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Marshal Clarke

Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Marshal James Clarke KCMG (24 October 1841 – 1 April 1909) was a British colonial administrator and an officer of the Royal Artillery. He was the first Resident Commissioner in Basutoland from 1884 to 1893; Resident Commissioner in Zululand from 1893 to 1898; and, following the botched Jameson Raid, the first Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia from 1898 to 1905.

Sir Marshal James Clarke
1st Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia
In office
5 December 1898 – 1 April 1905
Succeeded byRichard Chester-Master
2nd Resident Commissioner in Zululand
In office
1893–1898
GovernorSir Walter Hely-Hutchinson
Preceded bySir Melmoth Osborn
Succeeded byCharles Saunders
1st Resident Commissioner in Basutoland
In office
18 March 1884 – 18 September 1893
MonarchVictoria
Succeeded byGodfrey Yeatman Lagden
Personal details
Born(1841-10-24)24 October 1841
Tipperary, Ireland, United Kingdom
Died1 April 1909(1909-04-01) (aged 67)
Enniskerry, Ireland, United Kingdom
Spouse
Annie Stacy Lloyd
(m. 1880)
Children3
Alma mater
Awards
Military service
Allegiance British Empire
Years of service1863–1883
RankLieutenant-Colonel
UnitRoyal Artillery
Battles/warsFirst Boer War

For his work in Basutoland, Clarke drew praise from the economist John A. Hobson in his treatise Imperialism for his devotion to the education and development of the native people, while Viscount Bryce noted that his approach fostered goodwill amongst native people towards Britain. In Zululand, Clarke granted considerable authority and special judicial functions to the hereditary chiefs; and was commended by Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson, Governor of Natal, for his action in the face of potential famine. He recommended to the Imperial Government the return from exile of Dinuzulu, the paramount chief. While in Southern Rhodesia, he was appointed to protect the interests of native people against the overarching ambitions of the British South Africa Company.

He married Annie Stacy Lloyd, daughter of Major General Banastyre Pryce Lloyd in 1880 and had three children. He died suddenly of pneumonia in his home country of Ireland.

Early life edit

Reverend Mark Clarke, the Rector and Vicar of Shronell, County Tipperary, married Maria Hill on 6 April 1837. Marshal James Clarke was their eldest son, born on 24 October 1841.[1][2] He was born in Tipperary, educated at a private school in Dublin and studied at Trinity College, Dublin.[3] He went on to study at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich[1] and was commissioned a Lieutenant in the Royal Artillery in February 1863.[4]

He served in India, where he lost an arm to a tiger.[3] Moving to Africa, he was Resident Magistrate of Pietermaritzburg in 1874.[3] He was promoted to captain in December 1875.[5] He was Aide-de-Camp to Sir Theophilus Shepstone, the Special Commissioner of South Africa in 1876 on his mission to the Transvaal.[3] He was appointed Special Commissioner to South Africa in 1876.[6] He was Political Officer and Special Commissioner of Lydenburg in 1877.[7] During the First Boer War, Clarke was twice mentioned in despatches.[3][6] He was brevetted Major in April 1880 in recognition of his services during operations in South Africa.[8] He was Resident Magistrate of Basutoland in 1881.[1] He was promoted to Major in November 1882.[9] He was Commissioner of Cape Police in 1882.[1] He was seconded to the Sultan of Turkey's army in command of a regiment of the Egyptian Gendarmerie in 1882.[10]

He retired from the military in March 1883 with the honorary rank of Lieutenant-Colonel.[11]

Basutoland (1884–1893) edit

Clarke was appointed the first Resident Commissioner in Basutoland (today Lesotho) and took office on 16 March 1884.[12][13] In the preceding years, Basutoland had become unruly.[14] In 1879, an uprising by Chief Morosi was quelled but led to intertribal strife over the partition of his land. The Cape government sought to regain control in 1880 by extending the Cape Peace Preservation Act of 1878 to Basutoland, which provided for the disarmament of natives. Attempts to enforce the law resulted in the Basuto Gun War of 1880 to 1881. Unrest continued until it was agreed in 1884 to place the territory under direct British control.[15][16]

Under Imperial Administration through Clarke, Basutoland once again demonstrated the loyalty seen under previous Imperial rule and returned to prosperity, supplying neighbouring territories with grain and livestock, as well as labour for the Kimberley Diamond Fields.[17] James Bryce (later Viscount Bryce) noted in his Impressions, after his tour of Southern Africa in 1897, that Clarke combined tactfulness with firmness in order to inspire goodwill towards the British government.[18] While he suppressed the more "noxious" customs of the native people, he did not allow Europeans to own land and mineral prospectors were forbidden:[19] the only whites permitted to reside were officials, missionaries and certain traders.[20] Clarke's policy was to reinstate the tribal institutions and to govern through the recognised chiefs, amongst whom Letsie, son of Moshesh, was paramount. An annual pitso (national assembly) was held to debate questions of welfare. The white authorities only intervened when disturbances occurred between natives.[20]

Clarke served until 1893.[7] John A. Hobson, in Imperialism, A Study (1902), summed up Clarke's work in Basutoland saying that, along with other administrators like Sir George Grey and Lord Ripon, he "...brought sympathy and knowledge to the establishment of careful experiments in self-government."[21] Hobson compares the approach to imperialism in Basutoland with that in Rhodesia and the Cape Colony, noting that "in the former it is devoted to protecting and aiding the education and development of the native people, while in the latter two, the policy allows for the exploitation of the people and lands by white colonists."[21] The Paris Evangelical Missionary Society honoured him in appreciation for his work to bring about peace and good governance.[10]

Zululand (1893–1898) edit

 
Dinuzulu c. 1883

Sir Marshal Clarke succeeded Sir Melmoth Osborn as Resident Commissioner and Chief Magistrate in Zululand in June 1893. Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson was appointed successor to Sir Charles Mitchell as Governor of the colony in August 1893, as well as Governor of Natal, which was to gain responsible government two months later.[22]

The conclusion of the Anglo-Zulu War in 1879 had resulted in the imprisonment of the Zulu king Cetshwayo on Robben Island and the division of the Zulu Kingdom into 13 chiefdoms. In 1883, after John Colenso, Bishop of Natal, appealed on his behalf, Cetshwayo was released and restored to power. Zibhebhu kaMaphitha, one of the 13 Zulu chiefs, led a force against Cetshwayo and on 22 July 1883 defeated him in Ulundi. Cetshwayo escaped injured but died in February 1884, leaving his son Dinuzulu to inherit the throne. He ultimately succeeded in driving out Zibhebhu with the help of Transvaal Boers.[23]

