Major Sir Robert James Hudson Knight Commander of the Order of Street Michael and Saint George Military Cross KC was twice acting Governor of Southern Rhodesia.
Background
Born in Mossel Bay, Cape Colony, the son of George Matthews Hudson, Hudson was educated at Diocesan College, Rondebosch and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where in 1908 he became the first South African to gain a half blue for tennis.
Career
Hudson was called to the Bar Middle Temple in 1909 and moved to Rhodesia to practice as a barrister in Bulawayo. Following the outbreak of World War I, Hudson served with the 1st Rhodesia Regiment in Southwest Africa and then moved to England to become a pilot for the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Air Force. He was awarded a Military Cross in 1917.
While in England on active service, Hudson was called upon to give expert advice in a case involving mining in Rhodesia, which was later called "one of the most lengthy and costly court cases of its time." Hudson subsequently joined the Rhodesia Party and successfully stood for the electorate of Bulawayo North in the Southern Rhodesian Legislative Assembly at the 1924 election.
Following the election, Hudson was appointed Minister of Justice (as the position of Attorney-General had been renamed) and Minister of Defence. In 1933 Hudson resigned from parliament to sit on the High Court of Southern Rhodesia and served as resident judge in Bulawayo until 1943, when he was appointed Chief Justice of the High Court.
While serving as Chief Justice, Hudson twice acted as Governor of Southern Rhodesia. The first from 26 October 1944 to 20 February 1945 and the second from 19 July 1946 to 14 January 1947.
Hudson retired as Chief Justice on 15 May 1950, his 65th birthday.
Hudson continued to be involved in public affairs, chairing the Rhodesian Board of the Standard Bank of South Africa from 1957 to 1962, chairing the Rhodesian Federal Broadcasting Corporation, as well as serving on numerous other boards and Royal Commissions.
Membership
Following the war, Hudson returned to Bulawayo and continued to work as a barrister, gaining praise as "the leading advocate in Southern Rhodesia." Following the confirmation of responsible government to Southern Rhodesia in 1923, the nation"s first Premier Sir Charles Coghlan appointed Hudson Attorney-General of Southern Rhodesia, an appointment considered "unusual" at the time as Hudson was not a member of Coghlan"s Rhodesia Party. Re-elected in 1928, Hudson was considered one of the most outstanding members of the first cabinet.".