Colonial Surgeon
A Colonial Surgeon was a medical official in the British Empire. Colonial Surgeons were sometimes part of the government of British colonies, for instance in British Honduras where the Colonial Surgeon was a member of the Executive Council.[1] Daniel Robertson was Colonial Secretary and Acting Governor of the Gambia in the mid-nineteenth century. Samuel Rowe was twice governor of Sierra Leone and held several other senior positions.
List of Colonial Surgeons
    
- Peter Daniel Anthonisz (Southern Province, Sri Lanka)
 - James Bowman (New South Wales)
 - Albert John Chalmers (Gold Coast)
 - Robert Michael Forde (Gambia)[2]
 - Samuel Hamilton (British Honduras)
 - William Mayhew (Western Australia)
 - Daniel Robertson (Gambia)
 - Samuel Rowe (Gold Coast)
 - Isaac Scott Nind (New South Wales)
 - Robert Smith (Sierra Leone)
 - John Macaulay Wilson (Sierra Leone)
 
References
    
- Wall, Edgar G. (1903) The British Empire Yearbook 1903, Volume 1, Part 2. London: E. Stanford. p. 1243.
 - Hughes, Arnold & David Perfect. (2008) Historical Dictionary of the Gambia. 4th edition. Historical Dictionaries of Africa No. 109. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. p. 65. ISBN 9780810862609
 
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