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John Pope Hennessy

Sir John Pope Hennessy KCMG (Chinese: 軒尼詩; 8 August 1834 – 7 October 1891), was an Irish and British politician and colonial administrator who served as the eighth Governor of Hong Kong and the fifteenth Governor of Mauritius.

Sir John Pope Hennessy
15th Governor of Mauritius
In office
1 June 1883 – 11 December 1889
MonarchVictoria
Preceded bySir Frederick Napier Broome
Succeeded bySir Charles Cameron Lees
8th Governor of Hong Kong
In office
23 April 1877 – 30 March 1883
MonarchVictoria
Lieutenant GovernorSir Francis Colborne
Edward Donovan
John Sargent
Colonial SecretaryJohn Gardiner Austin
William Henry Marsh
Preceded bySir Arthur Edward Kennedy
Succeeded bySir George Bowen
10th Governor of Barbados and the Windward Islands
In office
1875–1876
Preceded bySanford Freeling, acting
Succeeded byGeorge Cumine Strahan
25th Governor of the Bahamas
In office
1873–1874
MonarchVictoria
Preceded bySir George Cumine Strahan
Succeeded bySir William Robinson
Governor of Sierra Leone
In office
1872–1873
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byJohn Jennings Kendall, acting
Succeeded byRobert Keate
Governor of the Gold Coast
In office
1872–1872
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byHerbert Taylor Ussher
Succeeded byCharles Spencer Salmon, acting
6th Governor of Labuan
In office
1867–1871
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byHugh Low (acting)
Succeeded bySir Henry Ernest Gascoyne Bulwer
Personal details
Born(1834-08-08)8 August 1834
County Cork, Ireland
Died7 October 1891(1891-10-07) (aged 57)
Rostellan Castle, County Cork, Ireland
Political partyIrish Parliamentary Party
Other political
affiliations
Conservative (1859–1865)
Spouse
Catherine Elizabeth Low
(m. 1868)
Domestic partnerA. M. Conyngham
Children2 daughters, 3 sons
Alma materQueen's University of Ireland
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese軒尼詩
Simplified Chinese轩尼诗
Transcriptions
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationHīn nèih sī
JyutpingHin1 nei4 si1

Early life

John Pope Hennessy was born in County Cork in 1834, the son of John Hennessy of Ballyhennessy and his wife Elizabeth Casey. He was one of eight children. The family were middle class with his father working as a hide merchant. He suffered from bronchitis as a child and was therefore initially privately tutored. In 1850 he entered Queen's College, Cork, initially studying in the science division of the faculty of arts. During his first year he was awarded a scholarship as he was one of the top three students, and this allowed him to transfer to medicine. He proved to be a gifted student scoring honours in five out of six subjects in his finals, came first in surgery and second in medicine.[1]

In May 1855 he went to London to further his studies at Charing Cross Hospital. He then entered public service.[2]

Public service

He started his Public Service career as the Supplemental Clerk at the Privy Council, and eventually became a minor Conservative member of the British Parliament, representing King's County from 1859 to 1865.[3] Whilst an MP he studied law at the Inner Temple, being called to the bar in 1861. In 1890, as MP for North Kilkenny he joined the Irish National Federation. He died the following year.[3]

Early colonial service

 
Caricature by Ape in Vanity Fair, 1875

Hennessy eventually joined the Colonial Office and became colonial Governor of Labuan in 1867 where he put the Crown Colony into solvency by introducing convict labour from the Straits Settlements. He went on to become the Governor of Sierra Leone from 1872 to 1873, when he moved to the governorship of the Bahamas.[4] He became Governor-in-Chief of the Windward Islands, from 1873 until 1877, with primary authority over Barbados, and executive oversight over the various British Lt. Governors and Administrators charged with running day-to-day affairs on the various islands.

Although Hennessy was born into the Anglo-Irish landowning gentry, his status as a Roman Catholic made him something of an outsider, particularly in his dealings with Protestant British colonial elites, whether in Barbados, Hong Kong, or Mauritius. Indeed, his earliest contributions as a Member of Parliament in 1860 pertained to the temporal power of the Pope, and unfolding events in Italy.[5] Coming into colonial administration, he was among a cohort of "new thinkers" whose ideas gained ground following the Sepoy Mutiny in India in 1857. Speaking at length in the House of Commons on 26 July 1860 about British civil and military forces in India, Hennessy urged a shift in policies so that "the military administration of India would be conducted with greater skill, with more economy, and, as a natural result of a higher educational standard, with a greater regard for the feelings and interests of the Native population. Indeed, recent events furnished us with the most conclusive evidence that many of the British officers, entrusted with grave authority in India, had, from an ignorance of popular customs and a disregard of national habits and traditions, given great cause of complaint and encouragement to disaffection. As long as we send out officers to India who seem inclined to treat the Natives as slaves, who seem unable or unwilling to appreciate the noble qualities, of that unfortunate people, and who add the grossest military outrages and insults to the civil misgovernment and financial burdens we have imposed upon them, so long will our rule in India be a blot upon civilization".[6]

Governor of Hong Kong

 
Hawaiian King Kalakaua visits Hong Kong in 1881. Hennessy is sitting immediately to the left of the King

Immediately after his tenure in Barbados, Hennessy was appointed as Governor of Hong Kong, a position from which he served until 1882.

During his tenure, Hennessy realised that the Chinese people, who were treated as second-class citizens up to that time, had developed an increasingly important influence on the Hong Kong economy. With that in mind, he lifted the ban that forbade Chinese people from buying lands, constructing buildings, and operate businesses in the Central District. This caused a development boom in the Central District. Also, he allowed Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to naturalise as British subjects. He appointed the first Chinese member (Ng Choy, who would later become the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China) to the Legislative Council.

In 1878, Hennessy also mandated that English be taught in all government schools in Hong Kong.

Due to his progressive attitude he was known by the Chinese as "Number One Good Friend".[7]

Also, during his rule, he established the first Grant-in-Aid system, a milestone in the educational history of Hong Kong.

Soon after arriving in Hong Kong, in April 1877, Hennessy set out to implement the "separate system" in Victoria Gaol, meaning separate cells for prisoners, during the night if not also during the day. This plan hinged upon sending long-term prisoners to Labuan, for convict labour.[8]

Governor of Mauritius

After his tenure as Governor of Hong Kong was over, Hennessy went on to become the 15th Governor of Mauritius from 1 June 1883 to 11 December 1889. Upon his arrival on 1 June 1883 on the island, Hennessy undertook to mauricianise the local administration by reducing the powers of the English officials, appointing Mauritians to positions of responsibility and proposing a new constitution based on the principle "Mauritius for Mauritians". It was therefore natural that he moved closer to the Mauritian lawyer William Newton, leader of the reform movement who demanded a more direct involvement of Indo Mauritians and coloured settlers in the administration of their affairs.[9] In 1886 Hennessy was suspended from office for some months during a enquiry into allegations of involvement in local politics as well as the collapse of a bank.[10] It was under Hennessy that Mauritius knew its first shudder of democracy. This was his last post in the Colonial Service.[11]

Personal life

 
Hennessy's family

Hennessy had two illegitimate daughters with his mistress, Miss A. M. Conyngham, before, on 4 February 1868, marrying Catherine "Kitty" Elizabeth Low (1850–1923), daughter of Hugh Low, his predecessor as Governor of Labuan. They had three sons, including Richard Pope-Hennessy.[12] Richard had two sons, art historian John Wyndham Pope-Hennessy (1913–1994) and writer James Pope-Hennessy (1916–1974), who authored a biography of his grandfather, Verandah, in 1964.

His personal motto was "Three Grand Qualifications to Success", which he described as "The first is audacity, the second is audacity, and the third is audacity".

Hennessy died of heart failure on 7 October 1891 at his residence, Rostellan Castle, near Cork, Ireland.

Honours

 
Sir John Pope Hennessy Governor of Mauritius, medal by Oscar Roty

Memorials

As he was not popular among the European community of Hong Kong, there were no contemporary memorials there. However, on 14 June 1929, a main road located on the new reclamation was called Hennessy Road, and there is now also a crowded commercial and shopping area at Wan Chai and Causeway Bay on Hong Kong Island named after him. In Port Louis, capital of Mauritius, there is both a major street, Pope Hennessy Street, and a statue by M. Loumeau erected in 1908.[12] Hennessy Road, a street in civil lines, Nagpur, Maharashtra state, India is also named after him.

