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Governor-General of India (1848-56), son of George (1770-1838), the
ninth Earl in the peerage of Scotland, was born at Dalhousie Castle
on 22 April 1812. He was educated at Harrow and at Christ Church,
Oxford. He succeeded his father to the peerage in 1838 and became
member of the House of Lords. In 1845, he became president of the
Board of Trade. In 1846, he declined a post in the British cabinet
under Sir Robert Peel. In 1847, however, he agreed to accept the office
of Governor-General of India.
Lord Dalhousie arrived in India in January 1848.
Soon thereafter incidents took place in Multan resulting in the
revolt of the local Sikh governor, Mul Raj. This was merely a local
affair which could have been easily put down by timely action, but
Lord Dalhousie deliberately avoided intervention. The Dalhousie
papers clearly indicate that immediate advance on Multan was neither
perilous not impracticable. Yet the GovernorGeneral delayed action
for five months so that the trouble might spread, giving the British
the excuse to come down on the Punjab with all their might and,
eventually annex it to their dominions.
Meanwhile, military preparations for a full-scale
war in the Punjab and its final annexation were set afoot. The Governor-General
began to call the Multan revolt a national rising of the Sikhs.
"The die is cast", declared Dalhousie. In November 1848,
Lord Gough invaded the Punjab. The main actions of this undeclared
war were fought at Ramnagar (22 November 1848), Chelianvala (13
January 1849) and Gujrat (21 February 1849). On 29 March 1849, the
kindgom of the Punjab was annexed to the British Crown. In England,
public and private opinion was averse to annexation, and the British
cabinet had directed the Governor-General to report the opinion
of the Government of India. But Lord Dalhousie forestalled both
the Secret Committee and the India Board by taking the step on his
own responsibility.
Lord Dalhousie returned to England in 1856.
He died on 19 December 1860.
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