Difference between revisions of "Lord Charles Henry Somerset"

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(Created page with "(1767-1831). Governor of the Cape of Good Hope from 1814-1827. A controversial yet influential man, who battled, inter alia, with Pringle and Fairbairn about the freedom of the p...")
 
 
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(1767-1831). Governor of the Cape of Good Hope from 1814-1827. A controversial yet influential man, who battled, inter alia, with Pringle and Fairbairn about the freedom of the press, the farmers on the border about their safety and the Dutch about their language. But he also provided Cape Town with the Somerset Hospital, the South African Library and Museum. Like sir George Yonge (qv) before him, he was also a keen supporter of the theatre and during his term of office theatre in Cape Town flourished. He not only supported it, he and his wife attended everything he could - English and Dutch, and thus encouraged theatrical activity immeasurably.  
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[[Lord Charles Henry Somerset]] (1767-1831) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Charles_Somerset]. Governor of the Cape of Good Hope from 1814-1827.  
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A controversial yet influential man, who battled, inter alia, with Pringle and Fairbairn about the freedom of the press, the farmers on the border about their safety and the Dutch about their language. But he also provided Cape Town with the Somerset Hospital, the South African Library and Museum. Like sir George Yonge (qv) before him, he was also a keen supporter of the theatre and during his term of office theatre in Cape Town flourished. He not only supported it, he and his wife attended everything he could - English and Dutch, and thus encouraged theatrical activity immeasurably.  
  
 
== Sources ==  
 
== Sources ==  
See: Fletcher, 1994
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[[ESAT Bibliography Fla-Fly|Fletcher]], 1994.
  
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== Return to ==
 
Return to [[ESAT Personalities S]]
 
Return to [[ESAT Personalities S]]
  

Latest revision as of 08:52, 31 March 2020

Lord Charles Henry Somerset (1767-1831) [1]. Governor of the Cape of Good Hope from 1814-1827.

A controversial yet influential man, who battled, inter alia, with Pringle and Fairbairn about the freedom of the press, the farmers on the border about their safety and the Dutch about their language. But he also provided Cape Town with the Somerset Hospital, the South African Library and Museum. Like sir George Yonge (qv) before him, he was also a keen supporter of the theatre and during his term of office theatre in Cape Town flourished. He not only supported it, he and his wife attended everything he could - English and Dutch, and thus encouraged theatrical activity immeasurably.

Sources

Fletcher, 1994.

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