Capricorn Africa Society
The Capricorn Africa Society was a multiracial pressure group in British colonies in southern and eastern Africa in the 1950s and 1960s.
History
The organisation was established in 1949 in Southern Rhodesia by David Stirling, with branches soon opening in Kenya, Northern Rhodesia, Nyasaland and Tanganyika; a branch was also opened in London in 1956.[1] With a mostly European leadership, it called for "equal rights for all civilised", giving Africans gradually increasing civic rights.[1]
The organisation briefly participated in electoral politics in Kenya. In the 1956 general elections it nominated two candidates for the fourteen European seats, choosing not to run in constituencies where independents aligned with the more liberal Michael Blundell and United Country Party stood a chance of beating right wing opponents, the Independent Group and the Federal Independence Party.[2] Although neither candidate was successful, Capricorn won one of the five Indian seats,[3] when Nahar Singh Mangat was elected in the Central (non-Muslim) constituency.
In 1957, members of the society in Northern Rhodesia formed the Constitution Party, which sought to promote Capricornist ideals. A multi-racial party, its membership included several prominent political figures, including Stirling, Harry Franklin, Stewart Gore-Browne, Lawrence Chola Katilunga, Gabriel Musumbulwa and Alexander Scott.[1] However, after failing in the 1958 elections, it was disbanded. Its position as the bastion of Northern Rhodesian liberalism by the Central Africa Party.[1] The Northern Rhodesian branch of the Capricorn Africa Society was subsequently dissolved in 1961.[1]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Bizeck Jube Phiri (1991) "The Capricorn Africa Society Revisited: The Impact of Liberalism in Zambia's Colonial History, 1949-1963", The International Journal of African Historical Studies, Vol. 24, No. 1, pp65–83
- ↑ Richard Hughes (2003) Capricorn: David Stirling's African Campaign, The Radcliffe Press, p179
- ↑ Hughes, p180