
Hudson Lowe
'Sir Hudson Lowe' (
28 July 1769 -
10 January 1844) was an
Anglo-Irish military leader.
The son of John Lowe, an army surgeon, he was born at
Galway in
Ireland, his mother's native country. His childhood was spent in various garrison towns but he was educated chiefly at
Salisbury Grammar School. He obtained a post as ensign in the East Devon Militia before his twelfth year, and subsequently (1787) entered his father's regiment, the 50th, then at
Gibraltar under Governor-General O'Hara. Following the outbreak of war with France early in
1793, Lowe saw active service successively in
Corsica,
Elba,
Portugal, and
Minorca, where he was entrusted with the command of a battalion of Corsican exiles, called the
Corsican Rangers. He led them in
Egypt in 1800-1801.
After the
peace of Amiens, Lowe, now a major, became assistant quartermaster-general; but on the renewal of war with France in
1803 he was charged, as lieutenant-colonel, to raise the Corsican battalion again and with it assisted in the defence of
Sicily. On the capture of
Capri he proceeded thither with his battalion and a
Maltese regiment; but in October
1808 Joachim Murat organized an attack upon the island, and Lowe, owing to the unreliability of the Maltese troops and the unavailability of help from the sea, had to agree to evacuate the island.
Sir William Napier criticised him, but his garrison consisted of only 1362 men, while the assailants numbered between 3000 and 4000.
In the course of the year
1809 Lowe and his Corsicans helped in the capture of
Ischia and
Procida, as well as of
Zante,
Cephalonia and
Cerigo. For some months he acted as governor of Cephalonia and
Ithaca, and later on of
Santa Maura. He returned to Britain in
1812, and in January
1813 was sent to inspect a Russo-German legion then being formed, and he accompanied the armies of the allies through the campaigns of 1813 and
1814, being present at thirteen important battles. He won praise from
Blücher and Gneisenau for his gallantry and judgment. He was chosen to bear to London the news of the first abdication of
Napoleon in April 1814.
He was knighted and promoted to major-general; he also received decorations from the
Russian and
Prussian courts. Charged with the duties of quartermaster-general of the army in
the Netherlands in 1814-1815, he was about to take part in the Belgian campaign when he was offered the command of the British troops at
Genoa; but while still in the south of France he received (on the 1st of August
1815) news of his appointment to the position of custodian of Napoleon, who had surrendered to
HMS ''Bellerophon'' off
Rochefort. Lowe was to be governor of
Saint Helena, the place of the emperor's exile.
On his arrival there at Plantation House he found that Napoleon had already had scenes with Admiral Cockburn, of
HMS ''Northumberland'', and had sought to induce the former governor, Colonel Wilks, to infringe the regulations prescribed by the British government. Napoleon and his followers at
Longwood pressed for an extension of the limits within which he could move without surveillance, but it was not in Lowe's power to grant this request. Various matters, in some of which Lowe did not evince much tact, produced friction between them.
The news that rescue expeditions were being planned by the Bonapartists in the
United States led to the enforcement of stricter regulations in October
1816, Lowe causing sentries to be posted round Longwood garden at sunset instead of at 9 p.m. This offended Napoleon and his followers, who successfully campaigned against Lowe.
Barry Edward O'Meara, the British surgeon, became Napoleon's man, joining in the criticisms from
Las Cases and
Montholon.
Lowe recommended that the government allowance of £8000 a year to the Longwood household should he increased by one-half. The charges of cruelty brought against the governor by O'Meara and others have been refuted; and the most that can be said against him is that he was occasionally too suspicious in the discharge of his duties. After the death of Napoleon in May
1821, Lowe returned to England and received the thanks of
George IV.
On the publication of O'Meara's book, Lowe resolved to prosecute the author, but his application was too late. This, together with the reserved behaviour of Lowe, prejudiced the public against him. In
1825-
1830 he commanded the forces in
Ceylon, but was not appointed to the governorship when it fell vacant in 1830. He was appointed to the colonelcy of the
56th Foot in 1831, and in
1842 transferred to the colonelcy of his old regiment, the
50th; he also received the
G.C.M.G. He died in 1844.
Hudson Lowe was portrayed by
Orson Welles in
Sacha Guitry's 1955 film
Napoléon (film).