Notes

  1. ^ "In the United Kingdom" (PDF). City University of Hong Kong.
  2. ^ "Papers of Sir John Pope-Hennessy - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 14 September 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ "Hansard 1803–2005".
  5. ^ "Commons Sittings in the 19th century (Hansard)".
  6. ^ House of Commons debate, 26 July 1860, Hansards, Vol. 160, cc. 231-59, 235
  7. ^ Sanghera, Sathnam (2021). Empireland : how imperialism has shaped modern Britain. UK. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-241-44529-7. OCLC 1193065927.
  8. ^ Hong Kong Government Gazette, 23 February 1878
  9. ^ Napal, D. (13 October 2017). "The Alleged Indian Peril (Glimpses of History 1956)". Mauritius Times. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  10. ^ "Mauritian democracy: a caesarean birth". Lexpress.mu. L'Express. 2 June 2005. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  11. ^ "Mauritian democracy: a caesarean birth". L'Express. 2 June 2005. Retrieved 2 June 2005.
  12. ^ a b Stearn, Roger T. (2007). "Hennessy, Sir John Pope (1834–1891)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22537. Accessed 2 August 2018.

Sources

  • "Sir John Pope Hennessy dead" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  • Pope-Hennessy, James (1964). Verandah: Some Episodes in the Crown Colonies: 1867–1889. London: George Allen and Unwin.

External links

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by John Pope Hennessy
  • Sir Walter Raleigh in Ireland (1883) via archive.org
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for King's County
1859 – 1865
With: Sir Patrick O'Brien, Bt
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for North Kilkenny
18901891
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by
Hugh Low (acting)
Governor of Labuan
1867–1871
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Gold Coast
1872
Succeeded by
Charles Spencer Salmon, acting
Preceded by
John Jennings Kendall, acting
Governor of Sierra Leone
1872–1873
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Bahamas
1873–1874
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Sanford Freeling, acting
Governor of Barbados and the Windward Islands
1876–1877
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Hong Kong
1877–1882
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Mauritius
1883–1889
Succeeded by

