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Hudson Lowe

Sir Hudson Lowe GCMG KCB (28 July 1769 – 10 January 1844) was an Anglo-Irish soldier and colonial administrator who is best known for his time as Governor of St Helena, where he was the "gaoler" of the Emperor Napoléon.

Hudson Lowe
Sir Hudson Lowe and his signature
14th General Officer Commanding, Ceylon
In office
1826–?
Preceded byJames Campbell
Succeeded byJohn Wilson
Personal details
Born28 July 1769
Died10 January 1844(1844-01-10) (aged 74)
Military service
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Branch/serviceBritish Army
RankMajor general
CommandsRoyal Corsican Rangers
General Officer Commanding, Ceylon

Early life

The son of John Lowe, an army surgeon, he was born at Galway in Ireland, his mother's native country. His childhood was spent in various garrison towns, particularly in the West Indies, but he was educated chiefly at Salisbury Grammar.[1] He obtained a post as ensign in the East Devon Militia when he was eleven. In 1787 he entered his father's regiment, the 50th Foot, which was then serving at Gibraltar under Governor-General Charles O'Hara. In 1791, he was promoted to Lieutenant. The same year he was granted eighteen months' leave, and chose to spend the time travelling through Italy rather than return to Britain. He chose to avoid travelling to France because the French Revolution had recently broken out.[2]

Career

Corsica

Lowe arrived back at Gibraltar shortly after the outbreak of war between Britain and France in early 1793. The 50th were sent to take part in the Defence of Toulon which had been seized by an Allied force under Lord Hood after an invitation by French Royalists in the city. The 50th arrived too late to assist the defence, as the Allied forces had already withdrawn from the city. They were then redirected to Corsica, a French-owned island, where British troops had been sent to join with Corsicans under Pasquale Paoli. Lowe's regiment served as part of General Dundas's force during the Siege of Bastia and Siege of Calvi driving the French from the island. The regiment was stationed in Bastia. Lowe volunteered to fetch supplies from Livorno in Italy, but nearly died of malaria during the journey there.[3]

When he recovered, Lowe returned to Corsica, and was stationed in the citadel at Ajaccio as an aide to the Governor, Colonel Wauchope, close to where Napoléon Bonaparte's sisters had recently been living before they fled to mainland France.[4] In October 1796 it was decided to abandon Corsica and the force at Ajaccio was embarked and taken to Elba. The following year Elba was also abandoned and Lowe was evacuated with his regiment first to Gibraltar and then to Lisbon. He spent the next two years as part of a British force which was placed to deter an invasion by French and Spanish forces.

Lowe later saw active service successively in Elba, Portugal, and Menorca, where he was entrusted with the command of a battalion of volunteer Corsican exiles in the British Army, the Royal Corsican Rangers, who were armed with Baker rifles and trained as light infantry. In Corsica he was actually billeted in the Casa Buonaparte. He led the Corsican Rangers in Egypt in 1800–1801.

Napoleonic Wars

After the peace of Amiens, Lowe, now a Major, became assistant quartermaster-general. On the renewal of war with France in 1803, he was charged, as a lieutenant-colonel, to raise the Corsican battalion again and with it assisted in the defense of Sicily. On the capture of Capri, he proceeded there with his battalion and a Maltese regiment; but in October 1808, Joachim Murat ordered an attack upon the island, which was organized by General Lamarque. Lowe, owing to the unreliability of the Maltese troops and no hope of help by sea, had to agree to evacuate the island. Sir William Napier criticized him, but his garrison consisted of only 1362 men, while the assailants numbered between 3000 and 4000.

In the course of 1809, Lowe and his Corsicans helped in the capture of Ischia and Procida, as well as of Zante, Cephalonia and Cerigo. For some months, he acted as governor of Cephalonia and Ithaca, and later of Santa Maura. He returned to Britain in 1812, and in January 1813, was sent to inspect a Russo-German legion then being formed. He accompanied the armies of the allies through the campaigns of 1813 and 1814, being present at thirteen important battles. He won praise from Blücher and Gneisenau for his gallantry and judgment. He was chosen to bear to London the news of the first abdication of Napoleon in April 1814.

