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Governor-General of
India (1842-44), son of Edward Law, Baron Ellenborough, Lord Chief
Justice of England, was born on 8 September 1790. He was educated
at Eton and at St John's College, Cambridge. He became a member
of the House of Lords in 1818. He was appointed Lord Privy Seal
in 1828 and president of the Board of Control (1828-30) whence began
his connection with Indian affairs.
He succeeded Lord Auckland
as Governor-General of India in February 1842. On his arrival in
India, Lord Ellenborough found himself confronted with an alarming
situation in Afghanistan and northwest frontier. The garrisons of
jalalabad and Gharni were surrounded by hostile Afghans; the Qandahar
division was unfit to move for lack of support; and of the five
brigades moved across the River Ravi, none had yet reached Peshawar.
Large Sikh forces were collected at Peshawar where General Pollock
with three British brigades felt uneasy at the large assemblage.
In that hour of difficulty, voices were being raised for full military
support from the Sikhs. Maharaja Sher Singh was being blamed for
not having helped his British allies whole-heartedly.
When in April 1842,
Robert Sale had defeated the Afghan army under the walls of Jalalabad
and Pollock had forced the Khaibar, Lord Ellenborough hastily decided
to terminate the Tripartite Treaty. An offer was made to the Sikh
government to occupy Jalalabad after the withdrawal of the British
army. The offer was in reality aimed at diverting the Sikh troops
then employed in the Chinese Tartary, and those garrisoned at Lahore
and Arnritsar. Ellenborough, who was assembling a large British
force on the Anglo-Sikh frontier at the River Sutlej, wished to
see the Sikh position weakened by the withdrawal of the Sikh troops.
As is evident from his private correspondence with the Duke of Wellington,
he was preparing for a war with the Sikhs. The correspondence shows
that, as early as October 1843, he had begun to discuss with the
Home Government possibilities of a military occuption of the Punjab.
He had laid out a network of spies and agents provocateur in the
Sikh capital and had raised the strength of British military outposts
to 11,639 men and 48 guns. A flotilla of seventy 35-ton boats to
bridge the Sutlej at Firozpur had been under construction. Ellenborough
wrote in April 1844:
"Let our policy
[towards the Sikhs] be what it may, the contest must come at last,
and the intervening time that may be given to us should be employed
in unostentatious but vigilant preparation."
Two years after his
return to England, Ellenborough became First Lord of Admiralty in
Sir Robert Peel's ministry in 1846. In 1858, under Lord Derby he
became president of the Board of Control. He died on 22 December
1871.
ELLENBOROUGH PAPERS
Official and private correspondence and papers of Lord Ellenborough,
Governor-General of India (1842-44), preserved in the Public. Records
Office, London. Some of these papers were used by Lord Colchester
in his History of the Indian Administration of Lord Ellenborough
in His Correspondence with the Duke of Wellington and the Queen
(London, 1874). Similarly, Sir Algernon Law published some selected
papers in his India under Lord Fllenborough (London, 1926) containing
references to the Punjab, particularly the dissensions in the State
and the intentions of British government about its future.
Among others, the Papers contain letters to
and from the Governor-General's Agent, North-West Frontier (January
1844-June 1844) PRO 30/12 (60) and PRO 30/12 (106). Also included
are files containing correspondence and papers relative to the Punjab
(1839-44) PRO 30/12 Part II (i); Lord Ellenborough's private correspondence,
with Sir Henry and Lady Hardinge (1842-47), providing information
about Hardinge's policy towards the Punjab before and after the
Anglo-Sikh war of 184546, and the British military movement towards
the Sutlej frontier, and about his deals with Gulab Singh (PRO 30/12,
21/7); and about Ellenborough's military policy and bellicosity
towards the Sikhs (PRO 30/12 (72).
The Ellenborough Papers contain some of the
most revealing documents relevant to Anglo-Sikh relations. Soon
after the disaster of the first Afghan War, Ellenborough abruptly
terminated the Tripartite Treaty, and decided to re-establish British
"military character" by the collection of a large British
force on the Company's "weakest, frontier," i.e. the Sutlej
(PRO 30/13-28/12). He conceived the idea, of extending the Dogra
power at the expense of the Lahore Darbar by separating the Jammu
hills from the plains of the Punjab. His letter to Queen Victoria
(October 1843) unravels his designs "to bring plains first,
and at a later period hills, under our direct protection and control."
Consequently, the Company's relations with the State of Lahore were
viewed by him as that of "an armed truce:" and to repeat,
"Let our policy [towards the Sikhs] be what it may, the contest
must come at last, and the intervening time that may be given to
us should be employed in unostentatious but vigilant preparation."
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