Margery Perham

Person

1895 –

73

Who is Margery Perham?

Dame Margery Freda Perham DCMG CBE FBA was a British historian of, and writer on, African affairs.

She was born in Bury, Lancashire, and educated at the School of S. Anne, Abbots Bromley and St Hugh's College, Oxford.

After completing her Oxford degree she became an Assistant Lecturer in History at the University of Sheffield in 1917. In 1922, as a result of illness, she took a year’s leave which she spent in Somaliland with her sister’s family, beginning her lifelong interest in the British African colonies.

In 1924 she became a Tutor and subsequently Fellow in Modern History and Modern Greats at St Hugh’s College. In 1929 she was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship, and from July 1929 until early 1932 visited the United States, the Pacific islands, Australia, New Zealand, and much of Africa south of the Sahara. In 1932 she was awarded a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship for travel and study in East Africa and the Sudan. During the 1930s she wrote the first of many books on Africa, including Native Administration in Nigeria, and from 1935 to 1939 was Research Lecturer in Colonial Administration at Oxford.

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Born
Sep 6, 1895
Education
  • St Hugh's College, Oxford

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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