* COCO Cca CERCO (CCS CCCCCCCC CCCCCC CCCCCC Con crorec LÀ CÁC CA COCOCCO COCO CEC C Coco COCKCG (CCC COCCCCCC CCCCCCCCCCCC COCOCCCOGO CCCCCCCCCC ( OOC CEC C G COCO CCCC CC CC cccccc CCC ( GC CCCCC Coco CO Tas CCG COC ( C C C C C CCCCCCC CICC CCCCCCC < (CCCCCCCCC Ci (CCCC (CCCCCCCC CCCCCCCCCC ( GCC COCOCO CCCCCCO CCCCCCCCCCC CCCCCCCCC CCCCCCCC SCOCCCC CCCCCCCC ca LTE VOLO H. Morse Stephens University of Califorma University of California Library Ellers. P THE BENGAL AND AGRA ANNUAL GUIDE AND GAZETTEER POR 1842. VOL.II. Calcutta : WILLIAM RUSHTON AND CO. EtEt : 1-2 1 HEN? MORSE STEPHEN STATISTICS. πολλών δ' ανθρώπων δεν άστεα και νόον έγνω. Hom, Od. 1. L. 3, PART I.- VOL. II. PART I. Vo? 11. 51 1559 STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. Our planet, the earth, is a globe flattened at the poles. At the equator its circumference is 24,840 British statute miles; and hence its surface contains about 196,000,000 of British square miles. Nearly three-fourths of this surface is water, leaving little more than one-fourth of dry land. Population. Territory. Surface. Length. Breadth, Total. In the Sq. Mile. Europe Asia Africa America Brit. squ. m. 3,700,000 20,300,000 11,400,000 15,800,000 Souls. 220,000,000 570,000,000 70,000,000 40,000,000 Souls. 59.459,459 28,078,818 6,140,351 2,614,379 Brit. m. Brit. m. 2,400 3,400 5,250 7,000 4,600 3,500 8,000 3,500 The World 50,700.000 900.000.000 19,723,866 24.000 24,000 The continent of Asia contains upwards of fourth-fifths, and the islands, Australia, and Polynesia, contain the other one-fifth of the area of Asia. America is subdivided into four portions, which contain the following areas, in miles :- Territory. Square Miles. Souls. Length. Breadth. South America North America Greenland Islands 6,420,000 8,100,000 620,000 160,000 12,160,000 24,830,000 10,000 3,000,000 Brit. m. Brit, m. 4,500 3,200 3,000 3,500 COMPARATIVE NATIONAL STATISTICS. The following Statistical tables are gleaned from the best authorities of Eng- "and, France, and Germany, showing what different powers think of each ther, and also exhibiting our imperfect knowledge of Statistical geography, 4 [PART 1. STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. Population. Martial Force. Territory, Length. Breadth. Surface. Total. Per Revenue, annually in £ sterling. sq. mile. Army. Navy. Reg. Irreg Line Frig. Small, England and Wales Scotland Ireland Eng. miles Eng. miles Eng. sq. miles 580 300 58,335 275 140 29,200 300 180 30,370 13,894,574 2,365,807 7,734,365 238 81 255 } 51,375,200 3,624,800 580 600 300 560 117,905 204,000 190,000 39,000 18,686 159 68 94 llo 277,017 150,000 small 24,000 33,758 67,516 49 31 nil reduced 55,000,000 41,000,000 6,420,000 2,110,000 412,000 .. 670 loo United Kingdom France and Corsica Spain Portugal Switzerland Sardinia Milan, Mantua, Nice, Parma, Guastalla, Placentia Tuscany Roman States Naples and Sicily Germany Holland Belgium Denmark Norway Sweden Russia in Europe Austria Prussia Turkey in Europe Greece 87,000 470 600 150 140 260 900 loa * 500 loo loa 23,994,746 32,560,934 13,000,000 3,683,000 2,037,000 4,137,000 4,161,000 1,275,000 2,592,329 7,500,000 34,400,000 2,600,000 3,560,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 2,770,000 50,000,000 32,000,000 12,726,000 9,000,000 750,000 120,000 81,000 40,000 12 } 9,000,000 28,000 small 43,000 91,000 10.000 13,000 22,300 151,171 170,000 1,650,000 230,000 90,000 160,000 15,000 150 ... 1,800 760 600 1,200 520 300 gallies 36 many nil 16 53,000 500.000 100,000 365.000 175,000 55 300,000 50 1,200,000 379,340 920,000 17,000,000 14,000,000 8,000,000 7,000,000 considerable Curope 3,302,056 245,747,009 ['IL *104 5 STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. Population. Martial Force. Territory. Length. Breadth. Surface. Revenue, annually in £ sterling. Total. Per sq. mile, Army. Navy. Reg. Irreg. Line Frig. Small. ... Eng.miles. Eng.miles. Eng. sq. miles. 800 1,050 470,400 1,430 1,200 1,000,000 1,000 1,200 400,000 230,000 146,000 1,930 1,400 1,020,000 1,200 200 240,000 560 150 90,000 700 70 250,000 350 220 100,000 1,330 1,030 1,298,000 500 1,500 1,000,000 1,080 3,100 3,200,000 1,960 5,350 6,258,000 1,100 870 600,000 1,900 100 123,000 200 1,000 loo 650 800 600 loo 55,000 1,960 2,600 2,500,000 200 500 1,400 Turkey Arabia Persia Cabool Beloochistan Hindostan Birmah Malaya Siam Tonquin China Tibet Chinese Tartary... Russian Tartary Independent Tartary Japan... Sumatra Java Borneo Celebes Australia Van Diemen's Land... Papua New Zealand Ceylon 10,000,000 12,000,000 12,000,000 15,000,000 1,500,000 141,000,000 8,000,000 500,000 2,800,000 5,200,000 360,000,000 small thin 10,500,000 4,500,000 20,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 3,000,000 1,000,000 30,000 1,800,000 50,000,000 large inefficient ... ... ... 600 ... ... 200 ... ... 500,000 1,250,000 ... 300 140 ... Egypt.. Nubia 250 :: 500 600 3,000,000 miserable 9 (PART 1. STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. Population. Martial Force, Territory. Length. Breadth. Surface. Revenue, annually in £ sterling. Total. Per 99. mile. Army. Navy. Reg. Irreg. Line Frig. Small. 100,000 .. : Abyssinia Morocco Algiers Tunis Tripoli and Barca Desert of Sahara Eng. miles Eng.sq.m. Eng. sq. miles. 770 550 600 260 70 500 120 600 2,500,000 2,500,000 11,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 .... 200 200 ... 200 400 300 300 loo 60 1,200 loo 80 200 30 1,250,000 100,000 150,000 60,088 16,000 23,473 9,000 13,000,000 8,000,000 2,000,000 10,000 1,200 2,000 900 1,200 2,360,000 1,408,449 200,499 Canada New Brunswick Nova Scotia Newfoundland Cape Breton Prince Edward's Island Bermudas United States Mexico Guatimala Greenland Cuba St. Domingo Jamaica Porto Rico Columbia Peru, Lower Peru, Upper, Bolivia Chili La Plata 5,779 1,000,000 7 10 36 59,000 1. 2 4,840,000 2,304,166 70 loo 60 40 700 400 170 935,000 360,000 .. 120 considerable small 1,500,000 1,000,000 300,000 413,000 173,000 1,096,410 2,312,756 3,000,000 1,600,000 1,200,000 800,000 1,200,000 5,000,000 900 1,100 40 450.000 450,000 2,500,000 La zil ... VOL. 11.] 7 STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. EUROPE. From the Almanac of Gotha. Surface. Population. Martial Foroe. A. D. State. Geograhpical square miles. Absolute. Comparative. Army. Regular. Irregular. Navy. Ships. Guns, 31 497,000 1835 :: 271,400 30,000 1836 1827 59,000 97 12 1827 38,000 30,000 278,000 46,000 15,000 314,268 295,791 298 574 6,500 1835 Austria Belgium Germany Cracow Denmark Sicilies Turkey Spain Rome France United Kingdom Greece Ionian Isles Lucca Modena Parma, Placentia Holland Portugal Prussia Russia, Poland St. Marino Sardinia Sweden, Norway Switzerland Tuscany 194,442 7,410 72,033 3,730 39,448 31,798 158,992 135,150 12,989 156,067 88,897 11,480 754 312 1,579 1,663 9,120 27,555 81,121 1,202,475 17 21,986 219,746 10,934 6,326 34,241,046 3,762,100 15,215,631 128,480 2,052,090 7,414,717 9,545,300 14,660,000 2,592,329 33,540,908 25,485,350 637,700 208,100 143,400 376,400 437,400 2,611,500 3,013,950 13,837,233 51,000,000 7,000 4,168,797 4,028,045 2,021,800 1,275,000 176,125 507,750 211.625 349,125 52,000 233,125 54,375 108,437 199,562 214,812 270,625 55,500 276,000 459,562 238,375 262,812 283,562 109,375 168,375 42,412 412,625 135,250 18,312 186,125 201,562 ... 1824 1833 5,600 800 1,860 1,320 43,000 50,600 165,000 1,020,000 76 1836 1835 359,000 400 39,000 1833 1832 1835 1825 20 30 35,000 52,000 30,578 3,000 Europe... 2,495,964 232,404,276 94,726 2,727,217 954,000 1,538 6,500 8 (PART 1. STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. THE PRINCIPAL POWERS IN 1837, TOGETHER WITH THEIR COLONIES. A Statistical and Comparative Table of their Extent, Population, and Resources, from the Annuaire Historique Universel pour 1837, published at Paris in December, 1838. Territory, in geographical square miles. Navy. State. Population. Revenue, annually. Debt. Regular army. Total, Mother Country. Colonies. Vessels. 258,400 194,500 22,120 154,000 194,500 22,120 104,400 nil nil 35,589,908] 32,000,000 4,075,000 Francs. 1,027,572,203 440,000,000 70,000,000 Francs. 3,663,004,380 1,800,000,000 265,200,000 Men. 302,583 381,404 57,061 Line Frig. Small. 33 77 213 3 8 61 France Austria Bavaria Germany, exclusive of Austria, Bavaria, and Prussia Denmark Spain Papal States United Kingdom Holland Belgium Portugal Prussia Russia and Poland Sardinia Sicilies Sweden and Norway Switzerland, 22 Cant. Turkey United States 46,380 16,500 174,230 13,000 4,457,600 241,406 9,700 29,150 80,450 1,535,700 21,000 31,460 223,000 11,200 1,077,700 1,570,000 46,380 nil 16,500 nil 137,400 36,830 13,000 nil 90,950 4,366,650 8,326 233,080 9,700 nii 29,150 nil 80,450 nil 1,499,000 36,700 21,000 nil 31,460 nil 223,000 Dil 11,200 616,200 461,500 1,570,000 nil 9,830,000 1,950,000 16,848,000 2,600,000 141,493,306 12,151,000 3,817,000 3,530,000 14,098,125 56,475,000 4,300,000 7,420,000 4,225,140 2,179,526 24,400,000 13,000,000 172,386,000 438,662,000 33,000,000 160,000,000 178,600,000 4,000,000,000 45,000,000 366,000,000 1,151,091,576 18,963,746,661 85,000,000 2,838,000,000 85,000,000 849,445,000 57,468,000 500,000,000 215,000,000 750,000,000 434,000,000 1,655,000,000 65,000,000 140,000,000 84,000,000 500,000,000 52,000,000 81,000,000 10,000,000 nil 360,000,000 130,807,393 130,000 39,000 119,000 10,000 100,790 100,000 Il0,000 26,418 260,000 734,000 65,000 60,000 45,200 100,000 247,286 8,221 nil 7 7 84 3 4 18 0 o some 165 117 324 12 33 56 nil 4 6 37 nil 32 25 107 2 3 7 2 5 lo lo 13 238 nil nil nil 17 16 12 17 31 23 Total ... 10,013,496 14,774,336 5,239,160 389,982,005) 4,695,925,172 36,970,058,041 2,895,963 302 331 1209 VOL. 11.] 6 STATISTICS OF THE WORLD. AMERICA. PA T I. VOL. 11. The New States at the end of 1826, according to Balbi, published 1833. Territory. Geographical State. Population. Debt. Revenue annually. Army. Navy, Vessels, square miles. ... Mexico Gautimala Colombia Peru, Lower, Peru, Upper, or Bolivia Chili Brazil Rio de la Plata... Uruguay Paraguay Hayti 1,240,000 139,000 828,000 373,000 310,000 129,000 2,253,000 683,000 60,000 97,000 22, 100 Souls. 7,500,000 1,650,000 2,800,000 1,700,000 1,300,000 1,400,000 5,000,000 700,000 70,000 255,000 800,000 Francs. 74,757,000 10,000,000 42,800,000 30,000,000 11,000,000 15,000,000 60,000,000 15,000,000 1,800,000 5,000,000 15,000,000 Francs. 308,500,000 9,500,000 254,000,000 145,488,000 16,000,000 36,000,000 233,000,000 134,000,000 nil nil 150,000,000 Men. 22,750 3,500 32,366 7,500 mil 8,000 30,000 10,000 nil 5,000 45,000 Line Frig. Small. 1 O 13 0 0 2 3 12 1 1 5 nil 0 1 5 3 940 0 o 15 nil 0 0 2 O 0 6 ... ... ... Total United States 6,104,100 1,570,000 23,170,000 13,000,000 280,357,000 130,807,393 1,486,488,000 nil 164,116 8,221 7 14 loo 12 17 23 о Total 7,674,100 36,170,000 411,164,393 1,486,488,000 172,337 19 31 123 10 1. POPULATION OF THE EARTH. (PART e. POPULATION OF THE EARTH, ACCORDING TO THE DIFFERENT RELIGIOUS SECTS.. MONOTHEISTS. I. CHRISTIANS ...... 1. Papists 129,150,000 2. Protestants ...... a. Evangelic, united.... 8,200,000 b. Lutheran 16,220,000 c. Reformed .....,Proper reformed 7,440,000 Presbyterians 4,800,000 Total Reformed.. 12,240,000 d. Anglican 15,050,000 Various sects, Methodists 1,500,000 Quakers 200,000 Menonites 200,000 Hencubuters 100,000 Baptists 76,000 Independents 3,800,000 Unitarians 60,000 Swedenborgians 36,000 Fillipines 12,000 Total of various sects...... 5,984,000 Total Protestants 57,694,000 3. Greek Church... a. Russian Greek 35,375,000 b. Eastern Greek 6,000,000 Total Greek Church 41,375,000 4. Monophysites ... a. Jacobites ......Proper Jacobites 220,000 Copts 3,200,000 Thomas Christians 80,000 John Christians 26,000 Total Jacobites... 3,526,000 VOL. IL] II POPULATION OF THE EARTH, 6. Maronites...... c. Armenians ........... 150,000 2,200,000 Total Monophysites 5,876,000 400,000 5. Nestorians ......... Total Christians 234,495,000 2,650,000 II. Jews III. MAHOMEDANS......1. Sunnites ........... Sunnites b. Wechabites 65,000,000 7,000,000 Total Sunnites 2. Schütes 3. Ishmaelites 72,000,000 43,000,000 120,000 Total Mahomedans IV. ZOROASTRIANS V. CONFUCIANS VI. NANKNISTS 115,120,000 780,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 362,045,000 Total Monotheists POLYTHEISTS. I. LAMAITES II. BRAMINS III. BUDDHISTS. IV. FETICHE WORSHIPPERS 58,000,000 115,000,000 169,000,000 124,000,000 Total Polytheists 466,000,000 The aggregate population of the globe, according to the foregoing statement, amounts to 828 millions of souls. It may be observed, however, that the number of Jews must be far greater, and may be taken at more than eight millions. We have given it at 2,650,000 because that is derived from authentic sources; but these are very uncertain, in Asia and Africa especially. In the same way the number of Sunnite Mahomedans may be rated as exceeding the amount above stated by nearly twenty millions.-From the Algemeine Zirchenzielung, ! ( 12 ) [PART 1. A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF THE PRINCIPAL GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES OF Modern European Nations. A. D. 861 Feroe Islands-discovered about this time by a Scandinavian vessel. 871 Iceland—discovered by some Norwegian chiefs, who were compelled to leave their native country. According to some accounts, it had been visited before this, by a Scandinavian pirate, Naddodd. 950 Greenland--discovered by the Icelanders about this period. The first colony established there was destroyed by a pestilence in the 14th century, and by the accumulation of ice which prevented all communication between Iceland and Greenland. 1001 Winenland-a part of the continent of America, is supposed to have been discovered by the Icelanders. It was called Winenland, or Vinland, from the abundance of a species of Vine found here. The Icelandic chronicles are full and minute respecting this dis- covery. 1344 Madeira –The discovery of this island is attributed to an English- man, Robert Macham; it was revisited in 1419 by Juan Gonzalez, and Tristan Vaz, Portuguese. 1345 Canary Isles, discovered by some Genoese and Spanish seamen, having been known to the ancients. 1364 Guinea—the coast of, discovered by some seamen of Dieppe, about this period. 1418 Porto Santo–discovered by Vaz and Zarco, Portuguese. 1419 Madeira-discovered by the same navigators. It was first called St. Laurence, after the Saint's day on which it was seen :-and subsequently Madeira, on account of its woods. 1434 Cape Bojador or Nun--doubled for the first time by the Portuguese. 1449 } Senegal River-discovered by the Portuguese. 1448 Cape Verd-discovered by Denis Fernandez, a Portuguese. 1448 Azores Islands---discovered by Gonzallo Vellor. a Portuguese. 1449 Cape Verd Islands-discovered by Antonio de Noni, a Genoese in the service of Portugal. 1471 Island of St. Thomas, under the equator, discovered. 1484 Congo-discovered by the Portuguese, under Diego Cam. 1486 Cape of Good Hope-discovered by Bartholomew Diaz. It was originally called The Cape of Tempests,' and was also named The Lion of the Sea,' and 'The Head of Africa. The appella- tion was charged by John II., King of Portugal, who augured favourably of future discoveries from Diaz having reached the extremity of Africa. 1492 Lucayog (or Bahama) Islands—These were the first points of disco- very by Columbus. San Salvador, one of these Islands, was seen by this great navigator on the night of the 11th or 12th of October, Cuba, Ísland of 2 discovered by Columbus in his first Hispaniola, or St. Domingos voyage. in this year. VOL. 11.) GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. 13 A, D, 1493 Jamaica St. Christophers' -discovered by Columbus in his second voyage. Dominica 1497 Cape of Good Hope-doubled by Vasco di Gama, and the passage to India discovered. Newfoundland-discovered by John Cabot, who first called it Prima Vista and Baccalaos. The title of Prima Vista still belongs to one of its capes, and an adjacent island is still called Baccalao. 1498 Continent of America-discovered by Columbus. Malabar, Coast of-discovered by Vasco di Gama. Mozambique, Island of-discovered by Vasco di Gama. 1499 America, Eastern Coasts of—discovered by Ojede and Amerigo Vespucci. (It is contended by some that this preceded by a year the discovery of the American Continent by Columbus.) 1500 Brazil-discovered 24th April by Alvarez de Cabral, a Portugese, who was driven on its coasts by a tempest. He called it the land of the Holy Cross, it was subsequently called Brazil, on account of its red wood; and was carefully explored by Amerigo Vespucci, from 1500 to 1504. 1501 Labrador and River St. Lawrence-discovered by Corterçal, who sailed from Lisbon on a voyage of discovery for the Portugese. 1502 Gulf of Mexico-Some of the shores of this Gulf explored by Co- lumbus on his last voyage. St. Helena, the Island of-discovered by Jean de Nova, a Portuguese. 1506 Ceylon-discovered by the Portuguese. Ceylon' was known to the Romans in the time of the Claudius. 1506 Madagascar, Island of-discovered by Tristan da Cunha, and revi- sited by the Portuguese navigator Fernandez Pereira, in 1508. This Island was first called St. Laurence, having been discovered on the day of that saint. 1508 Canada-visited by Thomas Aubert. Known before to fishermen who had been thrown there by a tempest. Ascension Isle-discovered by Tristan da Cunha. Sumatra, Island of-discovered by Siqueyra, a Portuguese. 1511 Sumatra-more accurarely examined by the Portuguese. Molucca Isles-discovered by the Portuguese. Sunda Isles_discovered by Abrew, a Portuguese. 1512 Maldives-A Portuguese navigator, wrecked on these Islands, found them in occasional possession of the Arabians. Florida-discovered by Ponce de Leon, a Spanish navigator. 1513 Borneo and Java-The Portuguese became acquainted with these Islands. South Sea--the Great Ocean was discovered this year from the mountains of Darien, by Nugnez de Balboa, and subsequently navigated by Magellen. The supposition of the New World being part of India now ceasod. 1515 Peru-discovered by Perez de la Rua. 1516 Rio Janeiro discovered by Dias de Solis. 1516 Rio dela Plata-discovered by the same. 1517 China-discovery of_by sea, by Fernand Perez d'Andrada. Bengal - discoved by some Portuguese thrown on the coast by a tempest. 1518 Mexico-discovered by the Spaniards. Conquered by Cortez, in 1519. 1519 Magellan, Straits of-passed by Magellan with a fleet of discovery, fitted out by the Emperor Charles V. The first voyage round the world was undertaken by this navigator ; and his vessel performed the enterp ise although the commander perished. 1 14 GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. (PART 1. A. D. 1520 Terra del Fuego–discovered by Magellan. 1521 Ladrone Islands-discovered by Magellan. Philippines—This archipelago discovered by Magellan, who lost his life here in a skirmish. 1524 New France—The first voyage of discovery made by the French under Francis the First, one of whose ships, after reaching Florida, coasted along as far as 50° north latitude, and gave to this part the name of New France. North America-travelled over from Florida to Newfoundland by Verrazzani, a Florentine, in the service of France. 1526 New Holland-discovered by the Portuguese about this time : this immense tract was for some time neglected by Europeans, but was visited by the Dutch, at various periods, from 1619 to 1644. This fine country is now colonized by the English, and every year adds something to our knowledge of its extent and its peculiarities. 1527 New Guinea-discovered by Saavera, a Spaniard, sent from Mexico, by Cortez, 1530 Guinea-the first voyage to, made by an English ship for elephant's teeth. 1534 Canada-visited by Cortier, of St. Malo, a settlement having previ- ously been made in 1523, by Verrazzani, who took possession in the name of Frances I, of France. 1535 California-discovered by Cortez. 1537 Chili-discovered by Diego de Almagra, one of the conquerors of Peru. 1541 Labrador-discovered by a French engineer, Alphonze. India—the first English ship sailed to, for the purpose of attacking the Portuguese. 1542 Japan-discovered by the Portuguese, Antonio de Meta and Antonio de Peyxote. 1545 Potosi-Mines of discovered by the Spaniards. Visited by Barentz, in search of a north-east passage, in 1596. 1552 Spitzbergen-observed by the English, but mistaken for a part of Greenland. 1553 White Sea, which had not been visited since the time of Alfred, was now supposed to be discovered by Chancellor, the English navi. gator. Nova Zembla-discovered by Willoughby, an English Seaman. 1575 Solomon's Isles-discovered by Mendana, a Spaniard. 1576 Frobisher's Straits-discovered by the English navigator whose name bears. Greenland-further explored by Frobisher, who also penetrated fur- ther between this country and Labrador. 1577 New Albion-discovered by Drake. 1580 Siberiam-discovered by Yarmak Timopheievitch, Chief of the Cossacks. 1587 Davis's Strait-discovered by the English navigator, whose name it bears. 1594 Falkland Island-discovered by the English navigator, Hawkins. 1595 Marquesas--discovered by Mendana, a Spaniard, on his voyage from Peru to found a colony in the Solomon Isles. Solitary Island-discovered by Mendana. 1606 Archipelago de Esperite Santo-discovered by Guiros, a Portuguese These islands are the Cyclades of Bougainville, and the new He- brides of Cook. Otaheite-supposed to be discovered by Guiros, who namy.it Sagittaria. tot. 11.) GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. 15 1 A. D. 1607 | Hudson's Bay-discovered by the celebrated English navigator 1610$ Hudson, on his third voyage. Venturing to pass the winter in this Bay on his fourth voyage, he was, with four others, thrown by the sailors into a boat, and left to perish. 1607 Chesapeake Bay-a-discovered by John Smith. 1615 Straits of Le Maire-discovered, with the Island of Staten on the east, by Le Maire, a merchant of Amsterdam, and Schouten, a merchant of Horn. 1616 Cape Horn-doubled by Le Maire and Schouten, Dutch navigators, who called it after the town of which Schouten was a native. 1616 Van Dieman's Land-adiscovered by the Dutch. 1616 Baffin's Bay-discovered by William Baffin, an Englishman. 1636 Frozen Ocean-In this year the Russians discovered that this ocean washed and bounded the north of Asia. The first Russian ship sailed down the Lena into this sea. 1642 New Zealand—with the southern part of Van Dieman's Land, disa covered by Tasman, a Dutch navigator. 1654 Bourbon-Isle of-occupied by the French. 1673 Louisiana-discovered by the French. This country received its name from La Salle, a Frenchman, who explored the Mississippi, in 1682. 1686 Easter Island discovered by Roggewein, a Dutch navigator. 1690 Kamschatka–the principal settlement of the Russians on the coast of Asia, discovered by a Cossack chief, Morosko. 1692 Japan-Carefully visited by Kemfer, a German. 1699 New Britain- This island, and the Straits which separate it from New Guinea, discovered by Dampier. 1711 Kurile Isles-occupied by the Russians. The people of these is- lands, which are twenty-one in number, still pay tribute to Russia. 1728 Behring's Strait-explored and designated by a Danish navigator in the service of Russia, whose name it bears. Behring thus estab- lished that the continents of Asia and America are not united, but are distant from each other about thirty-nine miles. 1728 Kamschatka-ascertained by Behring to be a peninsula. 1741 Aleutian Isles-on the coast of North America, discovered by Behring. A more accurate survey of these islands, was made under the Russian Government, by Captains Billing and Saryt- chef, from 1781 to 1798. 1755 Duke of York's Island-discovered by Byron. Isles of Danger-discovered by Byron. 1767 Otaheite--discovered by Wallis. 1768 Cook's Strait-discovered by Captain Cook on his first voyage round the world, which occupied from 1768 to 1771. 1769 New South Wales discovered by Captain Cook. 1772 Island of Desolation—the first land south of India, discovered by Kerguelen, and called by his name. Subsequently called the Island of Desolation by Captain Cook. 1774 New Caledonia—discovered by Cook in his second voyage, 1772— 1775. 1778 Icy Cape-discovered by Captain Cook. Sandwich Islands—discovered by Cook in his third voyage, which commenced in 1776. He lost his life in 1779. 1797 Bass's Straits.—Mr. Bass, Surgeon of H.M.S. Reliance, penetrated as far as Western port in a small open boat, from Port Jackson, and was of opinion that a strait existed between New South Wales and Van Dieman's Land. In 1799, Lieutenant Flinders circum- navigated Van Dieman's Land, and named the Straits after Mr. Bass. 16 GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. (PART 1. } + A, D. 1804-5-6 Missouri explored to its sources by Captains Lewis and Clarke, and the origin and source of the Columbia ascertained. 1819 Barrow's Straits-Discovered by Lieut. Parry. 1819 New South Shetland-Discovered by Mr. Smith, of the Brig William, bound to Valparaiso. 1819 North America— The northern limits of, determined by Captain Turnagain. 1821 Asia- The northern limits of determined by Baron Wrangel. 1825-6 North America—Franklin's second expedition, in which the coast between the mouths of the Coppermine and McKenzie's Rivers, and the coast from the mouth of the latter, in 1493. W. long. were discovered. 1827 North America-In August of this year, Captain Beechey, in H. M. S. Blossom, discovered the coast from Icy Cape to Point Barrow, leaving about 140 miles of coast unexplored between this Point and Point Beechey. Point Barrow is in 1564° W. long. 1829, May 23. Captain Ross departs on his voyage towards the North Pole. 1830. The two Landers reach the mouth of the Niger in the Gulph of Guinea, thus solving the problem as to the termination of that river. 1832. July. An expedition, consisting of two steam boats and a brig, sail from Liverpool under Mr. McGregor Laird, on a trading expedi- tion up the Quorra ; Richard Lander being interpreter and guide. The Arctic Land expedition under Captain Back proceeds in search of Captain Ross and his companions. Ross, in the meantime, returns in a whaler, after having been locked up in the ice upwards of four years. 1831 Feb. 27. Enderby Land, discovered by Mr. Briscoe in the brig Tula. 1832 Feb. 15. Adelaide Island, discovered by Mr. Briscoe in the Pula. 1834 Two expeditions fitted out, one under Dr. Smith, and the other under Captain Alexander, on an exploratory expedition into South Africa, Jan. 31. Richard Lander, the African traveller, dies at Fernando Po. 1835 The Arctic Land expedition returns from its search for Captain Ross. The Euphrates expedition leaves England under command of Colonel Chesney. 1836 Dec. 17. Mr. Davidson, the African traveller, murdered by the tribe of El Harild. May 21. Loss of one of Colonel Chesney's Steam Boats on the Euphrates. Jan. 21, Captain Back sails to explore Wager River. 1837 Jan. 3. A new group of islands in the S. Pacific, discovered by Lord Edward Bussell, in H. M. S. • Acteon.' Sept. 5. Messrs. Dease and Barrow, two individuals in the service of the Hudson's Bay Company, successfully explore the N. W. Coast of America, between Point Barrow and Franklin's extreme discovery. 1838 Journey to, and re-discovery of the source of the Oxus, by Lieut. Wood, of the Indian Navy. 1839 The Balleny Islands in the Antarctic Ocean, discovered. 1840 The North West Passage stated to have been discovered by an expedition fitted out by the Hudson's Bay Company. Captain Ross departs on his voyage towards the South Pole. 1841 The Albert and Wilberforce (iron steamers) sail on an expedition to explore the Niger. FOL. 11.) [ 17 ] HEIGHTS OF MOUNTAINS ABOVE THE LEVEL OF THE SEA, ... .. ... .. ... ... ... Most of the great Mountains of the earth lie together in connected chains or ridges. EUROPEAN MOUNTAINS. feet. Skiddaw, ditto... feet. 3020 Mount Blanc, Savoy... 15872 Grassmere Fell, ditto.. 2756 Mount Rosa, Alps.. 15530 Nephin, Ireland.. 2634 Oertler Spitz, Tyrol.. 15430 Trecastle Beacon, England 2590 Mount Cervin, Alps... 14754 Plynlimmon, Wales... 2463 Corn du Midi, ditto.. 14270 Whernside, England, York 2348 Fisterahorn, ditto.. 14000 ASIATIC MOUNTAINS, Mulahasan, Granada.. 11700 Dhawalagheri, Nepaul.. 26462 Mount Perdu, Pyrenees.. 11270 Jumnatra, ditto.. 25500 Col de Geant, Alps.. 11140 Dbailun, ditto.. 24740 Vignemale, Pyrenees.. 11010 Peak in the Valley of Nepaul 24625 St. Gothard, Switzerland 11000 Egmount, New Zealand.. 15304 The Cylinder, Pyrenees 10930 Petcha, Tartary.. 15000 Etna, Sicily.. 10926 Soomoopang, Bootan... 14000 Budislaw, Transylvania 9890 Ophir, Sumatra... 13840 Pic du Midi, France 9374 Ghassa, Bootan... 13080 Canigou, Pyrenees... 9207 Sochonda, China... 12600 Lomnitz, Carpathia.. 8860 Ararat, Armenia... 12700 Rotondo, Corsica.. 8700 Altai, Tartary... 10735 Grand Passo, highest of the 8791 Awatscha, Kamschatka.. 9600 Appendines.. Libanus, Syria... 9526 Mont d'Oro, Corsica... 8630 Geta, Java... 8500 Guadarama, Spain.. 8520 8000 Sneechatten, Norway... Olympus, Natolia 8200 Maggiore, Alps.. 7385 AFRICAN MOUNTAINS. Barthelemy, France.. 7365 Atlas........ from 10 to 13000 Mount Cenis (pass over Peak of Teneriffe. 12320 6780 Piedmont).. Lamalmon, Abyssinnia... 11200 Olympus, Greece.. 6520 Compass Mountain, Cape of Mont d'Or, France... 10000 6510 Good Hope.. S Cantal, ditto... 6090 Gondar Mountains, Abyss 8 to 9000 Swocku, Sweden.. 6050 Mont de Turo, Canary.. 7420 Parnassus, Greece.. 6000 Peak in 'Azore Island... 7016 Sierra d’Estre, Portugal 5580 Bonnet Pointu, Bourbon... 6000 Hussako, Moravia.. 5326 Ruino, Madeira... 5160 Speekeppe, Bohemia... 5240 Diana's Peak, St. Helena... 2700 Kassberg, Styria.. 5220 AMERICAN MOUNTAINS. Adelat, Sweden.. 5180 Chimboraso, Quito... 21441 Hecla, Iceland.. 5000 Great Peak, New Mexico...... 19788 Ida, Candia.. 4960 Cayamba Urea, Peru... 19388 Puy de Dome, France... 4846 Antisana, Quito... 19150 Balloon, Vosges.. 4620 Volcanie Cotopaxi, ditto... 18900 Ben Nevis, Scotland.. 4380 Mt. Kaah, Owyhee... 18400 Ben Lawers, ditto.. 4020 Potosi, Peru... 18000 Parnassus, Spitzberg... 3955 Mount Elias, Russian America 17840 Vesuvius, Naples.. 3731 Orizaba, Mexico... 17371 Snowdon, Wales.. 3570 Volcanic Tunguraguay, Pera 16500 Cader Idris, ditto... 2914 Monda Roa, Owyhee . 16474 Carned Lewellyn, Wales 3469 Sierra Merida, Peru... 16420 Macguillicuddys, Kerry, Ire- Cofre de Perote, Mexico... 3100 13400 land... Otaheite Mountain... 10895 Ben Lomond, Scotland.. 3240 Blue Mount, Jamaica, fr. 5 to 8000 Sta Fell, England... 3166 Mount Washington, United Hi 'vellin, ditto.. 3055 States... 6225 ERT I, VOI.. II, D ... ... .. ... ... C. ... ... !!! 1 ... } 18 [PART 1. HEIGHTS OF MOUNTAINS. feet. feet. Sulphatara, Gaudal i 5100 Manheim, stone, Germany Alleghanny.. ...from 2 to 3500 Presburg, boats, Hungary Lyons, stone, France LENGTH OF BRIDGES. Rouen, boats, ditto Trajan's Bridge, near 10000 Boston, United States Vidin, Bulgaria... Salem, ditto Nantes, succession of 9600 Warsaw, wood Wooden Bridges... Lintz, ditto, Austria Washington, Potomac... 5300 Francfort, Order Philadelphia, Delaware.. 5000 Tours, stone, France Kiow, wood, Russia... 4800 Limerick, Shannon. Boston, ditto, U. States... 3483 Cremona, boats, Italy Strasburg, ditto, France 3390 Waterloo, stone Pont St. Esprit, ditto 3060 Westminster, ditto Buda, boats, Hungary 3050 Berwick, ditto Thorn, wood, Prussia, 3000 Londonderry, wood Riga, ditto, Russia 2600 Ratisbon, stone, Bavaria Washington, east. br. 2500 Menai, Wales, chain Belfast, wood, Ireland 2500 Pont Neuf, Paris Dresden, stone 2480 Blackfriars, stone Wittenburg, Pru. Sax. 2450 London, ditto Cologne, boats, 2330 Vauxhall, iron, Seville, ditto, Spain 2310 Berwick Chain Tortosa, ditto, ditto 2290 Southwark, iron Mentz, ditto, Germany 2100 Span of Menai Cen. Ch. Brg... Wexford, wood 2080 Span of Berwick, ditto Zamora, Douro 1940 Cen. Arch of Meissen Bridge, Alcantara, stone, Tagus 1230 Saxony, Badajoz, ditto, Spain 1874 Arch of Schuylkill Bridge, Saumur, ditto, France 1730 Philadelphia Avignon, Rhone, ditto 1710 Cen. Arch Southwark Bourdeaux, stone, Garron 1690 Sunderland, iron RIVERS. 1650 1650 1560 1550 1503 1500 1500 1470 1460 1400 1340 1300 1223 1223 1164 1068 1050 1050 996 995 950 860 804 708 506 437 Oo ... 375 340 240 236 . Oo EUROPEAN RIVERS. Length in English Miles, Volga, Russia 2500 Danabe, Austria 1800 Nieper, Russia 1300 Don, ditto 1100 Dwina, ditto 1052 Cama, ditto 1050 Petchora, ditto 950 Rhine, Germany 840 Elbe and Moldaw, ditto 800 Oka, Russia 760 Niester, ditto 710 Vistula, Poland 700 Theyse, Hungary 650 Oder, Prussia 630 Tagus, Spain 580 Loire, France Pruth, Russia Duna, Russia Rhone and Saone, France Guadiana, Spain 500 Meuse, Netherlands 500 Save, Austria Seine, France 450 English Miles Douro, Spain 450 Drave, Austria 440 Garronne, France 440 Niemen, Poland 430 Po, Italy 420 Ebro, Spain 410 Weser, Hanover 400 Guadalquivir, Spain 360 Dahle, Sweden 350 Tornea, Lapland 345 Glomme, Norway 340 Maine, Germany 335 Moselle, Lorraine 330 Maritz, Turkey 330 Inn, Bavaria 300 Vardor, Macedonia 280 Severn, England 280 Xucar, Spain 260 Thames (from Thames Head). 250 Shandon, Ireland. 250 Trent and Humher, England... 230 Adige, Austrian Italy Neckar, Wurtemburg 190 Tiber, Italy 190 Schelde, Netherlands 30 545 520 516 510 2207 I.. 480 .. VOL. 11.] 19 LENGTH OF RIVERS. ! ... ... ... English Miles. Tay, Scotland 180 Spey, ditto 150 Fortb, ditto 120 Ouse, England 174 Swale and Ouse, Yorkshire 145 Wye, England and Wales 140 Barrow, Ireland 140 ASIATIC RIVERS. Yeneisy and Selenga, Sib 3550 Kianko, China 3290 Hoang Ho, ditto 3040 Oby and Irtysh, Siberia 2890 Lena, ditto 2550 Amour, Tartary 2500 Mecon, Cambodia 2200 Burrampooter, India 2000 Euphrates, A. Turkey 1900 lodus, India 1900 Thylunan, Burm. Empire 1860 Ganges, British India 1850 Irawaddy, Burm. Empire 1280 Gihnon, or Oxns, Persia 1200 Tigris, Turkey 1160 Gurrah, North India 1000 Godavery, India 850 Jumna, ditto 800 Gogra, ditto 789 Nerbuddah, ditto 780 Benjer, Borneo 570 Jordan, Canaan 176 AFRICAN RIVERS. Nile, Egypt, &c. 3240 Niger, Nigritia 2400 Senegal, West Africa 1400 Zaire, South Guinea 1300 Zambese, East Africa 1150 Orange, South Africa 1090 Great Fish River, ditto 1090 Gambia, West Africa 1000 NORTH AMERICAN RIVERS. English Miles. Missouri and Mississippi 4300 Athapescow and Mackenzie's 2800 Sakashawan and Severn 2500 Rio Bravo, Mexico 2300 Arkanza, Louisiana 2070 Red River, ditto 1520 Ohio and Alleghanny 1480 St. Lawrence 1450 Kanses, United States 1400 Mississippi to its junction 1350 with Missouri Columbia, W. America 1100 Colorado, N. Mexico 1050 Yellowstone, U. States 972 La Platte ditto 850 Tenassee ditto 790 Susquehannah, ditto 620 Delaware, ditto 420 Potomack ditto -420 SOUTH AMERICAN RIVERS. Amazon and Beni 4000 Plate, Paraguay 2700 Rio Madeira, Brazil 2300 Rio Negro, Colombia 1650 Orinoco, Guyana 1600 Para and Araguay, Brazil 1600 Parana, Buenos Ayres 1500 Rio St. Francisco, Brazil 1500 Jupura, Columbia & Brazil 1480 Puros, Brazil 1450 Tapayos, ditto 1360 Xingu, ditto 1250 Pilcomayo, Paraguay 1250 Jutay, Peru and Brazil 1200 Uruguay, Brazil and Para 1100 Mendoza, Patagonia 1100 Tunguragua, Pera 1000 Magdelena, Colombia 900 Essequibo, Br. Guiana 520 ... ..! [ 20 ] (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 1.-FROM FORT WILLIAM TO LOODIANA BY BANCOO- RAH, HAZAREEBAGH, BENARES, ALLAHABAD, CAWN- POOR, MYNPOORIE, ALLYGHUR, DELHI AND KURNAUL. PART 1.–From FORT WILLIAM TO BANCOORAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. TO 3.0 Hooghly 1 9 01.. 1 2 8) 0 13 8 0 4 8 o Damooda .. 8 5 Hooghly Sulkea, a Stage Bungalow here. Chundeetola Aleepoor Baharpoor Right Bank of the Damooda River.. Right Bank of the Dalkeesur River near Jehanabad..) Kotulpoor, B. Rajhath or Jeypoor? S. B. S BISHENPOOR Oondah BANCOORAH 91 o Dalkeesur.. 3 6 14) 4.. 7 10] 4.. 8 YOGURT Burdwan 101 ol. 9 1010 3 10 11 0 Dalkeesur....11 1170 B. LEDIG Total ../ 101) O miles. PART. 2.-FROM BANCOORAH TO HAZAREEBAGH. Chatna 9 2 12 Arrara 80 13 Gowrandee 81 0 2 14 RogonATHPORE, 100 2 15 Assistant to G. 11 0 2 16 G.'s Agent in Chumdunkearee, B. 11 01 3 17 Manbhoom, Chass, B. 14 4 2 18 Gurghee Angballee, B. 16 0 3 19 twice, Assistant to G. Gomeah, B. 13] 2 Damooda..6 20 G.'s Agent in Chittrochuttee, B.. 13) 4 5 21 Hazareebagh.. Deigwar, B. 14 21 3] 22 HAZAREEBAGH, B... 104.. 3 23 Bobra, Jungle Mehals and Ramghur. 12 Total 138) olmiles. N. B.-B. Staging Bungalows. VOL. 11.) 21 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Part. 3.-From HAZAREEBAGH TO BENARES. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. 12 41.. Asst. to G. Gi's Kutkumsandee, B... Agent Haza- Penarkoon, B. reebagh Kanachuttee, B. Dunghye, B. SHEERGHATTY, B. :: Gyah Mudunpoor, B. Nourunga, B. Baroon, B. Derhee or Dearee Arrah Sasseram, B. Jehanabad, B. Mohunea, B. 9 4 Mahana 81 4 12 6 146 Fulgo 16 o Moorhur 141 0.. 141 0 3 o Soane 120. 16 01 14 2 Durgow tee and 14 4 Kurum- nassa 15 4 12 2 Ganges 4 24 1/ 25 4 26 5 27 2, 28 3 29 3 30 3 31 32 2 33 1 34 35 NOBUTPOOR, B. 36 Benares 37 MOGUL SERAI, B. BENARES Cantt., B.. 38 Total 189 4'miles. S Marmasbaba SERAI 3 Camashabad PART 4.-FROM BENARES CANTONMENT TO ALLAHABAD. 7 2... Benares Il 4 10 41 (OOJ KE CHOKEE 13 4... 0 I SIDABAD 13 4 Jhoosee 13 6 Allahabad ALLAHABAD Can- tonment, Staging 4 6 Ganges Bungalow 39 40 41 42 43 44 ...... 45 7 Total ... 741 6 miles. 13 41... 46 47 10 4... 48 PART 5.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO CAWNPORE. Moofti ka Poorwa ... Kusseah 15 4 Allahabad Daranugur, near Kurrah Chokee ke Serai 141 4... Munda ke Sérai 13 4 Futtebpore FUTTEHPORE 131 0... Mulwa 10 0... Aoung 12 2 Maharajpore 13 2 Pandoo Cawnpore CAWNPORE 12 6... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 10 Total 128 6 miles. 22 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. PART 6.-FROM CAWNPORE TO MYNPOORIE. Dist. Territories. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Cawnpore Futtehgurh Kullianpoor Chobeepoor Poorah URROWL MERUN KE SERAI Goorsaigunge Chibberamow BEWUR ... Bowgong MYNPOORIE Cantt... 7 C 9c 10 6 13 4 Eesun 9! 4 141 0 151 0 13 2 8 0 71 41... :::::::::: 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 Mynpoore ... 10 Total ... 107) 4 miles. PART 7.-FROM MYNPOORIE CANTONMENT TO ALLEGURH. (Jeontee 10 2 Eesun twicel.. 66 Mynpoorie Sukeet 13 6 67 Etah u 2 68 Budwas 1] 4 69 Secundra Bao 9 0 70 Allygurh Akbarabad 10 6 71 ALLYGURI Cantt. 151 01 72 TOT DEN.. 7 Total... 811 4 miles. PART 8.-FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO DELHIB. Allygurb Somnagunge 15 7 KUOORJA 14 0 74 Choolah 7 0 75 SECUNDRA 101 76 Bolundshehur .. Soorujpoor 14 0 77 Hindun Putpurgunge, 14 6 and 78 Hingon Delhie Delhie Cantonment. 8 0 Jumna 79 80 81 7 Total..83 6! miles. Part 9.-FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO KURNAUL. Dehlie Near Alleepoor 101 0.. Barotah 104 Canal Burki Chokee near 13| 4... Rujeroo or Rujuloo Paneput Somalka 11 0... PANEPUT 12 0 Gurounda 101 0 KURNAUL Cantt. 12 0 } 82 83 ..... 84 85 86 7 Total... 78) 0 miles. VOL. 11.) 23 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK PART 10.-FROM KURNAUL CANTONMENT TO LOODIANA. Dist. Territories Civil Authorities. Name of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Leelakheree Thannesir Shahabad ... Kotekutchoa ... Protected Sikh States Pol. Agent at Umballa 10 0... 87 13 4 2 88 14) 2 Sursuttee... 2 89 0 Markun- 8 da and 2 90 Ombah 4. 91 13 o Guggur 2 92 3 93 9 ol. 2 94 11 o 95 14 0 96 14 0 97 91 4... UMBALLA Rajpoorah Pattarsee SIRHIND(westside of) Kunha ke Serai Douraha ke Serai LOODIANA Cantt 8 4 ... ... 11 Total... 1241 61 miles. 1.-Supplies and water abundant. Cross the river by ferry at Snikea Ghaut. 2.-Supplies in abundavce after due notice. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. 4.-Ditto ditto ditto. Road from Barrackpoor joins. 5.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road generally bad. The bridges being liable to be broken down, and the raised road to be washed away annually by the overtlowing of the Damooda. Cross the river by ferry. Several of the nullahs are deep and muddy bedded. 6.-A small village on the right bank of the Dalkcesur, Supplies from Jahanabad and other neighbouring villages. Road pretty good. River and nullahs fordable. 7.-Fire wood rather scarcother supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road pretty good. 9.-A large town and bazaar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road good. 10.-A small bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Nullahs fordable. 11.-Water and supplies abundant. Road pretty good. Ford the river and nullahs, heavy sand in the bed of the Dalkeesur. 12. -A bazaar. Water plentiful. Nullahs fordable, and road pretty good throughout. 13.- 14.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road indifferent. Much sand, country covered with jungle. 15. —A bazaar. Supplies and water abundant. Road indifferent. A good deal of ascent. A road strikes off from hence to Berampoor by Soory. 16 -A small bazaar. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road very good. 11.-A bazaar, Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good the whole way through a waste country, 18.-A bazaar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road pretty good generally. 19.-A small bazaar. Water plentiful and supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Country hilly. Road 'heavy in some places, but generally good. River and nul- lahs fordable. 20.-Sapplies and water as at last stage. Country hilly and road generally very bad. Moch cut by ravines and difficult for carts. The river and nullahs fordable. 21.-Supplies and water as in last two stages. Road very good throughout. 22.-A small bazaar. Supplies for a large detachment procnrable after due notice to the civil authorities. Road pretty good, but much ascent rendering it tiresome and diffi- cult for carts and laden cattle. 23.-A good bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful, Road very good the whole way, 24. -A small bazaar. Water good and plentiful. Supplies procurable in abundance after Kue notice. Road very indifferent. 25.-Supplies very searce here and road generally very bad. 26.-A hazaar, supplies, and water in abundance.' Road good. -A small bazaar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good generally, descend the Dunghye pass difficult for wheel carriages. 24 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 28.—A large bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good generally. Coun- try flat and well cultivated. 29.-A bazaar. Supplies and water abundant. Country flat and cultivated. Road good. 30.-A small bazaar. Provision and water procurable in abundance. Road good. 31.-Ditto ditto ditto. 32.—Supplies procurable after due notice. Cross the river by ford and ferry. Bed up- wards of two miles wide and of very heavy sand. 33.-A large bazaar. Water plentiful. Road good through a highly cultivated country. 31.- A bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road liable to be much cut up in the rains. 35.-Ditto ditto ditto. 36.-A bazaar. Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Ford the first and cross the latter by pucca bridge. 37.-Ditto ditto ditto. 38. - Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the Ganges at Raj ghat by ferry below the city of Benares and 4 miles from the Cantonment.. 39.-A small bazaar and supplies from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. Country flat, well cultivated and wooded, Road excellent. 40.-A small bazaar. Supplies procurable in abundance from surrounding villages, water from wells and a tank. Country and road as in last stage. 41,-A middling village. Waier plentiful and supplies abundant from Madhoogunge and adjacent villages. Country and road as above. Kuttra Umwa at 1, Maharajgunge at 47, and Lowjah at 64 miles. 42.-A small village. Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages ; only one good well, but at the distance of a mile there is a Jheel in which there is always water. Country low, flat, and partially cultivated. Road excellent. At 64 miles pass Gopeegunge, a large village and bazaar. Whence a road strikes oft' to Mirzapore. 43. —A bazaar. Supplies and water abundant. Country and road as in last Stage. Pass Baytee at 11, Barool at 31, and Handya at 8), miles. 44.-A small bazaar. "Supplies procurable in abundance. Water plentiful. Road excellent and country flat and cultivated. Pass Hunnoomangunge at 6, and Enyat ke Serai at 10. 45.--Cross the Ganges by public ferry at the Raj ghaut. There are 30 boats belonging to this ferry, and the farmer is bound by the terms of his agreement to pass troops and stores free of charges, but should extra boats be required they must be paid for. The bed of the river there is one mile wide and the stream occupying in dry season only of that space. The remainder is of moist sand and mud, and the road over it is usually much cut up by hackeries and bad. From the ghaut to the cantonment, the road is excellent. Corps marching past Allahabad usually encamp in the Alopee Bagh near Daragunge, 24 miles from Jhoosee, and march thence to Moofti ka Poorwa, 134 miles. 46.-A middling village. A few Buniah's shops and supplies from adjacent villages. Water from wells. Country well cultivated and a good road. Pass to the North of the city of Allahabad and join the high road at Sullaun Serai at 5. L'ass Needa puitee at 5 and Neam Serai at 64 miles. 47.-A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Country well cultivated. Road heavy and dusty iu dry weather. Pass Koila at 14 Munguon at 5, Emangunge at 7, Moorutyunge at 9$, near Surkam at 11, Russoolpore at 11f, Jumalmow at 14miles. 48.-Å bazaar. "Supplies and water plentiful. Road heavy sand in many parts, and particularly so near Shahzadpoor, pass Kurora at 14, Kuleyanpore at 3, Unswah at 4}, Shahzadpoor at 67, Huboonugur at 84, and Fureedgunye at 9 miles. 49.-A small bazaar and supplies from surrounuing viilages. Water from wells. Road pretty good. Good encamping ground in a fine tope of Mowah trees on the North West of the village. Pass Kumalpore at 18, Ahmudgunge at 44, near Joolah at 6, Apopee at 8 and near Rampoor at 124 miles. 50.-A small village and few buniah's shops. Supplies from surrounding villages and water abundant. Road pretty good. At 6 iniles pass through Hautgong, a town and bazaar. 51. -A large open town. Supplies and water in great abundance. Road pretty good. Pass Mooreon at 14, Oodey ke Serai at 23 and Bullunda, a large village and bazaar, at 8 miles. 52.--A middling village. A few buniah’s and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells and tank, Road pretty good. Pass Huboonugur at 1, Chundeepore at 5 Allypore at 5., and Seola at 8}. 53.-A small village. Supplies scarce. Water from wells. Road indifferent. Pass Oomrowree at 4, Kullianpore at 5, Mohars at 8, Gundrowlee at 11). 54.-A large village and bazaar. Water from wells and a tank. Road bad, Cross the Pandoo at 31, by ferry in the rains and usually by a fascine bridge in the dry season. Left bank steep and bad for carts. Pass Gurree at 1, Sukutea Poorwah at 5$, Tewureepore, at 8, Sirsoul at 104. 55.-Sudder bazaar. Wells and the Ganges. Road good during the dry season. Dis- tance given to the assembly rooms nearly in centre of Cantonments. Pass Roomah at 3, Ahbeerwa at 6, and Kazeekeera at 8 miles, 56.–A small village. Supplies should be taken on from Cawnpore, or may be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from wells. Road good. 57.--A bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. pretty good. Pass Herah Naromow at 21, Purgace at 31, Ramnuggur at 5, and Amilea at 7 miles. r 58. —A bazaar, ilud water plentiful. * Road indifferent. 59.-A few buniahs' shops. Water plentiful, and supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road heavy in many parts and particularly so for about a mile on either side of the Eesun nuddy which is crossed by a good pucka bridge. Pass Bilour, a large village, at 7, and Bacotee at 104 miles, 1 1 1 1 1 J VOL. 11.) 25 THE INDIAN ROAD, BOOK. 6. A bazaar and water abundant. Road generally bad, and much cut-up by hackery wheels, 61.-A good bazaar and water plentiful. Road indifferent. Pass Jellalabad at 104 miles. 62.-A large straggling town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. 63.-A small bazaar. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. 64.-A large village and bazaar. Road pretty good. 65.-A made road the whole way, but rather narrow and winding. 65.-a small village and a fe niahs Supplies from adjacent villages. Water from wells. Road pretty good. Cross the Eesun first by pucca bridge, and secondly by good ford. 67.- A bazaar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road as in last stage. Immediately N. and E. of Sukett there is au extensive waste plain, which would form a beautiful exercising ground for 20.000 men. Pass Chuttree Kecchowlie, Runkeepore, Eesaee, Doolapore, Maee and Chitmanpore. 68. -A large dirty village. Bazaar in low situation, surrounded by a mud wall, and in rains nearly encompassed by a deep jheel. Supplies abundant. Pass Gotelaee, Beebree and Heerapore. -69.-A small village. Six buniah's shops and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Road good, Pass Beraherapore, Suma, Pileua, Puthia, Soongranagre and Budna. 70.-A large open town and bazaar. Water and supplies abundant. Road good. Pass Khattooa and Burrei. 71. -A small bazaar and market on Thursdays. Water from wells. Good made road. Pass Gopee and Judhowa. 72.-Good made road the whole way. Supplies in abundance from the cantonment bazaar and town of Coel Good encamping ground on the left or S. of the lines. Pass Nauow, Roheno, Punhuttee, Nourangabad and Coel. 73.-A small bazaar and market on Mondays and Thursdays. Water from wells. Road in many parts very heavy. 74.- A large town and bazaar. Water from wells. Road good. 75.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and should be taken on from Khoorja or Secundra, secording to the direction of the march. Road good. Water from wells. 76.- A large town and bazaar. Road good. 77.-A bazaar. Water plentiful. The first 10 miles of road very good. Remainder heavy. 78. -A small bazaar. Water from wells. Cross the Hindun at the end of the 5th mile. Firma sandy bed, and shelving banks at the ghat. Depth of water in the dry season from 24 to 3 feet. There are two good ferry boats kept on the Hindun at this ghat, under the orders of the Post-master at Delhi, and they are bound to pass all travellers free of expense. Road pretty good generally, but rather heavy in some parts, 19.-Road good, with exception 1 miles in the dry bed of the Jumna, where it is hearf. Pass through the city of Delhi entering by the Turkooman gate. Cross the river by a bridge of boats. 20.—The village of Alleepoor is about a mile to the right of the road, and the canal runs between it and the encamping ground. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water from one pucca well and the canal. Road good. 81. -A small bazar. Water from wells. Road good in dry weather. At 27 miles cross the eanal by a pucca bridge. 2.-Good encamping ground at Barke Chokee, opposite the village. Supplies from Ganour 2 miles north, and from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. °Road good. At 7 miles pass Sonput, a large town and bazaar. 83.-A small bazaar. Water from wells. Road heavy. 84.-A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. The best ground for a large camp is a mile north of the town, and immediately on the right of the road. 85,-A bazaar. Well water plentiful. Road good. 86.-Road good; first 6 miles through thick jungle, remainder fine cultivation, Cross the canal bę bridge at the 6th mile. 8.-No bazaar. Supplies from Azumabad and neighbouring villages. Water from wells and tanks. Road good." Much bush jungle and little cultivation. Pass Seamgurh at 54 miles and Azumabad at 8. 88-A large town and bazaar. Water from wells and tanks. Road good. . Country flat, much bush jungle, and little cultivated. Pass Leelakheree at 21, Ryepoor at 67, and Sumanah at 1 miles. The best ground for a large camp is on the right of the road near a small clump of mangoe trees a mile short of the town. 89.-A large town and bazaar. Water and supplies plentiful. Encamping ground close to stage bungalow, west of the town. Road good. Pass Chunar t, hul at 7 miles. Country Hat, much grass and bush jungle for the first 12 miles, thence fine cultivation. The Sursuttee and nullahs fordable. 90.-Small village at some distance to left or west of the road. Good encamping ground close to the road near the ruins of a serai and a pucca tank, in which there is at all times an ample supply of water. Supplies must be collected. Road good. Country open and cultivated. Rivers and nullahs become dry soon after the rains. 91. -A large walled town. Supplies and water plentiful., Commtry fat and highly cul- tirated Road good. Pass Shahpoor Machounda at %, and Jindillee at 6 miles. Ground for encampment north-east of the town under the walls of the Fort. The Political Agent's residence is south-west of the town, and distant from the encampment about } miles. 92.-A bazaar. Water aburrdant. Country and road as in last stage. Ford the river and Enllahs. 954-A few buniahs and supplies from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Country fat, ttle cultivation, much grass and bush jungle. "Road good. Bridge and fords, PART 1. VOL. II, 26 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 94.-A bazas. Water and supplies plentiful. Ford and bridge. Country, and road much the same as in last stage. Good encamping ground about a mile west of the town on the Loodianah road. 95.-A bazaar and water plentiful. Country highly cultivated. Road excellent. 96.-A small bazaar. Water abundant. Country open and cultivated. Road good. At 9 miles pass Lushkuree khan ke serai. 97.—Country open, level and partially cultivated. A good deal of bush jungle. Road good. No, 2.-FROM FORT WILLIAM TO DELHI BY THE NEW LINE OF ROAD. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Name of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F Calcutta Cox's Bungalow 100 Right Bank Hoogh- ly River Ghyretty 9 Hooghly Ghat Hooghly be Hooghly 8 4 Tarragonea 111 0 Boinchee 10 4 Dulla Bazaar 13 01 11 4 saborito 1 Burdwan Surool 11 4 Burdwan Bood Bood 114 Gopalpoor ulo Undal 11 0 Bancoorah Bograh 12 o 202 203 Neamutpoor 12 0 Neersa 12 0 Maunbhoom Gobinpoor 12 0 Rajafeeta, 12 0 Paopoor 111 0 Doomree 110 Bagodur 11 01 Uthka 100 Hazareebagh Dhourara 11 0 Burhee 13 0 Churparun 12 01 Bulwah 91 o) Surwah 12 0 Gyah Sheerghatty 11 0 Mundunpoor 161 0 Nourunga 14 01 Baroon 141 0 Dharie 31 Soane Sasseram 12 o Arrah Jehanabad 16 0 Mohunea 14) 2 Durgow- Nobutpoor 14 4 tee & Ku- rumnassa Mogul Serai 15 4 Benares Cantt. 