Henry Everard

Henry Everard
Henry Breedon Everard
President of Rhodesia
In office
31 December 1975 – 14 January 1976
Acting
Prime MinisterIan Smith
Preceded byClifford Dupont
Succeeded byJohn Wrathall
In office
31 August 1978 – 1 November 1978
Acting
Prime MinisterIan Smith
Preceded byJohn Wrathall
Succeeded byJack William Pithey (Acting)
In office
5 March 1979 – 1 June 1979
Acting
Prime MinisterIan Smith
Preceded byJack William Pithey (Acting)
Succeeded byOffice Abolished
Personal details
Born21 February 1897
Barnet, United Kingdom
Died7 August 1980(1980-08-07) (aged 83)
Salisbury, Zimbabwe
Political partyRhodesian Front
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Civilian awardsLegion of Merit GLMIndependence Commemorative Decoration ICD
Military awardsDistinguished Service Order DSOTerritorial Decoration TD

Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Breedon Everard GLM ICD DSO TD (21 February 1897 – 7 August 1980) was a railway engineer and executive who briefly became the Acting President of Rhodesia on three occasions between 1975 and 1979.

Everard was born in Barnet and educated at Marlborough College and graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge in 1922.[1] During the First World War he served in France with the Rifle Brigade, where he was wounded in combat and reached the rank of captain. He worked as a railway engineer from 1922, but was commissioned again on the outbreak of the Second World War, this time in the Sherwood Foresters; he was taken prisoner by German forces, awarded the Distinguished Service Order, and reached the rank of lieutenant-colonel. When repatriated after the war he became an executive of British Railways.

In 1953 Everard moved to Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia to become General Manager of Rhodesia Railways, which he remained for five years before retiring. He supported the Rhodesian Front and stood in for Clifford Dupont (who had been made "Officer Administering the Government") in 1968–69.[2] Following the proclamation of a republic, Everard was Acting President on three occasions between 1975 and 1979.[3]

His maternal first cousin was the eminent scientist and professor Naomi Datta; their maternal grandfather's first cousins were architect Henry Goddard and Mormon pioneer George Goddard.

  1. ^ The Cambridge University List of Members, 1976
  2. ^ Survey of British and Commonwealth Affairs, Volume 2, British Information Services, 1968, page 715
  3. ^ Heads of State and Government, John V. Da Graça, Springer, 1985, page 265