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Henry Bartle Frere

Sir Henry Bartle Edward Frere, 1st Baronet, GCB, GCSI, PC (29 March 1815 – 29 May 1884) was a British colonial administrator. He had a successful career in India, rising to become Governor of Bombay (1862–1867). However, as High Commissioner for Southern Africa (1877–1880), he implemented a set of policies which attempted to impose a British confederation on the region and which led to the overthrow of the Cape's first elected government in 1878 and to a string of regional wars, culminating in the invasion of Zululand (1879) and the First Boer War (1880–1881). The British Prime Minister, Gladstone, recalled Frere to London to face charges of misconduct; Whitehall officially censured Frere for acting recklessly.

Sir Henry Bartle Frere
Commissioner of Sind
In office
1851–1859
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byRichard Keith Pringle
Succeeded byJonathan Duncan Inverarity
Governor of Bombay
In office
1862–1867
MonarchVictoria
Preceded bySir George Russell Clerk
Succeeded byWilliam Vesey-FitzGerald
High Commissioner for Southern Africa
In office
1877–1880
MonarchVictoria
Preceded bySir Henry Barkly
Succeeded byHenry Hugh Clifford
acting
Personal details
Born29 March 1815
Clydach, Monmouthshire, Wales
Died29 May 1884 (aged 69)
Wimbledon, London, England
CitizenshipBritish
Alma materEast India Company College

Early life edit

Frere was born at Clydach House, Clydach, Monmouthshire, the son of Edward Frere, manager of Clydach Ironworks, and Mary Ann Green. His elder sister, Mary Anne Frere, was born c. 1802 in Clydach, and his younger sister, Frances Anne Frere, was born c. 1819 in Clydach. He was the grandson of John Frere and a nephew of John Hookham Frere; William Frere; Bartholomew Frere; James Hatley Frere; and Temple Frere – canon of St Peters, Westminster. He was educated at the East India Company College, the precursor of Haileybury and Imperial Service College.[1]

Family life edit

On 10 October 1844, he married Catherine Arthur, daughter of Sir George Arthur, 1st Baronet, who was the Governor of Bombay and to whom he had been appointed private secretary two years earlier.

Their five children were: Mary Eliza Isabella Frere (born 1845 at Bitton, Gloucestershire); Catherine Frances Frere (born 1849 in the East Indies, who edited The Cookery Book of Lady Clark of Tillypronie in 1909); Georgina Hamilton Chichester Frere (born c. 1850 in the East Indies); Bartle Compton Arthur Frere (born c. 1855 in Paddington, Middlesex); and Eliza Frederica Jane Frere (born c. 1857 in Wimbledon, London).[2]

India edit

After leaving the East India Company College Frere was appointed a writer in the Bombay (now Mumbai) civil service in 1834. Having passed his language examination, he was appointed assistant collector at Poona (now Pune) in 1835, and in 1842 he was chosen as private secretary to Sir George Arthur, Governor of Bombay. Two years later he became a political resident at the court of Raja Shahji of Satara; on the rajah's death in 1848 he administered the province both before and after its formal annexation in 1849.[3]

Commissioner in Sindh edit

In 1850 he was appointed chief commissioner of Sindh. In 1851 he reformed the Scinde District postal system on the model of the British postal service, to provide better service with Rowland Hill's "low and uniform" postal rates. This system became the basis for India's postal system, designed to provide public service. In 1857, he sent detachments to Multan and to Sir John Lawrence in the Punjab in order to secure those locations during the Indian Mutiny.[citation needed] These services were fully recognized, as he received the thanks of both houses of Parliament and was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB).[3]

As the chief commissioner of Sindh, in 1851, Frere issued a decree making it compulsory to use Sindhi language in place of Persian in Sindh. The officers of Sindh were ordered to learn Sindhi compulsorily to enable them to carry on day-to-day work efficiently. A committee was constituted (1853) under Asst. Commissioner & Chief of Education Department, with an equal number of Hindu and Muslim members, which unanimously decided on the use of Persio-Arabic Sindhi script with slight modifications. Frere not only gave Sindhi language one script but he even published different Sindhi books related to various streams of the literature, which encouraged impetus to Sindhi writers to move quickly with literacy.

Governor of Bombay edit

He became a member of the Viceroy's Council in 1859, and in 1862 was appointed Governor of Bombay, where he continued his policy of municipal improvements, establishing the Deccan College at Pune, as well as a college for instructing Indians in civil engineering. A 5-mile road in Kirkee Cantonment was named after him circa 1865.[4] His order to pull down the ramparts of the old Fort allowed the city to grow, and the Flora Fountain was commissioned in his honour. During Frere's administration his daughter, Mary Frere, collected Old Deccan Days (1868), the first English-language field-collected book of Indian folklore.[5]

In 1867 he returned to England, where he was made GCSI, and given honorary degrees from Oxford and Cambridge;.[6] He was also appointed a member of the Council of India.[3]

Africa edit

 
Henry Bartle Frere, by 'Spy' in Vanity Fair, 1873

In 1872, the Foreign Office sent him to Zanzibar to negotiate a treaty with the sultan, Barghash bin Said, for the suppression of the slave traffic. On 4 August 1873 He was sworn in as a member of Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.[7] In 1875, he accompanied the Prince of Wales to Egypt and India, with such success that Lord Beaconsfield asked him to choose between being made a baronet or a Knight Grand Cross of the Bath. He chose the former, but Queen Victoria bestowed both honours upon him.[3]

