Correspondence, minutes, agenda etc. relating to the Conference of Governors of the East African Dependencies, the Royal Commission, and the Joint Select Committee; Colonel Walker's journal (1922-1936) which includes details of his work on the Committee of Imperial Defence and the Conference of Governors; papers about Lord de la Warr's mission to Ethiopia.
Papers of Colonel Charles William G. Walker
This material is held atBodleian Library, University of Oxford
- Reference
- GB 161 MSS.Afr.s.717
- Dates of Creation
- 1922-[ca. 1944]
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English.
- Physical Description
- 8 boxes
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
Colonel Charles William Garne Walker, CMG (1933), was born on the 2 July 1882 and educated at King's School, Canterbury, and Sandhurst. He was commissioned in 1902 and the following year joined the Indian Army. In 1911 he became a Captain and for the next 2 yeas was at the Staff College, Camberley. During the First World War Walker was twice mentioned in despatches and was awarded the DSO in 1918. He attained the rank of Colonel in 1923.
Walker was Assistant Secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defence (1921-1925) before being appointed Secretary to the newly formed Conference of Governors of the East African Dependencies (1925-1936). The Governors' Conference, formed to consider common problems of transport, trade, and native policy, met for the first time in January 1926 in Nairobi. The Chairman was Sir Edmund Grigg, Governor of Kenya, who also held the newly created post of High Commissioner of Transport to which Walker was also appointed Secretary.
In June 1927 the Governors assembled at the Colonial Office and Grigg suggested the establishment of a central legislature in which each territory would have equal representation. A Royal Commission was then appointed to consider questions relating to the closer union of the dependencies of Eastern and Central Africa, under the Chairmanship of Sir Edward Hilton Young, with H.F. Downie and Walker as Joint Secretaries. The Commission explored economic, political and racial problems from the Sudan to South Africa before publishing their Report in January 1929. A Joint Select Committee was subsequently set up to consider this Report.
On his return to England, Walker worked for H.M. Treasury (1936-1940), acted as Principal Officer of the Southern Civil Defence Region (1940-1942), and was employed by the War Cabinet Office (1943-1947) and the Association of Consulting Engineers (1948-1960). In 1944 he was Secretary to Lord de la Warr's mission to Ethiopia. Colonel Walker died on the 7 November 1974.
Access Information
Bodleian reader's ticket required.
Note
Collection level description created by Marion Lowman, Bodleian Library of Commonwealth and African Studies at Rhodes House.
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. 44 in Manuscript Collections (excluding Africana) in Rhodes House Library, Oxford, Supplement, compiled by Louis B. Frewer (Oxford, Bodleian Library, 1971).
Conditions Governing Use
No reproduction or publication of personal papers without permission. Contact the library in the first instance.