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Arthur William Mahaffy

Arthur William Mahaffy O.B.E. was a colonial administrator who served in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Protectorate, the British Solomon Islands Protectorate, the Colony of Fiji, the Anglo-French Condominium of the New Hebrides, with his final post being the Administrator of Dominica.

Arthur William Mahaffy
District Officer, Gilbert and Ellice Islands Protectorate;
Deputy Commissioner, British Solomon Islands Protectorate;
Colonial Secretary of Colony of Fiji, and then Assistant High Commissioner;
Resident Commissioner, New Hebrides;
Administrator, Dominica
Personal details
Born22 October 1869
Howth, co. Dublin, Ireland
Died28 October 1919
Dominica
NationalityBritish
SpouseEdith Enid Boyd (1874 – 1960)
ChildrenSibell Frances Kathleen Lucy Mahaffy (1904 – 1965);
John Mahaffy (1906 – 1934)
Alma materTrinity College, Dublin
OccupationColonial Service

Biography

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Mahaffy was the son of Lady Frances Letitia and Sir John Pentland Mahaffy. John Mahaffy was a Classics scholar and was a provost of Trinity College in Dublin.[1] He was said to have taught the young Oscar Wilde.[1]

Mahaffy attended Marlborough College, and Magdalene College at Oxford University, however he moved to Trinity College, Dublin where he received a Bachelor of Arts (1891) and a Master of Arts (1904).[2] Following his graduation with a B.A., he accepted a junior position at Magdalene College, then he joined the Royal Munster Fusiliers as a 2nd Lieutenant. He was accepted into the Colonial Service in October 1895, and was appointed to the British Western Pacific Territories (BWPT), where his first position was as a District Officer in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Protectorate.[2]

Solomon Islands – suppressing headhunting

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Two warriors in battle dress (1895)
 
A map of the Solomon Islands, with New Georgia located in the centre-left.

The Colonial Office had appointed Charles Morris Woodford as the Resident Commissioner in the Solomon Islands on 17 February 1897. He was directed to control the coercive labour recruitment practices, known as blackbirding, operating in the Solomon Island waters and to stop the illegal trade in firearms.[3] Mahaffy was appointed as the Deputy Commissioner to Woodford in January 1898.[4] In January 1900, Mahaffy established a government station at Gizo, as Woodford considered Mahaffy’s military training as making him suitable for the role of suppressing headhunting in New Georgia and neighbouring islands.[4][5] Mahaffy had a force of twenty-five police officers armed with rifles, who were recruited from the islands of Malaita, Savo and Isabel.[2] The first target of this force was chief Ingava of the Roviana Lagoon of New Georgia who had been raiding Choiseul and Isabel and killing or enslaving hundreds of people.[2]

Mahaffy and the police officers under his command carried out a violent and ruthless suppression of headhunting, with his actions having the support of Woodford and the Western Pacific High Commission, who wanted to eradicate headhunting and complete a “pacification” of the western Solomon Islands through punitive expeditions.[4] Mahaffy seized and also destroyed large war canoes (tomokos). One war canoe was used to transport the police officers.[2] The western Solomon Islands were substantially pacified by 1902.[4] During this time Mahaffy acquired artefacts held in high value by the Solomon Islanders for his personal collection.[6]

Mahaffy was appointed as a resident magistrate. He visited Malaita on HMS Sparrow (1889) in 1902 to investigate several deaths. Mahaffy demanded the Malaitians give up the person believed to be the murderer, and when they did not, Sparrow shelled the village and a shore party burnt down the village and killed the pigs.[7] Malaita was a difficult island to administer as Mahaffy believed that 80 per cent of Malaitan males possessed firearms in the 1900s. There were frequent inter-tribal killings and pay-back killings. Indiscriminate naval bombardments or naval shore parties destroying villages, canoes and killing pigs to punish Solomon Islanders was a common response to incidents, where the colonial administrators could not arrest the perpetrators of killings.[7]