Dinuzulu rebelled against the British in 1888 but was defeated and fled to the Transvaal. He gave himself up in November 1888, and he and his uncles Ndabuko and Tshingana were found guilty of high treason in April 1889 and exiled to St Helena.[23][22] Bishop Colenso's daughter, Harriette, intervened on their behalf in London.[22] On her return to Zululand in August 1893, Clarke invited her to his residence in Etshowe. While there, she was visited by Zulu from across the land.[24] The Zulu people had great affection for Bishop Colenso and his daughter.[25] She persuaded them that Clarke's appointment was beneficial to them and they gave Clarke the nickname 'uKwezi', meaning 'Keeper' or 'Protector'. A sign of this was the release of a number of Dinzulu's followers from prison.[26]

In his first year in office, Clarke established good order in the colony.[27] Unlike Osborn, who treated Colenso's presence at the trials in 1888 as an affront,[28] Clarke took up Colenso's cause and recommended to the Colonial Office in London that Dinuzulu and his uncles be allowed to return from exile, having been sufficiently punished for his supposed offences.[29][27] Clarke, persuaded by Colenso, argued that Dinuzulu would not cause further trouble so long as the policy of fomenting intertribal strife were discontinued and Dinuzulu be appointed induna.[30] He began the process for the return of Dinuzulu and sought to harness the authority of the Zulu leader to the administration.[31] In January 1895, the exiles received notice of their return to Zululand with an official position for Dinuzulu. Their departure was set for February 1895 but was delayed after Ministers in London recommended that Zululand first be annexed to Natal.[32]

Clarke's tenure marked a difference in policy: instead of trying to divide and rule and undermine the power of the hereditary chiefs, he granted considerable authority to them.[31] He applied a similar approach to that of his previous work in Basutoland.[33] His view was that the native people were "better able to manage their own affairs than we can do it for them, though they need our help in international matters and in matters between white and black."[34] He gave special judicial functions to Hlubi of the Basotho, Mehlokazulu of the Ngobese and Mpiyakhe of the Mdlalose, enabling them to try certain cases referred to them by Resident Magistrates.[35] In 1895, according to Harriette Colenso, the Zulu people approved of direct rule with Clarke as Resident Commissioner.[36] However, when Clarke was appointed Resident Commissioner in Rhodesia in 1898, Charles Saunders replaced him and he bowed to pressure from settlers and officials to minimise Dinuzulu's influence over the Zulu people, especially during the Second Boer War.[37]

Clarke had to deal with four natural disasters during his tenure.[38] An outbreak of smallpox in 1894 was the result of labour migration and men returning from working in Witwatersrand.[38] When it proved too costly for the people, he waived the charge for the vaccination.[38] Locust swarms in 1894 and 1895 caused damage to crops and resulted in famine in 1896.[38] The government response was to offer the chief of each tribe a reward of 3 d for every muid of locusts collected as well as cattle to slaughter when a swarm was eradicated.[38] At the same time, Clarke bought 1,090 muids of quick-growing mealies to be given on payment to families requiring immediate relief, a measure of which Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson, Governor of Natal, approved: "It is better to err on the side of unnecessary expenditure than to run the risk of exposing the people to starvation."[38] Finally, in 1897, an outbreak of rinderpest killed many cattle and the government responded with a programme of inoculation.[39]

Southern Rhodesia (1898–1905) edit

As a result of the debacle of the Jameson Raid in the winter of 1895–1896, the imperial government determined by order in council to appoint a permanent Resident Commissioner to supervise the affairs of the British South Africa Company in Southern Rhodesia.[3] Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, offered the role to Clarke, whose impressive prior administrative career was an indication of the importance being placed on the role.[40] Graham Bower, the imperial secretary, wrote recommending him for the role: "Clarke is far and away the best man in this country".[10] Clarke was in post from 1898 to 1905, reporting directly to Alfred Milner, the High Commissioner for Southern Africa based in Johannesburg, who in turn reported to the Colonial Office in London.[41] His role was to safeguard the interests of the natives and to call on the High Commissioner for interference where he saw fit.[42] The Aborigines Protection Society in London approved of his appointment, stating in its annual report of 1900 that he had a "rare capacity for dealing justly with native communities".[43]

 
Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner

From the outset of his posting, Clarke had to deal with issues regarding land and labour.[10] The latter was of major significance at this time in Southern Rhodesia. In response to questioning by the African Association and the Manchester Society for the Protection of Native Races, Chamberlain in 1898 responded that forced labour was not permitted. A year later, Chamberlain was concerned by a chief native commissioner instructing chiefs at an indaba that it was their duty to supply labour. Clarke's subsequent report accused officials of the administration of requisitioning labour by 'pressure only short of force', causing 'discontent amongst the natives'.[44] Clarke's view was that a mutually beneficial relationship between capital and labour was possible through market forces alone, without additional pressure. Chamberlain agreed,[45] although Milner was in favour of compulsory labour even to the extent of 'recommending the corvée'.[44]

Towards the end of 1899, the Second Boer War gave Clarke cause for concern and he requested aid from Britain for the defence of Rhodesia.[46] He was particularly concerned with the possibility of Africans avenging their recent defeat in the Second Matabele War by joining forces against the government. So, along with the native commissioners, he summoned and addressed indabas around the country to reassure the Africans that they would be protected and would not be called to fight, so could continue to pursue their peaceful occupations as normal.[47] During this time, Africans deserted the mines, keeping their options open and "watching events".[48]

The administration in 1901 proposed a scheme similar to that of the Glen Grey Act, imposing a tax of £2 to induce natives to work. In 1903, Rhodesian capitalists even proposed a £4 tax but Chamberlain preferred the lower rate of £2 and sought Clarke's opinion on its potential to cause trouble. Clarke argued that even £2 was too high. Milner disagreed and wrote to Sir William Milton, the company administrator, saying: 'I am embarrassed by a report form the Resident Commissioner in which he utterly condemns the proposed Native Tax Ordinance'.[49] In 1904, finally, Alfred Lyttelton, Chamberlain's successor refused assent, citing Clarke's reports and an ordinance limited the tax to £1.[50]

