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Lewis Pelly

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Lewis Pelly
Sir Lewis Pelly, 1882 photograph
Born(1825-11-14)14 November 1825
Minchinhampton, Gloucestershire, England
Died22 April 1892(1892-04-22) (aged 66)
Falmouth, Cornwall, England
AllegianceUnited Kingdom United Kingdom
Service / branch British Indian Army
RankLieutenant General
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Star of India

Lieutenant General Sir Lewis Pelly KCSI (14 November 1825 – 22 April 1892) was a British East India Company officer, and then an imperial army and political officer. At the end of his life, he was a Conservative Member of Parliament for Hackney North, from 1885 to 1892.

Early years

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He was the son of John Hinde Pelly of Hyde House, Gloucestershire, and his wife Elizabeth Lewis. He was educated at Rugby School. Sir John Henry Pelly, Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company and Governor of the Bank of England, was his uncle.[1][2]

First period in India

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Pelly entered the East India Company service in 1840.[1] In 1841 he was commissioned in the Bombay Army as an ensign.[3] He served in Sind before its annexation. Appointed to the regimental staff in 1842, he was promoted to lieutenant in 1843.[1]

Moved to a political role in the system of British indirect rule, Pelly in 1851–2 was posted to Baroda State. There he had a prosecuting role in James Outram's corruption enquiry, assistant reader at the court of the Gaekwar.[3][1] He then transferred to the civil service of Sind Division until 1856, being promoted to captain in 1855.[1]

In the Anglo-Persian War of 1856–7, Pelly was aide-de-camp to General John Jacob, and commanded a troop of cavalry. He was secretary to Sir James Outram during the occupation of Bushire and Kharg Island.[1] In April 1858 he was in London, where he had his book on Jacob published, and met Herbert Spencer at John Chapman's house, 142 The Strand.[4]

Pelly served as brigade major in the Frontier Force of the Scinde Irregular Horse, commanded by Jacob, in 1858.[3] He was made a judge in Karachi in 1859.[1]

In Persia

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Pelly was secretary of the British legation in Tehran at the court of Persia from 1859 to 1860: taking up the post, he rode to Tehran from Trebizond.[5] He was then appointed chargé d'affaires there.[1] Henry Rawlinson left the legation during this period, replaced as its head by Charles Alison.[6]

Alison sent Pelly on a special mission to Herat, in line with Rawlinson's idea that a British agent there would counter Russian influence. In the aftermath of the Treaty of Paris that had ended the Anglo-Persian conflict, the ruler there was Ahmed Khan (Sultan Jan). Pelly departed to visit Sultan Jan in Herat, with a small party and six horses, in September 1860.[6] From Herat, he travelled on to Farah, Kandahar and Qalati Ghilji.[2]

Roving political agent

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In 1860 Pelly had travelled overland on a horse, in uniform, from Tehran most of the way to Calcutta, a feat that impressed Sir Bartle Frere.[2] Like Rawlinson, Frere was a leading advocate of the 1860s of a Forward Policy for British India; and in particular of a British Agent at Herat and other strategic hotspots.[7] Frere took Pelly under his wing, and became a patron of his career.[8]

In 1861 Pelly went to the Comoros Islands, where he was shipwrecked on Johanna (Anjouan);[2] and to Mozambique. In May 1861, he was part of the expedition which placed Bahrain under British tutelage, even if theoretically it was in the sphere of influence of Persia.

Pelly was then appointed political agent and consul at Zanzibar. A deal brokered by Charles Canning, 1st Earl Canning separated the Sultanate of Zanzibar from the Sultanate of Oman came into effect in April 1861. It involved an annual subsidy from Zanzibar to Oman, the Canning Award agreed at the level of 40,000 Maria Theresa thalers. The sum represented about 20% of Zanzibar's revenue from the Indian Ocean slave trade.[9] In the years that followed, Imam Azzan bin Qais took power in Oman from Thuwaini bin Said, and Majid bin Said of Zanzibar was reluctant to make the payments. Pelly took the side of Majid bin Said in the dispute.[10]

From Zanzibar, Pelly visited and reported on the Seychelle Islands in 1862. Next, he was transferred back to Persia as political resident (1862 to 1872). On Frere's advice, he sought out William Mackinnon.[11] Frere and Mackinnon had been discussing possible new British India Steam Navigation Company shipping lines from Bombay, to the Red Sea and Zanzibar.[12] Mackinnon and Pelly then corresponded.[13] With William Mansfield and Matthew Sausse, Pelly was in the small group of well-placed British imperial staff who took up advantageous offers of British India Steam Navigation stock from Mackinnon in the 1860s.[14]

