- Keith Hancock
Sir William Keith Hancock KBE (
26 June 1898 -13 August 1988 ) was anAustralia n historian, born inMelbourne ,Australia . The son of Archdeacon William Hancock, he was educated atMelbourne Grammar School and later theUniversity of Melbourne . At the age of nine, he won theRoyal Humane Society 's medal for rescuing another child from drowning in the Mitchell River, Victoria. Too young to see service inWorld War I without permission from his parents, it was said that he always felt shame about the fact he could not fight.As a
Rhodes Scholar , Hancock went toBalliol College ,Oxford in 1922. He graduated in 1924 with aBachelor of Arts with first class honours inModern History . He then became the first Australian to gain a Fellowship ofAll Souls College , Oxford in 1923. After returning to Australia he was Professor of Modern History at theUniversity of Adelaide between 1924 and 1933. In 1930 he published "Australia", a book which was well received and notable for its ironic tone, particularly in criticism of Australian institutions such as tariff protection, was highly influential, and is still frequently quoted today.From 1934 to 1944 Hancock was the Professor of History at
University of Birmingham and during this war period was also appointed to theWar Cabinet Offices. His "Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs" was published in three volumes in 1937-42. In 1941 he was appointed Supervisor of the United Kingdom Civil Series of theHistory of the Second World War and was thereafter editor of the series. In 1949, withMargaret Gowing , he wrote "The British War Economy", the introductory volume to that series. Between 1944 and 1949, he returned to Oxford, becoming Chichele Professor ofEconomic History . During the War he also played a role inCivil Defence , serving as afirewatcher . He was knighted in 1953 partially for his services in writing and editing the histories.In 1949 he left Oxford, taking up an appointment as the Director of the
Institute of Commonwealth Studies . He served as the Professor of British Commonwealth Affairs at theUniversity of London until 1956. During this period he was sent as a government expert to examine constitutional questions inUganda in 1954. At this time he began work on his authoritativebiography of theSouth African Prime Minister Jan Smuts , which appeared in two volumes in 1962 and 1968, and editing for publication, withJean van der Poel , the first four volumes of theSmuts papers .Hancock returned to Australia in 1957. He was Director of the
Research School of Social Sciences at theAustralian National University from 1957 to 1961 and was Professor of History at theInstitute of Advanced Studies , ANU until his retirement in 1965. On his retirement he was madeEmeritus Professor (1968) and created the first UniversityFellow of ANU. Other positions he has held were Chairman of the Editorial Board of theAustralian Dictionary of Biography from 1958 to 1965 and President of theAustralian Academy of the Humanities in 1970-1971.In his honour, a library of Science resources at the ANU was named after him.
He retired in 1965, being appointed
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) on his retirement. In these later years he moved south ofCanberra , becoming a firm supporter of environmental politics. He also disliked American bases on Australian soil. He died in Canberra on 13 August 1988.He married Theaden Brocklebank in 1925; she died in 1960. He married Marjorie Eyre in 1961.
References
* Low, DA (ed.) - "Keith Hancock; the Legacies of a Historian", Melbourne University Press (2001)
* "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography"
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