Printed copies of letters from Sir Henry Willock to successive British Foreign Secretaries discussing the situation in Persia. [6v] (12/14)
The record is made up of 1 file (7 folios). It was created in 01 Dec 1838-04 Sep 1841. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .
Transcription
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( 12 )
The expences of the war in A fg-hanistan are only known to the
Secret Committee
Pre-1784, the Committee responsible for protecting East India Company shipping. Post-1784, its main role was to transmit communications between the Board of Control and the Company's Indian governments on matters requiring secrecy.
, but the
extent of increased outlay may in some measure be judged of by the following notice from the
Secretary of the North-West Provinces to the Secretary of the Financial Department at
Fort William.
" The expences under Bengal, which include all our Military charges, and the bills drawn
" by the Paymasters in Afghanistan, and the Agents in that Country, have much encreased
" our charges during the last two years; I may say from 15 and 16 to '26 and il
Lacs
One lakh is equal to one hundred thousand rupees
a
" monthand this it may be observed shews the increase of disbursements on one part
of the frontier only, whereas the equipment of a great part of the armament, with all the
freightage for the transport of Troops, and shipping charges, are defrayed at Bombay.
But the great evil in the drainage of India to cover trans-Indus expences is, that all
our plans for the improvement of the Empire are in abeyance. The formation of grand
lines of communication through different parts of India, the building of bridges, clearing of
lands, opening canals for the purposes of irrigation and navigation, were not only in contem
plation, but in operation; and it is melancholy to think that such great and good works
should be suspended; and the resources destined for their completion sunk in the support of
a fruitless enterprize.
It is true the
Court of Directors
The London-based directors of the East India Company who dealt with the daily conduct of the Company's affairs.
have very recently authorized the construction of a
canal at the estimated expeace of £30 ; J,00i), to carry the waters of the Ganges from
Hurdwar through the Dooab to the conjunction of the Jumna and the Ganges at Allahabad ;
and the means thus to be supplied of irrigating so extensive a tract it is hoped may prevent
the recurrence of famine which recently devastated that country. This looks well on paper,
but the order is issued under a knowledge that its execution must be suspended until more
prosperous circumstances will admit of the appropriation of so large a sum to so beneficial
a purpose.
Every branch and department of the service is to be hampered, and indeed not temporari
ly but for an indefinite period, and Lord Auckland recently being alive to the full extent of the
evil, says—" It will be sufficient for the present to state that we shall enforce in every
" department of the Government the utmost practicable limitation of expenditure; and we
(< would submit to your Honorable Court the propriety of your adopting a similar course in
" England."
Mr. Bird, a member of the Supreme Council, even goes further, and he actually contem
plates the possibility of a suspension of payments at the Treasury of Fort William in this
month of September. With regard to curtailment of disbursement he observes :—
" I would suggest that the several Local Governments be enjoined to reduce their expen-
" diture to the lowest possible scale, to suspend all works involving considerable outlay, the
" immediate prosecution of which is not indispensably necessary; and to abstain for the
" present from incurring any now pecuniary obligations not imperatively required by the
" exigencies of the public service."
All resolutions to diminish expenditure are sound and wholesome, but extremely difficult
of attainment when reduced to practice. The advantages of the service, as respects salaries,
have been clipped to the lowest possible grade, and Lord Auckland, whose time is always
devoted to useful purpose, recently endeavoured to curtail the charges of the Eastern Settle
ments of Malacca, Penang, and Singapore, which are at present a burthen on the finances of
India to the amount of £70,000 annually; indeed the pay of the Military employed there
exceeds the annual revenue of the joint settlements by 270,000
Rupees
Indian silver coin also widely used in the Persian Gulf.
