According to the diaries of
Lord Lugard, George Wilson was working with and teaching ex-slaves (whom he helped free) and coastal tribes near
Mombasa in January 1889. He was primarily engaged in assisting the
missions with fugitive slaves from their
Arab masters. Wilson spent at least five months in Fuladoyo, a runaway slave settlement in coastal Kenya, engaged in this work. By 20 December 1889, he joined Lugard's first expedition from Mombasa to
Machakos. Under Lugard's strong persuasion to IBEAC director
Mackenzie, Wilson was offered a job by the
company, which he joined on 1 January 1890. However, Wilson soon became ill with fever, a condition that persisted throughout the first expedition. This was not the first time Wilson had fallen ill, as he had previously become sick while working in East Africa with his brother the year prior. Wilson later joined Lugard's second expedition on 6 August 1890, embarking on the
Sabaki trip. Lugard's caravan left the coast at
Malindi and slowly moved up the Sabaki River. After crossing the
Tsavo River, they encountered a Swahili caravan transporting slaves. The traders fled but were later caught by Lugard and placed on trial in Mombasa. Some of the slaves were successfully freed, with malnourished children receiving food and clothing. Between 1890 and 1897, one-third of all slaves in East Africa were reportedly freed by officers of the IBEAC and the 1895
protectorate government, according to
Sir Arthur Henry Hardinge, who estimated that at least 26,259 legal slaves (a massive undercount that did not include those living in runaway mission settlements or areas outside their home villages) were held by Muslims in 1897. By 12 September 1890, on Lugard's second expedition, Wilson's health had deteriorated to the point of losing consciousness. Suffering from constant health challenges along the journey and having a weak pulse, Lugard acted quickly by taking Wilson to his tent and using natural medicine, like rubbing him with carbolic oil, to revive him. Whiskey was given to ease the pain, but his health continued to decline. Lugard nursed Wilson day and night, ultimately saving his life. From various accounts, George Wilson was determined to join Lugard's Uganda expedition in 1890. Lugard held a high opinion of Wilson, praising his success with the
Kikuyu and crediting him for teaching valuable lessons in interactions with locals. In August 1891, Wilson was engaged by
James Stewart. For a time, Wilson was involved with the
Scottish Industrial Mission at
Kibwezi and worked on taking control of
Fort Dagoretti on 19 September 1891. In August 1892, on his way back to the coast, Lugard found Wilson at work on the
Mackinnon Road, being built by the Mission from
Mazeras to Kibwezi. This road, funded by
Sir William Mackinnon, was aimed at increasing trade with Uganda. Wilson employed the
WaKamba for the 185-mile road construction between
Tsavo and
Kibwezi, paying them one brass wire ring per day, equivalent to 4
annas. Wilson joined the Uganda service on 30 August 1894, quickly making his mark as officer in charge of Kampala station. His leadership was recognized, and he was placed in charge of the protectorate region during the Sudanese Mutiny in September 1897.
