John Wrathall

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox officeholder John James Wrathall Template:Post-nominals (28 August 1913Template:Snd31 August 1978), was a British-born Rhodesian politician. He was the last white President of Rhodesia (later holders of the post were only acting as such). He formerly worked as a chartered accountant.<ref>President dies, The Age, 1 September 1978</ref>

Early life

Wrathall was born in Lancaster in Lancashire, Great Britain, and went to Lancaster Royal Grammar School.<ref name="almanac">Current World Leaders: biography and news, Volumes 20-21, Almanac of Current World Leaders, 1977, page 2</ref> Having qualified as a chartered accountant in 1935, he emigrated to Southern Rhodesia the next year. He worked for the Southern Rhodesian Government in its income tax department for the next ten years.<ref name="almanac" />

Rhodesian career

In 1946 Wrathall set up in private practice as an accountant in Bulawayo and also became involved in politics. In 1949 he was elected to Bulawayo City Council, where he served for a decade.<ref name="arb">Africa Research Bulletin, Blackwell, 1978, page 4967</ref> Wrathall was elected to the Legislative Assembly for Bulawayo South in the 1954 general election, as a member of the United Federal Party, then led by Garfield Todd, but stood down after one term in 1958.<ref name="arb" />

Ministerial office

By 1962 Wrathall was no longer a supporter of the United Federal Party and became a founder member of the Rhodesian Front under Winston Field. He was elected in Bulawayo North in the December 1962 election under the RF banner, defeating the incumbent, Cyril Hatty, by 67 votes.<ref>The Central African Examiner, Volume 6, page 4</ref> As one of the party's most experienced members, in October 1963 he was made Minister of African Education.<ref>Rhodesia: The Road to Rebellion, Institute of Race Relations, 1967, page 308</ref> A month later he also took on the Ministry of Health, which was being transferred from the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland on its demise at the end of 1963.<ref>Heads of States and Governments Since 1945, Harris M. Lentz, Routledge, 2014, page 869</ref>

Wrathall was among the members of the Rhodesian Front who deposed Winston Field and instead installed Ian Smith as Prime Minister in April 1964. Smith promoted him to be Minister of Finance and of Posts and Telecommunications.<ref name="rhodesian_offices_1924_1964">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Who's who of Rhodesia, Mauritius, Central and East Africa: Supplement to the Who's who of Southern Africa, Combined Publishers., 1967, 1161-5</ref> As such, he was one of the signatories to the Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI) on 11 November 1965. He was Deputy Prime Minister from 7 September 1966 when Clifford Dupont was named Officer Administering the Government. Known as "the quiet man of Rhodesian politics", Wrathall nevertheless was a key figure in the secret struggle against United Nations sanctions imposed after UDI.<ref>Rhodesia's Sanctions Buster Is Dead, The Glasgow Herald, 1 September 1978, page 2</ref>

As Minister of Finance, Wrathall also oversaw the adoption of a new decimal currency to replace the Rhodesian pound, known as the Rhodesian dollar, a name which he regarded as having international substance.<ref>Unpopular Sovereignty: Rhodesian Independence and African Decolonization, Luise White, University of Chicago Press, 2015, page 124</ref>

In July 1973 Wrathall ceded his responsibility as Minister of Posts; during the 1974 general election he stood down from the House of Assembly and transferred to the Senate. In 1975 he presented his 12th (and last) consecutive Budget as Rhodesia's longest serving Minister of Finance.<ref>Parliamentary Debates – House of Assembly, 1975, Volume 90,</ref>

Presidency

In 1976, Wrathall became the second President of Rhodesia, succeeding Clifford Dupont.<ref>Smith of Rhodesia, Matthew C. White Printpak, 1978, page 92</ref> On 14 January of that year, he was sworn in as president by the Chief Justice, Sir Hugh Beadle, in a ceremony at Government House witnessed by Prime Minister Ian Smith and his Cabinet ministers.<ref>RHODESIA: Former Finance Minister John Wrathall sworn in as Rhodesia's second President since UDI in 1965, Reuters, 19 January 1976</ref> Wrathall served for two and a half years, and died in office of a heart attack.<ref>John Wrathall, Appointed To Office In 1976 as Independent Rhodesia's 2nd President, Toledo Blade, 31 August 1978</ref><ref>The Great Betrayal: The Memoirs of Ian Douglas Smith, Ian Douglas Smith, Blake Publishing Limited, 1997, page 266</ref>

Awards

References

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