Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE READER
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II SIERRA LEONE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS
- CHAPTER III AFRICAN CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER IV FISHING IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER V FETISH
- CHAPTER VI SCHOOLS OF FETISH
- CHAPTER VII FETISH AND WITCHCRAFT
- CHAPTER VIII AFRICAN MEDICINE
- CHAPTER IX THE WITCH DOCTOR
- CHAPTER X EARLY TRADE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XI FRENCH DISCOVERY OF WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XII COMMERCE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XIII THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XIV THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XV MORE OF THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XVI THE CLASH OF CULTURES
- CHAPTER XVII AN ALTERNATIVE PLAN
- CHAPTER XVIII AFRICAN PROPERTY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XV - MORE OF THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE READER
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II SIERRA LEONE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS
- CHAPTER III AFRICAN CHARACTERISTICS
- CHAPTER IV FISHING IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER V FETISH
- CHAPTER VI SCHOOLS OF FETISH
- CHAPTER VII FETISH AND WITCHCRAFT
- CHAPTER VIII AFRICAN MEDICINE
- CHAPTER IX THE WITCH DOCTOR
- CHAPTER X EARLY TRADE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XI FRENCH DISCOVERY OF WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XII COMMERCE IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XIII THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XIV THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM IN WEST AFRICA
- CHAPTER XV MORE OF THE CROWN COLONY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XVI THE CLASH OF CULTURES
- CHAPTER XVII AN ALTERNATIVE PLAN
- CHAPTER XVIII AFRICAN PROPERTY
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Wherein is set down the other, or main, reason against this system.
Having attempted to explain the internal evils or what one might call the domestic rows of the Crown colony system, I will pass on to the external evils—which although in a measure consequent on the internal are not entirely so, and this point cannot be too clearly borne in mind. Tinker it up as you may, the system will remain one pre-eminently unsuited for the administration of West Africa.
You might arrange that officials working under it should be treated better than the official now is, and the West African service be brought into line in honour with the Indian, and afford a man a good sound career. You might arrange for the Chambers of Commerce, representing the commercial factor, to have a place in Colonial Office councils. But if you did these things the Crown colony system would still remain unsuited to West Africa, because it is a system intrinsically too expensive in men and money, so that the more you develop it the more expensive it becomes. Concerning this system as applied to the West Indies a West Indian authority the other day said it was putting an elephant to draw a goat chaise; concerning the West African application of it, I should say it was trying to open a tin case with a tortoise-shell paper knife.
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- West African Studies , pp. 324 - 362Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1899