James Drysdale Deveson was born, raised and educated in
the Inkerman School District. After finishing school, Jim stayed on the
farm and helped his father. In 1936 he married Doris Ross and they raised
a son and three daughters. In 1961, when his father died, he began
to operate the mixed farm. He practised good soil management
and conservation. The Deveson farm became a working model for agricultural
students.
Mr. Deveson contributed much to Manitoba. He was a farmer, a business
leader and a community worker. The very significant contribution was his
thirty-five years of dedicated service to the Manitoba Pool Elevators.
His involvement started when he was elected Director of the Arden Co-operative
Elevator Association in 1945 and ended when he retired as President
of the Manitoba Pool in 1980. In 1956 he expanded his involvement
in the Pool by being elected director of the organization.
He liaised between the Board and the membership. Jim represented
the M.P.E. with its business affiliates: insurance, livestock, grain, and
fertilizer. He also worked with farm associates: Wheat Producers,
Farm Bureau and Co-operative Council.
In 1977 he attended the International Federation of Agricultural
Producers Conference in Helsinki, Finland and the following year was made
advisor to the government at the international meeting in Geneva,
Switzerland. Because of his vast knowledge of the grain business, he was
appointed to the Senior Grains Transport Committee by the Government of
Canada.
One of his outstanding attributes was his ability to recognize the
need for change. He saw that changes in the transportation and export
systems had to happen. He also knew that farmers had to have in-put through
discussion, so that the adjustments wouldn't be crippling to the agricultural
community.
Mr. Deveson served the community: on church boards, school boards,
Oddfellows Lodge, Beautiful Plains Agricultural Society, and as Director
and President of the Neepawa Rotary Club. His friends and colleagues remember
him as one dedicated to his family, and ready to give
a helping hand whether with advice, counsel or moral support.
Jim was willing to listen, to consult, to provide leadership, and to clearly
state his position on controversial issues. He dedicated his life's
work to the betterment of farming, to agriculture in general and to his
community.