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See also: English general, and one of the heroes of the See also: Indian See also: Mutiny, was the son of Benjamin See also: Outram of Butterley See also: Hall,
See also: Derbyshire, See also: civil engineer, and was See also: born on the 29th of See also: January 1803
.
His See also: father died in 18o5, and his See also: mother, a daughter of Dr See also: James
See also: Anderson, the Scottish writer on
See also: agriculture, removed in 1810 to See also: Aberdeenshire
.
From Udny school the boy went in 1818 to the Marischal See also: College, See also: Aberdeen; and in 1819 an Indian cadetship was given him
.
Soon after his arrival at Bombay his remarkable energy attracted See also: notice, and in See also: July 182o he became acting adjutant to the first See also: battalion of the 12th regiment on its embodiment at See also: Poona, an experience which he found to be of immense See also: advantage to him in his after career
.
In 1825 he was sent to See also: Khandesh, where he trained a See also: light See also: infantry corps, formed of the See also: wild robber Bhils, gaining over them a marvellous See also: personal influence, and employing them with See also: great success in checking outrages and See also: plunder
.
Their See also: loyalty to him had its See also: principal source in their boundless admiration of his hunting achievements, which in cool daring and hairbreadth escapes have perhaps never been equalled
.
Originally a " puny lad," and for many years after his arrival in See also: India subject to See also: constant attacks of sickness, Outram seemed to win strength by every new illness, acquiring a constitution of iron, " nerves of See also: steel, shoulders and muscles worthy of a six-See also: foot Highlander." In 1835 he was sent to See also: Gujarat to make a report on the See also: Mahi Kantha See also: district, and for some See also: time he remained there as See also: political See also: agent
.
On the outbreak of the first Afghan War in 1838 he was appointed extra aide-de-See also: camp on the staff of See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Keane, and besides many other brilliant deeds performed an extraordinary exploit in capturing a banner of the enemy before See also: Ghazni
.
After conducting various raids against Afghan tribes, he was in, 1839 promoted major, and appointed political agent in See also: Lower See also: Sind, and later in Upper Sind
.
Here he strongly opposed the policy of his See also: superior, Sir See also: Charles
See also: Napier, which led to the annexation of Sind
.
But when war broke out he heroically defended the residency at Hyderabad against 8000 Baluchis; and it was Sir C
.
Napier who then described him as " the Bayard of India." On his return from a See also: short visit to See also: England in 1843, he was, with the See also: rank of brevet See also: lieutenant-colonel, appointed to a command in the Mahratta country, and in 1847 he was transferred from
In 1854 he was appointed See also: resident at See also: Lucknow, in which capacity two years later he carried out the annexation of Oudh and became the first chief See also: commissioner of that province
.
Appointed in 1857, with the rank of lieutenant-general, to command an expedition against See also: Persia, he defeated the enemy with great slaughter at Khushab,-and conducted the See also: campaign with such rapid decision that See also: peace was shortly afterwards concluded, his services being rewarded by the See also: grand See also: cross of the See also: Bath
.
From Persia he was summoned in See also: June to India, with the brief explanation— " We want. all our best men here." It was said of him at this time that " a See also: fox is a fool and a See also: lion a See also: coward by the See also: side of Sir J
.
Outram." Immediately on his arrival in See also: Calcutta he was appointed to command the two divisions of the See also: Bengal army occupying the country from Calcutta to See also: Cawnpore; and to the military control was also joined the commissionership of Oudh
.
Already the mutiny had assumed such proportions as to compel See also: Havelock to fall back on Cawnpore, which he only held with difficulty, although a speedy advance was necessary to save the garrison at Lucknow
.
On arriving at Cawnpore with reinforcements, Outram, " in admiration of the brilliant deeds of General Havelock," conceded to him the See also: glory of relieving Lucknow, and, waiving his rank, tendered his services to him as a volunteer
.
During the advance he commanded a troop of volunteer cavalry, and performed exploits of great brilliancy at Mangalwar, and in the attack at the See also: Alambagh; and in the final conflict he led the way, charging through a very See also: tempest of fire
.
The volunteer cavalry unanimously voted him the See also: Victoria Cross, but he refused the choice on the ground that he was ineligible as the general under whom they served
.
Resuming supreme command, he then held the See also: town till the arrival of Sir See also: Colin See also: Campbell, after which he
See also: con-ducted the evacuation of the residency so as completely to deceive the enemy
.
In the second capture of Lucknow, on the See also: commander-in-chief's return, Outram was entrusted with the attack on the side of the See also: Gumti, and afterwards, having recrossed the See also: river, he advanced " through the Chattar Manzil to take the residency," thus, in the words of Sir Colin Campbell, "putting the See also: finishing stroke on the enemy." After the capture of Lucknow he was gazetted lieutenant-general
.
In See also: February 1858 he received the See also: special thanks of both houses of parliament, and in the same See also: year the dignity of See also: baronet with an See also: annuity of £1oo0
.
When, on account of shattered See also: health, he returned finally to England in 186o, a See also: movement was set on foot to mark the sense entertained, not only of his military achievements, but of his constant exertions on behalf of the natives of India, whose " weal," in his own words, " he made his first See also: object." The movement resulted in the presentation of a public testimonial and the erection of statues in See also: London and Calcutta
.
He died on the 11th of See also: March 1863, and was buried in
See also: Westminster Abbey, where the marble slab on his See also: grave bears the pregnant epitaph " The Bayard of India."
See Sir F
.
J . See also: Goldsmid, James Outram, a Biography (2 vols., 188o), and L
.
J
.
Trotter, The Bayard of India (1903)
.
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