He was knighted and promoted to major-general; he also received decorations from the Russian and Prussian courts. Charged with the duties of quartermaster-general of the army in the Netherlands in 1814–1815, he was about to take part in the Belgian campaign when he was offered the command of the British troops at Genoa; but while still in the south of France he received (on 1 August 1815) news of his appointment to the position of custodian of Napoleon, Emperor of the French, who had surrendered to HMS Bellerophon off Rochefort. Lowe was to be Governor of Saint Helena, the place of the former Emperor's exile.

At the time of Lowe's appointment, Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, Lord Bathurst, wrote to Wellington:

"I do not believe we could have found a fitter person of his rank in the army willing to accept a situation of so much confinement, responsibility and exclusion from society."[5]

Saint Helena

 
Sir Hudson Lowe

On his arrival at Plantation House, he found that Napoleon had an uneasy relationship with Admiral Sir George Cockburn, who had been responsible for conveying Napoleon to St. Helena, and was in charge of him pending the arrival of a new Governor. Napoleon and Governor Lowe had a stormy relationship, and only met half a dozen times. To a large extent, Lowe's hands were tied by his instructions from The 3rd Earl Bathurst, but Lowe's characteristic lack of tact doubtless exacerbated the friction between them.

The news that rescue expeditions were being planned by Bonapartists in the United States led to the enforcement of stricter regulations in October 1816. Lowe ordered sentries to be posted round the garden of Napoleon's residence, Longwood House, at sunset instead of at 9 p.m. He assigned a British officer the task of catching sight of Napoleon every day. Lowe created a set of petty rules that included restricting Napoleon to the Longwood Estate and requiring that the British not address Napoleon by his Imperial titles but only as a general. He demanded that Napoleon pay for part of his imprisonment, so Napoleon offered up some Imperial silver for sale. This created such a backlash in Europe that the demand had to be cancelled. Then he reduced the amount of firewood for Longwood. News that Napoleon was burning his furniture to stay warm again caused such a backlash of public sympathy that the supply of firewood was restored.

All of this and more offended Napoleon and his followers, who campaigned against Lowe. Barry Edward O'Meara, the Irish surgeon, whilst initially providing information for Lowe, ultimately sided with Napoleon, and joined in criticisms from Las Cases and Montholon. The French, Russian and Austrian commissioners on St. Helena, whilst hostile to Napoleon, were also very critical of Lowe's conduct and found it impossible to get on with him.

In addition, modern scholars debate Lowe's role in Napoléon's death. Lowe's restriction of the former Emperor of the French to what amounts to "house arrest," not just "exile," certainly affected Napoleon's exercise and general health, but some have gone so far as to suggest that Lowe may have had him poisoned.

After the death of the Emperor Napoleon in May 1821, Lowe returned to England. On the publication of O'Meara's book, Lowe resolved to prosecute the author, but his application was too late. Ironically, O'Meara's book was softer on Lowe than what the doctor really thought of him and of his role as "executioner" at St. Helena. His true attitudes are revealed in the letters he passed clandestinely to a clerk at the Admiralty.[6]

Apart from the thanks of George IV, at a levee, he received little reward from the British Government, whose orders he had obeyed to the letter. His treatment of Napoleon and the subsequent public relations problems for the British Government remained an underlying issue for the rest of his career. Field Marshal The 1st Duke of Wellington later said that he was "a very bad choice; he was a man wanting in education and judgment. He was a stupid man. He knew nothing at all of the world, and like all men who knew nothing of the world, he was suspicious and jealous."[7]

He contributed to the abolition of slavery on the island.[8]

