The Years of Hope
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This is a record of British experience in the colonies, demonstrated through the memoirs of Philip Snow, who left England for Fiji in 1938 to pursue a Colonial Service career. Overshadowing all is the theme of racial harmony, mutual tolerance and distant respect which informed Snow's life.

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Philip Snow, the youngest of four brothers (one of whom became Lord Snow of Leicester), was born and went to school in Leicester before going up to Cambridge. For 14 years he served in the Colonial Administrative Service as Magistrate and Provincial Commissioner; these were just two of a remarkable variety of posts including Receiver of Wrecks and Deputy Sheriff, in Fiji and the South Pacific. He captained the national Fiji cricket team on the first-class tour of New Zealand in 1948. An elected Honorary Life member of the MCC, he was the doyen of the 30 members of the International Cricket Council, having served continuously as Permanent Representative of Fiji from 1965 until his retirement 30 years later. Appointed MBE in 1979 and promoted to OBE in 1985, he is retired in Sussex. Philip Snow maintains close contacts with the South Seas and was awarded the Fiji Independence Silver Jubilee Medal in 1995.

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