Appointment to Fiji – Mahaffy report into the administration of William Telfer Campbell

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Mahaffy remained in the Solomon Islands for over six years until September 1904 when he transferred to Fiji, where he was appointed as the Colonial Secretary of Fiji, under the Governor of Fiji, Sir Everard im Thurn.[2][8]

At this time, the British Western Pacific Territories (BWPT) were administered by a High Commissioner who resided in Fiji. From 1892, the Gilbert and Ellice Islands were directly administered by a Resident Commissioner. In 1895, William Telfer Campbell was appointed as the Resident Commissioner, remaining in office until 1908. Telfer Campbell was criticised for his legislative, judicial and administrative management. It was alleged that he extracted forced labour from the islanders. In 1909, Mahaffy returned to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Protectorates for 3 months as Assistant High Commissioner, to carry out an inquiry into this allegation.[9] and he issued his findings, which were published in 1910.[10]

In 1913, an anonymous correspondent to The New Age journal, published an article under the title "Modern buccaneers in the West Pacific", and described the maladministration of Telfer Campbell, and challenged Mahaffy’s impartiality, because he was a former colonial official in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Protectorate.[8] The anonymous correspondent also criticised the operation of the Pacific Phosphate Company Ltd, which was the company mining the phosphate deposits on Nauru and Banaba (Ocean Island) that were part of the BWPT.[8]

Later career

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Mahaffy was the Resident Commissioner in the Anglo-French Condominium of the New Hebrides from 1912 to 2013. He returned to London in 1914. He was appointed as the Administrator of Dominica from 1914 until his death in October 1919.[2][11]

He was appointed as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1919 Birthday Honours.

His family donated his Solomon Islands ethnographic collection and papers to the National Museum of Ireland.[6][2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Moore, Clive (2019). Tulagi: Pacific Outpost of British Empire. Australian National University Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-76046-308-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Mahaffy, Arthur (1869 - 1919)". Solomon Islands Historical Encyclopaedia 1893-1978. 2003. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  3. ^ Coates, Austin (1970). Western Pacific Islands. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 228. ISBN 978-0118804288.
  4. ^ a b c d Lawrence, David Russell (October 2014). "Chapter 7 Expansion of the Protectorate 1898–1900" (PDF). The Naturalist and his "Beautiful Islands": Charles Morris Woodford in the Western Pacific. ANU Press. pp. 198–206. doi:10.22459/NBI.10.2014. ISBN 9781925022032.
  5. ^ Coates, Austin (1970). Western Pacific Islands. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. p. 229. ISBN 978-0118804288.
  6. ^ a b Aoife O'Brien (2017). "Crime and Retribution in the Western Solomon Islands: Punitive raids, material culture, and the Arthur Mahaffy collection, 1898–1904". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 18 (1). doi:10.1353/cch.2017.0000.
  7. ^ a b Moore, Clive (October 2014). Making Mala - Malaita in Solomon Islands, 1870s–1930s. ANU Press. pp. 311–312. ISBN 9781760460976.
  8. ^ a b c "Modern buccaneers in the West Pacific" (PDF). New Age: 136–140. 5 June 1913.
  9. ^ Lawrence, David Russell (October 2014). "Chapter 7 Expansion of the Protectorate 1898–1900" (PDF). The Naturalist and his "Beautiful Islands": Charles Morris Woodford in the Western Pacific. ANU Press. p. 200. ISBN 9781925022032.
  10. ^ Mahaffy, Arthur (1910). "(CO 225/86/26804)". Report by Mr. Arthur Mahaffy on a visit to the Gilbert and Ellice Islands. Great Britain, Colonial Office, High Commission for Western Pacific Islands (London: His Majesty's Stationery Office).
  11. ^ "Obituaries for Mr Arthur W. Mahaffy O.B.E., Irish Times October 20, 1919, pg 5; Evening Telegraph (Dublin), 30 Oct 1919, p2)". Residents of Upper Beaconsfield and surrounding areas. p. 687. Retrieved 24 March 2024.