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Name: BRIGGS, John Henry OBE
Birth Date: 1868 Great Amwell
Death Date: 11.2.1944 Sydney, Australia
Nationality: British
First Date: 1892
Profession: CMS missionary in GEA; aged 24 dep. England for EA 9-5-1892; arr. Mombasa 9-6-1892; Kisokwe Mission, Usagara, GEA. Ordained later
Area: Kisokwe, Usagara GEA
Married: 1. 23.11.1900 Rose Colsey b. 1867 Toddington, d. at sea 18.10.1904; 2. Bertha Violet Attlee (1872-1919) 3. 1 Aug 1921 Annie Barling b. 3 Aug 1887 Scone, NSW, Australia, d. 29 Mar 1951 Sydney
Children: Joan (1901)
Author: The East Africa War Zone
Book Reference: Tucker, North, Red 22, CMS
General Information:
In 1905, while on the way to England for home leave, Rose, then six months pregnant, tragically died. John continued to England with Joan. The historical record on what became of Joan is vague, but it appears that after her mother’s tragic death, she went to live in England with Rose’s oldest brother, Thomas Colsey, his wife and their only daughter Dorothy Rose.
John returned to Mvumi that year. In 1907, he again married a missionary, Violet Attlee, and they continued the mission at Mvumi. They were joined by Elizabeth Forsythe and Effie Jackson. This marked the beginning of a period of sustained growth. During this time, Briggs felt he would be more effective if ordained. He returned to England for a short period of study and was ordained to the priesthood on November 23, 1913. Unfortunately, they and other Anglican missionaries were interned and frequently moved from place to place in German East Africa during the First World War. John wrote about these experiences in The East Africa War Zone.
After hostilities ended in the region, Violet and John went home to England and then returned to Mvumi in 1919. The mission station was in shambles and John immediately began rebuilding. After the deprivations suffered during the war, the local population was ready for renewed evangelization. Unfortunately, only six months after returning, Violet died of diphtheria.
During the prewar period, several African teachers arose from the mission schooling. Two men of outstanding ability, Andrea Lungwa [3]and Andrea Mwaka [4], were trained at Bible school in nearby Kongwa. Andrea Lungwa was head of the school at Mvumi during the war, but unfortunately died of influenza shortly thereafter. Andrea Mwaka was ordained into the ministry in 1924 and became a canon in the newly formed Diocese of Central Tanganyika in 1933. An Anglican secondary school in Dodoma is named after him.
In 1921, John again married a missionary, Annie Barling, from the Church Missionary Society of Australia. Work continued at Mvumi, but financial support from CMS England fell short. Also, after the war, Tanganyika became a British protectorate. This helped to some extent as the new British government supported schools. The British government also gave more support and authority to the local chiefs. Chief Mazengo of the Wagogo tribe and of Mvumi was a longtime collaborator and a friend of John Briggs. He actively supported the hospital, demanding that women go there to give birth rather than birthing with the traditional midwives.
In 1926 CMS Australia began to become primarily responsible for mission work in Tanganyika. Bishop Chambers of Australia became the bishop of Diocese of Central Tanganyika. His fund-raising abilities brought new life to the diocese and to Mvumi. The school became Mvumi Girls Boarding School in 1929. Work was begun on Dodoma Cathedral in 1932. Briggs became archdeacon of the diocese and was made an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) in 1934.[5] In the same year, Briggs was architect and builder of the new hospital at Mvumi. The single ward of the dispensary became a men’s ward. Pediatrics, maternity, and women’s wards were added to make a quadrangle. This led to a significant decrease in maternal and neonatal deaths in the area.
By 1938, as Briggs and Annie were struggling with health problems, he resigned from CMS Australia. John had given forty-six years of missionary service. They moved to Normanhurst, a suburb of Sydney. He continued to have problems with angina and died of complications after a major surgical procedure in 1944. He was seventy-six. His legacy continues as DCT [Diocese of Central Tanganyika] Mvumi Secondary School and Mvumi Hospital. The hospital is designated as a government hospital under DCT management. There are schools for clinical officers, nursing, and medical technology.
Martin McCann