After Saint Helena

In June 1822 he was appointed Colonel in Chief of the Sutherland Highlanders in place of Sir Thomas Hislop.[9]

In 1825–30, he commanded the forces in Ceylon, but was not appointed to the Governorship when it fell vacant in 1830. He was appointed to the colonelcy of the 56th (West Essex) Regiment of Foot in 1831, and in 1842 transferred to the colonelcy of his old regiment, the 50th (Queen's Own) Regiment of Foot. He was also made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG).[citation needed]

Lowe died at Charlotte Cottage, near Sloane Street, Chelsea, of paralysis, on 10 Jan. 1844, aged 74.[10]

Family

In London on 30 December 1815[11] Lowe married Mrs. Susan Johnson, daughter of Stephen De Lancey, sister of William Howe De Lancey, and widow of Colonel William Johnson. She had previously had two daughters, one of whom had died, and the other married Count Balmain. They had five children, two sons, Hudson Lowe, born in 1816, and Edward William Howe de Lancey Lowe, born in 1820, and three daughters, Camilla, Francis, Clara Maria Susanna Lowe, born on 26 August 1818. Lady Lowe died in Hertford Street, Mayfair, London, on 22 August 1832.[10][12]

Portrayals in fiction

Sir Hudson Lowe was portrayed by Orson Welles in Sacha Guitry's film Napoléon (1955), by Sir Ralph Richardson in Eagle in a Cage (1972), by Vernon Dobtcheff in L'Otage de l'Europe (1989), by David Francis in the Napoleon miniseries (2002), and by Richard E. Grant in Monsieur N. (2003). He appears in the play "La Dernière Salve" by Jean-Claude Brisville (1995). He is a character in Tom Keneally’s book "Napoleon’s Last Island’’ (2015).

References

  1. ^ Gregory p.17-18
  2. ^ Gregory p.18-19
  3. ^ Gregory p.19-22
  4. ^ Gregory p.22
  5. ^ Wellesley 1864, p. 56.
  6. ^ [Usurped!] Albert Benhamou, 2012
  7. ^ Lord Rosebery, Napoleon: The Last Phase, 1900, pp. 68–69.
  8. ^ George, Barbara B.; Caesar, Lucinda (2012). St Helena, Slavery and the Abolition on the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade (PDF). Saint Helena: Museum of St Helena. p. 8.
  9. ^ Scottish Highlands: Highland Clans and Regiments
  10. ^ a b "Lowe, Hudson" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  11. ^ Desmond Gregory (1996). Napoleon's Jailer: Lt. Gen. Sir Hudson Lowe : a Life. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-3657-2.
  12. ^ . Familysearch.org. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
Bibliography
  • Obit
  • Desmond Gregory Napoleon's Jailer: Lt. General Sir Hudson Lowe: A Life. Associated University Presses, 1996.
  • Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery, Napoleon: The Last Phase, London 1900.
  • Wellesley, Arthur Richard, ed. (1864). Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington KG. Vol. XI Occupation of France by the Allied Armies: Surrender of Napoleon and the Restoration of the Bourbons. J. Murray.
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainRose, John Holland (1911). "Lowe, Sir Hudson". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). pp. 72–73.

Further reading

  • Gilbert Martineau, Napoleon's St Helena (1968)
  • Kitching, G. C. (July 1948). "Sir Hudson Lowe and the East India Company". The English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. 63 (248): 322–341. doi:10.1093/ehr/lxiii.ccxlviii.322. JSTOR 555342.
Military offices
Preceded by General Officer Commanding, Ceylon
1826–?
Succeeded by
Preceded by Colonel of the 50th (Queen's Own) Regiment of Foot
1842–1844
Succeeded by
John Gardiner
Preceded by Colonel of the 56th (West Essex) Regiment of Foot
1832–1842
Succeeded by
Preceded by Colonel of the 93rd (Highland) Regiment of Foot
1822–1832
Succeeded by

External links

hudson, lowe, gcmg, july, 1769, january, 1844, anglo, irish, soldier, colonial, administrator, best, known, time, governor, helena, where, gaoler, emperor, napoléon, sirgcmg, kcbsir, signature14th, general, officer, commanding, ceylonin, office, 1826, preceded. Sir Hudson Lowe GCMG KCB 28 July 1769 10 January 1844 was an Anglo Irish soldier and colonial administrator who is best known for his time as Governor of St Helena where he was the gaoler of the Emperor Napoleon SirHudson LoweGCMG KCBSir Hudson Lowe and his signature14th General Officer Commanding CeylonIn office 1826 Preceded byJames CampbellSucceeded byJohn WilsonPersonal detailsBorn28 July 1769Died10 January 1844 1844 01 10 aged 74 Military serviceAllegianceUnited KingdomBranch serviceBritish ArmyRankMajor generalCommandsRoyal Corsican RangersGeneral Officer Commanding Ceylon Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Corsica 2 2 Napoleonic Wars 2 3 Saint Helena 2 4 After Saint Helena 3 Family 4 Portrayals in fiction 5 References 5 1 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life EditThe son of John Lowe an army surgeon he was born at Galway in Ireland his mother s native country His childhood was spent in various garrison towns particularly in the West Indies but he was educated chiefly at Salisbury Grammar 1 He obtained a post as ensign in the East Devon Militia when he was eleven In 1787 he entered his father s regiment the 50th Foot which was then serving at Gibraltar under Governor General Charles O Hara In 1791 he was promoted to Lieutenant The same year he was granted eighteen months leave and chose to spend the time travelling through Italy rather than return to Britain He chose to avoid travelling to France because the French Revolution had recently broken out 2 Career EditCorsica Edit Lowe arrived back at Gibraltar shortly after the outbreak of war between Britain and France in early 1793 The 50th were sent to take part in the Defence of Toulon which had been seized by an Allied force under Lord Hood after an invitation by French Royalists in the city The 50th arrived too late to assist the defence as the Allied forces had already withdrawn from the city They were then redirected to Corsica a French owned island where British troops had been sent to join with Corsicans under Pasquale Paoli Lowe s regiment served as part of General Dundas s force during the Siege of Bastia and Siege of Calvi driving the French from the island The regiment was stationed in Bastia Lowe volunteered to fetch supplies from Livorno in Italy but nearly died of malaria during the journey there 3 When he recovered Lowe returned to Corsica and was stationed in the citadel at Ajaccio as an aide to the Governor Colonel Wauchope close to where Napoleon Bonaparte s sisters had recently been living before they fled to mainland France 4 In October 1796 it was decided to abandon Corsica and the force at Ajaccio was embarked and taken to Elba The following year Elba was also abandoned and Lowe was evacuated with his regiment first to Gibraltar and then to Lisbon He spent the next two years as part of a British force which was placed to deter an invasion by French and Spanish forces Lowe later saw active service successively in Elba Portugal and Menorca where he was entrusted with the command of a battalion of volunteer Corsican exiles in the British Army the Royal Corsican Rangers who were armed with Baker rifles and trained as light infantry In Corsica he was actually billeted in the Casa Buonaparte He led the Corsican Rangers in Egypt in 1800 1801 Napoleonic Wars Edit After the peace of Amiens Lowe now a Major became assistant quartermaster general On the renewal of war with France in 1803 he was charged as a lieutenant colonel to raise the Corsican battalion again and with it assisted in the defense of Sicily On the capture of Capri he proceeded there with his battalion and a Maltese regiment but in October 1808 Joachim Murat ordered an attack upon the island which was organized by General Lamarque Lowe owing to the unreliability of the Maltese troops and no hope of help by sea had to agree to evacuate the island Sir William Napier criticized him but his garrison consisted of only 1362 men while the assailants numbered between 3000 and 4000 In the course of 1809 Lowe and his