Governor-General of Malta
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Governor-General of Malta was the representative in Malta of Queen Elizabeth II as Queen of Malta between independence in 1964 until the declaration of the republic in the 1974.
- 1813-1824: Lieut.-General Sir Thomas Maitland
- 1824-1826: General Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 1st Marquess of Hastings
- 1827-1836: Major-General Sir Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby
- 1836-1843: Lieut.-General Sir Henry Bouverie
- 1843-1847: Lieut.-General Sir Patrick Stuart
- 1847-1851: Right Honourable Richard More O'Ferrall
- 1851-1858: Major-General Sir William Reid
- 1858-1864: Lieut-General Sir John Gaspard Le Marchant
- 1864-1867: Lieut.-General Sir Henry Knight Storks
- 1867-1872: General Sir Patrick Grant
- 1872-1878: General Sir Charles Thomas van Straubenzee
- 1878-1884: General Sir Arthur Borton
- 1884-1888: General Sir John Lintorn Arabin Simmons
- 1888-1890: Lieut.-General Sir Henry D'Oyley Torrens
- 1890-1893: Lieut.-General Sir Henry Augustus Smyth
- 1893-1899: General Sir Arthur James Lyon Fremantle
- 1899-1903: Lieut.-General Francis Grenfell, 1st Baron Grenfell
- 1903-1907: General Sir Charles Mansfield Clark
- 1907-1909: Lieut.-General Sir Henry Fane Grant
- 1909-1914: General Sir Henry Macleod Leslie Rundle
- 1915-1919: Field-Marshal Paul Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen
- 1919-1924: Field-Marshal Herbert Plumer, 1st Baron Plumer
- 1924-1927: General Sir Walter Norris Congreve
- 1927-1931: General Sir John Philip Du Cane
- 1934-1935: General Sir David Graham Campbell
- 1935-1940: General Sir Charles Bonham Carter
- 1940-1942: General Sir William Dobbie
- 1942-1944: Field Marshal the Right Hon. John Vereker, 6th Viscount Gort
- 1944-1946: Lieut.-General Sir Edmund Charles Acton Schreiber
- 1946-1949: Sir Francis Douglas
- 1949-1954: Sir Gerald Hallen Creasy
- 1954-1959: Lieut.-General Sir Robert Edward Laycock
- 1959-1962: Admiral Sir Guy Grantham
- 1962-1964: Sir Maurice Henry Dorman
- Sir Maurice Henry Dorman (21 September 1964–4 July 1971)
- Sir Anthony Joseph Mamo (4 July 1971–13 December 1974)
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