Law and politics He was called to the bar at the
Inner Temple in 1938, and subsequently returned to Barbados. He practised law in Barbados from 1938 to 1947. He co-founded the Progressive League with the barrister
Grantley Adams. As General Secretary of the League, Springer transformed it into two initially closely related organisations, the
Barbados Labour Party and the
Barbados Workers' Union. From 1940 to 1947 he was the General Secretary of the
Barbados Labour Party and also General Secretary of the
Barbados Workers’ Union. In 1940 he was elected to the
House of Assembly.
Higher education Springer perceived Higher Education as vitally important for achieving regional cooperation and integration. He had previously sought employment in education in London in the 1930s, but was rejected on the basis of his ethnicity. In 1938 he taught Classics temporarily at
Codrington College. He was a member of the Asquith Commission on Colonial Higher Education in 1943-4 and sat on the Provisional Council of the University College at Kingston which was founded as an outcome of the commission. In 1947 resigned from the Cabinet of Barbados and took up the position as the Registrar of the
University College of West Indies, which he held until 1963, when he became Director until 1966.
International politics Following the collapse of the
Federation of the West Indies in 1962, Springer dedicated time to considering regional politics. He received a
John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and a Fellowship of the
Harvard Centre for International Affairs where he completed his 1962 book Reflections on the
Failure of the First West Indian Federation. During 1962-63 he was a Senior Visiting Fellow at
All Souls College, University of Oxford. On returning to Barbados, Springer was appointed as the Director of the Institute of Education at the University of the West Indies.
Commonwealth and international education Springer dedicated much of the period from 1964–84 to the areas of commonwealth and international education. He was Assistant Secretary General (Education) at the
Commonwealth Secretariat (1966–1970), and Secretary General of the
Association of Commonwealth Universities (1970–1980), and served as a Director of the
United World Colleges (1978–1990). He was appointed Governor-General of
Barbados in 1984, a position which he held until he retired due to ill-health in 1990. == Honors ==