Stanley Wyatt Smith

Stanley Wyatt-Smith (3 April 1887 – 17 November 1958) was Consul-General of Manila (1938–42) and Honolulu (1943–44).[1][2] A collection of his photographs taken in Wuhan during the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, form part of the 'Historical Photographs of China' project and are held at the University of Bristol.[3]

Stanley Wyatt-Smith
Born(1887-04-03)3 April 1887
Minchinhampton, Gloucestershire, England
Died17 November 1958(1958-11-17) (aged 71)
Burleigh, Stroud, Gloucestershire, England
NationalityUnited Kingdom
EducationBedford Modern School
Alma materKing's College London
OccupationBritish Diplomat
Known forConsul-General of Manila
Consul-General of Honolulu

Early life

Wyatt-Smith was born in Minchinhampton on 3 April 1887 the son of Rev. WH Smith and Susannah (née Rice). He was educated at Bedford Modern School and King's College London.[2]

Diplomatic service

In 1907 Wyatt-Smith entered the Consular Service in China. He was a student interpreter in Peking (1907–09), and later witnessed the 1911 (Xinhai) Revolution; his photographs of the aftermath of that revolution form part of the 'Historical Photographs of China' project and are held at the University of Bristol.[3] He was later student interpreter in Shanghai (1913–14) and Swatow (1914–17),[2] before being made acting Consul at Tsinan (1917–18) and later at Wuchow (1918–20).[2]

Wyatt-Smith was Vice-Consul at Hankow (1921), Shanghai (1922–23), Senior District Officer at Wei-hai-wei (1923–25), Consul at Chinkiang (1926–27) and Tengyeuh (1927–31). The American journalist Edgar Snow stayed with Wyatt-Smith in Tengyeuh as relayed in Robert Farnsworth's book about Snow's time in Asia: 'Stanley Wyatt-Smith, the British consul, was a congenial and well-informed host'.[4] Lady Diana Cooper described him as,'...delightful...His confidence and poise far exceeded any English Consuls I have seen'.[5]

After Tengyeuh, Wyatt-Smith was Consul at Changsha (1931–32), Newchang (1933), Tsinan (1933), Foochow (1934–36) and Swatow (1937–38).[2] In 1938 Smith was promoted to Consul-General of Manila (1938–42) until he was interned at Santo Tomas Internment Camp by the Japanese military authorities on the occupation of Manila and repatriated in 1942.[6] In 1943 he was made Consul-General of Honolulu until his retirement in 1945.[2]

Family life

Wyatt-Smith married firstly Clara Mabel Smyth (one son and one daughter, his son killed on active service in 1945). He married secondly Beatrix, eldest daughter of Sir Francis Metford KCB OBE. He died in Burleigh, Stroud, Gloucestershire, on 17 November 1958.[2]

Further reading

  • Where China meets Burma; life and travel in the Burma-China border lands, by Beatrix Metford (Mrs Wyatt-Smith). Published by London Blackie, 1937[7][8]
  • Chung Mien chih chiao, by Beatrix Metford and Wu kuang fu. Republished Beijing, 2014[9]

References

  1. Obituary in The Times, Mr. S. Wyatt-Smith, 19 November 1958, p.13
  2. Who Was Who, Published by A&C Black Limited, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014; online edn, April 2014
  3. "Wyatt-Smith, Stanley Collection – Historical Photographs of China". hpcbristol.net. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  4. From Vagabond to Journalist: Edgar Snow in Asia, 1928–41, by Robert M Farnsworth, 1996
  5. "The Spectator, 23rd May, 1987. Retrieved July 2015".
  6. Surviving a Japanese Internment Camp. Life and Liberation at Santo Tomas, Manila, in World War II , by Robert Wilkinson, 2014
  7. Metford, Beatrix (7 April 2019). Where China meets Burma; life and travel in the Burma-China border lands. Blackie. OCLC 976770351. Retrieved 7 April 2019 via Open WorldCat.
  8. "Beatrix Wyatt-Smith – Historical Photographs of China". hpcbristol.net. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  9. Metford, Beatrix; 伍況甫 (7 April 2019). 中緬之交. 商務印書館. OCLC 123021514. Retrieved 7 April 2019 via Open WorldCat.


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