High Commissioner for Southern Africa edit

 
Southern Africa in 1878, on the eve of the confederation wars,
  Transvaal
  Orange Free State

In 1877, Frere was made High Commissioner for Southern Africa by the London-based Secretary for the Colonies Lord Carnarvon, who continued to support the imposition of the unpopular system of confederation upon the southern Africa region. Frere accepted the position, on a salary double that of his predecessor, and with the understanding that successful implementation of confederation would result in his being appointed the first British Governor-General of a federated southern African dominion.[8]

Attempt to federate Southern Africa edit

The idea of melding the states of southern Africa into a British Confederation was not new. It was seen as an easy way of uniting the region under British control, while preventing any future attempt among the remaining independent African states to unite against British rule. However an earlier plan by Sir George Grey for a federation of all the various colonies in South Africa had been rejected by the home authorities in 1858, as not being viable.[9]

Through Frere's elevation, Lord Carnarvon sought another attempt at implementing the ill-fated and locally unsupported confederation scheme, that was met with resistance by all the local groups involved. South Africans resented the perceived high-handed manner in which it was being imposed from London with little accommodation and knowledge of, or concern for, local conditions and politics. Cape Prime Minister, John Molteno, advised that under current conditions confederation was ill-suited to and badly timed for Southern Africa. It would lead to a lop-sided confederation with resulting instability and resentment. He advised that full union status was a better model, but only at a later date and once it was economically viable.

Timing was a key factor in the ensuing events, as the different states of southern Africa were at the time still suspicious and resentful after the last bout of British imperial expansion. The Afrikaners resented the recent annexation of the Transvaal, did not support confederation, and would successfully rebel in the First Boer War. The various Black South African states were also suspicious of this new effort towards British expansion. The ill-advised policies of both Frere and his local ally, John Gordon Sprigg, ended up causing a string of wars across Southern Africa, culminating in the disastrous Anglo-Zulu and Boer Wars.[10]

Resistance from the Cape and the Xhosa edit

 
Pro-imperialist cartoon showing Sir Bartle Frere vanquishing the "negrophilist" liberals of the Cape government, represented by MP Saul Solomon.

The new governor was initially welcomed by the local (Molteno-Merriman) government of the Cape Colony, which was by far the largest and most powerful state in the region.

However Frere soon encountered strong political resistance against the unpopular confederation project. In particular, the local Cape government took a non-interventionist approach towards the neighbouring Boer and Black African states of southern Africa. It was also relatively liberal in its domestic politics. Its formal response to Carnarvon's confederation model, conveyed to London via Frere's predecessor Sir Henry Barkley, had originally been that any federation with the illiberal Boer republics would endanger the rights and franchise of the Cape's Black citizens, and was therefore unacceptable.[11] The Cape government also opposed Carnarvon's confederation plans, perceiving them as an attempt to override the Cape's constitution and extend British imperial control over the whole of southern Africa, which as they saw it would lead to an outbreak of conflicts between the British Empire and the remaining independent states in the region, such Zululand and the Transvaal (something the Cape government was adamantly opposed to).[12] The summary of Molteno's message was that "the proposals for confederation should emanate from the communities to be affected, and not be pressed upon them from outside."[13]

At the time, the subcontinent was being afflicted by the worst drought in its recorded history and, as the historian De Kiewiet memorably said: "In South Africa, the heat of drought easily becomes the fever of war."[14] It had begun in 1875, and by 1877 it was affecting the greater region. In September 1877, a minor tribal conflict erupted on the Cape frontier, between the Mfengu and Gcaleka tribes. The Cape government viewed the dispute as a local police matter, but Frere immediately traveled to the frontier and declared war on the neighbouring independent state of Gcalekaland. Frere saw the dispute as an opportunity to annex Gcalekaland for the planned confederation. Frere also expressed concerns that the continued existence of independent African states posed in his words an ever-present threat of a "general and simultaneous rising of Kaffirdom against white civilization". The 9th Frontier War soon broke out.[15]

The Transkei Xhosa were defeated and annexed early in 1878, by General Thesiger and a small force of regular and colonial troops.[3][16]

Frere appealed (February 1878) and received the authority from the Colonial Office to overthrow the Cape's elected government. He then asked his political ally, Gordon Sprigg, to form a puppet ministry. This unprecedented move solved his constitutional hindrances in the Cape, but was overshadowed by a growing set of conflicts across Southern Africa and Lord Carnarvon's resignation in early 1878.[17]

Outbreak of Zulu and Boer Wars edit

 
Sir Henry Bartle Frere in the 1880s.

