Sir Walter Ernest Mortimer Stanford

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Sir Walter Ernest Mortimer Stanford

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Alice, Amatole, Eastern Cape, South Africa
Death: September 09, 1933 (83)
Rondebosch, Cape Town, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Immediate Family:

Son of Captain William Stanford and Joanna Rosina Wright
Husband of Sarah Alice Stanford
Father of Walter Elliot Stanford; Dorothy Maud Ruffel; Robert Cecil Stanford; Alice Minnie Canswell-Smith; Arthur Warner Stanford and 2 others
Brother of Arthur Henry Bell Stanford and Robert William Stanford
Half brother of Henry Wright; Rosina Cotterell; Elizabeth Wright; William Wright and Mary Jane Chabaud

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Sir Walter Ernest Mortimer Stanford

https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKK-PKP1?i=131&ca...

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Walter Ernest Mortimer Stanford was born in Alice, South Africa, in 1850 and educated at the Lovedale (South Africa) Mission school. Walter left school and became a clerk under his uncle, the government agent to Tembu. Responsibility came early: in his uncle’s absence he became in effect the agent, Her Majesty’s representative to a semi-independent African tribe. At 18 he joined the civil service and was stationed at Queenstown, East London and in 1876 was appointed magistrate to the Qwathi chief, Dalasile, and settled at Engcobo, in Tembuland. He married Alice Sarah Walker in 1883 and they had three sons and four daughters. In 1885 he was promoted to chief magistrate of Griqualand East at Kokstad. Stanford was involved in negotiations with the Mpondo and in 1886 reached an agreement which provided for peaceful future relations. He was appointed C.M.G. (Order of St Michael and St George) in 1891 and became responsible for the administration of eastern Pondoland. In 1897 Stanford became under-secretary for native affairs in Cape Town, and subsequently the first chief magistrate of the newly formed Transkeian Territories. In 1904 he was appointed to the headship of the Native Affairs department, as well as chief magistrate. Special duties included roles as an adviser at the inter-state customs conference 1903, membership of the native affairs commission, 1903–1905, and acting as adviser to Lord Selborne, (William Palmer, 2nd Earl of Selbourne and British High Commissioner to South Africa) on Swazi affairs in 1906. He entered the Cape Legislative Assembly in 1908 as an independent member for Tembuland and was selected to represent the views of the African people at the National Convention of 1909, which led to the Union of South Africa. At this historic event he argued strongly for universal franchise, regardless of race and gender but his proposal was not accepted. From 1910 to 1929, Stanford served in the Senate, nominated for his knowledge of the African peoples. He was a colonel with the South African forces in the First World War. In 1919 he was appointed a Knight (Order of the British Empire) and died age 83 in 1933.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Walter_Stanford

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Sir Walter Ernest Mortimer Stanford's Timeline

1850
August 2, 1850
Alice, Amatole, Eastern Cape, South Africa
1884
December 25, 1884
Umtata, Transkei District, Eastern Cape, South Africa
1886
December 9, 1886
Kokstad, East Griqualand, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
1889
March 1, 1889
1890
October 9, 1890
1893
March 26, 1893
1898
January 6, 1898
1902
October 8, 1902
1933
September 9, 1933
Age 83
Rondebosch, Cape Town, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa