fbpx
Wikipedia

John Shore, 1st Baron Teignmouth

John Shore, 1st Baron Teignmouth (5 October 1751 – 14 February 1834) was a British official of the East India Company who served as Governor-General of Bengal from 1793 to 1798. In 1798 he was created Baron Teignmouth in the Peerage of Ireland. Shore was the first president of the British and Foreign Bible Society.[1] A close friend of the orientalist Sir William Jones (1746–1794), Shore edited a memoir of Jones's life in 1804, containing many of Jones's letters.

The Lord Teignmouth
Watercolour by George Richmond, 1832
Governor-General of the Presidency of Fort William
In office
October 1793 – March 1798
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byThe Earl Cornwallis
Succeeded bySir Alured Clarke
(Acting Governor-General)
Personal details
Born5 October 1751 (1751-10-05)
St James's, London
Died14 February 1834 (1834-02-15) (aged 82)
Portman Square, London
Resting placeSt Marylebone Parish Church
Spouse
Charlotte Cornish
(m. 1786)
Children9, including Charles John
EducationHarrow School

Early life

Born in St. James's Street, Piccadilly, on 5 October 1751, he was the elder son of Thomas Shore of Melton Place, near Romford, an East India Company employee, by his wife Dorothy, daughter of Captain Shepherd of the company's naval service. At the age of fourteen Shore was sent to Harrow School.[2] In his seventeenth year Shore was moved to a commercial school at Hoxton for the purpose of learning bookkeeping, to take up an opportunity made for him by the merchant Frederick Pigou, a family friend.[1] Towards the close of 1768 he sailed for India as a writer in the East India Company's service.[2]

Soon after his arrival in Kolkata, then called Calcutta, in May 1769 Shore was appointed to the secret political department, in which he remained for about twelve months. In September 1770 he was nominated assistant to the board of revenue at Murshidabad. Shore at the age of 19 suddenly found himself invested with the civil and fiscal jurisdiction of a large district; he also studied languages.[2]

In 1772 Shore went to Rajshahi as first assistant to the resident of the province. In the following year he acted temporarily as Persian translator and secretary to the board at Murshidabad. In June 1775 he was appointed a member of the revenue council at Calcutta. He continued to hold that post until the dissolution of the council at the close of 1780. Though he revised one of the bitter philippics launched by Philip Francis against Warren Hastings, and is said to have written one of the memorials against the supreme court and Sir Elijah Impey, he was appointed by the governor-general to a seat in the committee of revenue at Calcutta, which took the place of the provincial council.[2]

Revenue official

Shore gained the confidence of Hastings by attention to his duties. Besides superintending the collection of the revenues, he devoted much of his time to the adjudication of exchequer cases. He acted as revenue commissioner in Dacca and Behar, and he drew up plans for judicial and financial reforms. Deploring the lavish profusion of the governor-general, Shore communicated his views of the financial situation to John Macpherson, who, instead of privately imparting them to Hastings, inserted them as a minute into the records of the Supreme Council. As a result of what was seen as a breach of confidence, Shore resigned his seat on the board.[2]

In January 1785 Shore returned to England in the company of Hastings. While in England, on 14 February 1786 he married Charlotte, the only daughter of James Cornish, a medical practitioner at Teignmouth.[2]

Having been appointed by the Court of Directors to a seat on the Supreme Council, Shore returned to India, and on 21 January 1787 he took his seat as a member of the government of Bengal. Many of the reforms instituted by Charles Cornwallis were attributable to Shore's influence in the council. In the summer of 1789, Shore completed the ten-yearly settlement of the revenues of Bengal, Bihar, and Odisha. Though Shore recommended caution and further inquiry, and protested against rigidity, his decision in favour of the proprietary rights of the zamindars was ratified by Cornwallis and formed the basis of the much discussed Permanent Settlement.[2]

In December 1789, Shore embarked for England, where he arrived in April 1790. He is said to have refused the offer of a baronetcy on the ground of "the incompatibility of poverty and titles". On 2 June 1790 he was examined as a witness in the trial of Warren Hastings with regard to the transactions of the committee of revenue at Calcutta, and he testified to his friend's popularity among the Indians.[2]

