- Sir Henry Phillips
Sir Henry Phillips, CMG, MBE, was a colonial administrator in
Nyasaland , laterMalawi .Henry Ellis Isidore Phillips was born on
August 30 ,1914 . He attendedHaberdashers’ Aske’s School and graduated as Bachelor of Arts fromUniversity College London , in 1936, receiving his MA subsequently in 1939. His essay The Last Years of the Court of Star Chamber, 1630-41, won him the Alexander Prize of theRoyal Historical Society in 1938.Phillips received a commission in the
Bedfordshire andHertfordshire regiment early in theSecond World War and was sent toSingapore with the 18th Infantry Division, 5th Battalion, arriving shortly before Singapore fell to the Japanese onFebruary 15 ,1942 . From December of that year until April 1944, he worked as anintelligence officer on theThailand-Burma Railway , in the jungleprison camp at Tarsao, collecting and disseminating information from the outside world, from local newspapers and hidden radios, in order to boost the morale of his fellow prisoners. In February 1945 he was interrogated by the Japanese Military Police and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. He arrived at Singapore’s Outram Road Jail, known as “The Belsen of the East”, in July 1945 but was released after only a month. For his work during this time in Burma and Singapore he was awarded the MBE in 1946.Shortly after the end of the war he left England for
Nyasaland (nowMalawi ) in Central Africa where he served as an assistant district commissioner in the northern area of Karonga on Lake Nyasa. He moved to Salisbury (now Harare) in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in 1953, serving in the Treasury of the ill-fated Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland which was formed in that year.He returned to Nyasaland in 1957 as Financial Secretary. In 1960 he was appointed CMG. As the senior official responsible for finance, he expected to hand over the reins on independence to
Dunduzu Chisiza , a prominent young member of the group, headed byHastings Kamuzu Banda , which was to govern after Nyasaland achieved independence. Chisiza, however, was killed in a car crash in September 1962, and so Phillips was asked by Banda to occupy the post of Minister of Finance until another candidate could be schooled for this position. (In the event, his successor wasJohn Tembo ). He left Nyasaland, now Malawi, in 1964, shortly after the country finally achieved its independence, and was knighted.He returned to England and in 1966 he was appointed CEO of the Standard Bank Development Corporation. He died on December 21, 2004, at the age of 90.
References
*"From Obscurity to Bright Dawn: How Nyasaland Became Malawi — An Insider’s Account", by Sir Henry Phillips. London: 1998. Radcliffe Press.
* Obituary, The Times (of London), February 18th, 2005
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