TitleRichard Seymour Hall papers
Reference codeICS26
Date1964-1965
Creator
- Hall, Richard Seymour (1925-1997) political writerMore Info on CreatorLess Info on Creator
Richard Hall lived and travelled throughout Africa and Indian Ocean as a journalist and historian.
Born in East Sussex, he spent part of his boyhood in Australia, before returning to England in the early 1930's. He was educated at Hastings Grammar School, and then served in a destroyer in the Royal Navy during the Second World War, Richard Hall was a student at Keble College, Oxford, where he obtained an honours degree in English. After working in London on the Daily Mail, he lived for thirteen years in Africa, where he was co-founder and editor of the Central Africa Mail, and later was editor of the Times of Zambia. Throughout the 1950's and 1960's he remained at the centre of the de-colonisation process in Zambia. In 1967 he returned to the UK, but continued to be in close contact with African political affairs. He became the Commonwealth correspondent of the Observer, and a columnist on the Financial Times. In 1986, he founded the financial and political bulletin Africa Analysis.
Richard Hall wrote a number of books on Africa politics. He also produced a number of biographies and histories, ranging from the early Victorian explorers Sam and Florence Baker and Henry Morton Stanley, to the modem merchant-adventurer Tiny Rowland. Richard Hall lived in Oxfordshire for the last 15 years of his life, where he completed his last major book, Empires of the Monsoon. This was a wide-ranging history of the Indian ocean, focussing on the waves of foreign influence along the East African coast from the earliest Arab traders to the end of the colonial period.
He remained active as a writer until his death in 1997. Richard Hall married twice, first to Barbara Hall, a successful journalist and author in her own right and respected crossword compiler and puzzles editor for the Sunday Times. His second marriage was to Carol Cattley, whom he met whilst working at the Observer. Richard Hall had 5 sons from his first marriage.
Scope and ContentCorrespondence of Richard Seymour Hall on African politics.
Conditions governing accessOpen for research although access to some items might be restricted by data protection legislation. At least 24 hours notice before a research visit.
Extent4 items
Finding aidsHandlist available in Institute of Commonwealth Studies library.
Another much larger collection of Richard Hall's papers is also held at the Library (ICS193).
Level of descriptionfonds