Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,240 pages of information and 244,492 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

John Strachey

From Graces Guide

Sir John Strachey GCSI, CIE (5 June 1823 – 19 December 1907), British Indian civilian and brother of Richard Strachey

1823 Born in London the fifth son of Edward Strachey

After passing through the East India Company College, Strachey entered the Bengal civil service in 1842, and served in the North-Western Provinces, occupying many important positions.

1856 October 9th. Married Katherine Batten, daughter of Joseph Batten the Principal of the East India Company College and they had eight children.

1861 Lord Canning appointed him president of a commission to investigate the great cholera epidemic of that year.

1862 Became judicial commissioner in the Central Provinces.

1864 After the report of the royal commission on the sanitary condition of the army, a permanent sanitary commission was established in India, with Strachey as president.

1866 Became Chief Commissioner of Oudh, having been chosen by Lord Lawrence to remedy as far as possible the injustice done after the Indian rebellion of 1857 by the confiscation of the rights of tenants and small proprietors of land, maintaining at the same time the privileges of the Talukdars of great landlords. As member of the legislative council he introduced several bills for that purpose, which, with the full approval of the Talukdars, passed into law.

1868 Became a member of the governor-general's council, and on the assassination of Lord Mayo in 1872 he acted temporarily as viceroy.

1874 Appointed lieutenant-governor of the North-Western Provinces.

1876 By request of Lord Lytton and the secretary of state, he consented to relinquish that office, and returned to the governor-general's council as financial minister, which post he retained until 1880.

During this time, while Lord Lytton was viceroy, important reforms were carried out. The measures for decentralizing financial administration, initiated under Lord Mayo, were practically completed. The salt duties were reduced, and the system under which they were levied was altered, and that opprobrium of the administration, the inland customs line, was abolished. The removal of all import duties, including those on English cotton goods, and the establishment of complete free trade, was declared to be the fixed policy of the government, and this was in great measure carried into effect before 1880, when Strachey left India.

The defective system on which the military accounts were kept occasioned a very erroneous estimate of the cost of the Second Afghan War of 1878-80. For this error Strachey was technically responsible, and it was made the occasion of a violent party attack which resulted in his resignation. The fact that almost the entire cost of the war was paid for out of revenue is a conclusive proof of the state of financial prosperity to which India attained as the result of his administration.

From 1885 to 1895 Strachey was a member of the council of the secretary of state for India.

He was joint author with his brother Lt-Gen Sir Richard Strachey of The Finances and Public Works of India (1882), besides writing India (3rd ed., 1903), and Hastings and the Rohilla War (1892).

He died in 1907.


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