- Source: Agent-general
An agent-general (French: Délégué général or Déléguée générale) is the representative in cities abroad of the government of a Canadian province or an Australian state and, historically, also of a British colony in Jamaica, Nigeria, Canada, Malta, South Africa, Australia or New Zealand and subsequently, of a Nigerian region. Australia's and Canada's federal governments are represented by high commissions, as are all Commonwealth national governments today.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, a growing number of British colonies appointed agents in Great Britain and Ireland and occasionally elsewhere in Europe to promote immigration to the colonies. Eventually, agents-general were appointed by some colonies to represent their commercial, legal, and diplomatic interests in Britain and to the British government and Whitehall. They were appointed, and their expenses and salaries provided, by the governments of the colonies they represented.
Starting in 1886, Quebec and the federal Canadian government also appointed agents-general to Paris. The first, Hector Fabre, was dispatched by the province of Quebec but was asked by the federal government to represent all of Canada. He and his successor, Philippe Roy, continued to represent both Quebec City and Ottawa in France until 1912 when the federal government asked Roy to resign his Quebec position to avoid conflicts of interest. Canadian provinces have also appointed agents-general (called delegates-general by Quebec beginning in the 1970s) to other countries and major cities.
Following a military coup in Nigeria in 1966, the federal system was abolished, and the posts of the agents-general of Nigerian regions in London were subsumed in the Nigerian High Commission.
By the 1990s, some Australian state governments regarded the office of their agent-general in London as a costly anachronism, even for promoting tourism and investment, and have since been closed and subsumed into the Australian High Commission. The majority of Australian states continue to have agents-general in London, but operate from Australia House rather than maintain separate premises.
Many Canadian provinces similarly are no longer represented by an agent-general, although Quebec continues to have a Government Office in London (Délégation générale du Québec à Londres) and in several other cities around the world. Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba have representatives who work out of the Canadian Embassy in Washington, DC.
Australia
= Agents-general for New South Wales
== Agents-general for Queensland
== Agents-general for South Australia
=Gregory Seale Walters, 1856–1865
Francis Dutton, 1865–1877
Arthur Blyth, 1877–1891
John Cox Bray, 1892–1894
Thomas Playford II, 1894–1898
Sir John Cockburn, 1898–1901
Henry Allerdale Grainger, 1901–1905
John Jenkins, 1905–1908
Andrew Kirkpatrick, 1909–1914
Sir Frederick William Young, 1915–1918
Sir Edward Lucas, 1918–1925
John Price, 1925–1928
Sir Henry Barwell, 1928–1933
Lionel Hill, 1933–1934
Sir Charles McCann, 1934–1951
Alfred Greenham, (in 1959?)
Malcolm Pearce, 1961–1966
Lance Milne, 1966–1971
Raymond Charles Taylor, 1971–1974
John Louis Rundle, 1981?
Geoff Walls, 1985?–1998
Maurice de Rohan, 1998–2006
Bill Muirhead, 2007–2021
David Ridgway, 2021–present
= Agents-general for Tasmania
=Hon Adye Douglas (later Sir, Kt), 1886–1887
Sir Arthur Blyth (acting), 1887–1888
James Arndell Youl CMG (later Sir, KCMG) (acting), 1888
Hon Edward Braddon, (later Right Hon Sir, PC KCMG), 1888–1893
Sir Robert Herbert, 1893–1896
Sir Andrew Clarke (acting), 1896
Sir Westby Perceval, 1896–1898
Sir Andrew Clarke (acting), 1898–1899
Hon Sir Philip Oakley Fysh, KCMG, 1899–1901
Sir Andrew Clarke (acting), 1901
Hon Alfred Dobson, CMG, 1901–1908
Sir John McCall, KCMG, Kt., 1909–1919
Alfred Henry Ashbolt (later Sir, Kt), 1919–1924