In the meantime, in 1902, Scott, a native commissioner, brought to Clarke's attention that many work-seekers were suffering great privation yet were unable to find work while some businesses were short of labour. Clarke took up the cause: 'This indicates the necessity of the organisation of an Association for bringing those wanting labour and those seeking employment into contact and prevent, what I have myself seen, gangs of destitute natives wandering about the country.' In 1903, a Rhodesian Native Labour Bureau was proposed.[51]

Clarke was a critic of migrant labour schemes, which were designed to attract foreign labour to Rhodesia, and in 1900 he defended the rights of indigenous labour against infringement by foreign Africans from Mozambique, Nyasaland, Zambia and South Africa.[52] As early as 1900, the BSAC came to the Colonial Office with a proposal regarding Chinese labour.[53] In London, the Land and Mine Owners Association was formed in 1902 to lobby the Colonial Office and continued to press throughout 1903. The Colonial Office postponed its decision saying that the question concerned not only Rhodesia but all of southern Africa. Milner was lobbied by the BSAC and he promised his support. Clarke, however, dismissed the demands, arguing that 'the introduction of large numbers of Asiatics... will subject the aboriginal natives to unfair competition'. He forecast that the labour shortage was temporary and that the new bureau would satisfy demand.[54] Clarke also argued that most Rhodesians were opposed to the introduction of Chinese labour.[55] The Duke of Marlborough, then Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, recorded that he found Clarke's argument more convincing than Milner's, and the Colonial Office refused the proposal.[56]

After serving in office for an extra year to 1905,[57] Clarke retired, having helped to create a better system for the benefit of all. While the Colonial Office sought to mediate conflicts of interest, its impact was varied due to its desire to avoid expense. Milner was preoccupied with his vision of a new South Africa incorporating Southern Rhodesia, for which he needed the support of the BSAC. He appears to have had respect for Clarke, although he seems to have resented his influence at the Colonial Office, denying him an increase in salary or an official secretary. On Clarke's retirement, Milner wrote 'Personally I hardly think the office of Resident Commissioner any longer necessary'.[58]

Arthur Cripps, the Anglican missionary and supporter of the rights of natives, said at the end of the BSAC era:

Southern Rhodesian natives have surely had much in past years to thank a succession of Imperial Representatives for, Resident Commissioners, to whom the first of their number, Sir Marshal Clarke, handed on a fine tradition.[59]

Honours edit

He was invested as a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in April 1880,[60] and promoted to Knight Commander in 1886.[61]

He was granted authority to wear the insignia of the Third Class of the Order of the Medjidieh in November 1883 conferred on him by Tewfik Pasha, Khedive of Egypt, as authorised by Abdul Hamid II, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, in recognition of his services in the employ of the Khedive.[62]

Personal life edit

Clarke married Annie Stacy Lloyd, eldest daughter of Major General Banastyre Pryce Lloyd in 1880 and had three children: Elizabeth Clarke (17 June 1885 – 26 July 1952), Admiral Sir Marshal Llewelyn Clarke KBE CB DSC (9 May 1887 – 8 April 1959) and Captain Brian Lloyd Clarke (30 September 1888 – 19 April 1915).[1]

H. Rider Haggard was a friend of Clarke's and he dedicated Swallow, his story of the Boer Great Trek of 1836, to him: "...I hope that you will accept these pages in memory of past time and friendship, and more especially for the providential events connected with a night-long ride which once we took on duty together..."[63]

Clarke died suddenly on 1 April 1909 of pneumonia at The Lodge, Enniskerry, County Wicklow, Ireland.[64]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Montgomery-Massingberd 1976, pp. 240–242.
  2. ^ "Lt.-Col. Sir Marshal James Clarke". thepeerage.com. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Warhurst 1999, p. 223.
  4. ^ "No. 22717". The London Gazette. 17 March 1863. p. 1514.
  5. ^ "No. 24273". The London Gazette. 7 December 1875. p. 6300.
  6. ^ a b "British Resident in Rhodesia". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 May 1898. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  7. ^ a b "Sir Marshal Clarke". The Straits Times. 7 April 1909. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  8. ^ "No. 24835". The London Gazette. 20 April 1880. p. 2601.
  9. ^ "No. 25179". The London Gazette. 19 December 1882. p. 6457.
  10. ^ a b c d Warhurst 1999, p. 224.
  11. ^ "No. 25216". The London Gazette. 27 March 1883. p. 1697.
  12. ^ Sloley 1917, p. 112.
  13. ^ Mabille 1906, p. 371.
  14. ^ Sloley 1917, pp. 111–112.
  15. ^ Cana & Hillier 1911, pp. 505–506.
  16. ^ MacKenzie 1888, p. 16.
  17. ^ MacKenzie 1888, pp. 16–17.
  18. ^ Bryce 1897, p. 342.
  19. ^ Bryce 1897, p. 422.
  20. ^ a b Fox Bourne 1900, p. 80.
  21. ^ a b Hobson 1902, Part 2 Chapter IV.
  22. ^ a b c Colenso 1895, p. 3.
  23. ^ a b Cana 1911, p. 1054.
  24. ^ Colenso 1895, p. 4.
  25. ^ Marks 1963, pp. 403–404.
  26. ^ Colenso 1895, p. 5.
  27. ^ a b Fox Bourne 1899, p. 45.
  28. ^ Guy 2001, p. 303.
  29. ^ Colenso 1895, pp. 5, 7.
  30. ^ Marks 1963, p. 408.
  31. ^ a b Hamilton 1998, p. 131.
  32. ^ Colenso 1895, p. 14.
  33. ^ Fox Bourne 1900, p. 36.
  34. ^ Werner 1932, p. 252.
  35. ^ Unterhalter 1978, p. 64.
  36. ^ Zulu letters 1895, pp. 2–3.
  37. ^ Hamilton 1998, p. 132.
  38. ^ a b c d e f Unterhalter 1978, p. 66.
  39. ^ Unterhalter 1978, pp. 66–67.
  40. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 556.
  41. ^ Cranefield 2002, p. 18.
  42. ^ Fox Bourne 1900, p. 60.
  43. ^ APS 1900, pp. 4–5.
  44. ^ a b Warhurst 1999, p. 226.
  45. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 227.
  46. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 595.
  47. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 602.
  48. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 603.
  49. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 228.
  50. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 229.
  51. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 230.
  52. ^ Fisher 2010, p. 134.
  53. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 231.
  54. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 232.
  55. ^ Chinese Labour in Rhodesia. (HC Deb 8 June 1904 vol 135 cc1078-9)
  56. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 233.
  57. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 236.
  58. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 237.
  59. ^ Warhurst 1999, p. 238.
  60. ^ "No. 24831". The London Gazette. 6 April 1880. p. 2431.
  61. ^ "No. 25592". The London Gazette. 29 May 1886. p. 2634.
  62. ^ "No. 25287". The London Gazette. 13 November 1883. p. 5381.
  63. ^ Haggard 1898, pp. v–vi.
  64. ^ . South Africa. April–June 1909. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 23 November 2012.

