Geoffrey Archer (colonial administrator)

Sir Geoffrey Francis Archer KCMG (4 July 1882 1 May 1964) was an English ornithologist, big game hunter and colonial official. He was Commissioner and then Governor of British Somaliland between 1913 and 1922, and was responsible for finally quelling the twenty-year-long Dervish resistance.

Sir
Geoffrey Archer
Commissioner of British Somaliland
In office
May 1914  October 1919
Preceded byHorace Archer Byatt
Governor of British Somaliland
In office
October 1919  17 August 1922
Succeeded byGerald Henry Summers
Governor of Uganda
In office
1922–1925
Preceded byRobert Coryndon
Succeeded byWilliam Gowers
Governor-General of Sudan
In office
5 January 1925  6 July 1926
Preceded byLee Stack
Succeeded byJohn Maffey
Personal details
Born4 July 1882
Kensington, London, England
Died1 May 1964(1964-05-01) (aged 81)
Cannes, France

From 1922 to 1925, Archer was appointed Governor of Uganda. He later served as Governor-General of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan between 1925 and 1926. In the Sudan, Archer paid a formal but friendly visit to Abd al-Rahman al-Mahdi, son of the self-proclaimed Mahdi Muhammad Ahmad, whose forces had killed General Gordon in 1885. Abd al-Rahman was leader of the neo-Mahdists in Sudan. Archer was eventually forced to resign due to the resultant flap, and spent the remainder of his career organising salt works in India.

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