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Chronology Baharoon, Sayid Zein Bayoomi, Hassan Bell, James Blair, James Crouch, Michael Cuningham, Charles de Brath, Ernest Haines, Stafford Hickinbotham, Sir Tom Hinchcliffe, Peter Hogg, Brig Gen Adam Jacob, Harold Johnston, Sir Charles Jopp, John Luce, Sir William Maitland, James Makkawi Mason, Harry Meynell, Godfrey Miles, Oliver More-Molyneux, G H O'Moore Creagh Penton, H E Precedence Price, Charles Rassam, Hormuzd Reilly, Sir Bernard Schneider, John Scott, Thomas Shaw, David Stewart, James Symes, George Trevaskis, Sir Kennedy Trevelyan, Sir Humphrey Turnbull, Sir Richard Vaz, Keith Walton, William Younghusband,George
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Affiliate websites:
Aden Airways
RAF Schleswigland
Perim Island
Aden Dinner Club
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Sir
Charles Hepburn Johnston
The new Governor in
Aden, Charles Johnston, was convinced of the need to
merge the Colony and the Federation. He believed that
the federal rulers would never allow Aden to gain self-government without having some say in its affairs.
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Born in 1912, Charles
Johnston was educated at Winchester College and Balliol
College, in Oxford. He entered the Diplomatic Service in
1936 and was posted as 3rd Secretary in Tokyo in 1939.
He interned in Japan from 1940-1942 then moved to the
position of 2nd Secretary in Cairo from 1942-1945.
Promoted to 1st Secretary in Cairo 1945-1948 followed by
a posting to Madrid from 1948-1951. Johnston was
Counsellor to Japan and Pacific Department and China and
Korea Department, Foreign Office from 1951-1953 and
Political Adviser to British High Commissioner in Bonn
during 1953. |

Charles Johnston
arriving in Aden |
He became Ambassador to
Jordan from 1956-1959 then Governor and
Commander-in-Chief, Aden, 1960-1963. Following the
change of status of Aden and the other member States to
a Federation, he fulfilled the
role of High Commissioner for Aden and
Protectorate of South Arabia from
18 January 1963 to
17 July
1963. This was followed
by a position as Deputy Under Secretary of State,
Foreign Office, 1963-1965 then High Commissioner,
Australia, 1965-1971, retiring in 1971. Sir Charles died
15 years later in 1986.
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He retired a little earlier than intended
from his position as Governor of Aden to be back in
UK with his wife, who had been quite ill. In 1944 Charles
had married Princess Nathalia (Natasha)
Bagration-Moukhransky of the Russian Royal
Family. Natasha was born in 1912 and died
aged 72 in 1984.
With his wife
he published a translation of Turgnev's
Sportsman's Notebook and himself
published a book of poems, Towards
Mozambique, mainly written when he
interned in Japan during the war. Later he
published The View from Steamer Point,
an account of his three year term in Aden. |
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Charles
Johnston with his wife in the domestic
quarters of Government House in Aden. |
He described the rocky heights of Aden and Little Aden
well when he said they "stick out into the sea like the claws of a lobster
buried in the sand."
High Commissioners:
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This page last updated
Saturday, 02 August 2008
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