john, pope, hennessy, this, article, about, colonial, administrator, grandson, historian, john, pope, hennessy, kcmg, chinese, 軒尼詩, august, 1834, october, 1891, irish, british, politician, colonial, administrator, served, eighth, governor, hong, kong, fifteent. This article is about the colonial administrator For his grandson the art historian see John Pope Hennessy Sir John Pope Hennessy KCMG Chinese 軒尼詩 8 August 1834 7 October 1891 was an Irish and British politician and colonial administrator who served as the eighth Governor of Hong Kong and the fifteenth Governor of Mauritius Sir John Pope HennessyKCMG15th Governor of MauritiusIn office 1 June 1883 11 December 1889MonarchVictoriaPreceded bySir Frederick Napier BroomeSucceeded bySir Charles Cameron Lees8th Governor of Hong KongIn office 23 April 1877 30 March 1883MonarchVictoriaLieutenant GovernorSir Francis ColborneEdward DonovanJohn SargentColonial SecretaryJohn Gardiner AustinWilliam Henry MarshPreceded bySir Arthur Edward KennedySucceeded bySir George Bowen10th Governor of Barbados and the Windward IslandsIn office 1875 1876Preceded bySanford Freeling actingSucceeded byGeorge Cumine Strahan25th Governor of the BahamasIn office 1873 1874MonarchVictoriaPreceded bySir George Cumine StrahanSucceeded bySir William RobinsonGovernor of Sierra LeoneIn office 1872 1873MonarchVictoriaPreceded byJohn Jennings Kendall actingSucceeded byRobert KeateGovernor of the Gold CoastIn office 1872 1872MonarchVictoriaPreceded byHerbert Taylor UssherSucceeded byCharles Spencer Salmon acting6th Governor of LabuanIn office 1867 1871MonarchVictoriaPreceded byHugh Low acting Succeeded bySir Henry Ernest Gascoyne BulwerPersonal detailsBorn 1834 08 08 8 August 1834County Cork IrelandDied7 October 1891 1891 10 07 aged 57 Rostellan Castle County Cork IrelandPolitical partyIrish Parliamentary PartyOther politicalaffiliationsConservative 1859 1865 SpouseCatherine Elizabeth Low m 1868 wbr Domestic partnerA M ConynghamChildren2 daughters 3 sonsAlma materQueen s University of IrelandChinese nameTraditional Chinese軒尼詩Simplified Chinese轩尼诗TranscriptionsYue CantoneseYale RomanizationHin neih siJyutpingHin1 nei4 si1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Public service 3 Early colonial service 4 Governor of Hong Kong 5 Governor of Mauritius 6 Personal life 7 Honours 8 Memorials 9 Notes 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly life EditJohn Pope Hennessy was born in County Cork in 1834 the son of John Hennessy of Ballyhennessy and his wife Elizabeth Casey He was one of eight children The family were middle class with his father working as a hide merchant He suffered from bronchitis as a child and was therefore initially privately tutored In 1850 he entered Queen s College Cork initially studying in the science division of the faculty of arts During his first year he was awarded a scholarship as he was one of the top three students and this allowed him to transfer to medicine He proved to be a gifted student scoring honours in five out of six subjects in his finals came first in surgery and second in medicine 1 In May 1855 he went to London to further his studies at Charing Cross Hospital He then entered public service 2 Public service EditHe started his Public Service career as the Supplemental Clerk at the Privy Council and eventually became a minor Conservative member of the British Parliament representing King s County from 1859 to 1865 3 Whilst an MP he studied law at the Inner Temple being called to the bar in 1861 In 1890 as MP for North Kilkenny he joined the Irish National Federation He died the following year 3 Early colonial service Edit Caricature by Ape in Vanity Fair 1875 Hennessy eventually joined the Colonial Office and became colonial Governor of Labuan in 1867 where he put the Crown Colony into solvency by introducing convict labour from the Straits Settlements He went on to become the Governor of Sierra Leone from 1872 to 1873 when he moved to the governorship of the Bahamas 4 He became Governor in Chief of the Windward Islands from 1873 until 1877 with primary authority over Barbados and executive oversight over the various British Lt Governors and Administrators charged with running day to day affairs on the various islands Although Hennessy was born into the Anglo Irish landowning gentry his status as a Roman Catholic made him something of an outsider particularly in his dealings with Protestant British colonial elites whether in Barbados Hong Kong or Mauritius Indeed his earliest contributions as a Member of Parliament in 1860 pertained to the temporal power of the Pope and unfolding events in Italy 5 Coming into colonial administration he was among a cohort of new thinkers whose ideas gained ground following the Sepoy Mutiny in India in 1857 Speaking at length in the House of Commons on 26 July 1860 about British civil and military forces in India Hennessy urged a shift in policies so that the military administration of India would be conducted with greater skill with more economy and as a natural result of a higher educational standard with a greater regard for the feelings and interests of the Native population Indeed recent events furnished us with the most conclusive evidence that many of the British officers entrusted with grave authority in India had from an ignorance of popular customs and a disregard of national habits and traditions given great cause of complaint and encouragement to disaffection As long as we send out officers to India who seem inclined to treat the Natives as slaves who seem unable or unwilling to appreciate the noble qualities of that unfortunate people and who add the grossest military outrages and insults to the civil misgovernment and financial burdens we have imposed upon them so long will our rule in India be a blot upon civilization 6 Governor of Hong Kong Edit Hawaiian King Kalakaua visits Hong Kong in 1881 Hennessy is sitting immediately to the left of the King Immediately after his tenure in Barbados Hennessy was appointed as Governor of Hong Kong a position from which he served until 1882 During his tenure Hennessy realised that the Chinese people who were treated as second class citizens up to