Strickland was born in
Valletta, the son of naval officer Commander Walter Strickland, from the ancient English
Strickland family of
Sizergh, and Maria Aloysia Bonici-Mompalao, the niece and heiress of Sir Nicholas Sceberras Bologna, fifth Count della Catena in Malta, whom Gerald succeeded in 1875. He was educated at
St Mary's College, Oscott, and
Trinity College, Cambridge (BA, LLB). Upon graduating, he was admitted to
Inner Temple in 1887 entitled to practise as a barrister-at-law. He gained the rank of
major in the service of the
Royal Malta Militia. Elected in 1886 to the council of the government of Malta, Strickland began to take an active part in
Maltese politics at an early age and in December 1887, he accompanied Dr.
Fortunato Mizzi – founder of the Maltese
Nationalist Party – to the first Colonial Conference in London to submit a scheme for a legislative assembly. The result was that the new Maltese Constitution of December 1887 was largely based on the joint Strickland-Mizzi proposals. In the following year, he was appointed as Assistant Secretary to Malta in 1888 and held the office of Chief Secretary of Malta in 1889, a post which he held till July 1902 when to avert more troubles in Malta which were created by his orders-in-council to increase taxation, he was appointed as
Governor of the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean. Sir Gerald and Lady
Edeline Strickland left Southampton for
Antigua in September 1902, and took up residence at
Government House,
St Johns on arrival. He was appointed as
Governor of Tasmania in 1904, serving as such until 1909, and then as
Governor of Western Australia from 1909 to 1913. In the early years consequent upon
Australian Federation, he was involved in the delicate matter of State rights and the developing nature of the appointment, role and salaries of governors. Appointed as
Governor of New South Wales in March 1913, on 30 May 1913 he was made a
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG). He was a supporter of the Eugenics Education Society. ==Political career==