- Source: Daniel Searle (colonial administrator)
- Daniel Searle (colonial administrator)
- Charles Cameron Lees (colonial administrator)
- Henry Hawley (colonial administrator)
- Henry Willoughby (colonial administrator)
- Philip Bell (colonial administrator)
- Mark Aitchison Young
- John Waddington (colonial administrator)
- Robert Lowther (colonial administrator)
- James Walker (colonial administrator)
- Charles O'Brien (colonial administrator)
Daniel Searle was an English tobacco planter and Governor of Barbados from 1652 to 1660.
He was appointed governor in 1652 when the island was captured by a Parliamentarian naval force under Sir George Ayscue. In December 1654, he was named one of three civil commissioners assigned to the Western Design, an expedition against the Spanish West Indies led by General Robert Venables and Admiral William Penn. On arrival in January 1655, He authorised the raising of a volunteer regiment by Colonel Lewis Morris but took no part in military operations.
He remained Governor until The Restoration of Charles II in 1660, when he was succeeded by Francis Willoughby, although he retained his seat on the colony council.
Searle's brother Robert was a privateer best known for his raid on Spanish controlled St. Augustine, Florida in 1668.
References
Sources
Brooks, Baylus C (2016). Quest for Blackbeard: The True Story of Edward Thache and His World. Lulu.com. ISBN 978-1365258855.
Coldham, Peter Wilson (1987). The Complete Book of Emigrants: 1607-1660. Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 978-0806311920.