Papers of Rev Andrew Hake

Scope and Content

Papers and correspondence, 1949-1991, of Andrew Hake, accumulated during the course of his career in Kenya as an industrial missionary. The papers reflect the diversity of his work and interest in the urban and industrial community in Nairobi. The collection also includes publications collected by Hake, including Kenyan government publications and publications of the National Christian Council of Kenya.

Administrative / Biographical History

Andrew Augustus Gordon Hake was born in Bristol in 1925. After leaving Marlborough College, where he was at school, and having completed his army service, he read Theology at Cambridge University and Wells Theological College. He was ordained in Bristol in 1951 and served his first curacy in a housing estate until 1954, whereupon he took up an appointment as Assistant to the Industrial Adviser to the Bishop of Bristol.

In April 1957, he moved to Nairobi to take up the post of Industrial Adviser to the Christian Council of Kenya (which later became the National Christian Council of Kenya). During this time, he was active among the local churches as well as in urban and industrial work. The work was financed by Janet Lacey, initially through the British Council of Churches' Inter-Church Aid and later through Christian Aid. He was accorded an award from the Ford Foundation, which financed the research and writing of his book African Metropolis: Nairobi's Self-help City, which was published in 1977. During the course of his work, he also wrote Who Controls Industry?, the report of a working party, serviced by Hake, which addresses the issues of public versus private control of industry. The work was published anonymously in 1968. In 1958 he married Jean Besgrove, who was working as a CMS missionary in Nairobi. In June 1969, Hake and his family returned to the UK, where, after a year's study leave, he took up a post with the Swindon Borough Council as Community Development Officer, whilst remaining a non-stipendiary Priest in the Bristol diocese. During this time, he was also a member of the Archbishop of Canterbury's Commission on Urban Priority Areas, which produced the Faith in the City report, published in 1985.

Arrangement

As far as possible, the grouping of items follows that originally assigned to them by Andrew Hake. The papers are arranged into seven sections, classified according to the primary basis of the subject matter: the Church; the family; social issues and culture; urban life; industry and economic development; politics; and miscellaneous personal. Publications collected by Hake form a separate category. Each section is divided into sub-sections, and items within each sub-section are arranged in chronological order. Additional Andrew Hake Papers (PP MS 46 ADD) are complementary to the main collection, and are arranged in the same way. These papers are stored separately in Additional Boxes 1-11

Access Information

Open

Acquisition Information

Donated in 1992. Additional papers donated in 1993.

Other Finding Aids

Unpublished handlist, including index.

Conditions Governing Use

For permission to publish, please contact Archives & Special Collections, SOAS Library in the first instance

Related Material

The School of Oriental and African Studies holds the papers of Andrew Hake's grandfather, George Hake (Ref: PP MS 40).