John Kevan McDowall

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John Kevan McDowall (16 March 1891 - 2 September 1958) was a Scottish solicitor and politician during the early 20th century. He lived and practiced as a solicitor in Glasgow for the majority of his life. He was the first and only leader of the Scottish Party, which later merged with the National Party of Scotland (NPS) to form the Scottish National Party (SNP) in 1934.[1]

McDowall was the son of John Kevan McDowall (1861-1928), secretary of the Scottish Football Association, and Helen Paterson. He was a descendant of the Kevan family. While their heritage is uncertain, in his own book, Carrick Gallovidian, McDowall presents the theory that the family originated in Wigtown Bay, near Galloway, as early as the fifteenth century ("[the family] occurs in a charter of 1421 as Cavens").[2]

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