Foundation and establishment for the first time on Labuan on 24 December 1846 following its foundation as a Crown colony Since 1841, when
James Brooke had successfully established a solid presence in northwestern
Borneo with the establishment of the
Raj of Sarawak and began to assist in the suppression of
piracy along the island coast, he had persistently promoted the island of Labuan to the
British government. Brooke urged the British to establish a
naval station, colony or
protectorate along the northern coast to prevent other European powers from doing so which being responded by the
Admiralty with the arrival of Admiral
Drinkwater Bethune to look for a site for a naval station and specifically to investigate Labuan in November 1844, along with Admiral
Edward Belcher with his to survey the island. The British
Foreign Office then appointed Brooke as a diplomat to
Brunei in 1845 and asked him to co-operate with Bethune. At the same time, Lord
Aberdeen who was the British Foreign Minister at the time sent a letter to the Sultan of Brunei requesting the Sultan to not enter any treaties with other foreign powers while the island was under consideration as a British base. On 24 February 1845, Admiral Bethune with his and several other political commissions left
Hong Kong to survey the island more. The crews found that it was the most suitable for inhabitants than any other island in the coast of Borneo especially with its
coal deposits. The British also saw the potential the island could be the next
Singapore. Brooke acquired the island for
Britain through the
Treaty of Labuan with the Sultan of Brunei,
Omar Ali Saifuddin II on 18 December 1846. Captain
Rodney Mundy visited Brunei with his ship to keep the Sultan in line until the British government made a final decision to take the island and he took
Pengiran Mumin to witness the island's accession to the
British Crown on 24 December 1846. Brooke supervised the transferring process and by 1848, the island was made a
crown colony and
free port with him appointed as the first Governor. From 1890, Labuan came to be administered by the
North Borneo Chartered Company before been reverted to British government rule in 1904. By 30 October 1906, the British government proposed to extend the boundaries of the
Straits Settlements to include Labuan. The proposal took effect from 1 January 1907, with the administration area being taken directly from Singapore, the capital of the Straits Settlements.
World War II and decline As part of the World War II, the
Japanese navy anchored at Labuan on 3 January 1942 without being met by any strong resistance. Most treasury notes on the island had been burned and destroyed by the British to prevent them from falling into Japanese hands. The remaining Japanese forces then proceeded to Mempakul in the western coast of neighbouring
North Borneo to strengthen their main forces there. Following the complete takeover of the rest of Borneo island, Labuan was ruled as part of the
Empire of Japan and garrisoned by units of the
Japanese 37th Army, which controlled northern Borneo. The island was renamed after Marquis
Toshinari Maeda, the first commander of Japanese forces in northern Borneo. The Japanese planned to construct two airfields on the island with eleven others to be located in different parts of Borneo. To achieve this, the Japanese brought approximately one hundred thousand
Javanese forced labourers from
Java to work for them. landing on Labuan on 10 June 1945 The liberation of the whole of Borneo began on 10 June 1945 when the Allied forces under the command of General
Douglas MacArthur and Lieutenant-General
Leslie Morshead landed at Labuan with a convoy of 100 ships. The
9th Australian Division launched an attack, with its
24th Brigade landing two battalions at the island southeast protrudance and the north side of Victoria Harbour on Brown Beach while being supported by massive air and sea bombardments. The landings were witnessed by MacArthur on board the when he decided to proceed further south from the southern
Philippines to Labuan. Following the
surrender of Japan on 15 August 1945, Lieutenant General
Masao Baba who was the last commander of the Japanese army in northern Borneo surrendered at the island's Layang-layang beach on 9 September 1945. He was then brought to the 9th Division headquarters on the island to sign the surrender document in front of the commander of the 9th Division, Major General
George Wootten. The official surrender ceremony was held on the next day on 10 September at Surrender Point. The town of
Victoria had been damaged by Allied bombings but was rebuilt after the war. The island assumed its former name and was under
British Military Administration (BMA) along with the rest of the British territories in Borneo before joining the
Crown Colony of North Borneo on 15 July 1946. == Governor ==