Bibliography edit

  • Bryce, James (1897). Impressions of South Africa. MacMillan and Company.
  • Cana, Frank Richardson (1911). "Zululand". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 1050–1055.
  • Cana, Frank Richardson; Hillier, Alfred Peter (1911). "Basutoland". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 505–506.
  • Colenso, H. E. (1895), Zululand, the Exiled Chiefs, Natal, and the Colonial Office: 1893–5, London: Burt & sons, JSTOR 60229994
  • Cranefield, Paul F. (2002). Science and Empire: East Coast Fever in Rhodesia and the Transvaal. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521524490.
  • Fisher, J. L. (2010). Pioneers, Settlers, Aliens, Exiles: The Decolonisation of White Identity in Zimbabwe. ANU E Press. ISBN 9781921666148.
  • Fox Bourne, Henry Richard (1899), The Aborigines' Protection Society: chapters in its history, Aborigines' Protection Society LSE Selected Pamphlets, JSTOR 60221819
  • Fox Bourne, Henry Richard (1900), Blacks and whites in South Africa: an account of the past treatment and present conditions of South African natives under British and Boer control, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection, JSTOR 60231908
  • Guy, Jeff (2001). The view across the river : Harriette Colenso and the Zulu struggle against imperialism. Oxford: James Currey. OCLC 777867225.
  • Haggard, H. Rider (1898). Swallow: A tale of the great trek. OCLC 3334713.
  • Hamilton, Carolyn (1998). Terrific Majesty: The Power of Shaka Zulu and the Limits of Historical Invention. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674874455.
  • Hobson, John A. (1902). Imperialism, A Study. OL 20549349M.
  • Keppel-Jones, Arthur (1983). Rhodes and Rhodesia: The White Conquest of Zimbabwe, 1884–1902. McGill-Queens. ISBN 0773505342.
  • Mabille, H. E. (July 1906). "The Basuto of Basutoland". Journal of the Royal African Society. 5 (20): 351–376. JSTOR 715113.
  • MacKenzie, John (1888), Austral Africa: extension of British influence in trans-colonial territories : proceedings at a meeting of the London Chamber of Commerce, assembled on the 14th May, 1888, etc., LSE Selected Pamphlets, JSTOR 60225479
  • Marks, Shula (1963). "Harriette Colenso and the Zulus, 1874–1913". The Journal of African History. 4 (3): 403–411. doi:10.1017/s0021853700004321. JSTOR 180031. S2CID 161366058.
  • Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh (1976). Burke's Irish Family Records. Burkes Peerage Ltd.
  • Sloley, Herbert C. (January 1917). "Recent Developments in Basutoland". Journal of the Royal African Society. 16 (62): 111–124. JSTOR 716118.
  • Unterhalter, Elaine (1978). "The natives appear contented and quiet, the Nqutu district of Zululand under British rule, 1883–1897" (PDF). Collected Seminar Papers. Institute of Commonwealth Studies: 60–75. ISSN 0076-0773. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
  • Warhurst, P. R. (May 1999). "Imperial Watchdog: Sir Marshal Clarke as Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia". South African Historical Journal. 40 (1): 223–238. doi:10.1080/02582479908671356.
  • Werner, Alice (July 1932). "African Economics and African Administration". Journal of the Royal African Society. 31 (124): 245–254. JSTOR 716761.
  • Britain), Aborigines Protection Society (Great (1900), The annual report of the Aborigines Protection Society: 1900, Aborigines Protection Society (Great Britain) Wilson Anti-Slavery Collection, JSTOR 60239556
  • Zulu letters from St. Helena, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection, 1895, JSTOR 60232550

Further reading edit

Books edit

  • Haggard, Henry Rider (1882). Cetywayo and his White Neighbours. London: Trübner & Co. OL 17490W.
  • Phimister, Ian (1988). An Economic and Social History of Zimbabwe 1890–1914. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Phimister, Ian (1994). Wangi Kolia: Coal, Capital and Labour in Colonial Zimbabwe 1894–1954. Harare: Baobab Books.

Journal articles edit

  • Clarke, Marshal (August 1888). "Unexplored Basuto Land". Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography. 10 (8): 519–5225. doi:10.2307/1801003. JSTOR 1801003.
  • Duncan, Patrick (April 1959). (PDF). Africa South. 3 (3): 55–59. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 June 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  • Kerr, A. J. (1958). "The Reception and Codification of Systems of Law in Southern Africa". Journal of African Law. 2 (2): 82–100. doi:10.1017/s0021855300003454. JSTOR 745264. S2CID 54848551.
  • Phimister, Ian (April 1974). "Peasant Production and Underdevelopment in Southern Rhodesia, 1890–1914". African Affairs. 73 (291): 217–228. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a096469. JSTOR 720739.
  • Phimister, Ian (April 1977). "White Miners in Historical Perspective: Southern Rhodesia, 1890–1953". Journal of Southern African Studies. 3 (2): 187–206. doi:10.1080/03057077708707971. JSTOR 2636338.
  • Warhurst, Philip (April 1978). "A Troubled Frontier: North-Eastern Mashonaland, 1898–1906". African Affairs. 77 (307): 214–229. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a096962. JSTOR 721605.

