In 1926, Nangle abruptly left the priesthood and emigrated to
Southern Rhodesia (today
Zimbabwe) in
Africa. In a 1960 letter to
Premier Joey Smallwood, Nangle revealed that his wartime service caused him to have a crisis of faith, and he privately became an
agnostic. As he was "faced with the choice of being a living hypocrite all the rest of my life or clearing out to avoid as much scandal as possible," he chose to leave his life in Newfoundland behind and start anew. In Rhodesia, Nangle became a farmer and married a local woman. He became politically active and helped establish the
Reform Party, which formed the government in the
1933 election under
Godfrey Huggins. Nangle was elected that year to the
Southern Rhodesian Legislative Assembly as the Reform Member of Parliament (MP) for
Salisbury District. When the party split on ideological lines, Nangle was challenged by Huggins in his district, and he was defeated in the subsequent
1934 election. He twice attempted to return to the legislative assembly as a candidate for the
Rhodesia Labour Party in
1946 and
1948, but he was defeated in both elections. He died in Rhodesia in 1972 at the age of 83 and was buried in the city of
Kwekwe. ==Legacy==