- George Bowen
Infobox Officeholder
honorific-prefix =The Right Honourable
name = Sir George Bowen
honorific-suffix = GCMG
imagesize =
small
caption =
order = 1st
office = Governor of Queensland
term_start = 10 December 1859
term_end = 4 January 1868
deputy =
lieutenant =
monarch = Queen Victoria
predecessor =
successor =Samuel Blackall
order2 = 5th
office2 = Governor of New Zealand
term_start2 = 5 February 1868
term_end2 = 19 March 1873
deputy2 =
lieutenant2 =
monarch2 = Queen Victoria
predecessor2 = Sir George Grey
successor2 = Sir James Fergusson
order3 = 5th
office3 = Governor of Victoria
term_start3 = 30 July 1873
term_end3 = 22 February 1879
deputy3 =
lieutenant3 =
monarch3 = Queen Victoria
predecessor3 = Sir John Manners-Sutton
successor3 =George Phipps, 2nd Marquess of Normanby
order4 = 9th
office4 = Governor of Hong Kong
term_start4 = 30 March 1883
term_end4 = 6 October 1887
deputy4 =
lieutenant4 =
monarch4 = Queen Victoria
predecessor4 = Sir John Pope Hennessy
successor4 = Sir George William Des Vœux
birth_date = birth date|1821|11|2|df=y
birth_place =County Donegal ,Ireland , UK
death_date = death date and age|1899|2|21|1821|11|2|df=y
death_place =Brighton ,Sussex ,England , UK
nationality = flagicon|UK British
spouse =Diamantina Roma Bowen
Florence Bowen
relations =
children =
residence =
occupation =
profession = colonial administrator
alma_mater =Brasenose College, Oxford
religion =Church of England
website =
footnotes =The Right Hon. Sir George Ferguson Bowen GCMG (2 November 1821 – 21 February 1899) was a British colonial administrator whose appointments included postings to
Hong Kong and New Zealand.Early life
George Bowen was born the eldest son of the Rev. Edward Bowen, in
Taughboyne ,County Donegal ,Ireland . He was educated atCharterhouse School andTrinity College, Oxford , where two of his predecessors were also educated. Bowen, twice President of the Union, was awarded a first class degree inclassics in 1844, and was elected a fellow ofBrasenose College . He received an MA degree in 1847 and enteredLincoln's Inn in 1844. From 1847 to 1851 he was president of the Ionian University ofCorfu .Colonial services
In 1854 George Bowen served as the chief secretary of government in the
Ionian Islands . Five years later, he was appointed the first Governor of Queensland, a colony that had just been separated fromNew South Wales . He was interested in the exploration ofQueensland and in the establishment of avolunteer force, but incurred some unpopularity by refusing to sanction the issue of inconvertiblepaper money during the financial crisis of 1866.Governor of New Zealand
In 1867 Bowen was made Governor of
New Zealand , where he was successful in reconciling theMāori reaction to the British rule there, and saw the end of the struggle between the colonists and the natives. (For a rather different view of the conflict and its partial resolution, seeNew Zealand land wars ). He also instituted theNew Zealand Cross , one of the rarest bravery awards in the world, equivalent to theVictoria Cross .In 1872 Bowen was transferred to
Victoria (Australia) as Governor of Victoria, where he embarked on an endeavour to reduce the expenses of the colony, and in 1879 he became Governor ofMauritius .Governor of Hong Kong
On 30 March 1883, Bowen was made Governor of
Hong Kong , a position in which he served until 1887, when he retired due to ill health. This was his last post in the Colonial Service.During his tenure, Bowen established the Royal Observatory, which became the meteorological institute for all of Hong Kong. He also established the first college in the territory, and ordered the construction of the Typhoon Shelter in
Causeway Bay , and a government hospital.Post-governorship
Bowen retired to
England after his tenure as Governor of Hong Kong, and was appointed as a chief of a Royal Commission which was sent toMalta with regard to the new constitution for the island in December 1887. All recommendations made by Bowen were adopted. Afterwards, Bowen served as aprivy councillor .Personal life
Bowen was married twice. His first wife was Lady Diamantina Roma Bowen, daughter of Count
Candiano di Roma . They had a son and four daughters. His second wife was Florence, daughter of Dr T. Luby. Bowen died in 1899.Honours
* K.C.M.G., 1856
* G.C.M.G., 1860
*Privy Councillor , 1886
* Honorary DCL Degree,Oxford , 1875
* Honorary LLD Degree,Cambridge , 1886.Literary works
* "Ithaca", 1850 (London, 1854 translated into Greek in 1859)
* "Mount Athos, Thessaly and Epirus" (London, 1852);
* "Murray's Handbook for Greece" (London, 1854).
* "Thirty Years of Colonial Government" (London, 1889, edited by S. Lane-Poole)Places named after him
*The town of
Bowen, Queensland
*Bowen Road , andBowen Drive inHong Kong .*The town of Roma and the
Diamantina River , both in Queensland, are named after his first wife, Lady Diamantina Roma Bowen.External links
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogBe-Bo.html#bowen1 Dictionary of Australian Biography - Project Gutenberg]
References
*1911
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