· First
explorers (David Livingston, 1850s),
· followed
by missionaries (Church of England, Church of Scotland and others, 1860s),
· then
came British settlers, farmers, and traders (1870s onward),
· closely
followed by commercial export interests (Cecil Rhodes’ British South Africa
Company and others, initially for ivory and native rubber, later for coffee and
tea),
· then
a protectorate (The British Central Africa Protectorate, 1889, to defend
British interests against the Portuguese), and first stamps (British South
Africa Company stamps overprinted BCA, 1891),
· followed
by a name change (Nyasaland Protectorate, 1907), and new stamps with the
changed name (1908) and dropping the “protectorate” designation (1934),
· finally,
independence under African control (Malawi, 1964), new stamps inscribed Malawi.
The British Central Africa (BCA) and Nyasaland
Protectorate stamps were used almost entirely by the tiny white minority
population, which in 1908 accounted for 0.057 percent of the total (1). For
many years I’ve searched for a cover with stamps clearly used by an African
native, but have found none. I suspect such might exist, especially because
many Africans migrated out of Nyasaland in protest against colonists taking
over their land for plantations. Mostly able-bodied men, they may have wanted
to communicate with family member left behind.
The closest I’ve come to finding native use of stamps,
likely not by them personally but perhaps in their behalf, is two larger
denomination BCA stamps (shown below) which may have been receipts for paying
“hut taxes.” The amount is right but, given the single circle cancel, they may
be postal usage.
The British forced native Africans to pay a tax on all
residences to help defray the cost of government. Not being able to stop
emigration, the Government taxed it, too. Those who sought employment in
Rhodesia and South Africa had to pay twice the rate of those who stayed behind.
Moreover, they were also taxed in their destination countries.
South Africa issued “hut tax” stamps well into the
1950s. “Hut tax” stamps may be found readily on stamps auction sites, sometimes
masquerading as postally used.
Census: 33 in BB spaces, one tip-in, nine on
supplement page.
1) Caution: Native African populations are notoriously underestimated in early colonial reports. https://libsysdigi.library.illinois.edu/ilharvest/Africana/Books2011-05/469188/469188_1907_1908/469188_1907_1908_opt.pdf
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