Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR RICHARD TEMPLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 601 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR RICHARD TEMPLE
  . (1826-1902),
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English
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administrator, a descendant in the
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female
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line of the Temples of Stowe, was born on the 8th of March 1826, and after being educated at
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Rugby and Haileybury, joined the Bengal
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Civil Service . His industry and ready pen soon obtained appreciation, and after acting as private secretary for some years to John Lawrence in the
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Punjab, and gaining useful
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financial experience under James Wilson, he was appointed
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Resident at Haidarabad . In 1867 he was made K.C.S.I . In 1868 he be-came a member of the supreme government, first as
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foreign secretary and then as
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finance minister; and he did admirable
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work during the famine of 1874, in the course of which he was made
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lieutenant-governor of Bengal . His services were re-cognized by the bestowal of a baronetcy in 1876 . In 1877 he was made governor of Bombay, and his activity during the Afghan War of 1878–8o was untiring . In r88o he
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left India to enter on a
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political career in England, but it was not till 1885 that he was returned as a conservative for the
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Evesham division of Worcestershire . Meanwhile he produced several books on
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Indian subjects . In parliament he was assiduous in his attendance, and he spoke on Indian subjects with admitted authority; but he was not otherwise a
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parliamentary success, and to the public he was best known by the caricatures in
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Punch, which exaggerated his
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physical peculiarities and made him look like a lean and hungry tiger . In 1885 he became
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vice-chairman of the
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London School Board, and as chairman of its finance committee he did useful and congenial work . In 1892 he changed his constituency for the Kingston division, but in 1895 he retired from parliament, being in 1896 made a Privy Councillor .

He had kept a careful

journal of his parliamentary experiences, intended for
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posthumous publication; and he himself publisheda short
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volume of reminiscences . He died at
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Hampstead on the 15th of March 1902 . He was twice married, and left a daughter and three sons, all of the latter distinguishing themselves in the public service .

End of Article: BART SIR RICHARD TEMPLE
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