The Persian Gulf Telegraph Cable was planned and laid in the years leading up to 1864. Pelly was involved in surveys, of the north end of the Gulf, and on the proposed route.[15][16] The plan approved in 1862, by Colonel Patrick Stewart, would connect Fao by the Shatt al Arab to Karachi.[17] Pelly caused some confusion by a proposal for radical change in British arrangements, organised around a centre on the Musandam Peninsula.[15]

Pelly officially visited Riyadh in 1865 to meet with the ruler of the Second Saudi State, Faisal bin Turki.[18] At this point, he counted as the chief political resident in the Persian Gulf area, and was keen to promote trade. He made an inland journey to the Nejd, and an associated map.[19] On the return sea journey from Bushire, heading for Muscat on the SS Berenice, captain Edwin Dawes, the vessel caught fire, and the passengers and crew made for Sheikh Shoeyb Island in lifeboats.[20][21] Pelly published an account of his journey.

East India Company Steam Ship of War Berenice, lost in 1865 when it caught fire with Lewis Pelly on board in the Persian Gulf

The Qatari–Bahraini War broke out in 1867. When he was in a position to make a show of strength, in autumn 1868 Pelly sailed to Bahrain with the sloops HMS Daphne and HMS Nymphe, and the gunboats HMS Clyde and HMS Hugh Rose.[22] The outcome by 6 September 1868 was that Muhammad bin Khalifa Al Khalifa was deposed, and his brother Ali bin Khalifa Al Khalifa became the ruler of Bahrain.[23] On 12 September, Pelly signed a treaty with Mohammed bin Thani which recognised the independence of Qatar. In October he went to Bombay in HMS Vigilant.[24]

Pelly was promoted to major in 1861, lieutenant colonel in 1866, and colonel in 1871.

Anti-slavery mission

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In 1872–1873, Pelly accompanied Sir Bartle Frere in the anti-slavery mission to the east coast of Africa. Others on the expedition included George Percy Badger as Arabic interpreter, and Kazi Shahabudi from Kutch, representing Indian traders with East Africa.[1][25] The investigation, on behalf of the Anti-Slavery Society, had originally been intended by Frere to be led by Pelly, without Frere's participation.[26]

Frere in Muscat and Zanzibar was unable to negotiate an end to the Zanzibar slave trade, but John Kirk, consul in Zanzibar, did so shortly thereafter.[27]

Second period in India

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On 21 June 1873, Pelly was appointed agent to the governor general of Rajputana, remaining in this post until 1878.[1] This was the period of the Baroda Crisis. The embattled Robert Phayre, resident in Baroda, was the apparent victim of an attempted poisoning in November 1874, on the orders of its ruler Malhar Rao Gaekwad; but was unwilling to resign. He was replaced by Pelly later that month.[28] Pelly had Malhar Rao arrested in January 1875, and tried by a commission. The outcome was inconclusive, but Malhar Rao was deposed.[3] Pelly was knighted (K.C.B.) in 1877.[29]

Lord Lytton arrived in India in 1876, as incoming viceroy, and it was proposed to send Pelly to Kabul as envoy; but this offer was rejected by the Emir of Afghanistan.[30] Lytton had Pelly write to the emir, who found reasons against the proposed "Pelly mission", which would have been an unpopular concession. In particular, he argued that Konstantin Petrovich von Kaufmann for Russia could also demand a mission.[31] In January 1877 Pelly met the sadr-i a'zam Sayyid Nur Muhammad Shah representing the emir, Sher Ali Khan, in Peshawar. He stated that the admission of British agents to Afghanistan was a prerequisite for talks.[32] The discussions led nowhere, and Pelly, who had plenipotentiary powers, was told to withdraw from them in March.[3] Nur Muhammad was by then seriously ill, and he died on 26 March.[33] The Second Anglo-Afghan War began the following year.[3]

Later life

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A dilapidated kerb surround style grave with a tablet and a fallen cross headstone.
The grave of Lewis Pelly at St Katharine's Merstham

In 1878 Pelly returned to the United Kingdom.[1] In 1885, by now a lieutenant general, he was elected as Conservative Member of Parliament for the newly created North Hackney constituency.[3] In 1886 he attended the Annual General Meeting of the National Society for Women's Suffrage.[34]

Pelly became a director of the Imperial British East Africa Company.[35] On 8 March 1892 J. G. Swift MacNeill objected in Parliament to votes made by Pelly, William Burdett-Coutts and John Henry Puleston, directors and shareholders in the Imperial British East Africa Company, on a grant for a survey to be made from the East African coast to Lake Victoria Nyanza of a railway route.[36] MacNeill's motion was successful, and the "distinction of degree" of self-interest involved in this "Mombasa railway" instance of disallowal of votes persisted in parliamentary practice.[37]

Pelly died in Falmouth on 22 April 1892, and is buried adjacent to Rutherford Alcock at Merstham in Surrey.

