Laurence R. Fyfe

Jamaica at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition, London, 1886, by C. Washington Eves which reprinted Fyfe and Sinclair's report on the Jamaican exhibits.

Laurence Riky Fyfe (c. 1846 9 May 1892) was a civil servant in the Colonial Secretary's Office in Jamaica who, with Augustus Constantine Sinclair, compiled the annual Handbook of Jamaica, first published in 1881. Together they also produced a number of other works relating to the island of Jamaica.

Early life and family

Laurence Fyfe's origins and family background are unclear but he may have been descended from Scottish migrants to Jamaica. He was born around 1846 and was educated at the Collegiate School, Jamaica, Dr. Ridgway's School, Exeter, Monsieur Boquets Pension Anderlecht, near Brussels, and at the University of Aberdeen.[1]

He married Francis (Fanny or Fannie) Ann Colthirst and they had a son, Laurence Charles Colthirst Fyfe, at Altries Cottage, Kingston, on 4 November 1877, and another on 11 September 1879.

Career

Fyfe appears to have started his civil service career as a second class clerk in the Colonial Secretary's Office. By 1878 he was a first class clerk.[2] He progressed rapidly and in 1885 was appointed by the Governor of Jamaica to be secretary to a commission to report into the system of elementary education on the island.[3]

In January 1890, he was appointed Colonial Secretary of Grenada.[4]

Writing

Fyfe was the joint compiler with Augustus Constantine Sinclair (died 1891), head of the Government Printing Office, of the first editions of the long-running Handbook of Jamaica, from 1881. They also wrote Jamaica: Outlines of its Geography and History for schools (1883, at least five later editions)[5] and prepared a report of the Jamaican exhibits at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition of 1886 for the governors of the Jamaica Institute which was reprinted and bound into C. Washington Eves' own account of the exhibits.[6] In 1889 they produced a history of Jamaica during the governorship of Sir Henry Wylie Norman (1883-89) which, typically of their historical work, concentrated on chronology and fact-based accounts rather than analysis.[5]

Death

Fyfe died on 9 May 1892, aged 46. His address was 30 Eastbourne Terrace, Middlesex. Administration of his estate was granted in London to his wife Fannie. He left effects of £409.[7]

Selected publications

References

  1. The Handbook of Jamaica, 1884, p. 511.
  2. Kingston City Directory For The Year 1878. Jamaican Family Search Genealogy Research Library. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  3. Ford, Jos. C. & A.A.C. Finlay. (1903) The Handbook of Jamaica for 1903. Kingston: Government Printing Office, & London: Edward Stamford. p. 50.
  4. Musson, S.P. & T. Laurence Roxburgh. (1891) The Handbook of Jamaica for 1891-92. Kingston: Government Printing Establishment, & London: Edward Stamford. p. 573.
  5. 1 2 "Historiography of Jamaica" by Howard Johnson in B.W. Higman (Ed.) (1999). General history of the Caribbean: Volume VI Methodology and historiography of the Caribbean. London: UNESCO Publishing & Macmillan Education. p. 484. ISBN 978-92-3-103360-5.
  6. Eves, C. Washington. (1886) Jamaica at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition, London, 1886. London: Spottiswoode. p. vi-vii.
  7. Probate Calendar, 1892, p. 157.
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