Correspondence, chiefly relating to his agreement with Sir Charles Eliot (H.M. Commissioner in Nairobi) and the latter's resignation in 1904.
Dates
- Creation: 1903-1908
Extent
415 ff., 2 items
Language of Materials
- English
Preferred Citation
Oxford, Bodleian Libraries [followed by shelfmark and folio or page reference, e.g. MSS. Afr. s. 589].
Full range of shelfmarks:
MSS. Afr. s. 589
Collection ID (for staff)
CMD ID 1172
Biographical / Historical
Robert Arthur Briggs Chamberlain was born in 1865 in Hull, Yorkshire, England. He was educated at Trent College, Nottingham; King's College, Cambridge, and the Universities of Heidelberg and Tübingen in Germany. He became a law student of the Inner Temple then turned to journalism and worked on the Manchester Guardianand various London newspapers. Shortly before the Boer War broke out he went to South Africa as editor of the Johannesburg Star; his opposition to the importation of Chinese labour for the Rand gold mines was so unpopular that he resigned his editorship.
In 1903 Chamberlain, together with his colleague A.S. Flemmer, applied for concessions in the East Africa Protectorate (now Kenya). They reached an agreement with Sir Charles Eliot (H.M. Commissioner in Nairobi) but this agreement was cancelled by Lord Lansdowne (Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs) and resulted in Sir Charles Eliot's resignation in June 1904. Chamberlain then appealed to Viscount Milner (High Commissioner for South Africa) and for the next 3 years he continued to press his claim with the Foreign and Colonial Offices until in November 1907 Winston Churchill, as Colonial Under-Secretary, advised the Secretary of State, Lord Elgin, that the concession should be carried out in the terms arranged by Sir Charles Eliot. This advice was accepted and Chamberlain acquired 32,000 acres of land beside the Nderit Stream which he farmed until the late 1920s when he sold the greater part of his holding. He was largely responsible for the first wave of settlement in British East Africa of farmers from South Africa and also for the formation in 1911 of the Convention of Associations, a body which rendered much service to the cause of white settlers in Kenya.
Chamberlain died at Elmenteita, Kenya, in 1948.
Other Finding Aids
The library holds a card index of all manuscript collections in its reading room and a handlist is also available for this collection.
Listed as no. 139 in Manuscript Collections of Africana in Rhodes House Library, Oxford, compiled by Louis B. Frewer (Oxford, Bodleian Library, 1968).
- Title
- Correspondence of Robert A.B. Chamberlain
- Status
- Published
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Bodleian Libraries Repository
Weston Library
Broad Street
Oxford OX1 3BG United Kingdom
specialcollections.enquiries@bodleian.ox.ac.uk