Page 30 - Begrave Thesis_Neat
P. 30
helped to establish representation to the company in Bahrain. Belgrave and his
33
newly-wedded wife arrived in Bahrain on 31 March 1926. The official
34
appointment of Belgrave by the Government of Bahrain addressed to the Political
Agency was dated 12 April 1926. Belgrave borrowed the name of The Times
35
advertisement section as the title for his published memoir on Bahrain, Personal
Column.
The initial contract of four years in service to Bahrain’s Government became
three decades. Belgrave’s presence was felt early as was documented by the
Political Agent in Bahrain, Captain CG Prior, to the Secretary to the Resident in 1929.
Reforms undertaken by Belgrave in the first three years of his service were
summarised by Prior into the following points: his control of expenditure; the
reorganisation of customs; the reformation of courts; the organisation of the pearl
industry; the establishment of a Land Department with a survey of Bahrain in the
process of completion; the development of the Police Force (the Adviser also
assumed the title of Police Commandant); the development of a Public Works
Department (with the intention of installing electricity soon); the organisation of
Waqfs; the establishment of a municipality on Muharraq Island; and the
36
establishment of the first girls’ school. With the rate of developments that took
33 J. Mantle, Norwich Union: The First 200 Years (London: 1997), 90-91; K.M. Kanoo, The House of
Kanoo: A Century of an Arabian Family Business (London: 1997), 146; and M. Field, The Merchants:
The Big Business Families of Arabia (London: 1984), 281.
34 Belgrave, Personal Column, 15.
35 IOR/R/15/2/128, Government of Bahrain to Daly, 12 April 1926.
36 Waqf: Religious endowments.
© Hamad E. Abdulla 9