Colonial administration , 1900 (photo by
Alfred James Tattersall) (wearing peaked cap), New Zealand parliamentarian
Charles H. Mills and paramount chief
Mata'afa Iosefo during a visit by Mills to German Samoa, 1903 The German colonial period lasted for 14 years and officially began with the raising of the imperial flag on 1 March 1900.
Wilhelm Solf became the first governor. In its political relations with the Samoan people, Solf's government showed similar qualities of intelligence and care as in the economic arena. He skillfully grafted Samoan institutions into the new system of colonial government by the acceptance of native customs. Solf himself learned many of the customs and rituals important to the Samoan people, observing cultural etiquette including the ceremonial drinking of
kava. Solf co-opted Samoan chieftains, bestowing empty dignities on them. Solf restricted cricket-playing, banned gambling, banned land transactions, and banned
interracial marriage. The German administrators inherited a system by which some two hundred leading Samoans held various public offices. Over the years, rivalries for these positions, as well as appointments by colonial officials created tensions that dissident
matai (chiefs) gathered together into a militant movement to eventually march armed on
Apia in 1909. Governor Solf met the Samoans, his resolute personality persuaded them to return home. However, political agitation continued to simmer, several warships arrived and Solf's patience came to an end. He had ten of the leaders, including their wives, children and retainers, in all 72 souls, deported to
Saipan in the German Mariana Islands, in effect terminating the revolt. Energetic efforts by colonial administrators established the first public school system; a hospital was built and staffed and enlarged as needed. Of all colonial possessions of the European powers in the Pacific, German Samoa was by far the best-roaded; all roads up until 1942 had been constructed under German direction. The imperial grants from the Berlin treasury which had marked the first eight years of German rule were no longer needed after 1908. Samoa had become a self-supporting colony. Wilhelm Solf left Samoa in 1910 to be appointed Colonial Secretary at Berlin; he was succeeded as governor by Erich Schultz, the former chief justice in the protectorate. The Germans built the
Telefunken Railroad from Apia onto the
Mount Vaea for transporting building materials for the 120 m high mast of their
Telefunken wireless station, which was inaugurated as planned on 1 August 1914, just a few days after the beginning of
World War I. The German colonial administrator used the former home of writer
Robert Louis Stevenson as a residence; the building is now the
Robert Louis Stevenson Museum. Germany did not experience similar levels of violent anti-colonial resistance in Samoa as it did in Southwest Africa, Cameroon, or East Africa. However, there were anti-colonial resistance movements in Samoa, such as the elite-led
Oloa and
Mau a Pule movements, and youth movements against German colonial rule. British-born
Herbert Morley, who was in business in Samoa in 1914, sent a letter dated 27 July 1914, where he tells of six German warships docking off Samoa. The letter was publicized in the
Keighley News on 17 November 1914. At the behest of the United Kingdom the colony was invaded unopposed on the morning of 29 August 1914 by troops of the
Samoa Expeditionary Force. Vice Admiral Count
Maximilian von Spee of the
East Asia Squadron gained knowledge of the occupation and hastened to Samoa with the armored cruisers
SMS Scharnhorst and
SMS Gneisenau, arriving off Apia on 14 September 1914. He determined however that a landing would only be of temporary advantage in an Allied dominated sea and the cruisers departed. New Zealand occupied the German colony through to 1920, then governed the islands until independence in 1962 as a
League of Nations Class C Mandate at first and then as a
United Nations Trust Territory after 1946. == Planned symbols for German Samoa ==