John Dawson Ainsworth's memoirs recount how Wilson was ambushed by the
Wa-Kikuyu under
Waiyaki Wa Hinga's command for over a week. This forced Wilson and his men to vacate Fort Dagoretti at night and retreat to
Machakos on 30 March 1891 under the advice of Ernest Gedge, along with 30 African soldiers. This marked the first major confrontation between the
Agikuyu and British imperial forces. Wilson, praised by both the Kikuyu and the British, did not return to the region, but the Kikuyu regarded him as a leader who maintained the locals' respect. Wilson was left at the fort by Lugard due to further health setbacks. This led Lugard to make the difficult decision to leave him at a station in Dagoretti with a garrison of thirty men while the rest of the expedition moved forward. Wilson's health, however, improved rapidly in the "cold, bracing air of the mountains," as Lugard claims in his book,
The Rise of Our East African Empire. According to
Maina wa Kinyatti, a Marxist historian, the defeat at Dagoretti, along with another successive defeat for Wilson and his men, prevented them from sustaining the attacks led by
Waiyaki Wa Hinga. Following the recapture and rebuilding of the station at Dagoretti, they lost control of the previously burned
garrison during a dash for safety back to
Machakos, where their headquarters was built by Lugard in 1889. This ultimately led to Wilson's replacement by Colonel Erick Smith, who refocused his efforts on building another fort in
Kanyonyo, which he later named "Fort Smith." On the other hand, when Wilson, who had only barely recovered from his sabaki trip with Captain Lugard, was in charge of the fort that he and Lugard built to near completion in October 1890, he was tasked with finishing it off. However, he could not, along with his 40 porters and
askaris, defend against the Kikuyu to remain in the station. He was running out of ammunition and supplies and did not receive any new stock from the coast that was sent to him following Lugard's departure in November 1890. According to multiple accounts, including one from
Lugard, he was unfairly dismissed by the IBEA Company for abandoning the station. The company blamed his ambush on the mistreatment of natives. Even though Wilson and several officials maintained that the company was responsible for the failure due to the lack of assistance even after a request was sent, other accounts from people who met George Wilson, like
John Walter Gregory, claim that he was persuaded to retire from his IBEA post by the leaders of a caravan returning from Uganda following the failed project, rather than being abruptly dismissed. This stands in stark contrast to the statement made by the IBEAC's
Mackinnon. In a letter to Stewart on 27 October 1891, Mackinnon wrote that Wilson had "failed to conciliate the natives." Meanwhile, in 1923,
Brigadier-General Austin gave his account of what transpired when he was a witness at Fort Smith in 1890. He narrated that hostilities had emerged between the Wa-kikuyu and company officials when
Wa Hinga murdered two of Wilson's porters who had gone to his village to buy food for the garrison. Day by day, the number of those killed and wounded in the ensuing Waiyaki besiegement of the company post at Dagoretti increased. It is hard to find one isolating factor that led to the Kikuyus' besieging of the Dagoretti fort against Wilson and his men, especially considering that Wilson initially struck a positive friendship with the Agikuyu. However, one suggestion from Evanson Wamagatta, an associate professor and author at
Biola University, is that days after Lugard left for Uganda, his men and officials at Dagoretti did not honour the IBEA agreement and the blood-brotherhood that Lugard made with the Waikikuyu and its leader
Waiyaki. What followed was the forcible recruitment of the Kikuyu as porters, the purposeful theft of food from the Kikuyu, local squabbles between IBEA officials and Kikuyu residents, harassment and sexual assault of Kikuyu women, and the failure to pay the Kikuyu for supplying and delivering food to George Wilson. Nonetheless, despite his frictional encounters in the first three years of engaging with the natives via IBEA, George's long-term career was not damaged. Furthermore, he was eager and patient when it came to dealing with the natives. He could speak several local languages, having learnt to speak Swahili and Masai from two of his African wives. He had spent a significant period working as an administrator in the
Nile province, anxious but determined to push for administrative expansion into the North East. He was known as a good judge of character, earning the nickname
bwana tayari, an official who knew the country better than anyone else. By 30 August 1894, George Wilson was appointed as the first-class transport officer and later as the first-class assistant of the Uganda protectorate. From 31 January 1895, he served as a sub-commissioner of the Buganda Kingdom and was the principal British official in Buganda at the time. From 5 November 1897 to 29 January 1898, Wilson was the acting commissioner and commander-in-chief of the Uganda Protectorate, as well as the
consul-general in the absence of Colonel Ternan. That same year presented the next significant political challenge of Wilson's leadership when British power and political stability in the protectorate came under threat due to the ongoing Sudanese revolt. This prompted Wilson to communicate directly with the
