Chief Secretary of New South Wales

Chief Secretary of New South Wales
StyleThe Honourable
AppointerGovernor of New South Wales
PrecursorColonial Secretary
Formation1 January 1821
First holderFrederick Goulburn
Abolished4 April 1995
The Chief Secretary's Building in Macquarie Street, Sydney.

The Chief Secretary of New South Wales, known from 1821 to 1959 as the Colonial Secretary, was a key political office in state administration in New South Wales, and from 1901, a state in the Commonwealth of Australia. During much of the 19th century, the Colonial Secretary was the pre-eminent figure in public life.[1] The role of the Chief Secretary changed significantly from the time of its creation in 1821 to its final use in 1995, with various responsibilities changing hands. Nominally subordinate to the Governor of New South Wales from the early 19th century until the beginning of full self-government in 1856, he was effectively a government record-keeper and the officer with responsibility for the general administration of the colony. However, for most of its history the Chief Secretary was in charge of all matters relating to correspondence with government departments, naturalisation, the Great Seal, state security, censorship and classification laws, the arts (to 1975), Public Health (to 1934), Aboriginal welfare (to 1969), Lord Howe Island, and environmental protection and fisheries.[2]

  1. ^ "Colonial Secretary". State Archives of New South Wales. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  2. ^ "AGY-16 Colonial Secretary, Chief Secretary". NSW State Archives & Records. Retrieved 28 January 2021.

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