Edna May Diefenbaker ( Brower; November 30, 1899 – February 7, 1951) was the first wife of the 13th Prime Minister of Canada, John Diefenbaker.

Early life

She was born in Wawanesa, Manitoba, and worked as a schoolteacher at Mayfair Elementary School in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan before marrying John Diefenbaker in 1929.

Political life

Her marriage brought an end to her teaching career, and Diefenbaker devoted her energies to the advancement of her husband's political career. She would visit towns before her husband so that he was prepared with information on the inhabitants. She also edited her husband's speeches, and often acted as chauffeur, driving him to meetings. Perhaps most importantly, she helped him to overcome his shyness and develop into a "man of the people", which would help him in his future political successes.

Upon her husband's election as a Progressive Conservative member of Parliament Diefenbaker worked on his behalf in an unpaid capacity.

William Lyon Mackenzie King once asserted that if he had met Edna before John did, she would have become his wife instead of John's. Although John had no children with either of his wives who could take DNA tests to confirm a relationship, the brothers did get a DNA match to another man, George Dryden, who also already believed that John Diefenbaker was his biological father, although he was born during John's second marriage following Edna's death.

Illness and death

In later years, she suffered from depression as she entered menopause, and was subjected to electroshock treatment.

She died of leukaemia in 1951, six years before her husband became prime minister. MPs in the House of Commons of Canada gave her "unprecedented eulogies" for a non-MP.