Difference between revisions of "Alfred Claud Hollis"
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Latest revision as of 08:51, 22 January 2021
| Alfred Claud Hollis CMG | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Hollis, Alfred Claud.jpg | |||||||
| Born | 1874 | ||||||
| Died | 1961 | ||||||
| Residence |
Dartmouth House, Dartmouth Park Hill, NW [1901] Mombasa, British East Africa [1905] Nairobi, British East Africa [1911] Hill Station, Freetown, Sierra Leone [1913] | ||||||
| Occupation | administrative | ||||||
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Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
proposed 1901.10.15
1904.03.08 the following gentlemen, having been duly proposed & seconded, were appointed Local Correspondents of the Institute for five years, the appointments to lapse at the Annual Meeting of 1909: ... Mr C. Hollis – Mombasa ...
spelt Holles in 1901 list
Notes From Elsewhere
Sir Alfred Claud Hollis GCMG CBE (12 May 1874 – 22 November 1961)[1] was British administrator who served as British Resident to the Sultan of Zanzibar between 1923 and 1929 and Governor of Trinidad and Tobago between 1930 and 1936 and author of a historical account of Spanish Trinidad.
Hollis was born in London, and was privately educated in England, Switzerland and Germany. He worked for a commercial company in German East Africa (1893–96) and in 1897 he was appointed assistant collector in the British East Africa Protectorate.[1] He wrote pioneering works on the Maasai (1905) and the Nandi people (1908).[1]
In 1913, Hollis took up the post of colonial secretary in Sierra Leone, and in 1920 he was appointed chief secretary in Tanganyika.[1] In 1924 he became British Resident Minister in Zanzibar.[1]
In 1930 Hollis was made governor of Trinidad, holding that post until his retirement in 1936.[1] He came into conflict with Arthur Andrew Cipriani over the transfer of the electric works to the authority of the Port of Spain City Corporation.
Hollis died at the age of 87 in Cambridge.[1]
Publications
External Publications
He wrote pioneering works on the Maasai (1905) and the Nandi people (1908)