochial Board, which marked the beginning of his career in public service.

In 1953, he served as a Justice of the Peace and in 1955 he was elected to the House of Representatives as MP for Portland Eastern. In 1962, Ken Jones was appointed Minister of Communications and Works of Jamaica. The major achievements during his tenure include:

  • Launching a program to twin the bridges on the national highway.
  • Commencing work on the Sandy Gully Drainage System in Kingston.
  • Instituting a program to build post offices with living quarters upstairs.
  • Trans Atlantic telephone service was opened to the UK and agreements were in place for Air Canada and Lufthansa to commence service to Jamaica.[4]

Marriage

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In 1958, Ken Jones was married to Marlene d'Auvergne Holtz of Kingston. Gladys Rebecca Jones, their daughter, was born in 1960.[5]

Death

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On 11 October 1964, Ken Jones died in an untimely manner. The Gleaner, Jamaica's pre-eminent newspaper, reported his death with these words:

"MONTEGO BAY, S.J., Oct. 11: "THE HON. KENNETH JONES, Minister of Communications and Works, died in the Montego Bay hospital this morning as a result of injuries he suffered in a fall from the upstairs balcony of his room at the Sunset Lodge Hotel, where members of the Cabinet, other members of the Parliament and their top Civil Service advisers were spending the week-end in a special 'retreat' conference to review Government politics and plan future action."[1]

However, the true cause of Ken Jones's death is mysterious and controversial. Many suspect varying degrees of foul play. In 1994, The Gleaner published a series of articles questioning the legitimacy of the inquest and other suspicious circumstances of his death.[6][7][8]

Jones's funeral was held at the Friend's Church in Happy Grove, Portland, and attended by thousands of mourners who had gathered to hear the service on loud speakers.[3][8]

Legacy

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A roadside monument to Ken Jones

Several places in Jamaica are named in Ken Jones's honour, including:

In literature

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Ken Jones's mysterious death is portrayed in his brother Evan Jones's novel Stone Haven (1998).[9] In the novel, his character is called John Newton. Another of his novels, Alonso and the Drug Baron (2006), centers around a political assassination of a man who is thrown from his hotel balcony.[10]

A fictionalized Ken Jones, "Sir Arthur George Jennings", is one of the narrators of Marlon James's novel A Brief History of Seven Killings (2014).[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Ken Jones Dies from "Sleep-Walk" Fall". The Daily Gleaner. October 12, 1964. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  2. ^ "Caribbean aircrew in the RAF during WW2". Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b Roueche, Ken (2010). Portland : the other Jamaica : tales of dreamers, schemers and crusaders. [Victoria, BC: K. Roueche]. pp. 91–92. ISBN 978-0981076119.
  4. ^ a b Roueche, Ken (2010). Portland : the other Jamaica : tales of dreamers, schemers and crusaders. [Victoria, BC: K. Roueche]. p. 93. ISBN 978-0981076119.
  5. ^ Roueche, Ken (2010). Portland : the other Jamaica : tales of dreamers, schemers and crusaders. [Victoria, BC: K. Roueche]. p. 92. ISBN 978-0981076119.
  6. ^ "How did Ken Jones Die?". The Daily Gleaner. May 15, 1994.
  7. ^ "How did Ken Jones Die? Part II: A Very Strange Inquest". The Daily Gleaner. May 22, 1994.
  8. ^ a b "How did Ken Jones Die? Final in the Series". The Daily Gleaner. June 5, 1994.
  9. ^ Jones, Evan (1998). Stone haven (Abridged [ed.] ed.). Oxford: Heinemann. ISBN 0435989499.
  10. ^ Jones, Evan (2006). Alonso and the Drug Baron. Oxford: Macmillan Caribbean. ISBN 978-1-405031-75-2.
  11. ^ James, Marlon (2014). A brief history of seven killings : a novel (First Riverhead hardcover ed.). New York. ISBN 978-1594633942.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)