Hamilton Goold-Adams
Sir Hamilton John Goold-Adams, was an Irish soldier and colonial administrator, who served as Governor of Queensland from 1915 to 1920. He was married to Elsie Goold-Adams.
Early life
Born in the townland of Jamesbrook in County Cork, Ireland, fourth son of Richard Wallis Goold-Adams and Mary Sarah Goold-Adams, daughter of Elizabeth O'Neill and Sir William Wrixon-Becher, 1st Baronet.Military career
Hamilton Goold-Adams was a cadet in the training ship HMS Conway until he decided to join the British Army and was commissioned in the Royal Scots Regiment, serving principally in southern Africa, where he achieved the rank of captain in 1885 and major in 1895, leading many expeditions into the interior. During the Second Boer War he served first as Resident Commissioner in Bechuanaland, Afterwards as commander of the Town Guard during the latter half of the Siege of Mafeking where he was twice Mentioned in Despatches.Colonial administrator and governor
Goold-Adams was appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Orange River Colony under the Administrator Sir Alfred Milner in January 1901. Following the end of hostilities in May 1902, the colony formally received a new constitution on 23 June, and Goold-Adams was appointed as Lieutenant-Governor, serving as such until 1907, when he became governor.Goold-Adams was made a Companion of the [Order of St Michael and St George] in 1902, and was advanced to Knight [Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George] in 1907.
Goold-Adams returned to England in 1911, where he married a Canadian named Elsie Riordon on 4 July. Later that year he was appointed British High Commissioner to Cyprus. In 1914, he was made Governor of Queensland, and arrived in Brisbane just before the election of Queensland's first majority Australian [Labor Party |Labor] government, under Premier T. J. Ryan. He occasionally disapproved of Labor's policies and majority appointments to the Legislative Council of Queensland.
Returning to England after his retirement, Goold-Adams contracted pleurisy on board ship, and died in Cape Town, Union of South Africa in 1920.