Cecil Wallace-Whitfield Explained

Sir Cecil Wallace-Whitfield
Birth Date:20 March 1930
Birth Place:Nassau, Bahamas
Death Date:9 May 1990 (aged 60)
Death Place:Miami, Florida, US
Office:Leader of the Free National Movement
Term Start:20 October 1971
Term End:20 September 1972
Successor:Kendal Isaacs
Predecessor:(position created)
Birth Name:Cecil Vincent Wallace-Whitfield
Termstart1:20 June 1987
Termend1:9 May 1990
Successor1:Hubert Ingraham
Predecessor1:Kendal Isaacs

Sir Cecil Vincent Wallace-Whitfield (20 March 1930 – 9 May 1990) was a Bahamian politician who was a founding member and the first leader of the Free National Movement political party. He also served as a Minister in the cabinet of Lynden Pindling from 1967 to 1970 and as a longtime member of the Bahamian Parliament.[1]

Early life

Cecil Vincent Wallace-Whitfield was born on 20 March 1930 in Nassau to Kenneth Whitfield and Dorothy Wallace.[2] He studied at Government High School and St. John's College High School before studying law at University of London.[3]

Career

Originally a lawyer, Wallace-Whitfield started his political career in the early 1960s when he joined the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP). In 1967 he was elected Chairman of the PLP and joined the House of Commons as an MP representing the PLP.[4]

In January 1967, Wallace-Whitfield was selected to join Lynden Pindling's cabinet during his term as Premier, first serving as Minister of Finance before serving as Minister of Culture and Education. He had a key role in developing the Bahamian tourism sector in the late 1960s.

When Pindling was elected as the Bahamas' first Prime Minister in 1969, Wallace-Whitfield rejoined Pindling's cabinet as Minister of Education.[5] While Minister of Education, he initiated a massive school construction project to help develop the Bahamian education system.[6] However, during Pindling's term as Prime Minister, Wallace-Whitfield remained an outspoken critic of Pindling and his perceived authoritarianism. This led to his resignation from the cabinet and the PLP in 1970.

Free National Movement

See main article: article and Free National Movement. In late 1970, Wallace-Whitfield and a group of seven other former MPs from the PLP known as the "Dissident Eight", which included Arthur Foulkes, formed a breakaway political party called the Free Progressive Liberal Party. Wallace-Whitfield called on all parties in opposition to Pindling to disband, which led to the disbandment of the United Bahamian Party (UBP). On October 20, 1971, the Dissident Eight and several former members of the UBP met at Spring Hills Farms in Fox Hill, Nassau, where they formed a new independent center-right political party called the Free National Movement (FNM).[7] In 1971, he stood as Leader of the Opposition in the Bahamas.

Wallace-Whitfield was selected as the first leader of the Free National Movement, which he served as until 1972. Under his leadership, the FNM won nine seats in Parliament in the 1972 election, however Wallace-Whitfield himself was not elected. As a result, he was replaced as leader of the FNM by Kendal Isaacs.

After a long string of parliamentary defeats between 1973 and 1977, the FNM split into two opposing factions: the FNM and the Bahamian Democratic Party (BDP). Wallace-Whitfield took control of the FNM, while John Henry Bostwick took control of the BDP. When the FNM reunified in 1980, Wallace-Whitfield was again replaced by Kendal Isaacs, who led the party in the 1982 election. Wallace-Whitfield served as an MP for the FNM until his death in 1990.

Following the 1987 election, Isaacs resigned as leader of the FNM. Wallace-Whitfield was elected as his replacement, and led the FNM until his death, being replaced by Hubert Ingraham.

Personal life and death

Wallace-Whitfield died at a hospital in Miami on 9 May 1990 and was buried at St. Matthew's Anglican Church in Nassau. He had a wife named Daphne.

Honors

Wallace-Whitfield was knighted in 1987 for his services to the Bahamas.[8] He was posthumously awarded Order of the National Hero in 2018. His face is featured on all five-dollar Bahamian dollar bills.[9] The Cecil Wallace-Whitfield Centre corporate complex in Nassau which houses the Ministry of Finance and Office of the Prime Minister is named in his honor.[10]

Notes and References

  1. News: Associated Press . 11 May 1990 . Cecil Wallace-Whitfield, Bahamas Politician, 60 . . 17.
  2. "Cecil Vincent Wallace" No. 554, Bahamas Marriage Registers. Bahamas Civil Registration, 1850-1959. 10 Sept 1950. pp. 622
  3. Martin . Nona P. . Storr . Virgil Henry . 2009 . Demystifying Bay Street: Black Tuesday and the Radicalization of Bahamian Politics in the 1960s . The Journal of Caribbean History . 43 . 1 . 37–50.
  4. News: 12 May 1967 . Chairman of Bahamas Political Party Speaks Here Sunday . . 1 . University of Florida Digital Collections . 44 . 38.
  5. Web site: Resigned PLP Education Minister Cecil Wallace-Whitfield Beaten When Ten Men Try To Stop Political Meeting – Freeport November 1970 . Bahamianology.
  6. Web site: Miah . Sophia . Aug 2009 . Improving Standards in Bahamian High Schools: Using Geographic Information System as a Pedagogical Tool . Carlton University . Ottawa.
  7. Web site: Leadership . Free National Movement.
  8. News: 16 Jun 1989 . Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood . . 41 . 51776.
  9. Web site: Introduction to Bahamian Currency . Central Bank of the Bahamas.
  10. Web site: Government Ministries . The Government of the Bahamas.