12 2 Ganges aron 36 Total... 421 ol mileg. British Benares YOL. 11) 27 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. PART 2.-FBOM BENARES CANTONMENT To ALLAHABAD. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Benares Mohun ke Serai Tamashabad Gooseeah Oojke Chowke Sydabad Jhoosee Allahabad 7 21 11 4 104 13 4 134 13 6 4 6 Ganges British Allahabad { Kussenka Poorwa 7 Total...) 74 6 miles. PART 3.-FROM ALLAILABAD CANTONMENT TO CAWNPORE. Allahabad 13 41 Kusseah 15 4 Synie 101 0 Katonghun 12 4 Thurriao 11 4 Futtehpoor Futtehpore 13 0 Malwa 100 Aoung 12 2 Maharajpoor 13j 2 Pandoo Cawnpore Cawnpoor 12 6 British. 10 Total *183 2 miles. PABT 4.-FROM CAWNPOOR TO ALLYGURH. Kullianpoor 71 01 Cawnpoor 9 01 Chobeepoor Poorah 106) Urroul 13 4 Eesun Meerun ki Serai 94 Futtebgurh Goorsaigunge 14 0 Chiberamow 15 ol Bewur 13 2 Bowgong 7 61 Mynpoorie Korowlee 161 0 Mullawan 101 1 Etah 12 2 Budwas 106 Secundrarao 9/ 4 Allygurh Akbarabad 10 4 Allygurh Cantt. 14) 4 PART 5.-FROM ALLYGURU CANTONMENT TO DELHI. Allygurh Somnagunge 14 4 14 4 Choolah 71 0 Boolundsbehar.. Secandra 101 1 Dadree 111 4 Meerut Ghazeenugur 11) 4 Delhi Delhi Cantt. 14 4 British. 7 Total... 83! 5 miles. 28 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 3.–FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO AJMEER BY JEYPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Riders. Nullahs. M. F. No Nos. 101 0 Bhurtpoor. British Territory. Meerakoor FUTTEHPOOR SICK- .. Agra 313 4 .. 2 REE 81 0 12] 0 12 o Bangunga 8] 0 3 4 5 6 Khanua Puneh Bhurtpoor Weer Busawur Ajmere ..) Hoorlah or Hooru ... Maunpoor KALAKOH Bhaneru Mohunpoor Kanotah JYEPOOR Bankrotah Bowleah.. Bugroh Mokumpoor Governr. Genl.'s Agent in Raj- Doodoo pootana at Ajmere Kishen Agent at Bundree Sindree gurh Ajmere KISHENGURI Agent at Gugwana Ajmere AJMEER CITY 11 0 13 2 13 3 13 6 12 1 8 2 10 2 7 0 Sursuttee. 110 11 o Bandee 7 8 3 9 10 1 11 12 2 13 14 1 15 16 Jeypoor. 11 41 ... 17 13| 4 10 4 Ajmere 31 18 2 19 21 20 21 1014 8 01 21 Total../ 228 4 miles. The distances in the above route are measured from the centre of one village to the centre of another, and not from one encampment to another. ♡ 1.-A small bazaar and supplies procurable in abundance from surrounding, villages, water from wells. Country well cultivated and road good, with exception of the first : miles where it is rather heavy; pass Sooltan poor at 14, Puthowlee at 6, and Seharo Serai at 8 miles. 2.-A good bazaar and water from wells. Country highly cultivated and road good; passing by the villages of Baroda at 1, Kerawulee at 5, Singharpoor at 74, Khera at 1, and Goorke Mundee at 94, and 11 miles encamping ground near the southern gate of the old town wall. 3.-4 small village, supplies from adjacent villages and water from wells. Country par- tially cultivated; road narrow and for the last 3 miles very heavy; pass the villages of Jehanpoor at 1, Murrei at 2, Bhowpoor at 4, and Dabur at 44 miles. Enter the Bhurtpoor territory at the 7th mile. 4.-Supplies from surrounding villages, water from wells. Country level and well cultivated; road a tolerably good hackery track ; passing Pooran at' 14, Mehal at 27. Nugra Berawulee at 44, Puchoonoo at 64, and Harowlee at 87 miles. 5.-One of the strong holds of the Bhurtpoor state ; water and supplies in abundance. Country well cultivated. Hills on the left at some distance ; road pretty good, and leads past the villages of Phursu at 2, Goordo at 5, and Lohassoo at 8 miles. At Goordo cross the Bangunga, where the bed is about for a mile wide and of heavy sand; from Novem- ber to July there is little water in the river here, and from being so much spread out at the ghat, it is but seldom unfordable for any length of time in the rains. 6. -A large town and bazaar, water and supplies in great abundance. Country h' ghly cultivated. "Hills on the left at the distance of land 2 miles ; road good; pass the ullage of Jugzeepoor at 3 miles. VOL. 11.) 29 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 7.-A small bazaar ; water from wells. Country as in last stage, road pretty good, pass the villages of Lallpoor at 31, Mowah at 7, and Rámgurh at 8 miles. Enter the Jeypoor territory at 29 miles from Rusawur. 8.-A bazaar, water from wells and Bangunga river. At 34 miles from Hoorlah, the road leads through the Balachera pass, which has little or no ascent or descent, and is formed by a break in a low ridge of Hills, running north and south. Country partially cultivated, road a tolerably good hackery track, with exception of a short distance on the east and west of the pass where it is heavy, and much cut up by deep narrow ravines ; pass Gowar. ke at 1, Bissara at 6, and Kerowlee at 91 miles. The Bangunga passes Maunpoor on the Dorth, and runs nearly parallel to the road on the right in this march, 9.–A small village, with a few buniah's shops, water from wells and nullah. Country open and partially cultivated; hills left at a distance. At 6 miles pass the large village of Secundra on right bank of the Bangunga and at 10 miles pass Dubbee. Nullahs fordable ; a pretty good cart road. 10.-A middling village, with 'a few bunlah's shops, water from wells. Country un. dulating and partially cultivated ; road pretty good ; pass the Hill Fort and large town of Deosir at 9 miles. 11.-Supplies from surrounding villages and water from wells and a nullah. Country studded with detached hills on the right and left and very partially cultivated; road narrow and bad for carts, leading in some places, through deep ravines ; pass the large village of Jutwara on east or left bank of a dry nullah at 4, and the small village of Hurella at 6 miles. 12-A large village and bazaar, situated on the east bank of a nullah which has a con- siderable stream in the rains, but is nearly dry for 8 months in the year. Hills on the right at the distance of 2 miles ; road good ; pass village of Kheree at miles. 13.-Supplies and water in abundance ; encamping ground near the old Residency at the Mah-jee-ka Bagh, 1 mile to the south west of the city; the road for the first 5 miles is level and good; it then leads through a narrow pass in a ridge of hills for a mile and a quarter, at the end of which there is a short sandy ascent very difficult for carts, thence it passes under the city wall, and is very heavy sand. Pass Parlee at 3, and Guojer-ke Bowree 5 miles. Nullahs fordable. 14. A small bazaar and water plentiful. Country undulated and very partially cultivat- ed, road very heavy and bad for carts. 15.-A large village and bazaar, water plentiful from wells and a nullah. Country and Toad as in last stage; pass Chowdereewala at 3 miles, 16. -A small village, supplies from Buchroon, distant 3 miles to the northward and from surrounding villages, water from wells. Country undulating and road bad for carts. The Bandee river is fordable, the bed sandy and banks sloping ; pass Cheetrowlee at 14. Muhul at 3), and Nasnowtah at 7 miles, 17.-A bazaar, water from wells. Country slightly undulated and partially cultivated, road good. At 54 miles pass through the large village of Sowurdah. 18. -A hazaar, water from well. Country and road as in last stage ; pass Pullasowlee at 53, and Dantrie at 94 miles; nullahs fordable. At 104 miles enter the Kishengurh state. 19.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Kishengurh is a very large town, situated at the north east end of a chain of low hills, and has a fine lake on the north side ; it gives its name to a small state, and is the residence of Rajah Kulliau sing. Country and road as in last two stages. Nullahs fordable ; best encamping ground on east side of the town. 0.-A few buniahs, and supplies from surrounding villages; water from wells, road good, first passing through Kishengurh, and then winding round the northern end of hills. Country alter the first 2 miles is open and pretty well cultivated ; at 8 miles, enter the Hon'ble Company's district of Ajmeer. Nullahs fordable. 91.-Supplies and water in great abundance; good encamping ground close to the city. Road level and good for the first 4 miles ; it then winds through a pass between low hills for a mile, and is stony and rough, the remainder of the way good ; pass Googra 21 miles, No. 4.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO ALLYGURH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. ... British. Agra Muttra Allygurh Allygurh Kundowlee Saidabad Hattras Sasnee ALLYGURH tonment 13 0 Jumna 8/ 6 11 0 8! 4 1 2 3 4 Can- 14 4 5 5 Total... 55 61 miles. 30 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. [PART 1. 1.-A small bazaar and water from wells ; at 34 miles from the centre lines, cross the Jumna by a bridge of boats near the Raj-ghat, thence for a mile and half the road is heavy, the remainder very good ; passing through a partially cultivated country; pass Naraich at 4], Nundlapoor at 9, and Mulupoor at llj miles. 2.-A good bazaar, water and supplies plentiful. Country well cultivated, road excellent ; pass Barons at 2, Gigella at 4, Gursoatee at 5, and Jewahirgurhat 74 mile. Aty mile to the south west of Saidab ad there is a fine Pucea House, built by Government for a Kutchery. 3.-A large bazaar and well water in abundance. Road excellent and country highly cultivated ; pass Bisana at 31, Sooppaha at 6, Bhoosnugra at 7, Mitei at 74, and Kulwaree at 94 miles, with numerous villages at short distances from the road on right and left. The Kuttra or town of Hattras forms a square about 500 yards aside, and is surrounded by a mud wall and very deep dry ditch. The old Fort stands due east of the Kuttra at the dis- tance of half a mile. 4.-A large bazaar; supplies and water in abundance ; road good, and county well cul. tivated; pass Dianutpoor at 24, Roheree at 31, Bursee at 5, and Bijheree at 8 miles, with many villages at short distances on the right and left. The road from Allygurh to Etawah strikes off from Sasnee. 5.-Road good, and country open and partially cultivated, pass Murrurai at 64, and through the town of Coel from Ilto 124 miles. No. 5.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO BAREILLY BY KHASGUNGE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullans. M. F. Agra Muttra A CON | Nos. Allyghur 15 o Jumna 141 2 14 2 96 105 KallyNuddy 81 4 Umurkhera Jullaisir Nundowlee Pindowra KHASGUNGE Soorun Left bank of the Ganges at Kuchla Ghat Oojhanee Shazadnugur Budaon Suheswan 11 o Ganges 7 Suh 1 British. 8 9 AONLAGUNGE 1 10 11 4 91 2 Soot or 13 1 Yar Wuf- fadar Newab 10 0 Nuddy and Aril Ramgun- 11 2 ga and Dojorah Bareilly Gaenie 111 BAREILLY Cantt. 12 12 Total... 137 5 miles. 1. -A small bazar, supplies in abundance from surrounding villages ; water from wells and not very good. Country very partially cultivated, and cut into deep ravines in many places. Road bad hackery track, pass Naraich at 41, Naoke Serai at 7, Nadou at 93, and Osmanpoor at 14 miles. Cross the Jumna by bridge of boats, and ford the nullah, which becomes dry soon after the rains. 2.- A large open town and good bazar, good water from wells and tanks. Country well wooded and highly cultivated, road good, pass Bhyns at 47, Kunerah at 52, Neemke Sera at 71, Chew Khera at 104, and Goondao at 1lj miles, with numerous other villages, at short distances from the road the right and left. 3.-A small bazar and market twice a week, on Tuesdays and Saturdays; good well water. Country and road as in last stage, puss Khullelgunge at 1, Bejua at 5, Noob at 74. Kberat 8, Dulsaeepoor at 91, agd Tatarpoor at 13 mites, YOL IL) 31 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK." 4.-A small village, supplies from Marera 3 miles to the northward, and from surround- ing villages, water from Wells; road good, over a partially cultivated plain, pass Rampoor at 32, Budwas at 41, Mohudy poor at 71, and Puchera at 81 miles. Cross the new road from Allahabad to Delhie near Budwas. 5.-A large town and bazaar; good well water. Country partially cultivated, road sandy in some places, but generally good. At the 3rd mile ford the Kally Nuddy, which is about 20 yards wide, with low banks and knee-deep water in November. There is a pucea bridge of 9 small arches at this ghat which the Nuddy has left, and now runs about 40 yards to the north of it ; pass Marera at 3, and Nudrei at 74 miles. 6.-A bazar; supplies abundant, water from wells and a jheel ; road in many places heavy sand. At 5į miles the road descends into what appears to have been formerly the bed of the Ganges, and continues in it to Soorun, which is situated on the old bank of the river, and has a fine lake under it on the west side. Soorun is a Hindoo Teerut, and numbers of that faith resort to it annually to bathe in its Holy Waters. Country partially cultivated ; pass Gouraha at 34, and Pahlad poor at 51 miles; nullah nearly dry in No- Tember, 7.-No village ; supplies must be taken from Soorun, or collected from Oojhanee and other villages by order of the local authorities. Road in many parts heavy and bad for carts. Country cultivated in parts, and in parts covered with grass jungle, evidently once the bed of the river. Encamping ground immediately on the left bank of the river at the ghat. There are boats belonging to this ferry. When the Ganges is divided into two or more streams at the Kuchla ghat which it is during some seasons) and the Peeprole ferry, which is between 4 and 5 miles higher up, is considered preferable, the stages then are from Soorun to Peeprole on left bank of the Ganges 87 miles, and Oojhanee 10 miles. 8.- A large bazar; good well water. Road heavy in some parts, and much cut up by hackery wheels. Country very partially cultivated, a good deal of grass jungle, nullah nearly dry in November. 9. -A sınall bazaar, and supplies in abundance from the surrounding villages,-water from wells and the Soot river; road good, and the country partially cultivated and inter- spersed with patches of bush jungle ; pass Manickpoor at I, Roulee at 2, Bursoor at 31 Bee rah at 5, and Nurrunjunpoor at 6 miles. 10.-A town and large bazaar, water from wells and tanks. Ford the Soot river at I mile from Shazadnugur bed about 25 yards wide, sandy firm bottom, depth of water in November 3 feet. Cross the nullah at the 10th mile, becomes dry soon after the rains ; pass Tukeree at 51, Burour at 71, Choolera at 8, Resoola at 94 and Beerpoor at 104 miles, with many other villages at short distances on the right and left. Country well cultiva. ted. 11.-A few buniahs ; supplies in abundance from Allygunge, distant 2 miles to the Festward, and from surrounding villages. Country a low flat, and much under water in the rains, and for the first 84 miles it is mostly covered with grass jungle; road pretty good in dry weather. At li miles ford the Newab nuddy, and at 41 miles cross the Aril by a pucca bridge of 10 small arches, the nullah is a inile further in advance, and dry soon alter the rains. 12.-Supplies and water in great abundance ; road in some places good, and in others heavy sand. At 2 miles from Gaenie cross the Ramgunga by ferry and it may also be forded from December to June. At 61 miles, cross the Dojorah by ferry and ford. For the first two miles there is little cultivation; but after passing the Ramgunga the country is well cultivated. No. 6.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO THE BHURTPOOR RESIDENCY. Dist. Cioril Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 1010 Meerakoor FUTTEHPOOR Sick- ... ... ... British Agra REE 12 41 80 1 2 Bhurt - poor Governor Genl.'s Behnehra Agent Rajpoo- BAURTPOOR RESI-2 tana DENCY near Sewur 90 ... 3 .. 4 Total... 391 4 miles. 1.-See No. 3, page 28. 2.-A few buniahs, water from wells. Road good and country level, and pretty well cultivated. 3.- Sapplies in great abundance, water from wells. Good encamping ground on the parade in front of the residency. Road good, passing through the jungle which sur- Founds Bburtpoor the whole way. 32 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 7.-FROM AGRA CITY TO BHURTPOOR CITY. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 11 91 1 British Agra GovernorGenl.'s Agent Rajpoo- tana Ungotha Chuksanee BHURTPOOR CITY 12 O... Bhurt poor ... : : : 2 3 11 3 Total... 340 miles. 1.-A middling village. Water plentiful, and supplies procurable from surrounding vil. lages, road pretty good. -Supplies procurable; water from wells ; road good. 3.-Supplies and water abundant; road good. 1 2 British No. 8.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO ETAWAH. Etimadpoor 14/ 0 Jumna Agra Feerozabad 13/ 6 SHEKOABAD 125 Mynpoorie Moorlydur ke Serai 81 4 Jeswunt nugur 14 4 Etawah ETAWAHCantonment 96 :::: ...... 6 ...... 6 Total... 731 0 miles. 1.-A bazar, supplies and water in abundance. Road heavy in some parts, but in general good ; country after the first 7 miles partially cultivated. Cross the Jumna by a bridge of boats. Pass Shadera at 5 miles, and Chilesur at 74. 2.- A large town and bazar, good water from wells, road good and country well culti. vated. Pass Mahomedabad at 2, Oosainee at 74, and Raja Talao at 94 miles. 3.-A town and good bazar, well watered, road good. Conntry cultivated and studded with small villages. Pass Russeelpoor at i, Ussabad at 11, Kuneta at 23, Mukunpoor at 5, Edmy at 71, and Boorah at 91 miles. 4.-Supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Road and country as in last stage. Pass Noushera at 1, Puchperat 2, a Datree at 3, Omree at 41, and Deagunge at 6 miles. 5.-A small bazaar, and supplies from adjacent villages. Country as above; road in gen- eral good but sandy in some places, water plentiful. Pass Goorao at 44, Kutpooree å 61, Noornye at 7, Meetapoor at 8, Phooleree at 104, and Koorsainee ke nugur at 113 miles. 6.-Supplies and water in abundance, road good, country, well cultivated. Pass Kest at 1, and Lesah at 64 miles, with several small villages at short distances on the right and left of the road. The town of Etawah is about a mile S, E, of the cantonment. . No. 9.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO MHOW BY THE LAKHEREE AND MUKUNDRA PASSES. S Meerakoor 101 01. British Agra 1 Futtehpoor Sickree 134 Governor Genl.'s Bokowlee 84 Bangunga 2 Agent in Raj Near Rudawul 9 4. 3 pootana BIANA 9, 0... 4 Bhurt- poor VOL. II.] 33 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 81 2: Jeypoor Boondee. Sirote or Soorote 11 7 Gumbeer .. 5 HINDOUN 8] 4 Arinee 6 Kutgurh 7 Wuzeerpoor 7 7 Gumbeer .. Governor Gene- | Khooshalgurh or 2 11 6.. 19 ral's Agent in Khoosialgurh MEENAPARA 8 7 2 10 Rajpootana at Bunhan Ajmere Doonger Mularna .. 12 3 and 11 Moreel .. Seelu 11 o Banas 1 12 Allumpoor 10 4 1 13 Pancholas 12 5 5 14 Chakun Angowra or Ungura . 107 and 6 15 Tuldonee Papuree or Papree... 8 Maizė, 7 16 Right Bank of the Chumbul 11 4 17 (Ford) Notara 18 P. A. at Kotah Degode 105 1 19 Mowassa 13 6 3 20 Murana 101 2 3 21 MUCKUNDURA 22 Amjar Joolmee 15/ 5 and 3' 23 Paturea . Rewa Akodea 12 6 and 3 24 Ahoo. S Himra 11 01... 3 25 } 127... Kotah. 126 Ameer Scindea's. Khan's. Holkar's. Bolia or Boliabaree. 11 3 Chumlee.... 5 26 Soosneer Raoke Burra 4ggur 3 29 Tunoreea Resident at In- Hol-S dore kar':? Dabla (Huldua ka). Scindea's. 11 1 Kuntalee ... 71 27 6 4 Ditto 3 28 11 6 101 01 1/ 30 Chota 71 6 Kalli 2 31 Sind. 11 2 ... 4 32 124 4 33 10 5 Sipra ] 34 12 1 Kaan 35 12 0 3 36 13 6 Gumbeer.. 5 37 Nuzurpoor JOOJEIN Peeplye Solesunda INDORE Mhow Cantonment.. Hol- kar? 58 Total 415 01 PART I, VOL. II, 34 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, 1.--See No. 1. 2.-A small village. Supplies from the surrounding village, and water from wells, but not very good. A ridye of low hills on the right part of the way, and then some isolated heights. Road in some parts good, others heavy sand: between ile 6 and 7th mile it crosses the dry bed of the Bangunga river which is of heavy sand, and forms the boundary between the district of Agra and the Bhurtpoor state on this line. Pass Jehan poor at l, Murrei at 29, Bhow poor at 4, Dabur at 41, Serowlee at 5a, and Orella at 8 miles. 3.-Supplies from Rudawul and surrounding villages. Encamping ground close to the road, and about half way between the villages of Rudawul and Marupoor. Good well Water; at I mile from Bukowlee the road passes through the ridge of low hills, which recommences on right bank of the Bangunga, and then continues on the left the whole march. Road first half heavy; the last good, country partially cultivated. 4.-A large town at the foot of an extensive fortified hill. Water and supplies plentiful. Cross the nullah at the 4th mile, and the Gumbeer between the 7th and 8th, both dry in November. Country partially cultivated. Pass Nerowlee at 4, and Birmabad at 7 miles. The ridge of hills continues on running nearly parallel to the road, and enereasing in height. The fortified hill of Biana is on the righi of the road, and from it a chain of hills stretches ofi' mu a westerly direction. 5.- A large village and bazar enclosed by a mud wall and dry ditch. Supplies and water in abundance Road for the first 7 miles through ravines, and very bad for hackeries ; at the Gth miles eross the dry bed of the Gumbeer river, which is of heavy, sand, and nearly a mile wide. Country much cut by ravines, and very partially cultivated. At 2 miles from Sirote enter the Jyepoor country. For the first 3 miles of this march the road passes under the fortified Hill of Biana and the ridge of hills continues on the left at the distance of about 3 miles. 6.-A large open town and good bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road good, country ill cultivated and not fertile ; distant ranges of hills on the right and left. Cross the Arinee at the 5th mile, sandy bed, and becomes dry immediately after the rains. The road from Agra to Nusseerabad strikes off from Hindoun. 7.-A small village with four buniah's shops, water from four pucca wells, 70 cubits deep. Road good across an uncultivated plain. Hills on the left at the distance of two or three miles, Pass Phulwaree at 3, Kachirowlee at 33, and Khera at 5 miles. 8.--A large village and small bazar. Water plentiful from wells. Cross the Gumbeer river, under Kutyurh, bed 100 yards wide, sandy and dry for about 8 months in the year. Banks steep and cut into deep ravines for hair a mile on each side, road through ihese ravines bad for carts. The remainder pretty good over an open and partially cultivated plain. Pass Raepoor at 39, and Koorsaen ke Gurhee at 4 miles. Hills at a distance on right and left. 9.-A large town and good bazar, enclosed by a mud wall and ditch ; water from wells plentiful and good. Country as in last stage. Road pretty good. Pass Sarolee at 2, Chaan at 51, Binega at 63, and Saaloda at 10 miles. Hills on left at 21 and 3 miles. Cross the nullah under Sarowlee, dry for 8 months in the year, bed sandy and bank low. 10.-No supplies here, and they should be taken on from Koosialgurh or Doonger Mular- Da, according to the direction of the march. Water plentiful from wells, and the Bunhan puddy which runs past Meenapara on the west, At i of a mile cross the first nullah which has low banks and a clayey bed, with water in pools rising from springs, At? miles cross the second nullah, 20 yards wide, with low banks and sandy bed, dry for 8 months in the year. Road sandy and heavy for carts. Country open and bare. Hills on left at the distance of 4 miles. 11.-A large open town and good bazar, situated at the foot of a high hill, on the top of which there is a Mahomedan Durgah. Water and supplies in great abundance. At i mile cross the Bunhan, 150 yards wide, banks sloping and sandy, bed of moist sand. Small rill of water in dry season. At 94 miles enter the dry sandy bed of the Moreel along which the road leads for about 2 miles. Country bare and slighily undulated. The road hetween the Bunhan and Moreel good. The remainder heavy and bad for carts. Pass Battoda at 64 miles, whence the road to Neemuch strikes off. The ridge of hills which rises near Futtehpoor Sickree, and runs along the left of the road from Bokowlee ends at Doonger Mularna. 12.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and collected from neighbouring villages. Water scarce, only one good well and a tank, which becomes dry in February. At 3 miles cross the nullah, 10 yards wide, with low banks and sandy bed, becomes dry immediately after the rains. At 6 miles ford the Banas river, bed heavy sand, and 100 yards wide at the ghat, breadth of stream in dry season 250 yards, and from 1 to 2 feet deep; banks steep, and broken into deep ravines. "Country north of the Banas slightly undulated and bare, and south of that river it is level and partially cultivated. Road excellent with exception of the bed of the Banas. Pass Sangerwassa on the left and Puddana on the right bank of the river ; in the latter village, there is a small bazaar, and circumstances may render it advisa - ble to make this the intermediate stage between Doonger Mularna and "Allumpoor instead of Scelu, where water and supplies are scarce for a large detachinent. The distances would then be to Puddana 8 miles, Allumpoor 13-3 ditto, 13.-Formerly a large town but now reduced to a middle-sized village, the inhabitants having retired within the walls of Nyashehr or Madupoor, which is a large town in a val- ley surrounded by high fortitied hills to the east of Allumpoor. Supplies in abundance from Madupoor, provided timely notice be given to the Governor General's Agent in Kaj- pootana, and water from numerous wells all round Allumpoor. At 3 miles ford the nul- fah, which is sometimes called the Gumbeer. It has a small stream in the dry season, and its bed is sandy: Country level and pretty well cultivated. Road for the first 4 miles good, the remainder heavy in parts. Pass Dunowlee at 21, Phusada at 34, and Kootupora at 8 miles. from Allumpoor a ridge of hills runs off to the north east. 14.-A middling village and small bazaar, but supplies scarce. Water from 4 wells and a zullah, which retains water in pools during the dry season, The nullahs which intersect 1 VOL. 11.) 35 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. the road in this stage all dry immediately after the rains, and form no impediment; the ber of the last, which is within a mile of Pancholas, deep and rocky, but the banks slope off at the ghat; country slightly undulated and very partially cultivated. Hills on the left at the distance of 2 and 3 miles. Road good. Pass Joar at 6, and Rewan junna at 84 miles. 15_A small village. Water plentiful and supplies from Indurgurh, 24 miles westward. At 5 miles ford the Chakun which is 50 yards wide; bed sandy, leſt bank rocky, right steep and cut into deep ravines, small stream throughout the year running eastward ; at 9 miles ford the Tuldonee, a small perennial stream, steep broken banks, and gravelly bottom. Nullahs all dry and of no importance. At 3 miles from Pancholas there is a short rocky ascent near the village of Kurwareea, and thence to the Chakun, a distance of 2 miles; the road leading over undulated rocky ground is bad for wheeled carriages, the remainder is good. Little cultivation near the road in this stage. Hills on the left at some distance, and after crossing the Chakun there are hills close on the right. Pass Kurwareea at 3 miles, Goda at 5, and Roopara at 7. 16.-A small village. Supplies from Lakheree 4 miles to the northward. Water from the Maire river ; cross the Maize under Papuree, its bed sandy and dry at the ghất, but water remains throughout the year in the deep pools on the right and left, banks steep and cut into ravines. Country hilly and covered with jungle. Road stony and winding. At of a mile pass Balsundo, and at 3 miles leave Lakheree, 11 miles on right a large village bazar situated under a ridge of hills which extends southwest of Boondee. 17.-Supplies scanty and only procurable on timely notice being given to the Political Agent at Kotah. Water from the Chumbul river, which is here about 300 yards wide. The bed of heavy sand, banks steep and cut into deep ravines, during the dry season the stream is usually about 30 yards wide, and from 2 to 24 feet deep. Country between the Maize and Chumbul level and well cultivated; road good and soil black mould. Pass Lowaen at 5, and Daekheree at 9 miles. The bed of the Chumbul for some distance above and below the Burana ford is sandy, and is known to the natives by the name of Koosuk. 18.-A middling village and 3 buniahs' shops. Water from wells and a nullah distant 600 yards. Supplies in abundance from Soolian poor 24 miles to the southward, and froin adjacent villages. For the first 4 miles there are deep ravines on right and left on the road. The country then is slightly undulated and well cultivated on the left, whilst on the right it is cut into ravines hordering the Chumbul and a nullal which runs to join that river near Madoura. Road bad, winding along the head of deep ravines. Soil black; mould full of cracks and holes. Pass near Kunetto at 2, near Murano at 41, Myrana at 9, Kherlee at 101, and Neemlee at 114 miles, 19. -A large village and bazaar. 'Water and supplies in abundance. Pass Sooltanpoor, a large village and bazaar at 24 miles, Zilim poor at 5, Kumrpoor at 71, and Omedpoor at 9 milis. The nullah runs under Sooltanpoor; its banks steep and cut into ravines; its bed of gravel and sand, with water in pools throughout the year. Country slightly undu. lated, soil black mould and highly cultivated. 20.-A middling village and small bazaar, supplies procurable from adjacent villages and from Keylone. Water plentiful from wells and a nullah. Country and soil as in last stage. Road good. The nullahs become dry immediately after the rains. Pass Dugaree at 21, Chaar at 34, Dara at 5$, Moorpa at 61, Keytone, a large village and bazaar, at 103, and soopora at 114 miles. 21.-A large village and small bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Couutry for the first 2 miles level and well cultivated. Thence it is undulated, rocky, and covered with jungle. Road good for the first mile and a half, then rocky and bad for carts. Nullahs rocky-bedded and dry after the rains. Pass Barodea at 11, Kussur at 71, and Muckun- poor at 91 miles. 2.-A middle-sized village and small bazar, forming a long narrow street through which the road passes, water from baolees and a nullah. Country undulated and well cultivated for the first 8 miles ; it is then rocky and hilly for the remainder of the way. Road for 81 miles very good ; it is then stony, and leads through jungle for 24 miles to the entrance to the Muckundura pass. The remainder is very rocky in some parts, and in others covered with large stones, with hills close on right and left. Pass Meemk heree at 21, Oined poor at 4. Bheelkheree at 5, Kalliak heree at 6, Bobura at 8, and Moru at 109 miles. The village of Muckundura is situated in a narrow valley, formed by two parallel ridges of hills running northwest and southeast between the Chumbul and Ralli Sind river. Nullahs all dry after the rains. 23.-A small bazaar, supplies and water plentiful for a battalion. Country partially cultivated. Road stony in some parts but generally good. At l { miles cross the Arnjar. A small stream throughout the year, "bed stony, banks steep, but sloping at the ghat. Cross the Paturea, close to Joolmee; becomes dry in April; its bed stons and banks Tow. At 5 miles cross rocky, bediled nullah with perennial stream of good water. The other two nullahs become dry after the rains. 'Pass Amjar at l}, Seraido at 5, Iskillee at 6, Neemana at 8, and Kodela at 104 miles. 21.--A small village on right bank of the Ahoo river. Supplies from Sonail 24 miles south. Water from the river. Country well cultivated, soil black mould. Road generally good, but in some parts full of fissures and holes. At 44 ford the Rewa 50 yards wide, little water and sandy bed, banks steep and cut into ravines, through which the road leatis for some distance on both sides. Ford the Ahoo at the end of the march 120 yar ds wide, tred rocky, and bad for carts ; depth of water dry season from 1 to 2 leet, bank's steep and cut into ravines. Nullahs dry soon after the rains. Pass Rajpoor at 31, Sameea at 14, and Guneshpoor Garnawud at 74 miles, 25-A'mid.lling village, 9 buniahs. Supplies rather scanty from adjacent villages. Water from wells, soil as iu last stage, well cultivated. Road good. Pass Sonail at 21, Kallak- beree at 5, Semareea at 61, and Chota Dabla at 8 miles. Nullahs dry after the rains. 26.-A small village. Water plentiful; supplies from Perawah 4 iniles to the northward. 36 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. - Country undulated and pretty well cultivated; road good. Pass Doolah at 31, Perawah, a large town and head of a small district belonging to Aineer Khan, at 74, and Buldo at 84 iniles. 27.-A large town surrounded by a stone wall, with circular bastions in good repair, supplies and water plentiful. Country undulated and rising towards a ridge of low hills on the west. Soil black mould, full of stones in some places. In the first & miles the road passes over a ridge of rising ground and is very rough and bad for carts; the remainder is but reut in dry weather, and very bad after rain owing to the soft adhesive nature of the soil. At 9į miles cross the Kuntalee, a small stream, sloping banks and smooth rocky bed. The 5th nullah which is crossed near Suttrakheree is 10 yards wide, with banks and bed of soft black mould and difficult to pass for some time after the rains. The other nullahs present no impediment. Pass Putporah at 24, Munoura at 49, Suttrakheree at 51, Dinakheree at 8, and Sadulpoor at 9 miles. 28.-A small vlllage in ruins, situated on a low hill right of the road. Supplies should be taken on from Soosneer or Aggur according to the direction of the march, Water from one good pucca well and a nullah. Ground suficient for the encampment of a couple of regiments in a narrow valley close under Raoke Burra, cross the Kuntalee twice, first under Boosneer, and again near Khurenta, bed rocky and banks sloping at both Ghâts. Water throughout the year. The nullahs present no obstacle. Country and soil as in last stage, and for the last 2 miles there are hills close on the right and left of the road. Road pretty good. Pass Moorkherec at 2, and Khurenta at 34 miles. 29.-A large town enclosed by a stone wall with circular bastions; it stands on the left of the road on a narrow slip of high ground between a large lake on the south and a deep ravine on the north. Supplies and water in abundance. At 8} mlle from the encampment at Raoke Burra there is a short ascent to high undulated ground over which the road leads for 5 miles, it then descends and passes over less elevated but still undulated waste ground to the end of the march. Pass Kashie Burrea at 6, and Nissanea at 84 miles. The nullahs in this stage are easily crossed. 30.-A middling village having a small bazar and weekly market. Water from wells, country high, undulated and waste. Road stony and rough in parts but generally good. There are no villages on the road in this march and the nullah offers no impediment to carts. 31. -A small village, 3 Buniahs. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water abundant, At 4 miles cross the Chota Kalli-sind ai Paut Parsee ghat where it is 100 yards wide, its bed very rocky, and depth of water in dry season from 2 to 24 feet ; banks sloping, but also rocky for about 80 yards on both sides the river ; the nullahs are easily crossed in dry weather, but the first which occurs at a mile from Tunoreea being muddy-bedded is diffi. cult for carts in wet weather. Country undulated and partially cultivated, soil black mould full of fissures and holes. Road good with exception of the ghat on the Kalli-sind. Pass Parsee at 4, and Jellarah at 6 miles. 32.-A small village. Supplies from 24 miles to the northward. Water from Baolees and wells. Country undulated and rising into a ridge of low hills, which intersects the road a mile short of Nuzurpoor. Soil black mould and very partially cultivated. Road good, Pass Jogeepeeplia at 1, Gooslo at 4, and Gutteah at 81 miles. At I mile cross a nullah with sloping banks, rocky bed and about it fect in depth of water; the other nullahs are of no importance. 33.-A walled-city 64 miles in circumference. Supplies and water in great abundance. Country undulated and partially cultivated, Road pretty good with exception of a short distance at each of the núllahs or Khals, where it leads through ravines, and is cut up by the rains every season. Pass Nepaneea at 24, Jey till at 41, Dadla at 64, and Soosassa at 7} miles. The distance of 124 miles is from Nuzurpoor to the Niza- mutpoor gate in city wall on the eastern side, near which is the best ground of encampment at Bugta Matta ke Baolee. The principal road through the city enters by the Ungpole gate on the north, leads through the Chouk or principal bazar, and passes out by the Samere gate on the south, and may be marched by infantry, but artiſlery should proceed by the road which passes east of the city. 34.—A small village. Supplies should be taken on from Oojein or Samere according to the direction of the march. Water from Kaan River. Country level. Soil black mould and partially cultivated. At 41 miles cross the Sipra, bed rocky for 100 yards, banks steep and cut into ravines at the ghat, width of the stream in dry season 20 yards and from 1 to I feet deep: Road good with exception of the ghat on the Sipra wbich is bad for carts. Pass Nanakhera at 2, Gowla at 31, and Deudia at 5 miles. 25.-A middling village. 4 Buniahs. Supplies for a regiment procurable from Solesunda and neighbouring villages, but for larger detachments they must be taken on from Samere Indore. Water from 2 Baolees and a nullah. Cross the Kaan under Samere by a good ford. Water about one foot deep., Country level and partially cultivated. Road goud. Pass Samere, a large town and good bazar ai 5, Keylana at 74, and Turana at 8 miles. 36.-An open city. Supplies and water plentiful; the British residency is about 2 miles to the east of Holkar's palace, which is in the heart of the city. Country slightly undu. lated and raised into a low ridge which intersects the road at the 4th mile from Solesunda. Road excellent. Pass Barodea at !4, Ingodea at 21, Alwassa at 4, Bhorasila at 61, and Nurwul at 8 miles. The best road winds round Indore on the west side. The nullahs are, passed with ease. 37.–Country undulated, soil black mould and partially cultivated. Road excellent in dry wcather, and at 7 miles passes over a ridge of rising ground which runs off in a Northerly direction from the right, and is here and there raised into Knolls. The same ridge left of the road runs East, and is raised into detached hills and Hillocks. At 103 miles cross the Gumbeer by a good ford, bed 40 yards wide, banks steep and bottom gravelly, water throughout the year. Pass Beejulpoor at 39, Raon at 6, Peura al 7), Peeplea at si and Sehada at 114 miles. VOL. 11.) 37 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 10.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO MUTTRA. Dist. Territory. Ciril Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. British Agra Muttra 1 S Nurcutta Furrah MUTTRA Cantonment 12 0 10 3 13 0 CON Nos. 3 Total 351 3 1.-A small village. 5 buniah's shops. Water form 5 pucca wells from 40 to 45 feet deep. Country flat and well cultivated. Road heavy in some parts, but generally good and very wide. Pass through Jeyesingpora at 24, Lohke Mundee at 4, Nobuttă ai 4%, Seeundra at 7), and Atomee at 10 miles. 2.-A small bazaar-water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road sandy and beavy in some parts. ass near Chomooa at 24, near Koteh ka Nugra at 34, Ryepoora at 41, Pingeree at 7, Bhur ka Nugra at 84 and Bamun ka Nugra at 94 miles. 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Country cut into ravines, and partially cultivated. Road heavy sand in parts, and bad for carts. Pass Shahpoor at 1, Jendeepoor at 21, Werah at 44, Kunnour at 51. Ronchee at 81, Nourungabad at 94 miles. There are two toads leading from Furrah to the Muttra cantonment. The one here given keeps to the right along the bank of the Jumna, and is called the lower road. The other keeps to the left and clear of the broken ground, and is a much better road, but longer than the lower one by one mile. No. 11.-FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO MYNPOORIE. Shekoabad as in No. 8 Bharole 8 2 British Mynpoorie Bigrace 11 0 MYNPOORIE Can- ? 12 0 Eesun tonment ..} }| 40 2 1 2 - 3 6 Total... 71) 4 miles. 1.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road tolerably good in dry weather, but is under water till November, varying from 1 to 3 feet in depth in the rains. Pass near Bururaee at 1 Kuntree at 21, Maundhaee at 4, and Ramnugur at 57 miles. 2.-A small village. Supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Country flat and much under water. At 5, Giroul at 6, in the rains. Road as in last stage. Pass Bamunee atli, Bharole at af, Alatpoor at 5, Giroul at 6, and Kuthore at 94 miles. 3. --Supplies and water in great abundance. Country and road as above. Pass Mahtolee at 1, Butrowlee at 21, Dunahar at 3, Jeramaee at 54, and Mynpoorie (town of) at 9 miles. Cross the Eesun by a pucca bridge between the town and cantonment of Mynpoorie. in} 1071 61 Khan's Jeypoor. Ameer No. 12.–FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO NEEMUCH BY HINDOUN, KHOOSHALGURH AND CHITTORE. Meenapara, as in No. 9. Battoda 6 4 Bunhan Chour Mularna 8 6 Moreel 2 Peepulwara 11 4 1 3 Sawur 14 o Dhail 4 G. G.'s Agent Bumbour 11 4 Banas 5 Ajmere Shakara or Sheankra 13 4 ... 6 1 i: 38 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Jeypoor. Territory. Dhoonie PUNWAR 105... 11 6... 17 38 Superintendent of Ajmere Ghateeara 11 o Banas 3 9 Lassoreeah SHAHPOORA Mowah Bheelwara HAMEER GURH Gungrar Chittore or Chi-2 toregurh S 13 0... 12 o Kharri 14 6 11 2 Kotesaree 11 4 Banas 9 6... 12 4 Bailuch 10 11 2 12 1 13 1 14 1 15 Oodeypoor. 3 16 ... ... G. G.'s Agent Ajmere 17 SOWAH 10 0... ... 12 0... 2 18 Ameer Scindea's Khan's Neembhera or Neembahera ... Nyagong NEEMUCH Canton- ? ment S Teolun 2. 7 1 P. A. Neemuch Nuddy... } 1 19 6 20 9 1... 31 Total,... 329 6 N. B.-From Hindoun to Sawur there are two roads, one as in No. 12, and the other by Kemlah 11, Shehur 10, Bhamunwas 109, Madowree 114, Duttowlee 12%, Bopui 123, to Sawnr 138, both equally good and have been frequently marched by Troops,-in this latter route there are some quick sands in the bed of the Moreel river. 1.-A small village, surrounded by a dilapidated ud wall and ditch. Scanty, supplies. Water from wells. At one mile cross the Bunham 150 yards wide, banks sloping, bed of moist sand, small rill of water in dry season. Country bare and slightly undulated. Hills on left at the distance of 3 miles. "Road for the first mile rather heavy, the remainder good. 2.-A midlling village, surrounded by a mud wall and ditch, and having a mud ghuree inside, all going to decay ; supplies procurable, but fuel scarce. Good water from wells and a jheel; cross the dry sandy bed of the Moreel at Phursada gbat, nearly a mile wide, Country undulated and bare. Hills on right and left at a distance. Road good. Pass Phursada on right bank of the Moreel at 34 miles. 3.-Supplies procurable. Water from wells. Country undulated and bare. Road excel- lent and approaches the hills on the right. Cross the nullah, which is small and dry, at the 5th mile. 4.-A hill fort and large populous village. Supplies and water plentiful. Country as in last stage. , At 54 miles cross the dry bed of the Dhail Nuddy 100 yards wide. Left bank high. Right low. Road good. At 54 miles pass Neemadee and at 114 under the hill ford of Sarsoop. After quitting Peepulwara, there is a jheel on the right of the road for some distance. 5.-A village ; supplies procurable from Tank; water plentiful and good. Country to the Banas as above, afterwards a plain covered with stunted bushes. Distant hills on both flanks. At 4 miles cross the Banas at Mundawur ghat, bed 700 yards wide and sandy, stream during dry months from 20 to 30 yards wide, and from 1 to 1 feet decp, left bank low and right high. At the 10th mile cross thc Nullah which becomes dry immediately VOL. 11.] 39 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. after the rains, its bed is about 20 yards wide and sandy, it banks low. Road to the Banas good, afterwards more or less sandy, and there is a stiff pull for carts out of the bed of the river; Ameer Khan's resideace is about 3 miles to the north west of Bhumbour. 6.-A village ; supplies scanty. Good water from wells and a jheel. Country an open Rain with is of Road excellent at the 10th, 11th and 12th miles; there are small ravines intersecting the road, but they are of no consequence. 7.-A large village ; surrounded by a low mud wall and small ditch ; supplies procurable; good water from wells and a jheelCountry, road as yesterday and but less cultivation: Åt miles cross the nullah, which is small and nearly dry, and forms the boundary between Jyepoor and Tonk. 8.-A large village ; surrounded by a mud wall, and has a small mud fort inside ; supplies and water plentiful Country, an open plain covered with low bushes. No cultivation except a few patches near villages. Distant hills on right and left. On right high and detached, on left low and forming a range. Road excellent. At 3} cross the first nullah, a1 G4 the second, and at 7} the third ; all dry and forming no impediment. 9.-A village and small stone fort at the foot of a rocky range of hills. Supplies scanty. Water from Baolees and a jheel. at 67 cross the Banas 100 yards wide, nearly dry in Den cember, bed heavy sand, and bank not very high or difficult for carts. Nullahs of no importance. Country open and very partially cultivated. Road heavy. Pass Deoree or Deolee at 4, Khijuree at 7, and Khalerah at 8 miles. 10.-A small village. Scanty supplies from surrounding villages, and should be taken on from Saawur or Shahpoora according to the direction of the march. Water from wells. Road for the first 4 miles to Saawur (a walled town protected by a small hill fort,) is stony, and bad for carts, afterwards excellent. Country to Saawur hilly, and covered with dak and hair jungle, then an open plain for 5 miles, and then again thin dak jungle. Eu- ter the Oudey poor country about 3 miles from Lassoreeah. Pass Tittora at 11 miles. 11.-A large walled town. Supplies and water in abundance. Country a vast undulated plain covered with low bushes and few stunted trees. No cultivation except immediately around villages. Road excellent. Pass near Moondla at 24, Bullan at 54, Kahdeesuna at 71 miles. Cross the dry bed of Kharri at the 7th mile, 40 yards wide and easily passed, 12.-A village. Scanty supplies. Water plentiful. Country and road as in the last stage. Pass Deen Kola or Deekorah at 74, Khurumnanasat at 10, and Khyea at 13 miles. Nullahs dry after the rains, and form no impediment. 13.-A large open town. Supplies and water abundant. Country much the same as in the last two stages. Road good. Pass Reechil at 21, Chapree at 6, and Sangancer, a large valled town in ruinous state, at 9 miles. At 94 miles pass the dry sandy bed of the Kote. saree, about 300 yards wide, with low banks. The road from Nusseerabad to Neemuch joins at Sanganeer. 14. A large villa ge commanded by a small hill stone Fort in good repair. Supplies procurable and water plentiful from wells and a jheel, Country much the same as above, a few detached hills at a distance on the right, and a range on the left running north from Hameergurh. Road for 3 miles rough and uneven, and afterwards sandy and heavy in some places. At the 6th mile cross the nullah 15 yards wide-dry rocky bed and at the 10th mile cross the dry bed of the Banas, 30 yards wide of heavy sand: banks low. Pass Arinee at 2, Murphia at 6, and Gowalree at 8 miles. 15.-A large village commanded by a small hill fort in bad repair. Supplies scanty. water plentiful. Country undulated and partly covered with jungle. At first hills on right and latterly on both flanks. Road rough in parts, but generally good. Pass Sonera at 41, Khera at 54, and near Cheera at 74 miles, 16.-A Town and extensive hill fort, 3 of a mile east, or left of the road. Supplies and water abundant; encamping ground on left bank of the Gumeerea river, over which there is an old stone bridge on the road leading to Chittore. Country much covered with jun- gle, and the hills which are close on the right, decrease gradually into a low rocky ridge, through which the road passes at the 7th mile. Road afterwards good. Nullahs dry and rocky-bedded, wih exception of the first which occurs immediately after starting from Gungrar, and is swampy for some time after the rains. At the ilth mile cross the Bailach bed 190 yards wide with steep banks, nearly dry in December. Pass Dheet at 3, Khera at 4, Meerkhera at 54, Phootowlee at 64, Chanderio at 9, and Bugrakhera at 103 miles, 17.-A village ; supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Country and road much the same as in last stage. Pass near Saihutee or Sentee at 14, Saigwah or Seogah at 3, Se. mereeah 54, and Kuntareah at 7 miles. 18.-A walled town of about 800 houses, supplies procurable and water plentiful. Country a plain, thinly covered with stunted dak and other bushes. Nullahs occur at the 6th and 7th miles, both easy. Road good. Pass Murana at 2, Chirleea at 5, and Pha. sur at 71 miles. 19.-A small village. Water from wells and a nullah. Country flat, free from jungle and partially cultivated. Cross the nullah soon after starting, and 15 miles the nuddy, which is about 50 yards wide and nearly dry in December, its banks steep and bad for carts. Pass Kullianpoor at 14, and Jella Peeplia at 23 miles. 20,--Country much undulated, and rises from Nyagong for 3} miles, and then slopes of towards Neemucb. Nullahs all dry after the rains and easily crossed. Pass Keerpora at 1, Kandka at 2, Dungrowda at 6, and Kinnowlee at 71 miles. ! 40 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 13.-FROM AGRA TO NEEMUCH BY HINDOUN, KHOR- SHEGHUR AND MUNDULGHUR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs, Nos. M. F. 15 2 ... Oodeypoor. ... Punwar, as in No. 12. 195 6 Jehazpoor 16 21 Nuddy ... 10 1 Umurgurh 9 2 Maunpoora 12 3Oulee 4 3 G. Go's Agent Horah near Mun- ? 6 3 24 Ajmere dulgurh S Buroondunnee 9 0 Meenaree 4 5 Khalir? Palkah 14 3 3 6 and Orai. S Bijeypoor 10 0 8 7 Cherowul 10 0... 7 8 P. A. Neemuch. Jawud 12 5 Gumeeree 5 9 NEEMUCH Cantonmt. 6 10 Scindea's 10 2!... 29 Total ./ 3121 21 miles. over 1.-A town and bazaar, water plentiful. Country hilly on left, pretty open on right, with distant hills and knolls. Road a tolerably good hackery track. "Pass Konchelwara at 21, Umurwassee al 7), and Korarea at 94 miles. 2.--80 houses. 10 shops. Water plentiful from wells and a tank. Country hilly. soil rock and gravel. Road an indifferent hackery track, winding between hills sharp undulations. Rather a sharp descent of 60 yards at the end of the stage... Pass Chaburea at 27, Futteh poor at 74, Runnatoo Khera at 94, Kujjooree at 104, and Bekullee at 13 miles. 3.-109 houses, I shop, and well water plentiful. Country hilly at a distance and slightly undulated with scattered knolls near partial cultivation and low jungle, Road pretty good. Pass Mahsuttea at is, Suddapoor at 23, Hurpoora at 54, and Dhamunea at 8 miles. 4.-50 houses, 1 shop, and 7 wells. Mundulgurh 21 miles due east. Country open and flat; a ridge of hills on left at end of Stage running East, partial cultivation and jungle, soil chiefly black mould, 5.--250 houses, 16 shops, and water plentiful. Country open and flat on right. Hills on left at some distance at first, afterwards close. Road pretty good. Pass Lodeanah at 1/, Sengoulee at 6, and Dewureah at 7 miles. 6.--80 houses, 1 shop, 50 wells and l tank. Road an indifferent hackery track very little frequented, winding and confined in parts, and for the first 8 miles leads through a narrow valley between parallel ridges of low hills. Afterwards over an open country with hills at some distance on left. Pass Senguree at 8, Jodhpora at 10, Torneo at 115, and Sowawah at 124 miles. 7.--A good sized village and bazaar, water plentiful. Road passes along a narrow valley, and is quite practicable for laden cattle, but not for carts in consequence of the Bhundgurea Pass, which occurs at the 5th mile, and is rocky and impassable by wheeled carriages for about 200 yards of ascent, and near the same distance in descent. The cen- tre of the valley is pretty generally cultivated, and the sides lined with thick jungle along the foot of the Hills. Pass Tukhtpoorat at 2, Abeepoora at 34, Maunpoor at 37, Koljir at 44, Bawuree Khera at 61, Deo-Doongree at 74, Jewassea at 71 and Bhootpoora at 89 miles. 8.--80 Houses, 6 shops, and 25 wells, with 2 tanks. Road a passable hackery track though little if ever frequented by wheel carriages. Passes along å parrow valley, well cultivated in centre and lined with jungle, as in last stage. Hills generally covered with thick jungle, but in some parts their deep sides are cultivated to their summit. Pass Keerpoora at li, Kullianpoora at 4, Umurpoor at 5, Palchan and Putabpoorat 84 miles. 9:-A large town and bazaar, water plentiful. Road a pretty good hackery track, but confined by ravines in some parts, and is also narrow and rough in others between a wind- ing nullah, and the foot of a ridge of hills ; for the first 9 miles it leads along a narrow val- ley as above, and afterwards through a level well cultivated country. Pass Kurumpoor at 11. Sirowda at 3, Attah at 41, Boodu Singh Khera at 53, Toomba at 7), and Atianah at 9 miles. 10.--Country undulated and pretty well cultivated. Soil gravelly, on the swells, and black mould in the hollows. Road a good hackery track in dry weather. Pass Burkhera at 1, Palrakhera at 31, Newur at G4, and Burooklera at 82 miles, 1 VOL. IL] 41 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 14.–FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO NUSSEERABAD BY BALAHERA AND DEOSIR. Dist. Territories. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos, 1 11 2 3 3 Jeypoor. G. Gl.'s Agent Ajmere Kalakoh, as in No. 3, 101 1 DEOSIR, 90 Lowain, 11 4 Roophara or Roo-> 10 0... paheree, s Chaksoo, 11 0 Moreel, Dabich, 11 4 Bandee, JURANEE, near Mu- 7 0... dhoorajpor, Neemhera, 10 0... Puchewur, 12 3 Mashee, Bambhola, 11 4... LAMBA, 8 4 24 5 } 6 117 8 9 1 10 Kishen British ghur. 10 0... 1 11 Superinteudent | Kanhpora of Ajmere.. NUSSEERABAD Cantonment 2. 10 0.. 12 21 Total. J 223 5 miles. even 1.-A large walled town and hill fort. Supplies and water in abundance, Country undulated and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass near Kherlee, a small village at 41 miles. 2-A large bazaar. Snpplies and water abundant, Country open and partially cultivate ed. Hills at some distance on right. Road good. Nullah dry and sandy: 3.-A small bazaar; snpplies from Toonga ; 6 miles south west, and from surrounding villages. Water plentiful." Road heavy, sand in parts. Country on the left open. Hills on right to Toonga, and thence open and partially cultivated. Nullahs dry after the rains. 4.- A large town and bazaar ; water from wells and a tank. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good, with exceptio of the last 2 miles, where it becomes very and heavy. Pass Kankra at 2 and Bapoo at 5 miles. Cross the dry sandy bed of the Mo- reel under Bapoo. The nullabs form no impediment. 5.-A middling village, 6 buniahs' shops, and supplies procurable from adjacent villages, Fater from wells. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Jyepora at 5, and Keetpora at 8 miles. At 102 miles cross the dry sand bed of the Bandee. 6.-A small village. Supplies procurable from Mudhoorajpoor and water abundant, Country open, flat and little cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Gopalpoor at lf and Bankrota at 3 miles. 1.- A small bazaar. Supplies procura ble, and water from wells. Country as in last stage. Road very good. Pass Maundee at 4, and Mudunpora at 54 miles. Cross the nullah under Mudunpora. No impediment. 8.-A large town and bazaar. Supplies and water abundant. Country as above, Road excellent. "Pass near Myndooash at 3*, Koralee at 6.), and Bureroo at ið miles. At 6 miles cross the dry sand bed of the Mashee. 9.-A bazaar. Water abundant. Country flat, with little cultivation near the road. A good road the whole way. Pass Kumaroo at 4, and Nugur at 64 miles. 10.-A small bazaar. Water plentiful. Country flat and uncultivated. Road good. Pass Daun at 2 miles. Nullah dry after the rains. 11.-4 small bazaar. Supplies procurable and water plentiful, Country still unculti- vated. Road pretty good. Pass Dhadea at 2 miles. Nullah forms no impediment. 12. -Country undulating and rising towards a chain of low hills on the right. Road pretty good Pass Gudree at 5, Delwaree at 7, and Delwara at 74 miles. PART I. VOL. I. G 42 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD 'BOOK. No 15.--FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TONUSSEERABAD BY BIANA AND LALSONTH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 1 2 3 Jeypoor. G. GIl's Agent Ajmere Hindoun, as in No. 9, 707 Kemla 11 4 Gumbeer.. Sheher 101 o Bhamunwas 10 4 Behareepoor 141 4 Kurelee Dowlutpoor 100 Gurnewassee 9! 4 Moreel Keetpora 13| 4 Dhoond Juranee near Mad-2 hoorajpoor 9 o Bandee S Nusseerabad 62 3 1 . 1 5 6 7 8 21 Total 221 6 1.--A small bazaar. Fire wood very scarce here, other supplies procurable, and water plentiful; open country, with hills on right and left at a distance. "Road tolerably good till within four miles of Kemlah, when it becomes very bad, and leads into the dry bed of the Gumbeer, of deep heavy sand, with a steep ascent on opposite bank. Pass Jehanabad at 3, Erneah at 44, Hingode at 61, Mahabeer, on left bank of the Gumbeer, at & miles. 2.-A town and hill fort. Fuel scarce, other supplies, and water plentiful. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road good, approaching 'hills on the right. Pass Milik serai at 4 miles, and Soap at 6 miles 3.-A large town and bazaar. Supplies plentiful, with exception of fire-wood, which is very difficult to be got. Water plentiful. Road tolerably good, passing over a fiat country. Pass Hoodah at 14. Surah at 5, and near Bandee, atº6 miles. A road strikes off from hence to Neemuch. 4.-A small village. Supplies from Lalsonth, distant 3 miles. Water from wells. Fuel still very difficult to be got. At 4 miles pass near Newalee or Loalee, a large village, and from thence there are hills close on the right. Country on the left open and chiefly waste. Road for the most part a very heavy sand, and bad for carts. 5.-A middling village, 6 buniahs shops. Supplies scanty. Water from wells., Country hilly on right, open on left. Road heavy in some parts, but generally good. Pass Cha- toas at 3, and Thoonoo at 51 miles. 6.-A bazaar. Water from wells. Country Aat, and no cultivation except immediately around the villages. Road for some miles extremely heavy, particularly across the broad bed of the Moreel, but it improves greatly in the last 4 miles. Pass Tullockpora at 3, and Mooneeke Tikoroo at 4 miles. Cross the nullah at little after passing the latter place. 7.- A small village. Water from wells. Supplies should be taken on from Chaksoo or Madhoorajpoor, according to the direction of the march. Country flat, and very little cultivation. Cross the dry sandy bed of the Dhoond at 1} miles from Gumewa See, and thence to Keetpora the road is good. Pass Ragoopora at 24, Chaksoo, a large town, at 51, and Jyepora at 10 miles. 8.-A small village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable from Madhoorajpoor. At 2 miles cross the dry, sandy bed of the Bandee. Country open and flat, very partially cul- tivated. Pass Dabich, a middling village, at 24, Gopalpora'at 4, and Banklota at 51 miles, No. 16.–FROM AGRA CANTONMENT TO SAUGOR BY GWALIOR, DUTTEAH, JHANSI AND TEHREE. 12 01. Agra ..Tehara 1 1 G. G.'s Agent.. Muneah Dholpoor 13 4 Bangunga 9 o... 1 2 3 VOL. 11.] 43 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territories. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. Scindea's. 1 10 Jhansi. Dutteah. 1] 12 Hingonah 134 Chumbul Koharee Dunaila 121 and 5 Resident at Ahsin. Gwalior GWALIOR Residency. 112 Sank 6 Soowun Jinsee 63 7 reka Antree 122 Oomrar 18 Dubbra 144 2 9 Ooprai 122 Sind Dutteah, (South? 11 side of) 82 2 Ambabah 8/4 JHANSI 84 .. 2 13 Barairee G. G.'s Agent Burwa Sagor 122 and 7| 14 Banda Betwa .S Pirtheepoor 124 8 15 Bhumouree 136 111 16 Bilgong 12 3 12 17 Tehree 9.5 11 18 Jumnar River at 103 Jumnar Kiria Dunwa Ghat 71 19 Saroomul 154 12 20 Serai or Soraee W863 8 21 Dhamonee 11 22 Com. Jubulpoor, Barol 9 23 P. Asst. Saugor Serairee 100 Dussaun 12 24 SAUGOR Cantonment. 60 ... 26 .. .. Sha- garh *33143L 1 195 Bri- fish 106 1 25 Total 27343 1.-A large village. Small bazaar and supplies in abundance from adjacent villages. Well water plentiful. Country level and well cultivated, Road heavy sand in some parts. but generally very good. 2.-A bazaar; water from wells and a tank. Road tolerably good and country highly enltivated for the first 5 miles to Jahjoor on the left bank of the Bangunga, thence road heavy and country chiefly waste and saudy. Cross the Bangunga under Jahjoor, bed sandy and about 130 yards wide, with steep banks cut into deep ravines. A small rill of clear water in the dry season. The nullab which occurs between Tebara and Jahjoor is some- times called the Uttingin Nuddy, and forms no impediment during the dry season. 3.-Ground of encampment west of, and immediately opposite to Mr. Cavendish's bungalow, about a mile short of the town. Supplies and water in abundance. Country very partially cultivated. Road pretty good, heavs in some parts. 4-A middling village and small bazaar on left bank of the Koharee Nuddy. Water from 2 wells and the nuddy. At 34 miles cross the Chumbul by ferry close under the old lort of Dholpoor, and the road for about 3 miles on both banks of the river leads through very deep rasines, which in most parts are not suficiently wide to admit of two carts passe ing each other. After passing Chota Serai (a small village with only one well) at the head of the ravines on the right bank, the country is level, soil black mould and well cultivated, Road good. There is a ford on the Chumbul at Kehtree Ghat, some miles above Dholpoor; and in marching from Dholpoor by either the ford or ferry the first'encampment should be on the right bank of the river and thence to Hingonah, it being too much to cross the river and proceed to Hingonah in one day. 5.-A large village. Small bazaar, and supplies procurable from Noorabad, 2 miles east- ward Cross the Kohuree under Hingonah, little water, banks steep and cut into ravines, 44 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. but they slope off gradually at the ghat, and form no impediment. At 7 miles cross the Ahsin by an easy ford. Country flat and partially cultivated. Hills on right at a dis- tance. 6.- Encamping ground between the residency house and bazaar. Supplies from the old city, distant 3 miles. Water from wells. At I mile cross the Sank, water shallow, bed stony and rough, right bank rather steep. Road good. Country partially cultivated ; detached hills on the right and left. 7. Encamping ground near the artillery park, and about mile from Scindea's garden house at the Phool Bagh. Supplies from the Mahratta camp or new town of Gwalior. Water from wells. Road good, passing at some distance on the west of the fort of Gwa- lior, and for the last two miles it winds round the north-east side of the new city between it and the south end of the fort. Cross the Soowunreka near the end of the march. Banks sloping at theghat. Little water. Bed firm moist sand, and about 100 yards wide. 8.—A small bazar. Water from wells and a nullah. Road very narrow, rugged and bad for carts; passing through a belt of low table-crowned hills, and so narrow and confined by sleep banks, in some parts, that one hackery, would completely block up the road. At 4 miles cross the Oomrar by a good ford under kota-ke-Serai, and at 74 miles pass near Buroree. 9.-A middling village. Supplies procurable, and water from wells and a nullah. Country flat and partially culiivated,' soil black mould. Road a pretty good hackery track. Small detached hiſs at a distance on the right and left. Pass Dear Kulliance at 3, Burturee at 6, Undioee at 8f, Simria at 11, and Urroo at 124 miles. 10.-A small bazar and water plentiful. Road indifferent to the Sind about half way, and thence excellent through a well cultivated fruitful country. The bed of the Sind is about 200 yards wide and sandy, breadth of stream in dry season 40 yards, and from 14 to 2 feet deep. Banks steep and cut into deep ravines through which the road winds for nearly a mile on the left bank. On the right bank they do not extend far at this ghaut. At 5 miles pass Chandpoor, at 65, Ghora, at 8] Pechokra, at 9j Byroka. The Sind forms the boundary between Scindia's territories, and those of the Dutteah Raja. 11.-A large walled town and residence of a Raja, situated between parallel ridges of low rocky hills, and surrounded by an extensive jungle of brushwood, and stunted trees of various kinds. This jungle is called the Raja's Kumna, and is well stocked with game. Road good through the kumna most part of the way. Ground for encampment on east bank of lake south of the town. 12.- A small village; supplies scarce, well water plentiful and good. Country undulated and rocky, and chiefly with brushwood. Road good. 13.-A fine walled town and residence of a Raja. Supplies and water in great abun- dance. Country undulated and rocky, little cultivation, road excellent. Ground for encampment about t of a mile south of the town. 14.-A bazaar. Water from wells, and a fine lake on the east side of the town. Ford the Barairee nuddy at about the 7th mile, and the Betwa river at the 8th mile. The bed of the latter is about 600 yards wide. Full of rocks and loose stones, and bad for carts to Country undulated and rising into low detached hills at a distance on right and left. Road pretty good, with exception of the ford on the Betwa. 15.-A small village; supplies scanty. Water from wells and a nullah. Country open with isolated small hills scattered over it. Road good. Pass Jogeehaee at 4 Mucarah at 67, and Jeare at 10 miles. 16.-A small bazaar. Supplies procurable from neighbouring villages. Water from wells. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Bara Berora at 5, and near Chirpora at 84 miles. 17.—A small village. Supplies scarce, water from wells. Country and road as above. Pass Phonome at 2, Door at 31, Dogora at 5$, Koorai at 87, and Burma at 10 miles. 18.--A large walled town and residence of a Raja. Supplies and water abundant. Coun- 'try and road much the same. Hills on left running in ridges in north-east direction. Pass Baragong at 6 miles. 19.-Supplies from Asthone 2 miles north, end from neighbouring villages. from the Jumnar river. Country open, detached hills at a distance on the left. Road a pretty good hackery track. Pass Pehari at 4 and Asthone at 8 miles. 20.-Supplies procurable from the village and from Maroura, distant 27 miles to the southward. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Agora at 11, Bomor at 3, Koomeree at 74, and Bara Gurallee at 124 miles. 21.-A small bazaar and market twice a week on Tuesdays and Sundays. Water from wells. Country undulated, open and partially cultivated. Road a pretiy pood hackery track. Pass Maroura, a large village, at 23, Laher at 5, and Murkera at 7 miles. 22.-A small bazaar and market twice a week, on Wednesdays and Sunday. Water from a tank and wells. 23.—A small village. Supplies from adjacent villages. Water from the Dussaun river and from wells. 24.-A small village. Five buniahs, and supplies from neighbouring villages. Water from a tank. 25.-Supplies abundant from town and suddar bazaar ; good well water plentiful. cross. Water 1 VOL. 11.) 45 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 17.-FROM AKYAB TO CHITTAGONG. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 9 5... Bri- tish Commissioner in Arracan 100... 1 Kekra Tek Tek Myoo Selkallee Oingdong Meerala Brang Charee Comoo Mungdoo Tek Naaf Burradil Monakallee Pulooa Tek Julliapulung Ramoo Eedgong Dolu Huzaree Chuckereah Hurbung Adunugur Keonseah Do Hazaree Puttea Thana CHITTAGONG 10 0... 1 6 O Myoo 2 3! 3 8 6 5 4 8 4 415 66 10 2... 107 4 o Naaf 8 13 0... 29 9! O Monakallee 3 10 6 41... 2 11 3 12 10 0 Bangkallee 4 13 12 5 ... 1 14 8 4 1 15 8 6 2 16 8 4 Moree 2 17 8 6 4 18 11 4 719 5 o Sunkar 31 20 11 5.. 7 21 12 5 Kurnlfuee 8 22 12 0... British Chittagong : : 22 Total.. | 2051 41 miles. The above route was marched by the force entering, Arracap, under brigadier Ge- neral Morison, C. B. in 1825, but it will generally be found most advantageous to convey troops from Bengal to Arracan, by water. The trip from Chittagong to Akyab, during the cold weather, seldom occupying more than 36 hours. 1.–The road leads across the flat island of Akiope or Akyab, and is intersected by 7 creeks or tide nullahs, impassable at high water. Supplies must be collected; water from wells. L-Good encamping ground and water from wells, no supplies. The Myoo is 4 miles broad and is crossed in about 2 hours : there are 2 ferry boats, each 7 fathoms long and if broad. The farmers are bound by the Government regulations relative to the conveyance, but the means actually available would without previous notification be found very in- sufficient for the transport of any large body of men. 3. Good encamping ground and water from wells. The road at first leads inland and afterwards along the Sea beach, No supplies; tide nullahs fordable at low water. 4.-Road leads along the sea beach. Pretty good encamping ground, but water scarce and no supplies. 5.- Road along the sea beach. Ground for encampment; and water procurable, but no supplies. 6.-Road inland and through jungle ; a large plain for encampment and good water. 7.--Supplies procurable on previous notice. 'Water bad. Road as in last stage. 8.-Supplies procurable by means of police. Good encamping ground and excellent water about of a mile from the Thanna. The Naaf is about 2 miles broad, and is easily Crossed in an hour during the fair scason, but as it is open to the west like the Myoo, none but large boats will venture to cross it during the Southwest Monsoon. From Mungdoo, there is a fine nullah leading into the Naaf, and boats can proceed out at all times ; but on the opposite side there is a broad shoal near the ghaut, which boats can only get over at high water. 3. --Supplies procurable by means of the police after due notice ; encamping ground and waler very good. The first 5 miles of road is inland and through jungle, the remainder is along the sea beach, and is excellent. Nullahs fordable, } 6 46 [PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 10. Supplies procurable as above. Road very good along the beach. Nullahs fordable, Monakallee passed by ferry. 11.-Ditto ditto ditto. Nullahs fordable at low water. 12.-Ditto ditto ditto, last 2 miles of road inland having the Raijoo river on the left. 13.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good ; cross the Bangkallee by ferry at the end of the march. 14.-Supplies furnished by zemeendars after due notice. Road good. 15.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Country hilly and cover- ed with jungle ; road good. 16.-Ditto ditto ditto. Soil clayey. Road good. 17.-Cross the Moree or Matiamoree, by ferry at the commencement of the march. Supplies furnished by zemeendars after due notice. Ground for encampment confined and bad. 18.-Country hilly. Road good, but closely lined with jungle. Supplies procurable in abundance ; water plentiful. 19.-Country flat and well cultivated. Road good. Nullah fordable. Supplies procurable as above; water plentiful. 20. - Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the river by ferry at the end of the march. 21.-Ditto ditto ditto. Nullahs fordable. 22.-Ditto ditto ditto. Ferry the river at Buckultiah ghat, 34 miles from cantonments. No. 18.–FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO BANDA BY THE RAJAPOOR FERRY. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Bugwautpoor Buswar Allahabad Kuralee Shahpood RAJAPOOR Paharee British 11 0 1 124 1 2 8 2. 3 16 0 1 4 3 4 Jumna 5 14 6 Ohun 11 6 Pysonee 10 2 and 21 7 Bagun 120 18 11 41 19 11) 4 1 10 Banda Singpoor Amoah Suhewa BANDA Cantonment. 10 Total.. inil 21 miles. 1. A small village. Water from wells. Supplies from surrounding villages. Country, flat and well cultivated. Road indifferent. At 2 miles enter the city of Allahabad, and at 41 pass out of it at Hemutgunge. Pass Oomree at 94 miles. 2.—A small village. Supplies from Mehewa 2 miles west and from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Begumpoor at 11, Lockree. gong a large village and bazar at 5, Peerye at 7, Douja at 9, Jynteepoor at 104, and Thunnee at 114 miles. 3.-A large village and bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country well cultivated and road good. Pass Byragpoor at , Mehewa at 2, Bundoee at 4, and lamba at 6 miles. 4.-A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country well cul- tivated and road bad and winding. Pass Jumdoa at 2, Dandpoor at 4, Mahowa at 51. Poonwar at 7, Puchum at 8, Rujgawa at 10, Koolua at 11] and Byrumpoor at 113 miles. The Nullah is usually crossed by a temporary bridge. 5.-A small bazar. Water from the Jumna. Country highly cultivated. Road bad for cart Cross the Jumza by ferry. The bed sandy and a boi 800 yards wide. The stream occupying about one half of that space in dry season, left bank sloping, right bank steep. There are 8 boats belonging to this ferry, which is private, and ferry charges must be paid. 6.- Supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country flat and well cultivated. Road very good. VOL. 11.] 47 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 7.-A middling village. Supplies procurable. Water from wells. Country and road as in last stage. Ford the Pysonee at the 6th mile and the Bagun at the 9th. Water shallow, but banks steep and difficult for hackeries. &-Supplies from adjacent villages. Good water from wells. Country fat and well cultivated. Road good. 9.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 10.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. No. 19.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO BANDA BY FUTTEHPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. as Futtehpoor } British FUTTEHPOOR, No. 1, Part 5, Bowah Chillah Tara Piperinda BANDA Cantonment 804... 15 01... 96 Jumna 12. 01... 10 of... 1 2 3 Banda 10 Total... 127 2] miles. 1.-A large village and bazaar. Water from wells and a tank. Country flat, well culti- vated and studded with small villages. Road good. Pass Dukowlee at 47, Shah at 7%. near Subbah poor at 10 Kuttowlee at 114, and Ludgaon at 124 miles. 2.-A small bazaar and supplies from neighbouring villages. Water plentiful. Country partialis cultivated. Road good. Pass Bundwa at 4t, and Lullowlee, a large village, at 67 miles. Cross the Jumua by ferry at the the end of the March, only 3 boats belonging to the ghat, but others can be collected, bed of a mile wide, and heavy sand for about 2-3rds of that distance. Stream in dry season usually runs under the right bank ; banks steep and only one exit from the ghat through a deep ravine. 3.- A large village and bazaar. Water plentiful, country flat, soil black mould and Fell cultivated. Road good. Pass Soherpoor at 41, Puttera at 5t, and Ottrehut at 9 miles. 4. Supplies and water abundant. Country and road us in last stage. Pass Loma at 2, and slowai at 6 miles. No. 20.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO CALPEE. Futtehpoor, as in 80 4. No. 1, Part 5, Khoapoor 1 Kudjwah 2 Futtehpoor } ... 10 2... 10 4 ... Jehanabad 13 0... 3 British i Bridge 4 11 5 Cawnpoor Ghautumpoor MOOSANUGUR DowLUTPOOR CALPEE, (Old Fort) 10 41... 12 01 13 61 Singoor Nuddy ... 26 Jumna 6 Hameerpoor 7 13 Total... 153 21 miles. LL 48 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A middling village and a few Buniahs' shops. Water from wells and a tank. sup. plies from adjacent villages. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Aboonugur at i, Roraee at 45, Chunkhera at 74, and Serai at 8 miles. 2.-A bazaar and water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Bindkee, a large village and bazaar, at 74 miles. The road from Cawnpoor to the Chilla Tara ferry passes through Rudjwah. 3.-A town and bazaar, Supplies and water plentiful. Road bad, through ravines for some distance, 4.-A small bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road very good. 5.-A bazaar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road much cut in parts, but tolerably good in generai. Pass Bhaindee at 34, Nuwaree at 57, Sreenugur at 7, and Sankha at 10 miles. Nullah fordable. 6.-A middling village. A few Buniahs' shops ; supplies procurable from Calpee and from neighbouring villages. Water plentiful from welis and from the Jumna. A bad and difficnlt road, running through deep narrow ravines great part of the way. At 3 miles ford the Singoor nuddy at Chuppugatee. 7.-Supplies abundant from the town. Water from wells and the Jumnn. Ground for the encampment of a regiment close to the gateway of the old fort. The Jumna, at the Raj Ghat, Calpee is about ; mile wide. Half of which is heavy sand during the dry sea- son when the stream usually runs under the right bank. Banks high, but pretty well sloped off at the Ghat. There are boats belonging to this ferry. No. 21.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO ETAWAH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Name of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. } 136) 6 10 4 Singoor 2 Nuddy 1 Cawnpoor 7 01... 2 British Moosanugur, as in No. 20, Boghnee SHAHJEHANPOOR Secundra OOREEAH Ajeetmull S Buckewar ETAWAH Cantonment 10 0 10 4 14 2 11 ol.. 5 6 7 Etawah 14 01. 18 Total... 215 ol miles. 1.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road bad and difficult, running chiefly through deep narrow ravines. Pass Chuppugatee at 24, Doorgadas at 51, Nuttuar at 61. and Gourh at 74 miles. At 2 miles ford the Singoor nuddy. 2.-A small bazaar. Water from wells. Country fertile and road pretty good. At 2 pass Mhow and at 44 miles Roolgaon. 3.-A bazaar and water plentiful, Country partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Zillahpoor at 14, Rajpoor, a large village, at 4, and Sirdarnugur at 7 miles. 4.-bazaar. Water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Peetumpoor at 2}, Khojaphool at 31, Mutowlee at 5, and Bhowpoor at 71 miles. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Country flat and pretty well cultivated. Road bad and heavy in many parts. Pass Chirowlee at 34, Mahowlee at 5, Futtehpoor at 61, Jug- gutpoor at 84, Dulabnugur at 10, and Amileea at 13 miles. 6.-Supplies abundant and water plentiful. Country as in last stage. Road indifferent. Pass Bhawulpoor at 1, Moharee at 21, Annutram at 45, and Dojanee at 8 miles, with many other small villages at short distances on right and left. 7.-Abundant supplies from cantonment bazaar and city. Water plentiful. Country as above. Road good. Pass near Murdan Singh ke Serai at 11, Byowlee at 27, Kurwakhera at 41, Jugmohunpoor at 51, Beraree at 63, and Ekdil Serai at 8 miles, with many other small villages on right and left. J FOL. II.] 49 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 22.–FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO JUANPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British Jhoosee Allahabad 4 6 Ganges Phoolpoor 14 6 1 Badshapoor 101 6 2 Muchleeshehur 15 0 3 Juanpoor Goolzargunge 8 ] 4 Juanpoor Cantonmt. 13. Sye 5 6. Total... 66 11 la proceeding by the Popamow Ferry, the stages are, Popamow 4, Surson 9, and Phool. boor 8 miles. 1.-A town and good bazar. Water from wells and a tank. Country well cultivated and studded with villages, Road good. Pass Raheempoor at 34, Eseepora at 44, and Surson at 61 miles. 2-4 large bazar: Water good and plentiful. Country flat and but partially cultivated ; road much travelled and heavy. 3.-A large bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country, and road as in last stages. 4-A small bazar. Supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Road heavy and coun. try partially cultivated. Pass Somadgunge, a small bazar, about half way. 5. --Supplies and water abundant. Road heavy in some places, but generally good, passing through a rich and highly cultivated country. At2 miles cross the Bye by å fine pucca bridge, and pass through part of the city of Juanpoor, near the end of the stage. }| 4 o'Jumna 13 0... British 4 8 0.. 11 0... No. 23.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO JUBBUL- POOR BY THE KUTRA PASS AND REWAH. Himmutgunge near 1 Arrail Hurrey 2 2 Allahabad RAMNUGGUR 9 0 Tonse 2 3 Kurmabu Bahrutgunge 13 4 4 Nuddy Mirzapoor ... LALLGUNGE 5 Belun Allahabad Kutra Pass (foot of) 15 6 and 6 Seotie Hunumuna 4 7 Khutkurrie 9 O Goorma 38 Burghat Mowgunge 7 71 and 49 Gara Silar and Lour 107 Odda G. G's Agent Pukriar Jubbulpoor. Near Mungawa 9 20 and 11 Singree Ryepoor 9 5 Mohana 31 12 REWAH or Remah 11 0 3 13 Kutra Mowharee 11 7 Beehur 14 Near Umurpatun 12 7.... 15 PART 1, VOL. II, H 10 Rewah ..... 50 [PART 1. TUE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. Myheer Territory. 15 3 Tonse 12 3 Goosroo 13 21 12 0 4 16 15 17 18 18 26 19 Kuttee & ? 10 20 MYHEER G. G's Agent Goonwara Jubbulpoor... Sewagunge Chaka Newar Nuddy Kutnee Nuddy Asst. Comr. Sehora Jubbulpoor .. Gosulpoor Punagurh JUBBULPOOR Cánt....) British 9 7 Newars 11 o Kutnee 14, 1 Kinarie 7 5 Herun 9| 2... Prait 10 3 or 2. Purehut 25 25 Total...) 2711 71 miles., 1.-A small village on right bank of the Jumna at Gao Ghat. Supplies from Allahabad and Kiddgunj and water from the river. Ground for en campment much confined by cul. tivation. The Jumna at Gao Ghat is of a mile wide, and the stream in the dry season occupics nearly the whole of that space. Left bank rather steep and right sloping. There are plenty of boats belonging to this ferry. 2.- Armidling village and four buniahs' shops. Supplies procurable from Piperaon at 14 miles east and from adjacent villages. Water from wells and a tank; country fertile and road pretty good. Pass Futteh meah ke Poorwa at 14, Shahjeeka Poorwa at 2, Mowaree at 5, and Moongaree, a large village, at 94 miles. Nullahs easily passed. 3.-A small bazaar, and supplies from Sirsah distant 14 miles north-west. Country well cultivated. Road a good deal cut by ravines in some places. Pass Mujhwa at 1; Piperaon at 13, Punassah, a large village and bazaar, on left bank of the Tonse, at 4, Ooperouraka Poorwa at 6, and Emileea at 74 miles. The bed of the Tonse at the Punassah Perry is about 400 yards wide and the stream in the dry season usually runs under the left bank, and is 150 yards wide ; left bank steep, right sloping. There are boats at the ferry, 4.-A large village and bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country level, well cul. tivated and studded with small villages. Road pretty good Pass Onchadee at 1}, near Googah åt 3, Ontah at 4, Moondee at 54, Bominee at 7, Tikeree at 84, Chilbillah at 95, Chukdea at 108. Chowharee at 104; and Rutawul Hajapoor at 114 miles. A road strikes ott from Chilbillah to Mirzapoor. 5.-A small bazaar, water from wells and a nullah. 6.-Supplies, scarce and must be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from the Seotie river. Road excellent. Country undulated and partially cultivated. 7:-Water from tanks. Supplies scarce ; ascend the Kutra Ghat by Drummond's road, which is excellent. 8.-A bazaar. Water from Wells, tanks and a nullah. Country undulated and well cultivated. Road excellent. 9.-A bazaar. Water plentiful. Country undulated and highly cultivated. 10.-Supplies scarce, and must be collected from veighbouring villages. Water from wells and tanks. Country undulating, well-wooded, highly cultivated and exceedingly beautiful. 11.-A large bazaar, and water plentiful. Country as above ; distant hills right and left. The road frona Rewah direet to Allahabad by the Sohagee Ghat, strikes off here. 12- A small tazaar. Water from wells, tanks and a nullah. Country and hills as above. 13.-A large town and bazaar. Residence of the Rewah Raja. Water and supplies plentiful. Country a beautifully cultivated plain. Hills at a distance on right and left. 14.–A small village. Supplies searce, and must be collected from the adjacent villages. 15.-A large bazaar and water plentiful. 16.-A large town and bazaar, and the chief place in the district belonging to Thackoor Bishen Singh. Water plentiful. Country level and partly cultivated. Cross the Tonse by an indifferent ford ; bed 250 yards wide. Stream in dry season 60 yards, and from 1 to 2 feet deep: Right bank steep, left shelving. 17.-Light buniahs, and supplies from neighbouring villages. Water from wells and 2 tanks. Country gently, undulaled. Bandair hills west and parallel to the Road. Jungle and partial cultivation. 18.-Twelve buniahs, and supplies from adjacent villages. Beven Pucca wells and 2 tanks, Country slightly undulated, much uneven ground, shallow nullahs, and small savines. Jungle and partial cultivation. Vol. H.) 51 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK: 19.-A small village. Thren bupiahs. Supplies scarce. Water from one well and % tanks Country slightly undulated. Partial cultivation and open jungle. 20.-Supplies must be collected from Belharee, distant 3 miles and from other villages, Water from the Newar. Cross the Kutnee at the 4th mile, bed 60 yards wide and gravelly, Depth of water in dry season 2 feet. The Newar is 40 yards wide, with steep banks and grafelly bed. 21.--Supplies from Chappra 3 miles and from Teorie 21 miles, and other villages, Water from the Kutnee. 22.-A large bazaar. Water plentiful. 93.-A bazaar. Water plentiful. 24.-A bazaar and water abundant. 35.-Cantonment bazaar and supplies from the town of Jubbulpoor, distant 24 miles, Good made road all the way. 104 No. 24.–FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO JUBBUL- POOR BY THE SOHAGEE PASS AND REWAH. Of Un Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. British. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. SM. F. 41 0 Jum na Allahabad 12 01... Himutgunge Kantee ! Sooroul Sohagee, Top of Sohagee? Ghat near a Tank. S Tindooa 11 41 9 0 Tonse 1 2 3 3 61... 14 Rewah. G. G.'s Agent Jubbulpoor ... .. 6 Near Mungawa TO Ryepoor 10 4... Pukrair 11 ol and Sengree 9 5 ... 11 0 Mohana 31 7 31 8 Rewah 140 01 No. 23 21 Total ... 222 310720 votu 1.-A village of 100 houses. Some buniahs' and supplies from surrounding villages Water from tank and wells. Country open and cultivated. Road, a good cattle track, practicable for carts. 2.-Porty houses. Abuniahs. No wells, but 2 good tanks which never dry, Country and road as in last stage. 3.-One hundred and twenty-five houses. 12 buniahs. I pucca well, and water from a large tank, which never dries. Country as above, but the road for the most part a bad Winding path, never frequented by carts. Ford the Tones at the Chak ghat, at the end of the 4th mile. Bed of river rocky and banks steep. 4.-Asceud by the Sohag ee ghat to the tableland' of Rewah. At 5 furlongs from the vil- lage of Sohagee the ascent commences and continues for about a quarter of a mile very steep and rugged, path winding and practicable for laden cattle with difficulty, remainder of the road rugged and rocky, but comparatively level, passing through jungle. Two easy acents of about 100 yards each near the end of the stage. No village. Water from tank in jungle. 5. Supplies procurable, and water from a tank which never dries. Country covered with light jungle for the first 2 miles, and afterwards open and partially cultivated. For the last & miles the road is practicable for carts. 6.-A large bazaar and water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road practicable for earts. Join Drummond's road. 1.- A small bazuar, water plentiful. Country undulated, well wooded, and cultivated. Excellent made road. -A large town and capital of the Rewah state, and residence of its Rajah. Supplies and water abundant, Road excellent through a beautiful and fertile country. 52 (PART L. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 25.-- FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO KALLINJER be BY TEROWAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F.1 ech Rajapoor Vide No. 18 Nandee Tora 52] 2 100 Ohun 1 1 British Banda G. G.'s Agent Banda Terowah. Terowah 22 3 British. 350 Bhurtkoop tim Russun Pysonee 100 and a Nuddy 8 41. Banda Surha 11 2.. 34 5 5 6 KALLINJER 8 4.. 11 Total 112' d miles. 1.-Two small villages. Supplies procurable from adjacent villages and from Paharee 3 miles west and Gohanee 3 miles east. Country level and well cultivated. Road good. 2. A large bazaar. Supplies abundant, and water from wells and the Pysonee Nuddy. Road good across a flat partially cultivated country. Hills 3 miles south. 3. Å small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected from adjacent villages. Wa- ter plentiful from wells and a nullah. Cross the Pysonee close under Terowah and the Nuddy at about half way, both having steep banks cut into deep ravines. Road very good. Country flat, fertile, and very beautiful. Hills on left and approaching the road at 'Bhurt- koop. 4. A small village. A few buniahs. Supplies must be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from wells and a tank. Country and road as in last stage. Hills on left. 5.-A middling village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Road good and country as above. 6.-A large town and bazaar, at the foot of an extensive hill fort. Supplies and water plentiful. Ground for encampment at the foot of the hill on the east side of the town. Road good over level well cultivated country. Hills on left and in front. { 8 2.. No. 26. FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO LUCKNOW CANTONMENT. 41 OGanges 1 British Allahabad 2 Nuwabgunge Chutturgurh 12 2.. 3 Manickpoor 14 0.. 1 4 Mustufabad 13. 4.. 2 Nuwabgunge 11| 4.. 6 Rae Bareilly 100Sye 7 Resident at Thulendee 13 0.. 8 Lucknow Rattee 12] 4.. 9 Bijnour 15 0.. 1 10 Char Bagh (Luck- } 7) 0.. 11 now) LUCKNOW Cantonmt. 7 Goomty 12 12 Total 128) 2 I VOL 11.) 53 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Supplies, procurable from Popamow and surrounding, villages. Water plentiful First 2 miles of road to right bank of the Ganges very good, and the remainder after crossing the river more or less heavy sand. The bed of the Ganges is here l?_miles wide, and the stream in the dry season usually occupies one-sixth of that space. There are boats be- longing to this ferry. 2.- A few buniah's shops. Supplies from adjacent villages. Water from wells. Country fertile and studded with small villages, road bad. Pass Mullaka at 23, Sewpoor at 3, Hatgees at 37. Kussaree at 6, and Kowrear at 64 miles. 3.-A small bazaar. Water plentiful. Supplies procurable in abundance on due notice being given to the Oude authorities. Road very bad. 4.-A large bazaar. Supplies and water abundant." Road pretty good.' Cross the nullah by a pucca bridge. 5.-A small bazar. Water and supplies procurable in abundance. Road very narrow, and bad the greater part of the way. Nullahs fordable the first occurs near Manickpoor and is rather deep. 6-A very small village. Supplies scarce and collected from a distance. Water plenti- ful. Road pretty good. 7.-A large bazar. Supplies and water in great abundance. Road good. Cross the Sye by pucca bridge, about 3 miles from Rae Bareilly. 8. A small bazaar. Supplies and water in abundance. Road very good. 9.-A small bazaar, water and supplies procurable. Road indifferent. 10.-A small bazaar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. 11.-Supplies from the city. Water from wells, plentiful. Ground for encampment confined. “The Char Bagh is 2 miles from the British residency, Lucknow. 12. -Supplies from cantonment bazaar. Water plentiful. Road very heavy, particular. ly between the Goomty and cantonments. Cross the Goomty by pucca bridge. No. 27.–FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO MIRZAPOOR BY RIGHT BANK OF THE GANGES. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. M.F. Nos. Allahabad British RAMNUGUR as in No. 23 Chilbillah Besserah Bindachul MIRZAPOOR Cantnmt 1 2 261 0 91 4 9/ 4 Kumou. 8 0 lee Nudy ) 8 oOojlah Mirzapoor 3 1... 7 Total ... 611 0 1. A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice, and water from wells. Road pretty good. Pass Onchadee at 1}, Onteh at 4, and Bominee at 74 miles. 2-A small bazaar and water plentiful. 3. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. Nullah fordable in dry season, and there are 2 boats which ply on it in the rains. 4-Road good, cross the Dojlah by ferry and pass through the town of Mirzapoor. No. 28.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO MIRZAPOOR BY LEFT BANK OF THE GANGES. Ooj ke Chokee, as in No. 1, Part 4 32 1 British Benares Gopeegunge 1 MIRZAPOOR Can- Mirzapoor 14 Ganges 2 tonment 7 2.. { 5 Total 53) 2 54 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A bazaar and water abundant. Country low, flat and partially cultivated. Road excellent. 2.-Road pretty good, through a fertile country, Cross the Ganges by good public ferry, at the Nar Ghat opposite town of Mirzapoor, nearly 4 miles above the cantonment. No. 29.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO PERTAB- GURH, OUDE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Territory. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. Popamow, as in No. 26... Allahabad Mbow Resident at S PERTAB GURH Oude Cantonment 41 o Ganges 13 01. 11 14 Of... 2 3 Total 31] 0 1.-A bazaar, water and supplies, abundant, country flat and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Goaree at 27, Sewehut a large village at 43, with many small villages at some distances right and left. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Road indifferent. 11 1 ..., Sohawul. Nagond OULAIRE 1 No. 30.-FROM ALLAHABAD CANTONMENT TO SAUGOR BY THE KUTRA PASS AND REWAH. Rewah, as in No. 23. 13171 Rewah Rampoor 15 4 Beehur 1 1 Puttrahut 3 G. G.'s Agent Tonse or Sohawul 100 3 Jubbulpoor Tumse : Oon: Sutnee & ? 11 3 4) 4 chera. Umrun. S Silgee 8 5... 2 5 LOHARGONG, Old 2 97... 26 G. G's Agent Cantonment 11... Banda MEHEWA 14 1. 12 7 Pun- Tighura 12 7 Kane 48 nah. Gysabad 10 6 Bearmee 39 Assistant Com. J Hinnota Dummow Huttah 92 2 11 ... 11 7 Kopra. 5 12 Uslana 11 71... 13 PUTTUREAH 91 o Sonar 3 14 96... Shahpoor Assistant Com. 4 15 Saugor Left Bank Beos 8 4 and 16 Beos... SAUGOR Cantonment. 104... 517 Adjeegurh. 7) O... 10 Nuggur): British. Sailee) near Sundda Beos 30 Total.../ 313 7 miles. VOL. 11.) 55 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A large village and bazaar, water from wells and a nullah. Country level, fertile and thickly studded with mangoe groves and tanks, distant hills on right and left. Road good. Pass Emileea at 21, Agraar at 3, Omeree at 6, Kothar at 9, Rewar at 113, and Kureia at 14 miles. Ford the Beehur under Retvah, bed 80 yards wide. Stream in dry season 15 yards wide and knee deep. Good lord. Ford the nullah at the end of the march. 2-A large village and bazaar. Water from wells and the Sonse river. Country open and fertile, detached hills left, distant low range right. Road good, with exception of the ford on the Muggurda uullah which occurs at the 6th mile, and is rocky and bad. Pass near Kundaila at 34, near Bogunda at 5, Doorjunpoor at 6j, and near Simra Lohura at 9 táiles. 3.-A town and bazaar. Water from wells and the Sutnee river. Country for the first 2 miles well cultivated, then covered with bush jungle for 3 miles, and during the remainder of the march well cultivated. Cross the Touse close under Puttrahut by bad rocky ford, bed 200 yards wide, and stream during the dry season about 30 yards wide, and knee deep. Road inibifferent. Pass Ghoosdan at 41, and Burdadee at 5 miles. 4.-A large village and bazaar. Good water from wells and the Umrun. Country nearly level and well cultivated. , Road good. Cross the Sutnee by a pretty good ford close under Sohawul, bed 50 yards wide. Stream about 30 and 1 feet deep, banks rather steep, and the Umrun by a good ford at the end of the march. Road good. Pass Sitpora at 23, Mowharee at 14, Buttia at 51 and Rirwa, at 8 miles. 5.-A sinall village. Supplies must be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from wells and a nullah. Country undulating and pretty wen cultivated Hill 'at a dis. tance on left and the low ridge on right, almost disappears in the distance from the road on right and left. 6.-A small bazaar and supplies procurable from surrounding, villages. Water from tanks and wells, rather, scarce in hot season. Country 'undulating and very partially, cultivated. Hills at a distance ou right and left. Road good. Pass Tirwar at ly, and Lohargong (village of) at 8{ miles. 7-A large village and bazaar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country much undulated and barren. Road good. Pass Tourea Ghonour at 6], Jhoomta at 74, and Hinoutee at 94 miles. Nullabs become dry after the rains. • 8.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected from surrounding villages Water from the Kane river which is crossed at the end of the march by a rocky ford, bed 160 yards wide, stream 30, and 24 feet deep, banks steep. Country open, less undulated, and partially cultivated ; distant hills on right and left. Road good. Pass Teree at 31, Koodra at of, Rungia at 101, and Yoorenah at 111 miles. Nullahs become dry at the close of the rains. 9.A small bazaar and supplies procuráble from adjacent villages, water from wells and the Bearmee which is crossed at the end of the stage by a tolerably good ford, bed 220 yards wide, stream 40 yards and about knee deep during dry season. Country and hills much the same as in last stage. Road good. Pass Chikla at 23, Simmuria at 41, and near Rekra at 71 miles. Nullahs become dry. 10.- small bazaar. Supplies scanty, water from tank and wells. Country open, pretty level and partially culiivated, road excellent. At % miles pass Gurrehoo, distant hills right and left. 11.- A large town and bazaar. Water plentiful. Country, road and hills as above. Pass Gottareea ai 3, Hurdoa at 41, Kurrya at 5t, and Bintee at 7 miles. Huttah is situated on the right bank of Sonar river, and is the residence of a principal assistant to the commis. sioner in the Saugor and Nerbudda territories. 12.-A small bazaar; water from wells and the Sonar river. Country undulated and chiefly rocky and barren. Hills on right and left at a distance. Road good. Pass Jumo. nia at 31, Rohra at 6, and Kotree at 9 miles, At 101 mules cross the Kopra by a bad rocky ford. Banks steep, bed 40 yards wide, stream 20, and knee deep in dry season. The road from Heerapoor to Jubbulpoor crosses this stage at Jumonia. Nullahs become dry. 13.-A small bazaar. Water from wells and the Sonar river. Country as in last stage. Road bad and much interseeted by ravines. Pass Nursingurh, a large village, at 5, Kissun. gunge at 71, and Cherola at 91 miles. 14.-A bazaar. Country beautifully undulated and pretty well cultivated ; distant hills on right and left; low hills approach close to Patturia. Road indifferent and intersected by several rafines. At 6 miles cross the Sonar by good ford, bed 60 yards wide, stream i and knee deep. 15.-A large village. Supplies plentiful after due notice. Water from wells and a nul. lah. Country barren and covered with stun led jungle, low hills on left of the road whole way. Road stony in some parts. 16.-Supplies from Sunoda Water from the river ; ford the Sailee at the commence- ment of the march, and the Beos at the end of it. There is also an iron suspension bridge on the Beos at this ghat. Road good. Between the 4th and 5th miles there is an easy as. cent, and the 6th mile pass Purrurea. 17.-Suddur bazaar. Water plentiful. Country undulating and partially cultivated, low hills on right and left. Road pretty good. 56 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 31.- FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO BAREILLY BY RAMGHAT AND CHANDOUSEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. I iallygurh Nullahs. Nos. M. F. { } 2 2 3 04 5 6 British Hurduagunge, 7 4... Kalli Atrowlye, 10 0 Nuddy Boolundshehr... Ramghất, 12 6 Budaon . AssuDPOOR 24 Ganges Mohao & Shahzadbaree 15 4 Chooia Nuddies. Soot or Moorshedabad CHANDOUSEB 13 1 YarWuf- fadar. Aril or Budaon Sikiree 9 1 Ah,'re Nuddy. Chooia Hurdashpoor 11 1 Nuddy. Peeria Gaenie Bareilley Ramgun- BAREILLY, Can- 0} 11 21 ga and tonment Dojorah S 10 Total... 106 3| miles. 7 2 8 13 4 Nuddy. 9 1..10 1.-A large village and bazaar. Water from wells. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road good. No villages immediately on the road. 2.-A large town and bazaar. Surrounded by fine mangoe groves and cultivation. Sup- plies and water plentiful. Country tlat and partially cultivated. No villages immediately on the road. At 31 miles cross the Kalli nuddy by a bad ford. Twenty-five yards wide, 2 feet deep, firm sandy bottom, low swampy banks. No boats. Crossed by raft constructed on earthen pots in rains. 3.-A small bazaar, water from wells and the Ganges. Country, as in last stage. Road pretty good. Pass Raepoor at 44, Jerowlee at 53, Mulipora at 7, Jergawa at 9, and Gunga Gurh at 104 miles. 4.-A small bazaar and supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Water from wells. The bed of the Ganges at Ramghat is about 14 miles wide, and the stream in the dry sea. son usually occupies about one-third of that space, aud is sometimes divided into two or more channels. The road in the dry part of the bed of the river is heavy, and is more or less so on to Assudpoor. Right bank is steep and lett low. There are boats belonging to this ferry. 5.-A small village, with a few buniah's shops. Supplies for a large detachment must be collected from Rampoor, distant 3 miles, and from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country for the first 5 miles flat and well cultivated, next 3 miles patches of thin bush jungle and cultivation, and the remainder open and very partially cultivated. Road heavy in parts but generally it is a tolerably good hackery track. Pass Dubuthra at 11, Serai at 23, Rewaro at 41, Jukowra at 6, Phoosa wulee at 71, Danoura at 9, Songar at 111. Khujoora 131, Sutnowlee at 143 miles. At 84 miles cross the Mohao, at 10 miles the Chooia, both fordable, former 15 yards wide, sandy bottom and 14 feet deep in the dry season, the latter 20 yards wide, firm bottom, 24 feet deep, low banks. 6.-A large town and bazaar, surrounded by a low mud wall. Supplies aud water in great abundance. Country open and very partially cultivated. Soil sandy and road pretty good, with exception of a short distance on each side of the Soot. Pass Rampoor at and Munjoolee at 64 miles. At 84 miles cross the Soot sometimes by a very bad and deep ford, but usually by a bund or fascine bridge constructed across it. With at the ghat 10 yards. I VOL. II.) 57 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOKS 7.-A small bazaar and weekly market. Water from wells. Country, open ; patches of bush jungle and cultivation. Koad goud. Pass Chamarpora or Alladadpoor at 2, and Ra. howlee at 34 miles, and Leroree at 8 miles. Cross the Aril by a bund at the 5th mile, 15 yards wide, miry bed and low banks ; usual depth of water 4 feet. 8.-A small bazaar and market twice a week, on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Country open and pretty well cultivated ; a few patches of bush jungle along the banks of the Chooia. Road good, except for a short distance on either bank of the Chooia where it is usually much cut up. Pass Goolurea at 34, Suketta at 51, Nuwabgunge Khora at 64 and Jugba poor at 93 miles. At l4 miles cross the Chooia. An old pucca bridge of 3 small arches, passable for foot passengers only, a bad ford just below the bridge; depth of water 31 feet. 9.-Country flat and well cultivated; only a few patches of jungle on east bank of the Peeria. Road for the first half of the march bad and Hackery ruts deep, the remainder pretty good. Pass Juggernathpoor at 1, Kuthowlee at 21, Rajpoor at 7, Putpurgunge at 8, Aluhow leea at 9, and Allygunge at 114 miles. At 24 miles cross the Peeria by a lusciue bridge, and the dry bed of nullah close under Rajpoor. No. 32.- FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO BAREILLY BY RAMGHAT AND BISOWLEE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British. Suheswan Assudpoor, as in No.31.. Kaderabad Nadha Bisowlee ... Aonlagunge Hence to BAREIL- ? LY, as in No.5.. 32 6 10 0 Burdmar ... 9 0... 15 0 Soot 14 0.. 21 2 1 2 3 4 Bareilly 10 Total 102 0 1.- Road tolerably good. Supplies procurable, and water from the Burdmar, which is crossed at the end of the stage by ford in dry season, and by raft in rains. 2-Supplies procurable after due notice to local authorities. Road pretty good. 3.- Supplies and water abundant. Road bad through dak jungle. Ford the Soot tivet during the fair season, and pass it by raft or boat in rains. 4-A town and large bazaar. Water abundant. Road tolerably good. No. 33.FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO BAREILLY BY KHASGUNGE. Jellalee 121 71.. 1 Allygurh Kalli Gangheree 13 1 2 Nuddy Neem Budaon KHASGUNGE 12 3 3 Nuddy From Khasgunge, to Bareilly, as in 741 5 No. 5 British. ... 10 Total .. 113 0 N. B.-A road is heing made from Penhaitee to Hinderamy, passing Pebkanah, Cowren- gange and Malsie, leasing Gangheri on the right-when completed the stages will be from Allygurh to Pebkanah, Mulsei to Khasgunge. PART 1. VOL. Il I 58 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A bazaar and market twice a week on Mondays and Fridays. Well water plentiful. Country open and but partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Coel at 11, Yakootpoor at 5, Ikeri at 74, Mahmoodpoor ai 87, and Jumalpoor at 91 miles. 2.—A smali bazaar and market on Sundays and Thursdays. Water plentiful from wells. Country as in last stage. Road good in parts, and in others very heavy. Pass Cowrea. gunge, a large village and bazaar, at 34, Kootubpoor at 7, and Hideramy at 10 miles. At the gth mile cross the Kalli nuddy hy a Pucca bridge. 3.–Road tolerably good generally, but heavy in some parts. Pass near Mulsei at 1, Bhamunnugra at 3, Dhoolna at 5, Belraon, (a large village and small bazaar,) at 8, and Burkhurderpoor at 10 miles, cross the Neem Nuddy by a Pucca bridge between Gangheree and Mulsei. No. 34.–FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO ETAWAH CANTONMENT. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. r Allygurh 1 Muttra British Sasnee Mhow Jullaisir,(S.E.side of) Omergurh ... Kotelah Shekoabad Etawah, as in No. 8.. 14 4... 12 5 9 2 8 0 Eesun 9 2 14 4 32 6 Agra Mynpoorie 3 4 5 6 9 Total 100 71 I-A good bazar, water and supplies in abundance. Country open and partially cul. tivated. Road good. Pass through the town of Coel between the li and 21 miles, and pass Murrurae at 8 miles, 2.-A small bazar and market, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Water from wells. Soil sandy. Country open and well cultivated. Road good. Pass Ruttinugur at , Tillowtee at 11, Lootsan at 31, Derriapoor a large village and bazar at 5, Hajeepoor at 8, near Buggeehar at 104, and Mahasingpoor at 1]miles. 3.-A large open town and good bazaar, good water from wells and tanks. For the first 6 miles, the road is good and country well cultivated ; and thence on to Jullaisir, the road is very heavy, the country waste, sandy and undulated, the road for the last i of a mile passes through the town. Puss Mohubutpoor at 13, Kesupoor at 3, and Kunpoor at 54 miles. 4-A few buniahs' shops and market on Mondays. Water from wells. Soil clayey. Country open and well cultivated. Pass Mohunpoor at 1, Mouzimpoor at 2}, Bussei at 31, Sera at 51, and Kootubpoor at 54 miles. The Eesun is crossed close to Omerguph and is dry immediately after the rains, nu lah dry also. 5.- A small bazar. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country well cultivated and road heavy the greater part of the way. 6.