Honours

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Family

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Amy Lady Pelly, 1880 photograph

In 1878 Pelly married Amy Henrietta Lowder, who was born in 1847 at Calne in Wiltshire to the Rev. John Samuel Lowder.[2] Her father was an Anglican chaplain in Shanghai, and died by drowning in 1849. Her mother Lucy Windsor then in 1862 married Rutherford Alcock as his second wife.[38][39] She died on 31 May 1924, in Eccleston Street, London.[40]

In 1882, the couple were living at 1, Eaton Square, London.[41] They had no children.[3]

Publications

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  • Our North West Frontier (1858), pamphlet[42]
  • The Views and Opinions of Brigadier General John Jacob K.C.B. (1858)[43]
  • Report on a Journey to Riyadh in Central Arabia, 1865, 1866 text reprinted with an introduction by Robin Leonard Bidwell[44]
  • The Miracle Play of Hasan and Husain (1879, 2 vols.),[45] English translation from the Persian of 37 ta'zieh dramas, revised and with notes by Arthur Naylor Wollaston. Pelly's translations followed those by Aleksander Chodźko, into French.[46]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Pelly, Lewis" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  2. ^ a b c d e Rich, Paul John (2009). Creating the Arabian Gulf: The British Raj and the Invasions of the Gulf. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-7391-2705-6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Reynolds, K. D. "Pelly, Sir Lewis". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21816. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ Duncan, David (21 November 2013). The Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer. Cambridge University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-108-06681-5.
  5. ^ Pelly, Sir Lewis (1866). Report on a Journey to Riyadh in Central Arabia, 1865. Oleander. p. vi. ISBN 978-0-902675-64-3.
  6. ^ a b Alder, G. J. (1974). "The Key to India? Britain and the Herat Problem, 1830-1863: Part II". Middle Eastern Studies. 10 (3): 297–298. ISSN 0026-3206. JSTOR 4282538.
  7. ^ Meyer, Karl E. (2001). Tournament of shadows : the great game and the race for empire in Asia. London: Abacus. pp. 154 and 177. ISBN 0349113661.
  8. ^ Facey, William (1992). Riyadh, the Old City: From Its Origins Until the 1950s. Immel. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-907151-32-6.
  9. ^ Hall, Richard (28 April 2016). Empires of the Monsoon (Text Only). HarperCollins Publishers. p. 449. ISBN 978-0-00-754704-3.
  10. ^ Jones, Jeremy; Ridout, Nicholas (31 August 2015). A History of Modern Oman. Cambridge University Press. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-107-00940-0.
  11. ^ Galbraith, John S. "Mackinnon, Sir William, baronet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17618. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Munro, J. Forbes (1987). "Shipping Subsidies and Railway Guarantees: William Mackinnon, Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean, 1860-93". The Journal of African History. 28 (2): 215. doi:10.1017/S0021853700029753. ISSN 0021-8537. JSTOR 181547.
  13. ^ Munro, J. Forbes (2003). Maritime Enterprise and Empire: Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network, 1823-93. Boydell Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-85115-935-5.
  14. ^ Munro, J. Forbes (2003). Maritime Enterprise and Empire: Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network, 1823-93. Boydell Press. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-85115-935-5.
  15. ^ a b Harris, Christina Phelps (1969). "The Persian Gulf Submarine Telegraph of 1864". The Geographical Journal. 135 (2): 170. doi:10.2307/1796823. ISSN 0016-7398. JSTOR 1796823.
  16. ^ "Report No. 73 of 1864 by Lewis Pelly on his journey from Bandar Abbas to Cape Jask reconnoitering the route of the proposed telegraph line [7r] (13/20)". Qatar Digital Library. 5 June 2014.
  17. ^ Harris, Christina Phelps (1969). "The Persian Gulf Submarine Telegraph of 1864". The Geographical Journal. 135 (2): 170. doi:10.2307/1796823. ISSN 0016-7398. JSTOR 1796823.
  18. ^ Abdullah Mohammad Sindi. "The Direct Instruments of Western Control over the Arabs: The Shining Example of the House of Saud" (PDF). Social sciences and humanities. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  19. ^ Foliard, Daniel (13 April 2017). Dislocating the Orient: British Maps and the Making of the Middle East, 1854-1921. University of Chicago Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-226-45133-6.