Corsicans helped in the capture of Ischia and Procida as well as of Zante Cephalonia and Cerigo For some months he acted as governor of Cephalonia and Ithaca and later of Santa Maura He returned to Britain in 1812 and in January 1813 was sent to inspect a Russo German legion then being formed He accompanied the armies of the allies through the campaigns of 1813 and 1814 being present at thirteen important battles He won praise from Blucher and Gneisenau for his gallantry and judgment He was chosen to bear to London the news of the first abdication of Napoleon in April 1814 He was knighted and promoted to major general he also received decorations from the Russian and Prussian courts Charged with the duties of quartermaster general of the army in the Netherlands in 1814 1815 he was about to take part in the Belgian campaign when he was offered the command of the British troops at Genoa but while still in the south of France he received on 1 August 1815 news of his appointment to the position of custodian of Napoleon Emperor of the French who had surrendered to HMS Bellerophon off Rochefort Lowe was to be Governor of Saint Helena the place of the former Emperor s exile At the time of Lowe s appointment Secretary of State for War and the Colonies Lord Bathurst wrote to Wellington I do not believe we could have found a fitter person of his rank in the army willing to accept a situation of so much confinement responsibility and exclusion from society 5 Saint Helena Edit Sir Hudson Lowe On his arrival at Plantation House he found that Napoleon had an uneasy relationship with Admiral Sir George Cockburn who had been responsible for conveying Napoleon to St Helena and was in charge of him pending the arrival of a new Governor Napoleon and Governor Lowe had a stormy relationship and only met half a dozen times To a large extent Lowe s hands were tied by his instructions from The 3rd Earl Bathurst but Lowe s characteristic lack of tact doubtless exacerbated the friction between them The news that rescue expeditions were being planned by Bonapartists in the United States led to the enforcement of stricter regulations in October 1816 Lowe ordered sentries to be posted round the garden of Napoleon s residence Longwood House at sunset instead of at 9 p m He assigned a British officer the task of catching sight of Napoleon every day Lowe created a set of petty rules that included restricting Napoleon to the Longwood Estate and requiring that the British not address Napoleon by his Imperial titles but only as a general He demanded that Napoleon pay for part of his imprisonment so Napoleon offered up some Imperial silver for sale This created such a backlash in Europe that the demand had to be cancelled Then he reduced the amount of firewood for Longwood News that Napoleon was burning his furniture to stay warm again caused such a backlash of public sympathy that the supply of firewood was restored All of this and more offended Napoleon and his followers who campaigned against Lowe Barry Edward O Meara the Irish surgeon whilst initially providing information for Lowe ultimately sided with Napoleon and joined in criticisms from Las Cases and Montholon The French Russian and Austrian commissioners on St Helena whilst hostile to Napoleon were also very critical of Lowe s conduct and found it impossible to get on with him In addition modern scholars debate Lowe s role in Napoleon s death Lowe s restriction of the former Emperor of the French to what amounts to house arrest not just exile certainly affected Napoleon s exercise and general health but some have gone so far as to suggest that Lowe may have had him poisoned After the death of the Emperor Napoleon in May 1821 Lowe returned to England On the publication of O Meara s book Lowe resolved to prosecute the author but his application was too late Ironically O Meara s book was softer on Lowe than what the doctor really thought of him and of his role as executioner at St Helena His true attitudes are revealed in the letters he passed clandestinely to a clerk at the Admiralty 6 Apart from the thanks of George IV at a levee he received little reward from the British Government whose orders he had obeyed to the letter His treatment of Napoleon and the subsequent public relations problems for the British Government remained