Maxwell Hall Explained
Maxwell Hall should not be confused with John Hall Maxwell.
John Maxwell Hall (7 October 1884 – 30 July 1966), known most commonly as Maxwell Hall, was a British colonial administrator, judge and author who lived in and wrote about North Borneo (now Sabah).
Early life and career
Hall was born at Kempshot, near Montego Bay, Jamaica, on 7 October 1884, the son of Maxwell Hall and Agnes Gertrude Tullis.
Hall was appointed West Coast Resident, North Borneo, in 1931.[1] Before World War II and the Japanese invasion of Borneo, Maxwell Hall was a senior judge. Immediately after the war he was the Chief Advocate at some of the war crimes trials held at Labuan (holding the rank of Lieutenant Colonel) and was attached to BBCAU, the British Borneo Civil Affairs Unit which was responsible for the running of North Borneo and other territories after the handover from Australian military control.[2]
A description by K. G. Tregonning
In his 1960 book North Borneo, K. G. Tregonning described Maxwell Hall as
Several of Maxwell Hall's books have been reprinted, most recently Labuan Story: Memoirs of a Small Island near the Coast of North Borneo in 2008.
Selected works by Maxwell Hall
- 1929 revised S.S. Cookson's The Ordinances of the State of North Borneo, 1881-1915 (revised again by C.F.C. Macaskie in 1937)
- 1949 Kinabalu Guerrillas: An account of the Double Tenth 1943 Kuching: The Sarawak Press. Relates the history of the Japanese occupation of Borneo and the Jesselton Revolt. Contains information about the civil resistance to Japanese occupation, the reactions of the ethnic peoples and their relationship to the Japanese, and includes a few graphic sketches, including the Petagas cemetery which is now known as the Petagas War Memorial. The front cover a watercolour painting of Mount Kinabalu by Simon C. Yew. Reprinted by the Borneo Literature Bureau several times in the 1960s.
- 1950 Makan Siap: Table Tales of North Borneo Labuan: Foo Tong Chai, Capitol (also a 1951 Singapore Jitts & Co. edition) Contains twenty-four sketches and stories.
- 1954 Prepared a seventh supplemental volume to G. Bannerman Kellager, Laws of North Borneo, in force on the 30th June 1953, Revised edition, 1954 entitled Supplement to the Revised Edition and containing the Ordinances and subsidiary legislation enacted between July 1953 and the last day of December 1954
- 1955 "Musah of Paitan River" North Borneo and Sabah Times. Recounts the history leading up to Musah's rebellion against the government in 1908 and the years of fighting afterwards.
- 1956 "The old fort at Kinarut in Sabah: a relic of three hundred years ago" Malayan Historical Journal 3:43–49. Recounts the history of a fort at Kinarut and discusses its name.
- 1958 Labuan Story: Memoirs of a Small Island near the Coast of North Borneo Jesselton, North Borneo: Chung Nam. Front cover a watercolour painting of junks by Simon C. Yew. Reprinted by Silverfish Books in 2008.
References
- Book: Ingram, Kenneth . Manuscript Sources for the History of the West Indies . 2000 . University of the West Indies Press . 194. 9789766400255 . 2008-12-09.
- http://cas.awm.gov.au/photograph/122770 . The photograph caption (which may be incorrect) describes him as 'Former Chief Justice' of North Borneo; this post was held by C. F. C. Macaskie from 1934-1945 (Macaskie's Who's Who entry). If the caption is correct, the dates of Hall's tenure as Chief Justice are uncertain.
Bibliography
- Doolittle, Amity, 2003, "Colliding discourses: Western land laws and native customary rights in North Borneo, 1881-1918" Journal of Southeast Asian Studies vol 34,
External links