Carl Ludwig Sahl
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Carl Ludwig Sahl | |
|---|---|
![]() Sahl at Government House, Sydney, 23 November 1895. | |
| German Consul in Sydney | |
| In office 9 July 1872 – 1 April 1897 | |
| Preceded by | Siegfried Frank |
| Succeeded by | Post abolished |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 8 January 1840 |
| Died | 1 April 1897 (aged 57) |
Carl Ludwig Sahl (8 January 1840 – 1 April 1897) was a German businessman and diplomat who lived in the British Colony of New South Wales for 25 years until his death, and served as the German Consul in Sydney as well as the Special Commercial Agent of the Kingdom of Fiji in Sydney.
Born in Darmstadt in the Grand Duchy of Hesse and by Rhine in 1840, Sahl was educated in Germany, and left Germany in 1858 for Birmingham, from which he soon departed for Australia. Sahl took up residence in Geelong in the Colony of Victoria, where he remained until 1862. In 1862, Sahl moved north to the Colony of Queensland, being involved in the cotton industry and squatting. Sahl left Queensland in 1870 for Sydney in the Colony of New South Wales and joined the mercantile firm of Rabone, Feez and Company, rising from a general clerk to be a senior partner.[1]
Life in New South Wales
In 1872, as a recognition of the prominent position he held within the German community in the colony, he was appointed the consul for the German Empire in Sydney, from 1879 acting underneath the German Consuls-General for Australia, Richard Krauel, Gustav Travers and Alfred Pelldram.[2][3][4] On occasions he also acted as Consul or Consular agent for Switzerland, Italy, and Austria-Hungary.[1][5][6][7][8]
As a senior member and later managing director of Rabone, Feez and Company, Sahl was closely involved in Adolph Feez's investments into the Kingdom of Fiji, acting as a Special Commercial Agent for Fiji in Sydney. With the British takeover of Fiji in 1874, Sahl was closely involved in disputes with the British government over the validity of foreign land claims in the colony. On their takeover, the British authorities led by Governor Sir Arthur Hamilton-Gordon passed the Pacific Islanders' Protection Act, 1875, which required all foreign land claimants to provide sufficient evidence of their transfer of land from the Fijians. They set up a Land Commission to investigate these claims and of 1327 claims made, it disallowed 361 cases, of which 140 came from German subjects. As a consequence, Sahl led a movement from these German subjects, including himself, who demanded compensation for the confiscated property. As a result of Sahl's complaints, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck responded with diplomatic efforts to resolve the dispute.[9] These efforts led to the establishment in 1885 of an Anglo-German Mixed Commission, which issued compensation to various disallowed claims, including Sahl's, who received £9000.[10]
