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Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875

The idea for using Southey's letters as the basis for a study of his administration or Griqualand West was suggested to me by two historians, one South African and one American, almost simultaneously. Thus inspired, I spent many hours in the Cape Archives where I became fascinated by Southey, his fr...

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Main Author: Minott, Lorraine Lukens
Other Authors: Davey, Arthur
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Historical Studies 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Minott, Lorraine Lukens
author2 Davey, Arthur
author_browse Davey, Arthur
Minott, Lorraine Lukens
author_facet Davey, Arthur
Minott, Lorraine Lukens
author_sort Minott, Lorraine Lukens
collection Thesis
description The idea for using Southey's letters as the basis for a study of his administration or Griqualand West was suggested to me by two historians, one South African and one American, almost simultaneously. Thus inspired, I spent many hours in the Cape Archives where I became fascinated by Southey, his friends and his numerous adversaries. Southey was a tireless correspondent, and from his detailed accounts of the day to day happenings in Griqualand West and his definite opinions on people and events, a vivid picture emerges of Southey as a man. Stubborn, irascible, protocol minded and disorganized on one hand, humanitarian and imperialistic to the point of being almost visionary in his dreams for Africa on the other. The difficulty was to present Southey in depth without drowning in detail. Certain aspects of Southey's administration I have deliberately omitted, for instance, the complicated issue of ownership of the land which became Griqualand West and the endless boundary squabbles with the OFS and the SAR. Others, such as Southey's relations with Barkly, Carnarvon and Froude I have only touched upon from Southey's point of view as they have been dealt with in great detail by Mr. Goodfellow and Mrs. Macmillan. I have concentrated on the specific issue of Southey's administration and why it tailed. Southey's attitude towards the natives, which affected his views on the arms trade, complicated the settlement of the land problem, and soured his relations with the diggers was one factor. There were others as far flung as the fluctuation of the world diamond market, and as near as Southey's inability to compromise and his knack of making both warm friends and bitter enemies.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16359 Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875 Minott, Lorraine Lukens Davey, Arthur Historical Studies - South Africa The idea for using Southey's letters as the basis for a study of his administration or Griqualand West was suggested to me by two historians, one South African and one American, almost simultaneously. Thus inspired, I spent many hours in the Cape Archives where I became fascinated by Southey, his friends and his numerous adversaries. Southey was a tireless correspondent, and from his detailed accounts of the day to day happenings in Griqualand West and his definite opinions on people and events, a vivid picture emerges of Southey as a man. Stubborn, irascible, protocol minded and disorganized on one hand, humanitarian and imperialistic to the point of being almost visionary in his dreams for Africa on the other. The difficulty was to present Southey in depth without drowning in detail. Certain aspects of Southey's administration I have deliberately omitted, for instance, the complicated issue of ownership of the land which became Griqualand West and the endless boundary squabbles with the OFS and the SAR. Others, such as Southey's relations with Barkly, Carnarvon and Froude I have only touched upon from Southey's point of view as they have been dealt with in great detail by Mr. Goodfellow and Mrs. Macmillan. I have concentrated on the specific issue of Southey's administration and why it tailed. Southey's attitude towards the natives, which affected his views on the arms trade, complicated the settlement of the land problem, and soured his relations with the diggers was one factor. There were others as far flung as the fluctuation of the world diamond market, and as near as Southey's inability to compromise and his knack of making both warm friends and bitter enemies. 2016-01-12T11:21:43Z 2016-01-12T11:21:43Z 1973 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16359 eng application/pdf Department of Historical Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Historical Studies - South Africa
Minott, Lorraine Lukens
Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
title_full Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
title_fullStr Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
title_full_unstemmed Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
title_short Sir Richard Southey, Lieutenant governor of Griqualand West 1872-1875
title_sort sir richard southey lieutenant governor of griqualand west 1872 1875
topic Historical Studies - South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16359
work_keys_str_mv AT minottlorrainelukens sirrichardsoutheylieutenantgovernorofgriqualandwest18721875