UK Prime Minister at
10 Downing, who was also the
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. On 5 January, Wilson informed Prime Minister
Lord Salisbury in a letter to the
UK Foreign Office that he regretted being unable to report the termination of the mutineers in
Usoga. Following this, Wilson's leadership was debated in the
House of Lords between
Lord Stanmore and the
President of the Privy Council, the
Duke of Devonshire, on 3 March 1898 in the absence of the Prime Minister. As tensions continued to rise, Wilson issued a letter to
Major Macdonald on 16 March, referring to the Sudanese mutiny: "In Uganda the intensity of the relief experienced on the suppression of the Soudanese mutiny is beyond description. As I anticipated in a previous despatch, the deep gravity of the mutiny has put all local troubles out of focus, and it has been difficult to rouse the native authorities into taking the necessary action for the decisive stamping out of the
Mwanga revolt...I had found it necessary some time ago on account of certain previous unauthorised journeys during disturbed periods to warn the Missions that, unless I was informed of all intended movements in the country by their members, I could not undertake to have proper precautions taken for their safety.." However, following his services against the Sudanese mutineers, whom he defeated with the help of three to four thousand armed
Wagandas after leaving from
Mengo on 19 October 1898, Wilson was awarded the
(Civil) Companion of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (CB) for his outstanding military efforts. This award is second only to a
knighthooddespite not being a trained soldier. The events began when George Wilson, the chief political officer at the time, uncovered a serious plot during the
Nandi expedition. This led to the arrest of two Baganda chiefs: Mukwenda, the Protestant chief of Singo, and the Roman Catholic Kaima chief. George Wilson charged both with incitement to
revolt, sentencing them to five and seven years of imprisonment with
hard labour at
Eldoma Ravine. Meanwhile, Mwanga II had fled. Further information about the mutiny can be found in Hubert's ''King's African Rifles''. In the following years, Wilson oversaw important developments in the Protectorate region, including the
Buganda Agreement of 1900. In 1901, George Wilson visited Ankole and concluded that the country was ready for an agreement. Under
Jackson's instructions, he drafted the Ankole Agreement, similar to the Toro Agreement, presenting it with great care to the chiefs and people of Ankole. The agreement was signed on 7 August 1901. Jackson then wrote to the Foreign Office, informing
Lord Lansdowne, Britain's
Foreign Secretary, with a despatch on 25 October: "This Agreement Is, I consider a very fair one to the
Kabaka and chiefs, and entails no actual out-of-pocket expenditure in the form of subsidies. It is one which will cause the Kabaka and chiefs to interest themselves in the question of taxation, and, in view of the fact that it was drawn up at their own special request by Mr. Wilson after he had ample opportunity of judging them and their capabilities, I venture to submit it, with confidence for your Lordship’s ratification". To Which the foreign secretary though displeased but satisfied with Wilson's deal, responded with a ratification of the agreement, the foreign minister's assistant named Brooke informed Jackson: "His Lordship observes that the Agreement is said to follow the lines of that entered into regarding
Toro, of which, however, a copy has not reached this Department. Lord Lansdowne approved the object with which it has been drawn. But although the Agreement is described as a draft it appears to have been signed by a number of natives who probably considered it as a completed document. For this reason, His Lordship is unwilling to criticise it in detail or to make alterations which would suggest themselves were such criticism undertaken, as the result might be to shake the confidence of the native signatories in the good faith of the administration." Therefore, Wilson's Ankole deal was confirmed by the Foreign Office on 30 January 1902. However, the agreement was later withdrawn by the protectorate government following the murder of the Ankole sub-commissioner, Mr.
Henry Galt, who was described as a "ruthless" administrator that mistreated the locals. Wilson also played a crucial role in tempering the hostile behavior of senior officials at Entebbe towards Bunyoro natives. On 1 April 1902, he was appointed the
deputy commissioner of the Uganda protectorate in Entebbe until 1906. During this time, Commissioner Wilson helped advance the efforts of the
Sleeping Sickness Commission, made up of medical experts and other officials sent by the
British Royal Society to investigate the Sleeping Sickness outbreak in Uganda, which peaked by 1910 and claimed 250,000 lives by the time it ended in 1920. Wilson also lobbied the
Colonial Office to provide greater protections to African farmers, including the right to kill elephants that frequently attacked people. However, the underlying reason for this lobbying, which he and
Sadler (whom Wilson was deputy to) pursued, was to maintain the annual colonial income. This is evidenced by Wilson's attendance at the 1906
Annual General Meeting hosted by the