Pamphlets edit

  • The Native question in South Africa: outlines of a suggested charter for natives under British rule in South Africa : submitted to Her Majesty's Government on behalf of the Abrorigines Protection Society, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection, 1900, JSTOR 60231814
  • Zulu affairs: correspondence, December, 1896–January, 1897 between Sir John Robinson and H. E. Colenso, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection, 1897, JSTOR 60232760
  • The Zulu question in 1895, Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection, 1895, JSTOR 60232764

External links edit

  • Marshalclarke.com
Political offices
Preceded by
new post
Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia
1898 – 1905
Succeeded by
Richard Chester-Master
Preceded by
Sir Melmoth Osborn
Resident Commissioner in Zululand
1893 – 1898
Succeeded by
Preceded by
new post
Resident Commissioner in Basutoland
1884 – 1893
Succeeded by

marshal, clarke, lieutenant, colonel, marshal, james, clarke, kcmg, october, 1841, april, 1909, british, colonial, administrator, officer, royal, artillery, first, resident, commissioner, basutoland, from, 1884, 1893, resident, commissioner, zululand, from, 18. Lieutenant Colonel Sir Marshal James Clarke KCMG 24 October 1841 1 April 1909 was a British colonial administrator and an officer of the Royal Artillery He was the first Resident Commissioner in Basutoland from 1884 to 1893 Resident Commissioner in Zululand from 1893 to 1898 and following the botched Jameson Raid the first Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia from 1898 to 1905 Lieutenant ColonelSir Marshal James ClarkeKCMG1st Resident Commissioner in Southern RhodesiaIn office 5 December 1898 1 April 1905Succeeded byRichard Chester Master2nd Resident Commissioner in ZululandIn office 1893 1898GovernorSir Walter Hely HutchinsonPreceded bySir Melmoth OsbornSucceeded byCharles Saunders1st Resident Commissioner in BasutolandIn office 18 March 1884 18 September 1893MonarchVictoriaSucceeded byGodfrey Yeatman LagdenPersonal detailsBorn 1841 10 24 24 October 1841Tipperary Ireland United KingdomDied1 April 1909 1909 04 01 aged 67 Enniskerry Ireland United KingdomSpouseAnnie Stacy Lloyd m 1880 wbr Children3Alma materTrinity College DublinRoyal Military Academy WoolwichAwardsTwice mentioned in despatchesOrder of the MedjidieMilitary serviceAllegianceBritish EmpireYears of service1863 1883RankLieutenant ColonelUnitRoyal ArtilleryBattles warsFirst Boer War For his work in Basutoland Clarke drew praise from the economist John A Hobson in his treatise Imperialism for his devotion to the education and development of the native people while Viscount Bryce noted that his approach fostered goodwill amongst native people towards Britain In Zululand Clarke granted considerable authority and special judicial functions to the hereditary chiefs and was commended by Sir Walter Hely Hutchinson Governor of Natal for his action in the face of potential famine He recommended to the Imperial Government the return from exile of Dinuzulu the paramount chief While in Southern Rhodesia he was appointed to protect the interests of native people against the overarching ambitions of the British South Africa Company He married Annie Stacy Lloyd daughter of Major General Banastyre Pryce Lloyd in 1880 and had three children He died suddenly of pneumonia in his home country of Ireland Contents 1 Early life 2 Basutoland 1884 1893 3 Zululand 1893 1898 4 Southern Rhodesia 1898 1905 5 Honours 6 Personal life 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 9 1 Books 9 2 Journal articles 9 3 Pamphlets 10 External linksEarly life editReverend Mark Clarke the Rector and Vicar of Shronell County Tipperary married Maria Hill on 6 April 1837 Marshal James Clarke was their eldest son born on 24 October 1841 1 2 He was born in Tipperary educated at a private school in Dublin and studied at Trinity College Dublin 3 He went on to study at the Royal Military Academy Woolwich 1 and was commissioned a Lieutenant in the Royal Artillery in February 1863 4 He served in India where he lost an arm to a tiger 3 Moving to Africa he was Resident Magistrate of Pietermaritzburg in 1874 3 He was promoted to captain in December 1875 5 He was Aide de Camp to Sir Theophilus Shepstone the Special Commissioner of South Africa in 1876 on his mission to the Transvaal 3 He was appointed Special Commissioner to South Africa in 1876 6 He was Political Officer and Special Commissioner of Lydenburg in 1877 7 During the First Boer War Clarke was twice mentioned in despatches 3 6 He was brevetted Major in April 1880 in recognition of his services during operations in South Africa 8 He was Resident Magistrate of Basutoland in 1881 1 He was promoted to Major in November 1882 9 He was Commissioner of Cape Police in 1882 1 He was seconded to the Sultan of Turkey s army in command of a regiment of the Egyptian Gendarmerie in 1882 10 He retired from the military in March 1883 with the honorary rank of Lieutenant Colonel 11 Basutoland 1884 1893 editClarke was appointed the first Resident Commissioner in Basutoland today Lesotho and took office on 16 March 1884 12 13 In the preceding years Basutoland had become unruly 14 In 1879 an uprising by Chief Morosi was quelled but led to intertribal strife over the partition of his land The Cape government sought to regain control in 1880 by extending the Cape Peace Preservation Act of 1878 to Basutoland which provided for the disarmament of natives Attempts to enforce the law resulted in the Basuto Gun War of 1880 to 1881 Unrest continued until it was agreed in 1884 to place the territory under direct British control 15 16 Under Imperial Administration through Clarke Basutoland once again demonstrated the loyalty seen under previous Imperial rule and returned to prosperity supplying neighbouring territories with grain and livestock as well as labour for the Kimberley Diamond Fields 17 James Bryce later Viscount Bryce noted in his Impressions after his tour of Southern Africa in 1897 that Clarke combined tactfulness with firmness in order to inspire goodwill towards the British government 18 While he suppressed the more noxious customs of the native people he did not allow Europeans to own land and mineral prospectors were forbidden 19 the only whites permitted to reside were officials missionaries and certain traders 20 Clarke s policy was to reinstate the tribal institutions and to govern through the recognised chiefs amongst whom Letsie son of Moshesh was paramount An annual pitso national assembly was held to debate questions of welfare The white authorities only intervened when disturbances occurred between natives 20 Clarke served until 1893 7 John A Hobson in Imperialism A Study 1902 summed up Clarke s work