The Zulu Kingdom under King Cetshwayo remained independent of British control but Frere impressed upon the Colonial Office his opinion that if confederation was to succeed, Cetshwayo's forces had to be eliminated and Zululand annexed. While Carnarvon remained as Colonial Secretary in London the view had support but his replacement, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach strongly wished to avoid any war in southern Africa. Frere nonetheless used the delay in mail between London and Cape Town, to time his letters so as to circumvent the Colonial Office's opposition to war. Frere then sent Cetshwayo an impossible ultimatum in December 1878, effectively declaring war.[18]

Cetshwayo was unable to comply with Frere's ultimatum – even if he had wanted to; Frere ordered Lord Chelmsford to invade Zululand, and so the Anglo-Zulu War began. On 11 January 1879, British troops crossed the Tugela River; fourteen days later the disaster of Isandlwana was reported, and that was enough for the House of Commons to demand that Frere be recalled. Beaconsfield supported him, however, and in a strange compromise he was censured but asked to stay on. Frere had severely underestimated the Zulus, whom he had characterized as "a bunch of savages armed with sticks."[19]

 
The Battle of Isandlwana, Anglo-Zulu War
 
The Battle of Majuba Hill, First Boer War

The Zulu trouble, and disaffection brewing in the Transvaal, reacted upon each other most disastrously. The delay in giving the country a constitution afforded a pretext for agitation to the resentful Boers, a rapidly increasing minority, while the defeat at Isandlwana had badly tarnished the reputation of the British Empire in the region. Owing to the Xhosa and Zulu wars, Sir Bartle had been unable to give his undivided attention to the state of things in the Transvaal until April 1879, when he was at last able to visit a camp of about 4,000 disaffected Boers near Pretoria. Though conditions were grim, Frere managed to win the Boers' respect by promising to present their complaints to the British government, and to urge the fulfilment of the promises that had been made to them. The Boers did eventually disperse, on the very day upon which Frere received the telegram announcing the government's censure.[20] On his return to Cape Town, he found that his achievement had been eclipsed—first by 1 June 1879 death of Napoleon Eugene, Prince Imperial in Zululand, and then by the news that the government of the Transvaal and Natal, together with the high commissionership in the eastern part of South Africa, had been transferred from him to Sir Garnet Wolseley. Meanwhile, growing Boer resentment at Frere's policies erupted in December 1880 into the disastrous First Boer War. The First Boer War, with the British defeats at Bronkhorstspruit, Laing's Nek, Schuinshoogte and a decisive defeat at Majuba Hill led to the confirmation of the Boer Republics' independence and the final end of Carnarvon's confederation scheme.

Outbreak of the Basotho Gun War edit

 
The Basotho King and ministers.

Basutoland, home of the Basotho people, had been under the nominal control of the Cape Colony since 1872. However the Cape government had allowed the Basotho leadership to keep much of their traditional authority and independence. As allies and trading partners of the Cape, the Basotho were also well-equipped with firearms.

Frere pushed "The Peace Protection Act" (1879), during the Xhosa Wars, and decreed that all those of African descent had to be disarmed. The Basuto Gun War (1880) followed, as the Basothos rebelled at what they saw as a racist and high-handed ruling. Premier John Gordon Sprigg's unpopular attempt to enforce this disarmament of the Basotho was aggravated by his setting aside of Basotho land for white settlement.

The resulting war led to British defeats such as that at Qalabani, and ended in 1881 with a stalemate and a treaty that favoured the Basotho. The rebellion is a primary reason why Lesotho is now an independent country and not part of surrounding South Africa. At the same time as the Basuto Gun War broke out, unrest flared up once again among the Xhosa of the Transkei.

Recall edit

 
Remains of the Frere Bridge over the Orange River at Aliwal North. The bridge was opened on 21 July 1880, shortly before Frere's departure from the Cape.

In 1880 Frere was recalled to London to face charges of misconduct. When Gladstone's ministry first came into office in the spring of 1880, Lord Kimberley originally had no intention of recalling Frere. In June, however, a section of the Liberal party petitioned Gladstone to remove him, and the prime minister soon complied (1 August 1880).[21]

The disaster of Isandlwana was compounded by the humiliating defeats of the First Boer War. He was replaced by Sir Garnet Wolseley, then charged with having acted recklessly, and censured by Whitehall.[9]

Death edit

Upon his return, Frere replied to the charges relating to his conduct with regard to Afghanistan as well as South Africa, previously referred to in Gladstone's Midlothian speeches, and was preparing a fuller vindication when he died at Wimbledon on 29 May 1884.[21] He was buried in St Paul's Cathedral.[22]

Memorials edit

 
Henry Bartle Frere's statue on the Thames embankment

Frere was the founder and first president of the Royal Society of South Africa 1877.[23]

Frere Hall in Karachi was built in his honour. The city also named a road, street and town after him. Karachi Grammar School's Frere House is named after him. In 1888, the Prince of Wales unveiled a statue of Frere on the Thames embankment. Mount Bartle Frere (1622m), the highest mountain in Queensland, Australia, is named after him, as is a boarding house at Haileybury. A road in Parktown, Johannesburg, is also named after him. (Frere Road was also the home of Nadine Gordimer, the Nobel Prize-winning author). In Durban, two roads honour him: Frere Road which later transforms into Bartle Road. Freretown, a district of the Kenyan city of Mombasa, is also named after him. Mount Frere (Now known as KwaBhaca) in the Eastern Cape also was named after him in the 19th century.

 
Memorial to Sir Bartle Frere in the Cape Lantern newspaper.

The botanist, N. A. Dalzell (1864) named the plant genus Frerea to commemorate H. B. Frere. It is a monotypic plant genus known by a single species, viz. Frerea indica Dalzell. Dalzell stated "Sir H. B. E. Frere, not only as a mark of esteem and respect, but also because he always has been the enlightened encourager and promoter of scientific researches in India, and is himself a close observer of nature."[24]

Biographies edit

  • Martineau, John (1895). The life and correspondence of the Right Hon. Sir Bartle Frere. Vol. 1. hdl:2263/8556.
  • Martineau, John (1895). The life and correspondence of the Right Hon. Sir Bartle Frere. Vol. 2. hdl:2263/8556.

