Hodson was Governor of the
Falkland Islands (1926–30). During his tenure, a mountain - Mount Hodson (56°42'S, 27°13'W), the summit of
Visokoi Island in the
South Sandwich Islands - was named after him. The most notable achievement of Hodson's reign as governor of the Falkland Islands was the development of radio communications within and beyond the islands. Working with the
BBC, he connected the islands to the imperial broadcasting network. He also established a radio station in the islands. When he later moved to Sierra Leone and the Gold Coast, he continued work on his visions of establishing effective communication lines between various parts of the British Empire. From 1930 to 1934 he was Governor of
Sierra Leone, where he was known as the "Sunshine Governor" and was responsible for the creation of the
Sierra Leone Broadcasting Service, which launched on 7 May 1934. He encouraged African participation in government and had Sierra Leone "natives" trained to do jobs that had previously been reserved for bureaucrats who were imported into the colony from Britain. That same year he was knighted. Finally, he was Governor of the
Gold Coast (now
Ghana) 1934-41, and was the impetus behind the introduction of the
Gold Coast Broadcasting System (now Ghana Broadcasting Corporation). Hodson married Elizabeth Charlotte Sarah Hay, daughter of Major Malcolm Vivian Hay, in 1928. They had two daughters, Rosemary and Elizabeth. He died on 26 May 1944 in
New York City, aged 63. ==Selected bibliography==