in Basutoland saying that along with other administrators like Sir George Grey and Lord Ripon he brought sympathy and knowledge to the establishment of careful experiments in self government 21 Hobson compares the approach to imperialism in Basutoland with that in Rhodesia and the Cape Colony noting that in the former it is devoted to protecting and aiding the education and development of the native people while in the latter two the policy allows for the exploitation of the people and lands by white colonists 21 The Paris Evangelical Missionary Society honoured him in appreciation for his work to bring about peace and good governance 10 Zululand 1893 1898 edit nbsp Dinuzulu c 1883 Sir Marshal Clarke succeeded Sir Melmoth Osborn as Resident Commissioner and Chief Magistrate in Zululand in June 1893 Sir Walter Hely Hutchinson was appointed successor to Sir Charles Mitchell as Governor of the colony in August 1893 as well as Governor of Natal which was to gain responsible government two months later 22 The conclusion of the Anglo Zulu War in 1879 had resulted in the imprisonment of the Zulu king Cetshwayo on Robben Island and the division of the Zulu Kingdom into 13 chiefdoms In 1883 after John Colenso Bishop of Natal appealed on his behalf Cetshwayo was released and restored to power Zibhebhu kaMaphitha one of the 13 Zulu chiefs led a force against Cetshwayo and on 22 July 1883 defeated him in Ulundi Cetshwayo escaped injured but died in February 1884 leaving his son Dinuzulu to inherit the throne He ultimately succeeded in driving out Zibhebhu with the help of Transvaal Boers 23 Dinuzulu rebelled against the British in 1888 but was defeated and fled to the Transvaal He gave himself up in November 1888 and he and his uncles Ndabuko and Tshingana were found guilty of high treason in April 1889 and exiled to St Helena 23 22 Bishop Colenso s daughter Harriette intervened on their behalf in London 22 On her return to Zululand in August 1893 Clarke invited her to his residence in Etshowe While there she was visited by Zulu from across the land 24 The Zulu people had great affection for Bishop Colenso and his daughter 25 She persuaded them that Clarke s appointment was beneficial to them and they gave Clarke the nickname uKwezi meaning Keeper or Protector A sign of this was the release of a number of Dinzulu s followers from prison 26 In his first year in office Clarke established good order in the colony 27 Unlike Osborn who treated Colenso s presence at the trials in 1888 as an affront 28 Clarke took up Colenso s cause and recommended to the Colonial Office in London that Dinuzulu and his uncles be allowed to return from exile having been sufficiently punished for his supposed offences 29 27 Clarke persuaded by Colenso argued that Dinuzulu would not cause further trouble so long as the policy of fomenting intertribal strife were discontinued and Dinuzulu be appointed induna 30 He began the process for the return of Dinuzulu and sought to harness the authority of the Zulu leader to the administration 31 In January 1895 the exiles received notice of their return to Zululand with an official position for Dinuzulu Their departure was set for February 1895 but was delayed after Ministers in London recommended that Zululand first be annexed to Natal 32 Clarke s tenure marked a difference in policy instead of trying to divide and rule and undermine the power of the hereditary chiefs he granted considerable authority to them 31 He applied a similar approach to that of his previous work in Basutoland 33 His view was that the native people were better able to manage their own affairs than we can do it for them though they need our help in international matters and in matters between white and black 34 He gave special judicial functions to Hlubi of the Basotho Mehlokazulu of the Ngobese and Mpiyakhe of the Mdlalose enabling them to try certain cases referred to them by Resident Magistrates 35 In 1895 according to Harriette Colenso the Zulu people approved of direct rule with Clarke as Resident Commissioner 36 However when Clarke was appointed Resident Commissioner in Rhodesia in 1898 Charles Saunders replaced him and he bowed to pressure from settlers and officials to minimise Dinuzulu s influence over the Zulu people especially during the Second Boer War 37 Clarke had to deal with four natural disasters during his tenure 38 An outbreak of smallpox in 1894 was the result of labour migration and men returning from working in Witwatersrand 38 When it proved too costly for the people he waived the charge for the vaccination 38 Locust swarms in 1894 and 1895 caused damage to crops and resulted in famine in 1896 38 The government response was to offer the chief of each tribe a reward of 3 d for every muid of locusts collected as well as cattle to slaughter when a swarm was eradicated 38 At the same time Clarke bought 1 090 muids of quick growing mealies to be given on payment to families requiring immediate relief a measure of which Sir Walter Hely Hutchinson Governor of Natal approved It is better to err on the side of unnecessary expenditure than to run the risk of exposing the people to starvation 38 Finally in 1897 an outbreak of rinderpest killed many cattle and the government responded with a programme of inoculation 39 Southern Rhodesia 1898 1905 editAs a result of the debacle of the Jameson Raid in the winter of 1895 1896 the imperial government determined by order in council to appoint a permanent Resident Commissioner to supervise the affairs of the British South Africa Company in Southern Rhodesia 3 Joseph Chamberlain Secretary of State for the Colonies offered the role to Clarke whose impressive prior administrative career was an indication of the importance being placed on the role 40 Graham Bower the imperial secretary wrote recommending him for the role Clarke is far and away the best man in this country 10 Clarke was in post from 1898 to 1905 reporting directly to Alfred Milner the High Commissioner for Southern Africa based in Johannesburg who in turn reported to the Colonial Office in London 41 His role was to safeguard the interests of the natives and to call on the High Commissioner for interference where he saw fit 42 The Aborigines Protection Society in London approved of his appointment stating in its annual report of 1900 that he had a rare capacity for dealing justly with native communities 43 nbsp Alfred Milner 1st Viscount Milner From the outset of his posting Clarke had to deal with issues regarding land and labour 10 The latter was of major significance at this time in Southern Rhodesia In response to questioning by the African Association and the Manchester Society for the Protection of Native Races Chamberlain in 1898 responded that forced labour was not permitted A year later