For the South African anti-confederation view, see P. A. Molteno's Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno (2 vols., London 1900).[21]

A more recent work on Bartle Frere's life, The Zulu and the Raj; The Life of Sir Bartle Frere by D. P. O'Connor,[25] examines details of Frere's life and motives more fully than was permissible in Victorian times when Martineau was writing. In particular, O'Connor points to Frere as a leading thinker on imperial defence. He sets the Zulu war in the context of the overall global crisis, contingent on the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), which was widely expected to result in war between Britain and Russia. Frere was sent to South Africa to turn this vital area into a secure bastion on the route to India, but was distracted from the task by the routine instability of the South African theatre.

Popular culture edit

Frere was played by Sir John Mills in Zulu Dawn. His portrayal in the film is negative.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rootsweb, Mary Anne Green
  2. ^ Rootsweb. 1871 census – Frere household in Wimbledon. Accessed 8 January 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 206.
  4. ^ "The History of Lake Fife, NDA & Burr and Frere Roads, Kirkee, Poona". noelsramblings.blogspot.co.za. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  5. ^ Dorson 1999, p. 334.
  6. ^ "Frere, Sir Henry Bartle Edward (FRR874HB)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  7. ^ "The London Gazette 5 August 1873". The London Gazette. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  8. ^ Thomas 2009, p. 113.
  9. ^ a b Statham 1881.
  10. ^ Reader's Digest Association South Africa 1992, p. 182.
  11. ^ Mostert 1992, p. 1247.
  12. ^ Malherbe 1971.
  13. ^ Theal 1902, pp. 402–403.
  14. ^ De Kiewiet 1941, p. 105.
  15. ^ Meredith 2008.
  16. ^ Mostert 1992.
  17. ^ Anon 1878.
  18. ^ Parker 2011, p. 64.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 March 2013. Retrieved 18 March 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  20. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 206–207.
  21. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911, p. 207.
  22. ^ "Memorials of St Paul's Cathedral" Sinclair, W. p. 462: London; Chapman & Hall, Ltd; 1909.
  23. ^ Lubenow 2015, p. 181.
  24. ^ Dalzell 1864.
  25. ^ O'Connor 2002.

References edit

  • Dalzell, N. A. (June 1864). "A New Genus of Asclepiadeae". Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London. Botany. 8 (29): 10–11. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.1864.tb01069.x.
  • Theal, George McCall (1902). Progress of South Africa in the Century. Toronto: Linscott Publishing Company.
  • De Kiewiet, Cornelius William (1941). A History of South Africa: Social & Economic. Oxford University Press.
  • Fruin, Robert Jacob (1881). A Word from Holland on the Transvaal Question, a Reply to Sir Bartle Frere and an Appeal to the People of England. L. E. Bosch and son.
  • Martineau, John (1895). The Life and Correspondence of the Right Hon. Sir Bartle Frere. Murray.
  • Molteno, Percy Alport (1900). The Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno, K.C.M.G., Etc. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Ranade, Rekha (1990). Sir Bartle Frere and His Times: A Study of His Bombay Years, 1862–1867. Mittal Publications. ISBN 978-81-7099-222-6.
  • Brooke-Simons, Phillida (1999). Apples of the sun: being an account of the lives, vision, and achievements of the Molteno brothers, Edward Bartle Frere and Henry Anderson. Fernwood Press. ISBN 978-1-874950-45-5.
  • O'Connor, Damian P. (2002). The Zulu and the Raj: The Life of Sir Bartle Frere. Able Pub. ISBN 978-1-903607-29-9.
  • Thomas, Roy Digby (2009). The Rise and Fall of Bartle Frere: Colonial Rule in India and South Africa. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4490-3043-8.
  • Dorson, Richard Mercer (1999). History of British Folklore. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-20476-7.
  • Statham, Francis Reginald (1881). Blacks, Boers, and British, a Three-cornered Problem. Macmillan.
  • Lubenow, William C. (2015). 'Only Connect': Learned Societies in Nineteenth-century Britain. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1-78327-046-0.
  • Mostert, Noël (1992). Frontiers: the epic of South Africa's creation and the tragedy of the Xhosa people. Knopf. ISBN 9780679401360.
  • Malherbe, Vertrees Canby (1971). What They Said, 1795–1910: A Selection of Documents from South African History. Maskew Miller. ISBN 978-0-623-00457-9.
  • Meredith, Martin (2008). Diamonds, Gold, and War: The British, the Boers, and the Making of South Africa. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-58648-677-8.
  • Parker, Alexander (2011). Fifty People who Stuffed Up South Africa. Two Dogs. ISBN 978-1-920137-33-5.
  • Reader's Digest Association South Africa (1992). "Confederation from the Barrel of a Gun". Illustrated history of South Africa: the real story. Reader's Digest Association South Africa. ISBN 978-0-947008-90-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Anon (1878). Correspondence, Memoranda, and Minutes Connected with the Dismissal of the Late Ministry. Reprinted from the "Cape Times.". Murray & St. Leger.
  • "Frere, Henry Bartle Edward" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Frere, Sir Henry Bartle Edward". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 206–207.

