Charles Stewart Smith, was a British naval officer and diplomat, who was actively involved in the suppression of the slave trade in East Africa and held consular positions there and in Spain and Russia.
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He was born in London on 18 January 1859, the fourth son of Archibald Smith of Jordanhill and his wife, Susan Emma Parker
At the age of 12 he joined the Royal Navy training ship HMS Britannia as a cadet, and two years later passed out first in his term, being awarded the Admiralty prize for physics and rated midshipman. His service as a midshipman took him to various parts of the world and included two years on the China Station. He was promoted to sub-lieutenant in 1878. In 1879 he received the Beaufort Testimonial,[1] a naval award for surveying.
In 1879 he was posted to HMS London, the Royal Navy’s depot-ship at Zanzibar for the suppression of the local slave trade. HMS London operated a number of steam cutters (or pinnaces), led by lieutenants to intercept Arab dhows. These dhows smuggled slaves, captured from villages on the mainland, to the islands of Zanzibar and Pemba.
During his patrols Smith, who was promoted lieutenant in 1880, captured seven dhows, rescuing a total of 185 slaves – men, women and children. There is a surviving extract of HMS London’s log from 1880 to 1882, showing his largest rescue – that of 99 slaves on 20 October 1880.[2]
His next appointment was to the battleship HMS Sultan and he was present at the bombardment of Alexandria on 11 July 1882.[3]
In 1883 he was seconded to the post of Vice-Consul at Zanzibar, under Sir John Kirk (explorer) the Consul-General – a man instrumental in the eradication of slavery in Zanzibar. He returned to England early in 1886 and worked for two years in the Foreign Office. In 1888 he retired from the Royal Navy with the rank of Lieutenant Commander and received a permanent appointment in the British Consular Service, serving successively as Consul in Mombasa (1889-1892), Consul in Bilbao (1894-1900), Consul-General in Odessa (1900-1913),[4] and Consul-General in Barcelona (1913-June 1919).[5]
In 1892 he was appointed British Commissioner for the delimitation of the Anglo-German Boundary in Africa, between modern day Kenya and Tanzania. The delineation followed moves by Germany to seize areas of the mainland of East Africa formerly claimed by the Sultan of Zanzibar.[6]
He surveyed the 180-mile line from the sea to Mount Kilimanjaro and was assisted by his younger brother George Edward Smith, who was an officer in the Royal Engineers. Twelve years later George returned to complete the survey of the remaining 300 miles from Kilimanjaro to Lake Victoria. Soon after his return to England in 1893, he went to Berlin to take part in the negotiations regarding the boundary.[7]
When he was appointed Consul-General in the Russian port of Odessa in 1900, at the age of 41, he was the youngest Consul-General in the Service.[8] Odessa was the fourth-largest city of Imperial Russia, with a population of approximately 400,000, about a third of whom were Jews. The post was an important one, involving responsibility for eleven (later thirteen) consular districts in southern Russia and around the Black Sea. During his thirteen years in Odessa, he witnessed momentous events that included the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, the mutiny of sailors aboard the Russian Battleship Potemkin anchored off Odessa (28 June 1905), the rioting and massacre that immediately followed the mutiny, and several [Odessa pogroms].[9]
In one of the worst pogroms of Jews, in October1905, he (with support from the French Consul-General), made forceful representations to the Prefect of Odessa, D. B. Neidhart, to re-instate the police to stop the killing. Neidhart had previously ordered the police to withdraw – a move which allowed the looters a free hand to murder and pillage. The next day the pogrom subsided. He reported later to the Foreign Office: “It is quite clear that the late disorders were prepared and worked by the police who openly superintended the work of destruction, looting and murder”. The Russian Deputy Minister of the Interior later admitted to the Duma the complicity of the police.[10]
On the 18 Apr 1886 Smith married his second cousin, Anne Georgiana Macaulay in Putney, London.[11] Anne came from a family distinguished in academia and the abolitionist movement. Her brothers included George Campbell Macaulay, father of the writer Rose Macaulay, and William Herrick Macaulay, Vice-Provost, King’s College Cambridge. Her father was the Rev. Samuel Herrick Macaulay, Rector of Hodnet (Shropshire), a nephew of General Colin Macaulay (1760-1836), Zachary Macaulay (1768-1838, father of Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay and Jean Macaulay, wife of Thomas Babington of Rothley Temple (also a great-grandfather of Charles Stewart Smith). Charles and Anne had nine children:
1. Anne Georgiana Smith (died the day she was born, 1887)
2. Dorothea Smith (1888-1952)
3. Frances Ellen Smith (1889-1890)
4. Jean Isabel Smith (1891-1979)
5. Captain Thomas Macaulay Smith, RN, OBE (1894-1974)
6. Rev. (Charles) Reginald Smith, CR (1896-1986)
7. Col. (Archibald) William Smith (1897-1962)
8. James Stewart Smith (1900-1987)
9. Henry Ferguson Smith (1902-1992), father of Professor Martin Ferguson Smith.
Charles’s brothers included Arthur Hamilton Smith (curator), Sir Henry Babington Smith, James Parker Smith, General George Edward Smith, and Rev. Walter Edward Smith.
He retired in 1919 and died at Clent, Worcestershire, on 23 February 1934.[12] [13]
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