In September 1902 Guggisberg was employed by the
Colonial Office on a special survey of the
Gold Coast Colony and
Ashanti, and in 1905 was appointed director of surveys in that colony. In 1908 he returned to
Chatham for regimental work, but in 1910 was appointed director of survey in
Southern Nigeria. While in Nigeria he compiled
The Handbook of the Southern Nigeria Survey (1911) for the guidance of his assistants. Of this work the director-general of the ordnance survey wrote: :"The duties of all members of the staff were strictly defined and, in particular, sensible rules were laid down as to the relations of the staff with the civil administration. Much attention was paid to the treatment of villagers; unpaid labour was forbidden; all goods bought were to be paid for at the recognized rate, and great care was to be exercised not to damage the crops.... They were model instructions and the survey of Nigeria was a model survey." Following the union of the
Southern Nigeria Protectorate and the
Northern Nigeria Protectorate in 1913, Guggisberg was appointed surveyor-general of
Nigeria. In 1914 he was appointed director of public works in the Gold Coast, but he rejoined the army upon the outbreak of the
First World War. He commanded the 94th Field Company,
Royal Engineers, from 1915 to 1916, and was Commander, Royal Engineers, (CRE) of the
8th Divisional Engineers during the
Battle of the Somme (July 1916), and of the
66th (2nd East Lancashire) Divisional Engineers from November 1916 to May 1917. He was
brigadier-general commanding the
170th (2/1st North Lancashire) Brigade 1917–1918, assistant-inspector-general of training, general headquarters, France, in 1918; and in command of the
100th Brigade in 1918. He was
mentioned in dispatches five times, and was awarded the
Distinguished Service Order in 1918. In 1919, Guggisberg was appointed
Governor of the Gold Coast. There he undertook work to develop and extend the railways, and created the deep-water harbour of
Takoradi, superseding the use of surf-boats for handling traffic. In 1923 he commissioned the construction of
Accra's
Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, the most modern institution of its kind in colonial Africa at the time. During his time in the Gold Coast, as during his time in Nigeria, Guggisberg took the advice of the geologist
Albert Ernest Kitson, who took a keen interest in developing local infrastructures. Close association with native Africans during his survey work convinced Guggisberg that the African races and
Muslims of the
Middle East and
Asia were capable of eventually attaining the development levels of modern
Europe. Toward the close of his life he wrote: "My practical experience... during the last twenty-seven years has convinced me that what individuals have achieved, in spite of ill-selected systems of education, can be achieved by the race generally, provided we alter our educational methods." In order to carry out that purpose he founded
Achimota College for the training of native teachers and instructors. It was later to become the largest establishment for the education of native Africans. The aim of Guggisberg's policy was the development of the country by and for the natives rather than for the benefit of European capitalists. In 1928 he was appointed governor and commander-in-chief of
British Guiana, but owing to failing health he was obliged to leave the colony in 1929, and soon afterwards resigned the appointment. He introduced drastic administrative reforms and devoted himself to the problems of maintaining and improving the system of drainage and irrigation upon which the sugar and rice cultivation of the colony depended. He also promoted immigration and peasant settlement and the development of the production and marketing of rice. These activities were cut short by his illness and resignation in 1929. He died in 1930 at
Bexhill-on-Sea, Sussex, at the age of 60. During his last illness Guggisberg addressed a letter to his personal friends setting forth the aims which he had had in view in his administrative work in British Guiana, his confidence in divine guidance and in the spirit of Christianity, and his hope of being able to return to Africa "to try to do some more work for the African races.... As you know," he concluded, "my heart is in Africa, and I believe that away from the trammels of the Colonial Office, there is opportunity for me to do something useful both for the Empire and for the natives of Africa." ==Honours and family==