John Evelyn Shuckburgh

Sir John Evelyn Shuckburgh, K.C.M.G. (abbreviation: "JES", born 18 March 1877 in Eton, died 8 February 1953 in London) was a British colonial administrator.

Biography

Shuckburgh was the eldest son of Evelyn Shirley Shuckburgh (1843–1906) and Frances Mary Pullen. His eldest son, later diplomat and Middle East expert, Sir Charles Arthur Evelyn Shuckburgh, was born in 1909 in London.[1]

As a member of the British colonial service, Shuckburgh was active in India, and in Palestine.[2] He was a Dickens enthusiast and was asked by Oxford University Press to write the foreword to A Tale Of Two Cities, one of Dickens' finest books.

Governor of Nigeria

On 1 July 1940, John Evelyn Shuckburgh was appointed interim Governor of Nigeria; a position he held until 1942 when he was replaced by Sir Alan Burns. His tenure, as well as that of his successor, was characterised as unremarkable.[3]

gollark: I also apparently don't have the disconnect function down yet.
gollark: Probably not worth setting up yet.
gollark: Well, each guild has a "phone" "number" generated from a hash of its ID, which can then be used by other people to "call" it. When you "call" it, the people there are asked to take the call. If they accept, it adds it to the "calls" database, and currently does nothing.
gollark: Anyone with "manage channels".
gollark: You need to explicitly configure it as one.

References

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