Royal African Society in London, where he stated that the value and volume of ivory exports had recently fallen for the Protectorate colony, thereby reducing colonial income for that financial year. From 1904 to 1906, George was appointed His Majesty's commander in chief and acting commissioner of the Uganda protectorate. During this period, he received multiple outbreak reports, one of which is well documented in the
Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps. The situation became serious enough that Wilson sent a despatch to the Foreign Office due to the lack of medical assistance from London as the
metropole. Dated November 1904, the letter informed Foreign Secretary Lansdowne of the risks posed to the
Unyoro district and the unsuccessful
epidemiological efforts of the scarce public health officials, along with the skeleton laboratory team at
Entebbe, stating: "Present researches here must be somewhat purely academic, and, however resultant of facts of intense scientific interest, are not sufficiently advancing our hopes of prevention". Following the persistence of the epidemic, Wilson issued a notice in January 1908 banning all fishing activities on
Lake Victoria, as it was assessed to increase the risk of spreading the disease. "All fishing upon the lake shores is illegal; any subject of His Highness found fishing would be liable to punishment," the notice stated in part. Amidst all this, Wilson was responsible for a range of day-to-day engagements and administration roles. He led the inquiry into the death of
Harry George Galt, a man regarded as a ruthless colonial officer who had recently been appointed sub-commissioner of the western province of the protectorate, before being murdered with a spear by a native. Wilson believed Galt's death was politically motivated and cautioned in 1905 that the spirit of unrest in
Ankole would not subside until the Protectorate government thoroughly investigated and took decisive actions against the perpetrators. Edward I. Steinhart's book, published in 1977, delves into the investigation and the decisions George Wilson made following the inquiry. The Galt series article also provides an in-depth look at Henry Galt and his murder. On 28 March 1907,
Sir Henry Hesketh Bell wrote to the
Secretary of State for the Colonies,
Victor Bruce, to inform him that his deputy, George Wilson C.B., would be drawing up the annual colonial report for the financial year of 1905–06 for the East African Protectorate. This was because Wilson had administered the protectorate government for a significant portion of the year under review. Less than a month later, on 27 April 1907, upon Sir Hesketh Bell's leave, Wilson took over once again as H.M. commander in chief of the Uganda Protectorate until at least 22 October 1907. When Sir Hesketh Bell returned, he became deputy commissioner. However, after (then Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies) Sir
Winston Churchill's visit to Uganda in December of that year,
Sir Hesketh Bell was appointed
governor, which automatically made George Wilson deputy
governor of the Uganda Protectorate. Wilson was then tasked with setting up relief measures in response to the Busoga famine in 1908, after Hesketh Bell sent him from
Entebbe to investigate the crisis. Wilson reported back to Bell, stating, "From all the information I could gather, it appeared that 50 to 75 percent of the population of about 300,000 were in imminent danger of starvation." Wilson retired from his position as deputy governor of the protectorate due to ill health on 1 March 1909. Despite this, he retired with one of the highest pensions and annual salaries among officials that year. However, Wilson was not without controversy. He faced criticism for his handling of the Nyangire rebellion. Initially, Wilson did not believe that the natives were capable of such sophisticated political thought and action. Instead, he thought that Catholic missionaries were behind the rebellion, attempting to undermine their Protestant rivals. This belief was further emphasized when, shortly after the suppression of the rebellion and the arrest and subsequent exile of 54 Bunyoro chiefs from the kingdom49 of whom were Catholic and later replaced with 51 ProtestantsWilson wrote: "The conspiracy had been marked with such able organisation and recusancy for a long period so quietly and persistently sustained as to stamp it with the suspicion of non-native guidance." Later, in a speech at the Royal Society of Arts on 15 January 1907, Wilson remarked: "Natives under a wise restraint can be like good and even clever children, whereas natives in their wild impulses and with passions aflame can be very devils incarnate." He also expressed strong white supremacist sentiments, stating: "We are the superior race by virtue of our ability to teach and to restrain, and the natives readily acknowledge this, as they readily throw themselves upon us for the responsibility of judgments in decisions in all grave crises and will continue to do so until generations of civilisation remedy their mental defects, or we gratuitously or out of mistaken sentiment throw them entirely upon themselves." These views, combined with a desire to foster British-style governance and administration in Uganda, partially explain the ways in which Wilson governed the territory. Nonetheless, his policies had a profound impact on the geopolitics of the kingdom for decades to come. Wilson was particularly proud that Uganda was becoming "less anti-malarial" under his leadership, especially in the area of health. == Achievements and Honours ==