Arthur Grimble

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Sir
Arthur Grimble
Grimble, Arthur.jpg
Born 1888
Died 1956
Residence Lyndhurst, Theydon Bois, Epping
Ocean Island, Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony [1921]
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
Local correspondent from 1921.12.18-1930.02.25
left 1930 struck off
elected_AI 1921.01.11




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1920.12.14 proposed by H.J. Braunholtz, seconded by T.A. Joyce
1921.11.15 On the motion of Mr Braunholtz seconded by Capt. Joyce it was resolved to appoint Mr Grimble as Local Correspondent for the Gilbert Islands
1921.12.18 It was resolved to appoint Mr Arthur Grimble Local Correspondent for the Gilbert Islands
1930.01.21 it was resolved to remove the following names from the list of Fellows owing to arrears of subscriptions: Messrs Arthur Grimble, W.R. Humphries, Charles Frederick Jackson, J.B. Kittredge, Major Erskine Martin, Samuel T. Moses, Robert Neill, J. Hunter Shaw, C.W. Shorland, Roy George Townend
1930.02.25 It was resolved to delete the following names from the list of Local Correspondents, M. Leon Coutil, A. Grimble, Ven. Archdeacon Shaw

District Officer, Gilbert and Ellice Islands; Governor and Commander-in-Chief, Seychelles

Notes From Elsewhere

Sir Arthur Francis Grimble, KCMG (Hong Kong, 11 June 1888 – London, 13 December 1956) was a British civil servant and writer.
He was educated at Chigwell School and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He then went to France and Germany for postgraduate studies. After joining the Colonial Office in 1914, he became a cadet administrative officer in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, of which he became resident commissioner in 1926. He was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) on 1 January 1930.[1] Specialist in the myths and oral traditions of Kiribati people, he learned the Gilbertese language.
He remained there until 1933, after which he served as Governor of the Seychelles (1936–1942) and of the Windward Islands (1942–1948).
After retiring and moving to Britain in 1948, he became a writer and broadcaster. He wrote A Pattern of Islands (London, John Murray 1952, published in US as We chose the Islands) and Return to the Islands (1957) which were best-sellers. In 1956 a film Pacific Destiny was based on his experiences. A Pattern of Islands was republished by Eland, London in 2011, ISBN 978-1-906011-45-1. Both Grimble's daughter Rosemary and his son-in-law, Commander Adrian C. C. Seligman, published books of their own.[2]
The best book on his scientific work on the Gilbertese culture has been published by Henry Evans Maude, Tungaru Traditions: writings on the atoll culture of the Gilbert Islands, University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 1989, ISBN 0-8248-1217-4

Publications

External Publications

A pattern of islands, 1952

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

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