Joined service of the East India Company as
a cadet in the Madras Native Infantry in 1826.. In May 1841, he
went to Kabul in command of the escort which accompanied the families
of Shah Shuja' and Zaman Shah. He took part in the first Afghan
war and distinguished himself in the Khaibar operations under General
Pollock.
In 1844, he was appointed Agent to the Governor-General
at the North-West Frontier Agency. The appointment was not liked
by the Sikh Government. Major George Broadfoot was impulsive by
nature and had a temperamental hostility towards the Sikhs. While
leading a caravan of the royal Afghan families through the Punjab,
he had annoyed the Sikh escort provided by the Lahore Government
for the protection of the convoy. He incited the Muslim population
to rise and rescue him and requisitioned a British brigade from
Jalalabad to save him from what he called the violent intentions
of the Sikhs. His distrust of the Sikh escort, however, proved imaginary,
but his conduct had given offence to the Sikh Darbar.
Broadfoot had come to the Sikh frontier with
the set policy of inciting antagonisms against the Lahore kingdom
and bringing about a full-scale conflagration between the Sikhs
and the British. He endeavoured to win over Mul Raj, the governor
of Multan, to his side. He gave open encouragement to Gulab Singh,
who had made numerous proposals to the British for the destruction
of the Sikh army and offered to assist them in the occupation of
the Punjab in return for his being recognized as an independent
sovereign of Jammu and the neighbouring hills.
In March 1845, Broadfoot challenged the right
of the Sikh Government to administer its possessions to the south
of the Sutlej. He arrested a party of Lahore officials, escorted
by a cavalry force, proceeding to Kot Kapura to relieve State troops
stationed there. He prepared a case for the seizure of Lahore lands
on the left bank of the Sutlej, arguing that, if the river was the
boundary between the Sikhs and the British, the former could not
possess territories to the south of it. Soon afterwards took place
the Anandpur Makhoval incident.
The Colebrooke Award of 1828 had accepted Lahore
supremacy over the town, which was managed by the Sodhi priests,
and the Sikh Darbar's right so established had never been challenged.
A dispute having arisen among the Sodhis in the spring of 1845,
Broadfoot took upon himself to settle it by force. The Sikh forces,
however, upset Broadfoot's mediation and expelled both Lieutenant
Cunningham and his assistant sent there by the British agent.
These provocative acts on the part of Major
Broadfoot were among the chain of events which culminated in the
first Anglo-Sikh war. What Broadfoot did was only in line with Lord
Hardinge's policy, and had the approval of the Home Government.
Hardinge's approbation was expressed in his cryptic comment: "Broadfoot
is in his element on the frontier."
Major Broadfoot was killed in action on
21 December 1845 in the battle of Ferozeshah.
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