- Tom Askwith
Thomas Garrett Askwith (
May 24 1911 –July 16 2001 ), wasPermanent Secretary in the Ministry of African Affairs, and a double Olympian.Early life
Askwith was born in
Cheam ,Surrey . Tom was educated at Haileybury and matriculated atPeterhouse, Cambridge in 1929, where he readEngineering . His father worked in insurance, but was killed atYpres in 1917.Cambridge and Rowing
Tom joined
Peterhouse Boat Club (PBC) in theMichaelmas term of 1929, and was Treasurer in 1930-31, and Captain the following year and part of the next. He was Secretary of theCambridge University Boat Club in 1933. Tom was a prolific oarsman, and in the Michaelmas term of 1931 became the first PBC oarsman sinceLord Kelvin to win theColquhoun sculls . In theLent term of 1932 he rowed at 3 in the winning Blue boat in theUniversity Boat Race . This crew won theGrand Challenge Cup atHenley Royal Regatta rowing asLeander Club , and was subsequently chosen to representGreat Britain at the1932 Summer Olympics inLos Angeles . In 1933, Tom again represented the winning Cambridge crew in the Boat Race, later that year winning theDiamond Challenge Sculls at Henley Royal Regatta by two lengths from H L Warren of Trinity Hall, choosing to race under Peterhouse colours over those of Leander Club. After this victory, The Observer remarked that Tom would surely be a 'Pothouse Immortal'. Tom was again selected to represent Great Britain at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, finishing fourth in the VIII again.Colonial Service
After going down from Cambridge, Tom worked briefly for
Whitbread inLondon , before entering theBritish Colonial Service in 1935. Posted toKenya in 1936, he was District Commissioner forIsiolo , and thenMachakos .From 1945 Tom became the Municipal African Affairs Officer in
Nairobi . Four years later, Tom was appointed Commissioner of Community Development and Principal of Jeanes School,Kabete – a training institution for African colonial development officers.With his keen sporting background, Tom chaired the Kenya Sports Association and was involved in promoting Kenyan participation in the Commonwealth and
Olympic games .Tom was appointed to organize the rehabilitation of those imprisoned during the 1952
Mau Mau uprising, but was later relieved of his duties when he suggested that the Kenyan government should be more humane, and rely less upon force and harsh conditions to impose order in the camps. His stance was vindicated after the 1959 inquiry into the deaths of 11 detainees, who were beaten to death at Hola Camp (seeHola massacre ).Later life
Tom finished his career as
Permanent Secretary toBeniah Ohanga , the firstAfrican incumbent at the Ministry of African Affairs, retiring in 1961. Tom spent the next year working as a community development officer inAfghanistan , and worked in a similar role for the Britishgovernment inTurkey from 1964 until 1966.Tom recorded his memoirs in three volumes, "From Mau Mau to Harambee" (1995), "Getting My Knees Brown" (1996) and "Eyeball to Eyeball" (1998).
Family
Tom married Patricia Noad (died 1999) in 1939; they had two sons and a daughter.
References
*cite news|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1357785/Tom-Askwith.html|title=Tom Askwith|work=
Daily Telegraph |date=2001-11-22|accessdate=2008-09-15
*cite book |title=A short account of the Peterhouse Boat Club, 1828-1978 |last=Mayer |first=Roland
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