Chamberlain was concerned by a chief native commissioner instructing chiefs at an indaba that it was their duty to supply labour Clarke s subsequent report accused officials of the administration of requisitioning labour by pressure only short of force causing discontent amongst the natives 44 Clarke s view was that a mutually beneficial relationship between capital and labour was possible through market forces alone without additional pressure Chamberlain agreed 45 although Milner was in favour of compulsory labour even to the extent of recommending the corvee 44 Towards the end of 1899 the Second Boer War gave Clarke cause for concern and he requested aid from Britain for the defence of Rhodesia 46 He was particularly concerned with the possibility of Africans avenging their recent defeat in the Second Matabele War by joining forces against the government So along with the native commissioners he summoned and addressed indabas around the country to reassure the Africans that they would be protected and would not be called to fight so could continue to pursue their peaceful occupations as normal 47 During this time Africans deserted the mines keeping their options open and watching events 48 The administration in 1901 proposed a scheme similar to that of the Glen Grey Act imposing a tax of 2 to induce natives to work In 1903 Rhodesian capitalists even proposed a 4 tax but Chamberlain preferred the lower rate of 2 and sought Clarke s opinion on its potential to cause trouble Clarke argued that even 2 was too high Milner disagreed and wrote to Sir William Milton the company administrator saying I am embarrassed by a report form the Resident Commissioner in which he utterly condemns the proposed Native Tax Ordinance 49 In 1904 finally Alfred Lyttelton Chamberlain s successor refused assent citing Clarke s reports and an ordinance limited the tax to 1 50 In the meantime in 1902 Scott a native commissioner brought to Clarke s attention that many work seekers were suffering great privation yet were unable to find work while some businesses were short of labour Clarke took up the cause This indicates the necessity of the organisation of an Association for bringing those wanting labour and those seeking employment into contact and prevent what I have myself seen gangs of destitute natives wandering about the country In 1903 a Rhodesian Native Labour Bureau was proposed 51 Clarke was a critic of migrant labour schemes which were designed to attract foreign labour to Rhodesia and in 1900 he defended the rights of indigenous labour against infringement by foreign Africans from Mozambique Nyasaland Zambia and South Africa 52 As early as 1900 the BSAC came to the Colonial Office with a proposal regarding Chinese labour 53 In London the Land and Mine Owners Association was formed in 1902 to lobby the Colonial Office and continued to press throughout 1903 The Colonial Office postponed its decision saying that the question concerned not only Rhodesia but all of southern Africa Milner was lobbied by the BSAC and he promised his support Clarke however dismissed the demands arguing that the introduction of large numbers of Asiatics will subject the aboriginal natives to unfair competition He forecast that the labour shortage was temporary and that the new bureau would satisfy demand 54 Clarke also argued that most Rhodesians were opposed to the introduction of Chinese labour 55 The Duke of Marlborough then Permanent Under Secretary of State for the Colonies recorded that he found Clarke s argument more convincing than Milner s and the Colonial Office refused the proposal 56 After serving in office for an extra year to 1905 57 Clarke retired having helped to create a better system for the benefit of all While the Colonial Office sought to mediate conflicts of interest its impact was varied due to its desire to avoid expense Milner was preoccupied with his vision of a new South Africa incorporating Southern Rhodesia for which he needed the support of the BSAC He appears to have had respect for Clarke although he seems to have resented his influence at the Colonial Office denying him an increase in salary or an official secretary On Clarke s retirement Milner wrote Personally I hardly think the office of Resident Commissioner any longer necessary 58 Arthur Cripps the Anglican missionary and supporter of the rights of natives said at the end of the BSAC era Southern Rhodesian natives have surely had much in past years to thank a succession of Imperial Representatives for Resident Commissioners to whom the first of their number Sir Marshal Clarke handed on a fine tradition 59 Honours editHe was invested as a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George in April 1880 60 and promoted to Knight Commander in 1886 61 He was granted authority to wear the insignia of the Third Class of the Order of the Medjidieh in November 1883 conferred on him by Tewfik Pasha Khedive of Egypt as authorised by Abdul Hamid II Sultan of the Ottoman Empire in recognition of his services in the employ of the Khedive 62 Personal life editClarke married Annie Stacy Lloyd eldest daughter of Major General Banastyre Pryce Lloyd in 1880 and had three children Elizabeth Clarke 17 June 1885 26 July 1952 Admiral Sir Marshal Llewelyn Clarke KBE CB DSC 9 May 1887 8 April 1959 and Captain Brian Lloyd Clarke 30 September 1888 19 April 1915 1 H Rider Haggard was a friend of Clarke s and he dedicated Swallow his story of the Boer Great Trek of 1836 to him I hope that you will accept these pages in memory of past time and friendship and more especially for the providential events connected with a night long ride which once we took on duty together 63 Clarke died suddenly on 1 April 1909 of pneumonia at The Lodge Enniskerry County Wicklow Ireland 64 See also editCompany rule in Rhodesia British South Africa Company Administrative posts of the British South Africa Company in Southern Rhodesia Basutoland Zulu KingdomReferences edit a b c d e Montgomery Massingberd 1976 pp 240 242 Lt Col Sir Marshal James Clarke thepeerage com Retrieved 21 November 2012 a b c d e f Warhurst 1999 p 223 No 22717 The London Gazette 17 March 1863 p 1514 No 24273 The London Gazette 7 December 1875 p 6300 a b British Resident in Rhodesia The Sydney Morning Herald 9 May 1898 Retrieved 21 November 2012 a b Sir Marshal Clarke The Straits Times 7 April 1909 Retrieved 23 November 2012 No 24835 The London Gazette 20 April 1880 p 2601 No 25179 The London Gazette 19 December 1882 p 6457 a b c d Warhurst 1999 p 224 No 25216 The London Gazette 27 March 1883 p 1697 Sloley 1917 p 112 Mabille 1906 p 371 Sloley 1917 pp 111 112 Cana amp Hillier 1911 pp 505 506 MacKenzie 1888 p 16 MacKenzie 1888 pp 16 17 Bryce 1897 p 342 Bryce 1897 p 422 a b Fox Bourne 1900 p 80 a b Hobson 1902 Part 2 Chapter