Chauncey Hugh Stigand

Chauncey Hugh Stigand OBE FRGS FZS (1877–1919) was a British army officer, colonial administrator and big game hunter. He was killed in action while attempting to suppress a rebellion of Aliab Dinka.[1]

Captain

Chauncey Hugh Stigand
Governor of Upper Nile Province
In office
1917–1918
Governor of Mongalla Province
In office
February 1919  December 1919
Preceded byCecil Stephen Northcote
Succeeded byVincent Reynolds Woodland
Personal details
Born1877
Boulogne-sur-Mer
DiedDecember 1919
Pap, South Sudan
Resting placeTombé, South Sudan

Stigand was the son of William Stigand and Agnes Catherine Senior. His father was British vice-consul at Boulogne-sur-Mer when he was born there on 25 october 1877. He was educated at Radley and gazetted to the Royal West Kent Regiment in 1899. He served with them in Burma and British Somaliland, and then from 1901 in British East Africa with the King's African Rifles. He entered the Egyptian army in 1910 and was posted to the Upper White Nile, assuming control of the Lado Enclave from the Belgians in accordance with an agreement. He was placed in charge of the Kajo Kaji district.[2]

In 1915 Stigand was promoted to major. In 1916 he served in the campaign against 'Ali Dinar in Darfur. From 1917 to 1918 he was governor of the Upper Nile province. Stigand was appointed governor of Mongalla Province in 1919. He was killed on 8 december 1919 by tribesmen of the Aliyab Dinka at Pap, between the Lau River and the White Nile.[2]

He married in 1913 Nancy Yulee Neff of Washington, D.C., and had one child, Florida Yulee Agnes, born 1917.[3]

Bibliography

Stigand was a prolific writer.

  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand, Denis D. Lyell (1906). Central African game and its spoor. H. Cox.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand (1907). Scouting and reconnaissance in savage countries. Hugh Rees, ltd.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand (1909). The game of British East Africa. H. Cox.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand (1910). To Abyssinia through an unknown land: an account of a journey through unexplored regions of British East Africa by Lake Rudolf to the kingdom of Menelek. J.B. Lippincott.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand (1914). Administration in tropical Africa. Constable & company, ltd.
  • Chauncey Hugh Stigand (1913). The land of Zinj: being an account of British East Africa, its ancient history and present inhabitants. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-1723-7.
  • Chauncey Hugh Stigand (1913). Hunting the elephant in Africa: and other recollections of thirteen years wanderings. Macmillan Co.
  • Chauncey Hugh Stigand (1914). Black tales for white children: Being a collection of Swahili stories.
  • Chauncey Hugh Stigand (1915). A grammar of dialectic changes in the Kiswahili language. University Press.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand, Nancy Yulee Neff Stigand (1915). Cooking for settler and trekker. Field Press Ltd.
  • C H Stigand (1916). Observations On Northern Section Of The Tanganyika-Nile Rift Valley. Royal Geographical Society., London.
  • Chauncy Hugh Stigand (1923). A Nuer-English vocabulary. The University Press.
  • Chauncey Hugh Stigand, Sir Francis Reginald Wingate (1923). Equatoria: the Lado Enclave. Constable.
gollark: Well, I broke it horribly, thus problems.
gollark: Bee it?
gollark: test?
gollark: Yes, YOU.
gollark: Containing bees.

See also

  • List of famous big game hunters

References

  1. Monish (2010-04-22). "Captain Chauncey Hugh Stigand". AfricaHunting. Retrieved 2011-07-31.
  2. Richard Leslie Hill (1967). "Stigand Bey, Chauncey Hugh". A biographical dictionary of the Sudan. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-1037-2.
  3. H. H. Gordon Clark, The Family of Clark, 1924
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