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'Sir Henry Montgomery Lawrence'
'Sir Henry Montgomery Lawrence' (
June 28,
1806 -
July 4,
1857) was a
British soldier and statesman in
India, who died defending
Lucknow during the
Indian Mutiny.
Career
Lawrence was the brother of
John Lawrence, 1st Baron Lawrence and was born at Matara,
Ceylon. Educated at
Haileybury, in
1823 he joined the Bengal Artillery at the
Calcutta suburb of Dum Dum, where also
Henry Havelock was stationed about the same time.
In the
first Burmese War, Lawrence and his battery formed part of the
Chittagong column which General
Morrison led over the jungle-covered hills of
Arakan, until fever decimated them, and Lawrence found himself back in Britain, wasted by a disease that never completely left him.
He returned to India in 1829, and was appointed revenue surveyor by
Lord William Bentinck at Gorakhpur. He spent some years in camp, during which he married his cousin Honoria Marshall, and surveyed every village in four districts, each larger than
Yorkshire. He was then recalled to a brigade by the outbreak of the
First Afghan War towards the close of 1838.
As assistant to Sir
George Russell Clerk, he now added to his political experience in the management of the district of
Ferozepore; and when news of disaster came from
Kabul in November
1841 he was sent to
Peshawar in order to push up supports for the relief of Sale and the garrison of
Jalalabad. He was often unpopular with higher authorities due to his insistence that government should pay most attention to the welfare of the Indian population.
At the end of the First Anglo-Sikh War, the Treaties executed provided for a garrison to be based in Lahore. Lawrence remained there as Agent to the Governor General in charge of political relations of the British government with the Darbar.
[1] By the Treaty of Bhairowal (1846), he was made the Resident at Lahore as well as Agent to the Governor-General for the North West Frontier.
[1] While here, he governed the area with the help of officers, who were later known as
'Henry Lawrence's Young Men'
Death
In 1856, he was appointed to the newly annexed province of
Awadh as Chief Commissioner. In 1857 the
Siege of Lucknow took place in the province and the British community, including the garrison of some 1700 men, took refuge in the British residency when the siege began on June 30. Commander Henry Lawrence was one of the first casualties, being wounded by an exploding shell on 2 July and dying two days later. When Lawrence was critically injured, he is supposed to have said to those around him: "Put on my tomb only this; Here lies Henry Lawrence who tried to do his duty." This epitaph appears on his tombstone at the Residency graveyard.
Educational Institutions
Henry Lawrence established at three places, at that time all within
India - the Lawrence Asylums for the education of the children of European soldiers serving in India. These institutions exist even today as the prestigious
Lawrence School, Sanawar (
HP, India),
Lovedale (
TN, India) and
Ghora Ghali (
Murree,
Pakistan).
Henry Lawrence Island in the
Indian Ocean, at 12N 93E, is named after him, as is the town of
Lawrence in
New Zealand and also two schools in India and one in Pakistan.
References
1. Political Diaries of the Agent to the Governor General, North West Frontier and Resident at Lahore. from 1st January 1847 to 4th March 1848, Pg i
2. Political Diaries of the Agent to the Governor General, North West Frontier and Resident at Lahore. from 1st January 1847 to 4th March 1848, Pg i
Works
★ ''Essays, Military and Political, Written in India,'' London, W. H. Allen & Co. (1859)
See also
★
Lawrence School, Ghora Gali
★
Lawrence School, Lovedale
★
Lawrence School, Sanawar
External links
★
Illustrated London News Oct 24 1863 - p.415 The Lawrence Asylum at Murree
★
Sir Henry Lawrence
★
Henry Lawrence Island
★
The Second Anglo Sikh War
★
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
★
Lawrence College, Ghora Gali, Murree, Pakistan
★
Lawrence School, Sanawar