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  • Nigeria and the Death of Liberal England, Palm Nuts and Prime Ministers 1914-1916 by Peter J. Yearwood
  • Declan O'Reilly
Peter J. Yearwood. Nigeria and the Death of Liberal England, Palm Nuts and Prime Ministers 1914-1916. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. 302 pp. ISBN 978-3-319-90565-5, €93.59 (cloth).

It is well known to students of early twentieth-century British politics that the House of Commons Nigeria debate in November 1916 led directly to the collapse of Asquith's coalition government and the elevation of Lloyd George, then minister of war, to the premiership. Far less well known is why Sir Edward Carson, leader of the unionist faction of the Conservative Party, should have chosen so obscure a topic, the sale of confiscated German property in Nigeria, with which to attack the government and in particular Andrew Bonar Law, the colonial secretary, who was also leader of his own party. Peter Year-wood's important new book Nigeria and the Death of Liberal England gives us invaluable insight into this question but also the significance of Nigeria in World War I imperial political economy.

It is a book that Professor Yearwood is well qualified to write, as he spent nearly a decade in Nigeria teaching African history at the University of Jos. It covers three broad themes: the economic development of Nigeria in the years before 1914; the problem of what to do with extensive German holdings in Nigeria's palm kernel trade, which had been seized as enemy property in World War I; and the role of the Nigerian debate in British politics at the end of 1916. Professor Year-wood also explores a number of subsidiary themes. Among the most significant is the rise ofa Lagos-based nationalist movement in Nigeria, in part brought on by the Lugard administration's racially superior attitude toward Africans who had acquired European education, something that had not been the case in the late Victorian period.

Before World War I, the Nigerian economy was heavily dependent on exports of palm oil and kernels. This business was broadly divided into German-owned companies, which exported the palm kernels [End Page 808] directly to Germany for crushing into a "hard" vegetable oil used for margarine; a "ring" of large British firms exporting "soft" palm oil to Liverpool, where it was used for soap; and a collection of small British companies and African traders. In 1913, exports were £4.9 million, accounting for about 70 percent of Nigeria's total. With the onset of war, the trade experienced serious problems, including dramatic fluctuations in price, particularly in shipping rates. This was compounded by the loss of German shipping and the Royal Navy's requisition of ships from Elder Dempster, the main company that dealt with Nigeria. Moreover, rigid shipping quotas discriminated against the smaller British firms and local traders, who were vocal in their opposition to the big firms. These problems were accentuated by what to do with confiscated German assets. Initially, the position was thatcontrolled holdings were managed by the state for the good of the war effort. The ultimate fate of any seized property would be a matter for the peace treaty when the war ended. This was all well and good if the war was short, but as it lengthened into years, the pressure to dispose of seized property became greater. The big British merchants, backed by their connections in Liverpool, favored a simple sale to British interests. Lugard wanted to open the sale to neutral bidders. He was unwilling to countenance the erection of a British monopoly, which he believed would discriminate against local African trade. Lugard, whose view was that he governed in the interests of Nigeria and not the imperial metropole, was determined upon two things: to encourage American capital investment in the colony and to prevent a return of German business after the war. A further problem was the desire of the Ministry of Munitions to shift the entire trade to the United Kingdom, at a fixed price, so that it could be diverted to glycerine production for shells.

Matters came to a head in late 1916. Sir Edward Carson, then the...

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