Honorific-Prefix: | Sir |
Robert de Zouche Hall | |
Office: | Governor of Sierra Leone |
Term Start: | December 1952 |
Term End: | 1 September 1956 |
Predecessor: | George Beresford-Stooke |
Successor: | Maurice Henry Dorman |
Birth Date: | 27 April 1904 |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Death Place: | Gisborne, New Zealand |
Sir Robert de Zouche Hall, GCMG (27 April 1904 – 19 March 1995)[1] was an English colonial governor. He served in Sierra Leoneand Tanganyika.[2] Robert was born in Liverpool, from parents Arthur William Hall & Beatrice Margaret Hall (née de Zouche).[3]
Hall was educated at Willaston School.[4]
Hall was Governor of Sierra Leone from December 1952 to 1 September 1956.[5] Robert de Zouche Hall reduced the income requirement for women from £100 to £60 per year in order to qualify for the franchise. This dramatically increased the portion of women in the country who were able to vote.[6] A year after leaving office, when Hall was asked if he supported Sierra Leone becoming an independent country he said he did, he also opposed South Africa's policy of Apartheid.[7]
He was appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George on 1 June 1953 as part of the 1953 Coronation Honours.[8]
When on leave from Tanganyika Hall was involved in the setting up of the Vernacular Architecture Group. After his service in Sierra Leone he retired to Somerset, and became Secretary of the Vernacular Architecture Group from 1959 to 1972 and its President from 1972 to 1973.[9] He compiled and edited the Group's first Bibliography.
In 1973 he moved from the United Kingdom to New Zealand. He settled in Gisborne. From 1975 until 1980, he took charge of building up the historical resources and archives at the Gisborne Museum. He studied the early Pākehā settlement and relationship with the Māori, looking at how land was acquired and developed in the Poverty Bay region.[10]
Robert was buried in Taruheru Cemetery, New Zealand and shares a gravestone with his wife Lady Lorna Dorothy Hall who died in 2006.[11]
Photographs by de Zouche Hall are held and being digitised at The Courtauld, London, UK.[12]