Frederick Eyles

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Frederick Eyles (10 May 1864, Wick, Gloucestershire - 28 May 1937, Gatooma, Southern Rhodesia) was an English-born Rhodesian botanist, politician and journalist.[1] The standard author abbreviation

Eyles
is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.[2]

Eyles was probably resident in Natal for some time, since J.C. Juta & Co. published his book, Zulu Self-Taught, in Cape Town in 1900.[3] Another edition was published in Johannesburg in the same year. He arrived in Rhodesia in January 1899, choosing to settle in Bulawayo and founding "The Bulawayo Observer" in August 1902. He acted as editor for this weekly, which reported on political and financial news, until its demise in January 1904. In 1910 he relocated to the vicinity of Mazoe, a village north of Salisbury, and stayed on the farm "Tatagura: for a number of years. From 1911 to 1914 he served on the Legislative Council as a representative of the Northern Districts. In 1914 he joined the civil service, carrying out the duties of statistician and water registrar in the Department of Agriculture. Some time later he became associated with the Census office and compiled the report of the director of census dealing with the European census taken on 3 May 1921.

Scientific endeavors

Legacy

References

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