. The result of this
attempt has been very unsatisfactory, and serves to show how little is to be hoped for by
reduction; and that we must ground our hope of amelioration, and release from financial
About this item
- Content
The printed copies of the letters have been brought together as a booklet giving Sir Henry Willock's thoughts on the situation in Persia from December 1838 to September 1841. Sir Henry Willock had spent 23 years in Persia, 11 of which had been spent superintending British relations with the Court of Persia. The letters that comprise the booklet are as follows:
- Letter to The Right Honorable The Lord Viscount Palmerston, 01 December 1838, outlining the background politics in Persia and in particular with regards to the Kings Of Persias ambitions over the last 30 years to conquer Herat, the view the British Government had taken to such attempts and amibitions in the past and the views of the Sovereign who had mostly recently attempted to annex it. The letter goes on to discuss the line of policy which should now be applied to Persia, particularly in light of the British Government's occupation of the island of Karrack, and Sir Henry Willock's belief that the British now needed to regain the confidence of Persia and should unconditionally retreat from the island. The letter also discusses Russia current aims and intentions with regards to Afghanistan, its own empire, trade with India and the need for the British to check its progress. There is also speculation by Sir Henry as to the British Government's intentions of removing Dost Mohammad Khan from power owing to his decision to ally with the Persians in order to remove a rival from power; thoughts on the difficulties of marching Indian troops through Afghanistan and his opinions on the Shah's rival Runjeet Singh and his conclusions that the safest move for Great Britain is to adhere to its alliance with Persia.
- Memorandum to The Right Honourable Viscount Palmerston, Secretary of State, 4 Feburary 1839 offering his opinions on the effects that the British Mission leaving the Court of Persia would have. The memorandum focuses on the disadvantages of this action including leaving Persia open to occupation by Russia; enabling the Shah to occupy Herat; damaging commercial relations between the two countries; the likelihood of Persia discovering Britain does not have the means to cause injury and cautioning that invasion of Persia would be impractical owing to the difficulty in traversing the passes into the country.
- Memorandum to The Right Honourable The Earl of Aberdeen, Secretary of State, 04 September 1841 regarding his recommendations from 1838 to Viscount Palmerston of maintaining the Persian alliance and abandoning the subjection of Aghanistan and his letter of 1839 following the withdrawal of the British Mission from the Court of Persia and other private remarks since which he has made to the Right Honorable Henry Ellis. The memorandum outlines Willock's opposition to the opinions of Lord Auckland and the intention to place Shah Shuja on the throne at Cabul; his dislike of the news that a secret committee Pre-1784, the Committee responsible for protecting East India Company shipping. Post-1784, its main role was to transmit communications between the Board of Control and the Company's Indian governments on matters requiring secrecy. had taken this decision without consulting the East India Company Board of Directors and his belief that the British's best approach in Persia is to avoid collision and to avoid recommendations eminating from the Court of St. Petersburgh. Willock goes on to consider the benefits of a neutral Afghanistan permitted to remain independent which he views as having been the best solution that the British Government threw out; comparing the British position in Afghanistan to the French position in Algeria; considering the potential threats to Punjab of viewing Herat as an enemy; the risk of war with Russia; the need to ensure secession is not regarded as an evil of great magnitude; financial difficulties in India; the cost of war in Afghanistan and the need to retreat from the island of Karrack if friendly relations with Persia are to be restored. Towards the end of the memorandum Willock diverges from Persia to discuss the port of Aden which he believes is only useful as a coal depot and that it should be given up as a way of saving money.
- Extent and format
- 1 file (7 folios)
- Arrangement
The copies of letters have been printed in the booklet in date order.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: The file has been foliated in the front top right hand corner of each folio with a pencil number enclosed with a circle.
The file also contains original pagination 2-13 which starts on the verso The back of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'v'. of the first folio and concludes on the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. of the final folio.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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Printed copies of letters from Sir Henry Willock to successive British Foreign Secretaries discussing the situation in Persia. [6v] (12/14), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F126/18, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023190383.0x00000d> [accessed 19 December 2024]
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- Mss Eur F126/18
- Title
- Printed copies of letters from Sir Henry Willock to successive British Foreign Secretaries discussing the situation in Persia.
- Pages
- 1r:7v
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence