George Phillippo was born in 
1833 in St. Catherine, 
Jamaica -- a small Spanish Town. Phillippo is most known for being the third Attorney-General
                     of 
British Columbia. He was educated in England where he trained as a barrister. In 
1862, he was called to the Bar but he decided not to practice in England and rather returned
                     to 
Jamaica. Although Phillippo practiced law in 
Jamaica, he did later join the British Government, taking different positions in different
                     parts of the world. In 
1870, Phillippo was appointed Attorney-General of 
British Columbia, succeeding 
Henry Crease. In his position, Phillippo represented the crown in the courts, organized the justice
                     system and worked as a legal advisor. He would officially swear into his position on 
19 May 1870.
On 
22 December 1870, 
Musgrave appointed Phillippo as a member of the Executive Council. After just one year as Attorney-General, on 
3 June 1871, Phillippo accepted the commission to become Puisne Judge in British Guinea, thus
                     resigning from his current position in 
British Columbia. Throughout his legal career, Phillippo served in various countries throughout the
                     world. After his resignation as Puisne Judge in British Guinea in 
1872, he became the Puisne Judge of the Straits Settlements, then Chief Justice of 
Gibraltar in the late 
1870s, and eventually the Chief Justice of 
Hong Kong from 
1882-1888. Phillippo was knighted in 
1882. He retired from the Colonial Service on 
5 October 1888. After his retirement, he was appointed as the British high consul at Geneva in 
1897, which he held until 
1910. Phillippo lived the rest of his life out of the public arena, dying on 
16 February 1914 in Geneva.