IV a b c Colenso 1895 p 3 a b Cana 1911 p 1054 Colenso 1895 p 4 Marks 1963 pp 403 404 Colenso 1895 p 5 a b Fox Bourne 1899 p 45 Guy 2001 p 303 Colenso 1895 pp 5 7 Marks 1963 p 408 a b Hamilton 1998 p 131 Colenso 1895 p 14 Fox Bourne 1900 p 36 Werner 1932 p 252 Unterhalter 1978 p 64 Zulu letters 1895 pp 2 3 Hamilton 1998 p 132 a b c d e f Unterhalter 1978 p 66 Unterhalter 1978 pp 66 67 Keppel Jones 1983 p 556 Cranefield 2002 p 18 Fox Bourne 1900 p 60 APS 1900 pp 4 5 a b Warhurst 1999 p 226 Warhurst 1999 p 227 Keppel Jones 1983 p 595 Keppel Jones 1983 p 602 Keppel Jones 1983 p 603 Warhurst 1999 p 228 Warhurst 1999 p 229 Warhurst 1999 p 230 Fisher 2010 p 134 Warhurst 1999 p 231 Warhurst 1999 p 232 Chinese Labour in Rhodesia HC Deb 8 June 1904 vol 135 cc1078 9 Warhurst 1999 p 233 Warhurst 1999 p 236 Warhurst 1999 p 237 Warhurst 1999 p 238 No 24831 The London Gazette 6 April 1880 p 2431 No 25592 The London Gazette 29 May 1886 p 2634 No 25287 The London Gazette 13 November 1883 p 5381 Haggard 1898 pp v vi Domestic Announcements Deaths South Africa April June 1909 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 23 November 2012 Bibliography edit Bryce James 1897 Impressions of South Africa MacMillan and Company Cana Frank Richardson 1911 Zululand In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 1050 1055 Cana Frank Richardson Hillier Alfred Peter 1911 Basutoland In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 505 506 Colenso H E 1895 Zululand the Exiled Chiefs Natal and the Colonial Office 1893 5 London Burt amp sons JSTOR 60229994 Cranefield Paul F 2002 Science and Empire East Coast Fever in Rhodesia and the Transvaal Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521524490 Fisher J L 2010 Pioneers Settlers Aliens Exiles The Decolonisation of White Identity in Zimbabwe ANU E Press ISBN 9781921666148 Fox Bourne Henry Richard 1899 The Aborigines Protection Society chapters in its history Aborigines Protection Society LSE Selected Pamphlets JSTOR 60221819 Fox Bourne Henry Richard 1900 Blacks and whites in South Africa an account of the past treatment and present conditions of South African natives under British and Boer control Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection JSTOR 60231908 Guy Jeff 2001 The view across the river Harriette Colenso and the Zulu struggle against imperialism Oxford James Currey OCLC 777867225 Haggard H Rider 1898 Swallow A tale of the great trek OCLC 3334713 Hamilton Carolyn 1998 Terrific Majesty The Power of Shaka Zulu and the Limits of Historical Invention Harvard University Press ISBN 0674874455 Hobson John A 1902 Imperialism A Study OL 20549349M Keppel Jones Arthur 1983 Rhodes and Rhodesia The White Conquest of Zimbabwe 1884 1902 McGill Queens ISBN 0773505342 Mabille H E July 1906 The Basuto of Basutoland Journal of the Royal African Society 5 20 351 376 JSTOR 715113 MacKenzie John 1888 Austral Africa extension of British influence in trans colonial territories proceedings at a meeting of the London Chamber of Commerce assembled on the 14th May 1888 etc LSE Selected Pamphlets JSTOR 60225479 Marks Shula 1963 Harriette Colenso and the Zulus 1874 1913 The Journal of African History 4 3 403 411 doi 10 1017 s0021853700004321 JSTOR 180031 S2CID 161366058 Montgomery Massingberd Hugh 1976 Burke s Irish Family Records Burkes Peerage Ltd Sloley Herbert C January 1917 Recent Developments in Basutoland Journal of the Royal African Society 16 62 111 124 JSTOR 716118 Unterhalter Elaine 1978 The natives appear contented and quiet the Nqutu district of Zululand under British rule 1883 1897 PDF Collected Seminar Papers Institute of Commonwealth Studies 60 75 ISSN 0076 0773 Retrieved 23 November 2012 Warhurst P R May 1999 Imperial Watchdog Sir Marshal Clarke as Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia South African Historical Journal 40 1 223 238 doi 10 1080 02582479908671356 Werner Alice July 1932 African Economics and African Administration Journal of the Royal African Society 31 124 245 254 JSTOR 716761 Britain Aborigines Protection Society Great 1900 The annual report of the Aborigines Protection Society 1900 Aborigines Protection Society Great Britain Wilson Anti Slavery Collection JSTOR 60239556 Zulu letters from St Helena Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection 1895 JSTOR 60232550Further reading editBooks edit Haggard Henry Rider 1882 Cetywayo and his White Neighbours London Trubner amp Co OL 17490W Phimister Ian 1988 An Economic and Social History of Zimbabwe 1890 1914 London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Phimister Ian 1994 Wangi Kolia Coal Capital and Labour in Colonial Zimbabwe 1894 1954 Harare Baobab Books Journal articles edit Clarke Marshal August 1888 Unexplored Basuto Land Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography 10 8 519 5225 doi 10 2307 1801003 JSTOR 1801003 Duncan Patrick April 1959 Basutoland in transition PDF Africa South 3 3 55 59 Archived from the original PDF on 18 June 2015 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Kerr A J 1958 The Reception and Codification of Systems of Law in Southern Africa Journal of African Law 2 2 82 100 doi 10 1017 s0021855300003454 JSTOR 745264 S2CID 54848551 Phimister Ian April 1974 Peasant Production and Underdevelopment in Southern Rhodesia 1890 1914 African Affairs 73 291 217 228 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals afraf a096469 JSTOR 720739 Phimister Ian April 1977 White Miners in Historical Perspective Southern Rhodesia 1890 1953 Journal of Southern African Studies 3 2 187 206 doi 10 1080 03057077708707971 JSTOR 2636338 Warhurst Philip April 1978 A Troubled Frontier North Eastern Mashonaland 1898 1906 African Affairs 77 307 214 229 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals afraf a096962 JSTOR 721605 Pamphlets edit The Native question in South Africa outlines of a suggested charter for natives under British rule in South Africa submitted to Her Majesty s Government on behalf of the Abrorigines Protection Society Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection 1900 JSTOR 60231814 Zulu affairs correspondence December 1896 January 1897 between Sir John Robinson and H E Colenso Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection 1897 JSTOR 60232760 The Zulu question in 1895 Foreign and Commonwealth Office Collection 1895 JSTOR 60232764External links editMarshalclarke com Political offices Preceded bynew post Resident Commissioner in Southern Rhodesia1898 1905 Succeeded byRichard Chester Master Preceded bySir Melmoth Osborn Resident Commissioner in Zululand1893 1898 Succeeded byCharles Saunders Preceded bynew post Resident Commissioner in Basutoland1884 1893 Succeeded byGodfrey Yeatman Lagden Retrieved from 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