Governor-general

Shore was appointed by the court of directors governor-general of India in succession to Cornwallis on 19 September 1792, and was created a baronet on 2 October following;[3] Edmund Burke protested vainly. Shore embarked for India at the end of the month. On 10 March 1793 he arrived at Calcutta, where he remained without official employment or responsibility until the departure of Cornwallis. He succeeded to the government on 28 October 1793.[2]

The period of Shore's rule as governor-general was comparatively uneventful. His policy was attacked as temporising and timid. He acquiesced in the invasion by the Marathas of the dominions of Ali Khan Asaf Jah II, the Nizam of Hyderabad; he permitted the growth of a French subsidiary force in the service of more than one native power; he thwarted Lord Hobart's efforts for extending the sphere of British influence; and he looked on while Tipu Sahib was preparing for war. In these matters Shore faithfully obeyed his instructions.[2]

Though he showed weakness in dealing with the mutiny of the officers of the Bengal army, he boldly settled the question of the Oudh succession, when he substituted Saadat Ali Khan II for Wazir Ali Khan, albeit at the cost of the Massacre of Benares. As a reward for his services Shore was created Baron Teignmouth, of Teignmouth in the peerage of Ireland by letters patent executed at Dublin on 3 March 1798.[2][4]

Later life

Resigning the government into the hands of Sir Alured Clarke, Teignmouth left India in March 1798. On 4 April 1807 he was appointed a member of the board of control, an office to which no salary was attached, and four days afterwards was sworn a member of the privy council. He occasionally transacted business at the board of control, or at the Cockpit, where as a privy councillor he sometimes decided Indian appeals with Sir William Grant and Sir John Nicholl. But he occupied the most of his time in religious and philanthropic matters, though he nominally remained a member of the board until February 1828.[2]

Teignmouth never took his seat in the Irish House of Lords, nor was he elected a representative peer after the union. He was twice examined before the House of Commons on Indian affairs, on 18 June 1806 and on 30 March 1813. In consequence of the order of the House of Commons for Teignmouth's attendance on the first occasion, the House of Lords on 19 July 1806 passed a resolution maintaining the privilege of peerage as apart from the privilege of parliament. This resolution, however, was not communicated to the Commons; and on the second occasion the order of the Commons for Teignmouth's attendance was not questioned by the Lords.[2]

Shore became a prominent member of the Clapham sect: from 1802 to 1808 he lived at Clapham. He then moved to London, where he passed the remainder of his days. He was elected the first president of the British and Foreign Bible Society on 14 May 1804, and held that office until the end of his life. He took an active part in the various controversies in the Society, and gave his decision in favour of the exclusion of the apocryphal books from all editions of the Bible issued by the society. He died at his house in Portman Square on 14 February 1834, aged 82, and was buried in Marylebone parish church, where a monument was erected to his memory.[2]

Teignmouth was elected president of the Royal Society of Literature, but declined the office in favour of Bishop Burgess.[2]

Works

Teignmouth was a close friend of Sir William Jones, whom he succeeded as president of the Asiatic Society of Bengal on 22 May 1794. On that occasion he delivered an address on the 'Literary History' of his predecessor (London, 1795), which was frequently reprinted, and has been translated into Italian. Three of his contributions to the society are printed in 'Asiatick Researches' (ii. 307–22, 383–7, iv. 331– 350). He translated in three manuscript volumes the Persian version of an abridgment of the 'Jôg Bashurst,' but later destroyed them in consequence of the little encouragement which his translations of Persian versions of Hindu authors received. He wrote a number of articles for the Christian Observer, and the earlier annual reports of the Bible Society were written by him. He was also the author of some mediocre verse. He published:[2]

  • ‘Memoirs of the Life, Writings, and Correspondence of Sir William Jones,’ London, 1804. This passed through several editions, and formed vols. i. and ii. of ‘The Works of Sir William Jones,’ which were edited by Lady Jones (London, 1807, 13 vols.)
  • ‘Considerations on the Practicability, Policy, and Obligation of communicating to the Natives of India the Knowledge of Christianity. With Observations on he “Prefatory Remarks” to a pamphlet published by Major Scott Waring. By a late Resident in Bengal,’ London, 1808. Reply to John Scott-Waring.
  • 'A Letter to the Rev. Christopher Wordsworth, D.D., in reply to his Strictures on the British and Foreign Bible Society,' London, 1810.
  • 'Thoughts on the Providence of God,' London, 1834 (anon.)

