Henry George Keith (1899-1982), known as
Harry Keith, was a British forester and plant
collector. Keith is credited with starting the process of
large-scale conservation of the forests of
North Borneo (now Sabah). In 1984 a new species
of
Rafflesia endemic to Sabah,
Rafflesia keithii, was
named in his honour. Keith was the husband of author
Agnes Newton Keith.
Life
Keith was
born in New
Plymouth
, New
Zealand, to English parents and grew up there, before being sent
abroad to be schooled in England and then in California, United
States. Keith served in the
United States Navy in the First World
War, and then took a degree at the
University of California (B.Sc.
1924).
In 1925,
Keith was appointed the Assistant Conservator of Forests for the
government of North Borneo (now Sabah) under the Chartered Company, based at
Sandakan
, and was
promoted to Conservator of Forests in 1931, and later again to
Director of Agriculture and Wildlife. He was also Honorary
Curator of the Sandakan Museum.
In 1934 Keith married
Agnes Newton
Keith (1901-1982), an American who was later to become a
celebrated writer.
Keith had been a friend of Agnes’ brother Al
when both boys had been at the same school in San
Diego
. Keith had first met Agnes when she was
eight years old and he was two years older. Keith had not seen
Agnes in ten years when he visited California while on leave in
1934. As soon as they re-met they fell in love, and married three
days later, and Agnes accompanied him to North Borneo.
During the
Japanese occupation of Borneo in World War II Keith was imprisoned
at Berhala Island near
Sandakan and then in Batu Lintang
internment and POW camp near Kuching in Sarawak
, as were
Agnes and their infant son George. Agnes later wrote a book
on their wartime experiences,
Three
Came Home, which was also made into a film.
After a short period of recuperation in Canada, Keith resumed his
position as head of the Department of Agriculture in British North
Borneo (1946-1952). Keith is credited with starting the process of
large-scale conservation of North Borneo's forests. In 1931 the
Forestry Department, under Keith's guidance, aimed to have at least
10% of the total land area of North Borneo created as Forest
Reserves (the total in 1930 was 0.37%); after the interruption of
World War II Keith observed that the Forestry Department’s
management of forest resources was one of ‘exploitation’ rather
than ‘sustained yield’ and so in 1948, the ‘sustained yield’ Forest
Policy was officially adopted by the Government, while also
reaffirming the 10% aim. By 1984, some 45.4% of Sabah's land was
designated a Forest Reserve.
After formal retirement from service in British North Borneo in
1952, Keith held several temporary appointments.
In 1953 he joined the
Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) of the United
Nations, and was posted to the Philippines
as instructor at the Timber Graders School in
Manila.
In 1955
Keith became FAO Representative at Benghazi in Libya
, and served
six years as forestry adviser in the
country. He finally retired in 1964.
Throughout his career Keith collected plants for scientific study.
His
collections are now housed in the Natural History Museum
and Kew
Gardens
in London, the Herbarium Bogoriense at Bogor Botanical
Gardens
in Indonesia, and the Herbarium of the Forest
Department at Sandakan, Sabah.
All but one of his wife Agnes’ books are autobiographical and
detail the family’s life in the various countries in which they
lived. Keith and Agnes retired to British Columbia, where they died
within a few months of each other in 1982.
In 1984 a new species of
Rafflesia endemic to Sabah,
Rafflesia keithii, was named in
Keith's honour. This
parasitic plant
is the largest
Rafflesia found in Sabah, with flowers
reaching up to one metre in diameter. In addition,
Dryobalanops keithii, a heavy
hardwood tree, and
Randia
keithii, a shrub or small tree in the genus
Randia were also named after
Keith.
Newlands

Newlands, the home of the Keiths
in Sandakan.
On arriving in Sandakan in 1934, the newly-married couple moved in
to Keith's bachelor
bungalow, but the
couple soon relocated to a government building on a hilltop. They
lived there until they were interned in 1942. After the war the
Keiths returned to Sandakan to find the house destroyed. They built
a new house in 1946-1947 on the original footprint and in a similar
style to the original. They named this house
Newlands and
lived there until they left Sabah in 1952. After nearly fifty years
of gradual deterioration, first under tenants and then as an empty
shell, the house was restored by
Sabah
Museum in collaboration with the
Federal Department
of Museums and Antiquities in 2001. The house is a rare
survival of post-war colonial wooden architecture. It was opened to
the public in 2004 and is a popular tourist attraction. It contains
displays on Agnes and Harry Keith as well as information about
colonial life in Sandakan in the first half of the twentieth
century, and is commonly referred to as the Agnes Keith
House.
The Keiths' library
Both Agnes and Harry Keith were ardent bibliophiles. Following
their deaths, their collection of books and documents on Borneo and
South East Asia was auctioned in 2002. The collection numbered over
1,000 volumes, and had been gathered over many years. Agnes wrote
of the collection, which they were forced to abandon to the
occupying Japanese forces, in
Three Came Home: "Harry's
library of Borneo books, perhaps the most complete in existence,
his one self-indulgence...".
The auction press release commented that
"Many of these items are not listed in any institutional holdings,
including the British
Library
, and may well be the only surviving extant
copies".
Selected publications by Keith
- 1928 "Description of a native oil press (chandasan) from North
Borneo" Journal
of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society
(JMBRAS) 6(3): 96–97
- 1935 Forestry in the State of North Borneo
- 1936 "A few Ulun-no-Bokan (Murut) taboos" JMBRAS
14(3): 327–329
- 1936 "Some Ulun-no-Bokan (Murut) charms" JMBRAS 14(3):
330
- 1936 "Some Ulun-no-Bokan (Murut) words from North Borneo"
JMBRAS 14(3): 314–322
- 1936 "Ulun-no-Bokun (Murut) folklore" JMBRAS 14(3):
323–326
- 1938 A Preliminary List of North Borneo Plant Names
North Borneo Forest Records, no. 2 (reprinted 1947; 2nd edition
1952, reprinted 1964). Hong Kong: Ye Olde Printerie
- 1938 "Keris measurements from North Borneo"
JMBRAS 16(1): 134–136
- 1947 The Timber of North Borneo North Borneo Forest
Records, no. 3. Hong Kong: Published by permission of the
Government of the Colony of North Borneo, printed by Ye Olde
Printerie
- 1947 "Megalithic Remains in North Borneo" JMBRAS
20(1): 153-5
- 1980 The United States Consul and the Yankee Raja
Brunei Museum Journal
Monograph 4
References
- Keith 1955, p.37
External links