-A bazar. Well water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road good. Pass Bheer ke Nugļa at 3, Shekopoor Halhan at 4, Purtábpoor at 54, Senowra at 6), Hussunpoor at 81, Kuckrala at 8j, Lubow at 10, and Dektowlee at 12 miles. No. 35.–FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO MEERUTT CANTONMENT. KHOORJA, as in No. 1 297 Boolundshehr ... BOOLUNDSHEHR, } 1 Civil Station Golauttee 13 41 2 Haupper 9 4 Meerut 3 Kurkowda 8 2 4 MEERUT Cant. 11 2 5 11 11... British. Total... 83| 4' miles. vol. 11.] 59 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A town and bazar. Supplies abundant. Water from wells and the Kali Nuddy. Coun- try open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Mamun at 51, Hatimabad at 64, Neemk hera at 7 miles. 2.-A large village and bazar. Water from wells plentiful. Country open and partially eultivated. Road good with exception of the tirst 2 or 3 miles which is heavy. 3.-A large town and bazar. Country open and well cu tivated. Ruad excellent. 4.-A small bazar. Supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. Coun- try open and partia'ly cultivated. Road good. 5.-Sudder bazar. 'Water plentiful, open and pretty well cultivated. Road heavy in parts, and particularly so near the town of Meerut, which is passed at the 10th mile. Good ground for encampment between the lines of His Majesty's Dragoons and foot, nearly in the centre of cantonments. No. 36.-FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO MORADA- BAD CANTONMENT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. L-i | Nullahs. | Nos. Allygurh Chittaree Boolundshehr.. { Axupoor AxOOSHEHR Choupoor :::: 1 2 3 4 Budaon Raniwala 5 British. 14 6... 71 4 Kali Nuddy 12 0 3 o Ganges Mohao 13] 3 Nukta & Chooi 11 5)... Soot or 11 2 Yarwuff fadar 11 4 Gangun ... Sumbhul ... 2 6 Moradabad 1 Minatere 7 MORADABAD Cantt. 18 8 Total...' 85 0 N. B.-The following stages are considered preferable with reference to the facility of proeuring Supplies, viz. Gumma (crossing the Ganges at Deepoora ghat 3 miles above Anoopshehr) 81 ; Soondun Serai 101 ; Tunbul 94 ; Mahmoodpoor 84, and Moradabad Cantonments 15 miles. 1.-A large village and bazar, surrounded by a mud wall and ditch ; water from wells. Country open, soii clayey and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Jumalpoor at 1}, Cheerut at 41, Nigola at 11, Bura Joon at 9, and Bhyloipoor at 12 miles, 2.- A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and pretty well cultivated after crossing the Kalli Nuddy: Road good. Pass By rainnugur at 14. Chourera at 31, and Ressoo poor" Narainpoor at 54 miles. Ford the Kalli Nuddy at 3 miles, 40 yards wide, low books and muddy bottom, usually 2 feet deep in dry season. This is a bad ford, and a fascine bridge is required to enable à corps to pass without difficulty and delay. 3.-A town and bazar. Water from wells plentiful. Comtry 'open. 9oii sandy and partially cultivated. Road very good. Pass Jerowlee at 6, and Rajour'at 84 miles. 4-A'small village. 3 buniahs' shops. Supplies must be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from wells. The bed of the Ganges opposite Anoopshehr is about a mile wide, and the stream in the dry season usually oceupies about one-fifth of that space, the dry part of the bed of the river is heavy sand, and from the left bank to Choupoor the road leads through jhao and grass jungle. There are boats belonging to this ferry. 5.-A small village. Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages. Water froin wells and the Chooia Nuddy. Flat low country, partially cultivated. Road bad. Pass Davuta (Thackoor Daske) at 11, Kurkulee at 31. Gumna, a middling village, 4 buniahs' shops and weekly market, at 61, Singola at 9, Talatura at 11, and Bahadurpoor at 19 miles. At 54 miles ford the Mohao Nuddy, 50 yarıls wide, firm sandy bottom and 3 feet depth of water. At 101 cross the Nukta, 60 yards wide and from 7 to 8 feet (leep. Foot passengers are crossed by a raſt constructed on earthen pots, and carts are obliged io make a consider- able detour to the left to cross by a bund constructed across the nuddy near Adampoor. At 124 miles ford the Chooia 12 yards wide, bottom inuddy, and depth of water ! foot. 6.--A large straggling town and good bazaar. Water and supplies in abundance. Coun- try open and very partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Suondun Serai at 2, Kovtuk poor al li, and Bulowla at 5 miles. Nullahs small and dry. 60 [PART L. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 17.–A small village. Supplies should be taken on from Sirsee and Mahmoodpoor or from Moradabad according to the direction of the march. Water from one pucca well. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Road good with exception of half a mile on leſt bank of the Soot where it is low and swampy. Pass Feerozpoor, a large village, 31, Sirsee a large village and bazaar at 6, and Mahmoodpoor. a small bazaar, and market on Mondays, at 8 miles; at 3} miles cross the Soot by a bad pucca bridge. 8.-Supplies and water abundant, Country open, soil sandy and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Tahurpoor at 39, Jetpoora at 45, and Fureedpoor at 7 miles. Cross the Gangun at 74 miles, 60 yards wide, sandy bottom, banks step and depth of water usually about 31 feet. No. 37.-FROM ALLYGURH CANTONMENT TO MUTTRA CANTONMENT. Dist. - Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Allygurh British. Kaku or Kanka { Joar S Rao or Rayah Muttra Cantt. 141 41 91 4 8/ 1 91 Jumpa 1 2 3 Muttra 4 Total... 41 2 miles. 1.-A small village, only 2 buniahs' shops, but supplies are procurable from adjacent villages, and a toll has been established for the supply of fuel, earthen pots and other Burdasht articles. After passing through the town of Coel the country is open, soil sandy and partialy cultivated." Road in general very good. Between the 14 and 2 mile pass through coel, at 31 pass Hurnarain Serai, at 5, Bukhara, and at 74 miles Eeset, 2. A large village and bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country as in last stage. Road heavy in parts and much cut up by Hackery wheeis. Pass Nougawa at 3, Belout at 34, Karis at 4, and Raetpoor at 5miles. 3.-A small bazaar and market, on Mondays and Fridays. Water from wells. Country well cultivated and studded with small villages. Road heavy and bad for carts. Pass Kobuniga at 24, Kohma Sera at 41, Berhuna at 3, and Pursood at 52 miles, 4.-Supplies aud water abundant. Country open, soil sandy and partially cultivated, Road as in last stage. Pass the village of Goosuna at 41 miles, and cross the Jumna at the 7th mile by a bridge of boats at all seasous, except in the height of the rains, when plenty of good ferry Boats are procurable. No. 38.-FROM ALMORAH CANTONMENT TO BAREILLY CANTONMENT. Purah or Peorah 81 6 Sawul 1 1 Commissioner at Ram Gurh 10 5 2 Almorah Bheem Tal 117 3 Bumouree 11 6 Bulleah British Bareilly TANDAH or Tarah 15| 3|.. 5 Commissi British. Rampoor. G. G.'s Agent Bareilly Manpoor 13] 3.. 1 6 British. Bareilly Seesgurgh Shahee Sunka Nuddy at Pucca Bridge .. BAREILLY Cantonmt. 13 7 Kullee 27 14 2 Bhagool : 33 8 6 Sunka 2 9 10 4 Jooa 10 10 Total 110 3 miles. VOL. 11.] 61 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Supplies abundant. Water scarce. Road pretty good. Confined encamping ground near public bungalow. Cross the nullah at the 3rd and the river at the 6th mile, both by suspension bridges. 2-Supplies procurable in abundance, water distant and scarce. A pretty good hill road. Cross several small hill streams. Ground for encampment confined near the stage bun- galow. 3.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Ground for encampment as at ast stage. 4.–Supplies must be collected, but are procurable in abundance on due notice being given to the civil authorities. Road indifferent and intersected by several small hill streams. Cross the Bulleah at the 7th mile by suspension bridge. 5.–Supplies must be brought from Ruddurpoor, distant 7} miles ; a good made road through forest all the way. Water from a nullah. 6.-A large village on right bank of the Bhagool Nuddy. Supplies and water plentiful. Country flat and covered with grass jungle to Ruddurpoor, thence it is pretty well culti- Fated. The road is good for 8 miles, the rest very bad. Pass Ruddurpoor Rampora at 7%, and Inderpoor at 10 miles; cross deep bedded nullah close to the last named village. 7.-A bazar and market on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Water plentiful. Country open and well cultivated. Road bad. Pass Bhatu at 2, Gohadee at 34, Dhaunne at 6, Khujureea at 84, Udumpoor at 94, and Aheero at 11 miles. Cross small dry nullah close under Dhaunee, and second nullah by fascine bridge, near Udumpoor. TheKullee intersects the road at the 10th mile, 10 yards wide and 24 feet deep, bottom sandy aud banks rather steep. 8.-A small bazaar and market on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Water from the Bhagool. Country open and well cultivated. Road a tolerably good hackery track. Pass Girdhur poor at 2, Jufferpoor at 2, Boocha at 21, Busehai at 64, Dunka at 91 Anundpoor at 11, and Agroura at 114 miles. Ford the Bhagool at the end of the march, 220 yards wide, sandy bottom and steep banks. The stream in the dry season is usually 60 yards wide, and from { to 3 feet deep. 19.-No village. Supplies from Futtehgunge, distant 21 miles, and water from the Sunka. Country low, flat and very partially cultivated. Road good.' Pass Lubkun at 1, Kurs senie at 3), and Agrass at 5 miles, 10.-Sudder bazaar. Water plentiful and good. Country flat and well cultivated, Road good. Pass Kulleelpoor at 4, Muhespoor at 5, enter the city of Bareilly at 61, and pass out of it at 8 miles. "Ford the Jooa nuddy at the entrance to Bareilly. 'Low banks, firm, sandy bottom, and from 1 to 14 feet depth of water, No. 39.-FROM ALMORAH CANTONMENT TO DEHRA BY SRINUGUR AND HURDWAR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. AH03101 M. F. Gullee Bussoor Dewara Hath Gunaee Guermanda Adbhudree Kurnprag Commissioner at Dharee Debee Sewanundee Manda. Almorah Srinugur Seetakotee a Byat ka Sera Chandpoor "Byragur THỰC HÀNH VI ĐI Koonao Chandee Ghat Seharunpoor HURDWAR Khansroo Chokie P. A. Dehra Lucheewala DEHRA Cantt. British. 12 o Causilla 13 0... 11 0 Ramgunga 12 0 Ramgunga 11 0... 12 0... 11 3. 1611... 100 10 2 14 4 10 Nyar 12 o Hewul 14 0 13 0 1 4 Ganges 12 0... 8 2 Sooswah 11 0 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 TO 11 12 13 14 ... 15 16 17 18 19 ...... 19 Total... 215' 0 miles. From Byragur to Rickhikhes 10 miles, (crossing the Ganges at the end of the stage by ferry boat, or by a rope bridge at Tapobund 24 miles above Rickhikhes,) Luckeewalla 1, and Debra 11 miles, 62 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Encamping ground near a stream mile from the village. Cross the Causilla by an iron suspension bridge. Common Zimeendaree road. 2.-Encamping ground at Temple of Kalka, 200 yards beyond the village of Dewara from which supplies are procurable. Road as in last stage. 3.-Supplies procurable from adjacent villages. T'he Ramgunga is fordable, except in the rains, when it can be crossed by a spar bridge, at Masee, 1 mile below Gunaet. Road as above. 4.-Encamping ground on the left bank of the river over which is a spar bridge. Sup- plies procurable from surrounding villages. Fine made road. 5.—Encamping ground near the temple at which there is a Buniah's shop. Fine made road. 6.-Encamping ground on the left bank of the Pindur river opposite, to Kurnprag, at which is a Buniah's shop. Good made roard. 7.-A Dhurumsala, with a Buniah's shop. Capital made road. 8.-A Dhurumsala with Buniah's shop. "Good made road. Doongreepunt, a small vil. lage, 13 miles froin Sewanundee, would be a better division of distance, but there are 110 supplies there. 9.--A bungalow, bazaar and Police Thanna. Good made road. 10.-A Dhurumsala with Buniah's shop. Made road. 11.- Ditto ditto ditto, excellent made road. 12.-Ditto ditto ditto. The Nyar river is fordable except in the rains when a rope bridge is established, 13.-Dhurumsala with Buniah's shop. Excellent road, and the Hewul fordable. 14.-A small village at the foot of the hills, at which is a Buniah's shop, and to which hackeries can be brought from the plains. Road as before. 15.--A Police Thauna with Buniah's shop. Made road. 16. --Cross the Ganges by ferry (2 Boats) to Hurdwar in which there is a good bazaar. 17.-No village. Encamping ground in the forest. Water from one well and the Soos- wah river. Road excellent the whole way and practicable for carts. 18.--A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from an irrigation canal cut from the Song river. Road very good, with exception of the ford on the Sooswah, which is stony, and bad for cattle and carts. 19.- Water and supplies abundant. Road excellent. No. 40.-FROM ALMORAH TO LOHOOGHAT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British. Commissioner at Almorah Dole Dee Phurka 15 2 Suwul 14 6.. 14 2 8 6 1 2 3 4 ... LourboGIT AT 4 Total... 531 0 miles. N. B.-From Almora to Lohooghat there is a good made road kept in rapair by Govern- ment. 1.-A staye Bungalow with encamping ground and water near. . Supplies procurable from the village of Dole, distant į mile. 2.—A stage Bungalow, Encamping ground and water near ; but no Buniah, and villages distant. 3.-A stage Bungalow. Water and encamping ground near. No Buniah but supplies procurable from adjacent villages. 4.-A Military Pust. VOL. 11.] 63 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 41.–FROM ALMORA TO MORADABAD BY BAMOUREE AND RAMPOOR. Dist. Territories. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Wullahs. Nos. M. F. British Bareilly G. G's Agent at Bareilly ... 526 71 4 11 6 9 4 2 3 1 Tanda, as in No. 38.. Rudderpoor Billaspoor Boht or Bohit Rt. Bk. Causilla Riv. near Rampoor Rt. Bk. Rujhera Nuddy at Pucca Bridge MORADABAD Can- tonment S 10 o Causilla 4 Moradabad Rampoor 8 4 Rujhera 5 Moradabad 7 0 Ramgunga... 16 11 Total ...). 1071 01 site. 1-A bazaar. Supplies and water in abundance. Road good. Country flat and cover- ed with grass jungle. Rudderpoor is on the east or left bank of the Bhagool nuddy, and the ground of encampment is at Rampoora, on the west or right bank immediately orpo- 2.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. 3.—Supplies and water as in last stage. Road very bad, intersected by many water courses with steep banks. 4.-Supplies from Rampoor. Water from the Causilla, Road bad as in last stage. 5.--Supplies procurable from adjacent villages ; water from the nuddy. Road pretty good. 6.-Supplies and good water plentiful. Country flat and well cultivated to the left bank of the Ramgunga. Road good, with exception of the bed of the river, which is of heavy sand and bad for carts. Ai 34 miles enter the bed of the Ramgunga which is here I mile wide, and the stream in dry season is usually divided into 2 or 3 branches, and from 1 to 3 feet deep, with uneven sandy bottom. 2'small ferry boats ply at this ghat in the rains. No. 42.–FROM ALMORA TO MORADABAD BY CHILKEA AND KASSIPOOR. Munras Commissioner at Almora missio S Ghutgarh ... dabad Bijnour British Mora- 101 6 Suwul 11 1 11 o Causilla 2 13! o Dubka 3 9 21 4 Dubka and 8 4 5 Causilla 15 ... 6 111 11 3 7 10 11 8 9 6 Ramgunga .... 9 Khanee Polegurh Chilkea Cassipoor Pudianugra Bhojpoor MORADABAD Can- tonment Bijnour Moradabad 9 Total 98 4 64 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Supplies procurable from the village and water from a well. Good encamping ground below the village. Cross the Suwul river by an iron suspension bridge. Made road. 2.--Encamping ground on the bank of the stream. Supplies procurable from surround- ing villages, distant I to 2 miles. The Causilla river is twice crossed by iron suspension bridges in this stage. Made road. 3.- Encamping ground on the left bank of the Dubka below the village. Supplies pro- curable from a Buniah's shop at Kotah on the opposite bank of the river. The Dubka is fordable at all seasons of the year Made road. 4.- A Mundee on the left bank of the Dubka river at the foot of the lower range of hills, containing a bazaar and Police Establishment. Made road. 5.-A considerable Mundee. All kinds of grain procurable and water from an irrigation canal. The Dubka and Cabsilla are fordable at all seasons. Good road. 6.- A large town and bazaar. Supplies and water in abundance. Good en camping ground on the East side. 7.--About 60 families of Jats and 3 Buniah's shops. Water from wells. Country open, low, flat, and partially cultivated, Road had for carts. Pass Tara at 1, Dukeea at 13, Gainee Khera at 2},Bauskhera at 31, Girdhai at 4, Bhowrunpoor at 91, and Billabaree at 10 miles. 8.-A bazaar and market on Sundays. Well water abundant. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Lallpoor at 1, Byheree at 27, Dholpooree at 34, Kuchnar at 41, Jahidpoor at 6], and Davidpoor at 7 miles. 9.--Road pretty good, with exception of the bed of the Ramgunga, which is of heavy sand. Pipursena at 11, and Sehulat 4 miles. At 64 miles enter the bed of the Ramgunga at Newbpoora ghat were it is 1 mile wide. Ford the stream, which from November to June is usually divided into two or three channels, and varies in depth from 1 103 feet with un- even sandy bottom. There are 4 small ferry boats ply at this ghat, in the raius. No. 43.-FROM ALMORA TO PETORAGURH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F British Commissioner at Almorah Chanee Soopee Boora Jageshur Gunglee Hath. Bans PETORAGURI 8 o Suwal 11 61 15 6 Surjoo 9 0 Ramgunga.. 8 6.. ... 3 4 5 Total .., 53 2 N. B.-From Almora to Petorayurh there is a good made road kept in repair by Gorern- ment, 1.-Encamping ground near a temple on the left bank of the Suwal, which is fordable at all seasons. No Buniah's shop; but supplies procurable from surrounding villages. 2.-Confined encamping ground vear the temple of Boora Jageshur. Water from a Bow- lee. No Buniah's shop, and villages distant one or two miles, 3.-Encamping ground close to the village, from which supplies are procurable. Water from a Bowlee. The Surjoo is crossed by an iron suspension bridge. 4.-Encamping ground near the village. No shop; but supplies procurable from adja- cent villages. 5.-A bazaar and Military Post. VOL. 11.) 65 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 44.–FROM ALMORAH TO THE THIBET FRONTIER BY THE JOORWAIR PASS. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. :: 1 2 3 Sutralee Bageshur Uethan Nowkooree Ramaree Girgaon Jullut Commissioner at Lillum Almorah Bugoodyar British. 17 3... 11 5 Gowmuttee Surjoo & 14 Nakooree) 10 0... 14 0... 14 Ramgunga 12 0... 91 ... 12 0... Bugoo- 9 4 dyar and Luspa Looan- 10 o garh Goree 11 0... 12 0... 5 6 7 8 9 Rilkote ... 10 Melun 11 Doon CHOORCHIN 12 13 13 Total...) 156 41 miles. 1.-Encamping ground near a temple on the bank of a stream, supplies procurable from surrounding villages, beyond Hawil Bagh, the road is made and repaired by the zemindars. 2.-A bazar with plenty of supplies. The Gowmuttee is always fordable except after Fery heavy rain. 2-Both rivers are crossed by spar bridges. Encamping ground on left bank of the Surjoo near the village of Vethan, from which supplies are procurable. 4.-Encamping ground below the village on the bank of a stream. Supplies procurable. 5.--Encamping ground near a spring between the road and the village. No supplies pro- curable here. 6.-River fordable except in the rains, when a Julha or rope bridge is thrown across it. Encamping ground on the bank of a stream & mile south of Girgaon. Supplies procurable from surroundiug villages. 7.-Supplies procurahle and eucamping ground near a fountain in the village. 8.-Encamping ground near a stream of water. Only one house in Lillum, and no sup- plies procurable. N. B.-Above this point the ghat opens in May and closes in November. 9.-Encamping ground on the right bank of the Bugoodyar nullah ; no village near, and no supplies procurable. 10.–Encamping ground a mile south of the village on the right bank of the Goree- gunga Supplies scarce. Bugoodyar fordable: Luspa crossed by a spar bridge. !!.-Encamping ground on the left bank of the Goreegunga which is crossed by a spar bridge. Supplies procurable from Melum. Cross the Looangarh by a spar bridge. N. B.-Above this point the ghat opens in June and closes in October. 12.--Encamping ground on the bank of a stream. No fire wood or supplies procurable. The former article must be carried from 3 miles below. Road in some parts difficult. 13.—Encamping ground on the bank of a stream at the Northern base of the Himalaya range. A few stunted bushes to be found for fire-wood. No supplies. The Thibet Fron- tier is distant 4 miles North, marked by a low wall. The road in this stage crosses the Oouta Dhoora Pass, on which snow ſies 11 months in the year. Road in some places difficult, PART I, VOL. II, K 66 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 45.–FROM AZIMGURH TO GHAZEEPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. M. F. :: | Nullahs. Nos. 10 o Touse Azimgurh { 10 0... British. Tihanagunge Chuppra Sickree GHAZEEPOOR Cantt. 2 2 Ghazeepoor { 100 Bysoo & 2. 14 0 Munghie } 2 4 Total... 440 miles. The road between Azimghurh and Ghazeepoor generally is kept in good repair during the cold and hot seasons, but in the rains it becomes quite impassable for troops. The Bysoo is crossed by a Pucca bridge and the Munghie which is fordable during the cold and hot seasons becomes unfordable in the rains, and is then crossed by means of a private ferry boat kept up for the purpose. The country traversed by this route being in general high and dry, there is no where any difficulty in selecting good ground for encampment and the requisite supplies are procurable on due notice being given to the local autho- rities, : 1.-A good cart road. Cross the Touse under Azimghur constructed on Dingies. 2.-Road good, Little or no traffic on it, No. 46.-FROM AZIMGURH TO GORRUCKPOOR. 1 Azimgurh British 2 Beeltriagunge or Beeliriagunge Rounapoor or 2 Rounapar Gopalpoor Mircha Unoula GORRUCKPOOR 2 Cantonment S Sooksoee 100 and Kyar Nuddies Chota & O Surjoo 10 o Gogra 10 0'... 10 4 ... Aumee & 2 131 0 Raptee Gorruckpoor he 3 4 5 1 6 6 Total... 616 4 Miles. For some years back (from the present, 1834,) a chur or island has formed in the middle of the Gogra at Neineejore Ghat which makes the crossing inconvenient, and the following Route is consequently preferred by some travellers, but troops have not been accustomed to proceed by it owing to the greater difficulty of procuring supplies, 1.-A small bazar and supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. Country open and very partially cultivated. Road good. Nuddies fordable except after very heavy rain when they must be passed on rafts or dingies. -A few Buniahs' shops. Supplies from adjacent villages and water plentiful. Coun- try level and intersected with patches of cultivation and low jungle. Rond good. Cross the Chota Surjoo at Chandputiee ghat; it is fordable for eight months in the year and two dingies ply on it in the rains. A temporary bridge is sometimes necessary for the pas- sage of a corps marching this way. 3.-A good bazar. Supp:ies and water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Cross the Gogra at the Neinjore ferry by two large boats and 10 dingies, VOL. 11.] 67 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 4-A few Buniahs' Shops. Supplies procurable in abundance on due notice being given to the Local Authorities. Country much covered with thick jungle. Road usually much eut up by Hackery wheels. 5.-Supplies procurable as at Mircha. Country and road as in last stage. The sullahs are crossed by Pucca bridges. 6.-Supplies and water abundant. The country for six miles covered with thick jungle the remainder open and well cultivated. Road as in last two stages, and between the Anmee and Raptee a distance of 6 miles, it is often during the rains entirely under water. The Aumee and Nullah are crossed by bridges, and the Raptee by ferry, the Farmer of which is bound to pass troops and public stores free of expense. No. 47.–FROM AZIMGURH TO GORRUCKPOOR. Second ROUTE. SOS012 UTA Names of Stages. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos M. F. 1 British. Jeewunpoor Azimgurh Lott Ghat Burhul El Gugya or Ghuga ... Gorruckpoor .. Bellipar DI GORRUCKPOOR Cantonment Sooksoee 12 0 and Kyar Chota E 0 Surjoo } 11 Gogra 12 0.. 10 Aumee & 2 12 0 2 3 24 Raptee} 5 ... 6 Total... 65 ol miles. The Road on the above route is tolerably good from November to June, but impassable in the rains. Sufficient en camping ground for a regiment at all the stages, and supplies procurable after the due notice to the local authorities. 1.-The nuddies are almost impassable in the rains. 2-The Surjoo at Lott Ghat is passed by a diugie in the rains. 3.-A bazar. The Gogra at Dhoorie Burhul Chat is contined to one channel, and is crossed by ten good ferry boats. 4,-Nullahs crossed by small boats free of expense to troops and public stores. 5.-Cross the Aumee by a temporary bridge, and the Raptee by ferry at the Bhowapaur Ghaut. British. No. 48.-FROM AZIMGURI TO JUANPOOR. Ranee Serai 84Touse 1 Azimgurh Tekmah 13 O Munghie ...... 2 Badshahpoor Gourah 12 4... 2 3 Juanpoor JUANPOOR Cantt. 3 Goomty 1/4 ... 4 Total.../ 431 ol miles. This road, especially in the two middle stages, is formed in a deep sandy soil and is ne- Fer in good condition owing to the great number of cotton carts, &c. which pass along it. It is however always passable even in the height of rains, 68 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and partially, cultivated. Road rather heavy. Cross the Touse under the town of Azimgurh by a bridge constructed on dingies. 2:—A middling village and small hazar, water plentiful. Country open and very par- tially cultivated. Road very heavy and much cut by Hackery wheels. At 8 miles pass Gumeerpoor, a large village and bazar, and at 11 miles cross the Munghie Nuddy by a pucca bridge. 3.-Two adjoining villages with a long bazar street in each. Water from wells and a tank, Country and road as in last stage. Nullahs fordable. 4.–Supplies and water plentiful. Road and country as above. Pass through the city of Juanpoor and cross the Goomty by a fine pucca bridge near the end of the march. The nullah is fordable. No. 49.–FROM AZIMGURH TO SECRORA. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Name of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Azimgurh Captain Gunge 12 0... 12 0 100 12] 0 100 100 100 100 Oude. Resident at Lucknow... Buskarie Kusbah Tanda Ultafgunge Begumgunge Pooraee Fyzabad Left Bank of the Gogra River op- posite Fyzabad... Wazeergunge Goondah Ballapoor SECRORA 2 0 12 o 12 4 9 01 71 01 1 No. 50.--FROM AZIMGURH TO SOOLTANPOOR, OUDE. Azimgurh Juanpoor Ş Kudwah Mahoul Buragaon Soorahpoor Luchmunpoor Purusputtee SOOLTANPOOR 12 01 12 0 120 10 0 100 101 01 12 on Resident at Lucknow. 7 Total. 781 ol miles. This road is a mere bridle track, impassable for wheel carriages. The best route is via Juanpoor. VOL. 11.) 69 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 51.–FROM BAITOOL CANTONMENT TO GURRAWARA BY HOSHUNGABAD. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 13 4... ... Neempanee Shahpoor Assist. Commis- J Bhora Nuddy sioner Baitool . Kaisla 104 ... ... .. British. Itarsee HOSHUNGABAD* fowa River Right Bank Assist. Commis- | Babye sioner Hoshun-Saimree Sohagpoor Hutwas Bunkhere 9 1 8 2 Machna 71 1 9 & Bhora 3 Dhar and 141 Ol Sook- towa 10 5 9 5 11 5 5 6 8/ 6Towa 67 6 1] 2 8 1012) Puluck- 2 71 4 mutee S 8 10 8j 11 Koorinee 2 12 5 11) 12 & Anjun 15 0 Doodye? & Omar 3 12 13 11 4 Sukkur 8 14 15| 3... 9 15 Burerwa 2 9| 3 & Singree) 4 16 112 9 gabad 111 11... Assist. Commis- sioner Gurra- wara Nandnair or Nadnair Bhowanee Kureilee GURRAWARA or Nursingpoor Cnt. 16 Total... 173) 6 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies scanty but procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good. Valley of Baitool highly cultivated. Nullahs small and fordable. 2.-X bazar, water from wells, and the Machna nuddy. Country hilly and covered with jungle. Road indifferent, leading down the Neempanee ghat and over several slight ascents and descents. The ghat forms a long and stiff pull for carts proceeding to Baitool by this route. 3.-One Buniah. Supplies scarce. Water plentiful. . Country hilly and covered with jungle. Road good. The nuddies and nullahs all fordable. 4-A small bazar. Water from nuddy, scarce in hot season. Country and road as in last stage. Nuddies and nullahs fordable, most of them dry after the rains. 5.-Supplies from neighbouring villages. Water from wells and a nullah. Country hilly and covered chiefly with wood and grass jungle. Road pretty good generally; but stong in parts and there are several ascents and descents in this march, but none of them difficult. The last two miles level ground. Nullahs dry after rains. 16.-Supplies and water abundant; country level and well cultivated. Nullahs dry du- ring the cold and hot seasons. 7.-Supplies from neighbouring villages; water from the river. Country flat and culti- vated, Road good. The Tow becomes fordable soon after the close of the rains. Bed about 1 of a mile wide and heavy sand. Nullahs dry. 8.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country flat, covered with tree jungle. Hills at a distance on right. Road good. Nullahs dry. 9:- A small bazar. Water from wells. Conntry flat and well cultivated. Road good. Nullahs dry. Hoshangabad may be avoided by going from Kaisla to Seindkhera 14, and thence to Babye 10 miles. 5 70 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 10.-A large town and bazar. Water and supplies abundant, Country and road as in last stage. Nuddy fordable and nullahs dry. 11.-A large village on the left bank of the Koorinee nuddy. Supplies and water procur- able in abundance. Country, road and nullahs as above. 12,-A small village. Supplies from Futtehpoor, a large place in the hills four miles south. Water from wells. Country flat and partly cultivated. Road good through low jungle in parts. Cross the Koorinee at starting, tiſty yards wide and shallow water. The Anjun is dry and its bed sandy. The nullahs are all fordable, and of the eleven which in- tersect the road in this stage only three retain any water in the hot season. 13.-A good sized village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice, water plentiful. Country flat, partial cultivation and a good deal of jungle. Hills at a distance on the right. At7 miles cross the Doodye, which forms the boundary between the districts of Hoshungabad and Gurrawara, its banks are steep, but shelving at the ghat; its bed san- dy and little water in cold and hot seasons. The Omar and nullahs are all fordable. 14.-A good village, supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road yood through a well cultivated country. At about half way pass the large village of Gurrawara, and cross the Sukkur, 150 yards wide, sandy bed and narrow stream about knee deep during the hot season. Nullahs fordable. 15.-A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Country flat, and highly cultivated, road good. The nullalis are mostly dry, but some of them are deep bedded. They form no impediment however during the cold and hot seasons, and in the rains the whole road is bad. 16.-Sudder bazar. Water plentiſul from wells and the Sinyree nuddy. Country and road as in last stage. No. 52.-FROM BAITOOL CANTONMENT TO MHOW BY HINDIA. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 9 0 Machna ... 1 Assist. Commis- sioner Baitool . British. 90. 15 4... 101 o... : : : : 1 2 2 2 3 4 Assistant Com. Hoshungabad. 100.. Machna Nuddy) near Komharea... S Chicholee Cheerapatla Gowassain Ouskully Timurnee or Tim- ? burnee HURDAH Hindiah SUNDULPOOR CHUNWANAH Kunnode Beejwar QONCHODH PEEPLEA, (HATH KA) P. A. Sehore Scindea's. 8. 5... .. 13 Gungill 1 6 9 6... 7 141 0... 8 6 7 Nurbudda. 9 8\ 3... 1/10 11 11 11 5 1 12 9) 1 2 13 9 2 Kalli Sind . 114 Bamoree 113 and 1 15 Sendula 10 5 Sipra 4116 11| 2 Kanar 81 17 Kanar & R. 81 4 2 18 Gumbeer + . Dews Akbarpoor Holkar's. Resident at Indore Sonwah Duttoda Mbow Cantonment.. 18 Total... 1851 7 The best route for troops from Baitool to Hindiah is by Hoshungabad. The road from Chicholee to Ouskully being very bad, and all but impracticable for whceled carriages. VOL. 11.) 71 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small village. Supplies must be taken from Baitool or collected from neighbouring villages. Water from the Machna. Road pretty good, but the best road, and usual route is by Kheree 8, Chicholee 14 miles. 2.-A large village. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road tolerably good. Nullahs fordable, 3.-A small village. Supplies scarce and should be taken on from Chicholee. Water from a nullah. The first half of the road pretty good. The last half rough, stony and winding amongst hills and jungle. 4-A small village. Supplies very scanty, and procurable only after due notice to the local authorities; water from a nullah. Road very stony and bad through hills and jungle. Nullahs fordable. 5.-A small village situated at commencement of open country. Water from a nullah. Supplies procurable after due notice. Country hilly. Road stony and bad through jungle. 6.—A bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Road good. 7.- A bazar, Water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road good. The road from Hoshungabad to Assergurh passes through Hurdah. 8-A large town and bazar on left bank of the Nerbudda river. Supplies and water plentiful. Country for the first ten miles open and cultivated, remainder covered with jungle. A good Hackery road. N. B. From Timurnee to Hindiah there is a more direct road (passing Charkhera at 4, Piddaggawn at 10, and Tassa at 15 miles) the distance by which is about 20 miles, and has been made in one march. 9.- A large village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water from a tank. Country open and cultivated. The Nerbudda is fordable on this route from Decem- ber to Juue and there are ferry boats at Hindiah. The town of Neemawur is on the right bank of the river opposite Hindiah. 10.-A middling village. Water from a nullah ; supplies, if required in large quantities, must be collected from adjacent villages. Country well cultivated. Road goou. 11.-A large village and bazar. Water plentiful from wells. Road good, much jungle and little cultivation, Ai5 miles pass Ninwassa. 12.- A small village. Water from a nullah, heavy jungle all the way. Road pretty good. At 34 miles pass Banghunkhera. 19.-A bazar. Water from wells. Heavy jungle for the first 6 miles. Road pretty good. A ghat of gradual ascent for nearly a mile to the table land of Malwa. At 51, pass Dhun- talao at top of ghat. 14.-A large village, and bazar. Water from wells and Bamoree nuddy. Country open, soil black muuld, slightly undulated and partially cultivated. Road' goodAt 2 miles ford the Kalli Sind, 30 yards broad, sandy bed, steep banks, small stream throughout the year. Pass Sangwee on left bank of the Kalli Sind and Billowlee at 1 miles. The road from Mhow to Saugor passes through Peeplea. 15.-A small bazar, of six shops. Supplies from Ragoo Gurh, distant 12 miles and from neighbouring villages. Water from wells and a nullah. Country undulated and hilly; Road a pretty good llackery track, stony in parts, and particularly between the 5th and 8th miles, where it passes between low hills. Pass Kurnawud at 41, a Baolle at 7, and Ragoo Garh, a middling village and small bazar at 94 miles. The nuddies and nullah are fordable with ease. 16.-A small village. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country slightly undulated and partially cultivated. Soil black mould, full of fissures and holes. Road pretty good in dry weather but impassable in the rains. Nullahs muddy, hedded and difficult for carts for some time after the rains. Pass Gailee at 14, Phulee at 31, Bowlea at 44 and Moorud at 64 miles. Cross the Sipra under Bowlea 15 yards wide, small rill of Fater, sandy bed, left bank shelving, right bank steep. 17-A large village and bazar. Market on Mondays. Supplies and water plentiful. Country undulated and raised into detached hills on right, partial cultivation interspersed with patches of jungle, Road pretty good for carts in dry season, but impassable in rains from the soft adhesive nature of the black soil. Pass Morilla at 18, Keorea at 3, Tillore at 5 and Peeplea at 64 miles. Cross the Kanar under Duttoda, become dry in January ; firm gravelly bottom but low muddy banks. The road through Duttoda is Darrow and winding, and for six weeks after the rains the banks of the Kanar swampy and difficult to pass. 18.-Suddur bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country undulated, and here and there raised into small conical and table crowned hills. Soil black mould, full of stones and partially cultivated. Road good in dry weather. Pass Goojurkhera at 7 miles. Ford the kanar on the west side of Duttoda and the Gumbeer under Goojurthera, both easy Ghats. 72 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 53.-FROM BAITOOL CANTONMENT TO NAGPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Bayewaree Machna 5 1 & Sapun twice. OLI 11 6... British. P. A. Baitool 8 11 2 3 11 4 ... 7 5 Wurda 51 4 Synkhera Mooltye Left Bank of the Wurda River Teegong Seonee Chicholee Omree 2 5 9 0... Jamb 12 2 31 6 ... 107 11 8 Nagpore. Resident at Nagpore *59 Burrumpooree 7 3 11 4 Koolar & 13 2 Chander- baga 13 5 9 31... 5 9 ... NAGPOOR Old Cant. (KAMPTEE Cantont... 8 10 4 11 11 Total...) 112 2 From Burrumpooree to the cantonment at Kamptee, the direct line of road is by Kolaree, making the distance about 16 miles, which may be divided into stages, thus: Kolaree 98. Kamptee 61 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies from the town of Baitool, distant I mile. Water plenti- ful. Country hilly but well cultivated round Baitool. Road pretty good. Ford the nuddies. 2.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road rugged and covered with loose stones,-numerous ascents and descents in this march,-three of them rather steep. Valleys well cultivated. Nullahs all fordable, and no village immediately on the road. 3.-A good bazar and water plentiful. Road rough and bad for carts. Country wavy and cultivated in the hollows. Nullahs fordable, all having small streams of clear water. The source of the Taptee is near Mooltye. 4.—No village. Supplies should be taken on from Mooltey. Water from the river. Country hilly and thinly covered with jungle, little cultivation. Nullahs fordable. 5.-A small village. Supplies scanty and must be collected by order of the local autho. rities. Road to the Borowlee ghat 2 miles good, it then descends for about half a mile, is steep and covered with loose stones and there are besides several ascents and descents, some of which are difficult for wheeled carriages ; country below the ghat cultivated. 6-Supplies scanty and should be taken on from Pandoorna, a large village, passed about midway. Road good in dry season but deep and miry after rain, Country culti- vated. 7.-A small bazar. Supplies scanty, water plentiful. Road stony and through light jungle. Nullahs fordable. 8.-A small village. Supplies scarce. Water abundant. Road indifferent. Country undulated, wild and chiefly covered with light jungle. Nullahs fordable. 9.- A small village, Supplies must be collected. Encamp on the right bank of the Chunderbaga. Country open, well cultivated and well wooded with Mangoe and Tamarind trees. Road good. Rivers and nullahs fordable. 10.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Country open and gently undulated. Road good. 11.-Supplies from Suddur Bazar, Water plentiful, Road good, tbrough an open and well cultivated country, VOL. 11.) 73 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 54.-FROM BAITOOL CANTONMENT, NEEMUCH, BY HINDIAH AND OOJEIN. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Oonchode, as in No. 52... 1347 Sein- dea's. Newree 15 o... 7 Dewas. DEWAS Nurwul OOJEIN Kunta Kheree Ooneil Peeploda Scindea's. 16 0... 2 12 0... 3 13 0 Sipra 4 8 4 Gumbeer... 25 107... 36 94. Chumbul 11 3 and 38 Bageree 10 0... 3 9 94 Mullenee..3 10 96 Pearea 3 11 11 0... 4 12 Somnee& 94 Sieu or 2 13 Subna. ... KACHRODE Resident at Burowda or Bul- ? Indore rowdee S Jowrah Dodur or Dodhur Burra Dulowda ноэлая | Mundesore dea's. Jowrah. Scindea's. Jowrah. Sein- Mulbargurh 16 4... 2 14 P. A. Neemuch ... NEEMUCH Raitum & 14 6 Arkea.. 2 15 ... 28 Total... 312| 1 miles. 1.- Supplies and water abundant. Country at first open and undulated, with distant hills, latterly hilly. Road a very indifferent hackery track. 2. A large open town. Capital of the Dewas state, and residence of its Puars or rajas. Supplies and water plentiful. Road a very bad hackery track, intersected by several swampy-bedded nullahs. Country hilly at first, then open and undulated with a cluster of hills on left on approaching Dewas. 2.-Supplies procurable and water plentiful; country open and undulating. Road gaod. 4.-A large walled city on right bank of the Sipra river. Supplies and water abundant ; pass through the city. Ford the Sipra at Pucha Muchun ghat, and encamp on its left bank. Road good. 5.- small village on the left bank of the Gumbeer river. Supplies from surrounding villages, and water from the river. Country, open, slighty undulated, and very partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Ratturea ‘at 21, noukheree at 51, and Amoded at 74 miles. The Gumbeer is crossed by ford at the end of the stage, bed 50 yards wide, stream 15, and one foot deep in fair season, bottom sand and rock, banks steep and cut into ravines through which the road passes for some distance. 6.- A large town and bazar, also weekly market on Sundays. Water abundant from baglees and tanks. Country undulated and raised into ridges of low hills. Road a rough backery track, and passes over the stony ridges, one between Baloda and Peeplea, and the other between Peeplea and Ooneil. Pass Kunjura, a middling village at 4, Baloda at 61, and Peeplea at 9 miles. PART 1. VOL. II, I THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. (PART 1, 7.-A middling village. Some bupiahs, and market on Tuesdays. Water from the Chumbul river. °Road tolerably good the whole way. Pass Noubadea at 3, Akia at 4}, Nagjeree at 6], and Bagla at 7 miles. At 14 miles from Ooneil there is an easy ascent to a table-crowned ridge, across which the road leads to Nagjeree, where it is left by an easy descent. 8.-A large open town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open, undulated, and partially cultivated. Road pretty good with the exception of the ghat on the Chumbul, and where it is intersected by nullahs. Pass Julwal at 34, Beekumpoor at 51, Sirona at 7, Sipulda at 78. and Kumurwaree at 90 miles. At 4 of a mile from Peeploda cross the Chumbai by a rugged ghat. Stream 30 yards wide, and from I to l¥ feet deep during the fair season. The Bageree is crossed near Beckumpoor by an easy ghat. 9.-A small village. Water from a nullah, and supplies from Burowda, 1 mile north east. Country as in last stage, Rood good. Pass Goorawun at 2, Ghinodr at 5, and Phunakheree at 7 miles. 10.-A town on right bank of the Peerea nuddy. Residence of a nuwab, (son of Guffoor Khan.) Supplies and water abundant. Country open, undulated, and partially cultivated. Road good, with exception of a short distance on each side of the Mullenee, where it is narrow and winding through ravines. Pass Barodee at 2, Rajakheree at 34, Ukulea at 4 and Bootera at 61 miles. 11.-A small bazar and weekly market on Saturdays. Water from wells. Country as before. Road good. Pass Urnea at 3, Bagakheree at 4, Reechea at 6, and Purwurea at 7 miles. 12. -A small village. Five buniahs and a bazar in Dumnar, 2 miles south east. Water from kutcha wells. Country open and cultivated, few small hills scattered on right and left. Road good. Pass Manundkhera at 2, Kuchnarea at 44, Ackia at 7, and Luchmakheree at 9 miles. 13.-A large walled town on left bank of the Sien Nuddy. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open, undulated, and well cultivated. Road good. Pass Rojja, a small village on right bank of the Somnee at 34 miles. Nuddies crossed by good fords. 14.-A hazar and water from wells. Country, undulated, and raised into ridges and small detached hills and knolls, Rood good. "Pass Bhonak heree at 34, Parlea at 7, Tur. rode at 8, Peeplea at 104, Kachakheree at 11, Burkhera at 124, and Sootode at 144 miles. 15. -Sudder bazar and water from wells. Country undulated and partially cultivated. Road a very good hackery track, but ground to right and left full of fissures and holes. Pass Moorlee at 11, Chuldow at 21, Bhatkhera at 8, Bura Jumonea at 104, and Hingonea at 18% miles. No. 55.-FROM BANCOORAH TO BARRACKPORE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Bancoorah 100... 100... British. Oondah BISHENPOOR Rajhath or Jeypoor Kotulpoor Jehanabad Left Bank of the Damooda River .. Paharpoor Booragong Gbyretty BABRACKPOOR 11 o Dalkeesur 2 3 2 3 10 4 14 4 Dalkeesur 10 4 Damooda.. 2 6 64 27 15 0 4 8 101 0 3 9 3 Hooghly 19 acoa a to Hooghly 10 Total... 101' 0 miles. 1.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Ford the river and nullahs. Heavy sand in the bed of the Dalkeesur. 2.-A large bazar. Water ip abundance. Road good. Nullahs fordable. VOLA 11.) 75 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 3.-A good bazar and water plentifuí. Road good. 4.-A small bazar. Supplies procurable after due noticē. Road good. 5.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Ford the river at the end of the march. 6.-Supplies must be collected, procurable in abundance after due notice. Road pretty good for the first 8 or 9 miles, the remainder is liable to be washed away by the Damooda in the rains, leaving sloughs and muddy bedded nullahs, which render the road nearly impassable for some time after the close of the rains. 7.-Supplies procurable from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. Řoad in general much eat up and bad. &.-A small village. Supplies from Singpore and adjacent villages. Nullahs passed by fords and bridges, the latter generally in bad repair. 9.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good, but the bridges on the nullahs generally ila bad repair. 10.-Cross the river at Pultah ghat by good ferry boats. No. 56.-FROM BANCOORAH TO MIDNAPOOR, Dist: Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers: Nullahs. M. F. | Nos 211 0 Bancoorah British. Bishenpoor, as in ? No. 55, Bankadah Betagurh Salbunny MIDNAPOOR Cantmt. Midnapoor 8 4'... 7 5 Salai 16 1... 15 1'... 3 2 3 3 6 Total... 68 3 4 1.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and must be taken on from Bishen poor. Water pleutiful. Road pretty good. 2.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Bridges on the nullahs, and the river is passed by ferry and the ford. 3.-A small bazar. Road good. Bridges on all the nullahs. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. No. 57.-FROM BANCOORAH TO BURDWAN. Bancoorah British, Baleatore Soonamookee Kishennugur Khund Ghose BURDWAN 12 6 Goondee 1 12 6... 2 11 3 3 10 3. 3) 4 96 Damooda... 5 Burdwan 5 Total... 56 0 1.-A small bazar. Water from tanks. 2.-A large bazar, and water from tanks. 3.-A small bazar. Water from tanks and a nullah. 4.–Supplies must be collected. Water from the Damooda river. 3. -Water and supplies in great abundance.. Cross the river by ford or ferry, according to season, 76 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 58.-FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO CALPEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Banda 1 2 3 British. Kupsa Moundah or Moondal Bewur Left Bank of Betwa opposite Jellalpoor Murgawn or Murgyah CALPEE 11 0 Kane 12 0.. 12 41 Beerma & 13 0 Betwa 8] 4 11 4 Hameerpoor 2 4 5 6 6 Total... 68 4 miles. 1.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Ford the Kane, sandy bed, and water knee deep during the fair season. 2.- A bazar, Water plentiful. One nullah has very steep banks and is difficult for carts; it also has a small stream of water in it; the other nullah is dry, and presents no impe- diment. Road generally very good. 3.-A bazar. Water good, and road very good. 4.-Supplies from Jellalpoor. Water from the Betwa. Road good ; passes through ravines ou the banks of the Beerma, which is crossed about way. One nullah with shallow water, the other dry after the rains. Ford the Betwa at the end of the stage. Bed 550, and stream in the dry season 180 yards wide, bottom sand and gravel. Usual depth of water 24 feet. Right bank steep. Some small ferry boats ply at this ghat in the rains. 5.-A small bazar. Water from wells and a jheel." Country open, slightly undulated,. and partially cultivated. Road heavy for the first mile or so, then good. 6.-Supplies and water abundant. Road much inters ected by ravines, otherwise very good. Country for first 5} miles open and partially cultivated, remainder cut into ravines. Encamping ground near the gate of the old fort. No. 59.-FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO CAWNPOOR BY HAMEERPOOR. Banda Sessolur 14 O'Kane Bheroah 12 4 Chundwur. 1 Hameerpoor Hameerpoor u o Betwa Left Bank Jumna 2 o Jumna 11 4 Cawnpoor Ghautumpoor Bidhnoo 12 0 11 0 British. 7 Total... 74 0 1 No. 60.–FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO CAWNPOOR BY CHILLA TARA. Banda (Piperenda 100.. Left Bank Jumna at Chilla Tara 12 6 Jumna 1 Futtehpoor Ghat Roudpoor 104 2 Kudjwah 10. 6 3 Chunda Poorwa 12 6 4 Rameypoor 114 Cawnpoor 5 CAWNPOOR Centre 9 0 6 of Cantonments British. .. 6 Total...) 77 2 * 1.-No village. Supplies from Chilla Tara and Lillowlee, 2 miles north. Country and road as in last stage. VOL. 11.) 77 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. %-A small village. Supplies scarce, and must be collected. Water from wells. Coun. try open and partially cultivated. Road tolerably good, winding round the head of the Jumna ravines between Lillow lee and Mahakheree. Pass Lill owlee at 2, Bundwaal at 44, Mahakberee at 54, Azmutpoor at 7), and Suraee at 10 miles. 3.-A bazar and water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Berdera at 11, Koorumabad at 35. Murreraon at 57, and Sillawn at 10 miles. 4. Road tolerably good in dry weather. Supplies procurable from Sahar, 4 miles N. W. and from surrounding villages. Water from weils. Pass Goorba at 2, Buckewur at 4, Doobeepoor at 6, Kuckrowlee at 74, Moosafir at 9, and Koornee at 114 miles. 5.-A'small bazar and supplies from adjacent villages. Road pretty good. Pass Sehar at 4, Simree Herdow lee at 7, Mehjawun at 9, and near Hajeepour at 10 miles, 6.-Road pretty good. Pass Rajaka Poorwa at 1, Bingawar at 2, Paharpoor at 24. Harsapoor ai 34, Noubusta at 4, and Dakunpoor at 6 miles. No. 61.-FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO GWALIOR BY CHIRKAREE, KEITAH, JHANSI AND DUTTEAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. Britisł. Banda Utgar 11 4 Kane 31 G. Go's Agent Banda Chanee Bumbouree Chirkaree 11 0 2 2 10 o Chundrour. 3 3 90.. 4 Jhansi. British Chirkaree, Hameerpoor S Keitah Kochech Gurota 3 7 Paharee, (Bunka) G. Gi's Agent Tarecher Bamunwah Tehree Banda Burwasagur Jhansi Gwalior Residency, as in No. 16, Urjoon & 15 6 Beerma S 90 Dussaun 11' 4 and Luckairee 10 0 11 0 10 4 11 4 Burwa Betwa &? 12 2 Barairee S Soowun- ? 70 5 reka ... 28 29 3 10 3 11 7) 12 Jhansi. 19 Total... 204! 3 1.-Middling village. Supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Water from welis, plentiful. Road good in dry weather. Country open and partially cultivated. Cross the Kane by good ford at Boragurb opposite the town of Banda. Steep banks, sandy boitom, and usual depth of water from November to June from 14 10 2 feet. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Country open, undulated, and partially cultivated. Road tolerably good, but not much travelled, and full of cracks and holes in parts. 3.-A middling village. Water plentiful, but supplies must be collected for a detach. ment marching this way, Road as in last stage. The tract intervening between Chanee and Bumbonree is in the Company's Pergunna of Mahoba, and well cultivated. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Encamping ground between two low hills near a large tank, north west of the town. Chirkaree is the residence of a Rajah, and is a large irre- gular town, situated on the west and south of a fortified hill. Road as above, little cultiva- tion on the right, and the Rajah's Rumna on the left. 5.-A small bazar. Supplies procurable in abundance, and water from wells and the Beerma, Ground for encampment in front of the old cavalry lines. Country open, un- dulated, and well cultivated after passing the Chirkaree boundary. Road, narrow hackery track not much travelled. Pass Goorah at 68, and Bopraita at 9 miles. 6.-A middling village. Supplies procurable from Motee Kutra, distant 2 miles, and from surrounding villages, water from the Dussun river. Excellent road through a flat. well cultivated country. Hills at distance on left, 78 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. (PART 1 4.- A siñall bazar. Water plentiful. Ford thë Dussaun at the commencement of the march, sandy bottom and water about knee-deep from November to June. Country much cut by ravines, and road very winding through ravines the greater part of the way, but it is pretty good for carts. 8.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and must be collected by order of local authority, Water from wells and a tank. Country partially cultivated and intersected by a ridge of low rocky bills running north east, and south west. Road good, and passes along the base of the hills for some miles. 9.-A small village. Supplies from Tarowlee, a large village, distant 1 mile. Water plentiful. Country open and very partially cultivated. Road bad a cross-country hackery track. -- 10.-A small bazar. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water scarce from wells and tank. Road good. Hills at a distance right and left. Country partially cultivated 11.- A bazar and water abundant from wells, and a fine lake. Country and road as in last Stage. Good encamping ground | mile west of the village. 12.