(Redirected from British New Guinea)
The 'Territory of Papua' was a ''de facto''
Australian possession comprising the southeastern quarter of the island of
New Guinea, existing from roughly
1902 to
1949. It had previously been administered from London as British New Guinea and remained a de jure British possession until 1975 when Papua New Guinea was granted independence by Australia. The territory now forms the southern part of
Papua New Guinea, and makes up roughly half of that country.
History

British flag raised in 1883 when Queensland annexed the southern part of New Guinea
In
1883 Sir
Thomas McIlwraith the Premier of
Queensland ordered Henry Chester (1832-1914), the Police Magistrate on
Thursday Island to proceed to
Port Moresby and formally annex New Guinea and adjacent islands in the name of the British government. Chester made the proclamation on
4 April,
1883, but the British government repudiated the action.
On
6 November 1884, after the Australian colonies had promised financial support, the territory became a British
protectorate.
On
4 September,
1888 it was annexed, together with some adjacent islands, by
Britain as British New Guinea.
The northern part of modern Papua New Guinea, then known as ''
Kaiser-Wilhelmsland'' and part of the
colony of
German New Guinea, had been under German commercial control since
1884 and passed to direct rule by the German government in
1899.
In
1902, Papua was effectively transferred to the authority of the new British
dominion of
Australia. With the passage of the Papua Act of 1905, the area was officially renamed the Territory of Papua, and Australian administration became formal in
1906 although Papua remained a ''de jure'' British possession until the independence of Papua New Guinea in 1975, an anomaly which has continuing minor legal significance with respect to certain statutes which have force in the former Papua but not the former Australian New Guinea.
Shortly after the start of the
Pacific War, the island of New Guinea was invaded by the
Japanese. Papua was the least affected region. Most of
Western New Guinea, at that time known as
Dutch New Guinea, was occupied, as were large parts of the Territory of New Guinea (the former German New Guinea, which was also under Australian rule after
World War I), but Papua was protected to a large extent by its southern location and the near-impassable
Owen Stanley Ranges to the north. Civil administration was suspended during the war and both territories (Papua and New Guinea) were placed under
martial law for the duration.
Post-war, the Papua and New Guinea Act
1949 united the Territory of Papua and the Territory of New Guinea as the Territory of Papua and New Guinea, which later became the fully independent
Papua New Guinea. However, for the purposes of
Australian nationality a distinction was maintained between the two territories.
Special Commissioner
★ Sir
Peter Scratchley special commissioner for Great Britain in New Guinea 1884-1885
★ Hugh Hastings Romilly (acting) 1885-1886
★ John Douglas 1886-1887
Administrator
★ Sir
William MacGregor, 1888-1895
Lieutenant-Governors
★ Sir William MacGregor, 1895-1897
★
George Le Hunte, 1898-1903
★
Christopher Stansfield Robinson (acting administrator)
★ Sir
Hubert Murray, 1908-1940
★ H. L. Murray, 1940-1942, (civil administration was suspended in 1942 and replaced with a military administration for the duration of the war)
Military Administration
★ MajGen.
Basil Moorhouse Morris, 1942-1946
Administrator
{after restoration of Civil Government in 1945}
★ Sir Jack Keith Murray, 1945-1952
★ Sir Donald Cleland, 1952-
See also
★
Territory of New Guinea
★
Territory of Papua and New Guinea
★
Papua
★
New Guinea
★
Papua Region
★
Papua (Indonesian province)
★
Kaiser-Wilhelmsland
★
Irian Jaya
★
Western New Guinea
★
German New Guinea
★
Dutch New Guinea
Further reading
★ ''Colonial Intrusion'', Papua New Guinea Centennial Committee, Port Moresby 1984, ISBN 9980-84-009-9