Carl Fredrik Bagge af Söderby

Carl Fredrik Bagge af Söderby
Governor of Saint Barthélemy
In office
6 June 1790 – 17 November 1795
MonarchsGustav III
Gustav IV Adolf
Preceded byPehr Herman Rosén von Rosenstein
Succeeded byGeorg Henrik Johan af Trolle
Personal details
Born(1750-10-23)23 October 1750
Järpås, Sweden
Died31 December 1828(1828-12-31) (aged 78)
Colombier, Swedish Saint Barthélemy
AwardsOrder of the Sword

Carl Fredrik Bagge af Söderby (October 23, 1750 – December 31, 1828) was a Swedish military officer and colonial administrator who served as governor of Saint Barthélemy from 1790 to 1795, the only Swedish colony at the time.

Biography

Bagge was born in Järpås, Västergötland, to Jean Georg Bagge af Söderby, an army major, and his wife Maria Sofia Juliana (née Friedenreich). The family belonged to the untitled nobility.[1] He travelled with an East Indiaman as a non-commissioned officer to Guangzhou in 1765–66. He was later promoted to lieutenant of the Admiralty in 1773 and awarded the Order of the Sword in 1783.

In 1786, Bagge first arrived in Saint Barthélemy on the merchant brig Antonetta and was soon appointed harbour master by governor Rajalin. At this time, he had also attained the rank of captain of the Admiralty.[2]

Governor of Saint Barthélemy

Seal of the Swedish governor of Saint Barthélemy, 1784–1878.

Bagge was appointed governor on 3 February 1790 and formally took up his duties on 6 June the same year.[3]

He bought land in Colombier, first one and a half carrés in 1792, and a further three carrés in 1794, on which he built an estate called Bellevue. According to a census record from 1796, Bagge was listed as the head of a household consisting of 32 individuals, including 22 slaves.[4]

During his governorship, the island witnessed a rapid increase in population as many refugees from the French West Indies arrived, fleeing the turmoil caused by the French Revolution. By 1792, the island had a population of 1,488, compared to only 749 in 1784.[5] This led to increased fear among the Swedish colonial authorities on the island that revolutionary ideas would spread to the colony.[6] At the same time, the population on the island, especially the Swedes, were considered to hold very Francophile views and allowed the export of ammunition to Guadeloupe after its recapture by Victor Hugues in 1794.[7] The increased French presence on Saint Barthélemy also disturbed the British, who accused the Swedish authorities on the island of supplying two French cruisers. The British admiral Sir John Jervis, even threatened the island with destruction.[8] He was dismissed as governor in 1795 due to pressure from the British on the Swedish government, which considered him too pro-French.[4]

Bagge returned to Sweden in 1800 and became responsible for the defence port in Karlskrona. In 1802, he was allowed to return to Saint Barthélemy and settled down on his estate. He later tried in vain to get reinstated as governor, as well as to be elected to the Conseil de Justice in Gustavia, but he only received one vote.[9]

In the aftermath of the 1810 mutiny, he handed over a letter to governor Anckarheim, which he had supposedly received from Samuel Fahlberg in 1811. The letter would later lay the foundation for the trial against Fahlberg.[9] He was an enthusiastic supporter of Sweden's annexation of Guadeloupe as a colony, when the British temporarily transferred the island to the Swedish Crown in 1813–1814.[9]

He died after a brief illness on New Year's Eve in 1828 and was buried on his estate.

Bagge married Susanna Maria Clarck, a native of Hampshire, England. The marriage was childless, but he fathered several illegitimate children with his coloured handmaids.[10]

References

  1. ^ "Bagge af Söderby - Adlig - Nr. 147 - Minerva - minerva.riddarhuset.se" (in Swedish). Retrieved 2025-06-21.
  2. ^ Tingbrand 2001, p. 58.
  3. ^ Tingbrand 2001, p. 34.
  4. ^ a b Tingbrand 2001, p. 59.
  5. ^ Tingbrand 2001, p. 11-12.
  6. ^ Ekman 1964, p. 23.
  7. ^ Sjögren 1966, p. 38-39.
  8. ^ Ekman 1964, p. 25.
  9. ^ a b c Tingbrand 2001, p. 60.
  10. ^ Tingbrand 2001, p. 61-62.

Bibliography

  • Ekman, Ernst (January 1964). "St. Barthélemy and the French Revolution". Caribbean Studies. 3 (4). Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus: 17–29. Retrieved 2025-06-21.
  • Sjögren, Bengt (1966). Ön Som Sverige Sålde (in Swedish). Zindermans.
  • Tingbrand, Per (2001). Who Was Who in St. Bartholomew during the Swedish epoch?. Swedish St. Barthélemy Society. ISBN 91-88812-80-4.