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Sir Douglas Hall, 14th Baronet

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Preceded by
  
Theodore Pike

Died
  
April 8, 2004

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Awards
  
Order of the Garter


Years of service
  
1930 – 1971

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Name
  
Sir Hall,

Rank
  
General

Succeeded by
  
None, independence of Somalia

Service/branch
  
Northern Rhodesia  British Army  British Somaliland

Commands
  
Commander-in-Chief of the British Somaliland

Sir Douglas Basil Hall, 14th Baronet, (1 February 1909 – 8 April 2004) was a British colonial administrator. He served as the last Governor of the British Somaliland Protectorate before its independence, from 11 July 1959 to 26 June 1960. He was also a lifelong radio enthusiast.

Contents

Early life

Hall was born on 1 February 1909, the son of Captain Lionel Erskine Hall and Jane Augusta Reynolds. Though raised in England, he was a descendant of Sir John Hall and his son Sir James Hall, who each had a footnote in the history of Scotland.

He was educated at Radley College and Keble College, Oxford, graduating to earn an MA. He married Rachel Marion Gartside-Tipping in 1933 (d. 1990) and they had four children, the first of whom died in infancy.

Hall developed an interest in home-built radios and electronics at age 15 when he built his first receiver, a detector unit, in 1924. Beginning with an article in Practical Wireless of December 1943, Hall subsequently published over 100 articles with circuits, construction advice and commentary in magazines like Radio Constructor and Radio Bygones.

Career

Northern Rhodesia

Hall joined the Colonial Administrative Service in 1930 and served in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) for almost 30 years. He was a District Officer from 1932 to 1950 and Senior District Officer from 1950 to 1953, he was promoted Provincial Commissioner in 1953 and Administrative Secretary in 1955. Hall concluded his service in Rhodesia as Secretary for Native Affairs (1956–1959).

Hall was made Companion, Order of St. Michael and St. George (CMG) in 1958 and knighted () in 1959.

British Somaliland

In 1959, Sir Douglas was appointed Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the British Somaliland (1959–1960). He was the last person to hold this office, as the territory gained independence and united with Somalia the following year.

Later life

Hall retired to Ringmore, Devon, where he became a magistrate, and was a member of the Devon and Cornwall Police Authority from 1971 to 1979.

Baronet

Sir Douglas Hall, Kt., had himself been knighted for some two decades when, in later life, he inherited his family′s baronetcy, to become, in addition, Sir Douglas Hall, Bt.. The Scottish baronetcy - a baronetcy in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia - of Hall of Dunglass dates from 1687. Douglas descended from a junior branch and would not have expected to inherit, but the senior line died out and the inheritance passed to his own branch. By then, Captain Lionel had died but each of his three sons gained the title in turn: Sir Lionel became the 12th Baronet, inheriting from his kinsman in 1974; Sir Neville outlived him and succeeded the following year, holding the title for three years, before passing on the line to the third brother, Sir Douglas, in 1978.

Douglas Hall′s first child died in infancy, but his surviving son, Sir John Hall, is the current holder of the title and has issue.

Sir Douglas Hall died in Derbyshire, England on 8 April 2004 at age 95.

References

Sir Douglas Hall, 14th Baronet Wikipedia