Philip Mannington (died 1806)[1] was a British colonial administrator. He arrived as the first magistrate of the Prince of Wales' Island[2] (Penang Island) and governed the land as Superintendent and acting governor of Prince of Wales' Island, after Sir Francis Light, from 1794.[3] Ill health caused by the unhealthy living conditions at the time forced him to resign in 1796. He was succeeded by Major Forbes Ross MacDonald.[4] Mannington also developed major plantations of pepper in the Air Itam district of Penang island. When he died in 1806, his estate "in the district of Ayer Etam, called Mount Felix, on the left side of the road leading to the Flagstaff Hill, about four and a half miles from town" and said to contain 25,000 pepper vines, was put up for auction.[5][6]

References

  1. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 1923. p. 8.
  2. Tregonning, K.G. The British in Malaya: The First Forty nYears, 1786-1826. Association for Asian Studies. University of Arizona Press, 1965: p. 49
  3. Webster, Anthony. Gentlemen Capitalists: British Imperialism in South East Asia, 1770-1890. I.B. Tauris, 1998: 45, 46, 52, 278
  4. "Hussin, Nordin. Urban Growth and Municipal Development in Colonial Port-town Penang, 1786-1830." Presented at the Fourth International Malaysian Studies Conference (MSC4), 3–5 August 2004, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia.
  5. "New Ways of Knowing: The Prince of Wales Island Gazette--Penang's First Newspaper." Wade, Geoff. Presented at "The Penang Story - International Conference 2002." 18–21 April 2002, Penang, Malaysia. The Penang Heritage Trust & STAR Publications
  6. Prince of Wales' Island Government Gazette, Vol. I, No. 46 (10 January 1807).
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