External links edit

Government offices
Preceded by Commissioner in Sind
1851–59
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Bombay
1862–67
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Cape Colony
High Commissioner for Southern Africa

1877–1880
Succeeded by
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New title
Granted by
Queen Victoria
Baronet
(of Wimbledon)
1876–1884
Succeeded by
Bartle Compton Arthur Frere

henry, bartle, frere, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message For the British barrister and colonial judge see Bartle Henry Temple Frere Sir Henry Bartle Edward Frere 1st Baronet GCB GCSI PC 29 March 1815 29 May 1884 was a British colonial administrator He had a successful career in India rising to become Governor of Bombay 1862 1867 However as High Commissioner for Southern Africa 1877 1880 he implemented a set of policies which attempted to impose a British confederation on the region and which led to the overthrow of the Cape s first elected government in 1878 and to a string of regional wars culminating in the invasion of Zululand 1879 and the First Boer War 1880 1881 The British Prime Minister Gladstone recalled Frere to London to face charges of misconduct Whitehall officially censured Frere for acting recklessly The Right HonourableSir Henry Bartle FrereBt GCB GCSI PCCommissioner of SindIn office 1851 1859MonarchVictoriaPreceded byRichard Keith PringleSucceeded byJonathan Duncan InverarityGovernor of BombayIn office 1862 1867MonarchVictoriaPreceded bySir George Russell ClerkSucceeded byWilliam Vesey FitzGeraldHigh Commissioner for Southern AfricaIn office 1877 1880MonarchVictoriaPreceded bySir Henry BarklySucceeded byHenry Hugh CliffordactingPersonal detailsBorn29 March 1815Clydach Monmouthshire WalesDied29 May 1884 aged 69 Wimbledon London EnglandCitizenshipBritishAlma materEast India Company College Contents 1 Early life 2 Family life 3 India 3 1 Commissioner in Sindh 3 2 Governor of Bombay 4 Africa 4 1 High Commissioner for Southern Africa 4 2 Attempt to federate Southern Africa 4 3 Resistance from the Cape and the Xhosa 4 4 Outbreak of Zulu and Boer Wars 4 5 Outbreak of the Basotho Gun War 4 6 Recall 5 Death 6 Memorials 7 Biographies 8 Popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editFrere was born at Clydach House Clydach Monmouthshire the son of Edward Frere manager of Clydach Ironworks and Mary Ann Green His elder sister Mary Anne Frere was born c 1802 in Clydach and his younger sister Frances Anne Frere was born c 1819 in Clydach He was the grandson of John Frere and a nephew of John Hookham Frere William Frere Bartholomew Frere James Hatley Frere and Temple Frere canon of St Peters Westminster He was educated at the East India Company College the precursor of Haileybury and Imperial Service College 1 Family life editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Henry Bartle Frere news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message On 10 October 1844 he married Catherine Arthur daughter of Sir George Arthur 1st Baronet who was the Governor of Bombay and to whom he had been appointed private secretary two years earlier Their five children were Mary Eliza Isabella Frere born 1845 at Bitton Gloucestershire Catherine Frances Frere born 1849 in the East Indies who edited The Cookery Book of Lady Clark of Tillypronie in 1909 Georgina Hamilton Chichester Frere born c 1850 in the East Indies Bartle Compton Arthur Frere born c 1855 in Paddington Middlesex and Eliza Frederica Jane Frere born c 1857 in Wimbledon London 2 India editAfter leaving the East India Company College Frere was appointed a writer in the Bombay now Mumbai civil service in 1834 Having passed his language examination he was appointed assistant collector at Poona now Pune in 1835 and in 1842 he was chosen as private secretary to Sir George Arthur Governor of Bombay Two years later he became a political resident at the court of Raja Shahji of Satara on the rajah s death in 1848 he administered the province both before and after its formal annexation in 1849 3 Commissioner in Sindh edit In 1850 he was appointed chief commissioner of Sindh In 1851 he reformed the Scinde District postal system on the model of the British postal service to provide better service with Rowland Hill s low and uniform postal rates This system became the basis for India s postal system designed to provide public service In 1857 he sent detachments to Multan and to Sir John Lawrence in the Punjab in order to secure those locations during the Indian Mutiny citation needed These services were fully recognized as he received the thanks of both houses of Parliament and was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath KCB 3 As the chief commissioner of Sindh in 1851 Frere issued a decree making it compulsory to use Sindhi language in place of Persian in Sindh The officers of Sindh were ordered to learn Sindhi compulsorily to enable them to carry on day to day work efficiently A committee was constituted 1853 under Asst Commissioner amp Chief of Education Department with an equal number of Hindu and Muslim members which unanimously decided on the use of Persio Arabic Sindhi script with slight modifications Frere not only gave Sindhi language one script but he even published different Sindhi books related to various streams of the literature which encouraged impetus to Sindhi writers to move quickly with literacy Governor of Bombay edit He became a member of the Viceroy s Council in 1859 and in 1862 was appointed Governor of Bombay where he continued his policy of municipal improvements establishing the Deccan College at Pune as well as a college for instructing Indians in civil engineering A 5 mile road in Kirkee Cantonment was named after him circa 1865 4 His order to pull down the ramparts of the old Fort allowed the city to grow and the Flora Fountain was commissioned in his honour During Frere s administration his daughter Mary Frere collected Old Deccan Days 1868 the first English language field collected book of Indian folklore 5 In 1867 he returned to England where he was made GCSI and given honorary degrees from Oxford and Cambridge 6 He was also appointed a member of the Council of India 3 Africa edit nbsp Henry Bartle