Lieut.-Colonel R. Eccles Snowden (later Sir, Kt), 1924–1930
Darcy W. Addison, CMG, ISO, MVO, 1930–1931
Herbert W. Ely, ISO (acting), 1931–1937
Hon Sir Claude Ernest Weymouth James, Kt, 1937–1950
Sir Eric E. von Bibra, Kt, OBE 1950–1958
Hon Sir Alfred J White, Kt 1959–1971
Royce R. Neville, 1971–1978
Hon Bill Neilson AC, 1978–1981
= Agents-general for Victoria
=Hugh Culling Eardley Childers, 1857–1858
Charles Pasley, 1864–1867 (acting)
George Frederic Verdon, 1867–1872
Hugh Culling Eardley Childers, 1872–1873
James McCulloch, 1873 (acting from January to April)
Archibald Michie, 1873–1879
Charles Pasley, 1880–1882 (acting)
Robert Murray Smith, 1882–1886
Graham Berry, 1886–1891
James Munro, 1892–1893
Duncan Gillies, 1893–1897
Andrew Clarke, 1897–1902 (and for Tasmania)
John William Taverner, 1903–1913
Peter McBride, 1913–1922
John McWhae, 1922–1924
George Fairbairn, 1924–1927
Walter Leitch, 1929–1933
Richard Linton, 1933–1936
Murray Bourchier, 1936–1937
Albert Louis Bussau, 1938–1944
Norman Angus Martin, 1945–1950
John Henry Lienhop, 1950–1956
William Watt Leggatt, 1956– 1964
Sir Horace Petty, 1964–1969
Sir Murray Porter, 1970–1976
Sir John Rossiter 1976–1979
The Hon Joseph Anstice Rafferty 1979-1983
Ian Haig, 1983–1985
Kenneth Andrew Finnin, 1985–1988
Ian Haig, 1988–1989
Ken Crompton, 1993-1996
Alan Brown, 1996–2000
Peter Hansen, 2000–2004
David Buckingham, 2004–2009
Sally Capp, 2009–2012
Geoffrey Conaghan, 2013–2016
Ken Ryan AM, 2017–2020
Tim Dillon, 2020-present
= Agents-general for Western Australia
=Hon Septimus Burt KC, 1891–1892 (Acting)
Hon Sir Malcolm Fraser, 1892–1898
Hon Sir Edward Wittenoom, 1898–1901
Hon Sir Henry Lefroy, 1901–1904
Hon Sir Walter James, 1904–1907
Hon Sir Cornthwaite Rason, 1907–1911
Hon Sir Newton Moore, 1911–1917
Hon Sir James Connolly, 1917–1923
Hon Sir Hal Colebatch, 1923–1927
Hon William Angwin, 1927–1933
Hon Sir Hal Colebatch, 1933–1939
Hon Michael Troy, 1939–1947
Hon William Kitson, 1947–1952
Hon James Dimmitt, 1953–1957
Hon Ernest Hoar, 1957–1965
Hon Gerald Wild, 1965–1971
Hon Sir Stewart Bovell, 1971–1974
Jim Richards, 1975–1978
Les Slade, 1978–1982
Ron Douglas, 1982–1986
Hon Ron Davies, 1986–1990
David Fischer, 1990–1992
Gary Stokes, 1992–1994
Bill Hassell, 1994–1996
Hon Clive Griffiths, 1997–2001
Robert Fisher, 2001–2005
Noel Ashcroft, 2005–2008
Dr. Kerry Sanderson, 2008–2012
Kevin Skipworth, 2012–2015
John Atkins, 2015–2018
Commodore Michael Deeks CSC RAN Rtd, 2018–2021
John Langoulant, 2021-present
Canada
= Agents-general for Canada
=to the United Kingdom
Edward Jenkins, MP for Dundee (1874–1876)
William Annand (1876–1878)
to France
Hector Fabre (1886–1910)
Philippe Roy (1911–1912)
= Agents-general for Alberta
=John Alexander Reid (Great War)
Herbert Greenfield (1927–1931)
R. A. McMullen (circa 1966)
James McKibben (1980s)
Mary LeMessurier (1986–1992)
= Agents-general for British Columbia
=Gilbert Malcolm Sproat (1872–1876)
Thomas Stahlschmidt
Henry Coppinger Beeton (1893–1895)
Forbes George Vernon (1895–1898)
William Walter (1898–1901)
John Herbert Turner (1901–1915)
Sir Richard McBride (1915–1917)
Frederick Coate Wade (1917–1925)
Frederick Arthur Pauline (1925–1931)
Frederick Parker Burden (1931–1934)
W. A. McAdam (1934–1958)
B. M. Hoffmeister (1958–1961)
J. V. Fishei (1961–1964)
Earle Cathers Westwood (1964–1968)
Rear Admiral M. G. Stirling (1968–1975)
R. M. Strachan (1975–1977)
L. J. Wallace (1977–1980)
WR. Smart (Acting) (1980)
A. H. Hart (1981–1987)
Garde B. Gardom (1987–1992)
Mark Willson Rose (1992–1995)
Paul William King (Acting) (1995–2002)
= Agents-general for Manitoba
=Anthony John McMillan (c. 1890–1900)
R. Murray Armstrong (1955–1963)
As it was difficult to compete with larger provinces like Ontario and Quebec, the province of Manitoba decided to leave trade promotion to the federal government and accordingly recalled their agent-general in 1965 without appointing a replacement.
