Sir George Goldie
- Original name:
- George Dashwood Goldie-taubman
- Born:
- May 20, 1846, near Douglas, Isle of Man
- Died:
- Aug. 20, 1925, London (aged 79)
Sir George Goldie (born May 20, 1846, near Douglas, Isle of Man—died Aug. 20, 1925, London) was a British colonial administrator, organizer of a chartered company (1886) that established British rule on the Niger River. He was chiefly responsible for the development of northern Nigeria into an orderly and prosperous British protectorate and later a major region of independent Nigeria. Although his importance in West Africa may have equalled that of Cecil John Rhodes in South Africa, he differed from Rhodes in his preference for obscurity; he destroyed his papers and pronounced a curse on any of his children should they write about him after his death.
Educated at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Goldie served briefly (1865–67) in the Royal Engineers. After travelling for several years in Egypt and the Sudan, he formed the Central African Trading Company in 1876 and first visited West Africa the following year. He soon conceived the idea of combining the competitive British trading firms on the Niger River to form a single chartered company, which then would govern the area for the crown. In 1879 he succeeded in amalgamating all British commercial interests on the Niger into the United African Company, but his application for a royal charter was refused in 1881 on the ground that British influence was not paramount in the Niger region. After the company had bought out its French competitors, however, Great Britain successfully claimed at the Berlin West Africa Conference (1884–85) that its commercial predominance on the lower Niger justified British rather than international political control. In 1886 Goldie’s firm was chartered as the Royal Niger Company. He became governor of the company in 1895. (He was knighted in 1887.)
By force and persuasion Goldie established control over the peoples of the hinterland of the Niger and Benue rivers, and, in negotiations with the French and German governments, he settled the boundaries of the British sphere of influence. When it appeared, however, that a private company was necessarily at a disadvantage in dealing with international questions, the Royal Niger Company’s charter was revoked, the British government taking direct control of the company’s possessions on Jan. 1, 1900. This territory and the adjacent Niger Coast Protectorate were reorganized as the two protectorates of Northern and Southern Nigeria.
About this time Goldie lost interest in West Africa and became fascinated with China as a theatre of British imperialism. His visit to that country in 1900 was disrupted by the Boxer Rebellion, however, and he returned to England. In 1902–03 and 1905–06 he served on royal commissions established consequent to the South African War (1899–1902). From 1908 to 1919 he was an alderman of the London County Council and chairman of its finance committee.