-A fine walled town and residence of a raja. Supplies and water in abundance. Country undulating and rising into low detached hills at a distance on right and left., Ford the Betwa at the 4th mile, bed about 600 yards wide, full of rocks and loose stones and bad for earts to cross. Ford the Barairee at the 5th mile. Road pretty good, with exception of the ford on the Betwa. No: 62.-FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO JUBBULPOOR BY BISRAMGUNGE GHAT AND MYHER. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. Now | Nullahs. British Banda Girwah Pungura Neheree 11] 4 ... 91 0 9 4 ... :: i i 3 2 2 3 Adjee- gurh. Deogong ... 12 3... ... 3 4 7 7 ... 5 4| 3 ... ... 2 6 57 8 0... Punna. Bisramgunge, (foot of Ghat) A Nullah, 3 miles from top oftheGhat S G. G's Agent | Punnah Banda Bank of MeerHus- sen Nuddy near KUCKRUTTY or KUCHRAHUTTEE Bilsaee or Bilsaon.... Nagond G. Gi's Agent |Betteah 14 6 Meer Hus- 6 8 sen . 5 9 510 Jubbulpoor ... Sunkergurh Myheer. Oocharah. 1201... 10 4 8 6 Umrun, 311 Kuraree & 94 Burwa Nuddies. 412 { MYHEER 13 6 Silgee ... 413 JUBBULPOOR as in No. 23 997 22 Total 231 6 miles. 1. Supplies and water abundant. Road good through a flat and highly cultivated country. Pass Tindwar at 6, Beroker at 75, and Pyghumberpoor at194 miles. 2.-Water from wells and a tank. Scanty supplies from adjacent villages. Country open and cultivated. Road good. 3-Scanty supplies, but procurable after due notice. Water from wells and nullah, rather scarce in hot season. Road generally good, stony in some parts, thin cultivation and jungle. VOL. II.) 79 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 4-A small village, Supplies from Singpoor and Nyashehur, distant 4 miles. Water from wells and pullah. The road is pretty good, but intersected by numerous water courses and nullahs, which are rather troublesome for carts. Country hilly with jungle and cultivation, 5.-Supplies must be taken on from Singapoor, good water from one baolee, Road stony and bad for carts, especially at the nullahs which all become dry at the close of the rains. 6-Supplies must be brought from Punnah, distant 8 miles. Water from 2 haolees and the nullah. The Bisramgunge Ghat or pass is about 14 miles in length, and in March 1832 was reported to be in excellent repair. The first ascent is about 300 yards in length, and from the baolee which is situated about 600 yards below the top of the pass, the ascent is very steep. Corps marching this way will always require one day to pass their baggage up or down the ghat, and may halt at the encampment above or below according to the direction in which they may be moving: 7.-Supplies and water abundant. Punnah is a town and the residence of a raja. Country barren and rocky with occasional jungle. Road stony in parts, particularly in crossing the nullahs and a low ridge of hills of easy ascent. 8.-A bazar in Kuckretty. Supplies procurable from it and adjacent villages. Water plentiful. Country hilly and barren with jungle. Road very difficult for carts in many places ; about 4 miles from Punnah there is a steep ascent. The nullahs also are deep and stons, This distance of 141 is by the cart road, but troops may march by a more direct line, shortening the distance to about 11 miles. 9.-A small village. Six buniahs, Supplies procurable after due notice. Good water pleutiful, Cross country road very bad for carts... The best cart road is circuitous and goes by the stages of Lohargong, 9 miles, Silgee 97 miles to Nagond 81 miles. 10.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and partially cultivated. Road as above. 11.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and should be taken on from Nagond. Country open. Water plentiful and road pretty good, approaching hills to the south. 12.–Supplies from Oncharah, distant 3 miles. Water from wells and a tank. The wells become dry during very hot seasons, and the tank water is never good. Road bad for carts, especially at the ghats on the nụddies and nullahs which intersect it. Hills at some dis- tance on right. 13.-A large town and bazar, and the chief place in the district belonging to Thakoor Bishen Singh. Supplies and water abundant. Road bad for carts. Kymore hills right, open country left. No. 63.–FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO JUBBULPOOR BY THE BISRAMGUNGE AND PIPEREA GHATS. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages, Rivers. Nullahs. M, F. | Nos. Kuchrahuttee or to Kuchretty as in No. 62... S 77 3 Adjee- { garh. Ghonore or Ghonour, 91 4.... ... 11 Кора, ... 6 4... Punna. 14| 2... ... 12 OKane 22 G. G's Agent Piperea, (foot of 3 Banda Ghat) Bissanee 11) 4 Saenugarh 10 0 Kane 35 Belharee 5 Kowrea 11 41 Assist, Commis- Sehora 15 6 8 sioner Jubbul- Gosulpoor 7 5 Heren 9 poor Punagurh 9 2 10 LJubbulpoor Cantmt.. 10 0... 11 19 Total... 195 51 1.-Supplies must be collected, and water procurable in abundance. Country open, tindulated, and uncultivated. Cross country-road not good for carts. The old canton- ment of Löhargon; is about 5 miles north east of Ghonore. British. ::: A arco 80 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK: 2.-A large village and small bazar.. Water abundant. Road pretty good. At the 9th mile ford the kane, stony bottom, and from two to two and a hall, feet of water in Nov. 3.-No village. Confined encamping ground ou the left bank of the Kane. Supplies must be collected and taken on froʻn Kopa and other villages. Water from the river. Road pretty good for laden cattle leading up a narrow valley through jungle. 4.-No village, but a tank of good water. Supplies procurable after due notice to the local authorities. At the commencement of the march ascend the Piperea pass, which is steep, but not long or very difficult; after ascending the pass, the road leads over a ste- rile, and in some parts rocky barren tract, and although very rugged in some places is not bad for cattle. The nullahs are all rocky and the last rather deep-bedded. 5.-A small bazar. Water abundant. "Road pretty good. 6.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good generally, but rugged in some parts. None of the nullahs present any obstacle. Just before reaching Belharee there is a steep rocky ghat to descend rather difficult for laden cattle. 7.-A small bazar. Water from tanks and wells. Road tolerably good. 8.- Join Drummond's road at this place. 9 10 and 11.-See No. 23. No. 64.-FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO PERTABGURH, IN OUDE. Dist. Rivers. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. M. F. Nullahs. | Nos. :: 13 12 6 Jumna 9 0. British. Futtehpoor 46 61... 13 0 13 4 14 4 : : : : To Futtehpoor as No. 19 Munda ke Serai Chobee ke Serai Kurrah Left Bank of the Ganges at Goot- nee Ghat Budree Molawun or Malwa Misserpoor PERTABGURH Can-2 tonment 2 4 Ganges ... 1 Oude. Resident at Lucknow 12 01... 10 0 11 01. 2 2 3 114 ...... 11 4... 12 Total.../ 136 6 & : 1.-A bazar in Gootnee. Water from wells and river. Cross the Ganges by ferry. Bed of the river heavy sand for about 300 yards. 2.-A middling village. Supplies from Behar, distant 4 miles, from Budree itself, and neighbouring villages. Water abundant. Country bare with occasional patches of low jungle. The nullahs are deep bedded, but become dry soon after the rains; the road is little travelled by hackeries, but presents no great impediment to their passing. 3.-A small village. Water from wells and tanks. Supplies from Alladgunge, 9 miles south west. Country alternately low, dak jungle, and thin cultivation. The first 4 miles of road is bad, and intersected by a deep marsh at about 1} from Budree; the last 6 miles is tolerably good. 4.-A small village. Water from wells not of good quality. Supplies must be collect- ed from surrounding villages. For the first 7 miles the road runs through a low swampy country, with patches of cultivation and many pools of water. The remainder passes through thick jungle, and is little frequented. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good through cultivation and thin jungle. VOL. 11.] 81 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 65.-FROM BANDA TO REWAH BY THE BURSAKER OR BURSANKER GHAT. Dist. Rivers. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. 1 11 4 ... 13 Bagun 100... 8 41 Girwah Banda Goorah Kallinger Bursaker G. G's Agent Rampoor Kishen- Banda 1 2 8 0... poof Kothee Sohowul. Rewah. Berounda British Kothee 1974 ... Sri Seroha Lulpoor 15 0... Semroul 10 4 Chohur&| Jerwa ... G. G.'s Agent at Jubbulpoor Putrahut 9 o Tonse ... Rewah Rampoor REWAH 11 1... 15 4 Beehur 31 1 10 Total ... 112l 1 miles. 1.- A middling village on the right bank of the Bagun nuddy. Supplies procurable in abundance, and water plentiful. Country well cultivated and road good. 2-A large town and bazar at the foot of an extensive hill fort. Road good. Country fiat and well cultivated, No. 66.–FROM BANDA CANTONMENT TO SAUGOR BY HEERAPOOR PASS. British Banda Mattound 13 4 Kane 2 1 Koobrye 11 2 ... 1 2 Mahoba 11 7... 2 3 Sreenugur 11 0... 1 4 ... pore. Jullown. Chatter- il 5 Mulhara Chatterpore 12 4 Oormul 104... ... 06 Muhutgaon ... 11 2... 4 7 *Chirkaree. G. Gi's Agent Banda Bijour. Goolgunge 11 0... 118 ... Mulhara Sundwah or Sirwah 11 2 ... 65. 49 4 10 Chirkaree. Punnah. 9 4... 4 11 ... HEERAPOOR Soonwaha or Soon- waee 10' 5... 3 12 PART * VOL. II, M 82 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Sahgurh. Territory. G. Gi's Agent Jubbulpore... Kuttorah 12 5. ... 0 13 Assist. Com. Saugor Bundah Kurrapoor SAUGOR Cantonment 101 01... 10 31 21 14 1 15 51 16 91 ol... 16 Total 172) 7 miles. 1.- A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good. Ford the Kane at Boragurh, opposite the town of Banda Steep banks, sandy bottom, and usual depth of water from November to June, from 14 to 2 feet. 2.-A small bazar. Country and road as in last stage. 3.-A large bazar. Water plentiful. Country and road much the same as above. There are fine lakes, and some hills at Mahoba. 4.-A large bazar. Water plentiful, and supplies procurable in abundance. Road good. Country studded with short ridges and detached low hills. 5.-A small bazar. Water plentiful and supplies procurable in abundance. Country as in last stage, Road good till within two miles of Mulhara, when it becomes rough and bad for carts. 6.-A large town and bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Country hilly. 7.- A small village. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Chatterpoor. Country undulating and mostly covered with jungle. A few small hills. Road good. | 8.-A hazar. Water from wells. Country as in last stage. A low range of hills close on the left. Road good, interseeted by several small ravines. 9.-A small village. Supplies scanty. Water plentiful. Country and road as above. 10.-A small bazar. Water from wells and a nullah. Supplies must be collected if re- quired in any quantity, Country hilly. Road good. 11.-A small bazar. Supplies scanty. Water from wells and a tank. Soon after leav- ing Sundah the road passes through a low range of hills covered with jungle, and at 5 miles there is a gentle ascent for about į mile, and thence the road is winding and rough in parts, 12.-Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water plentiful and good. At ] mile commence the ascent of the Heerapoor pass, which is about a mile in length and easy. Country above the pass undulating and covered with jungle. Road from the top of the pass winding, and has one short descent and three stony ascents to Soonwaha. 13.-A small bazar. Water from wells. Country undulated, partly cultivated, and partly covered with bush jungle. Road good. 14.-A small bazar. Water from a nullah and wells. Country much the same as in last stage. Pass, some low hills covered with jungle, Road good. 15.-A bazar, Supplies and water plentiful. Country, much undulated and very par- tially cultivated. Road stony, bad, and intersected by many dry water courses. `At 74 miles it erosses a low ridge of barren hills, and has a gentle ascent and descent. 16.-See No. 5. No. 67.–FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO DELHIE BY ANOOPSHEHUR. Moradabad ... British. Chandousee As in No 31 reversed Bajhuee Bugrere or Budgehr... Choupoor 45 0 Sootor Yar 106 wuffadar 9 6 Nukta 9 6 Mohas Budaon 1 1 2 2 3 VOL. 11.) 83 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British. Boolundshehur. Anoopshehur Jehangeerabad Boolundshehur Secundra DELHIE, as in No. 1. 3 o Ganges, 10/ 4 2 16 0 Kali Nuddy 1 1 36 6 4 5 10 5.. 14 Total 152! O miles. 1.-A small bazar and market on Sundays. Water plentiful. Country open. Soil sandy and very partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Munjoola at 6), Akbarpoor at sy, and Kunhetta at 9 miles. At 44 miles cross the Soot by a bund or fascine bridge, width at the ghat 10 yards and very deep. 2-A small village. Supplies must be collected from adjacent villages. Water plenti- ful. Country open. Soil sandy and partially cultivated. Road good." Pass Dhakaree 13 and Dhonaree at 8 miles. At 8j miles pass the Nukta by good ford. 3.— Road bad, and the Mohao at the Rajpora ghat is frequently so deep that carts are obliged to make a considerable detour to the right to cross it by a bund, constructed near Fyzpoor. Pass Umrpoor at 24, Sewrora at 32, Rajpoora 54, and Semree at 6 miles. Width of the Mohao at Rajpora ford 40 yards. Bauks low and bottom sandy. 4.-A bazar. Supplies procurable in abundance and water plentiful. Road indifferent. Country open and partially cultivated. 5.-Country and road as in last stage. Cross the Kalli nuddy at the end of the march by a good ford. One good ferry boat plies here in the rains. No. 68.–FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO FUTTEHGURH. Bareilly. 1 2 3 ... British. Shahjehanpore Furreedpoor FUTTEHGUNGE Burri Muttana JELLALABAD Imratpoor FUTTEHGURU 12 2 Nuktea 107 15 3 Bhagool 15 3 Ramgunga. 14 0.. 12 6 Ganges Futtehgurh 6 6 Total.../ 801 51 miles. 1.-A bazar. Water and supplies plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road good Pass Khurgawn at 1, near Nurriawul at 31, near Bhurbila at 44, near Rijou at 7, and near Sudulpoor Jehur, under which there is a large jheel, at 94 miles. Cross the Nuktea by pucca bridge. 1.-A bazar and water plentiful. Country open and partially cultivated. Road heavy in one or two places but good generally. Pass near Bhujwan poor at 34, and through Tis. 8002 at 6] miles. 3.-A middling village, & of a mile off the road to the left. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Good encamping ground near a pucca well and Police Cho- kee, Road good. Country open and cultivated. Pass Kuttra, a large village and bazaar, whence the Road to Shahjehanpoor strikes off. at 34, Feelnugur at 54, Khyrpoor at 74, near Kabilpoor at 12, and near khunpoor at 13 miles. Cross the Bhagool by pucca bridge. 4.-Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages, Water plentiful." Road pret- ty good generally. Pass Akbarpoor at 4, Synjuna at 5, and Jellalabad, a large village and bazar, at 10 miles. Cross the Ramgunga by a good ferry. Country open and cultivated. 5-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Plat open country, highly cultivated and thickly studded with villages. Road indifferent. 6.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Country as in last stage. Road pretty good for the first 10 miles, the remainder is usually very heavy sand in the bed of the Ganges at Husseinpoor ghat, just below the fort of Futtehgurh. Cross the Ganges by Rood ferry. Pass Gorruckpoor at 44, Paharpoor at 5, Chand poor at 6 Dhurumpoor at %, Gountia al 3, and Jumalpoor at 9 miles 84 TIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. (PART 1. No. 69. FROM BAREILLY TO MEERUTT BY CHANDOUSEE, SUMBUL AND GURMOOKTESIR. Dist. Rivers. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 450 Yarwuffa- 11 0 dar .. 1 Moradabad British. Chandousee, rever- sed, as in No. 31 S Right Bank of the Soot or Yarwuffa- dar Nuddy Sumbul Nuglee Hussunpoor GUJROWLA Right Bank Ganges at Gurmooktesir Shahjehanpoor Mhow Meerutt 2 11 3 11 4 7 0 12 0 9 o 9] 2 10 4 Ganges 9 2.. 1010 11 0 KalliNuddy 6 Meerutt 7 8 9 13 Total. . I 1341 oi miles. 1.-Supplies procurable from Nerowlee. Water from the Soot or Yarwuffadar, which is crossed at the end of the stage by a bad ford. This stream is crossed by a raſt in the rains, and when not fordable, there is an old bridge which has been recommended to be repaired. Road pretty good. 2.Supplies and water very plentiful. A very large straggling town. Road open and pretty good. 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good, with exception of the last mile, which is heavy sand. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Soil sandy and road heavy. 5.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Soil and roads as in last stage. 6.—This ferry is usually 14 miles above Gurmook tesir, whence supplies are procurable in abundance. Plenty of good ferry boats procurable. Fifteeu constantly ply at this ghat. 7.-A town and bazar. Water plentiful." Road tolerably good. 8.—A small village. Supplies procurable aſter due notice. Water plentiful and good. Road indifferent. 9.-Ground for encampment between the lines of H. M.'s regiments of dragoons and foot. Country open and partially cultivated. Road indifferent. Ford the Kalli nuddy, which is generally miry at this ghat, and difficult for carts and cattle. 12 4 { Josanka No. 70.–FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO MORADABAD. Futtehgunge and British Bareilly 1 Meergunge 9 1 Dojora 2 Ram-G Go Agent } Kumora Damora il 4. 3 poor. Bareilly Right Bank of the Causila River at 11 5 Causila 4 British Moradabad Gunes Ghat MORADABAD Cantmt. 14 2.. 5 ... 5 Total 59 o miles. Another route from Bareilly is by Allygunge 13, shkopoor 123, Shahabad 303, Reonra 13, to Mooradabad 134 miles, crossing the Dogorah, Ramgunga, and Gangun rivers by ferry. 1.-A small bazar and market on Thursdays and Sundays. Water from wells. Country flat and cultivated. Road good. Pass through the town of Bareilly, and ford the Jooa on its northwest side. Pass Muhespoor at 51, Kullelpoor at 64, and Madhupoor at 114 miles. Cross the Sunka by pucca bridge, VOL 11.] 85 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 2.-A bazar and market twice a week. Water plentiful Country open, flat and cultivated. Road good. Cross the Dojora at the 3d mile by ferry. Stream about 60 yards wide and becomes fordable in hot weather. Pass Betoura at $, Khirka at 14, and Hurhuree at 64 miles. 3.-Two small villages. There is a weekly market held on Fridays at Damora, but supplies in any quantiiy are only procurable after due notice. Good water from wells. Country open and highly cultivated. Road good. Pass Duneillee at 3, Millick, a large village just within the boundary of the Rampoo Jagheer, at 54, and Loohea at 8 miles. 4. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water from the river. Country well eultivated. Cross the Causila at the end of the march by ford. Width of bed 450 yards, and depth of stream from December to June from 2 to 2 feet. When necessary a few ferry boats can be ordered to this ghat, but there are none belonging to it. Road good. Pass Druga Nugra, whence a road strikes off to Rampoor at 5i, Ajeetpoor at 84, and Agapoor at 94 miles. 5.-Supplies and water plentiful. Country flat and well cultivated to the left bank of the Ramgunga. Road good, with exception of the bed of the river, which is of heavy sand and bad for carts. Ať 74 miles cross the Rujhera by pucca bridge, and at 104 miles enter the bed of the Ramgunga which here 1 mile wide, and the stream in the dry season is usually divided into 2 or 3 channels, and from 1 to 3 feet deep with uneven sandy bottom. Two small ferry boats ply at this ghat in the rains. Pass Morah at 3 miles. No 71.–FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO PETORAGURH BY PILLIBEET AND LOHOO GHAT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 1 12 3 British. Rhetoura Left Bank of the Bareilly Pungailee at Nu- wabgunge Pillibeet, (south side) Pillibeet Beekharpoor Beraru or Bindaru ... Sooneya Mundee ... Chanda or Chandnee Burm Deo Bheel Khet Assist. Com. Al-Choura Panee morah LoHoo GHAT Dargurah Kuntagaon PETORAGURH 11 1 Nuktea 10 2 Bhagool & Pungailee Apserha & 12 0 Gurra 6 4 Kukra 9 6 ... 15 01. 6 4 Jugut 10 4.. 14) Ludeea 15 10 o Lohoo Ghat 8 0... 7 6 Surjoo 100... 4 5 36 7 8 9 O... 10 11 12 13 14 14 Total 1461 3 miles. 1.-Small village. A few buniahs' shops. Supplies procurable in abundance from adja- cent villages. Water plentiful. Road rather heavy for the first 4 miles the remainder good after passing the town of Bareilly; the country is open and cultivated. Cross the Nuktea by a pucca bridge. 2.-A bazar and market on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. The direct road, the distance by which is here given, is frequently ſaid under water in consequence of the stream of the Bhagool being diverted from its course by a bund constructed across it a little above the ford, for the purposes of irrigation. Hacke- ries and laden cattle are then obliged to make a considerable detour to the right, to avoid the space thus laid under water. The Bhagool and Pungailee are fordable. Pass Labeira at 14, Hafizgunge, a middling village, with small bazar and weekly market at 5, and Reecholo at 83 miles. The Bhagool occurs at 71 miles, and when dammed up below the ghat which it is some seasons, there are ferry boats provided. 3.-A large town. Supplies and water abundant. Encamping ground near the Eed. gah, on the south side of the town. Country open, low, flat and cultivated. Road bad, much under water in rains, and generally much cut up by cart wheels in dry season. Pass Dhoorera at 24 and Juttepora at 53 miles. There is a pucca bridge on the Apserha, and the Gurra is fordable from December to June, and there is a ferry during the rest of the year, Bed about 250 yards wide, bottom sandy. 86 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 4.-A middling village. Abundant supplies procurable after due notice. Water plenti. ful. Country as in last stage. Road bad. Pass through the towu of Pillibeet for a mile, and cross the Kukra by a fine pucca bridge on the north side of it. Pass Sirsa at 3, Rum- pora at 4, and Jungrowlee at 34 miles. 5.-A small village. Supplies from neighbouring villages. Water plentiful, but becomes anwholesome in hot season. Country as above. Road pretty good, but not much frequent- ed. Pass Simarca at 1, Bahaderguuge at , Machundee at 31, Torurpoor at 51, Khirka urna at 7, and Geedhour at & miles, 6.-A bazar during the cold season from November to April, when the mountaineers descend to exchange their commodities for those of the plains. Water from a nullah. Road bad through grass jungle the whole way, 7.-A small village. Good water. Supplies must be taken on from Sooneya Mundee, Road pretty good through grass jungle. Cross the Jugut by ford. 8.-At the foot of the hills. Supplies of all kinds procurable from November to April, when the hill people descend with their merchandise, but it is uninhabited the remainder of 9.-No village. Supplies must be collected by order of local authority. Encamping ground for a regiment on the bank of the Ludeea (fordable.) First 2 miles of road good, the rest steep, stony and bad. 10.-No village. Supplies must be collected from Chumpawut, distant 3 miles west Water sufficient. Road better than in last stage, but ascent steep. 11.-A bazar. Road pretty good. Cross the Lohoo Ghat by a wooden bridge. 12:-A stage bungalow, confined encamping ground near it. Water from a bowlee. No buniah, and villages distant. Good made road. 13. -A stage bungalow, and ground for encampment about 200 yards below it. Water from a stream, No shop and villages distant. Good made road. 14. A bazar and military post. Good made road. the year. No. 72.-FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO SEETAPOOR BY MAHOMDY. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Left Bank of the Pungailee at Guz- 1 Bareilly nera British. Nuktea, Bhagool 14 0 and Pun- gailee 11 1 Gurra 11 6 Kutnee 131 7 Khanout 101 6.. Beesulpoor Shajehanpoor .. S Buinroulee Powain or Poaine Mahomdy Resident at Burhour or Burhoul Nourungabad Lucknow Mahowly SEETAPOOR Cantmt. 42 13 1 4 5 6 7 8 219 Oude. 91 4 6 4 Goomty 12 o'Kattina 161 0... 9 Total 1051 4 1.--A small village. Supplies may be collected from adjacent villages after due notice, but should be taken on from Bareilly. Water plentiful. Country open and cultivated, Road good. Pass Khurgaon at 1,'Hurunugraat 34, Punapoor at 6, Meurce at 9}, aud Reechahat at 113 miles. The three nullahs are passable by good fords at Hurunugra, Punapoor, and Gujnera respectively. 2.-A town and good bazar. Water plentiful. Country open, flat, and pretty well cultivated. Road good, and not much travelled by carts. Pass Hurdaha at , Aheerola at 14, Churra at 41, Mahadeo at 6, and Bhourua at 7 miles. Cross the river under Bhourua. Bed 250 yards wide, sandy bottom. Fordable from November to June, usual depth of water during that period 2 feet. One ferry boat at this ghat in the rains, 3.-A small bazar and market on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Ecntgaon at 8, Rampora at 7, and Deoria at 9 miles. At 13 miles cross the Kutnee at Tehere ghat by one ferry boat. The stream being unforda- ble in consequence of its being dammed up for the purposes of irrigation. 4.--A good bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country Hat, partial cultivation, and patches of bush jungle. Road good, but the Khanout which occurs at the end of the 4th mile is a great obstacle to pussengers ; it is about 40 yards wide at Chuprona Ghat and 4 feet deep. No boats and no better ford within a great distance. Banks low and muddy, bottom sandy. Pass Chutea at 1, Tilchee at 2, Chuprona at 34, Singhapoor at 5, Muhre- nee at 64, Nabil at 8, and Gunsanpoor at 121 miles. VOL. IL] 87 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 5.-A large bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country open and highly cnltivated. Enter the Oude territory at the end of the 5th mile. Road good, but not much frequented. Pass Amlea at 11, Etowa at 34, Mukeempoor at 43, Sissora at 51, Goolurea at 7, and Muge rouna at 91 miles. 6.- A middling village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Coun- zpen large villages and bazar? Wateroplentiful from wells. Country a waste sandy plain the whole way. Atl, miles cross the oomty by ferry and ford. Boats are procuran ble at this ghat to form a bridge, and one should be constructed when a large detachment is passing. The river is fordable for cattle from December to June, usual" depth 3 feet. Six boats are sufficient to form a bridge here. 8-4 large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Country waste. Soil sandy, and road heavy in parts. Cross the nuddy at the end of the March by a pucca bridge. 9.-Supplies and water abundant. Country open, and very partially cultivated. Road tolerably good. Cross the nullahs by bridges. No. 73.–FROM BAREILLY CANTONMENT TO SHAJEHAN- POOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. Nos. Futtehgunge, as in No. 68 Tillher SHAHJEHANPOOR Cantonment 1 British. 23 1 11 Bhagool 13 4 Gurra 1 Shahjehanpoor 2 4 Total.. 47) 6 miles. 1.-A large bazar and water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road good. Pass Kuttra, a large village and bazar, whence road to Futtehgurh strikes off at 34 miles. Cross the Bhagool at the commencement of the march by a pucca bridge. 2.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Country open and highly cultivated. Road good Cross the Gurra at Shahbaznugur ghat by ferry and ford for cattle. Barra- sut. No. 74.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO BERHAMPOOR BY KISH- NAGURH. Adapted for the march of Europeans. Barrasut 91 0... Barrasut ... Aumdanga 7 0 Jagoleah 9 ol... Goonpalla 9 0 Jaboona Right Bank of the Matabanga, at 7 O Matabanga..... Ranaghat Badcoola 81 o... Kishnagurh Kishnagarh 8] 4 Bulleea 71 . 4 Jellinghee.... >1 15 Kidderpoor Deegaon PLASSEY 의이​. Daodpoor 7 o.. Nuddea. 81 o... 8l Ol Moorshe- dabad. Berhampoor .. Baftah or Babtah BERHAMPOOR 8 0... 71 0 with 14 Total... 112) o miles. 1.- The road is raised and furnished with bridges and drains across nullahs and water courses, and there are ferries on the three rivers. Supplies are procurable in abundance at each stage after due notice, and water is plentiful and good, 88 [PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 75.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO BERHAMPOOR BY KISH. NAGURH. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos . Barra- sut. Barrasut Nuddea. Barrasut Aumdanga Jagooleah Chandpoor Beernugur Kishnagurh Bulleea Bickrampoor PLASSEY 90 70 90 11 0 Jaboona ... 10 2 Matabanga. 11 2 7 4 Jillinghee. 11 6 13 2 Kishnagurh Moorshe- dabad. Berhampoor ...{ BERHAMPOOR 54.36 11 Total... 112 0 :: 11 0 11 0 No. 76.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO BERHAMPOOR BY HOOGHLY. Hooghly 3 0 Hooghly 6 4... 3 0 Sursuttee 10 0 Koontie 1 3 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 British. Ghyretty Chinsurah Seebpoor Inchura Mirzapoor Jehannugur Patooly or Pathlee... Left Bank of the Bagiretty River at Agurdeep Plassey BERHAMPOOE, as in No. 74... Burdwan 12 0... 12 0... 13 0... 8 2 4 Bagiretty. Kishnagurh ...... 12 0... 9 ...... 22 0 11 Total.../ 101 0 1- Supplies and water abundant. Encamping ground on bank of the river, which is crossed at Pultah Ghat by good Ferry Boats. 2.-A good pucca road all the way. Supplies and water in great abundance. 3.-Supplies from Tribany, distant 4 of mile. Encamping, ground on bank of the Hooghly. Road good. Cross nuddy by bridge, and nullah by ferry, 4.- No bazar, but supplies furnished plentifully after due notice. Road pretty good. Cross the nullahs by bridges. 5.--Supplies in abundance from Culna, 2 miles South, water abundant. Road pretty good. Cross nullah by ferry. 6.-Supplies procurable in abundance. Road very winding through fields. 7.-Supplies and water plentiful. 8.--Supplies procurable after due notice, water plentiful, Cross the river by ferry. 9.-Supplies and procurable in abundance. 4 1 Vol. 11.) 89 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, No. 77.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO DACCA BY JESSORE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. M. F. | Nos, ini:: | Nullahs. ... British. Barrasut S BARRASUT 90... Sheerpoor 12 4 1 Rampoor 11 4 Jaboona 2 Kishnagurh Hurdraspoor 11 0 Esamuttee 3 Nabaroon 11 4 Betriah 2 4 Meigla 8 0 Kubtuck 5 EN Jessore 7 4 Bhyrub 6 Doakallee 9 Sittarea 1 7 Gunagutty or Bu- Musaw or 11 4 8 Jessore nagutty Chittra Nouhatta 6 4 Nougunga 9 Burrashee Mahomedpoor 10 0 (branch of ) Jeynugur 8 0 Burrashee 11 FURREED POOR 15 0 Comer 12 Left Bank of the Ganges at Hurry 6 6 Ganges .... 13 rampoor Pullumgunge 11 0 Esamuttee.. 14 Churan 12 0. 2 15 Rohudpoor or Rood - poor AG | DACCA ... 13 0 Borygunga 3 17 10 Dacca } 7 0 Dullaiseree 2 16 18 Total. . 180 6 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies from adjacent villages after due notice. Country low and road intersected in several parts by swamps. Water plentiful. Hobia, a village, with a small bazar, about a mile further on, would perhaps be a better halting place. 2:-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from the Jaboona, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the stage. Road good. 3.-Supplies from adjacent villages. Water from the Esamuttee, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the stage. Six platformed boats. Road good. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Cross the nullahs by fascine or pontoon bridges, and the Bentah at the end of the stage by 4 platformed boats. Road good. 5.-Supplies plentiful. Water from the river, which is crossed at the end of the stage by 4 platformed boats. Road good. 6.-Supplies and water plentiful. Encamping ground on left bank of the Bhyrub, (which is crossed by ferry) opposite Neelgunge. 7.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road Wad, chiefly through fields. Cross the nullah by bridge of boats and the Sittarea at the end of the stage by 8 small ferry boats. 8.-Supplies scanty and must be collected. Water from the river, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the stage. Road bad, winding through fields. 9.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Road pretty good, but there is an extensive jheel to be passed in small boats, and the Nougunga is crossed at the end of the march by 10 good platformed boats. 10.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road swampy and bad. Cross the river at the end of the stage. Eight or 10 ferry boats. 11.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road very indifferent. Cross the river at the end of the stage on 7 platformed boats, 12.- Supplies and water abundant, Road good throughout. Cross the Comer on 4 plata formed and 1 small boat. 13.-Supplies procurable in abundance. Water from the river. Cross the Ganges by ferry. Road good. 14-Supplies and water plentiful. Cross the river on 4 platformed boats,' and encamp on confined ground on its left bank. Road generally good, PART I. VOL. II, N 90 [PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 15.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good. Cross the nullahs by bridges of boats. 16.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road good. Cross the nullahs by bridges of boats, and the river which is nearly 2 miles wide by ferry. 17.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good, Cross the núllahs on bridges of boats and the river by ferry. No. 78.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO DUM-DUM. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. DUM-DUM 15 0... 1 Total.. 15 ( miles. 1.- Proceeding by the Calcutta road to opposite Cossi poor, and thence by the new or Cossipoor road to Dum Dum. No. 79.–FROM BARRACKPOOR TO FORT WILLIAM. British Calcutta ... FORT WILLIAM 16 41... 1 • 16 0 1 Total. 16 41 miles. 1.-A good pucca road the whole way. Pass through Calcutta by the Chitpoor road and Cossitollah. . 10 0'... British. No. 80.-FROM BARRACKPOOR TO MIDNAPOOR. Ghyretty 3 0 Hooghly Booragong 3 1 Paharpoor 15 0 4 2 Hooghly Right Bank of the? 8 0 Damooda..8 3 Damooda River .S Right Bank of the Dalkeesur River 9 o Dalkeesur 3 4 near Jehanabad.. SKUMULPOKER 80.. 5 5 Bancoorah Bahmunea 13 0 Omadur 6 Naradoul 9 4 Salai 5! 7 Midnapoor Umalea 10 0 Tremohuna 4 MIDNAPOOR Cantmt. 11 0... 4 9 10 Total :) 964 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies from Singpoor, distant 1 mile, and from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Road good. Nullahs crossed by bridges, generally in bad repair. 2. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentilul. Nullahs crossed by fords and bridges, the latter in bad repair. Road good ; join the new road at the 26th mile from Calcutta. 3.-Supplies from Myapoor and adjacent villages procurable after due notice. Road generally bad. Bridges liable to be broken down annually, and raised roadwas washed away in many places by the overflowing of the Damooda. Cross the river by ferry, and several of the nullahs are deep and muddy bedded. 4.-A small village on the right bank of the Dalkeesur. Supplies from Jehanabad and other adjacent villages. The road good. River and nullahs fordable. 5.-A bazar, Water plentiful, Road generally bad, and much broken up. Nullahs fordable, VOL. 11.1 91 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 6.-Supplies from Keerpoy. Water from a nullah. Road bad, intersected by several Sloughs. Nullahs fordable, some of them muddy bedded. 7. -A bazar. Water abundant. Road in general much broken with sloughs and muddy bedded nullahs. 8.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Road good. 9.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Nullahs crossed by bridges generally in bad repair. No. 81.–FROM BENARES CANTONMENT TO CHUNARGURH. Dist. Territory. Ciril Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Bri- S Benares tish. Mirzapoor Sultanpoor CHUNARGURA 12 4. 3 4 Ganges 1 2 .. 2 Total.. 16 o miles. 1.--Supplies from the cantonment bazar. Water plentiful. Road good through a well cultivated country, 2.-Supplies and water plentiful. Cross the Ganges by ferry just below the Fort of Chunar. No. 82.-FROM BENARES CANTONMENT TO GHAZEEPOOR. Benares . Chobeepoor 12 o/Burna 1 SYEDPOOR 11 2 Goomty 2 Ghazeepoor ... Nundgunge 12 4 Ganghie 3 GHAZEEPOOR Cantmt. 10 2.. 4 British. 4 Total... 46 Omiles. 1.-A few buniahs' shops. Water plentiful and supplies' procurable in abundapce after due notice. An excellent made road the whole way. Cross the Burna by pucca bridge. 2-Å large village and bazar on left bank of the Ganges. Road very good. At the 9th mile pass the Goomty by a bridge of boats established annually at the close of the rains. A stali toll being levied to pay the expense. During the 4 months of the rains the river is passed by ferry. 3. a very small village. Supplies must be collected, but are procurable in abundance after due notice. Water good. Cross the Ganghie by a pucca bridge at the village of Deukallie about half way. Road good. 4.-Supplies and water abundant; distance measured to Marquis Cornwallis' Mausoleum, Dear which there is good ground for the encampment of the regiment. No. 83.-FROM BENARES CANTONMENT TO JUANPOOR. Benares Bric tish Swamce Seraie S Burragong JUANPOOR Cantmt. 8 6 Burna 14 6... 14 4 Sye 1 2 3 Juanpoor 3 Total.. 380 miles. 1.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Cross the Burna by bridge. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto, 2.- Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the Sye by pucca bridge near Jullalpoor, 4 miles from Barragongo 92 [PART 1. TEE INDIAN ROAD BOOK No. 84.-FROM BENARES CANTONMENT TO MIRZAPOOR CANTONMENT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Benares Bri- tish. Mohun ke Serai Kutchwa MIRZAPOOR Cantmt. Mirzapoor 7 2 12 0 7 6 Ganges 1 2 3 Total.. 27 O miles. 1.--Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good through cultivated country. Supplies and water in great abundance. Cross the Ganges by ferry at Budowlee ghat. There is generally about a mile of heavy sand to cross in the dry bed of the river at this ghat. The remainder of the road good. 1 2 British. No. 85.-BERHAMPOOR TO BANCOORAH BY SUROOL Gockurn, ... 12 0 Bagiretty, Berhampore Jumuakandee 10 O Moar | Nuddy Curronda 14 0 Omdara 12 0 Sooree Surool 7 0 Elam Bazar 8 0 Cooksee 15 0 Adjye Sonamookee 12 0 Damooda 2 Bancoorah Baleatore 12 6... BANCOORAH 12 6 Goondasree 3 4 6 7 10 Total. J 115 4' miles. 1.-Supplies should be taken on from Berhampore. Water from a tank. Soil hard, but road uneven and bad. Boats readily procured to cross the Bagiretty: 2.-Supplies from Kandee and surrounding villages. Water plentiful. The Moar nuddy is fordable during the fair season, and there are 2 or 3 boats procurable to cross it in the rains. Road as in last stage. 3.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance after due notice to the local authori- ties. 4.--Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road very indifferent. 5.-Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road soft and bad. The river is forda- ble for 8 months in the year, and boats are procurable in the rains. The nullahs are ford- able at all seasons, excepting for a short period after heavy rains. 6.-Supplies procurable. Water good. The river is fordable throughout the greater part of the year, and boats are easily procured when it is not so. The nullahs are insig- nificant. 7.--Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road good. 8.-Supplies and water abundant." Road good. Nuduy fordable. British. No. 86.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO BURDWAN. Berhampoor Burruah 11 0 Kishnagurh PLASSEY 11 0 Kutwa 11 4 Bhigiretty, , Ninghun 14 4 ... Burdwan Kurjuna 13 BURDWAN 11 0 - miles. 6 Total..' 72 0 0. 1 2 2 1 3 14 FOL. 11.] 93 TIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. ' 1.-Supplies and water abundant. First 2 miles of road to Koolbarea good, remainder bad. Cross the river by ferry at Kutwa. 4-Small bazar. Supplies rather scarce, but procurable after due notice. Water plen- tifol, Road pretty good. Cross the first nullah by ford, and the last at the end of the stage by a bridge, 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Ford the nullah at the end of the stage. 4.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Road indifferent. No. 87.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO DACCA. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 6... } Baloo Nullah Berhampoor ... 1 Azimgunge Left Bank Jellin- Kishnagurh ghee River Hurry Sunkur, Damadooa ! Opposite Kooshtee Sudokee near Com Pubna mercolly Mordapoor or Muddapoor. Bailgatchee Furreedpoor Kumaldigge Furreedpoor 8 1 1 14 2 2 2 8 4 Jellinghee 13 12 4 Matabanga .. 4 12 Ol... 5 11 4Gurroy 16 10 4... 7 British. 11 4 Chundnah 28 10 00 9 0 14 41... 9 10 1 11 1.-Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages, or taken on from Berhampoor. Cross the nullah by ferry at the end of the stage. Road tolerably good in dry weather. 2.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. No regular road, and the travelling distance consequently varies from 14 to 16 miles. 3.-Cross the river by ferry or temporary bridge at the end of the stage. The village of Maddoobuna is on the right bank of the river at the ghat. No regular road. Supplies must be collected. Water from the river. 4.-Cross the river by ferry, 5 miles from Hurry Shunkur. No Pregular road, and dis- tance uncertain, varying from 121 to 14 miles. Supplies and water plentiful. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Good encamping ground on the banks of the Gan- ges. No regular road, but a cross country path. 6.-Cross the Gurroy by ferry at the end of the stage. No regular road, distance un- certain from 114 to 13 miles. 7.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road as above. 8.-Cross the river by ferry at the end of the stage. Road as before, and distance from 111 to 14 miles. 9.-Low bad encamping ground. Road as before, and distance from 10 to 12 miles. Supplies and water plentiful. 10.-Good encamping ground. Water rather scarce. Supplies procurable in abundance, 11.- First part of the road as before, latter part pretty good. Cross the nullah by bridge. Supplies and water abundant. 94 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 88.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO DINAPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 0. 5 4 2 Bagiretty... o.... 14 8 11 8 11 8 8 9 10 8. 9 12 11 0 4 4 0 4. 5 1 1 2 3 4 25 2 6 7 8 19 10 11 12 1] 13 . British. 0... Bomineah, Dewanke Serai Berhampoor KAMBAH Sooty Downapoor NearFurruc kabad... Futkipoor RAJMAHAL Mussaha Sickree Gungapersad Bhaugulpoor Pialapoor COLGO NG Left Bank Goga Nuddee Bhaugulpoor Afzulgunge KULLIANPOOR Hussungunge Monghyr ...Hybatgunge Balgoozer Moranchee Mukra Bar Patna Bukteearpoor Futwah BANKIPOOR 1DINAPOOR 8 Goga 3/ 14 12 0.. 15 13 4.. 2 16 10 0... 1] 17 11 4. 2] 18 Dackra and 13 6 31 19 Singhea 14 6 Booah 220 11 0 Fulgoo 21 12 0... 22 10 0 23 12 0 24 14 0 Pompoon.. 25 14 0 21 26 7 0. 11 27 27 Total... 293 6 miles. 1.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good. 2.-Ditto ditto. Road good in general. Cross the nullah by a kutoha bridge. 3.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. 4.-Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the river by ferry. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the first nullah by temporary bridge and ford the last Road pretty good. 6.-Supplies when required in any quantity must be collected from neighbouring villages, Water plentiful. Road pretty good, leading for some miles along the bank of the Ganges. 7.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good along the bank of the Ganges. 8.-A large bazar. Water from the Ganges. Road good, 9.-Supplies should be taken on from Rajmahal. Water from the Ganges. Road pretty good. Hills left. Ganges right. 10.–A small bazar. Water from the Ganges. Road through jungle. Hills on left, Ganges right. 11.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good, leading through the Sickree Gully pass at starting: A very thick jungle all the way. 12. -Ditto ditto ditto. At the 4th mile the road leads through the Terriagully pass, which is steep and stony. The ascent and descent very dificult for cattle. 13.- A small bazar. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road very good. 14.–Supplies scarce, but procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Cross the nullahs by ferries or temporary bridges. Road good. VOL. 11.] 9.5 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 15. -A large bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road very good. Encamping ground in a fine grove of mangoe trees, vorth of the town. 16.-Road good. Supplies procurable from Sultangunge, distant 14 miles. Cross the nullahs by temporary bridges. 17.—Road good. Supp.ies from Mahadewa, distant 2 miles, and from adjacent villages. Water plentiful. 18.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Monghyr 2 miles to the east or right of this place. 19.- Supplies from Soorajgurra and adjacent villages. Water from the Ganges. Cross the Dackra and Singhea by ferry and bridge of boats when a large detachment passes. 20.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Cross the Booah and one of the nullahs by ferry, the other nu lah nearly dry. 21.-Cross the nuddy by ferry. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water abun- dant, Road good. 22.-Ditto ditto ditto. 23.-A bazar and water plentiful. Road good. 24.-Supplies must be collected from adjacent villages. Road very good. Water from the Ganges. 25.-A large bazar. Water abundant and road good. Cross the nuddy by good pucca bridge. 26.-Water and supplies abundant. Road good, the last half leading through the city of Patna. Encamp near the Golah. 27.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. No. 89.–FROM BERHAMPOOR TO HAZAREEBAGH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British $ Gookurn Berhampoor Jumuakandee Belgong A kilpoor Sooree Sooree Kishennugur Khyrasall Chooruleah Ulwarah G. G's Agent Hazareebagh.. Berah Surbooree Rogonathpoor Hazareebagh, as in? No. 1, Part 2d 12 0 Bagiretty.. 10 0 10 0 Maur 10 0 Maur 12 0... 10 0 10 0 12 0 11 0 11 0 10 0 50 1 1 2 1 3 4 5 5 36 Jungle Me- hals. : : : : : . 104 4 20 Total 227 4 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful and gocd. 2.-Supplies and water as above. Soil sand and clay. Road indifferent. Cross the Maur by ford in dry season and boat in rains. 3.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Encamping ground on right bank of Maur, which is crossed at the end of the stage. There are 2 dinghees be- longing to the Zemiadar which ply at this ghat in the rains. Road good. 4.-Supplies and water abundant, Road good. 3-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water good and abundant. Soil sand and clay. No regalar road. Nullahs all fordable during the fair season. 6.--Provisions procured with difficulty. Water good. No regular road. 96 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 90.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO JUMALPOOR RY BAULE- AHI AND BOGRAH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Berhampoor 8 0... Bauleah British. Dewanke Serai 8 51... Bargatchee or Go. 10 o Ganges 1 dagurry Ghat ... Komurpoor or Ko- 6 4... 2 meerpoor 3 Newabgunge Bauliah Banasur 12 4. 2 Pooteah 6 4 Nattore 12 2... Atri and Surkole 12 0 7 Nagar . s Chogong 9 4 Gurmooee . l 8 Rungbugga 60 9 Tingamagoora 12 0 10 Buggorah or Bograh 10 0 .11 Churai- Pahrumala 8 4 tea& Esa 12 muttee Bengalee Chyliabaree 14 O and Mo 13 nass Peergunge 80 Konci Chandgunge 12 0.. 15 JUMALPOOR Cantmt. 12 4 Jennei 16 Bograh 14 Rungpoor Nusseerabad 18 Total 183 3 miles. N. B.–The country near Nattore is so low, that this route cannot be considered as open for the march-of troops before the middle of January. 1.-Cross the river by ferry. The first half of the road is tolerably good, the last heavy sand in the dry bed of ihe Ganges. Plenty of good ferry boats procurable. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water abundant. Road very good. 3.-Supplies from Baulea bazar, distant about 2 miles to northeast. Water abundant. Road pretiy good. 4.- A small bazar and supplies from ncighbouring villages. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. 5.-A bazar. Water abundant. Road pretty good. 6.-Water and supplies abundant. Road good 7.-Supplies scarce and must be collected from Shingra, distant 2 miles, and from other villages. Water plentiful. Road rough and under a considerable depth of water in the rains, Pass the rivers by ferry. 8.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country low, and from 8 to 10 feet under water in the rains. The road passing near the head of the Chullum jheel. The Gurmooee is about 50 yards wide and crossed by ferry: From Nattore to Chogong the conntry is low and swainpy, and the road passable only in the dry season. 9.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road rough, principally across rice fields, which are perfectly dry and passable in December. 10.-Ditto ditto ditto. The tract of country passed over in this stage is not inundated in the rains. II.-Abazar. Supplies and water abundant. Rond good, and the country passed over is not inundated by the overflowing of the rivers in the rains. 12.--A small village on right bank of the Esamuttee. Supplies should be taken on from Bograh. Road good. Cross the rivers by temporary bridges or by ferries. Encampment on left bank of Esamuttee, 13.–A small village. Supplies from neighbouring villages. Water from the Monass which is crossed at the end of the march, Road good, VOL. 11.) 97 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 14.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful, Road to the river at Meergunge 4 miles very good. The river is 3 miles wide from bank to bank, of which 24 are heavy sand. The current is s mile wide and rapid. Cross by ferry. 15.-Small village. Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages. Water plen- tiful. Road good. 16.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. At the 8th mile reach right bank of the river ai Bhowany poor, bed about 1 mile wide, and stream from 4 to 500 yards. Cross by ferry. No. 91.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO MULLYE BY MONGHYR- AND MUZUFFERPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. as Bhaugulpoor 173 21... 1 Monghyr Kullianpoor, in No. 88 Monghyr Left Bank Ganges Bulleah (Chota) Bagoo Serai Tegra Dulsing Serai Mubarickpoor Sirmustpoor MUZUFFERPOOR Toorkee 13 0 2 7 4 14 0 14 0 15 o Bullan 14 Jumwaree 14 4 1 2 3 4 5 British. 7 8 9 15| 41... Muzufferpoor 10 Little 16 6 Gunduk Little 10 6 Bilsund Puckree Mullye Cantonment. Bagmutty}/1/11 Chupprah 10 7 12 1 12 13 30 Total... 333 2| 1.-A large bazar. Supplies of all kinds abundant. Road good. 2.-Cross the Ganges by public ferry, the farmer of which is bound to pass troops and stores free of expense. Supplies should be taken on from Monghyr. 3.-Supplies must be collected. Fire-wood scarce, but procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. 4.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. Road prettỹ good in dry season, but under a considerable depth of water in rains. 5.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good. 6 --Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Cross the Bullan at the end of the march by ferry ; the nullah' becomes dry in November. 7.-Supplies and water in abundance, readily procured. Cross the Jumwaree at the end of the stage by ford and ferry. 8.--Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road very good. 9.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Road always good, 10.-Supplies and water abundant. Road tolerably good. Cross the river by ferry. Troops and stores are passed without charge. il.-Supplies must be collected. Road indifferent, and partly under water in the rains. Cross the river by ferry. Troops and stores passed as above. Nullah crossed by temporary bridge. 12.--Supplies must be collected. Road tolerably good. • 13.-Road tolerably good. • This stage may be divided by halting at Bahader poor 8f, from Muzufferpoor. PART 1. VOL. 11. 0 98 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 92.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO PURNEAH BY MALDAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. 341 1.4 ... Maldah r Kamrah, as in No. 88. Right Bank of the Ganges at Babopoor Seebgunge Mohudypoor MALDAH Nougureah Kooreleah Gourgureela Bussuntpoor Newabgunge Syfgunge Roturah PURNEA British. 90.. 6.0 Ganges 12 0 12 0 12 0 12 o Kalendrea 12 0 Birmupea 12 o Kalapee ... 21 2 3 1 1 6 7 8 0. Purnea 15 o 10 0 Bhesna 10 Soorah 9 3 10 2 11 2 12 15 Total... 164 1 1. --Supplies must be collected. Road pretty good. Cross one nullah by temporary bridge, the other becomes dry in November. 2.--Cross the Ganges by ferry. Two boats are constantly kept up at this ghat, and a large number can be collected in two days. Road heavy in the dry bed of the river, last 2 miles pretty good, Supplies procurable in abundance. 3. --Supplies and water procurable in abundance, Road pretty good. Nullah deep and rapid in the rains, and in dry weather the banks are very sleep. No public ferry, Bouts can be collected in a day, and must be paid for, 4.--Supplies and water in great abundance. The road is raised throughout, and very good. The nullah is crossed by wooden bridge. 5,--Supplies and water plentiful. The road is passable only in the dry weather, being nearly inundated during the rains. Nullah fordable in dry season. 6,--Supplies procurable after due notice, Water plentiful. The road in this march is passable only in the dry season. The Kalendrea is a small branch of the Mahanuddy, and ás fordable during the dry season. There is likewise a ferry when requisite. 7,--Supplies nnd water procurable in abundance. Road as in last stage. Cross the river by ferry and ford in hot season. 8, Ditto ditto ditto. 9.--Supplies and water plentiful, Road Indlfforent. Nullahs fordable. 10.-Ditto ditto ditto, 11.--Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good. Nuddy and nullahs fordable, 19.-Ditto ditto ditto. .... No. 93.-FROM BERHAMPOOR TO RUNGPOOR via DINAGE- POOR. From Berhampoor to Maldab, as in No.92 731 1 Ballia Nuwabgunge.. 7 0 Mahanudy 1 Maldah Gajola 14 41... 21 2 Deotullah 101 ch... 3 Tumboolee 12 0 24 Miepoldiggee 11 4 Purnabu. Dinagepoor 14) 4 26 bah Dinagepore Gaboora Attri, Mungulbaree 14 4 Kankra 7 and Jur bonah I. British, ... VOL. 11.) 99 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers, Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British. Rungpoor Kolahattee Momunpoor RUNGPOOR, Civil Station 8 9 Kurteah 11 4 Jubunserie. 2 9 9 o Gogot 10 17 Total 185 5 miles. 1.-A bazar. Road good and passable at all seasons. Water from the Mahanuddy. The ferry on the Mahanuddy is private, and there are but 2 boats kept up at it. 2. -Supplies furnished by Zumeendars on due notice being given to them. Road much out of repair. Temporary bridges required on nullahs when troops march this way. .3.-This part of road can be marched at all seasons, but some inconvenience would be experienced during the rains. 1-A small place. Supplies furnished by Zumeendars on due notice being given. Road, bal. One of the nullahs becomes dry in cold weather, the other is passed by ferry. 5.-Supplies must be brought from a considerable distance. Road passable at all seasons. 6.-Road good at all seasons. River crossed by ferry and nullahs by bamboo bridges. two publie ferry boats on the Poor abubah, which is very shallow in the dry season. 7.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from the Jubonah, which is crossed by ford and ferry at the end of the march. The Gaboora and Kankra are fordable from December to June, and are crossed by ferry in the rains. The Attri is never fordable, its bed is about 50 yards broad, and its stream in dry weather about 20 yards. 8.-Seanty supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Bad water from a nullah, Cross the Kurteah by ford or ferry according to the season of the year. 9.-Scanty supplies. Water from a nullah and not very good. Cross the river by Perry or bridge of boats. Bed 180 yards broad, and stream in dry season only 20 yards. 10.-Supplies and water abundant. Cross the river by ford or temporary bridge. Some parts of the road in this stage are liable be flooded from ce fields, and become swampy. No. 94.-FROM BISHNATH TO JORHATH. ...... ... 135) Ol... ..... 1 1.-There is no regular road between these places, but there is a foot path by which troops unencumbered by heavy baygage can proceed, the distance is about 35 miles. From Bishnath to within 9 miles of Jorhath there is communication by water, and the trip is usually accomplished in from eight to ten days. No. 95.-FROM BISHNATH TO JUMALPOOR BY GOWA- HATTY AND GOALPARAH. Hoolol or Sooloi 11 5 Burumpoo- ter 5 2 Kullung 1 2 7 7 Kullung ... 3 Commissioner at Gowahatty, Assistant at Nowagong. 2 21. 3 4 Assam. Kurrungee Ramgurh Nowagoce or Haza- ree ke gong near Meesa Mook Ouneealtee Gorramoore Nowa- gong, Civil Station 3 Pohoo Koolea Nowagong Hensuagong Rana CuOKKE 41 2 ... 5 ... 53 Kullung 6 7 3... 7 14 i Kullung ....... 8 100 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. 10 i Kullung 12 0... 12 0... :::: 9 4 10 3 11 Assam. Sobowree Raja ke ? Baree Goba Commissioner at Bogpoor Gowahatty. Sonapoor Jamgooree GoWAHATTY Palasbarree Balagong Kutowah Left Bank of the 2 Gurooan River... S Koomarpoota Asst. Comnr. at Bupoosur GOALPARAH Goalparah Koolu Kowah Jeybhoom Jellasur Bangamary Teeltary Singamary Lower Assam. 4 12 8 0 100 8 0 15 ol... 14 0... 12 Koolahee or Koolsys 8 Gurooan ... 5. O... 100... 13 0... 12 4... 100 12 0 8 0 12 0 12 4... Burum- 9 opooterin2 branches. 11 4.. 13 4 Cheesta 14 0... 10 Goojarea .. 7 o Konie 100.. 12 4Jennie 3 13 2 14 2 15 2 16 1 17 3 18 2 19 1 20 3 21 Bugwa 22 Rungpoor British 1 23 1 24 2 25 OLIAPOOR Panchgatchee Bagorah Telkoopie or Bho- wanygunge Dewangunge Chandgunge JUMALPOOR Cnt. 26 27 Nusseerabad 35 Total .. 356) 6 miles. 1.-Supplies must be collected. Good water from a small running stream close at hand, Road a mere path across a grass plain, with occasional patches of cultivation. Cross the river by ferry just below the Cantonment of Bishnath. 2.–Supplies procurable. Water from the river. Road a mere path, the greater part of the way through heavy grass jungle, and running along the bunks of the Kullung river, which is crossed by ford. Nullahs are also fordable. At 1 mile pass within 400 yards of the Koleabur Hill. 3.-Supplies not procurable. Water from the Kullung. Road a bund in tolerable good order for cattle; runs along the bank of the river which is again crossed by ford. 4. -Scanty supplies. River water. Path leads through a desolate country covered with jungle. Ford the nullahs, two of them difficult for cattle owing to the steepness of their banks; formerly there was a raised road which ran in this direction, and it may still be traced, but from long neglect it is much cut up and fallen into disuse. 5.--Supplies and waler plentiful, Road broad and good ; distance measured to the kutcherry.. 6.-Supplies procurable in abundance. Water from the river. Road good, passing through a continued line of villages belonging to Nowagong. Ford the river. 7.-Supplies procurable and water from the Kullung: Road from 10 to 15 feet broad, but not level enough for wheeled carriages. Country highly cultivated, 8.--Supplies procurable and water from the Kullung. Road good, but not suffi- ciently wide for artillery. Cross the river by ferry, and encamp on its right bauk, VOL 11.) 101 TIE INDIAN ROAD BOOX. 9.-Supplies must be collected. Water from the Burumpooter. Pass several large vila lages. A good foot path the wliole way. Country well cultivated. 10. - Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Cross nullahs by ferry and fords. IL-Supplies scanty and must be collected. Water from a nullah. Road as above. Cross auddy and nullahs by ferry and fords. 1-No (supplies ; must be collected hy order of civil authorities. Cross the Gurooan at the end of the march by ferry. Road a bad winding foot path, quite impassal for wheel carriages. 13.-No supplies. Water from the Burumpooter. Road as in last stage. 14.-Supplies must be collected. Road good. Cross the nullahs on temporary bridges. 15-Supplies and water procurable. First part of the road through thick jungle and over many ascents and descents, latter part good. Temporary bridges. 16.-Supplies must be collected. Water abundant. Road ihrough thick forest. Many steep ascents and descents. 17.-Supplies must be collected. Road good, little or no jungle. Temporary bridge. 18.-Ditto ditto ditto. Nullahs dry. 19.-Ditto ditto. Road very good. Low grass jungle. Nullahs dry. 20.-A small bazar, water pientitul. Road excellent. Nullahs fordable. 21.-A bazar, Road low throngh grass jungle ; 1 ferry and 2 fords, 22.-Supplies must be collected. Cross the river by ferries. Road heavy sand, 23.-A small bazar Water plentiful. Road good. Nullah fordable. 24.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. Ferries. 2.-Supplies procurable from surronnding villages. Road indifferent. Ferries. 26.–Supplies procurable in abundance. Water plentifnl, At 2 miles cross the river by ferry. Road pretty good. 27.-Supplies and water abundant. The Konei is ?f miles wide from bank to bank. Stream in dry season about 1200 yards wide, deep and rapid. The road at first enters the dry bed of the river and is heavy for 14 miles. On the left bank it is good. • The road from Jumalpoor to Goalparab is practicable for Guns, and couple of 6-poun. ders accompanied Major George Cooper's Detachment of the Champarun light infantry from Rungpoor to Goalparah in 1824. The 13th native infantry having embarked on boats at Bagwa ghat on the Burumpooter, cast on the 26th April 1826, and arrived at Goalparah on the 8th May. Cast off again on the 3d and arrived at Gowahatty on the 14th June, east of from thence on the 19th and arrived at Bislinath on the 26th June. No. 96.–FROM BISHNATH TO RUNG POOR IN ASSAM. Dist. Territory. Ciril Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers Nullahs. Nos, M. F. 85 0 Jorhath, as in No. 2 94 S Tootagong 2 1 9 1 Dehar Kocksi, Theock 11 30 andJaz- Mou Bysa Borigong Takoor Baree... ( 1 2 Central Assam. G. G's Agent at Gowahatty.. zee 2 3 Gouri Sagor RUNGPOOR 8 3 times... 5 4 Namdung 4 Total..119 3 miles. 1.-Saplies must be collected. Good water and encamping ground. The first 6 miles is by a band. Road in tolerably good repair, but there are breaks in it about every 600 yards, which render it impassable for wheel carriages; the remainder of the way is through rice cultivation and villages. 2.-Supplies must be collected. Good water from the Jazzee. Road for the first 6 miles through cultivation and villages. The remainder through a swampy grass plain. Nuddies and nuliah fordable. 3.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. The first 6 miles of road through rice cultivation. The remainder along a bund. 14:- A high bund road the whole way, but very uneven. Thick grass jungle on both sides. Cross the muddy by a pucka bridge. 102 (PART 1. TUL INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 97. FROM BISNATH TO RUNGPOOR IN BENGAL. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Oliapoor, as in No. 95 2996 Baminy Koonda 1010 Monass & Baminy ... Koonda 1 British Rungpoor RUNGPOOR 151 0... 2 31 Total... 324 6 miles. 1.--No supplies. Water plentiful. Good ping ground and good road. Cross the nuddies by ferries. 2.--Supplies and water abundant. Country flat, damp, well wooded and cultivated. } ... Lower Assam. 11 2... 1 No. 98.-FROM BISNATH TO SYLHET. Raha Chokee, as 65 1 in No. 95 Koosuagong 4 3 Kullung 1 Kolargong Ram-2 11 4... 5 2 Commissioner gurh at Gowahatty... Oum Sil- Oogoree Godown 8 4 ling or 4 3 Silleeung Near Ounsye 12 5 Oum Silling 12 4 Nongtong near Ka-2 6 5 karoon Bur Panee Godown 7 1 Sooroo 3 6 Nurteng 107 Bur Panee 5 7 Mantung Momtony Near Juwey 81 0 4 8 Oomgong- yong Oomgony. Superintendent of Jyntea and Murkeng River near 14 3 longsa 5 29 Cachar. Quar Poorgee times, Mokjue & Murkeng. Momunteereeun Murkeng 4 5 & Moon- 4 10 River Jynteapoor 5) 11 Nyar, Bor- Har- Hurreisgong 111 7 gong, 2 12 rie & Kep- pa British Sylhet SYLHET 15 5 Kurreis and Kopna 21 Total. 195 4 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable in small quantities. Water from the Kullung, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the stage. Road along the bank of the river. Ong Trị Cossya Hills. } gee 7 5... 6 13 VOL. 11.] 103 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 2.- A large village. Supplies and water procurable. Road a tolerably good path in the dry season, passing sometimes through cultivation, sometimes through jungle. · At 5 miles, hills on the left at the distance of a mile to ld miles. 3.-Supplies must be collected. Water from river. Road pretty good ; first half through a tolerably well cultivated country, and the last half through jungle in a valley between low hills, 4.--Supplies must be collected. Water from a running stream. Road a rough rugged path barely practicable for laden cattle. First 4 miles winding between low hills, then astend a steep ghat nearly 4000 feet up, and continue descending and ascending during the remainder of the way. Temporary wooden bridges. 5:-Supplies and water as in last stage. Country hills and path pretty good, ascending and descending. 6.-Supplies must be collected. Water from the Bur Panee river. Country hilly, and covered with wood and jungle. Path very bad generally. Many ascents and descents and occasionally swampy. 7. A village of about 1500 inhabitants. Scanty supplies procurable and water from a tank. Road pretty good, ascending and descending long sloping hills. Vallies cultivated, Cross the Bur Panee at the commencement of the march by a wooden bridge. 8.-No supplies procurable here. Water from Oomgongyong river. Road pretty good, but country still hilly and numerous ascents and descents. Juwey is about 14 miles from the encamping ground. 9.-Supplies must be collected. Water abundant. Country and road much the same as in last stage. Some of the hills clothed with fir trees. 10.-Water from running stream. Supplies must be collected. Country hilly and road pretty good, winding over many ascents and (lescents, not so great as before. 11.-Supplies and water abundant. For 24 miles the road leads along table land ; it then begins to descend from the high land into the valley of Sylhet, and at 6 miles enters on a bund road running from the foot of the hills to the town of Jynteapoor ; the road down the ghat is pretty good for cattle, but quite impracticable for wheel carriages. 12.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. First 4 miles along a bund, the remainder of the road through a low cultivated plain. The first rivers are fordable, and the last 2 are crossed by ferry. 13. -Supplies and water abundant, Road for first mile through swampy plain, then Finding between low hills for 5 miles, when it leaves the Jyntea Raja's country, passes over another low plain for a mile, and the remainder of the way through low hills ; last 2. miles very good road. No. 99.FROM BURDWAN TO KISHNAGURH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British. Burdwan Koochut or Koon- chut Boohar Kunagunge KISHNAGURH 13 5... 10 11... 11 0... 2 2 3 Kishnagurh 13 0 Hooghly ... 4 Total.../ 471 61 miles. 1.- A large bazar and water from tanks. Cross the nullahs by bridges. 2.-Supplies procurable on due uotice. Water plentiful. 8.- A large bazar. Water from tanks and Hooghly river. Cross the nullahs by Bridges. 4.-Cross the Hooghly river by ferry, opposite Kulnagunge. No. 100.-FROM BURDWAN TO MIDNAPOOR. Qochalun 14 0 Damooda....... i British Bancoorah Kumulpoker 18 0 Dalkeesur. . ll 2 MIDNAPOOR, as in No. 80... 43 4 6 Total... 70 4 miles. 1.-A bazar. Water abundant. Road generally bad and very heavy in the bed of the Damooda, which is forded at the commencement of the march. 2-4 bazar. Water plentiful. Road bad generally, and much broken up. River aud Rullah fordable, 104 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 101.-FROM BURDWAN TO SOOREE BY SUROOL. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Burdwan *British. Huldee Oorgawn Kullianpoor Surool Puraoee Sooree 93 7 1 10 5 6 7 81 0 10 2 Sooree 11 2 2 6 Total 52 2 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Road good. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Nullahs fordable during fair season, and passed by dinghee in rains, No. 102.-FROM CALPEE TO CAWNPOOR. | DowLUTPOOR 26 Jumna. Deeg 13 0 Barah u o Singoor Cawnpoor Chachendee 10 6 Rind Cawapoor, Centre 14 o Pandoo. of Cantonment 2 3 British. ....... 5 Total... 506 1.-A middling village. A few buniahs' shops. Supplies from Calpee. Water plenti. ful from wells and from the Jumna. The Junina at the Raj ghat Calpee is about 1į miles wide, one of which is heavy sand during the dry season when the stream usually runs under the right bank. Banks high, but pretty well sloped off at the ghat. There are boats belonging to this ferry. 2.-A small village. Supplies may be taken on from Pokraen, or collected from neigh. bouring villages. Water plentiful. Country well cultivated and studded with small villages. Road pretty good. Pass Chowra ka Kuttra at 11, Boghnee, a large village and bazar at 31, Pokraen, also a large village and bazar at 71, Asamow at 10ġ, and Chitanee at 12 miles, 3.- A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Country partially cultivated. Road generally bad and much cut up by cart wheels. Pass Mowa at 24, Patapoor at 45, Mattee at 64, and Nubbeepoor at 7 miles. Ford the Singoor under Mowa, baz: Supplies and rater plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Kunchunpoor at 24, Runeea at 4, and Raeepoor at 8 miles. Ford the puddy under Raeepoor. 5.--Supplies of all kiuds abundant. Water from wells and the Ganges. Country well cultivated. Road much travelled and generally, much cut up by cart wheels.' Pass Chukurpoor at lf, and Kakadoo at 8 Punkee ka Kuttra at 5, Roudpoor at 75 miles. 6\Jumna ... { No. 103.-FROM CALPEE TO ETAWAH. 5 Dowlutpoor 2 British Cawnpoor 1 914 2 Etawah, as in No. 21 59 6 7 Total ... 72 o 1.- Vide Remarks in No. 102. 2.--A small bazar. Water from wells. Road pretty good in dry weather. At first a few ravines on the left, afterwards through a well cultivated country. Pass Chowra ka Kutira at ld, Umrsuda at 4, and Shekh poor at 7 miles. VOL. II.] 105 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 104.-FROM CALPEE TO FUTTEHGURH BY TIR- WAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 8 o... ...... ...... Cawnpoor ... British. Shahjehanpoor, as in No. 103 Rasdan Mungulpoor RUSSOOLABAD Khyrnugur Tirwah TALGAwn or Talgram Khodagunge FUTTEHGURh Cantt. 12 2 1 11' 4 Singoor 2 14) O Rind 1 3 15 o Pandoo 4 7 01... 5 11 0 Eesun 6 u o KalliNuddy... 7 ::::::: Futtehgurh 13| 4.. 10 Total ../ 103 2miles. 1.-A large bazar. Water plentiful. Country, well cultivated and road good Passing Omudpoor at 1, Khoapoor at 2, Waena at 34, and Mohurkapoor at 6 miles. 2.-Å small bazar. Water plentiful. Country first half well cultivated, and the latter half raviny and barren. Road bad, being much cut and intersected by ravines. At the 6th mile ford the Singoor nuddy. 3.-A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good. Country well cultivated and studded with villages. At the 10th mile ford the Rind, which is about knee deep during the dry season. Bed 40 yards wide, with steep banks. 4.-A small village. Some buniahs and supplies from surrounding villages. Country cultivated. Road little frequented and little better than a path for two-thirds of the way. 5. A bazar and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country cultivated and thickly studded with small villages. 6.-A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Ford the nuddy, depth of water 2 to 2 feet. 7.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country well wooded and cultivated. Road good, with exception of last mile or so, where it is rather heavy, Cross the Kalli nuddy by ferry, and suspension bridge constructed by the Nuwab Hakeem Mehndet. Three boats are sufficient to form a bridge at this ghat. & Supplies of all kinds and water abundant. Country as in last stage. Road good. Pass Rajeh poor at 4, and Kumalgunge at 6 miles. No. 105.-FROM CALPEE TO FUTTEHGURH BY BELAH. Btitish. Belah Futtehgurh (Russoolabad, as in No. 104... Belah Indergurh Talgawn or Talgram FUTTEHGURH, as in No. 104.. 45 6 13| 4 84 9 4 Eesun { 1 2 3 241 4 16 Total..101 6'miles. ? 1.-A town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country highly cultivated. Road winding and bad 2.-A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road indifferent. Country well cultivated. 3.-A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Road winding and bad. Cross the Berun by ford. Water 24 feet deep, bed about 40 yards wide. PART 1. VOL. II, P 106 (PART 1 TUE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. . No. 106.-FROM CALPEE TO GOONAH BY JHANSI AND THE MYAPOOR PASS. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Jhansi Jaloun. Territory. British. G. G.'s Agent at 71 6... : gong ... Attah 11 2 OOREI 10 6 2 Akori 13 6 3 Birgawa 106 4 Pooch 9 2 5 Banda Bumrowlee near Mote 8 7 16 Simree 8 4 7 Chir Chirgong 8 Scin-2 Resident at Murora, 9 4 dea's $Gwalior, 9 Jhansi, 10 Chumrowa, 11 G. G's Agent Punniari, 14 6 2 11 at Banda, Simree, 11 6 12 Muhowa 2 Myapore, 7 ] 2 13 Nuddy, S Bura Pahara 12 o Muhowa 1 14 Ramgur 11 0.. Resident at 2 15 Kalabagh 12 0 1 Nuddy..... 16 Gwalior Te Kootiowud 12 4 Scind GOONau Cantonment 120 ... 10 0... Jhansi. Scindea's. 19 Total.. 205] O miles. A bazar, Supplies and water in abundance. Country raviny for the first 4 miles, afterwards open and partially cultivated. Road pretty good, 2.--A large village and bazar. Water from wells and a nullah, Ruad pretty good, making considerable bends to avoid broken ground. Country open and partially cultivated. 3.-A large village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plenti- ful. Country open and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Quit the road leading from Calpee to kooneh, and pass through the village Korassa. 4.--A large village. Supplies abundant after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good aud pretty straight through a flat and highly cultivated country. 5.-A middling village. Water plentiful. Supplies procurable after due notice. Country open, flat, and highly cultivated. Road a cross-country hackery tract winding much. 6.—A small village. Water plentiful. Supplies from Mote, 1 of a mile west. Country partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Nullah dry. 7.-A middling village. Water plentiful, and supplies in abundance after due notice. Excellent road through a flat and well cultivated country. At half way pass Omrah, a castle belonging to Sumpter surrounded by a wet diteh. 8.-A large village. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Country a dead flat, and highly cultivated, 9.-Å middling village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road very good, and country well cultivated. 10. A ine walled town and residence of a Raja. Road good, but winding for the first 6 miles through a cultivated country, then over undulated barren rocky ground for about three miles more, and lastly it winds through the town of Jhansi for nearly a mile. 11.-Supplies procurable. Water from a lake. Road pretty good." Pass Moraree, Bedowra, Lullowa, and Chouka. 12. Scanty supplies. Water from wells. Road good. Pass Kuchowra Bumna, near Bachroun. 13.–Supplies procurable and water from the nuddy. Road pretty good. Pass Bagerwaro and near Peepulkheree. 14.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells and a nullah. At the end of the first mile ascend the Myapoor Ghat, short, stony, and of gradual ascent. Practicable for guns with aid of drag-ropes. 15.-Supplies and water procurable. Road pretty good. Pass Baidmow, Kotwarah, and Bugoria. 16.-Supplies and water procurable, 31 VOL. 11.) 107 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 107.–FROM CALPEE TO JUBBULPOOR BY KEITAH AND THE HEERAPOOR PASS. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. British. Murwan or Murgyah 11 4 Jellalpoor 9 6 Betwa Amood 13 6... Rhaat 11 4... KEITAH 6 0... Burwara 12 4 Beerma Jeitpoor ORA.CONF | Nos. Hameerpoor 71 4... 7 : Logassie ... 14 2... ... 48 Chatterpoor ... 12 0 Oormul 31 9 G. G.'s Agent at Banda. Muhutgaon 112. Pun- Chir- Pun-Chir- Chat- Logas-Jeit- karee. terpoor. sie. poor nah. karee. nah. Bijour. Goolgunge Mulhara 11 0 11 2 1 41 Sundwah or Sirwah.. 61 5. 3 4 HEERAPOOR 9 ... 4 11 0... 5 10 ... 6 11 14 4... 8 1 Sonar ... 3 12 Buxwaho OLE (Ramnugur Right bank of the Sonar River at Hurhit Dummow Bungawn DUMMOW Ubhana Hurdooa Jhubera Assistant Com- Singrampoor missioner at Kuttingee Jubbulpoor.. Bugoree JUBBULPOOR Cantt. 8 5 13 1 British, ... 1114 7 CBcarmee 8 0 8 3 8 5 12 0 Heron 101 2 ... 31 13 7| 14 5 15 4 16 4 17 1 18 0 19 3) 20 5.21 26 Total... 2694 miles. 1.- A small bazar. Water from wells and jheel. Conntry for 6 miles very raviny, after- Tards an open and partially cultivated plain. Road much intersected by the ravines, 2.-A small bazar. Water abundant. ' Country open, and slightly undulated and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Kavakhera at , and cross the Betwa at the end of the stage by ford. Bed 550, and stream in dry season 180 yards wide, bottom sand and gravel, and lisaal depth of water 24 feet. Right bank steep. There are some small ferry boats which ply at this ghat in the rains. 108 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 3.--Supplies must be collected. Water procurable in abundance. Country and road much the same as in last slage. Pass Mumah at 6, Gowlee at 8%, and Chibowlee at 11 miles. 4.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country and road as in last two stages. Pass Oonereah at 3, Bahpoor at 41, and Sursaee at 7 miles. 5.-Old cantonment. Small bazar. Water plentiful. Country flat and cultivated. Road good. 6.- Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Country for the first 6 miles open and partially cultivated, then some rocky hills on right and left, and afterwards an open cultivated plain. Road good. Pass Phudna at 5, Burora at 6, and Killowah at 7 miles. Ford the Beerma at the commencement of the march. 7.-A bazar. Water plentiful, Country studded with rocky hills. First 2 miles open and cultivated, remainder covered with bush jungle. Road good. Pass Sutaree at 3 miles. 8.-Supplies procurahle from Logassie and from surrounding villages. Water rather scarce in hot season. Country hilly and covered with bush jungle, only a few patches of cultivation. Road good, with a gentle ascent and descent in passing through 3 ranges of jungle-covered hills. The nullahs are all fordable, their banks steep. Pass Mujrole at 3, Mudjaong at 6, and Jeenjun at 104 miles. 9. - See Number 66. 10.-A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. At miles commence the ascent of the Heerrapoor Pass, which is about a mile in length and easy. Country above the pass un- dulated and covered with jungle. Road pretty good generally, but stony in parts and rough. At about half way strike off to the left from the Saugor road. 11.-Supplies after due notice, and water procurable in abundance. Road pretty good for 10 miles, the remainder is rough and stony; Nullahs all fordable in dry season. 12.-Supplies from Huttah, distant 3 miles. Water from the river. Road good. Cross the Sonar at the end of the march by ford; stony bottom; rather difficult for carts. The stream is divided into two channels, and there is one ferry boat occasionally plies on the deepest. 13.-A small village. Provisions scarce, but procurable after due notiee. Water plenti- ful. Country open. Road good generally, stony in some parts. 14.-A bazar. 'Water from wells and a tank, but rather scarce in the hot weather. Road good 15. -A bazar and water abundant. Road good, but a little hilly and stony in the last half of the march. 16.-A small village. Supplies scarce, and should be taken on from Ubhana, Road good, but through jungle and a little stony occasionally. Cross the river by ford at the 3rd mile, 17.- A bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. At the 5th mile is the Bedaree ghat, very stony, but perfectly practicable for wheel carriages. 18.-A small bazar. 'Water abundant. Road indifferent and stony. 19.-A large village and good bazar. Water abundant. Road good. 20.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. A good made Road the whole way. Cross the Heron about a mile from Kuttingee, fordable in dry season, and passed on rafts constructed on canoes in the rains when not fordable. 21.-A good made road the whole way. + No. 108.-FROM CALPEE TO GWALIOR BY KOONCH AND SEUNDAH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 1 2 3 Oorei, as in No. 106. Jalloun Hirdoee Koonch G. G.'s Agent at Nuddygaon Banda Ukdeo Seundah or Seurah... Rutwah Resident at Rupooapoora Gwalior. Bijowlee Burragawn 4 22 0 10 2 96 11/ 2 8 4 Puhooj & 3 Sumei 11 0.... 12 o Sind Scindea's British. ::: :::: ... 5 6 27 11 3... ... 12 o Baislee 6 0... 9 VOL. II.] 109 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. © | Nos, Scin- dea's. ResidentatGwalior GWALIOR Residency Oonmrar 104'and Soo- wunreka. ... 12 Total.. 124 5 miles. 1.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country open, flat, and par. tially cultivated. 2.-Supplies and water abundant., Country open and cultivated. Road good. 3.-A small bazar. Water from the Puhooj river. Road for 10 miles good, winding through an open well cultivated country. The remainder winds through deep narrow ravines. 4.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. For the first 6 miles the road is bad, winding through deep narrow ravines, the last 2 miles are good. The Puhooj is crossed at the commencement of the march by good ford, and the Sumei at the 5th mile also by good ford. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Road tolerably good, but winding through several ravines. 6.-Pord the river at starting, steep banks, sandy bottom, and usual depth of water during dry season 2 feet. Road at first very narrow with high banks on each side, barely room for one cart, then rugged over barren rocky hills for about 2 miles, the last 6 miles pretty good. Suppiles procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. 7.--Supplies from Behut, 2 miles east, and from surrounding villages. Road tony and intersected by numerous small water-courses. 8.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful.---Road, with the exception of a few ravines and deep ruts, good and hard, rather stony about the 2nd mile. 9.-Ditto, ditto, ditto, ditto. 10.-Supplies and water abundant. Ground for encampment close to the residency. Road pretty good Pass through the old town of Gwalior, north of the fort. No. 109.-FROM CALPEE TO GURRAWARA BY KEITAH AND THE HEERAPOOR PASS. Dummow Dummow, as in No. 107.. 203 6 Imeleea 90... 3 1 Bulleyah 12 0 5 2 Chandpoor 12 4 Kopra 3 3 Dewree 12 03 Nuddies... 5 4 Maharajpoor Bhaminee 10' 1 Punaree 46 Left bank of the Nerbudda at Keer 11 o Nerbudda. 3 7 8 2... British. Nursingpoor panee Ghat Gurrawara, or Nursingpoor Cantonment Shair, 12 o Oomur & Singree 8 27 Total... 290 5 miles. 1.- A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good. 2.-Supplies and water procurable. Road pretty good generally, stony in some parts, and through jungle. 3.-Supplies and water as above. Road pretty good, a few ascents and descents. Rivere and nullahs fordable. 4.- Uneven road through jungle. Hills and ghat. Supplies and water plentiful. Nul. labs and nuddee fordable. 110 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 5.-Small village. Water plentiful. Supplies procurable after due notice. Road good. 6.-A good sized village bellow the Vindhya ghats. Water plentiful and supplies pro- curable. Road good, with exception of the ghat; descent of which is rugged and bad for wheel carriages. 7.-A large village. Supplies procurable and water abundant. Road indifferent. Ford the Nerbudda. Bad ghat. Canoes are procurable to form rafts for the transport of carts. 8.-Sudder bazar. Water plentiful. 'Road circuitous and raviny. Nuliahs fordable, but steep and bad for carts. No. 110.-FROM CALPEE TO KOTAH BY JHANSI, NUR- WUR AND SHAHABAD. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Jhansi. Scindea's. Jhansi, as in No. 106 1003 Ruxsa 81 0 G.O.'s Agent Dunarah 11 2 2 Banda Kurairah 12 6 Burwa 3 Nurowah 11 01 4 Nurwur 9 1 5 Left Bank Sind River between 8) 4 Sind 6 Gopalpoor and Ryepoor Resident at Thea Sutturwar 671.. 7 Gwalior or Suttunwarees Morairee or Mon- 10 4.. 1 8 dairee ...S Jhirree 8 6.. 29 Pawree 8 4 2 10 Gultonee 18 0 3 11 i Shahabad 12 i Poona 3 12 Mamonee 100 Kailwara 14 0 Purolee Banstonee. 11 0 Bangunga. . 2 Barah Political Agent 14 o Parbuttee.. 4 14 Bura Soorkunda 104.. 4 15 at Kotah Left Bank of the Kalli Sind River 10 o Kalli Sind. 3 16 at Surkairlee 101 6 4 17 f) ! Degode Kota 15 0.. 3 18 13 Kotah. 30 Total 321 0 miles. 1.--A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from wells. Road pretty good. 2.-A bazar. Water from a nullah. Road good. 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. 4.-Supplies must be collected. Water from wells. Road as above, Pass Dumduma at 31, Anrur at 7, and Banskur at 8 miles. 5.--A bazar and water plentiful. Road good. 6.-Supplies must be collected. Water from the Sind river, which is crossed by ford at the end of the stage. 7.-No supplies. Water from tank and nullah. Rugged road. 8.-Supplies must be collected. Water from bewlee and wells. 9.-A small bazar. Water from a jheel. 10.-Supplies abundant. Water from a nullah and well, bad. VOL. 11.) 111 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 11.-A small Village. Water from a nullah, Supplies from Powree or Shahabad. 12.-A good baz ar and water plentiful. Cross the Poona by ford. 13.- A small village. Supplies should be taken on from Shahabad. At the end of the Ist mile from Shahabad there is a rugged ascent practicable for guns with assistance of pioneers. 14.-A town. Supplies and water abundant. Cross the Parbuttee by ford at the 7th mile, near Kullian poor. 15.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from a nullah. Corintry open, undu- lated, and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Nurka, Mailkheree, Rajpoora and Tamlee. 16.-Supplies procuralıle after due notice. Water plentiful, Cross the Kalli Sind at the end of the stage, 450 yards wide. Stream divided into 3 channels, the deepest about 3 feet during fair months, very rapid and extremely stony, broken rugged ground to some extent on both banks. Pass Bumbowlee, Uleepoo ra, and Ryepoora. 17.-A large village and bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road very good over an open, undulated, and pretty well cultivated country. Pass Jearee, Sooraila, Mandee, and Omaidpoora. 18.-A fortified city on right bank of the Chumbul. Road tolerably good. Pass Moon. dulah, Tattair, Jaleepoor, Borkundee, Manpoora and Borkhairee. No. 111.–FROM CALPEE TO PERTABGURH, OUDE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. To Futtehpoor, as ? Futtehpoor British No.2.18} 72.6 Oude. { Resident at PertaBGUR Cantt. Lucknow.. 2 as No. 64.. S 88 0 15 Total.. | 160 6 miles. No. 112.-FROM CALPEE TO SAUGOR. Heerapoor, as in No. 109, 148 3 Saugor, as in No. 66, 52 5 19 Total.... 201 c miles. No. 113.-FROM CAWNPORE TO ETAWAH. Chachendee 141 0 Pandoo Barah 101 6 Rind Cawnpoor Beharee 11 2 Singoor Rasdhan 11 0 Ooreeah 14) 2 Etawah Cantt. Etawah 39 2 as in No. 21 2 British. 8 Total.. 100) 4 iniles. 1.-A small village. Supplies can be taken on from Akbarpoor, or may be collected from adjacent villages after due notice. Water from wells. Road pretty good. Pass Shahazadpoor at 2, Akbarpoor at 4, Mahomedpoor at 8, and Koent at 94 miles. Ford the Buddy bear the end of the march. 2.- A large bazar. Water plentiful. Country cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Tanapoor at 2, Mowyee at 3, Bilareemow at 4, Doobkee at 6, Kaundy at 8, and Rampoora at 9 miles. 3.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country, open and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Morudea at 14, Maungunge at 21, Secundra åt 31, Peetumpoor at 64, Klooju- pholl at 74, Mutowese at $T, and Bhowpoor atlli miles. 112 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 114.–FROM CAWNPORE TO FUTTEHGURH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 496 10 4 Kalli 1 To Meerun ke Serai as in No. 1 ... Jellalabad Khodagunge FUTTEHGURH Cantt. British. Futtehgurh 9 2 Nuddy 2 13 41 3 8 Total... 831 Olmiles. 1. -A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road indifferent. Pass Muckrundnugur at it, Mahmooda at 3, Bahapoor at 31, Feerozapoor at 41, and Fut- tehpoor at 8 miles. 2.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good throughout. Pass Goorsaigunge whence the road to Mynpooree strikes off at 34, Sumdun at 51, and Mullic- poor at miles. Cross the Kalli Nuddy by ferry, and a suspension bridge constructed by the Nawab Hakeem Mehndee. Three boats are sufficient to form a bridge at this ghat. 3.-Water and supplies of all kinds abundant. Country cultivated and road good. Pass Rajehpoor at 4, and Kumalgunge at 6 miles. No. 115.-FROM CAWNPOOR TO LUCKNOW. Onaw 10, 4Ganges Rhamutgunge 11 4 Resident at NOELGUNGE 12 Sye Budlee ke Tuckia Lucknow. at entrance 100. city of Lucknow.. LUCKNOW Cantt. 9 o Goomty 1 2 3 Oude. to 4 5 5 Total..! 53 Olmiles. 1.-A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Road generally heavy and bad for carts, particularly in the dry bed of the Ganges, which is spread out to great width opposite to Cawnpoor. Mowassee is the half way village in this stage. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Country low, fat, and partially cultivated. Road bad and generally much cut up. Ramgunge is the half way village. 3.-A good bazar and water abundant. Good ground for encampment on west of the village, where the road from Lucknow to Nanamow ghat strikes off. At 34 miles pass Jhalotra, a large village and fine circular lake of about a mile in diameter. Nia serai is the half way village, and is very small. Ford the Sye Nuddy. Road bad. 4.-Supplies from city. Waier from wells. Road pretty good. 5.—The road for 3 miles is good across the Bbudlee ke Tuckia plain, it then winds through the narrow streets of the city of Lucknow. Crosses the Goomty by fine pucca bridge, whence to cantonments it is heavy sand. . No. 116.–FROM CAWNPOOR TO PERTABGURH. Hurrah 10 o Ganges Resident 12 0 Beegahpoor at 8 0 Lucknow Amarah 90 Dalmow 7! 01. 1 2 Oude. Nugur 1 3 VOL. 11.) 113 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 101 0 100... 101 0... Resident at Lucknow Oude. Dye Mustafabad Russoolabad Rampoor Raja ka Talab PERTABGURI Cantt.. 14 0 100 16 0. : : : : : 5 6 7 11 Total.../ 1161 0 miles. 1.- A small village. No supplies. Cross the Ganges by ferry. Road heavy and bad. 2.-A small village. No supplies. Road pretty good. 3.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. 4.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 6.-No supplies. 7.-Ditto. No. 117.-FROM CAWNPOOR TO SOOLTANPOOR, QUDE. 34 0 Oude. Resident at Lucknow Noelgunge, as in No. 115... S Jellalabad Gosaingunge Saleempore Hydergurh Inhowna Jugdeespoor Paimsah ka Poorwa. Daoodpoor SOOLTANPOOR Can- tonment 14 0 14 6 62 14 3 1012 8 4 11 0 94 1 2 23 2 4 5 6 27 8 } 12 6.. 9 12 Total... 135/ 3 miles. 1.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Rond good. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto. 3.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. A bad hackery track winding over a waste plain. 4-A bazar. Plenty of good water. Road indifferent. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto. Country flat, with here and there patches of bush junggle. 6.- A large bazar. Supplies aud water abundant. Road good, first half through a cul- tivated country, the last through low jungle. 7. A small village. Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages. Plenty of good water. Road generally much cut up and bad for carts, winding through a cultivated country, intersected with patches of low jungle. Cross nullahs by fine bridges. & -A small bazar. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road generally ba First 6 miles country cultivated, and covered with low jungle, the re- 9.–The road for the most part lies through a low jungle with patches of cultivation, and is very good. and much cut up. mainder of the way. PART 1, VOL. 11. 114 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 118.-FROM CHITTAGONG TO DACCA BY COMILLAH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. \F. Chittagong 10 6 11 0 13 0 120 12 0 4 O Fenny 120 Noakally 12 01. Kuddum Russool Seetakond Meerkee Serai Nee zampoor Kairah Mahomed Ally Hath Chondagong 1 Jerpokoneah COMILLAH Burkumpta Eliottgunge Doudkandy Bhowanygunge Narraingunge 100 10 0 British. Comillah 101 0... 100 5 101 0 이 ​5 8 O Megna 2 Kuttah Nuddy 10 Burrumpooter 3 3 Creek and Luckiah 10 0.. 1 Dacca Dacca 1 15 Total 1541 41 miles. 1.-Abundant supplies procurable at each of these stages after due notice, and water plentiful from tanks and jheels. The Penny river is crossed by ferry, and there are bridges (mostly wooden ) across the nullahs. The whole country being cultivated, there is no waste space for encampment on either side of the road, and troops usually encamp on the public road, which is a hund raised considerably above the surrounding country. 2.-The whole of this distance is hy water, and boats may readily be got to cross a re- giment at once. Supplies scanty. Encamping ground on right bank of the Meyna. 3.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Cross the streams by ferries. Plenty of boats to be had after due notice. 4.-Road good. Cross the nullah by bridge of boats. 1 2 3 No. 119.-FROM CHITTAGONG TO SYLHET. Comillah, as in No. 118, 960 | Chougong 10 4 Goomty 11 Niampoor 6 o Kamdano.. Kusba Thana Begai Nun- 6 0 dee Moogra Senaigung Comillah 60 land Hurra. Singeer Beel 6 Kudaleea. Patan 41 0 Ulea Joree Chandura 6이 ​and Bnleal Joree Mattee Cutta Lour and 8) 0 Sylhet Sonai Chatteehine 8 02 Nuddies Sunkerpassa 10 0.... British. .. 7 8 9 10 VOL. 11.] 115 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers | Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. ... Soutong & 8 0 another Nuddy 7 0... 7 0... 11 12 13 British. Sylhet HOBBIGUNGE LONTANTE 11 Nya Bazar Nubbigunge Seebgunge Estraguree Tajpoor Lalla Bazar SYLHET 6 o... 6 01 Nuddy 6 0... Booree Ba- 71 4 rak 6 0 Soorma 14 15 16 ... 17 18 27 Total... 2191 0 miles. 1. -Supplies procurable in abundance. Country on the right low paddy fields, on the left high ground and bush jungle. 2.-Road generally good. Swampy near the Kamdanoo river at the end of the stage. Country as in last stage. 3.-Road good along the Begai Nundee. Low hills right, open cultivation left. 4.-Road swampy in parts, and in others firm and dry. Country as in last stage. 5.-Road swampy and very bad till the end of December, when it becomes tolerably dry and passable. Low hills right, low marshy country left. 6.-Road rather swampy in parts, but passable by the end of November. Country as in last stage. 7.-Road pretty good generally, but swampy in some parts, passes through fine open cultivation. 8.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 9.-Road dry and passable by the end of November, through fine open cultivation. 10.-First part of this stage low and swampy, the latter, dry and firm. 11.-Road through a low swampy tract, which dries about the end of November or be- ginning of December. 12.-Road good, following the course of the Burak river, fine cultivation. 13.- Diito ditto ditto ditto. 14.-Road swampy, but becomes dry in November, 15.-Road swampy in parts, becomes dry in November through rich cultivation. 16.-Road pretiy good, through fine open cultivation. 17.–Road swampy in some parts, very dry in others, through fine cultivation. There are some hillocks near Lalla Bazaar. 18.-Road swampy, but dries in November ; through fine cultivation. This route was surveyed by Mr. Powlett Mathews in 1824. He left Comillah on the 27th October, and the above remarks are applicable to the state of the road at that period of the year. It is understood to become dry and perfectly practicable for troops in De- cember, and to continue so until the middle or latter end of April. Supplies are procur- able in abundance at each stage after due notice, also boats and canoes for crossing the several streams that ia tersect the route. The road however is nothing more than a foot- path. No. 120.-FROM CHUNAR TO ALLAHABAD BY SOOLTAN. POOR, BENARES. British. Benares Sooltanpoor 1 { 31 4 Ganges Mohun ke Serai 8] 0... 1 2 Hence to Allahabad, as in No. 1, Part 4th,.. 67) 4 8 Total .. 731 0 miles. 1.-Supplies from the cantonment bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Cross the river by ferry just below the fort of Chunargurh. 2.-A small bazar and supplies from adjacent villages. Water plentiful, Cross-country road rather zig-zag, but good. 116 (PART 1. TIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 121.–FROM CHUNAR TO DINAPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Mirzapoor Benares 22 23 Ghazeepoor 2 5 6 British. Chota Mirzapoor Kylee Sukuldeah Kumalpoor Zumaneah Kurreiah Near BUXAR Chota Bhojpoor Ranee Sagur Gugrajgunge Arrah Kuttesur DINapoor Canton- ment 100 11 01 71 0 ] 81 0 12 0. 13 4 Kurum- 151 0 passa, 101 0... 130 12 4 8 6 11 0 Soane Arrah Patna 1 7 2 8 3 9 3 10 5 11 12 14 4.. 3 13 13 Total.../ 146 3 miles. 1.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road good along right bank of the Ganges. Country well cultivated, and studded with clumps of mangoe trees. The nullahs are crossed by bridges. 2. -Supplies as above. Road bad, little frequented by carts, which are obliged to make a detour to the right by Mogul Serai, lengthening the distance to about 13 miles. Country highly cultivated. 3.-Supplies and water plentiful. Country as above. Road pretty good. 4.-A large place. Supplies abundant. Road good. Country as before. 5.-A large town on right bank of the Ganges. Supplies abundant. Country as before, Road good, except where intersected by some deep raviues. 6.-Small village. Supplies procurable in abundance from adjacent villages. Road good. Country still the same. 7.-Pass the fort and town of Buxar, and encamp about 14 miles east of the place, there being no good ground nearer. The river is about 100 yards wide. Water very deep and banks steep. Boats being readily procured, it is usual' to construct a bridge of boats for the passage of a corps marching ihis way. The nullah is also crossed by temporary bridge. 8. --Supplies and water plentiful. Country Aat and well cultivated Road excellent Bridges on the nullahs, 9. -Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 10.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 11.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 12.-A small village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Country and road as usual. At 8 miles cross the soane by ferry at the Kulwurghat, and thence to the end of the stage the road is heavy, and particularly so for about 300 yards in the dry bed of the river. 13.-Road good. Country well cultivated. In marching from Dinapoor by this route the first 3 stages should be Muneah 89, left bank of the Soane at Kulwur Ghat 83, and Arrah 8 miles, No. 122.-FROM CHUNAR TO HAZAREEBAGH. British | Mirzapoor .. Chota Mirzapoor .., 3 1 Total. 100 miles. 101 o... 11 1.--Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. VÕL. 11.) 117 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 123.–FROM CHUNAR TO MIRZAPOOR CANTONMENT. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. Nos. British Mirzapoor... S Belwin MIRZAPOOR Cant. 101 4 Belwin 11 0... 31 2 2 Total...) 211 4 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water abundant. A range of low barren hills on left. Road' bad for carriages from being much intersected by ravines. Ford the Belwine nuddy at the end of the march. Bed 40, and stream in dry season 10 yards wide and knee deep, banks steep. The nullahs are also deep bedded and difficult for earts. 2.-Country and road as in last stage. Hackeries experience very great difficulty in these two stages from the numerous deep ravines that intersect the road. ... 12 4... No. 224.-FROM CUTTACK TO GANJAM BY JUGGERNATH. Kautjoorie Bulwunta 14 01 and Koos 1 budra Peeplee 12 4 Barghubee. 2 Sutbadee 3 Pooree Juggernath... 12 0 Barghubee 4 Pooree Nursingpatam 91 6 Manickpatam 12 2 Outlet of Meeta Kooah 10 2 the Chil- ka Lake Malood 12 4 Piaghy 8 2 Berhampoor 6 GANJAM 12 2 British. ... 10 Total../ 115 2 miles. 1.-Good made road all the way. Supplies abundant and water plentiful. The Kaut- joorie is fordable during the dry season, and the Koosbudra is, with exception of a few days in the raius, entirely dry. 1 -Good encamping ground. Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road made and good in dry weather. River always fordable, excepting some days during the rains. 3.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road as above. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Road as above. River is fordable, excepting for some days in the rains when it is crossed by ferry. 5.-No made road whatever in these stages, uor could one be constructed from the nature of the soil which is nothing but sand along the sea shore. Supplies might be collected at each of the halting places, but with some difficulty, as little or nothing is produced near them. Boats easily procured in any number. When the road through Khoorda has been completed this will of course be abandoned, excepting by persons coming from the south- ward to the temple of Juggernath. 6.-Frot Piaghy the Ganjam district commences, and the road leads more inland. No. 125.-FROM CUTTACK TO GANJAM BY KHOORDA AND WEST OF THE CHILKA LAKE. Darotbang 10 5 Kautjooree. 1 1 British Pooree Mundesir 116 2 2 KHOORDA 2 3 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. This distance is from the Commissioner's kuteheree. From the right bank of the river the road is raised for 34 miles, and the remainder is over high rocky ground. Boats are used during the rainy seus son, and are procurable in abundance. Troops and stores passed free of expense. 91 11:: 118 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 2.-Supplies and water as above. For nearly the whole of this stage the road has been cut through dense jungle, and is over high ground and good at all seasons. Nullahs sub- ject to very sudden rise, rendering the road occasionally impassable for a day or two. Bridges are now constructed. Thick jungle all round, and ground for encampment scarce. 3.--Supplies and water abundant. Made road good. One or two bridges. Chief part of the road over fine kunkuree soil, rest over paddy ground, being raised with earth, becomes very heavy at times. No. 126.–FROM CUTTACK TO MIDNAPOOR. Dist. Rivers. Names of Stages. Civil Authorities. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 1 ::: :: Cuttack 2 3 . dungan 5 6 7 8 9 Balasore Maha Nud- Tanghy 10 01 dy Chutteah 6 0... Sankradhee 11 2 ... Kunditter 7 4 Braminy & Kursooa Akooapudda 8 2 Bitturnee... Bareepoor 100... Budruck 7 6 Salindee Simleah 8 2 Soroh 11 2 Khuntapara or Nya? Serai Balasore Huldeepudda . 8 6 Boorabo- long Bustah 7 3... Jellasore al 11 4 Subanreka Dantoon 12 4 Bailda near Khaut-2 -}| 100 10 0... nugur Muckrampoor 10' 0 .. Kurruckpoor 9 5).. MIDNAPOOR Cantt. 64 Cossya 10 British. 12 0... 106... 11 12 13 14 15 16 Midnapoor 17 18 3 19 19 Total. 179 21 miles. 1.-Water plentiful and supplies also on one day's notice. Road made and passable at all seasons, but miry in rains. River fordable in fair season. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto. 3. -The country about here is jungly. Water plentiful and supplies procurable on short notice. Road as above. 4.-Provisions and water plentiful. Road as above. Cross the river by ferry, the first at the 2d mile and the second at the end of the march. 5.-A sınall bazar and water plentiful. Cross the river by ferry at the and of the march. 6.-A bazar. Road rassed and passable at all seasons, but miry in rains. A bungalow for travellers. 7.- Encamp on the Salindee. Supplies from Budruk, distant 14 miles. 8.-A bazar and bungalow for travellers. 9,-A bazar. 10,- A bazar. 11.-A large bazar, 12.- A bazar, Water plentiful and good. The river is fordable at low water for about 6 months of the year, and boats are always procurable. 13.- Ditto ditto. Encamping ground low and damp. There is a pucka serai at this place. VOL. IL.] 119 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1 14.–Supplies and water plentiful. River fordable for about 2 or 3 months in the year, and good toats procurable. 15.-Ditto ditto. 16.-Ditto ditto. 17.-A bazar and water from a tank. 18. -A few shops and supplies furnished by zemeendars on a few days previous notice. 19.-Supplies and water abundant. The river is fordable during the dry season, and boats ply on it in the rains. No. 127.-FROM CUTTACK TO NAGPOOR BY RAEEPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. CON - | Nos. :: ...... ...... Tributary States. :: Sumbhulpoor. S *Kuntaghat 5 0 Kautjoorie British Pooree Sautundy 9 0.. 2 Behra 13 0 3 PUDDUMBUTTA 100 Commissioner Kuntillo 81 0 in Cuttack Bailpara 10 o Burnool 14 0 Puddum Talao 90 Koosumgurh 81 0 Paungurh 10 4 ... Kirhee or Kirdhee... 141 0 BOAD 80 Jena Panka 81 0 Bhaug Nuddy 12 o Sonepoor 100 Kartung 9 0 G. Go's Agent ! Binka 7 0 Hazareebagh. Rampoor 111 0 Burpalee 9 0 Bominee 11 o Augulpoor 7 o Malmunda 101 0... Pattree 14 oung Khera 12 0 Brinkrajpoor 11 o Ung Nuddy 100 .. in Joong Nuddy 17| 4 Joong Kopela 12 o Ung Killaree 12 0. Ararbund 6 4... Mahasoomund 91 0 Arring 10 O Maha Nud- Resident at dy 100.. Nagpoor. Nowagawn ORRAEEPOOR 101 o... 6 Koomairee 8| 0 Karown 27 Bullaie 90... 8 Doorg 11 0... 9 Somnee 9 o Sew 2 10 Pindree 12) O... 11 From Cuttack to Puddumbutty the route by. Khukkur, Kundulpoor, &c. as in table 128, is preferable. Nagpoor. 120 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. ... ... 11 4. 11 0 16 1 Baug 100... 11 0... 11 6... Nagpoor. Oorarbund Checholy Baug Nuddy Moondeepoor Urjonee Sakoolee Resident at Nag- Larknee poor. Bhundara Kurbee Right Bank of the Kunhan River at Matnee Mahulgawn Kamptee Cantt. NAGPOOR City, 6 miles from Ma- hulgawn 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 11 6. 13 4 Kyngunge 8 6 ... 9 Kunhan 1 21 11 0... 6 0... 3 ... 0.23 51 Total... 627 7 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. The river is fordable during the dry season, and boats are procurable when it is not so. 2.-Supplies as above. Road indifferent along the right bank of the Mahanuddy river. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto. 4.-The 1st battalion 7th, and 2d battalion 26th regiments marched by the stages in pro- gress from Malwa to Cuttack in 1821-22, and experienced no difficulty. Supplies having been abundantly furnished by the local authorities. 5.-Marched by the 4st battalion, 7th, and 2d battalion 26th regiments as above. 6.-A large bazar. Road good, and good encamping ground. 7.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water abundant and road very good. 8.-Water from tanks and supplies abundant. Road good. 9.-Water and supplies abundant. Road good over a cultivated plain. 10.-Road to the river very good, thence rugged. Supplies plentiful. 11.-Supplies and water abundant. Road rugged and stony. Good encamping grounds. 12.-Supplies and water abundant. Road tolerably good, 13.-Water from a nullah and supplies abundant. Road good through a jungle of under- wood and grass, much infested by Tigers. :4.-Water from the baug. Supplies must be collected. Confiued encamping ground in jungle. 15.-Supplies and water abundantRoad indifferent through jungle. One glat difficult for carts. 16.—Supplies abundant. Water from tanks. Road good. A small ghat. 17.-Ditto ditto ditto. 18.-Ditto ditto ditto. 19.-A small bazaar and water from tanks. Road very good. Bad encamping ground near the fort. 20.-Water scarce and supplies from adjacent villages. Road pretty good. 21.