an underlying issue for the rest of his career Field Marshal The 1st Duke of Wellington later said that he was a very bad choice he was a man wanting in education and judgment He was a stupid man He knew nothing at all of the world and like all men who knew nothing of the world he was suspicious and jealous 7 He contributed to the abolition of slavery on the island 8 After Saint Helena Edit In June 1822 he was appointed Colonel in Chief of the Sutherland Highlanders in place of Sir Thomas Hislop 9 In 1825 30 he commanded the forces in Ceylon but was not appointed to the Governorship when it fell vacant in 1830 He was appointed to the colonelcy of the 56th West Essex Regiment of Foot in 1831 and in 1842 transferred to the colonelcy of his old regiment the 50th Queen s Own Regiment of Foot He was also made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George GCMG citation needed Lowe died at Charlotte Cottage near Sloane Street Chelsea of paralysis on 10 Jan 1844 aged 74 10 Family EditIn London on 30 December 1815 11 Lowe married Mrs Susan Johnson daughter of Stephen De Lancey sister of William Howe De Lancey and widow of Colonel William Johnson She had previously had two daughters one of whom had died and the other married Count Balmain They had five children two sons Hudson Lowe born in 1816 and Edward William Howe de Lancey Lowe born in 1820 and three daughters Camilla Francis Clara Maria Susanna Lowe born on 26 August 1818 Lady Lowe died in Hertford Street Mayfair London on 22 August 1832 10 12 Portrayals in fiction EditSir Hudson Lowe was portrayed by Orson Welles in Sacha Guitry s film Napoleon 1955 by Sir Ralph Richardson in Eagle in a Cage 1972 by Vernon Dobtcheff in L Otage de l Europe 1989 by David Francis in the Napoleon miniseries 2002 and by Richard E Grant in Monsieur N 2003 He appears in the play La Derniere Salve by Jean Claude Brisville 1995 He is a character in Tom Keneally s book Napoleon s Last Island 2015 References Edit Gregory p 17 18 Gregory p 18 19 Gregory p 19 22 Gregory p 22 Wellesley 1864 p 56 Barry O Meara s clandestine letters Usurped Albert Benhamou 2012 Lord Rosebery Napoleon The Last Phase 1900 pp 68 69 George Barbara B Caesar Lucinda 2012 St Helena Slavery and the Abolition on the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade PDF Saint Helena Museum of St Helena p 8 Scottish Highlands Highland Clans and Regiments a b Lowe Hudson Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Desmond Gregory 1996 Napoleon s Jailer Lt Gen Sir Hudson Lowe a Life Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press ISBN 978 0 8386 3657 2 Free Family History and Genealogy Records Familysearch org Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 3 December 2016 BibliographyObit Desmond Gregory Napoleon s Jailer Lt General Sir Hudson Lowe A Life Associated University Presses 1996 Archibald Primrose 5th Earl of Rosebery Napoleon The Last Phase London 1900 Wellesley Arthur Richard ed 1864 Supplementary Despatches Correspondence and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington KG Vol XI Occupation of France by the Allied Armies Surrender of Napoleon and the Restoration of the Bourbons J Murray Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Rose John Holland 1911 Lowe Sir Hudson Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed pp 72 73 Further reading Edit Gilbert Martineau Napoleon s St Helena 1968 Kitching G C July 1948 Sir Hudson Lowe and the East India Company The English Historical Review Oxford University Press 63 248 322 341 doi 10 1093 ehr lxiii ccxlviii 322 JSTOR 555342 Military officesPreceded byJames Campbell General Officer Commanding Ceylon1826 Succeeded byJohn WilsonPreceded bySir George Walker Colonel of the 50th Queen s Own Regiment of Foot1842 1844 Succeeded byJohn GardinerPreceded byThe Lord Aylmer Colonel of the 56th West Essex Regiment of Foot1832 1842 Succeeded byThe Earl of WestmorlandPreceded bySir Thomas Hislop Bt Colonel of the 93rd Highland Regiment of Foot1822 1832 Succeeded byJohn CameronExternal links EditSuccinct chronology of Napoleon s Captivity Usurped by Albert Benhamou Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hudson Lowe amp oldid 1120747264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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