In 1888 Olivier wrote the seventh Fabian tract,
Capital and Land, in which he criticised
Georgism (a system, popular with some
Radicals and Christian Socialists, in which land continued to be privately owned and managed but should be taxed for the benefit of the community) and instead advocated the communal ownership and control of land. That year he performed with
Annie Besant clerical duties at the strike headquarters during the
Bryant and May match factory strike. By now he was one of the "Big Four" of the Fabian movement in London, with Shaw, Webb and Wallas. In 1889 he wrote
Moral Aspects of the Basis of Socialism in the
Essays in Fabian Socialism, an attempt to develop a distinct programme for the Fabians. That year he stood down as Secretary of the Fabian Society, being succeeded by
Edward R. Pease. The Oliviers bought a holiday home in
Limpsfield in the
North Downs; they had two daughters by now, and a third was born in November. He was a guest speaker at the
London School of Economics, which had many Fabian connections. In October 1890, having established an excellent reputation at the Colonial Office, Sydney Olivier was appointed as acting Colonial Secretary of
British Honduras. He continued to be active in the Fabian Society during his periods back in London. In 1891 the Oliviers made a permanent home in Limpsfield; several other Fabians and radicals moved to the area, and they soon became the dominant force on the
parish council. In 1892, Olivier and Shaw attacked
Robert Blatchford, Fabian leader in
Manchester, for calling for members to boycott both the
Conservative and
Liberal parties at the ballot, regardless of the policies of individual candidates. In 1895 he was posted to the
Leeward Islands as Auditor-General, a special appointment to examine and reorganise the finances of the colony. After this he returned to London, working as Private Secretary to the Under-Secretary to the
Colonial Office,
Lord Selbourne. In 1897 he became Secretary to the
West Indian Royal Commission, and during 1898 he went to Washington to take part in trade negotiations on behalf of the West Indian Colonies. In the run-up to the
Second Boer War, the executive of the Fabian Society became split. Some Fabians, including Olivier and
Ramsay MacDonald, adhering to the traditional Liberal opposition to militarism and imperialism, opposed the war; Olivier claimed that the Secretary of State for the Colonies,
Joseph Chamberlain, had engineered the conflict to increase British holdings in South Africa. Other Fabians, including Webb and Shaw, believed military action could be used to promote democracy and civilisation, whilst some also felt that the best policy was to reform the
British Empire rather than, as Olivier advocated, retreating from it. The majority of the leading Fabians believed that it was a just war and that the native population would be better off under the British than under the
Boers, whom many saw as religious fundamentalists and bigots. After a series of close votes, the executive came out in support of the declaration of war, although the Society would change its position during the war, as the government's conduct came under scrutiny. ==Governor of Jamaica==