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Name: GILLMAN, Clement CBE, FGS, FRGS

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Birth Date: 26 Nov 1882 Madrid

Death Date: 5 Oct 1946 Moshi

First Date: 1905

Profession: On railway construction and surveys EA 1905-14. Dist. Engineer, Tanganyika Railways 1919; Senior Dist. Engineer 1925; Ch. Engineer 1928; Ag. Gen. Manager 1935-36

Married: 22 Feb 1908 Eva Johana Kerber b. 1883

Children: Harold (1909); Frank (1913)

Book Reference: Colonial, Red 22

War Service: served EAP Force 1916-19, Capt., Railway Corps; Exec. Engnr. EA Military railways (Occupied Territory 1916-18)

School: Swiss Federal Tech. High School, Zurich; MSASCE

General Information:

Died on a flight from Dar es Salaam to Moshi 1946, buried in Moshi
Red 22 - C. Gillman, Railways, Dar es Salaam
Gillman's Point on Mt Kilmanjaro named for him.
Although British by nationality he was educated in Germany and Switzerland, having a German mother, and it was to German East Africa that he went at the beginning of his career in 1905 and indeed he spent the greater part of his life in Tanganyika. He developed a great interest in the environment and made a major contribution to geographical works in that country. Described by some as "the man who was Tanganyika" this enigmatic character clearly epitomises the political, cultural and social development of German East Africa and Tanganyika from the turn of the century to the end of the Second World War.
Clement Gillman (November 26, 1882 - 1946) was a geographer, cartographer, engineer, hydrographer, and intellectual of Anglo-Swiss and German ancestry. During his entire working life, Gillman shuttled between East Africa and Europe, working for the railroads as an engineer, and gathering scientific knowledge, which he condensed into several papers which were published in scholarly journals.
Gillman was born in Madrid to his father, Fritz Gillman, who was managing his father’s silver mines in Spain, and his mother, Margarete von Petzholdt, a German national who grew up in Estonia. In 1900, at the age of seventeen, Gillman entered a five year engineering course in Zurich at the Technical High School. Upon completing his studies, Gillman was offered an appointment as Assistant Engineer with Phillip Holzman and Company of Frankfurt-am-Main. The firm also happened to be the contractors for the construction of the first section of the Central Railway in German East Africa. Following a short stint working at the company headquarters in Frankfurt, Gillman set off for East Africa and arrived in Dar es Salaam on October 21, 1905.
Gillman instantly took to life in East Africa, stating that he felt an ‘increasing love for life away from ‘civilization.’’ He became the engineer in charge of several successive sections the central railway as it pushed across German East Africa. After twenty-three months in Africa, Gillman received his first leave and returned to Europe, where he stayed until June 1908. While in Europe he married Eva Kerber on February 22, 1908. They returned to Africa together and arrived in July 1908. Gillman continued his work as engineer in charge of the construction of the railroad until his next European leave in August 1912. Once back in Africa, Gillman was put in charge of the preliminary survey for the proposed Kagera railway to Rwanda. This was only a short deployment, after which Gillman returned to Europe, until definitive plans were made for a survey in May 1914, when he returned to Africa with his wife and two sons. But, with the outbreak of the First World War, the Kagera railway was abandoned.
The Gillman family spent WWI in East Africa, and Clement spent almost two years as a civilian prisoner of war. By September 1916, the Belgians had occupied Tabora, where the Gillman family was living. Gillman left his family in Tabora and went to Dar es Salaam, where he was commissions as a 2nd Lieutenant in the British East Africa Protectorate Force and attached to the Railway Corps. Due to his Anglo-German descent, Gillman was not immune to exceedingly difficult treatment during the war year, writing in 1917 of, ‘renewed attacks by my enemies, and much suffering due to suspicion and intrigue.’ In March 1919, Gillman received two months military leave in England and began searching for what to do now that the war was over. After a venture in Brazil with his uncle never materialized, Gillman decided to ‘sell his soul’ to the Colonial Office.
Gillman was back in Africa by December 1919, and was made District Engineer in charge of the Tanga District. By May 1920, he had a permanent post in the Colonial Office and in 1921 was named District Engineer Tanganyika Railways. From July 1925 to February 1926, Gillman conducted reconnaissance for a proposed rail route to Lake Nyassa, which he bluntly stated, was an impossible proposition involving a criminal waste of money. In 1928 Gillman was appointed to the post of Chief Engineer, Tanganyika Railways.
Retirement meant anything but a lessening of activity for Gillman, even during the war years. For the last six years of his life, even with a generally failing standard of health, he made numerous tours of East Africa. The King George V Memorial Museum opened in December 1940, with Mrs. Gillman as its first curator. He published over thirty works during these years, including eleven which count as major papers. He produced a paper on ‘clouds and cloudscapes’ in 1940, which was the embryonic form of a cloud atlas which Gillman intended to produce after the war. He also published a history of the building of the Tanganyika Railway. The crowning achievement of his career, however, was published posthumously in 1949. This was a study and map of vegetation-types of Tanganyika. This was his magnum opus on which he spent over 1,000 hours during the last two years of his life. He completed a draft of the map on a scale of 1 : 500000 in January 1946, which the final version being sent to Geographical Review on September 20. He died a few weeks later, on October 5, while flying from Dar es Salaam to Moshi, engaged in making notes of the journey.
1028 appt Chief Engineer of Tanganyika Railways.
Dhiru Chauhan and Dr Marieke Dekker, 'Clement Gillman of Tanganyika', Old Africa  no 111, Feb-Mar 2024

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