b. 1840-01-14
d. 1895-04-16
Edmund Burke Pennell was born on 14 January 1840 in Portsea Island, Hampshire, England. Pennell was the son of William Pennell
and Catherine Croker, and the husband of Edith Mary Brooking with whom he had eight
children.
In his career, Pennell was a civil servant working for the Colonial Office as a Chief
Clerk -- primarily, and for most of his official life, in the North American
Department.
In April 1859, Pennell began his official career, when after a competitive examination he was appointed
Clerk to the Office of the
Secretary of State for the colonies.
By
April 1863, Pennell was promoted to third class and became the private secretary to
Mr. Forster
until
1866 -- other officials he would serve as private secretary include:
Sir C. Adderley and
Lord Blachford. Due to his primary
involvement in the North American Department as early as
1862, he was either the first or second person in the office to read the despatches
coming directly from the colonies that make up what is now known as
Canada.
In
1879, Pennell was promoted to Principal Clerk, and during this time he became an
expert in the French Treaty question in
Newfoundland
, he would visit
Newfoundland multiple times in
the
1880s.
Pennell stayed in his position as Principal Clerk and continued to work for the Colonial
Office until his death on
16 March 1895
in East Molesey, Surrey, England.
- 1. Edmund Burke Pennell, Ancestry.ca.
- 2. David Farr, The Colonial Office and Canada 1867-1887, (University of Toronto, 1995).
- 3. Great Britiain, Colonial Office The Colonial Office List, 398.
- 4. Ibid.
- 5. Farr, The Colonial Office.
- 6. Ibid.
- 7. Ibid.