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Henry Lawrence



         


Sir Henry Montgomery Lawrence (June 28, 1806 - July 4 1857) was a British soldier and statesman in British India, who died defending Lucknow during the Indian Mutiny.

Educated at Haileybury, in 1823 he joined the Bengal Artillery at the Calcutta suburb of Dum Dum.

In the first Burmese War, Lawrence and his battery formed part of the Chittagong column which General Morrison led over the jungle-covered hills of Arakan, until fever decimated them, and Lawrence found himself back in Britain, wasted by a disease he never completely threw off.

He returned to India in 1829, and was appointed revenue surveyor at Orakhpur. He spent some years in camp, during which he married his cousin Honoria Marshall, and surveyed every village in four districts, each larger than Yorkshire. He was then recalled to a brigade by the outbreak of the first Afghan War towards the close of 1838.

Henry Lawrence established at Sanawur the Lawrence Asylum for the education of the children of European soldiers serving in India.

In 1857 the Henry Lawrence Island in the Indian Ocean, at 12N 93E, is named for him.

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