--Supplies from Mohdu and Matnee on opposite bank of the Kunhan. Water from the river, which is forded at the end of the stage. 22.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. 23,-Ditto ditto ditto. VOL 11.) 121 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 128.-FROM CUTTACK TO SUMBHULPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. Nos. Cuttack ... Khukkun 7 4 Mahanuddy ... 1 Tributary Cut- Mehals. tack. ... Kundulpoor Commissioner at) Attagurh Cuttac Golagund PUDDUMBUTTY 81 4.. 81 0 10 4 Mahanuddy 90.... 2 3 4 5 From Puddumbutty to road the stages and distances are the same as in No. 127, but from road to Sumbhulpoor they have not been correctly ascertained. 1.-A large straggling, village. Supplies procurable after due notice, and good water from the Mahanuddy. Koad little frequented, but passable for wheeled carriages. Cross tue river by ferry about half way. 2.-Water from the river. Supplies scarce and must collected. Few traces of a road, Pass along the bank of the river through wood, with hills on the right. Country pas- sable for wheeled carriages. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto. 4. First two miles over bed of river, which is crossed by ferry. Country on right bank more open. Road as above. Supplies must be collected. Water from the river. 5.-Road along the river better defined than before. Supplies and water as above. No. 129.–FROM DACCA TO FORT WILLIAM. Barrasut, as in No. 171 6 77, Reversed Dum-Dum British Calcutta Fort William 8 0 } .. 71 4... 2 16 Total... 187| 2 miles. 1-A made road, pucka the whole way. 3.-A good pucka road. ... No. 130.-FROM DACCA TO JUMALPOOR. Moraparah 111 4 Luckiah 1 i Panchdowna 11/ 4 1 2 Dacca Gurburia 12 Burumpo 3 ter ka Sota Sagoordie 12 0... 4 Digahboe, on Right Burumpoo- | Bank of Banar 5 o ter ka Sota ... 5 | River & Banar Koormoyl 6 Nusseerabad Nowapara 11 0 7 Babookally lil on Kegdore near Sou- 101 0... 8 rara Kaida 16L 11 o Sootee 9 Noondha 11Sheerukally 10 JUMALPOOR Cantt.. 101 o Banar 11 101 0... British. ... ... ... ..} 12 Total... 126 of miles. PART I. VOL. I. R 122 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Country low, and road mostly under water in November ; it becomes passable abont the midklle of December. Supplies from Moraparah and water from the Lurkiah, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the march. The nullah is also crossed by ferry. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from a tunk. Road good for the first 9 miles, the remainder is a footpath across tielus. Nullah passed by ferry. 3.- A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from jlieels. Foot path crosses two jheels, with little water in them, which in November becomes dry. 4. -Small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from the Burumpooter river. The footpath for the first 6 miles leads through bamboo lanes and across fields. The remainder along the left bank of the Burumpooter ka Sota. 5.-Supplies must be collected. Water from the Banar. Foot path lies in the bed of the Burumpooter river, which at Sagooruie is called Megna by the natives. The Sota is fordable and Banar is crossed by ferry. 6.-Supplies must be co lected. Water from the Burumpooter. Road good along right bank of the river. 7.--Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 8.-Ditto ditto ditto dito. Supplies from Nusseerabad. 9.-No supplies, but procurable after due notice. Road as above. Cross the Sootee by ferry. 10.-Supplies from.Taragunge. Road as above. Ford the nuddy. 11.-Road as before, Cross the river by ferry. 3 No. 131.-FROM DACCA TO SYLHET. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. r Moraparah Motkolah Nursingdee, 2 3 Dacca Raepoorah 4 ... 11 4 Luckiah 1 51 0. 1 100 A branch of 10 the Meg-2 na 6 o Megna 2 12 0 12 O 100... 12 0 120 2 British. Comillah Backergunge Talshar Majlispoor Hurnbaree Poorikola Hobbigunge SYLHET, Vide No. 110 Sylhet 44 0 17 Total... 145 4' miles. 1.-Country low and mostly ander water in November; it becomes passable about the middle of December, Supplies abundant and water froin the Luckiah, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the march. Nullah is also crossed by ferry. 2.--Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Good encamping ground for a re- giment. 3.--There is a bazar at Nursingdee capable of furnishing supplies for one regiment. Good water from a branch of the Megna river. Good encamping ground. 4.-Supplies from Nursingdee and from adjacent villages. Water from a tank. Rives and nullahs fordable during dry season. 5.-No bazar. No. 132.-FROM DEHRA TO LAND OUR. Political Agent, Rajapoor 61 3... Dehra LANDOUR 6. 4... 1 British 22 2 2 Total.., 12 7 miles. VOL. 11.] 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 123, 1.-A bazar at the foot of the hills. - A good earriage road. Very gradual ascent from Dehra, 2.-Hill road. First 3 miles to Jhireepanee very steep, thence to the Landour bazar 27 Diles, the road is good, and ascent more gradual and easy. The distance given in this route is to a point on the top of the Landour hill, about half way between the bazar and hospital. No. 133.-FROM DEHRA TO MEERUTT BY HURDWAR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos, 111 0 8 2 Sooswah i :: 131 0... 1 2 3 14 British. Political Agent, s Lucheewala Dehra Khansroo Chokie HURDWAR Seharunpoor ... Bharapoor Bhouree. Landhoura Kazeekepoor Muzuffernugur. MuzUFFERNUGUR Kutowlee Douralla Meerutt MEERUTT Cantt. 11) 2 Solanee& 7 2 Purtree 123 15 4 15 0 121 0 81 2 6 7 18 no com c. 10 10 Total. . 113.7 miles. 1. A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from the Song brought by a cut from that river. Road excellent. Country for about 6 miles pretty open, then co- fered with thick forest. 7.-No villaye. Encamping ground in the forest. Water from one well and the Soos- vah river. Road good, with exception of the ford on the Sooswah, which is stony and tad for carts and cattle. 3.-The distance is measured to Myapoor, a mile and a half beyond Hurdwar, where the best en camping ground is to be found. Water from wells and the Ganges. Supplies from Hardwar and Kunkul. Road excellent the whole way, chiefly through forest and jungle. About a mile after leaving Khansroo there is a short ascent, rather dificult for carts and heavily laden cattle. 4.-A small village. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Joallapoor, a large place, which is crossed in the march, Water from wells and a nullah, Road for the great. er part heavy and bad. Country low · Kadir.! 5-A large bazar. Supplies and water abundant, Road bad, leave the low Kadir land at Jourassee, | mile short of Landhoura. 6.- A large village. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road indifferent. 7.-A large town. Supplies and water abundant. Country open and partially culti. Yated. Road pretty good, rather heavy in passing some sand hiils in the middle of the mareh near Chupar. 8. --Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good, excepting a mile of sand, where the nullah intersects it about the middle of the march. The nullah is fordable, but when a large camp or detachment passes this way, it is usual to construct a temporary bridge on it. 9. -A small village. A toll has been established here for the supply of grass, wood, and earthen pots. °Other articles of the requisite supplies must be collected. Well water plentiful. Country cultivated. Road good. 10.-Country and road as iu last stage. Ground for encampment between the lines of Her Majesty's regiments of Dragoons and Foot, near the Chureh. No. 134.--FROM DEHRA TO MORADABAD BY HURDWAR. Hurdwar, as in No. 144... 32 2 British Seharunpoor Bhogpoor 13 4 Bandunga... 2 I 1 Asofgurh 41 4 Ganges 11 2 124 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Nujeebabad 3 Bijnour Rao, Lak- reehan, 13 5 Rutnar & Malin Chooia & 134 Gangun.. 107 15 2 11 4... British. 34 Nugeena Dhampoor Sahespoor { S Sundleepoor MORADABAD Cantt. 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 Moradabad 10 7.. 11 Total... 125 7 miles. 1.-A small village. Three buniahs' shops. Water from the Ganges. Road good. Country flat and covered with bush and grass jungle, interspersed with patches of cultivation. Pass through Kunkul at 2, and Kutarpoor at 7 miles. Ford the Bangunga at the lith mile. 2.-No supplies. Water plentiful. Road good. At 3 miles cross the Ganges by two ferry boats of about 300 maunds each. Stream about 300 yards wide and rapid, bottom stony: In February the Ganges becomes fordable for elephants and camels nearly oppo- site Bhogpoor, and in 1828 the laden cattle of Lord Combermere's camp forded the river there. 3.-A large town. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. The nuddies and nullah all crossed by good fords. Pass Samiwala at 4, Mohunpoor ; at 54, and Sahun- poor at 1l4 miles. 4.-A large town and bazar. Country open and cultivated. Road good. Pass Ghoosipora at 24, Bussi at 41, Rawulheri at 84, and Sitarwala at 9 miles. The Chooia is crossed by a pucca bridge. The Gangun and nullahs are good fords. 5.--A large village and bazar. Water plentiful.Country, open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Purunea at 3}, Sera at 4, Mujeri at 83, and Peepursena at 67 miles. 6.- A small bazar and market on Saturdays. Water plentiful. Road pretty good through thin bush jungle and patches of oultivation. To Pass Surugthul at 31, Souhara, a large village and bazar, at 8], and Geindajoor at 12 miles. 7.-A small village. Supplies procurable from Mogulpoor, distant 4 miles, and from adjacent villages. Water from wells. Road good. Pass Gurree at 2 Mouree at 5, Khempoor at 6, and Rustam poor at 91 miles. 8.--Supplies from cantonment bazar and city. Road good. Pass Mogulpoor at 4 miles. No. 135.-FROM DEHRA TO MUSSOORIE. 6 31 Dehra. , 64 1 2 1 2 Total... 12] 71 miles. 1.-See No. 132. 2.-Hill road to Jhireepanee very steep, thence for 24 miles to where the road to Landour branches off to the right, the ascent is more gradual and easy, remainder nearly level along the top of the Mussoorie ridge. Distance measured to nearly in centre of the place. Ni: 1 2 23 No. 136.–FROM DEHRA TO SEHARUNPOOR. 71 01... British Pol. Agent, Dehra Shorepoor Chokee... Mohun Chokee 8 9 Kheree T A... 10 4 Solanee, Seharunpoor, Solanee & Hurowrab 767 8\ 2 Kandonur SEHARUNPOOR Fort... 8 Hindon, 5 Total... 416 miles. British. 4 5 VOL. 11.) 125 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Road excellent. Very gradual ascent. Encamping ground in forest on the banks of a dry bed of a hill torrent, about of a mile short of the Chokee, where there are two good Wells. Water is also to be had by digging in bed of the torreut. Supplies must be taken on from Dehra. 2.-Supplies must be collected from Kheree and other villages. Water from river. Good enicamping ground on left of road in forest at the foot of the hills. After passing Shore- poor Chokee, a short way, there is a pass (called the Kheree or Lalldurwaza Ghatee), the ascent of which is considerable, but practicable for carts, and thence to Mohun Chokee the road leads down the bed of the Solan ee river, between wooded hills, and is very stony and bad for carts. 3.-A bazar of 11 shops, which can always procure supplies when required from Bhug, wanpoor, a large town, distant 6 miles. Water from wells and the Solanee river. Road excellent through forest and jungle the whole way. 3.-Six buniahs' shops, and supplies procurable from adjacent villages on short notice. Water from wells. Country open and cultivated. Road very good. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Ground for encampment on parade in front of the Provincial lines near the fort. Road good. Nullahs crossed by bridges. The Hindon fordable. No. 137.–FROM DEHRA TO SIMLA BY MUSSOORIE AND THANA TOONGRA. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M.F. British. Rajpoor 6 3 Mussoorie 6 41 Budraj 60... Luckwara 기 ​이​Jumna Political Agent, Mukha or Mukta 5 4... Nagthap or Nagtbat. 7 0 Debra Thana Toongra 6 41. Deobun 8 0 Bundrowlee 91 0 Kandha 90 Tonse Bridge 5 4. Penutra 90 Chepal 100 Political Agent, Dussowlee Puttur Nullah 11 0 8 0 Soobatboo Goond Rana's Durbar Fagoo British Simlah 12 0 18 Total.../ 152 3 miles. Protected Hill Stages. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 121 0... 14 o'... 1 and 2.-See No 135. 3-Good made road all the way along the side and summit of the ridge. Good encamping ground and water procurable. 4.-Made road. "Descend 34 miles to the Jumna, which is crossed by bridge, thence ascend. Ground for tents scanty, but there is a place attached to a temple which travellers can occupy: 5.-Ascend a good zig-zag road. Excellent ground for pitching tents on. 6.-Long stiff ascent, but good road leading over the Byrath hiil. Extensive ground for tents. 7.-Good road along the summit of the range. &.-Ascend by good road to the top of the Deobun hill, where there is good water. 9.-Good road.Steep descent for 4 miles, then alongside of hill. 10.-Good road along the side of hills, with several ascents and descents crossing the nullah Deoee Kud. 126 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 11.-Descent, and then along the left bank of the Tonse river. Road good. 12.-Made road. 13.-Good made road. 14.–Made road. 15.-Ditto. 16.--Ditto. 17.-Ditto and stage bungalow. This stage might be divided by halting at Synge on the bank of the Giree river, whence to Eagoo there is a stiff ascent to 6 miles. 18.-Ditto. No. 138.–FROM DEHRA TO SOOBATHOO BY SIDOWRAH AND BHAR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Beendhall 151 0 & Tonse 7 1 British. olitical Agent, Sahespoor or Syn- ? Dehra poor Right Bank Jumpa at RAJ-GHAT Kullaisur Khizerabad 9 o Jumna ... 10 2 11) 4 Batta 5' 3 14 9] 1... ... Bollie & 11) 6 Billaspoor Partly British, partly belongº ing to the protected Sikhs. 65 Bsolim... } 1 SIDOWRAH 6. Political Agent, Umballa Nurraingurh 3 7 Raepoor Sursuttee 7 4 & Adha Khandra, Murkun- 90 da and Roona... Bagnah, Simlotun 10 4 and Dan- geree Dangeree 10 0 Toke and Kunjsura) 6 o Guggur 8 0 8. O 5 8 Protected Sikh States. 69 Ramgurh Munni Majra Pinjore Barh 6 10 3 11 4 12 British Soobathoo. Political Agent, Sobathoo Soobathoo 13 2 Gumber 4 13 13 Total.../ 151 il miles. VOL. 11.) 127 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.--Supplies and water procurable in abundance after due notice. Country open, undu. lated, and slopes off gradually to the Asun river on the left. Road a very good hackery track, Little cultivation. Much grass jungle with few trees. The nuddies and nullaha are all fordable, except immediately after very beavy rains. 2-Country and road as in last stage. Supplies must be collected by previous notice to Civil Authorities. Water from the Jumna. There is only one boat of 1,200 maunds at Raj. ghat, but numbers are built in the neighbourhood, and several could be collected here when necessary. The channel of the river is 600 yards wicie, and steam usually about 10 during the dry season ; clear, deep and rapid, sometimes fordable by unladen camels at Duekrauiee , a short distance higher up the river, but never at this ghat. 3.-No supplies, unless previously ordered. Water from the "Jumna. The road is a pretty good hackery track, leading along the right bank of the Jumna all the way. For the first 4 miles the open valley of Kyarda is on the right, then the low wooded hills which bound it on the south come close up to the road. Hills also on left beyond the Jumna. 4.-Country for the first 4 miles hilly, and Road rugged and narrow, but passable for hackeries; the remainder of the road good, and country level and cultivated. Supplies procurable after due notice. 5.-A bazar. Country for the first 9 miles flat, then slightly undulated and higher, the whole highly cultivated. Good cart road. 6.- A large towu. Supplies and water abundant. Country open, undulated and culti. vated. Road a pretty good hackery track. 7.-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice to the Political Agent at Umbal- lah. Road tolerably good, very heavy in the bed of the Kandra, which passes under Si- dovrah. &-A bazar. Water from wells. Road a very indifferent hackery track, last half over high undulated and rugged broken ground, much jungle and little cultivation in this mareh. 9.- A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Country much undulated, forming ridges between the nuddies and nullaks. Partial cultivation and jungle. Road pretty good. 19.-A good bazar. Water plentiful. Country flat and highly cultivated. Road is crossed by numerous kools (water-courses,) cut from the Guggur for the purposes of irri. gation, and in some parts miry and bad for carts. 11 -A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Passes over a low range of Hills which bounds the Pinjore Doon on the south, and then runs nearly parallel to the bed of the Guggur river on the right, having low wooded hills on the left. At Munsa Devi, about 2 miles from Munni Majra, the ascent to the ridge of hills is rather difficult, but quite practicable for carts. 19.-Road good and nearly level for the first 5 miles, then a very gradual ascent up to Barh, which is situated immediatly at the foot of the hills. A small bazar, and water brought by a kool, or cut, from one of the mountain streams. 13. -An excellent made road the whole way, but is in the hills and impracticable for laden eattle loaded as in the plains. Camels can go up with half loads, making the distance into two stages. The Punchukee or water mill near Kuttul, is the usual half way halting place. No. 139.–FROM DEHRA TO SOOBATHOO BY KYARDA AND NAHN. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos, 24 0 9 0 Batta 9 0.. 1 2 Raj Ghat, as in No. 138 British Pol.Agent Dehra... Kyrada Koolar or Kalroom ... NAAN Political Agent) Bunettie Umballa Suran Bhol 13 o... 9 0 Protected Hill States. 11 0... 181 01... 3 4 5 6 .. British Polito bath@gent} SOOBATH00 161 o... 7 8 Total... 108 of miles. 128 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. To any, person marchiug this way who may be independent of the stage bungalows, a better division of the distance from Nahn would be Bunettee 9, Suran 11, Tikur 121, Kuddoo 125, Soobathoo 9 miles, 1.-A made road the whole way, passing through grass jungle, thinly interspersed with trees. Hills at some distance on right and left. Kyarda is a mere hamlet, and supplies must be collected on previous notice to political agent. 2.-Made road, passing up the Kyard which gradually becomes narrower until opposite Koolur, where the hills are only separated by the channel of the Batta. No supplies. Water from the Batta. 3.-Made road. Soon after leaving Koolur ascend and pass over a ridge of low hills, then pretty level along a narrow valley for several miles. In the last 3 or 4 miles the ascent to Náhn is considerable. Nahn, a considerable town, is the capital of Sirmoor and resi- dence of its Raja. A pucca house for the accommodation of travellers. 4.-A bungalow. Supplies must be collected. Road good, first descent and then much ascent. 5.—A small house. Supplies must be collected. Good road winding along a ridge of mountains, much ascent and descent. 6.- A bungalow. Ditto ditto ditto. 7.-Road good. Much descent in the first 6 miles, then pretty level along the valley of the Gumber. There is a public bungalow for the use of travellers at Soobathoo. No. 140.-FROM DELHI CANT. TO ALWUR BY REWAREE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. 14 4 13 0 13 0 13 6 CHA CON | Nos. King of Patau-b Alwur. Delhi's dee. British Delhi Sobul ke Serai Hursoo ke Gurhee Goorgaon PATAUDEE REWAREE G. G's Delhi Futtehabad G. G.'s Agent) Kishengurh Ajmere Bahaderpoor ALWUR 15 31.. ... .. 7 3 Sabee 81 0 12 0 11 1 6 7 8 9 Total...' 108] 11 miles. 1.- A bazar. Water plentiful. Road indifferent, passing over a rocky ridge, west of the city of Delhi, not difficult for carts. 2.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and well cultivated. Road good generally, but heavy in some parts. One of the nullahs is very deep-bedded, and not fordable for some time after much rain, 3.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country slightly undulated in low irregular swells and partially cultivated. Soil sandy and road heavy and bad for carts. 4.-A large town and bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good for the first 8 miles, but heavy in parts during the remainder of the way, and particularly so near Rewaree. 5.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road pretty good during the fair season. 6.-Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the Sabee hy ford. 7.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful from wells. Road indifferent. 8.--Supplies procurable and water abundant. Road bad through the Kishengurh Pass, 9.-Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. No. 141-FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO HANSI. British Delhi Mudeepoor 61 41.. 1 G. G.is Agent at } Bahadergurh 12 2... ..... VOL. 11.) 129 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. 12 0... :: Rotuck British. Samplah Rotuck Modena Mohim Moondahul Hansi Cantonment. 15) o 100... 94 91 0 151 0. :::::: 6 7 8 Hissar 8 Total... 89 Olmiles. 1.-Supplies procurable with ease. Road good. Mudeepore is a middling village, about 14 miles in advance of Seetaram ke Serai, Water and encamping ground good. 2-A large walled town. Supplies and water abundant, Road good. Pass Langloe at 31, Kumurudeennugur at 44, Moonda at 6, and Tekeree at 10 miles. 3.-A few shops. Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good in dry Weather. Pass Jackoda at 41 and Rohod at & miles. 4.-A large town and bazar, Road heavy in some parts, but good generally. Pass Ismael at 24, Kuthoura at 7, Sadk heree at 9, and Jogee ke Mut at 11 miles. 5.-A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Road heavy in some parts. 6,-A town and good bazar. Road excellent. Pass Kurkura. 7.-Small village. Supplies for a battalion procurable after due notice. Water from vells. Road heavy in parts, but generally good. &-Road very good. Pass Sourkee at 4, and Dhanna at 104 miles. 3 1 No. 142.-FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO MEERUTT. Jumna & Shahderah 64 Delhie Canal.. Left Bank of the Meerut Hindon River near 8 o Hindon Furruckhnugur.. Begumabad 18 4 MEERUTT 15 4 British. 2 3 4 Total 48 3 miles. 1.-Supplies from Delhi. Road good. Pass through the city of Delhi. Cross the Jumpa by bridge of boats, and the Canal by pucca bridge near the village of Saleem poor. 2.-Supplies from Furruckhnugur. Water from the Hindon. Roud good. Country open and partially cultivated. Pass Bhoperah at 34 and Furruckhnugur at 6 miles. Ford the Hindon, sandy bottom, and depth of water from 2 to 24 feet in dry season. 3.-A bazar. Water and supplies plentiful, Road good.” Pass Soniar at 1, near Beekun.' poor at 4, Moradnugur at 74, and Ubbupoor at 9 miles. 4.- Distance measured to the ground of encampment between the lines of Her Majesty's Dragoons and regiment of Foot, near the church. Road good. Pass Boorbarore at 6, Purtabpoor at 7., and Koonda at 8 miles. Enter the Meerut cantonment near the jail at the 13th mile. No. 143.–FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO MHOW BY RE- WAREE NEAR JEYPOOR, TONK, BOONDEE, KOTAH, OOJEIN AND INDORE. Goorgaon Pataudee, as No. 140 40 4 dee. Paton-Patau- dee. Ditto Janth 8 O Sabee PART 1. VOL. 11. S 130 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Goorgaon .{ 10 0.. 12 0. 3 100... s Bharawas Shahjehanpoor Byrode Goorjurbas KOTE POOTLEE Praugpoor Bhahbra 7 1 4 5 8 0 ree. Alwur. Khet- 6 7 8 Munohurpoor 29 SAMOTE 10 4 81 0 11 41.. Sabee & 13 4 one other Nuddy Bownee 11 Oor Bowa- neegunga 10 0 Bandee 8 0.. 11 ol 90 90 Bandee 1.. 10 Jeypoor. G. G.'s Agent Ajmere Il 1 12 13 .. 14 Nangul Jootwara Neouta REINWAL Madhoorajpoor Bunwara Right Bank of the Banas River near Tonk Neembola 15 16 13 O... 15 o Banas 2 17 11 4... 18 Nugur ... 11 0... ..,... 19 Boondee. Jeypoor. Tonk. Neinwah Doogaree Dooblana 10 0... 81 0... 1 20 2 21 3 22 Pol. Agent Ko- tah Kotah. Boondee Talrah or Talerah Kinaree КоТАН Jugpoora Hunoteea MUCKUNDURA Mhow, as in No. 9 13 Bujan & 2 Maize S 101 01.. 10 4 Tye 11 4... 2 o Chumbul.. 100... 81 0 14 4 169 1 1 23 2 24 25 26 27 3 28 1 29 47 Total... 5075 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Encamping ground west of the village. The first part of the road good, latter rather heavy. The Sabee is generally dry from November to July. 2.-A small bazar and supplies procurable from Rewaree. Water from wells. At 5 miles pass through Rewaree, a large thriving town. First half of road heavy, and parti- cularly so near the town of Rewaree, remainder good. The old cantonment of Rewaree is a mile north west of Bharawas. 3.-A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good over an open country, with a range of hills on the right, running parallel to the road at the distance of about 3 miles from it. VOL. II.] 131 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 4.-A bazar. Water from wells. For the first 8 miles the road is a tolerably good hackery track over a fiat country, and gradually approaching the hills on the right, and for the last 2 miles it winds through hills, is rough and much cut up by ravines. By rode is situated at the southern end of these ridge of hills. 5.- A small village. A few huniahs, but supplies must be collected. Water from wells. Country open with hills at a distance on right and left. Road pretty good, with exception of about half a mile in crossing the dry sandy bed of the nullah, which intersects it at the bih mile. 6.-A large bazar in Kote. Encamping ground on left of the road, opposite the small Fillage of Pootlee, which is a mile in auvance of Kote. Road good, except for a short dis- tanee near Kote, where it is heavy sand. Country as in last stage. The Sabee runs parallel to the road on the left. 7.-- A bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country as before. 8.- A large village and small bazar at foot of hill on right of road close on the left. Road pretty good until within 3 miles of Bhabra, when it becomes heavy and bad for carts. Ridges of hills on right and left. 9. -A large bazar Water from wells. The first 4 miles of road heavy, the remainder pretty good. The nuddies and nullahs are all fordable. At 7 miles pass near the large walled town of Shahpoora. Country hilly: 10.---A large walled town under a fortified hill. Supplies abundant. Water from wells. Road heary and bad for carts, particularly in passing through the Soorstee Ghattee, a long narrow pass in a ridge of low hills. The Bownee runs under Munohurpoor, has a small stream throughout the year and is fordable, except immediately after a heavy fall of rain ; it runs to join the Bangunga. li.-Supplies must be collected. Water from wells. Soil sandy and road heavy. Hills right and left at first, and then on left ouiy: 1o.-Small village. Water from wells and supplies from Jeypoor, distant 3 miles east. Jeypoor hills left, open country right. Soil sandy and road heavy. 13.-A middling village. Water from wells and supplies procurable. Country open, undulating. Soil sandy and roads heavy. 11.-A bazar. Water from wells. Country as in last stage. Road pretty good general- ly, heavy in some parts. 15.-Surplies and water plentiful. Country open. Soil sandy. Very little cultivation, No irees.' Road heavy. Ford the Bandee, little water, sandy bottom. 16 -A small village. Water from wells. Supplies procurable on due notice to civil authorities, Road pretty good. No cultivation, except immediately around village. A grass plain nearly the whole way. 17.-A large bazar and water plentiful. Road good, with exception of the passage of the Banas river, where it is heavy sand for some distance ; depth of water at this ford usually 2 feet. 18. -A small bazar and good water from two wells. Road very good. Country partially cultivated. 19.-A fortified town and large bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Pass through a range of hills about 3 miles from Nugur. 20.-A large bazar. Water plentiful. Road good, much grass jungle. Scarcely any cultivation. 21.-A bazar. Water abundant. Country undulating and covered with jungle. First half of road tolerably good, latter half rocky and uneven. Encamping ground south east of town near a fine lake, surrounded by low hills. 22.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road bad through jungle the whole way. Cross the Maize buddy at the end of the march, and encamp on its bank. Nullahs have steep banks and rocky uneven beds. 23.- Water and supplies abundant. Road good for about 5 miles, the remainder over large loose stones and rugged rocks through the Boondee Pass. Ground for encampmezt south of the town. 4.-A few buniahs' shops in this village. Supplies should be taken from Boondee or Kotah, according to the direction of the inarch. "Road good. Country undulated and co- sered with jungle. Cross the Tye nuddy at the end of the march by a stone causeway, and encamp on its bank. 5.-A small village on left bank of the Chumbul, opposite Kotah. Supplies from Kotah Water from the river. Road good. Country for the first 4 miles as in last stage, the re- inainder well cultivated. 26.-A fortified city on right bank of Chumbul, capital of the Kotah state, and residence of its Raja. Supplies and water abundant. Ground for encampment east of the city Cross the river by ferry. Plenty of boats procurable and ghat good on right bank, but steep and rocky on leit. 27.-A small village. Supplies must be collected by order of civil authority or taken or from Kotah. Water abundant, Road bad for carts over rocks and loose stones and through jungle. 2.-A small village. Water plentiful. Supplies from adjacent villages after due no. tice. Road stony and rough the greater part of the way. 29.-A small bazar, forming a long narrow street through which the road passes. Water from baolees and a nullah. Country undulated and well cultivated for the first 10 miles, it is then rocky and hilly for the remainder. koad good, with exception of the Muc- kandura pass, where it passes over rocks and large loose stones between hills covered with jungle for upwards of two miles. 132 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 144.-FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO MUTTRA. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Delhi* Kissen Dass ka Talae 11 0... ... 100.. Bullum- gurgh. Commissioner at S Furreedabad Delhi Peertullao or Peertal 3 2 3 13 4 Goorgaon British. Baminee Khera HORUL Chattah Jeyt Muttra Cantonment. 13 0 15 0 15 0 12 O 100 : : : : : : : : : 5 6 7 Muttra 8 Total... 971 4 miles. 1.-Supplies scanty, but procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. The road is very good for the first 5 miles, the remainder is heavy. Pass through the city of Delhi entering by the Cashmere gate and going out by the Turkooman gate. Pass the old Fort of Delhi and Humaion's tomb. 2,-A bazar. Water plentiful. A low rocky ridge runs parallel to the road on the right. Road bad for caris, intersected by numerous ravines and generally much cut up. 3.-A middle village. Water from tank and wells. Supplies should be taken on from Bullumgurh or Pulwul, according to the direction of the march. Road good for first 6 miles, remainder low and under water after rains. Pass Bullumgurh at 52, Thar Soutlee at 8, and Sickeree at 10 miles. 4.-A small village. Water from tanks and wells. A few buniahs' shops in the village, and supplies procurable from Pulwul and adjacent villages. Road god Pass Bugoloh at 2, Alahpoor at 41, Pulwul at 7, and Burolah at 11 miles. 5,- A town and bazar. Water from tank and wells. Road good. Pass Metrolee at 23, Kuttehla at 5, and Buncharee at 91 miles. 6.-A town and bazar, Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Pass Kotebund at 41, Kossee, a town and bazar, at 8, Ajeejpoor at 101, and Deothan at 12 miles. 7.- A small village. Supplies procurable from adjacent villages after dne notice. from wells and a tank. Road heavy. Pass Semree at 4, Billowtee at 5, Akbarpoor at 65, and Chowmah at 9 miles. 8.-Road heavy sand and bad for wheel carriages. Pass through the city of Muttra. •The road by the Kuttub Minar is better than the more direct one by Kissen Dass ka Talao, and the distances are to the Kuttub 13 1, and thence to Pureedabad 12 4. Water 1 ::} Jey- British. poor. No. 145.-FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO NEEMUCH. Reinwal, as in No. 181 4 143 Phaggee 10 4/Bandee 1 Chouslah 12 4 Mashee 2 Malpoorah 11 4 1 G. Go's Agent 3 Deogong 14 0 Ajmere Kekree 13 4 1 5 Koderah 14 0 3 6 Shahpoora 15 4 Kharri 2 NEEMUCH, as in 9810 No. 12 33 Total..) 3711 0 miles. 1.-A town and bazar, Road heavy in parts, Country open and partially cultivated. Ford the Bandee nuddy. Little water. Sandy bottom. 2.-A small village.' Water plentiful. Supplies from diggee and neighbouring villages. Road heavy in some parts, in others very good. 3.-A large town. Water and supplies plentiful. Road good. VOL. 11.) 133 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 4.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Country, open and road very good. 5.-A large town. Supplies and water plentiful, Road very good. 6.-A small village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable after due notice. Road good 7.- A large walled town. Supplies and water abundant. Road good, with exception of a short distance near the Kharri nuddy. No. 146.–FROM DELHI CANTONMENT TO NUSSEERABAD. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 12 O... Jeypoor. Samote, as in No. 143 142 4 (Kaladehr or Kaladera Kurrumsir 12 4 G. G.'s Agent, Jobneer 100 Ajnere Akoda 13 0 Doodoo Rehlana 100.. 1 2 1 3 14 5 2 6 100... .. . Kishen- Consula 11 6 Mashee 17 British. gurh. Kanbpora 111 4.. ... 28 NUSSEERABAD 10 0.. 39 22 Total...' 243 2lmiles. 1.-A small village. Water from wells. Supplies procurable after due notice, and may be takeu on from Choumoo. Road good. Country hilly at first, but after the first 3 miles it becomes open and partially cultivated. Pass Choumoo at 6, Tankera at 84, and Jug. singhpoora at 10 miles. 2:-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Country open, undulated, and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Dass at 2, Raethúl at 8, and Buss at 11 miles. 3.-A town and bazar. Suupplies and water abundant. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Kheree Lowaro at 3, Moorleepora at 6, and Dhanas at 8 miles. 4.- Water plentiful. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Country un- dulated, Hills on left at a distance. Road pretty good. 5.-A large village and bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Couutry open and much undulated, and very partially cultivated. Road good. 6.-A small batar and water from wells. Country, and road as in last stage. 7.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country and road as above. &.-A small village. 10 shops and supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Country and road as before. 9.-Ditto ditto ditto. No. 147.-FROM DINAPOOR TO GHAZEEPOOR. To near Buxar, 1 as in No. 131 69 4 Near Kuruntadee 2 4 Ganges Ghazeepoor Mahomedabad 13 0... GHAZEEPOOR Cantt. 14 2 Bys00 AL... British 1 { : : : a: 1 2 2 3 4 Total... 992 1.-Supplies abundant after due notice. Cross the Ganges by ferry at Buxar, Good boats. 2.-Bazar. Water plentiful, Road good. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto, 134 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 148.-FROM DINAPOOR TO GORRUCKPOOR BY CHUPRAH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. r 2 3 Chuprah British. Lall Begwah 4 4 Ganges Singhee Bagh 90 CHUPRAH Civil 3) 10 4.. Station Seraya 14 0.. Maharajgunge 12 0 Sewan Allygunge 11 2 Burragong 14] o Dhaw Butwah 6! 4 Jerhie Simore 12 0... Kusseah 16 2 Chota Pocowlee 15 3 Gunduck Pipraitch 12 0... GORRUCKPOOR Cant. 11 4 4 5 6 27 8 29 2 10 Gorruckpoor 11 12 3 13 13 Total... 148) 7 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Cross the Ganges by ferry. 2.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road tolerably good along the left bank of the Ganges. 3.–Supplies and water abundant. Road very good. 4.-A small bazar, and supplies procurable in abundance from adjacent villages after due notice. Water plentiful, Road good. 5.-A good bazar and water from wells. Country level and well cultivated. Road good. 6.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 7.--Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Cross the Dhaw by temporary bridge under Allygunge. 8.-Small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from wells., Cross the Jerhie by temporary bridge Road pretty good. 9. --Supplies abundant after due notice; must be collected from neighbouring villages. 10.-Supplies abundant after due notice. Water plentiful. Country level, well cultivat- ed, and wooded with mangoe trees. Cross nullahs by temporary bridges. 11.- A bazar of a few shops, and supplies from neighbouring villages. Cross the river by ford and ferry. Country and road much the same as in last stage. 12.- 4 bazar. Water plentiful. Country level and well cultivated. Road good. 13.-Road heavy and bad, running through thick jungle nearly the whole way. Cross the nullahs by bridges. British. No. 149.-FROM DINAPOOR TO HAZAREĘBAGH. Bankipoor 7 0... 9 1 Patna Neema Nudawa or 2 Neema Nowada. ) 16 0 Pompoon... 1 Jehanabad 14 0... 1 3 Belah 16 0 2 4 GYAH 14 0 5 Kooslah 10 0 3 6 17 0.. 3 7 | Hazareebagh... S HAZAREEBAGH, as 43 2 No. 1 Gyah ... G. G.'s Agent Dunghye 11 Total...) 137) 21 miles. VOL. 11.] 135 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Supplies and water abundant. Road very good. Encampment near the Golah. 2-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Couniry flat and cultivated, principally rice. Road good. Cross the nuddy by ford and ferry. 3.-, bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. "Road good and country as in last stage. 4.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country flat and partially cultivated. Hills seen at a distance. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Country low, rice fields, with rocky hills. 6.- A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. 7-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road very good. Encamping ground rather confined N. B.-A better division of the distance from Gyah to Dunghye is Bood Gyah 64 miles, Surwah 104 miles, Dunghye 10 miles. No. 1492.-FROM DINAPOOR TO JUMALPOOR BY RAJMU- HUL AND MALDA. Dist. Territory. Ciril Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. "} 1 2 1 3 14 5 British. Bhaugulpoor Rajmahul, as in No. 88 Manickchuck Nougureah Maldah MALDAH Mohudypoor Seebgunge Huzroopoor Nuwab- gunge Godagurry Bauleah fo ... Komur poor or Ko- meerpoor JUMALPOOR, as in No. 90 214 7... 50 Ganges 12 0 Bagiretty ... 12 0... 12 0 12 0... Maha 12 0 Nuddy 9 0... 10 on 6 31 7 143 4 41 Total...l 442 3] miles. 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Cross the Ganges by ferry at Rajmahul. 2.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road passable only in the dry season, being inundated in the rains. The nuddy is fordable except in the rains. 3.-Supplies and water in great abundance. Road as in last stage. Nullah fordable in dry season. 1.-Supplies and water abundant. The road is raised throughout, and is very good. Nullah crossed by wooden bridge. 5.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Road good. Nullah deep and rapid in the rains, and in dry weather the banks are steep. No public ferry. Boats can be collected in a day, and must be paid for. 6.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road tolerably good in dry season, but inundated in - the rains. There are 2 public ferry boats at Nuwabgunge ghat on the Mahanuddy, aod a sufficient number can be collected on hire in a day or two to cross a regiment. 7.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Road passable with ease in dry weather. 7 01... 8 2... 1 British. No. 150.-FROM DINAPOOR TO KATHMANDOO. Patna ... Bankipoor HAJEEPOOR Lallgunge 14 0... Muzufferpoor ... Singhea Buckrah 13 o... Dewree or Deorea ... 13 o Byah near 2 3 4 136 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. 14 0 100 100 voor Nos. 8 British. Chuprah 9 Sahibgunge Boputpoor Purkowleea SEGOWLEE or Su- gowlee Bella Mijereah Moorlee Bissowleea Beecheakoh Hetoundah 100... 7 o Sekraneh... Tillawee 2 기이 ​Nuddy 8 0 10 0... 12 0 13 o Kurro Raptee 13| 4 crossed 22 times 8 0... 7 0 ::: : : : : 10 11 12 13 14 Bheempedee 15 Nepal Resident at Kathmandoo Tambeh Kaunnee Chitlong Thancote KATHMANDOO Re-2 sidency ::: 16 17 18 61 0... 71 0... 19 20 Total.../ 197) 6'miles. 1.-Supplies and water abundant. Cross the Ganges by public ferry, opposite Patna. Plenty of good boats procurable. 2:-Supplies procurable. Water abundant. Couutry well cultivated and thickly studded with villages. Road good. 3.-Ditto ditto ditio ditto. 4.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 6.--Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 7.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 8.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. There is a bungalow and depôt belonging to the resident of Nepal, on the bank of the Sekraneh nuddy, I mile north of Segow lee. A dâk Mutsuddee stationed here. 9. The Sekraneh is fordable in 21 feet water during the fair season, but in the rains it overflows its banks on the north, and reaches nearly to Bella. 10.-Open country. Road indifferent, 11.-Ditto ditto. 12.-In the Terrai, on border of great forest. Water here very bad. 13.—This stage lies entirely through the great forest. Beecheakoh is in the channel of a torrent, Road level and good, but occasionally obstructed by fallen trees. There is a good Durumsala, (built of brick and tiled) on a rising ground at the foot of the first hills. The Khola or bed of the Beecheakoh torrent affords pretty good encamping ground in the dry months, and a supply of clear wholesome water. 14.-This stage takes up the bed of the torrent, and over the Chureeaghatty range of hills at 8 miles, thence an easy descent and pretty good road through a forest to Hetoun- dah. Carriage cattle cannot go beyond this place. Cross the Kurro nuddy 14 miles below Hetoundah in 2 feet water. There is a Durumsala for the accommodation of travellers here, and a good spot of ground for a tent. 15.—This stage goes up the bed of the Raptee torrent between hills of great height, covered with nearly impervious wood over-hanging the road on either side. There is also a Durumsala for the accommodation of travellers here. 16.- This stage takes over the Cheesapanee mountain. Steep ascent and descent. Cheesagurhee fort near the top. Tambeh Kaunnee is in the bed of a torrent. 17.- This stage takes up the bed of the Tambeh Kaunnee torrent between mountains, then over the Ekdumta mountain into the Chitlong valley. Fine encamping ground in a romantic spot about a mile in advance of Chitlong. 18.-This stage takes over the Chandra-Gir mountain, a difficult ascent and descent to Thankote in the valley of Nepal. Good encamping ground and provisions procurable. 19.-This stage is entirely in the valley of Nepal. Ground very broken. Road pretty good, leads through the city or on its left. VOL. 11] 137 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 151.–FROM DINAPOOR TO MULLYE BY MUZUFFER- POOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British. 1 To Hajeepoor, as in No. 150... Etbarkhan ke Serai.. Muzuffernugur.. Mircha (Muzufferpoor Mullye, as in No. 91 15) 2 8 3... 16.2 Byah 101 31 50 4 ::: 2 1 2 2 10 Total.../ 100 6 miles. 1.-A small bazar. Water from wells. Wood and earthen pots scarce, and must be collected. Road good. 2.-Supplies scarce, but procurable after due notice. The Byah and nullahs are fordable for about 6 months in the year, and are crossed by ferry or temporary bridges during the remainder of the year. Road good. 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Road usually excellent. No. 152.- FROM DINAPOOR TO PURNEAH BY POOSAH, DURBUNGA AND NATHPOOR. To Hajeepoor, as in No. 150.. 15 0 Kundhoulee 12 0.. 1 Hurlochunpoor 2 12 Byah 1 2 Sookee Poosah 11 0 Gunduck} 2 3 Chuck Missee 8 0 4 Little Bag DURBUNGAH 8 0 muttee & Buckiah.. Kumlah Puttee 2. 6 Puttee... Jewutch Kumlah, Oojan 12 0 7 branch of Bejah 12 0 Tiljooga Soopoul 12 0 and 19 Muhnee Mahespoor 14 0.. 1) 10 Munglee Serai 14 o Daose 111 NATHPOOR 80.. 1 12 Gurreah 5 o Koosee 1 13 Purneah Syfgunge 11 o Kumlah 3 14 Hansah or Goon- 11 0.. 15 muttee Jagaillee 12 0... 16 PURNEAH 14 o Khata 17 British. 20 Total... 201) 6 miles. T PART I, VOL. II, 138 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road inundated in rains, and much out of repair. 2.-Supplies must be collected. Water abundant. Byah and Nullah fordable during half the year, and passed by ferry or temporary bridges during the other half. 3.-A good bazar. Water plentiful. Cross the Little Guaduck by ferry at the end of the march. Nullah fordable except in the rains. 4.- A small village. Supplies niust be collected. 5. - Supplies and water in great abuudance. Cross the river by ferries, the latter at the end of the stage. 6.- A small village. Sapplies must be collected. Water plentiful. There are boats in abundance on the Runlah anu jewutch, and more can be collected when required; the lata ter partakes more of the nature of an extensive jheel than a nuddy, and is fordable, ex- cept during the rains and for a short time after. 7.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good; in this branch of the Kumlah there is water only for 4 inonths in the rains. 8.-Supplies and water plentiful after due notice. Road good. 9.-Supplies and water abundant after due notice. Road goud. Cross Tiljooga by ferry. The Muhnce becomes dry after the rains, 10.-Supplies scarce and must be collected. Nullah fordable. ll.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Cross nuddy by ferry: 12.-Supplies and water abundant. Nullah' fordable: 13.–Supplies and water procurable in abundance, Cross the river by public ferry and nullah by ford. Road mostly across heavy savd in the dry bed of the river during the dry season. The Koosee is divided into 3 channels at this ghat, at each of which boats are kept up. 14.-Supplies procurable without difficulty after due notice. Road indifferent. Nullah fordable. “Kundah is fordable in dry season, and boats ply on it in rains. 15.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 16.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 17.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. River and nullah are fordable in dry season, and boats ply on them in the rains. No. 153.-FROM DINAPOOR TO SHEERGHATTY. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Gyah, as in No. 149.. 67 0 10 0 1 British Gyah { SHELEGHATTY 11 0 2 7 Total... 88' 0 miles. 1.-Small village. Supplies from surrounding villages. Road good. 2.-Road good, and supplies abundant. Prom Sheerghatty to Chittra two stages, viz. Looseengah 16 miles, and Chitira 10 miles. Road pretty good. At the 6th mile in the stage, the road leads up a Ghat about a mile in length, not very steep, but hackeries require assistance in ascending it. No. 154.–FROM ETAWAH CANTONMENT TO FUTTEHGURH. Moonjh 131 4/Singoor ... 11 1 Etawah Kissunee 12 0... 2 Binseah 11 o Rind 3 Left Bank Kalli Eesun & Futtehgurhi Nuddy 104 Kalli Bhorekpoor Nuddy FUTTEHGURH 14 4... British. near 5 Total.../ 611 4 miles. 1.-A large village on a Mound, about of a mile to the right of the road. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water from wells. Road good. Nuddy and nullah fordable. 4.-A small village. Supplies from adjacent yillages. Water from wells. Road pretty good. VOL. 11.] 139. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 3.-A large village and bazar. Water from a jheel and wells. Road good. Nuddy fondable. 4-Supplies from Bhorek poor and adjacent villages, and from Chibberamow, distant 3 miles south-west. Water from the Kally Nuddy. Ford the Eesun, and pass the Kally by ferry or temporary bridge of boats. 5.-Road very narrow, and heavy sand in several places. No. 155.-FROM ETAWAH CANTONMENT TO GWALIOR RESIDENCY. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. M. F. Nullahs. - Nos. British Etawah Bindeapoor r Birgowah Bhind Maigowah or Ma- hengwah Gohud 6 0.... 12 0... Scindeås. Resident at Gwalior... 12 0 Jumna Chumbul 11 6 and Ko- 2 haree ... ...... 3 4 13 6... 5 Baislee 11 4 twice & 6 Omrar 8 6 7 8 0 Soowanreka 8 Bahaderpoor 1 ... Juruirwa GWALIOR Residency. 8 Total... 83 6 miles. 1.-A small village. Water from wells. Supplies must be collected. Cross the Jumna by ferry just below the town of Etawah. Road to the ghat through ravines, and after pass- ing the river it winds through deep narrow ravines for about 3 miles, and is in many parts of this distance barely wide enough for one cart. After quitting the ravines the road is good and passes through a higlily cultivated country. 2. -Supplies procurable after due notice to Gwalior authorities. Encampment on right bank of the Koharee on broken uneven ground. Extensive ravines on both' banks of this nuudy. Cross the Chunibul by 'ferry. Fordable for elephants and camels in December. Road indiferent. 3.-Large town. Supplies and water abundant. Encampment near a tank on west side of the town. Road inditierent. 4.-Supplies procurable from surrounding villages. · Water from wells. Road good. Country open. 5.- á larve walled town, on the south, or right bank of the Baislee Nuddy. Supplies and water abundant. Encampinent on north bank of the river opposite the Town. Road good. 6.-Suppli must be collected from surrounding villages Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Ford the Baisle at the commencement of the March and again about half way. The Oinrar occurs at the end of stage, and the encampment is on its left bank, immediately opposite to Baladerpoor. 7.--Smali village. Supplies must be collected. Water from the Omrar Nuddy which runs close to the village. "Road good. Fine encamping ground north of the village. 8.-Supplies and water lentiful. Encamping ground close to the residency. Road pretty good. Passes through the old town of Gwalior, north of the fort. No. 156.–FROM ETAWAH CANTONMENT TO LUCKNOW BY BELAH AND NANAMOW GHAT. I Gopeegunge 11 41... Etawah 1 1 Etarolee 8 4 Singoor 2 Bicarah 100 Belah 1 Belah 10 4 Rind Jainpoor 12 4 Cawnpoor Mukunpoor 9 ol... 6 NANANOW 8 4 Eesun 7 British, ::: 140 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Oooo | Nos. ii: Oude. Resident at Lucknow... Nobutgunge Near TUCKEAH Meahgunge NOELGUNGE Near Futtehgunge... LUCKNOW Cantt. 2 4 Ganges 14 0... 10 4 ... 100 Sye 8 0 11 o Goomty 13 Total... 132 Olmiles. 1.-Supplies abundant. Water plentiful and good. Road good through a fertile country. 2.--Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. Country and Road as in last stage. 3.-Supplies &c. as in last stage. Good water rather scarce. Country and road as above, 4.-A bazar. Water abundant. Country and road as before. 5.--Supplies from Tutteah and other neigbouring villages. Water rather scarce but goud. Country and road as before. 6.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road bad, being heavy sand in parts and intersected by ravines in others. Country but partially cultivated. 7.-A small bazar on right bank of the Ganges. Water plentiful. Road rather heavy. Country fertile. 8.-A small bazar. Supplies abundant after due notice. Water plentiful. Cross the Ganges by ferry. Good boats. 9.-A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road indifferent. 10.-A town and bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good. 11.-A good bazar and water abundant. Road good. Cross the Sye and Nullah' by bridges. Good ground for encampment on west of the village, where the road from Cawnpore to Lucknow joins. No. 157.-FROM ETAWAH CANTONMENT TO MUTTRA. Etimodpoor, as No. 8 reversed... 591 0 Agra Kundowlee Buldeo 15 6 Muttra MUTTRA Cantonment 120 121 0... British { 1 2 3 4 Total... 986 miles. 1.-A small bazar and water from wells. Road pretty good. Country open and partially cultivated. 2.- A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Road and country as before. 3.-Road sandy and heavy in some parls. Country as above. The Jumna is crossed by a bridge of boats, except during the rains when plenty of good ferry boats are readiiy procured. No. 158.-FROM ETAWAH CANTONMENT TO MYNPOORIE CANTONMENT. Etawah Machera 12 4 Singoor 1 Rutbhanpoor 2 Mynpoorie 100 Eesun British ... 10 O Cantt. 3 Totol... 32 4 miles. 1.- Supplies must be collected. Water from kutcha wells. Road good. 2.-Road pretty good. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. 3.-Road good-pass through part of the town of Mynpoorie. Ford the nullah an d cross the Eesun by a pucka bridge, VOL. II.) 141 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 159.FROM FORT WILLIAM-TO DIAMOND HARBOUR Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. 7 0 100 British. 1 Calcutta Thackoor Pookria ... Rajhath DIAMOND HAR- BOUR Ghat at Godowns 12 0... 1 3 Total... 29 miles. 1.-A made road the whole way. Supplies procurable in abundance, and water plentiful. N. B.—This distance may be made into two stages by halting at Bishenpoor. No. 160.-FROM FORT WILLIAM TO MIDNAPOOR BY BUDGE BUDGE. Calcutta ..Budge Budge 12 0... 1 Oolabareah 5 0 Hooghly 2 Hooghly Right Bank of the 3 Pamooda River 7) 5 Damooda.. Right Bank of the Roopnarain River 7 6 Roopnarain... 4 at Koila Ghat ... Right Bank of the Khatan or Kossye Midnapoor 11 0 Khatan 5 River at Panch- koora Ghat Debrah 6 Moonibgurh 8 01 7 (MIDNAPOOR 8 0 Kossye 8 British. 90... 8 Total... 683 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable. Water abundaut. A good made road the whole way. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the Hooghly by ferry at the end of the stage. 3.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. A good made road. Cross the Damooda by ferry at the end of the stage. 4.-Ditto ditto ditto. The Roopnarain is crossed at the end of the stage by ferry. 5.- Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the river at the end of stage the by ferry. N. B.-The road from Tumlook joins here. 6.-Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Good made road. 7.-Diito ditio ditto. 6. -Ditto ditto ditio. Cross the Kussye at the end of the 20 mile by ferry in the rains and by ford during the fair season. No. 161.