A portrait of Teignmouth was painted by Arthur William Devis.[2]

Family

Teignmouth had three sons and six daughters by his wife, who died on 13 July 1834. He was succeeded in the title by his eldest son, Charles John Shore.[2] His second son, Frederick John married in 1830 Charlotte Mary Cornish of Devonshire.[5] The second daughter Anna Maria married Thomas Noel Hill,[6] who had fought at the Battle of Waterloo. His daughter Caroline Dorothea married Rev. Robert Anderson (their eldest daughter, Florence Caroline, married Lord Alwyne Compton).[7] Shore was great-uncle to the poet Louisa Catherine Shore.[8]

Coat of arms of John Shore, 1st Baron Teignmouth
 
Crest
A stork regardant with a stone in its dexter claw Proper.
Escutcheon
Argent a chevron Sable between three holly leaves Vert.
Supporters
Two storks regardant Proper.
Motto
Perimus Licitis (We Die In A Good Cause) [9]

References

  1. ^ a b Embree, Ainslie T. "Shore, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25452. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Shore, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  3. ^ "No. 13463". The London Gazette. 29 September 1792. p. 765.
  4. ^ "No. 14064". The London Gazette. 11 November 1797. p. 1081.
  5. ^ La Belle Assemblee London, February 1830.
  6. ^ Falkner, James. "Hill, Sir Thomas Noel". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13312. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ Stanton, V. H. "Compton, Lord Alwyne". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32523. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ "Shore, Louisa Catherine" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  9. ^ Debrett's Peerage. 1838.
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Shore, John". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

Further reading

  • Charles John Shore Baron Teignmouth (1843). Memoir of the Life and Correspondence of John Lord Teignmouth. Hatchard and Son.
  • Birendra Bahadur Srivastava (1981). Sir John Shore's policy towards the Indian states. Chugh.gjjn

External links

    Government offices
    Preceded by Governor-General of India
    1793–1798
    Succeeded by
    Peerage of Ireland
    New creation Baron Teignmouth
    1798–1834
    Succeeded by
    Baronetage of Great Britain
    New creation Baronet
    (of Heathcote)
    1792–1834
    Succeeded by