Frere by Spy in Vanity Fair 1873In 1872 the Foreign Office sent him to Zanzibar to negotiate a treaty with the sultan Barghash bin Said for the suppression of the slave traffic On 4 August 1873 He was sworn in as a member of Her Majesty s Most Honourable Privy Council at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight 7 In 1875 he accompanied the Prince of Wales to Egypt and India with such success that Lord Beaconsfield asked him to choose between being made a baronet or a Knight Grand Cross of the Bath He chose the former but Queen Victoria bestowed both honours upon him 3 High Commissioner for Southern Africa edit nbsp Southern Africa in 1878 on the eve of the confederation wars Cape Colony Transvaal Orange Free StateIn 1877 Frere was made High Commissioner for Southern Africa by the London based Secretary for the Colonies Lord Carnarvon who continued to support the imposition of the unpopular system of confederation upon the southern Africa region Frere accepted the position on a salary double that of his predecessor and with the understanding that successful implementation of confederation would result in his being appointed the first British Governor General of a federated southern African dominion 8 Attempt to federate Southern Africa edit The idea of melding the states of southern Africa into a British Confederation was not new It was seen as an easy way of uniting the region under British control while preventing any future attempt among the remaining independent African states to unite against British rule However an earlier plan by Sir George Grey for a federation of all the various colonies in South Africa had been rejected by the home authorities in 1858 as not being viable 9 Through Frere s elevation Lord Carnarvon sought another attempt at implementing the ill fated and locally unsupported confederation scheme that was met with resistance by all the local groups involved South Africans resented the perceived high handed manner in which it was being imposed from London with little accommodation and knowledge of or concern for local conditions and politics Cape Prime Minister John Molteno advised that under current conditions confederation was ill suited to and badly timed for Southern Africa It would lead to a lop sided confederation with resulting instability and resentment He advised that full union status was a better model but only at a later date and once it was economically viable Timing was a key factor in the ensuing events as the different states of southern Africa were at the time still suspicious and resentful after the last bout of British imperial expansion The Afrikaners resented the recent annexation of the Transvaal did not support confederation and would successfully rebel in the First Boer War The various Black South African states were also suspicious of this new effort towards British expansion The ill advised policies of both Frere and his local ally John Gordon Sprigg ended up causing a string of wars across Southern Africa culminating in the disastrous Anglo Zulu and Boer Wars 10 Resistance from the Cape and the Xhosa edit nbsp Pro imperialist cartoon showing Sir Bartle Frere vanquishing the negrophilist liberals of the Cape government represented by MP Saul Solomon The new governor was initially welcomed by the local Molteno Merriman government of the Cape Colony which was by far the largest and most powerful state in the region However Frere soon encountered strong political resistance against the unpopular confederation project In particular the local Cape government took a non interventionist approach towards the neighbouring Boer and Black African states of southern Africa It was also relatively liberal in its domestic politics Its formal response to Carnarvon s confederation model conveyed to London via Frere s predecessor Sir Henry Barkley had originally been that any federation with the illiberal Boer republics would endanger the rights and franchise of the Cape s Black citizens and was therefore unacceptable 11 The Cape government also opposed Carnarvon s confederation plans perceiving them as an attempt to override the Cape s constitution and extend British imperial control over the whole of southern Africa which as they saw it would lead to an outbreak of conflicts between the British Empire and the remaining independent states in the region such Zululand and the Transvaal something the Cape government was adamantly opposed to 12 The summary of Molteno s message was that the proposals for confederation should emanate from the communities to be affected and not be pressed upon them from outside 13 At the time the subcontinent was being afflicted by the worst drought in its recorded history and as the historian De Kiewiet memorably said In South Africa the heat of drought easily becomes the fever of war 14 It had begun in 1875 and by 1877 it was affecting the greater region In September 1877 a minor tribal conflict erupted on the Cape frontier between the Mfengu and Gcaleka tribes The Cape government viewed the dispute as a local police matter but Frere immediately traveled to the frontier and declared war on the neighbouring independent state of Gcalekaland Frere saw the dispute as an opportunity to annex Gcalekaland for the planned confederation Frere also expressed concerns that the continued existence of independent African states posed in his words an ever present threat of a general and simultaneous rising of Kaffirdom against white civilization The 9th Frontier War soon broke out 15 The Transkei Xhosa were defeated and annexed early in 1878 by General Thesiger and a small force of regular and colonial troops 3 16 Frere appealed February 1878 and received the authority from the Colonial Office to overthrow the Cape s elected government He then asked his political ally Gordon Sprigg to form a puppet ministry This unprecedented move solved his constitutional hindrances in the Cape but was overshadowed by a growing set of conflicts across Southern Africa and Lord Carnarvon s resignation in early 1878 17 Outbreak of Zulu and Boer Wars edit nbsp Sir Henry Bartle Frere in the 1880s The Zulu Kingdom under King Cetshwayo remained independent of British control but Frere impressed upon the Colonial Office