, with New Georgia located in the centre-left. The Colonial Office had appointed
Charles Morris Woodford as the Resident Commissioner in the
Solomon Islands on 17 February 1897. He was directed to control the coercive labour recruitment practices, known as
blackbirding, operating in the Solomon Island waters and to stop the illegal trade in firearms. Mahaffy was appointed as the Deputy Commissioner to Woodford in January 1898. In January 1900, Mahaffy established a government station at
Gizo, as Woodford considered Mahaffy’s military training as making him suitable for the role of suppressing
headhunting in
New Georgia and neighbouring islands. Mahaffy had a force of twenty-five police officers armed with rifles, who were recruited from the islands of
Malaita,
Savo and
Isabel. Mahaffy was appointed as a resident magistrate. He visited
Malaita on in 1902 to investigate several deaths. Mahaffy demanded the Malaitians give up the person believed to be the murderer, and when they did not,
Sparrow shelled the village and a shore party burnt down the village and killed the pigs. Malaita was a difficult island to administer as Mahaffy believed that 80 per cent of Malaitan males possessed firearms in the 1900s. There were frequent inter-tribal killings and pay-back killings. Indiscriminate naval bombardments or naval shore parties destroying villages, canoes and killing pigs to punish Solomon Islanders was a common response to incidents, where the colonial administrators could not arrest the perpetrators of killings. ==Appointment to Fiji – Mahaffy report into the administration of William Telfer Campbell==