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  1. Frederick Seymour (6 September 1820 – 10 June 1869) was a colonial administrator. After receiving little education and no inheritance from his father, Seymour was offered a junior appointment in the colonial service by Prince Albert. Seymour held positions in various British colonies from 1842 to 1863, when he returned to England.

  2. 13 de ene. de 2008 · Frederick Seymour, colonial administrator, governor of BC (b at Belfast, Ire 6 Sept 1820; d at Bella Coola, BC 10 June 1869). Seymour obtained an appointment in the colonial service of Van Diemen's Land [Tasmania] in 1842, and in 1848 he was sent to the West Indies, where he spent the next 16 years in various senior administrative posts.

  3. Biography – SEYMOUR, FREDERICK – Volume IX (1861-1870) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Source: Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. SEYMOUR, FREDERICK, colonial administrator; b. 6 Sept. 1820 at Belfast (Northern Ireland), fourth and youngest son of Henry Augustus Seymour and Margaret Williams; d. 10 June 1869 at Bella Coola, B.C.

  4. El sucesor de Douglas fue Sir Frederick Seymour, quien llegó a la colonia con veinte años de experiencia colonial en la Tierra de Van Diemen, las Indias Occidentales Británicas, y la Honduras Británica.

  5. Governor Frederick Seymour in 1864. Date: 1864. Author: Southwell Brothers. Source: Royal BC Museum / BC Archives, A-08341. A statue of Judge Begbie sat in front of the New Westminster courthouse for decades where the sixth Tsilhqot’in chief was hanged. Author: Victor Lipp. Source: New Westminster Museum and Archives, 2172.

  6. Frederick Seymour, The Forgotten Governor*. MARGARET. A. ORMSBY. The fourth and youngest son of Henry Augustus Seymour (i771-1847) (also known as Henry Augustus Harvey of Belfast) and Margaret, daughter of Reverend William Williams of Cromlach, Anglesey, Frederick Seymour was born at Belfast in 1820.1 His father, Henry Augustus Sey mour, the ...

  7. Frederick Seymour was the third Governor of the Colony of British Columbia, serving from 1864 to 1869. He was appointed Governor after the colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia were united in 1866.