his opinion that if confederation was to succeed Cetshwayo s forces had to be eliminated and Zululand annexed While Carnarvon remained as Colonial Secretary in London the view had support but his replacement Sir Michael Hicks Beach strongly wished to avoid any war in southern Africa Frere nonetheless used the delay in mail between London and Cape Town to time his letters so as to circumvent the Colonial Office s opposition to war Frere then sent Cetshwayo an impossible ultimatum in December 1878 effectively declaring war 18 Cetshwayo was unable to comply with Frere s ultimatum even if he had wanted to Frere ordered Lord Chelmsford to invade Zululand and so the Anglo Zulu War began On 11 January 1879 British troops crossed the Tugela River fourteen days later the disaster of Isandlwana was reported and that was enough for the House of Commons to demand that Frere be recalled Beaconsfield supported him however and in a strange compromise he was censured but asked to stay on Frere had severely underestimated the Zulus whom he had characterized as a bunch of savages armed with sticks 19 nbsp The Battle of Isandlwana Anglo Zulu War nbsp The Battle of Majuba Hill First Boer WarThe Zulu trouble and disaffection brewing in the Transvaal reacted upon each other most disastrously The delay in giving the country a constitution afforded a pretext for agitation to the resentful Boers a rapidly increasing minority while the defeat at Isandlwana had badly tarnished the reputation of the British Empire in the region Owing to the Xhosa and Zulu wars Sir Bartle had been unable to give his undivided attention to the state of things in the Transvaal until April 1879 when he was at last able to visit a camp of about 4 000 disaffected Boers near Pretoria Though conditions were grim Frere managed to win the Boers respect by promising to present their complaints to the British government and to urge the fulfilment of the promises that had been made to them The Boers did eventually disperse on the very day upon which Frere received the telegram announcing the government s censure 20 On his return to Cape Town he found that his achievement had been eclipsed first by 1 June 1879 death of Napoleon Eugene Prince Imperial in Zululand and then by the news that the government of the Transvaal and Natal together with the high commissionership in the eastern part of South Africa had been transferred from him to Sir Garnet Wolseley Meanwhile growing Boer resentment at Frere s policies erupted in December 1880 into the disastrous First Boer War The First Boer War with the British defeats at Bronkhorstspruit Laing s Nek Schuinshoogte and a decisive defeat at Majuba Hill led to the confirmation of the Boer Republics independence and the final end of Carnarvon s confederation scheme Outbreak of the Basotho Gun War edit nbsp The Basotho King and ministers Basutoland home of the Basotho people had been under the nominal control of the Cape Colony since 1872 However the Cape government had allowed the Basotho leadership to keep much of their traditional authority and independence As allies and trading partners of the Cape the Basotho were also well equipped with firearms Frere pushed The Peace Protection Act 1879 during the Xhosa Wars and decreed that all those of African descent had to be disarmed The Basuto Gun War 1880 followed as the Basothos rebelled at what they saw as a racist and high handed ruling Premier John Gordon Sprigg s unpopular attempt to enforce this disarmament of the Basotho was aggravated by his setting aside of Basotho land for white settlement The resulting war led to British defeats such as that at Qalabani and ended in 1881 with a stalemate and a treaty that favoured the Basotho The rebellion is a primary reason why Lesotho is now an independent country and not part of surrounding South Africa At the same time as the Basuto Gun War broke out unrest flared up once again among the Xhosa of the Transkei Recall edit nbsp Remains of the Frere Bridge over the Orange River at Aliwal North The bridge was opened on 21 July 1880 shortly before Frere s departure from the Cape In 1880 Frere was recalled to London to face charges of misconduct When Gladstone s ministry first came into office in the spring of 1880 Lord Kimberley originally had no intention of recalling Frere In June however a section of the Liberal party petitioned Gladstone to remove him and the prime minister soon complied 1 August 1880 21 The disaster of Isandlwana was compounded by the humiliating defeats of the First Boer War He was replaced by Sir Garnet Wolseley then charged with having acted recklessly and censured by Whitehall 9 Death editUpon his return Frere replied to the charges relating to his conduct with regard to Afghanistan as well as South Africa previously referred to in Gladstone s Midlothian speeches and was preparing a fuller vindication when he died at Wimbledon on 29 May 1884 21 He was buried in St Paul s Cathedral 22 Memorials edit nbsp Henry Bartle Frere s statue on the Thames embankmentFrere was the founder and first president of the Royal Society of South Africa 1877 23 Frere Hall in Karachi was built in his honour The city also named a road street and town after him Karachi Grammar School s Frere House is named after him In 1888 the Prince of Wales unveiled a statue of Frere on the Thames embankment Mount Bartle Frere 1622m the highest mountain in Queensland Australia is named after him as is a boarding house at Haileybury A road in Parktown Johannesburg is also named after him Frere Road was also the home of Nadine Gordimer the Nobel Prize winning author In Durban two roads honour him Frere Road which later transforms into Bartle Road Freretown a district of the Kenyan city of Mombasa is also named after him Mount Frere Now known as KwaBhaca in the Eastern Cape also was named after him in the 19th century nbsp Memorial to Sir Bartle Frere in the Cape Lantern newspaper The botanist N A Dalzell 1864 named the plant genus Frerea to commemorate H B Frere It is a monotypic plant genus known by a single species viz Frerea indica Dalzell Dalzell stated Sir H B E Frere not only as a mark of esteem and respect but also because he always has been the enlightened encourager and promoter of scientific