    john, shore, baron, teignmouth, john, shore, redirects, here, inventor, tuning, fork, john, shore, trumpeter, other, people, john, shore, disambiguation, october, 1751, february, 1834, british, official, east, india, company, served, governor, general, bengal,. John Shore redirects here For the inventor of the tuning fork see John Shore trumpeter For other people see John Shore disambiguation John Shore 1st Baron Teignmouth 5 October 1751 14 February 1834 was a British official of the East India Company who served as Governor General of Bengal from 1793 to 1798 In 1798 he was created Baron Teignmouth in the Peerage of Ireland Shore was the first president of the British and Foreign Bible Society 1 A close friend of the orientalist Sir William Jones 1746 1794 Shore edited a memoir of Jones s life in 1804 containing many of Jones s letters The Right HonourableThe Lord TeignmouthWatercolour by George Richmond 1832Governor General of the Presidency of Fort WilliamIn office October 1793 March 1798MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byThe Earl CornwallisSucceeded bySir Alured Clarke Acting Governor General Personal detailsBorn5 October 1751 1751 10 05 St James s LondonDied14 February 1834 1834 02 15 aged 82 Portman Square LondonResting placeSt Marylebone Parish ChurchSpouseCharlotte Cornish m 1786 wbr Children9 including Charles JohnEducationHarrow School Contents 1 Early life 2 Revenue official 3 Governor general 4 Later life 5 Works 6 Family 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditBorn in St James s Street Piccadilly on 5 October 1751 he was the elder son of Thomas Shore of Melton Place near Romford an East India Company employee by his wife Dorothy daughter of Captain Shepherd of the company s naval service At the age of fourteen Shore was sent to Harrow School 2 In his seventeenth year Shore was moved to a commercial school at Hoxton for the purpose of learning bookkeeping to take up an opportunity made for him by the merchant Frederick Pigou a family friend 1 Towards the close of 1768 he sailed for India as a writer in the East India Company s service 2 Soon after his arrival in Kolkata then called Calcutta in May 1769 Shore was appointed to the secret political department in which he remained for about twelve months In September 1770 he was nominated assistant to the board of revenue at Murshidabad Shore at the age of 19 suddenly found himself invested with the civil and fiscal jurisdiction of a large district he also studied languages 2 In 1772 Shore went to Rajshahi as first assistant to the resident of the province In the following year he acted temporarily as Persian translator and secretary to the board at Murshidabad In June 1775 he was appointed a member of the revenue council at Calcutta He continued to hold that post until the dissolution of the council at the close of 1780 Though he revised one of the bitter philippics launched by Philip Francis against Warren Hastings and is said to have written one of the memorials against the supreme court and Sir Elijah Impey he was appointed by the governor general to a seat in the committee of revenue at Calcutta which took the place of the provincial council 2 Revenue official EditShore gained the confidence of Hastings by attention to his duties Besides superintending the collection of the revenues he devoted much of his time to the adjudication of exchequer cases He acted as revenue commissioner in Dacca and Behar and he drew up plans for judicial and financial reforms Deploring the lavish profusion of the governor general Shore communicated his views of the financial situation to John Macpherson who instead of privately imparting them to Hastings inserted them as a minute into the records of the Supreme Council As a result of what was seen as a breach of confidence Shore resigned his seat on the board 2 In January 1785 Shore returned to England in the company of Hastings While in England on 14 February 1786 he married Charlotte the only daughter of James Cornish a medical practitioner at Teignmouth 2 Having been appointed by the Court of Directors to a seat on the Supreme Council Shore returned to India and on 21 January 1787 he took his seat as a member of the government of Bengal Many of the reforms instituted by Charles Cornwallis were attributable to Shore s influence in the council In the summer of 1789 Shore completed the ten yearly settlement of the revenues of Bengal Bihar and Odisha Though Shore recommended caution and further inquiry and protested against rigidity his decision in favour of the proprietary rights of the zamindars was ratified by Cornwallis and formed the basis of the much discussed Permanent Settlement 2 In December 1789 Shore embarked for England where he arrived in April 1790 He is said to have refused the offer of a baronetcy on the ground of the incompatibility of poverty and titles On 2 June 1790 he was examined as a witness in the trial of Warren Hastings with regard to the transactions of the committee of revenue at Calcutta and he testified to his friend s popularity among the Indians 2 Governor general EditShore was appointed by the court of directors governor general of India in succession to Cornwallis on 19 September 1792 and was created a baronet on 2 October following 3 Edmund Burke protested vainly Shore embarked for India at the end of the month On 10 March 1793 he arrived at Calcutta where he remained without official employment or responsibility until the departure of Cornwallis He succeeded to the government on 28 October 1793 2 The period of Shore s rule as governor general was comparatively uneventful His policy was attacked as temporising and timid He acquiesced in the invasion by the Marathas of the dominions of Ali Khan Asaf Jah II the Nizam of Hyderabad he permitted the growth of a French subsidiary force in the service of more than one native power he thwarted Lord Hobart s efforts for extending the sphere of British influence and he looked on while Tipu Sahib was preparing for war In these matters Shore faithfully obeyed his instructions 2 Though he showed weakness in dealing with the mutiny of the officers of the Bengal army he boldly settled the question of the Oudh succession when he substituted