The Colonial Office


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     The Secretary of State for the Colonies (aka the Colonial Secretary) is a member of the Cabinet, a member of Parliament (in either the House of Commons or the House of Lords), and the political head of the Colonial Office and the Colonial Service. He is also the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs. In the Pulp period (1932-1938), the following persons hold this office:

 

 

     There is also the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, the only other political appointee in the Colonial Office. He is a menber of whichever house (Commons or Lords) that the Colonial Secretary is NOT a member of.

     There are usually several Private Secretaries to the Colonial Secretary -- one "in general", one for military matters, a couple for appointments, and a parliamentary private secretary (which is pretty much the conduit between the Colonial Secretary and his political party).

     At the head of the civil service of the Colonial Office is the Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies. In the Pulp period, this is:

 

 

     Some other members of the Colonial Office in London:

 

     Deputy Under-Secretary of State:

 

 

     Assistant Under-Secretaries of State. Before the early Twenties, the fourth one was in charge of Dominion affairs, before the separate Dominions Office was created. By the Thirties, the fourth one was in charge of a segment of Middle Eastern affairs relating to the League of Nations:

 

 

     Principal Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for the Colonies:

 

 

     Legal Advisor:

 

 

     Heads of Departments:

 

 

     There are lots of Advisers, Archivists, Establishment Officers, Inspectors-General, Staff Officers, a Press Officer, so-and-so Assistants, etc. in London. Four "Resident Clerks" live on the premises, to attend to night-time business and communications. The total staff of the Colonial Office in London is 220 persons -- note that the staff below the rank of Assistant Under-Secretary of State were interchangeable between the Colonial Office and the Dominions Office.

     About a hundred colonial Governors, Lieutenant-Governors, Administrators, Residents, High Commissioners, Chief Commissioners, etc. are "on the scene" at various colonies, protectorates, mandated territories, etc.

     The Colonial Service comprises (on the administrative side) the Provincial Commissioners, District Commissioners, District Officers, Assistant District Officers, Cadets. Fifteen other sub-services include medical, postal, police, education, customs, forestry, etc. Overseas positions in the Colonial Service (administrative and other sub-services) total about 2,500 persons. Military officers attached to the Colonial Office are not included in that total. Palestinian Police Force, the Royal West African Rifles, and the King's African Rifles are not included in that total.

     Military forces and militarized police agencies under the administration of the Colonial Office:

 

 

     Keep in mind that the Colonial Office has nothing to do with India (under the India Office) or a few special situations (such as Egypt and the Irish Free State, under the Foreign Office). Since 1925 there is a separate Dominions Office for Canada, the Union of South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Newfoundland, Southern Rhodesia, Nauru, and the Irish Free State; and a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Dominions.

     The administration of League of Nations mandates is complicated by the involvement of the Foreign Office. This is especially notable in Palestine -- the F.O. negotiates with the various states around Palestine regarding matters that bear directly on British administration of that territory.

 

The Colonial Office in London

     The London offices are in Whitehall, on King Charles Street; the building also houses the Foreign Office, Home Office, and the India Office. Downing Street is the opposite side of this building; St. James Park is to the west, and the Admiralty and Horse Guards are a block or two to the north. About 1200 people work there (among all four cabinet-level departments).

     The Map Room in the Colonial Office is sort of "clubby" for senior staff.

 

Appointment, Promotion and Advancement

 

     Unlike the War Office and the Army, there is some -- not much -- movement between the Colonial Office (almost entirely in London) and the Colonial Service (posted to the various colonies). Until a couple of years ago, almost all promotion and seniority was confined within the Departments, or even within a particular colony. Except for the Governors, the Colonial Service staff would arrive in a colony, and spend most of their career in that same colony.

     The Governor of each colony makes appointments for any office with a salary of £300 per annum or less, from among persons resident in his colony.

     For positions with a higher salary, the Colonial Secretary makes appointments; these may be anyone who can fulfill the Civil Service requirements.

     About one-quarter of the appointments as Governor are made with persons having no previous service in the Colonial Office or Colonial Service; and Governors-General have all been appointed from outside the Colonial Office. The Colonial Secretary makes all these appointments, of course.

     Within the Colonial Office there are two divisions of staff:  the "Upper", concerned with administration and decision-making, and the "Lower", of file clerks, typists, code clerks, accountants, messengers, etc. The Lower Division employs 60 persons (mostly in the Registry); the Upper Division, 160 persons.

