Online Encyclopedia

METCALFE,

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 258 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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METCALFE,  . CHARLES
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THEOPHILUS
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METCALFE, BARON (1785–1846),
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Indian and colonial
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administrator, was born at
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Calcutta on the 3oth of
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January 1785; he was the second son of Thomas Theophilus Metcalfe, then a major in the Bengal army, who afterwards became a director of the East India
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Company, and was created a
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baronet in 1802 . Having been educated at
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Eton, he in 1800 sailed for India as a writer in the service of the Company . After studying
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Oriental
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languages as the first student at Lord Wellesley's College of Fort William, he, at the age of nineteen, was appointed
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political assistant to General Lake, who was then conducting the final
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campaign of the Mabratta war against
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Holkar . In 18o8 he was selected by Lord Minto for the responsible
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post of envoy to the court of Ranjit Singh at
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Lahore; lyre, on the 25th of
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April 1809, he concluded the important treaty securing the independence of the
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Sikh : states between the
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Sutlej and the Jumna . Four years afterwards he was made
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resident at
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Delhi, and in 1819 he received from Lord Hastings the appointment of secretary in the secret and political department . From 1820 to 1825
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Sir Charles (who succeeded his
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brother in the baronetcy in 1822) was resident at the court of the .
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nizam, and afterwards was summoned in an emergency to his former post at Delhi . In 1827 he obtained a. seat in the supreme council, and in March 1835, after he had acted as the first governor of the proposed new
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presidency of
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Agra, he provisionally succeeded Lord William Bentinck in the governor-generalship . During his brief tenure of office (it lasted only for one .
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year) he carried out several important
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measures, including that for the liberation of the press, which, while almost universally popular, complicated his relatipns with the
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directors at home to such an extent that he resigned the service of the Company in 1838 . In the following year he was appointed by the Melbourne administration to the governor-
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ship of
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Jamaica, where the difficulties created by the
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recent passing of the Negro Emancipation Act had called for a high degree of tact and ability . Sir Charles Metcalfe's success in this delicate position; was very marked, but unfortunately his
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health compelled his resignation and return to England in 1842 . Six months afterwards he was appointed by the Peel
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ministry to the governor-generalship of
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Canada, and his success in carrying out the policy of the home government was rewarded with a 1z peerage shortly after his return in 1845 .

He died at Malshanger, near

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Basingstoke, on the 5th of September 1846 . See J . W . Kaye's
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Life and Correspondence of Charles Lord Metcalfe (
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London, 1854) .

End of Article: METCALFE,
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