Saadat Ali Khan II for Wazir Ali Khan albeit at the cost of the Massacre of Benares As a reward for his services Shore was created Baron Teignmouth of Teignmouth in the peerage of Ireland by letters patent executed at Dublin on 3 March 1798 2 4 Later life EditResigning the government into the hands of Sir Alured Clarke Teignmouth left India in March 1798 On 4 April 1807 he was appointed a member of the board of control an office to which no salary was attached and four days afterwards was sworn a member of the privy council He occasionally transacted business at the board of control or at the Cockpit where as a privy councillor he sometimes decided Indian appeals with Sir William Grant and Sir John Nicholl But he occupied the most of his time in religious and philanthropic matters though he nominally remained a member of the board until February 1828 2 Teignmouth never took his seat in the Irish House of Lords nor was he elected a representative peer after the union He was twice examined before the House of Commons on Indian affairs on 18 June 1806 and on 30 March 1813 In consequence of the order of the House of Commons for Teignmouth s attendance on the first occasion the House of Lords on 19 July 1806 passed a resolution maintaining the privilege of peerage as apart from the privilege of parliament This resolution however was not communicated to the Commons and on the second occasion the order of the Commons for Teignmouth s attendance was not questioned by the Lords 2 Shore became a prominent member of the Clapham sect from 1802 to 1808 he lived at Clapham He then moved to London where he passed the remainder of his days He was elected the first president of the British and Foreign Bible Society on 14 May 1804 and held that office until the end of his life He took an active part in the various controversies in the Society and gave his decision in favour of the exclusion of the apocryphal books from all editions of the Bible issued by the society He died at his house in Portman Square on 14 February 1834 aged 82 and was buried in Marylebone parish church where a monument was erected to his memory 2 Teignmouth was elected president of the Royal Society of Literature but declined the office in favour of Bishop Burgess 2 Works EditTeignmouth was a close friend of Sir William Jones whom he succeeded as president of the Asiatic Society of Bengal on 22 May 1794 On that occasion he delivered an address on the Literary History of his predecessor London 1795 which was frequently reprinted and has been translated into Italian Three of his contributions to the society are printed in Asiatick Researches ii 307 22 383 7 iv 331 350 He translated in three manuscript volumes the Persian version of an abridgment of the Jog Bashurst but later destroyed them in consequence of the little encouragement which his translations of Persian versions of Hindu authors received He wrote a number of articles for the Christian Observer and the earlier annual reports of the Bible Society were written by him He was also the author of some mediocre verse He published 2 Memoirs of the Life Writings and Correspondence of Sir William Jones London 1804 This passed through several editions and formed vols i and ii of The Works of Sir William Jones which were edited by Lady Jones London 1807 13 vols Considerations on the Practicability Policy and Obligation of communicating to the Natives of India the Knowledge of Christianity With Observations on he Prefatory Remarks to a pamphlet published by Major Scott Waring By a late Resident in Bengal London 1808 Reply to John Scott Waring A Letter to the Rev Christopher Wordsworth D D in reply to his Strictures on the British and Foreign Bible Society London 1810 Thoughts on the Providence of God London 1834 anon A portrait of Teignmouth was painted by Arthur William Devis 2 Family EditTeignmouth had three sons and six daughters by his wife who died on 13 July 1834 He was succeeded in the title by his eldest son Charles John Shore 2 His second son Frederick John married in 1830 Charlotte Mary Cornish of Devonshire 5 The second daughter Anna Maria married Thomas Noel Hill 6 who had fought at the Battle of Waterloo His daughter Caroline Dorothea married Rev Robert Anderson their eldest daughter Florence Caroline married Lord Alwyne Compton 7 Shore was great uncle to the poet Louisa Catherine Shore 8 Coat of arms of John Shore 1st Baron Teignmouth Crest A stork regardant with a stone in its dexter claw Proper Escutcheon Argent a chevron Sable between three holly leaves Vert Supporters Two storks regardant Proper Motto Perimus Licitis We Die In A Good Cause 9 References Edit a b Embree Ainslie T Shore John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25452 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Shore John Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 No 13463 The London Gazette 29 September 1792 p 765 No 14064 The London Gazette 11 November 1797 p 1081 La Belle Assemblee London February 1830 Falkner James Hill Sir Thomas Noel Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13312 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stanton V H Compton Lord Alwyne Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32523 Subscription or UK public library membership required Shore Louisa Catherine Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Debrett s Peerage 1838 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Shore John Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Further reading EditCharles John Shore Baron Teignmouth 1843 Memoir of the Life and Correspondence of John Lord Teignmouth Hatchard and Son Birendra Bahadur Srivastava 1981 Sir John Shore s policy towards the Indian states Chugh gjjnExternal links EditLeigh Rayment s Peerage PagesGovernment officesPreceded byThe Marquess Cornwallis Governor General of India1793 1798 Succeeded bySir Alured Clarke actingPeerage of IrelandNew creation Baron Teignmouth1798 1834 Succeeded byCharles ShoreBaronetage of Great BritainNew creation Baronet of Heathcote 1792 1834 Succeeded byCharles Shore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Shore 1st Baron Teignmouth amp oldid 1146224509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.