 

Rewards for Service

 

     Meritorious service in, or for, the Colonies is recognised by honorific distinctions of various kinds -- usually by knighthood, or by admission into the Order of St. Michael and Saint George, the Order of the British Empire, and the Imperial Service Order. The last named is confined to civil servants at home or abroad; for the others, all British subjects are eligible, if qualified. Lists of honours are issued twice yearly -- on the Royal Birthday (currently June 3rd) and on New Year's Day; and so far as is practicable the Sovereign personally confers knighthoods.

     Eminent foreigners and princes are eligible for appointment to the SMG as Honorary Members. There are otherwise three regular classes of members:  Knights Grand Cross (G.C.M.G.), Knights Commander (K.C.M.G.), and Companions (C.M.G.). There is a limit to the number of members at each class. Membership is made by recommendation from either the Colonial Secretary or the Foreign Secretary, directly to the sovereign.

     The OBE and ISO are less often awarded to members of the Colonial Office or Colonial Service.

 

Correspondence

 

     Every letter sent by the Colonial Office begins with, "I am directed by the Secretary of State for the Colonies to ... "  The letterhead will have the usual royal emblem at the top:

 

probably should be a Tudor "King's crown", but I couldn't fine one of those for a stationery crest

 

     Except in odd circumstances, the "from" address will read:

 

Colonial Office

London, SW1

 

Colonial Service Rank

 

     There are five classes of civil servants within the Colonial Service who might wear a uniform:

 

     First-class civil servants:

 

 

     Second-class civil servants:

 

 

     Third-class civil servants:

 

 

     Fourth-class civil servants:

 

 

     Fifth-class civil servants:

 

     Clerical and supervisory staff (don't have a particular uniform):

 

 

     Governors, Governors-General, and High Commissioners have a special uniform of their own; all the others wear "civil uniform" the same as other members of government. There are, however, tropical white dress uniforms for some postings.

     A very few of the very highest levels of service within the Colonial Office (i.e., in London) are entitled to wear the appropriate civil service uniforms, pretty much only at major State occasions ... coronations, etc.

 

Subsidiary Organizations

 

The Crown Agency

 

     Commercial enterprises owned by the government in colonies are administered by the Crown Agency, which is separate from but parallel to the Colonial Office. There's a definite tension between the Crown Agents, operating in the colonies but not always working to the same ends as the Colonial Office. In London there is the Senior Crown Agent:

 

 

     In each colony there is at most one Crown Agent, supervising a whole set of people with normal commercial titles.

 

The Colonial Audit Department


The Tropical Diseases Bureau

 

     Employs a Director, with a few editors; and issues some monthly and quarterly bulletins, contributed by medical specialists.

 

The Imperial Bureau of Entomology

 

     A Secretary and Assistant Secretary produce bulletins and fund research

 

The Imperial Bureau of Mycology

 

     Yes, they study fungi. Founded in 1918, this unit encourages and coordinates fungal research throughout the Empire. A member of the Colonial Office is the Secretary in charge; the Bureau publishes the Review of Applied Mycology every month, maintains a library, and provides travel and accommodations for researchers.  From 1930, it became part of the Imperial Agriculture Bureau, and was renamed the Imperial Mycological Institute.  

 

This outfit is Michael's candidate for hiding Spooky Government Stuff,

especially since funding for the Bureau comes entirely from non-Treasury sources

(the colonies, protectorates, Dominions, and India), and is largely

independent of Parliamentary review. Kew Gardens have all sorts of useful temples.

 

The Overseas Defence Committee

 

     Previously known as the Colonial Defence Committee, this is a sub-committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence. The chairman is the Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, and the regular members are from the branches of the combatant forces, and from the military department of the India Office. Meetings are confidential.

 

     The following committees are mostly made up of various men and women in the front rank of their respective professions, serving in an honorary unpaid capacity.

 

The Colonial Survey Committee

 

The Colonial Research Committee

 

     Since 1919, this five-member committee administers various Parliamentary grants on "matters of economic importance". The Secretary and three other members are from the Colonial Office; the Chairman is not. There are various unofficial members, as well.

 

Committee for Research in the Falkland Islands

 

     Mostly to do with whaling. They use the RRS Discovery (of Captain Scott fame) for their investigations.

 

The Advisory Committee on Native Education in the British Tropical African Dependencies

 

The Colonial Advisory Medical and Sanitary Committee

 

     Members are heads of various Colonial Office departments, plus a Chairman, Secretary, and Assistant Secretary, and various unofficial advisers and honorary committee members.

 

The Tropical Diseases Research Fund

 

     Consists of an Advisory Committee, a Secretary, and several honorary committee members.

 

Bibliography

 

     The Dominions and Colonial Offices, by Sir George V. Fiddes, pub. 1926 by G.P. Putnam's Sons