= Agents-general for New Brunswick
=Frederick W. Sumner (1915–)
= Agents-general for Nova Scotia
=Joshua Maugher (1761–1768)
William Annand (1878–1887)
John Howard (1892–1929)
Miss Jean Iris Howard (Acting, 1929–1930s)
Charles Arthur Richardson (1969–1972)
John Elvin Shaffner (1973–1976)
Rear Admiral Desmond Piers (1977–1979)
Donald MacKeen Smith (1980–?)
= Agents-general for Ontario
=to the United Kingdom
Southworth (1908–?)
Richard Reid (1913–1916) Died in office
Brigadier-General Manley R. Sims (1918–1920)
G. C. Creelman (1920–1921)
William C. Noxon (1921–1934)
vacant (1934–1944)
James S. P. Armstrong (1944–1967)
Allan Rowan-Legg (1968–1972)
Ward Cornell (1972–1978)
W. Ross DeGeer (1978–1985)
Thomas Leonard Wells (1985–1992)
Robert Nixon (1992–1994)
Sophia Arvanitis (2021-present)
to Asia-Pacific
Tim (Thomas E.) Armstrong (1986-1990)
to France
Patrick J. Lavelle (1981-1983)
Adrienne Clarkson (1983–1988)
to Japan
Robin Sears (1990–1994)
to New York City
Carlton Masters (1992)
= Agents-general for Prince Edward Island
=Harrison Watson (1902–?)
= Agents-general for Quebec
=Quebec uses the title agent-general or delegate-general. In 1936, legislation was passed by the government of Maurice Duplessis closing all Quebec government offices abroad. The government of Adélard Godbout repealed the legislation and opened an office in New York City in 1940. When Duplessis returned to power in 1944, his government retained the New York City office and its agent-general but opened no others. In the early 1960s, the government of Jean Lesage began to open additional offices abroad appointing in Paris (1961), London (1962), Rome and Milan (1965) and subsequent governments opened offices in Chicago (1969), Boston, Lafayette, Dallas and Los Angeles (1970), Munich and Berlin (1971), Brussels (1972), Atlanta (1977), Washington (1978), Mexico City and Tokyo (1980), Beijing and Santiago (1998), Shanghai and Barcelona (1999), Mumbai (2007), São Paulo (2008) and Moscow (2012). In 1971, the title of agent-general was officially changed to delegate-general although previous title is still often used, particularly for the government's representative to London.
As of 2024, the Government of Quebec has 35 offices abroad, including 9 delegates-general.
to the United Kingdom
Jean-Marie-Joseph-Pantaléon Pelletier (1911–1924)
Louis-Joseph Lemieux (1925–1936)
vacant (1936–1961)
Hugues Lapointe (1961–1966)
Guy Roberge (1966–1971)
Jean Fournier (1971–1977)
Gilles Loiselle (1977–1983)
Patrick Hyndman (1983–1987)
Reed Scowen (1987–1992)
Harold Mailhot (1992–1995)
Richard Guay (1995–2000)
Daniel Audet (2000–2003)
George R. MacLaren (2003–2008)
Pierre Boulanger (2008–2012)
Stéphane Paquet (2012–2014)
Christos Sirros (2014–2017)
John A. Coleman (2017–2019)
Pierre Gabriel Côté (2019–present)
to France
Hector Fabre (1882–1910)
Philippe Roy (1911–1912)
vacant (1912–1961)
Charles Lussier (1961–1964)
Jean Chapdelaine (delegate general) (1964–1976)
François Cloutier (delegate general) (1976–1977)
Jean Deschamps (delegate general) (1977–1979)
Yves Michaud (delegate general) (1979–1984)
Louise Beaudoin (delegate general) (1984–1985)
Claude Pug (delegate general) (1985–1986)
Jean-Louis Roy (delegate general) (1986–1990)
Marcel Bergeron (delegate general) (1990–1991)
André Dufour (delegate general) (1991–1994)
Claude Pug (delegate general) (1994–1995)
Marcel Masse (delegate general) (1995–1997)
Michel Lucier (delegate general) (1997–2000)
Clément Duhaime (delegate general) (2000–2005)
Wilfrid-Guy Licari (delegate general) (2005–2010)
Michel Robitaille (delegate general) (2010–present)
to Belgium
Godfroy Langlois (1914–1928)
vacant (1936–1972)
Jean Deschamps (1972–1977)
Jean Chapdelaine (chargé des affaires) (1977)
André Patry (1978)
Jean-Marc Léger (1978–1981)
Jean-Paul L'Allier (1981–1984)
Jean Tardif (1984–1986)
Claude Roquet (1986–1989)
Pierre Lorrain (1989–1993)
Gérard P. Latulippe (1993–1996)
Denis de Belleval (1996–1999)
Richard Guay (1999–2001)
Nicole Stafford (2001–2004)
Christos Sirros (2004–2014)
Michel Audet (delegate general) (2014–present)
to Germany (Munich)
Claude Trudelle (delegate general) (as of 2016)
to Japan
Claire Deronzier (delegate general) (2013–present)
to Mexico
Christiane Pelchat (delegate general) (2011–2014)
Eric R. Mercier (delegate general) (as of 2016)
to the United States (New York City)
Charles Chartier (1940–1967)
Jean-Marc Roy (1967–1969)