researches in India and is himself a close observer of nature 24 Biographies editMartineau John 1895 The life and correspondence of the Right Hon Sir Bartle Frere Vol 1 hdl 2263 8556 Martineau John 1895 The life and correspondence of the Right Hon Sir Bartle Frere Vol 2 hdl 2263 8556 For the South African anti confederation view see P A Molteno s Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno 2 vols London 1900 21 Molteno Percy Alport 1900 The Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno Vol 1 Molteno Percy Alport 1900 The Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno Vol 2 A more recent work on Bartle Frere s life The Zulu and the Raj The Life of Sir Bartle Frere by D P O Connor 25 examines details of Frere s life and motives more fully than was permissible in Victorian times when Martineau was writing In particular O Connor points to Frere as a leading thinker on imperial defence He sets the Zulu war in the context of the overall global crisis contingent on the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 which was widely expected to result in war between Britain and Russia Frere was sent to South Africa to turn this vital area into a secure bastion on the route to India but was distracted from the task by the routine instability of the South African theatre Popular culture editFrere was played by Sir John Mills in Zulu Dawn His portrayal in the film is negative See also editHorniman Circle Gardens Mount FrereNotes edit Rootsweb Mary Anne Green Rootsweb 1871 census Frere household in Wimbledon Accessed 8 January 2023 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 p 206 The History of Lake Fife NDA amp Burr and Frere Roads Kirkee Poona noelsramblings blogspot co za Retrieved 1 October 2017 Dorson 1999 p 334 Frere Sir Henry Bartle Edward FRR874HB A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge The London Gazette 5 August 1873 The London Gazette Retrieved 26 October 2022 Thomas 2009 p 113 a b Statham 1881 Reader s Digest Association South Africa 1992 p 182 Mostert 1992 p 1247 Malherbe 1971 Theal 1902 pp 402 403 De Kiewiet 1941 p 105 Meredith 2008 Mostert 1992 Anon 1878 Parker 2011 p 64 The Martini Henry Rifle and the Anglo Zulu War 1879 Archived from the original on 18 March 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Chisholm 1911 pp 206 207 a b c Chisholm 1911 p 207 Memorials of St Paul s Cathedral Sinclair W p 462 London Chapman amp Hall Ltd 1909 Lubenow 2015 p 181 Dalzell 1864 O Connor 2002 References editDalzell N A June 1864 A New Genus of Asclepiadeae Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London Botany 8 29 10 11 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1864 tb01069 x Theal George McCall 1902 Progress of South Africa in the Century Toronto Linscott Publishing Company De Kiewiet Cornelius William 1941 A History of South Africa Social amp Economic Oxford University Press Fruin Robert Jacob 1881 A Word from Holland on the Transvaal Question a Reply to Sir Bartle Frere and an Appeal to the People of England L E Bosch and son Martineau John 1895 The Life and Correspondence of the Right Hon Sir Bartle Frere Murray Molteno Percy Alport 1900 The Life and Times of Sir John Charles Molteno K C M G Etc London Smith Elder amp Co Ranade Rekha 1990 Sir Bartle Frere and His Times A Study of His Bombay Years 1862 1867 Mittal Publications ISBN 978 81 7099 222 6 Brooke Simons Phillida 1999 Apples of the sun being an account of the lives vision and achievements of the Molteno brothers Edward Bartle Frere and Henry Anderson Fernwood Press ISBN 978 1 874950 45 5 O Connor Damian P 2002 The Zulu and the Raj The Life of Sir Bartle Frere Able Pub ISBN 978 1 903607 29 9 Thomas Roy Digby 2009 The Rise and Fall of Bartle Frere Colonial Rule in India and South Africa AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4490 3043 8 Dorson Richard Mercer 1999 History of British Folklore Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 20476 7 Statham Francis Reginald 1881 Blacks Boers and British a Three cornered Problem Macmillan Lubenow William C 2015 Only Connect Learned Societies in Nineteenth century Britain Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 78327 046 0 Mostert Noel 1992 Frontiers the epic of South Africa s creation and the tragedy of the Xhosa people Knopf ISBN 9780679401360 Malherbe Vertrees Canby 1971 What They Said 1795 1910 A Selection of Documents from South African History Maskew Miller ISBN 978 0 623 00457 9 Meredith Martin 2008 Diamonds Gold and War The British the Boers and the Making of South Africa PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 58648 677 8 Parker Alexander 2011 Fifty People who Stuffed Up South Africa Two Dogs ISBN 978 1 920137 33 5 Reader s Digest Association South Africa 1992 Confederation from the Barrel of a Gun Illustrated history of South Africa the real story Reader s Digest Association South Africa ISBN 978 0 947008 90 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Anon 1878 Correspondence Memoranda and Minutes Connected with the Dismissal of the Late Ministry Reprinted from the Cape Times Murray amp St Leger Frere Henry Bartle Edward Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Frere Sir Henry Bartle Edward Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 206 207 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Bartle Frere nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Henry Bartle Frere Works by Bartle Frere at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Henry Bartle Frere at Internet Archive Works by or about Bartle Frere at Internet ArchiveGovernment officesPreceded byRobert Keith Pringle Commissioner in Sind1851 59 Succeeded byJonathan Duncan InverarityPreceded bySir George Clerk Governor of Bombay1862 67 Succeeded bySir William FitzgeraldPreceded bySir Henry Barkly Governor of Cape ColonyHigh Commissioner for Southern Africa1877 1880 Succeeded bySir Hercules RobinsonBaronetage of the United KingdomNew titleGranted byQueen Victoria Baronet of Wimbledon 1876 1884 Succeeded byBartle Compton Arthur Frere Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Bartle Frere amp oldid 1178627018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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