  20. ^ "The Burning of H. M. Steamer Berenice". Sun (London). 26 December 1866. p. 3.
  21. ^ "Her Majesty's Steamer Berenice destroyed by fire". blogs.bl.uk.
  22. ^ Lorimer, J. G. (2003). Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman and Central Arabia. Vol. 2. Archive Editions. p. 898. ISBN 978-1-85207-030-4.
  23. ^ Talal Toufic Farah (1979). "Protection and Politics in Bahrain 1869-1915" (PDF). eprints.soas.ac.uk. University of London. p. 61.
  24. ^ "The Revolution in Musct". Homeward Mail from India, China and the East. 16 November 1868. p. 3.
  25. ^ Martineau, John (1895). The Life and Correspondence of the Sir Bartle Frere, Bart., G.C.B., F.R.S., Etc. Vol. 2. J. Murray. p. 71.
  26. ^ Martineau, John (1895). The Life and Correspondence of the Sir Bartle Frere, Bart., G.C.B., F.R.S., Etc. Vol. 2. J. Murray. p. 69.
  27. ^ Munro, J. Forbes (2003). Maritime Enterprise and Empire: Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network, 1823-93. Boydell Press. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-85115-935-5.
  28. ^ Lunt, James. "Phayre, Sir Robert". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22088. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  29. ^ Debrett's illustrated baronetage and knightage (and companionage) of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 1880. p. 574.
  30. ^ The Pall Mall Budget: Being a Weekly Collection of Articles Printed in the Pall Mall Gazette from Day to Day, with a Summary of News. 1879. p. 263.
  31. ^ Lee, Jonathan L. (15 December 2018). Afghanistan: A History from 1260 to the Present. Reaktion Books. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-78914-019-4.
  32. ^ Cassell's Illustrated History of the Russo-Turkish War: From December, 1878, to the ratification of peace : including a history of Cyprus, and of the Afghan war. Cassell, Petter & Galpin. 1880. p. 422.
  33. ^ Great Britain Parliament House of Commons Afghan Committee Sub-committee on Afghan and Central Asian Questions (1879). Causes of the Afghan War: Being a Selection of the Papers Laid Before Parliament with a Connecting Narrative and Comment. Chatto and Windus. p. 122.
  34. ^ "Women's Suffrage". Morning Post. 16 July 1886. p. 2.
  35. ^ Gjersø, Jonas Fossli (2015). "'Continuity of Moral Policy': A Reconsideration of British Motives for the Partition of East Africa in light of Anti-Slave Trade Policy and Imperial Agency, 1878-96" (PDF). etheses.lse.ac.uk. London School of Economics and Political Science. p. 252.
  36. ^ "SUPPLY—COMMITTEE. (Hansard, 8 March 1892)". api.parliament.uk.
  37. ^ Platt, D. C. M. (1 October 1961). "The Commercial and Industrial Interests of Ministers of the Crown". Political Studies. 9 (3): 272. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9248.1961.tb00767.x. S2CID 143502773.
  38. ^ Roberts, J. A. G. "Alcock, Sir (John) Rutherford". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/293. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  39. ^ "Lowder, John (LWDR836J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  40. ^ Ruxton, Ian, ed. (16 August 2019). The Diaries of Sir Ernest Satow, 1921-1926 - Volume Two (1924-1926). Lulu.com. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-359-14630-7.
  41. ^ Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed & Official Classes. Kelly & Co. 1882. p. 400.
  42. ^ Ward, Thomas Humphry (1887). Men of the Time: A Dictionary of Contemporaries, Containing Biographical Notices of Eminent Characters of Both Sexes. G. Routledge & Sons. p. 822.
  43. ^ Jacob, John (1858). The Views and Opinions of Brigadier General John Jacob K.C.B. ... Collected and Edited by ... L. Pelly.
  44. ^ Pelly, Sir Lewis (1866). Report on a Journey to Riyadh in Central Arabia, 1865. Oleander. ISBN 978-0-902675-64-3.
  45. ^ Pelly, Sir Lewis; Wollaston, Arthur Naylor (1879). The Miracle Play of Hasan and Husain. Vol. I. W. H. Allen.
  46. ^ Carlson, Marvin (2019). Theatre & Islam. Macmillan International Higher Education. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-352-00561-5.
[edit]
Government offices
Preceded by Chief Political Resident of the Persian Gulf
1862–1872
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Commissioner of Ajmer-Merwara
1873–1878
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
New constituency
Member of Parliament for North Hackney
18851892
Succeeded by