Général Jean V. Allard (1969–1971)
Guy Poliquin (1971–1977)
Marcel Bergeron (delegate general) (1977–1980)
Richard Pouliot (delegate general) (1980–1982)
Raymond Gosselin (delegate general) (1982–1984)
Rita Dionne-Marsolais (delegate general) (1984–1987)
Léo Paré (delegate general) (1987–1992)
Reed Scowen (delegate general) (1992–1994)
Kevin Drummond (delegate general) (1994–1997)
David Levine (delegate general) (1997–1998)
Diane Wilhelmy (delegate general) (1998–2002)
Michel Robitaille (delegate general) (2002–2007)
Bruno Fortier (delegate general) (2007–2008)
Robert Keating (delegate general) (2008–2009)
John Parisella (delegate general) (2009–2012)
André Boisclair (delegate general) (2012–2013)
Dominique Poirier (delegate general) (2013–2014)
Jean-Claude Lauzon (delegate general) (2014–present)
= Agents-general for Saskatchewan
=Graham Spry (1946–1968)
Edward Arthur Boden (1973–1977)
Merv Johnson (1977–1983)
Robert Larter
Paul Emile Rousseau (1986–1991)
Jamaica
Source: Historic Jamaica.
1664–1666: Sir James Modyford
1682–?: Sir Charles Lyttelton
William Beeston
1688: Ralph Knight
Gilbert Heathcote
1693–1704: Bartholomew Gracedieu
1714: P. Marsh
1725: Alexander Stephenson
1725–1726: Edward Charlton
1728–1733: Charles de la Foy
1733: John Gregory
1733–1757: John Sharpe
1757–1762: Lovell Stanhope (MP for Winchester)
1764–1795: Stephen Fuller
1795–1803: Robert Sewell
1803–1812: Edmund Pusey Lyon
1812–1831: George Hibbert
1831–1845: William Burge
1845 Office abolished
Malta
With the granting of responsible self-government to Malta in 1921, a proposal of the government of Lord Strickland to appoint an agent-general to "encourage the migration of Maltese to the Northern Territory and north-west Australia" was presented to the parliament. Strickland, who was Governor of Western Australia (1909–1913) suggested former Colonial Secretary and Agent-General of Western Australia in London, Sir James Connolly. The position was discontinued with the suspension of the constitution in November 1933 and was replaced by a Trade Commissioner, who was in turn replaced by a Commissioner-General in 1947.
South Africa
Prior to the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910, the four constituent British colonies of southern Africa all sent agents-general to London, coinciding with the establishment of responsible self-government in each colony.
= Agent-general for the Orange River Colony
=The Orange River Colony sent an agent-general from 1908 until the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910. Brounger was a former director of the Orange Free State Railways.
= Agent-general for the Transvaal Colony
=The Transvaal Colony sent an agent-general from the establishment of responsible self-government in 1907 until the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910. Solomon then served as the first South African High Commissioner in London from 1910 to 1913.
= Agents-general for the Cape Colony
=The Cape Colony sent separate agents-general until the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910.
= Agents-general for Natal
=The Colony of Natal sent separate agents-general until the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910.
New Zealand
After 1905 the position of Agent-General was replaced by that of High Commissioner, with the final Agent-General becoming the first High Commissioner.
Nigerian regions
The First Nigerian agents-general to the United Kingdom were appointed in December 1959 and include:
Northern Region: Alhaji Sa'adu Alanamu
Eastern Region: Jonah Chinyere Achara
Western Region: Chief Akitoye Emmanuel Coker
The last Nigerian Agent-Generals in London were:
Northern Region: Baba Gana
Eastern Region: A. Ekukinam-Bassey
Western Region: Prince Delphus Adebayo Odubanjo
Mid-West Region: Josiah A.P. Oki
Notes
Bibliography
Hilliker, John; Barry, Donald (1995). Canada's Department of External Affairs. Volume 2: Coming of Age, 1946–1968. Canadian Public Administration Series. Vol. 20. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-0738-8. ISSN 0384-854X.
Australian Dictionary of Biography
External links
Australian High Commission Website Archived 15 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine
Quebec Government Office in London
Victorian Government Agent-General
Office of the Agent-General – South Australia
Agent-General (UK) – Trade & Investment Queensland
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