- Richard Rutledge Kane
Captain Richard Rutledge Kane was the
United Kingdom 's fourthResident Commissioner of the Solomon Islands Protectorate , serving from 1921 to 1929. [ [http://www.rulers.org/ruls2.html Solomon Islands] atRulers.org ]He made a speech on
Malaita about the benefits that the newhead tax was bringing the islanders. The speech caused considerable resentment, as in truth, there was little to show for the tax collection. The District Commissioner of Malaita,William R. Bell , then pushed the authorities to provide a Medical Officer and other return for the tax money. [Roger M. Keesing and Peter Corris. Lightning Meets the West Wind: The Malaita Massacre. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1980; 103-105.] The resentment did not decrease, however, and Bell was murdered byKwaio in October 1927 as part of theMalaita massacre . Kane was on tour at the time of the killing, and his deputy Captain N.S.B. Kidson sought immediate help. By the time Kane returned, apunitive expedition was nearly fully planned. [Keesing and Corris, 150-156.]In November Kane began planning for a resettlement of the Kwaio on another island. He was later encouraged by the
High Commissioner inFiji issuing a 'King's Regulation to Authorise the Detention of Certain Natives Formerly Living on the Island of Malaita,' declaring as lawful the detention of the 200 Kwaio that were brought toTulagi during the expedition. However, the scheme was quashed by Lieutenant-ColonelH.C. Moorhouse , sent by theSecretary of State for the Colonies to investigate, who pushed for rapid repatriation of the detainees. They were returned in August 1928. [Keesing and Corris, 188-190.]Notes
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