that time had developed an increasingly important influence on the Hong Kong economy With that in mind he lifted the ban that forbade Chinese people from buying lands constructing buildings and operate businesses in the Central District This caused a development boom in the Central District Also he allowed Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to naturalise as British subjects He appointed the first Chinese member Ng Choy who would later become the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China to the Legislative Council In 1878 Hennessy also mandated that English be taught in all government schools in Hong Kong Due to his progressive attitude he was known by the Chinese as Number One Good Friend 7 Also during his rule he established the first Grant in Aid system a milestone in the educational history of Hong Kong Soon after arriving in Hong Kong in April 1877 Hennessy set out to implement the separate system in Victoria Gaol meaning separate cells for prisoners during the night if not also during the day This plan hinged upon sending long term prisoners to Labuan for convict labour 8 Governor of Mauritius EditAfter his tenure as Governor of Hong Kong was over Hennessy went on to become the 15th Governor of Mauritius from 1 June 1883 to 11 December 1889 Upon his arrival on 1 June 1883 on the island Hennessy undertook to mauricianise the local administration by reducing the powers of the English officials appointing Mauritians to positions of responsibility and proposing a new constitution based on the principle Mauritius for Mauritians It was therefore natural that he moved closer to the Mauritian lawyer William Newton leader of the reform movement who demanded a more direct involvement of Indo Mauritians and coloured settlers in the administration of their affairs 9 In 1886 Hennessy was suspended from office for some months during a enquiry into allegations of involvement in local politics as well as the collapse of a bank 10 It was under Hennessy that Mauritius knew its first shudder of democracy This was his last post in the Colonial Service 11 Personal life Edit Hennessy s family Hennessy had two illegitimate daughters with his mistress Miss A M Conyngham before on 4 February 1868 marrying Catherine Kitty Elizabeth Low 1850 1923 daughter of Hugh Low his predecessor as Governor of Labuan They had three sons including Richard Pope Hennessy 12 Richard had two sons art historian John Wyndham Pope Hennessy 1913 1994 and writer James Pope Hennessy 1916 1974 who authored a biography of his grandfather Verandah in 1964 His personal motto was Three Grand Qualifications to Success which he described as The first is audacity the second is audacity and the third is audacity Hennessy died of heart failure on 7 October 1891 at his residence Rostellan Castle near Cork Ireland Honours Edit Sir John Pope Hennessy Governor of Mauritius medal by Oscar Roty KCMG 1880 Memorials EditAs he was not popular among the European community of Hong Kong there were no contemporary memorials there However on 14 June 1929 a main road located on the new reclamation was called Hennessy Road and there is now also a crowded commercial and shopping area at Wan Chai and Causeway Bay on Hong Kong Island named after him In Port Louis capital of Mauritius there is both a major street Pope Hennessy Street and a statue by M Loumeau erected in 1908 12 Hennessy Road a street in civil lines Nagpur Maharashtra state India is also named after him Notes Edit In the United Kingdom PDF City University of Hong Kong Papers of Sir John Pope Hennessy Archives Hub archiveshub jisc ac uk Retrieved 10 April 2021 a b Leigh Rayment s House of Commons pages K Archived from the original on 14 September 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Hansard 1803 2005 Commons Sittings in the 19th century Hansard House of Commons debate 26 July 1860 Hansards Vol 160 cc 231 59 235 Sanghera Sathnam 2021 Empireland how imperialism has shaped modern Britain UK p 159 ISBN 978 0 241 44529 7 OCLC 1193065927 Hong Kong Government Gazette 23 February 1878 Napal D 13 October 2017 The Alleged Indian Peril Glimpses of History 1956 Mauritius Times Retrieved 13 October 2017 Mauritian democracy a caesarean birth Lexpress mu L Express 2 June 2005 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Mauritian democracy a caesarean birth L Express 2 June 2005 Retrieved 2 June 2005 a b Stearn Roger T 2007 Hennessy Sir John Pope 1834 1891 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22537 Accessed 2 August 2018 Sources Edit Sir John Pope Hennessy dead PDF The New York Times Retrieved 21 August 2012 Pope Hennessy James 1964 Verandah Some Episodes in the Crown Colonies 1867 1889 London George Allen and Unwin External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Pope Hennessy Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by John Pope Hennessy Sir Walter Raleigh in Ireland 1883 via archive orgParliament of the United KingdomPreceded bySir Patrick O Brien Bt Loftus Henry Bland Member of Parliament for King s County1859 1865 With Sir Patrick O Brien Bt Succeeded bySir Patrick O Brien Bt John Gilbert KingPreceded byEdward Marum Member of Parliament for North Kilkenny1890 1891 Succeeded byPatrick McDermottGovernment officesPreceded byHugh Low acting Governor of Labuan1867 1871 Succeeded bySir Henry Ernest Gascoyne BulwerPreceded byHerbert Taylor Ussher Governor of the Gold Coast1872 Succeeded byCharles Spencer Salmon actingPreceded byJohn Jennings Kendall acting Governor of Sierra Leone1872 1873 Succeeded byRobert KeatePreceded byGeorge Cumine Strahan Governor of the Bahamas1873 1874 Succeeded bySir William RobinsonPreceded bySanford Freeling acting Governor of Barbados and the Windward Islands1876 1877 Succeeded byGeorge Cumine StrahanPreceded bySir Arthur Edward Kennedy Governor of Hong Kong1877 1882 Succeeded bySir William Henry Marsh actingPreceded bySir Frederick Napier Broome Governor of Mauritius1883 1889 Succeeded bySir Charles Cameron Lees Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Pope Hennessy amp oldid 1147263113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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