John Thorp (colonial administrator) explained

Sir John Thorp
Birth Date:1912 6, df=y
Death Cause:drowning
Education:Campbell College, Belfast
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Dublin
Office:Commissioner of Saint Lucia
Term Start:1953
Term End:1958
Predecessor:John Montague Stow
Successor:Julian Asquith
Office2:Governor of Seychelles
Term Start2:January 1958
Term End2:13 August 1961
Predecessor2:William Addis
Successor2:Julian Asquith

Sir John Kingsmill Robert Thorp, (13 June 1912 – 13 August 1961) was a British colonial administrator. He was Governor of Seychelles from 1958 until his death in 1961.

The elder son of Samuel R. Thorp, of Tullow, County Carlow, and Mary (née Williams), of Mallow, County Cork, John Thorp was educated at Campbell College, Belfast and Trinity College, Dublin, where he was elected a foundation scholar in 1932 and took first-class moderatorship and the gold medal in Mental and Moral Science in 1933. He was lecturer in logic at Trinity College in 1934.

Thorp joined the Colonial Administrative Service and, after attending the Colonial Service Course at the University of Cambridge, was posted to Kenya in 1935 as a cadet, and served in the Kitui, Machakos, Turkana, Mombasa, Digo, Isiolo, Marsabit, Fort Hall and Nandi districts.

Thorp died by drowning at Grand'Anse Mahé on 13 August 1961,[1] along with the Financial Secretary, Maurice Boullé.

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Governor Drowned in Seychelles Surf . The New York Times . 14 August 1961 .