-FROM FUTTEHGURH TO LUCKNOW CANTON- MENT BY NANAMOW GHAT. Meerunke Serai as 33 2 No. 114 94 British Cawnpoor 7 0... 1 LUCKNOW CANTT. 61 41 as in No. 156 ... :{Nanamow 11 Total..! 111 2 miles. 1.--Road rather heavy. Pass Mendua or Merua at 1, and Bacootee at 21 miles. 142 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 162.–FROM FUTTEHGHUR TO MEERUTT BY KHAS- GUNGE, ATROWLEE, AND BOOLUNDSHEHUR, Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. 8 6. : 7 2... Futtehgurh 4 15 4 12 4 100 101 o. Budaon British. 9 0... Beroun Newabgunge Allygunge Parowlee Sirpoora Umapoor KHASGUNGE S Booragawn Atrowlee Chourera Shikarpoor Boolundshehur Meerutt, as in No. 35 Ally Gurh ... 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 3 15 2 Neemnuddy ... 10 5 14 2 ſ Kalli 13 0 1 Nuddy 42 4 Boolundshehur 12 16 Total..( 182 0 miles. 1.-A small village ; water from wells. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Furruckabad. Road in many parts heavy and had for carts. Enter the city of Furrucka- bad by the Lall Durwaza at 31, and pass out of ditto at 51 miles. The road through the city is broad and good. 2.-A small bazar. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country open and partially cultivated. Road heavy and bad for garts. Pass Mahomed poor at }, Bey at 5, and Sirmoura at 6} miles. 3.-A town and good bazar surrounded by a low mud wall. Supplies and water plenti- ful.' Country flat, cultivation and patches of bush jungle. Road heavy and bad for carts. Ruts deep. Pass Beerpoor at 11, Salempoor at 3, Teoree at 3ļ, Futtuinpoor at 44, Bulli- poor at 4., Kulwara at'54, Achera at 64, Jerhuree at 71, Nongawn at 9, and Amrowlee at 104 miles. 4. -A small village. Supplies scanty but procurable from Doomrie 23 miles west. Good well water. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Buchowra at 3!, Joora at 7, Derowe lee at 74 and Kussowlee at 10% miles. 5. -A midding village and small bazar. Water from wells and tanks. Country and road as above only rather more bush jungle. Pass Kulbureea at 17, Surawul at 54, Nibona at 63, Soonera at 8], and Pahlooi at 9 miles. 6.-A small bazar and supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country and road us above. Pass Raepoor at 2, Urjunpoor at 5%, and Bachmai at 7 miles. Colector's Kutcheree close to Sirpoora. 7.-A large town and bazar, Good well water. Country open and undulated. Soil sandy and partially cultivated. Road very heavy and bad for carts. Pass Luckmeepoor at 5 miles. 8.-Six Buniahs shops, and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells and the Neemnuddy, Country open. Soil sandy and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Biiraon at 4, Dhoolva at 7, and Beloumna at 104 miles. 9.-A large open town.. Suplies and water abundant. Country open and partially cul- tivated, some patches of thin bush jungle between Churra and Tentha. Road pretty good. Pass Bahaturpoor at 1}, Dhunsari at 2, Churra at 3, and Tentha at 9 miles. At 1 of a mile from Booragawn cross the Neemnuddy by pretty good ford. 10.-A middling village 4 mile to right of the road. Encamping ground on left bank of the Kaili nuddy immediately opposite the village. Supplies must be collected, and are procurable from Pururawulee and other adjacent villages. Water from the Kalli. Coun- try open and but partially cultivated, Road good. Pass Kazimabad at 44, Reapoor at 54, and Pururawulee at 8 miles. 11. A town and good bazar. Water from wells. Country open and partially cultiva ed. Road a pretty good hackery track. Pass Burowla at 5, Lalbir or Lollmeir at 8, and Burrason at 114 miles. 12. - Country and road as in last stage. Pass Kylawun at 23, Saleempoor at 5, Tirsoon at 67, Mukeempoor at 81. and Dhutara at 9} miles. Cross the Kalli under Boolundshehur by a good ferry boat which plies here in the rains, VOL. 11.) 143 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 163.–FROM FUTTEHGURH TO MYNPOORIE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. "htoputa je 1 Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 13 4 1 Futtehgurh 11 € S British. Mahomedabad Bewur s Bowgong Mynpoorie Cantt. Kalli { Nuddy 8 0... Mynpoorie 7 0 4 Total.. 402 miles. 1.-A bazar. Water plentiful, Country low, flat aud cultivated. Road generally much cut up and bad. 1 ] No. 164.–FROM FUTTEHGURH TO SEETAPOOR. S Left Bank Ganges Britis! Futtehgurh at Hussein poor 2 4 Ganges Ghat r Kurruckpoor 6 O Ramgunga Pawley 94. Shahabad 12 0 Gurra Antowrah 84 Resident at Peyaunee 93 Lucknow Left Bank Goomty 8 Goomty near Moondha Mahowly 11 Cl... SEETAPOOR Cantt.. 16 0 2 3 4 5 6 1 Oude. 7 18 9 Total. . 82 ;l miles. 1.-Sapplies from Futtehyurh. Water from the Ganges. Cross the river by ferry and pass over a heavy sand in its bed. %-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country, open, flat and cultivated. Road pretty good, cross the Ramgunga by ferry at the end of the stage. 3. —A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country and road as in last stage. Ford the nullah. 4.-A small bazar and supplies procurable after due notice to the Oude authorities. Country partia ly cultivated and road bad Water good and plentiful. Cross the Gurra by ferry, and ford about 1 of mile E. of Pawley. 5.-A small bazar and supplies procurable as above. Water plentiful. Country flat and partially cultivated. Some bush jungle. Road bad. The nullah thigh deep. 6.-A small bazar. Supplies must be collected when required in large quantities. Water good and plentiful. Country flat, thin cultivation and wood jungle. Road basl. 7.-Supplies procurable from Moondha, and other neighùouring villages, Cross the Goomty at the end of the march by for:d. Usual depth of water in dry season 3 feet. Country open, flat and pretty well cultivated. Road tolerably good. Moondha is 4 miles off. 8.- A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Open country, partly cultivated, Road indifferent, first part sandy. Cross the nuilah by temporary bridge. Water about 4 feet deep. No. 165.-FROM FUTTEHGURH TO SHAHJEHANPOOR CANTONMENT. Jellalabad, as No. 681 28 Ramgunga British Shahjehanpoor Kant 11 01 1 SHAHJEUANPOOR Ct. 10 Gurra 2 3 Total.. 49 31 miles. 144 (PART 1. TJIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small bazar. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Country flat, open and very partially cultivated, Road indifferent. Pass Obereea at 25, Pureona at 34, Arooa at 5, and Bharera at 6 miles. 2.-Road pretty good. Country as in last stage. Pass Piproul and Azeezgunge. Cross the Gurra by ferry under Azeezgunge, and from thence to the lines the road leads through the city of Shahjehan poor. No. 166.–FROM GHAZEEPOOR TO GORRUCKPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Ghazeepoor 1 2 156 Bysoo & Munghie 101 2 ... 8 4. Surjoo 100 13 Gogra 3 Azimgurh Kahgudeepoor Bahadergunge Left Bank of the Surjoo at Mhow . s Ghosee Dhooree Burhul Gugya or Ghuga Bellipar GORRUCKPOOR Cant. British. 4 12 0.. Gorruckpoor 6 7 100 12 o Amee & Raptee 8 Total.. 911 4 miles. 1.- A small village. Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plenti. ful. Road good, At 7 miles cross the Bysoo by good ford, and at 12 miles cross the Mun- ghie by a pucca bridge. 2.-A large village and bazar on the right bank of the Surjoo river. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Cross dry nullah at the end of the stage. 3.- A large straggling town on the right bank of the Surjoo, which is crossed by very good ford just below the town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good through a par- tially cultivated country. 4.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Road pretty good. 5.—A bazar on left bank of the Gogra river, which is here confined to one channel, and is crossed by 10 good ferry boats. 6.- A small village. Supplies scarce, but procurable after due notice. Water plentiful. Road tolerably good. The nullahs are passed by ferry free of expense to troups and public stores. 7.--Ditto ditto ditto. 8.-Cross the Aurnee by a temporary bridge, and the Raptee by ferry at the Bhowapar- ghat. Road pretty good from November to June, but quite impassable in the rains. British No. 167.-FROM GHAZEEPOOR TO HAZAREEBAGH. Zumaneah* 100 Ganges 11 01 Benares NOBUTPOOR 9 4 Hazareebagh, as in 161/ 6 No. 1 Ghazeepoor ..{Cuddasur 1 2 3 } 10 Total... 192 2 miles. 1.-A large town on right bank of the Ganges. Supplies and water plentiful. Cross the Ganges by ferry and nullah by a bridge. Road pretty good. 2.-Supplies procurable. Road indifferent. 3.- A bazaar and water plentiful, Road indifferent. * N. B. There is a more direct route to Sasseram thus : Right bank Ganges 21, Zuma- neah 10, Kaytanee 104 Moutanee 11, Koorumabad 12, and Sasseram 12, fording the Ky- Tuninassa and Durgo w tee rivers, VOL. 1.) 145 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 168.—FROM GHAZEEPOOR TO JUANPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Ghazeepoor British. Nundgunge 101 2 Syedpoor 12 4 Ganghie .. Behree 81 0 Chandwuck 71 0 Mooftigunge 12 0' JAUNPOOR Cantt. 11 O Goomty 8 1 2 2 3 4 Jaunpoor 6 Total.. 606 miles. 1.-Supplies easily procured. Water good, and road very good. Encamping ground confined and bad. 2.-Road Fery good. Supplies abundant, and good water from wells. 3.-Road good. Supplies abundant, and water from 2 pucca wells. Nullahs shallow, 4.-A fine road. Supplies and water abundant. Cross the Goomty by fine pucca bridge, and encamp near the Cantonment. No. 169.–FROM GHAZEEPOOR TO MULLYE BY CHUPRAH AND MUZUFFERPOOR. 12 0. British. Mahomedabad 14 2 Bysoo 21 Lutteodhee or Sut-? 10 O Munghie 51 2 toodhee Left Bank of the Ghazeepoor Surjoo, opposite 10 o Surjoo 13 Burragong Bulleah 8 o'Kuttehur.. 4 Huldee 1010 4 5 Mudbunee 5 6 Left Bank Dewah Dowah or River at Manjee 61 01 7 Ghat Gográ. S Chúprah Chupra Civil Sta- 12 0.. 8 tion Runpoora or Ry-? 10 O... 9 poor Mukair 12 01 10 Buckra 8oGunduk, il Muzufferpoor... Koorunjadhee 19 0Byah 12 Muzufferpoor 101 0... Mullye, as in No. 91. 501 41 17 Total... | 182 61 miles. 1.-A bazar and water plentiful. Road good. Temporary bridge and fords. 2.–A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected by previous notice. Water from wells. Roau pretty good. Cross the nuddy and nullahs by bridges. 3.-Supplies and water abundant, Road good. Surjoo crossed by ford and ferry. Nul. lah inconsiderable. 4-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful. Road good. The Kuttehur is crossed at the end of the stage by ferry in the rains, and by a temporary bridge during the remainder of the year. 5.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected from a considerable distance. Water sufficient and road good, Nallahs dry after the rains, PART I. VOL. II. U 13 146 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 6.- Ditto ditto ditto, 7.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Cross the river by ferry. Plenty of good boats. 8.-Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. 9.-Good road. Water plentiful and supplies procurable from adjacent villages. 10.-Road very good in dry season, but partly under water in the rains. Supplies and water plentiful. 11.-Road pretty good. Cross the Gunduk at Rewah Ghat. Public ferry, and no charge for crossing troops. A bazar and water plentiful. 12. -Supplies must be collected. The Byah is fordable about 6 months in the year, and boats are procurable when it is not. Road good, 13.-Good road. Supplies and water abundaut. No. 170.-FROM GOONAH TO MHOW. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 16 4 1 Nuddy .12 12 0 Parbuttee 3 1 2 3 12 0... 11 41... 70... 4 5 5 Rajgurh & Scindea's. Dewas. NursingurhScindea's Territory. ... ... 6 RAGOOGURH Resident at Gwa- Burkhera lior Chachowra Sundoria Beorah BHOPALPOOR Old ? Cantonment Pol. Agent at Kujneer Sehore Golautee Left Bank of the Kalli Sind, oppo- site Sarungpoor Soneyra SHAHJEHANPOOR 11 Ajnar 3 9 2 Neewuj ... 4 10 3 ... 2 7 8 81 0 Kalli Sind. 4 9 Jonkur Tonk, (Purbia) Resident at In Dewas { DEWAS dore Duckaitch Indore Mhow Canton- ument 93... 4 10 7) 2 Teelur or Cheelur. 2) 11 15 i Lookunder 10 12 9, 1 2 13 12 1 Chota Kalli Sind 2 14 9 6 Sipra 3 15 13] o Kaan 51 16 13 6 Gumbeer... 5 17 Holkar's. 17 Total... 185| 4 miles. 17 1.-A good bazar and water abundant. Country hill and dale the whole way. Road a good hackery track. Pass through town of Leynugur Bujrungurh at 11 miles. 2.-Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road indifferent. Cross the Parbuttee river by a pretty good ford near the end of the stage. 3.-A good bazar and water plentiful from wells. Road an indifferent hackery track. 4.-Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages. Water from wells and a nullah. Road stony and bad through a dreary country with alternate hill and dale. 5.-A bazaar and water from the Ajnar river. Road an indifferent hackery track. 6.--Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water from the Neewuj river. Hackery track very circuitous. Country bleak, stony, and undulated, 7.-A good sized village. Small bazar and market on Sundays. Water plentiful from wells and nullabs. Road good. Country much undulated and covered with grass jungle, thinly interspersed with dak trees. Pass Dabree at 1, Banskheree at 3, and Koo. rea at 6 miles. The Neewuj is crossed by ford soon after starting, 200 yards wide, banks steep, and bottom of rock and loose stones, depth of water in dry season from 1 to 1į feet. VOL. 11.) 147 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 8.-A middling village. Two buniahs. Supplies must be collected from surrounding vil- lages. Water from wells. Country open and slightly undulated. Little cultivation, ex- cept immediately round the villages. Road good. Pass Dobree at 24, Amlaroree at 4, Dhamunda at 6, and Sheerpora at 94 miles. 9.-Sarungpoor is a large open town on right bank of the Kalli Sind river. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Country open and partially cultivated. Pass Borak beree at 21, and near Tilleinee at 6 miles. Cross the river at the end of the march by ford. Bed 400 yards wide, bottom of rock in ledges and sand. Water shallow during the dry scason. 10.-A small bazar and supplies from neighbouring villages. Country level and pretty well cultivated. Road good and no impediment, except at the first nullah, which is miry at the ghat and bad for carts. Pass Punwarah at 6, and Peerk heree at 8 miles. 11.- A large town on left bank of the Teelur river. Supplies and water abundant. Ground for encampment on the left bank of the nuddy, just above the town. Country undulated and raised into low ridges and knolls. Cross the nuddy by good ford at the end of the march. 12.-A bazar and market on Mondays. Water plentiful. Country hilly. Road rough, and covered with small loose stones. Pass Duflode at 3, Bhullakheree at 4, Ankia at 6, Dewanee at 74, and Serowlee at 11 miles. The rivers and nullahs are all crossed by good fords. 13.-A middling village. Three buniahs, and supplies from surrounding village. Water from wells and a nullah. Country open, undulated, and pretty well" cultivated. Soil black mould, and road full of fissures and holes. Pass Peeplea at 44, and Bherwakheree at 8 miles. 14.-A large town and bazar. Water and supplies plentiful, Country and soil as in last stage. Road pretty good. Pass Seah at 6, and Bilawulee at 9 miles. Nuddies and nullahs fordable. 15.-A middling village. Five buniahs, and supplies from surrounding villages. Water abundant. Road good. The country between Dewas and the Sipra is slightly undulated and slopes to westward from a cluster of hilis called the Nagde Pahar, lying to eastward of the road, and distant from it 31 miles. Soil a deep black mouid and pretty well cultivated. Pass Bowlea at 3, Resoo) poor at 34, Lohar Peeplea at 55, and Peerkurarea at 7 miles. Cross the Sipra by rough ghat (ford), but not difficult. 16.–Road tolerably good in dry weather. Pass Lusolda at 1, Manglea at 4, Tillawulee at 5, and Jellode at 7į miles. Kaan and nullahs fordable. 17.-Ser. No. 9. No. 171.–FROM GOONAH TO NEEMUCH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Khan's. Scindea's Territory. Ameer Durnowda 16 0 Resident at Gwa. lior Bholone or Boolain CHUBRA 90 Parbuttee ili 8 4 Bytaillee ... 21 2 3 4 : 5 Kotah. Barode Sartul Benaee TAL | Itchnawar Pol. Agent at JALRA Patun Kotah Left Bank of the Ahoo at Bulwara. ) Oosarah Mullar- gunge 10 0 12 0 12 0 Purwan & Chappee 13 0... 101 0.. 7 6 Ahoo .. i: 6 7 .. 5 8 Scindea's. 10 4 Rewah .. 119 148 (PART 1. TUE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. \F. } Scindea's Holkar's. BHANPOORAH, (west Gate of) Bara Bhumoree Rampoorah, (west-/ ern Gate of) Kuckresir 10 4 Rewah 4 10 14 6 Nuhsir ... 11 11 9! i Chumbul... 4 12 11 o Toolsee 11 13 Pol. Agent at Neemuch ... 13 6... Sawan NEEMUCH Cantt. 11 14 9 15 13 01. 16 Total.../ 1807 miles. 1.-A small village. Scanty supplies, and must be collected. Water from a nuddy. 2.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road rough and bad over a broken country, mostly covered with low jungle and cut up by ravines-at the 3rd mile pass through a break in low range of hills, 3.-Capital road through a well cultivated country. 4.-First part of road good. Cross a range of hills by a bad ghat, and latter half of road very stony. 5.-Cross the Purwan about half way. Pass through Eklaira at 8 miles, and cross the Chappee at the end of the stage. 6.-A good hackery road, ---by a short cut a stony ghat is crossed about half way. 7.-A large walled town and excellent bazar. About haiſ way cross a range of hills by a stony ghat; the hackery road is some distance further but good. 8.-Supplies from Bulwara and other adjacent villages. Water from the Ahoo, which is crossed by ford at the end of the march. Country undulated and partially cultivated. Hills on right. Road pretty good. Pass Gondul at 4, and Sumraee at Gf miles. 9.-Four buniahs' shops, and supplies from surrounding villages. Well water plentiful. Country open, undulated, and well cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Kulleakheree at 5, Panchakheree at 7 miles. 10,-A large walled town and good bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country open, undulated, and partially cultivated. No jungle. Hills on right at end of stage. Road stony in parts and indifferent generally, Pass Chota Lardee at 21, Osiruah at 41, and Rullumpoorah at 8 miles. 11.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country undulated and rocky in parts; partial cultivation. Hills on right at some distance. Road rugged and stony in parts. Pass Burkheree at 41, Kowlah at 6, Rewalkee at 81, Dublah at 10, and Tailah at 11 miles. 12.-A large walled town and bazar. Water plentiful. Surface of the country uneven, Soil rocky and stony. Road rugged. Pass Chota Bhumoree at II, Goojrut at 3), and Semuree at 5f miles. The Chumbul at Goojrut ghat is fordable after the 1 st of November, and during the rains there is a ferry boat of 400 maunds in attendance ; the banks of the river are steep, and its bed of rocks and loose stones. 13,-A bazar. Water and supplies plentiful. Country much undulated and rising in abrupt swells in some place. Hills on right. Soil stony and road rough. Pass Koonduleah at 7, and Phoolporah at 9f miles. 14-A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country undulated, partially cultivated, and free from jungle. Road pretty good. Pass Gotahee ke Peepulea at 23, Dendehree at 4, Peetpoer at 67, and Munassah, a large town and bazar, at 8} miles. 15.-Country as in last stage. Road good. Pass Jawassa at 25, Boorkheree at 31, Dewuree Rewuree at 6, and Girdowra at 71 miles. as Nº. 172.–FROM GOONAH TO NUSSEERABAD BY KOTAH AND BOONDEE. Chubrah, in 33 4 No. 171 Pol. Agent at Koondee 12! 4 Underee 1 Kotah Sakutpoor 12 6 Paronee 6 2 Bhopawur or Bopour 91 0 3 Sungode 91 41 }} 33 VOL. II.] 149 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 3! 5 2 6 Agent at, Kujooree Keytone or Kethoon. KOTAH Pol. Agent at Kinaree Kotah Tolarah or Talerah.. BOONDEE Nowgaon Thanna and Oojar 15 0 Kalli Sind 11 4 9 41 2 o Chumbul. 11 Tye 10 41... 101 ol... 81 4/Maize 2 2 17 18 Jehazpoor ... 11 41... 9 British Kishengurh British Jeypoor. Boondee. Kotah. Sawur Parah Kekree 10 4 Banas 9 0 Kharri 7 0... 10 .. 1 11 ...' 2 12 G. G's Agent in Rajpootana at Ajmere 6 Dei Surwar ... 11 0... 1 13 Surrana NUSSEERABAD Cantt. 12 41... 13 01... 14 15 bu 36 Total... 229 2 miles. 1.-A large village at north end of ridge of hills. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road pretty good over an undulated and partially cultivated country. Hills on left at distance, and approaching close at end of stage. Pass Reechunda at 31, Kopoor at 53, Gorukheree at 64, Moassa at 84, and Mosaun at 10%. The Underee is 170 yards wide, rocky bottom, steep banks, and clear rapid stream, -A small village. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. 'Road over a rough broken country, at first barreu and cut up by ravines, latterly pretty well cultivated, distant hills leſt at & miles. Cross the Paronee by pretty good ford, bed : 20 yards wide, with pebbly and rocky bottom. Steep banks shelving at the ghat. Pass Dailoor at 21, Kurkura at 5, and Buchalus at 94 miles. 3.-A middling village. Some shops and supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road over a broken undulated country, partially cultivated, Hills ou left at distance. Pass Kurarea at 24, Amlei at 34, Danhee at 41, and Labaneea at 7 miles. 4-A considerable town and bazar. Water plentiful. Country open, well cultivated, and thickly inhabited, distant hills southward. Road very good. 'Pass Kumolur, a large village, at 41, Boorda at 6, and Toolsee at 7 miles. 5.-A middling village and some bupiahs' shops. Supplies procurable and water from Fells, Country open and cultivated. Road good. l'ass Luchmeepora at 2, Gunnahaira at 5, Kundgaon at 104, Rajpora at 12, and Dickolee at 131 miles. At 54 miles cross the Kalli Sind, ºbed 450 yards wide, of flat rock-like pavement, and banks cut into ravines. Water shallow during fair season, deep and rapid in the rains. 6.-A considerable village and small bazar. Water plentiful. Road excellent through an open well cultivated country. Pass Keelulhaira at %, Arudkhaira at 4, Bugwanpoora at C, and Ubbaipoor at 84 miles. 7-A small bazar. Water from wells. The road through the pass in the hills, West of Boondee, is very rugged and bad for carts for 6 or 7 miles. The remainder is very good through a level weli cultivated country. 8.- A small bazar. Water plentiful. The first part of the rood is good through a well cultivated country, the last 3 or 4 miles over stony rocky ground, 9.-A town and good bazar. Water abundant. Road excessively bad over rocks and broken ground. Small hills and thick jungle. 10.-town and good bazar. Water abundant. Road pretty good. At the 3rd mile ford the Banas at Jeera ghat, knee deep iu dry season, 300 yards wide, rocky bottom and steep banks. 150 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1 11.-A middling village and some buniahs. Supplies from Sawur or Kekree. Water from wells. Road good, with exception of the bed of the Kharri, which is 200 yards wide and of heavy saud. Pass Goorgaon at 5 miles. 12.-A large town and bazar. Water and supplies abundant. Road good. Pass Koon - da at 3 miles. 13.-A town and good bazar. Water plentiful. Road very good. Pass Ujgurah at 44 miles. 14.-A small bazar. Water from wells. Road very good. Pass Keerea at 34, and Go- len at 6 miles. 15.—Road very good. Pass Rampoora at 5 miles. No. 173.-FROM GOONAH TO SAUGOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Resident Gwalior at Rampora. Scindea's Territory. Tonk 14 4)... 11 o Sind Bhadore Barode Kheria Daipoor or Deopoor SERONJE 1 2 3 8. 4... 7 4 9 41 Kaitoon 2 70 Nuddy 5 at Pol. Agent Sehore ... 9 4 Juaree Sehulpoor Bhourasso 36 37 38 Heerun or Aerun British Asst. Comnr. at Khoraee Saugor Moondura Nureeawullee | Saugok Cantonment Nuddy 13 0.. Betwa & 11 0 Raintee Nuddy 11 4 Beena 11 6 Narain 90 Dussaun 12 4.. 2 9 1 10 ... 3 11 21 12 12 Total.../ 128' 6 1.-A middling sized village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells and a nullah. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Kaijra at 4, Baitah at 6, Gionkhera at 8, and Burkhera at 94 miles. 2.- A small village on right bank of the Sind, which is forded at the end of the stage. Supplies must be llected. Water from the river. Road pretty good. Pass Kamhera at 5, and Moondra at 73 miles. 3.-A considerable village. Supplies procurable and water from wells. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good. Pass Ak, khera at 41, and Chopna at h} miles. 4.-A respectable village. Water from wells. Road good through a well cultivated country. Pass Bohura at 2, Chopna at !, and Lossulla at 54 miles. 5.-Å large town. Supplies and water abundant. Road stony, and at the 5th mile it descends from table land by a ghat of about mile in length, declivity easy and practicable for carts, but the road is stony and bad at the foot of the ghat. Pass Duraira at 2 miles. 6.-A large village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road very good. Pass Bagrode at 3, and near Bheerpoora at 6 miles. Cross the Juaree nuddy at the 5th mile. No impediment. 7.- A large village and bazar on left bank of the Betwah river. Road very good. Pass Moreedpoor at l}, Kulooa at 34, Khooja at 5, and Goaree at 7 miles.. 8.-A considerable walled village on the left bank of the Beena river. At the 3rd mile ford the Betwa, bed 220 yards wide, bottom rock and stones, banks sloping at the ghat. Stream 30 yards wide and 2 feet deep. At the 9th mile ford the Raintee, which forms the Western boundary of the Sangor territory. The road tolerably good for the first 3 miles, but intersected by ravines, the remainder very good. Pass Punawur at 6 miles. 9,-A respectable walled town with stone Ghurry detached. Road good, except at the passage of the Beena which occurs at the 3rd mile, and is 150 yards wide, with rocky bottom and steep banks, water 2 feet deep. Country for the first 6 miles through thick jungle, remainder of this stage cultivated. Pass Bapson at 2, near Silyooa at 41, and Roysula at 74 miles. VOL. II.) 151 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 10.-A small village. Supplies from adjacent villages. Water from wells. Road good and country well cultivated to Bunhut, from whence a pass between hills is entered. Aclivity easy, and the hills which approach each other again recede from the top of the pass. The road from Bunhut is narrow, stony, and through thick jungle. Pass Remgwa at 14, Siloda at 3, Simnarea at 6, Bunhut at 63, and Peepurkheree at 104 miles. 11.-A large village, situated between two hills connected with a stone wall at both ends of the passage. Road indifferent, being narrow and interseeted by ravine. Cross the Dusgaun river at the 6th mile, 200 yards wide, bottom stony and rocky, 2 feet water, eas y ghat. Pass Palee Torah at 2 miles. 12.-Country hilly. Vallies cultivated and road good. Pass Imalea at 2, and Bheekhero at 5 miles. No. 174.–FROM GORRUCKPOOR CANTONMENT TO LUCK., NOW. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. Sureyah Mugurh MEERGUNGE Bustee British Gorruckpoor Captaingunge AMORHA or Amorah 8 2 Raptee 10 0 Aumee 1 10 0 2 151 2 2 3 12 0 4' Munorama 13 0 and Ram 5 rekha 9 1 6 100), Gogra 7 8 0 8 15 0 1 9 13 0 10 14 0 111 9/ 6 ..12 1117 13 14 ... Bailwa Ghat Fyzabad Nourahee Shujahgunge Deriabad Syfdargunge Nuwabgunge Cheinhath Chokee LUCKNOW Cantt. Resident at Lucknow Oude 70. 15 Total, .I 166 2 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies, plentiful after due notice. Cross the Raptee at Raj ghat by good ferry, Road indifferent in dry weather, and under water in the rains. 2. -Bazar. Good water. Road pretty good. Ferry or temporary bridge on the Amuee. 3.-A Bazar. Water plentiful and good. Road bad in parts, but pretty good generally. Cross the nullahs by Bunds or temporary bridges. 4.--Supplies procurable in abundance. Road sandy in parts, but in general very good. 5.- Provisions and wood plentiful. Road occasionally heavy and sandy. Cross the buddies br ferry, the latter close to Amorah. 6.-Provisions, wood, and water plentiful. Encamping ground on sandy plain on left bank of the Gogra river. Road indifferent. 7:-A large town and good bazar. Cross the Gogra by ferry at Raee ghat. Boats indifferent, but numerous. Road heavy. Pass through the town and encamp in a fine tope called Ashik Bagh.' 8.-Road at first much broken and out of order, latterly pretty good. Water plentiful. Supplies scanty. 9:-Road generally good, heavy in some parts. Cross the nullah by pucca bridge. Pro- visions and water plentiful and good. Fire wood rather scarce. 10.-Road very good. Provisions and water good and plentiful. Firewood very 11. -Good road. Encamping ground on an extensive plain. Provisions and wood must be collected by previous notice to the Oude authorities. 12.—Provisions and water plentiful, wood scarce. Road heavy at first, latterly good. 13.-Road for the most part heavy, sandy, and bad for carts. Provisions and water good and abundant Wood scanty and dear. 14.-Road generally heavy and bad. Searce. 152 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 175.-FROM GORRUCKPOOR CANTONMENT TO MUL- LYE BY BETTIAH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. Pipraitch Captaingunge Ramkola 3 212 Gorruckpoor 3 14 . Perowna Mudbunee 5 Rutwal 6 British. Lungrec Bettiah Mujhowlee SUGOWLEE Muttearee 10 4'. 12 0 60 Chota 2 Gunduk 3 8! 0 11 0 Branch of Gunduk 8 0 Great Gunduk 11 0... 16 0 8 0 8 0... 15 01 Sickrona Lal Buck- 13 0 ia or Boor Gunduk 14 0 9 0 Bagmuttee old & new 7 8 2 9 10 IL Chuprah Shekurgunge 1 12 13 Baglee MULLYE Cantt. 2 14 14 Total... | 1491 41 miles. 1.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road heavy, and bad, running through close jungle nearly the whole way. Cross the nullahs by bridges. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good and country well cultivated. 3.Ditto ditto ditt o. Cross the river by ferry, aud it becomes fordable in hót season. 4.-Road generally good. Countay much wooded. Paddy fields and grass jungle. Sup- plies abundant. 5.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. Cross the river by Ford at Bansee ghat and enter the Sarun district. Boats are also in attendance at the ghat. 6.-Supplies procurable on due notice to local authorities. Encamping ground confined and bad. Cross the river by ferry at the 5th mile. 8 or 10 boats of middling and small size. Road for 5 miles heavy and bad, remainder very good. 7.-Supplies abu ndant. Road good and good encamping ground near the Village. 8.-Supplies abundant. Encamping ground lf miles East of town on a coarse grass plain. Road good, partial cultivation. 9.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Cross nullahs by pucca bridges. 10.-Supplies, water, and good hackeries procurable in abundance. Road good. Cross nullahs and ravine by pucca bridges. Soil poor and very partially cultivated. 11.-Supplies and water abundant and good. Country but partially cultivated, much long grass. 12.-Road very good and country well cultivated. Cross the Boor or little Gunduk at the 9th mile, 200 yards wide. Boats sufficient to cross a regiment procurable. Supplies and water plentiful. 13.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good and Country well cultivated. 14.–Road good. Oross the new Bagmuttee by ferry at the end of the 2d mile, and the old by a ricketty wooden Bridge at the end of the Stage, VOL 11.) 153 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 176.-FROM GORRUCKPOOR CANTONMENT TO SECRORA. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. as 60 2 Amorha, in No. 174 Rehly Wuzeergunge Goonda Ballpoor SECRORA Cantt. at Oude.. Resident Lucknow 13 0 11 0 12 4 90 7 0 11 Total... 112 6 miles. No. 177.--FROM GORRUCKPOOR TO SOOLTANPOOR, OUDE. Meergunge as in in}] 28 2 No. 174 S Lallgunge 15 OKoanee British Gorruckpoor 1 Near Gaee Ghat 2 Tandah 8 O Gogra 3 Sujahpoor 16 Touge 4 Resident Oude. Dostpoor 11 0 2 5 Lucknow Imlack 11 0 11 6 SOOLTANPOOR Cantt. 15 0 Goomty 7 60. Ni:: at 10 Total... 1091 6 miles. 1.--Supplies and water abundant. Cross the Koranee nuddy 70 yards wide by ferry at the end of the march. Road generally good. Soil light and sandy. Much wheat cultiva- tion. 2.- Road good. Light sandy soil. Country well cultivated. Supplies plentiful. Good encamping ground, I mile east of Gaee Ghat. 3.-Cross the Gogra by ferry at the 4th mile. Boats sufficiently large to pass two backeries each. Road generally pretty good. Supplies abundant. 1.--Supplies abundant, Country well wooded and cultivated. Cross the Touse by pucka bridge, 400 yards long. 5.-Road rough and bad, Cross first nullah by kutcha bridge, and ford the second 24 feet deep and arm bottom. Supplies abundani. There is a cantoument here for 3 of the King of Oude's battalions. 6.-Road as in last stage. Country well cultivated, and supplies procurable after due notice. Good encamping ground close to the village. 7.--Road bad, the latter part sandy and full of ravines. Cross the Goomty by ferry. or No. 178.-FROM GURRAWARRA CANTONMENT TO JUBBUL- POOR CANTONMENT. Beerkheree il o Shair 8! 1 Beelkheree Gurrawa Cheinwarra or Bangunga 11 0 Chind & Oomar.. 71 2 Saeepoora 13 4 Nerbudda 8 3 Jubbulpoor Hunoutagunge 96... JABBULPOOR Cantt 5 British. 96... 5 Total... ,55 6|iniles. PART I, VOL. II. Y 154 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable after due notice to the local authorities. Road very uneven and bad for carts. Nuddy and Nullah fordable. 2.-A large village and bazar. Water and supplies abundant. Road pretty good in dry weather. The nuddies and nullahs fordable. 3.—A small bazar and water from wells. At the 10th mile cross the Nerbudda at Jhansee ghat. The river is generally fordable, except during the rains and immediately after. The only boats used here are common canoes, several of which are lashed together when necessary for the transport of wheel carriages. The ferry being a public one, there is no charge made for crossing troops and public stores. Road to the river much intersected by ravines, and thence very good in dry weather. 4.-A small bazar. Water from wells. Road good. 5.-Road very good. No. 179.–FROM GURRAWARRA TO NAGPOOR PASSING NEAR SEONEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Butchye ...... ... British Gurrawarra Mungwanee 10 4 ... 1 Macha Re- 9 6 wa cross- 2 2 ed twice... 2 Nagpoor. 96 Kunebra 10 4... 3 4 2 10 o Beejna 7 4.. Wyne or 5 6 2 7 4 BanGunga Resident at Nag-) Gorahbebee роог Adagaon Guneshgunge CHUPPARA Kokurea Tullao British Seonee Nurella, (Seonee 57 miles S. East) :) Chowree Pattarea Puchdar Doongerthal Ramteak Resident at Nag- Kamptee Cantt. poor Nagpoor City ...16 8 6... ... 11 7 8 4 Ban Gunga 5 8 12 4. 9 12 2 6 10 11 5 15 1... 9 12 14 4 Kunhan 4 13 100... 4 14 ...... 11 Nagpoor. Water 15 Total.../ 1471 1 miles. 1.-A small village. Water plentiful, and supplies can be had after due notice to the local authorities. The road lies over fields, and is almost impassable in wet weather. 2.-A small hill village, where no supplies are to be had unless previously sent. plentiful. Road pretty good for cattle in dry weather, but becomes swampy and very bad in the vallies in wet weather. 3.--A hamlet in the Adagaon jabgeer. Water from a nullah. Supplies very scarce and procurable only on application to the jahgeerdar. An indifferent cattle road. 4.-A middling village belonging to Doulet Bhartee, a jahgeerdar. Supplies procurable in some quantities. Water plentiful. Road as before. 5.- A large bazar. Water from river and wells. 6.-- Roadstony and bad. Country hilly. Water from tank. Supplies must be collect- ed. Ford river and nullahs. 7.— Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road tolerable in parts, and in others very stony. 8.-Eight buniahs and suppiles from Seonee, distant 4 miles to N. E. Road as in last stage. 9.-A small village. Three buniahs. Water abundant, but not of very good quality. Road indifferent, and intersected by numerous dry water courses. VOL. II.) THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 155 111 2 ... 10.–A small village. eight buniahs. Water from a nullah by digging. Descend the Pattarea Ghat, steep and rocky. First 7 miles of road rugged, remainder pretty good through thick jungle the whole way. 11.-Six buniahs. Water scarce and bad. Road good. 12.-A large bazar. Water and supplies abundant. Road as in last stage. 13.-Cantonment bazars. Water plentiful. Road good through a low open country partially cultivated. 14.-Road good, through an open and well cultivated country. No. 180.-FROM GURRAWARRA TO NAGPOOR BY SINDWARA. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. Batchye 10 4 British Asst. Commr. at Macha Re- Gurrawarra Chota Moondrye 11 2 1 wa twice. Hurrye 9! 2 Sukur Nuddy 8 2 Sukur 11 3 Jingawanee 94 94 Amburwara 6 5 Tail 5 Singowree 8 6 13 4 Pech Resident at Nag-! Sindwara 77 Ekulberee 13 6.. poor u 8 Right Bank of Kun- 2 13 5 Kunkan 99 han at Ramakona Lodikhera 10 2 Jam 7) 10 Nundapoor 13 1... 15 11 Patun Sungee 10 1 Nerunjena . 4 12 L KAMPTEE Cantt. 12 4 Koolar 71 13 Territory Nullahs. Nos. ... 10 6... Nagpoor. 14 Total... 155 Omiles. N. B. The distance from Patun Sungee to the City of Nagpoor is also4124 miles, 1.-A very small and noor village under the hills, where no supplies are to be had unless previously collected. Water plentiful. Road stony and through jungle the whole way. 2.-A bazar, Water from wells. 3.-Water from the nuddy and supplies from Hurry. 4.-Water from nullah and wells. Supplies from Amburwara. There are 3 hill ghats in this stage, all practicable for carts. 5.-A bazar. Water from wells. 6.-Scanty supplies from the village and from Amburwara. Water from wells. 7.-A large bazar. Water plentiful. 8.-Small village. Supplies must be collected on previous notice or taken on from Sindwara. Road pretty good through brushwood and partial cultivation. 9.-A 5azar. Water plentiful. Descend the Tara ghat practicable for guns with a little difficulty. Hills on right and left below the ghat. Road rocky and bad, intersected by numerous ravines, nullahs, and water courses. Fords. 10.-A bazar. Water from the Jam. Road indifferent generally, and in some places rocky bad. Country much intersected by savines and broken ground, chiefly jungle. Fords. 11.---A small village. Sapplies from Khapa, ? miles south east. Water plentiful. The country pretty well cultivated. The road much intersected by ravines and water courses. Low hills on right and left, Fords. 12.-A bazar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road good through a well cultivated Country. Pords. 12.-Road pretty good through an open well cultivated country. Soil much covered with loose stones. Fords. 156 (PART II. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 181.--FROM GURRAWARRA TO SAUGOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Asst. Commr. at Gurrawarra Right Bank Nerbu- ? da at Keerpanees 8 1 Singree Oomur, 121 4 Shair, & Nerbud- da 101 4 101 1 Punaree ... British. 3 2 4 3 8 2... Bhaminee Maharajpoor Deoree or Dewree Asst. Commr. at Jeitpoor Dummow Rhylee or Riley Asst. Commr. at s Dhana Saugor SAUGOR Cantonment 6 7 6 Kopra Boraee or 11 5 Sonar.. S 151 6 2 Nuddies 101 1 Beos 4 it { 8 8 Total... 86/ 5 miles. 1.-Supplies from Keerpanee and neighbouring villages. Water from the river. Road circuitous and much intersected by ravines. Nullahs fordable, but banks steep and diffi- cult for carts. Ford the Nerbudda by bad ghat. The ouly description of boats' used here is the canoe, and two or more of them are lashed together when necessary to cross carts. 2. -A good sized villake. Water plentiful, and supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Road indifferent. 3.-A small village. Supplies procurable in abundance aſter due notice. Road pretty good with exception of the hill ghat (ascent), which is steep, rugged, and difficult for wheel carriages. 4.- A bazar. Water abundant. Road very good, 5–Supplies from Jeitpoor and neighbouring villages. Water from the Kopra. Road stony and bad, 6.--A bazar. Water and supplies plentiful. Road good, except for a short distance near the ford on the Sonar river. 7.- Supplies from Dhana and surrounding villages. Water abundant. Road good, with exception of two small stony ghats. 8. --Road stony. A difficult rocky ghat on the Beos river, and a stony ascent near the station, No. 182.-FROM HANSI TO BHAWULPOOR BY BHUTNEER. Hissar, (Town) 151 0... 1 Kalerawun 13 0 2 Beegur 14 4 3 Jodka 15 0 4 British Hissar Begoke 11 4 5 Rania 12 0 6 Bunnee 14 0 7 Tibee 13 4 8 BHUTNEER 91 4 9 Futteghurh 7 0 Gooree Bunga 10 0 10 G. G.'s Agent in, Soorutgurh 13 0 11 Rajpootana Hulwana 8 Ol... 12 Heheror Kummaul 22 0... 13 Sir Anoongurh 10' Ol... 14 VOL. 11.) 157 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 15 16 114 12 0 12 0 11 4 17 18 Bhawulpoor. Nuwab of Bha- wulpoor. Sirdarkote Phoolera Meergurh Maroot Encampment in de- sert Parwallah BHAWULPOOR ::::::: 15 0... 19 1 2010 13 0 20 21 22 Total... 2831 ol miles. 1.--A plentifully supplied bazar and water from canal and wells. Road good, and runs throughout the whole state within a few yards of the canal. 2.-No bazar and water scarce. Road tolerably good, though in some places rather heavy. 3.- No bazar. Supplies from the town of Futtehabad, distant 4 miles. Water scarce. Road heavy in parts, bat generally good. 4.-Road hard and good. No bazar and water scarce. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 6.-A tolerably well supplied bazar and a sufficiency of water. Road very good, passing along the dry bed of the Guggur for nearly two miles. 1.--No bazar, and very scanty supply of water. Road sandy parts, but generally good. 8.-Ditto ditto and road heavy. 9.--Road very heavy. Supplies and water scarce. 10.-One shop. Water good. 11.-A town with a brick fort. Sand hills near on left. 12: -A mud fort. Many houses and some wells of excellent water. High sand hills 8 miles left. 13.-A small Mahomedan village. Bad water and only 1 shop. Soil sandy throughout this march. Pass Boogeah at 41, and Beloocha at 184 miles. Bad water at both villages. 14.-A considerable place. Brick fort. Several wells. Much dry grass on the sides of the road. Soil for the most part hard, and thinly dotted here and there with hillocks of shifting sand. 15.-A mud fort, outside of which there are many houses and several wells, but the vater is bad. 16.- A small town with a fort. Road for the most part over hard earth, which sounds under horses feet. Much good grass by the way side. 17. A strong little brick fort. A few shops within it, and many houses outside. Very little loose sand in this stage. 18.-A small town, surrounded by a wall with bastions ; road for the most part over firm earth, occasionally crossed by a broad layer of heavy sand. Pass the small fort of Jamgarh about half way. Several wells of good water, at which one has to pay a trifle for watering horses. 19.-Water and supplies to be taken from Maroot. Much coarse grass near the encamp- 20.-A village of 100 huts in the desert, where there are 4 deep wells of good water. From Maroot and Purwallah there is more hard soil than loose sand, but what there is of the latter is very heavy. This is considered the only difficult part of the road. 21-A considerable town within a short distance of the left bank of the Gurrah river, Road for 11 miles through heaps of loose sand formed on hard subsoil, last 2 miles soil good and cultivated. mnent, No. 183.–FROM HANSI CANTONMENT TO KURNAUL CANTONMENT. British Hissar ... Narnound 141 6 Canal 1 Canal 3 Jheend 13 0 2 Pol. Agent at S Umballa Kulwah 12 5 S Suffeedoon 101 7 Canal 4 Moonuck 14 6 Canal twice British Paneput Kurnaul Cantt. 6 times.. Jheend. ...... 15 2 ... 6 Total... 88! 2 miles. 158 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.--A bazar. Water abundant. Country level and partially cultivated. Road good. Cross the caual by bridge at the 3rd mile. Pass Khera at 6, Rajpoorah at 10, and Maddah at ll miles. 2. A large bazar. Water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Cross canal by bridges. Pass near Bhainee at 2, Rathul ai 4, Ramry at 7, and Doodu Teerutt at 94 miles. 3. A bazar. Water rather scarce in hot season. Country flat and very partially cul- tivated. Road good, but near Pindarah Teerutt it becomes miry after much rain. Pass Pindarah Teerutt at 34, and Sowaha at 9 miles. 4.-A bazar and water abundant. Country very slightly cultivated and much overgrown with jungle. Road good. Pass Boorakhera at 31, Chapur at 6, and Singhana at 7 miles, Cross the canal by bridge under Chapur. 5.- A small village. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Suffeedoon or Kur- naul, according to the direction of the march, Water plentiful. Road pretty good gen- erally, but miry in some parts after rain, and particularly near Kye, where it becomes impassable for about mile. This place may however be avoided by a short detour to the right. Pass Kye at 7. Dhurrumgurh at 10, and Rairh at 12 miles. Cross canal by bridges. 6.-Country fat and partially cultivated. Much jungle of dak. Road very good. Pass Sugsanah at 4, Seetouudee at 6, and Burotah at 10, and the town of Kurnaul at 14 miles. No. 184.-FROM HANSI CANTONMENT TO LOODIANA CAN- TONMENT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British Hissar r Pol. Agent Umballa .. Protected Sikh States. Moonuck Kurruck Dunodah Dhumtan Mandowee at Jeloor or Jheloor Khuree al or Khu reeal Sungroor Dhooree Kotelah Mullair at Laihra LOODIANA Cantt. 14 6 Canal twice... i 9 0 2 12 1 3 12! 4 4 811 5 10 5 Guggur 6 12 1 ... 7 11 2 Chooia 8 95 9 10 127 11 15 7 12 12 5 Pol. Agent Loodiana 12 Total.../ 136) 2) 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice, or they may be taken on from Hansi. Water from wells. Country level and pretty well cultivated. Road good, 2.-No bazar, but supplies procurable as above. Water from two good pucca wells. Coun- try and road as in last stage. Pass Dahta at 31 miles. 3.-A small bazar. Provisions procurable in abundance and water from wells. Country slightly undulated and very partially cuitivated. Road excellent. Pass Murdlanda at 4, and Koomba at 6 miles. 4.-Country generally level. Little cultivation and a great deal of jungle. Road good. 5.-On left bank of the Guggur. Country fat and road very good through thick jungle. 6.-The country for the first i miles is subject to inundation by the Gurgur, and when that takes place after very heavy rain, the road so far is impracticable for laden cattle, but this is not the case after a slight overflow. The river is always passable by rafts constructed on earthen pots, and it generally becomes fordable in December. Pass Hybutpoor at 3, Rajlee at 45, and Doodee at 6 miles. 7.- Country slightly undulated in low sandy swells, much cultivation and some patches of jungle. Road good. Pass Kowree Ally Singke at 34, and Chahir at 64 miles. 8.--Country flat anıl well cultivated. The Chooia is sometimes (not often) unfordable for a day or two after heavy rain. Road good, but a little mire in some places after heavy rain. Pass Begerwal at 2, Koolar at 49, Kunoee at 64 miles. 9- Country very slightly undulated and partially cultivated. Road good, but narrow and winding, confined by cultivation and enclosures. Pass Koee at 3, and Bainrah at 6 iniles. VOL. 11.) 159 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 10.-Country as in last stage. Road in many parts miry after rain, and particularly so near Ruttolee, but the bad parts may be avoided by going to the right or left. Pass Beir- wall at 21, Basour at 5, Singhla at 7, and Ruttolee at 94 miles. 11.-Country as in last stage. Road firm and good, but much under water after heavy rain. 19.-Country level and well cultivated. Road good at all seasons. N. B. On marching from Loodiana this last stage had better be divided into two, by halting at Runeeah, 7, under Pol. Asst. Loodiana. The whole of this route is a capital hackery track in dry weather, and supplies may al- ways be speedily collected at each stage. No. 185.–FROM HANSI TO MUTTRA BY GOORGAON. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Rohtuck Moondahal Mohim Kallanoor Beeree Jhujur, 150 9 0 12 4 13 4 10 0. ::: 1 2 3 Jhujur. ::: G. G.'s. Agent { Furrukhnugur, at Delhie 4 15 Sabee, ... Jahgeer. 5 6 1 British Goorgaon. Goorgaon, 13 0... Badshah or Padshah 6 4. poor, Sonah, 10 2 Munkolah, 11 2 Huteen, 8 2 Horul, 13 4 MUTTRA as in No. 144 - 37 0 7 8 9 10 15 Total. . 1741 6| miles. 1-Supplies for a regiment procurable. Water abundant. Road tolerably good. Good encamping ground. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto. 3:-Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Jhujur is the residence of Nawab Pyz Mahomed Khan. Encamping ground at pucca tulao on west side of the town. 4.-Supplies procurable and water plentiſul. Road indifferent. 5.-Supplies procurable. Water from wells. Encamping ground good on old parade. 6. A bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country level and partially cultivated. Road good. Low hills at a distance on right and left. 7.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road good. Hills right and left, ridges running parallel to each other. 8.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Road good. 9.-Ditto ditto. Road indifferent. 10,-A town and bazar. Water from tanks and wells. Road good. British No. 186–FROM HANSI TO NEEMUCH. Hissar Chota Bhowanee, 11 6... Rohtuck Bhowanee, 14 6'... 1 2 160 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. · Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 82, 10 0... 8 0. 3 4 5 6 8 2 ... Munheiroo Dadree Doodhoe G. G's Agent Burana at Delhie Kurnound or Ku-2 nound NARNOUL Thuņwas 9 2... 1 7 Khetree Raja. Jhujar Nuwab's. 15 6 14 0.. 2 1 8 9 Kote Pootlee 11 6... 1) 10 Neemuch as in No:} No:} 275 op 34 Total... 383 6 miles. 1.-A few buniahs' shops. Supplies scarce and must be collected when required in any quantity. Water rather scarce and bad in hot season. Country open and uncultivated. Road good. 2.-A large bazar and 'water plentiful. Country open and very partially cultivated. Road good. 3.-A few buniahs' shops. Supplies for a corps must be collected on previous notice. Water from wells and tauks. Country and road as above. 4.-A large bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Lust half of this distance the road is rather sandy and heavy: 5.-Water good and abundant. A few buniahs' shops, and supplies procurable after due notice, Road good. 6.-A small bazar. Water from wells, rather brackish. Road good. 7.- A large bazar. Water plentiful, but rather brackish, last 7 miles over a deep sandy road. Country pretty well cultivated. 8.-A large bazar. Supplies and wnter plentiful. · Road heavy, particularly between Kurnound and the village of Nagul, a distance of about 7 miles. 9.-A few shops and supplies for a corps procurable after due notice. Good water from wells. 10.-A good bazar. Supplied and water plentiful, Road pretty good. Country open, with hills at a distance. Good encamping ground opposite Pootlee. • From Narnoul to Praugpoor there is another route by Surohee 81, Chadurrah 6, Nurera, near Khirub, 8, and Praugpoor 9 miles. 2 1 3 2 3 3 Shaikhawut. No. 187.-FROM HANSI TO NUSSEERABAD. CjNarnoul, as in No. 186... 86 0 Bussee 11 0 Moonda 14 Gualah or Gowalah *16 *16 G. Go's Agent in Madhoopoor Ringwas 7 4 Rajpootana at Budhar 10 4 Ajmere. Mendha 12 41. Sunodeah Sambur 8 0 Momana British Hurmara 11 0 o soco voor Co. 91 0.. Jeypoor. 10 4... 11 URT 1. 161 VOL. 11.] THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Territory. Nos. Null Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. KISHENGURH 10 0.. 11 12 British. Kishengurh. G. G's Agent in Rajpootana at Ajmere. Rampoora NUSSEERABAD 13 0.. 8 0 13 14 1.10 1.-A small village. Supplies from Narnoul, and may be collected in some quantities from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Country pretty well cultivated, and studded with small detached hills. Road good. 2.-Water from wells, few buniahs, and supplies procurable after due notice. Road in- different. Country hilly: 1.- A large bazar. Water in abundance. Road stony and country hilly. 4.-A large bazar. Water and supplies in abundance. Road good. Country open and pretty well cultivated, hills at a distance. 5.-No bazar. Water plentiful, and supplies procurable after due notice. Country open, very little cultivation. Road sandy. 6.-Water plentiful , and supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Soil sandy and road heavy. 'Open undulating country. 7-A bázar, and good well water. Country as in last stage. Road heavy. 8.-Water from wells. Supplies procurable after due notice. Country and road as above. 9.-A large bazar, and water plentiful and good. The Salt Lake extends to the west from this town, and is about 50 miles in circumference. Road heavy. 10.- No bazar. Supplies scarce and must be collected on previous notice. Water from Welle. Country open, undulated, and very partially cultivated. Road tolerably good. 11.-No bazar, but supplies and water abundant. Country open and pretty well culti- vated. Road very good. 12.-A large walled town. Supplies and water very abundant. Road rough and rather circuitous, io avoid hills and broken ground on the right near Kishengurh. 13.–Supplies abundant after due notice. 'Water plentful. First 4 miles of road rough and stony, reminder good, bills on right, open undulating country left. 14.-Road good. Titel கள் 6 1 3 3 4 Ś 6 1 No. 188.–FROM HAZAREEBAGH TO NAGPOOR. Belliah ... 15 2 Beenjah 13 6 Omadunda 8 2 Chooreah 15 0 Nowatand 101 O Teekoo 82 Loaduga, or Lo- 11 6 hurdega Konrah 101 0 Kootamb 151 2 Burragaon 141 2 Burwanugur 4 4 Koothee 8| 2 Joombah 71 3 Dhooree 8! 4 Jheruah 101 Dipadee 9 5 Maunpoor 90 Laroo 11 2 Burree 12 PART I. VOL. II. W 9 10 11 162 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Sirgoojanugur 13 7 Andelah 19 2 Dandgaon 13 3 Urseemanee 17 2 Sutringah 13 5 Choorhee 14 1 Chytmah 15 5 Palee 81 0 Ruttunpoor 131 7 Tukutpoor 121 1 Mohgelee 12 3 Nowagurh 12 3 Segowna 14 1 Rakhee 181 0 Kothelee 141 1 Khyragurh 14 5 Brinjarah 131 4 Moglejeree 71 6 Lanjee 15 4 Kamtah 161 2 Bureed 17 3 Koelwara 126 Toomsur 12 7 Moharee 8 0 Mohurgaon 100 Tarsa 100 Kamptee Cantt. 11 01 Nagpoor City 9 3 47 Total 574 0 No. 189.–FROM HAZAREEBAGH TO SUMBHULPOOR BY DOORUNDAH. _ Ramgurh., Chandowl Augoo Jynugur 14 6... 10 4 Ahora 10 4 Damooda 2 3 2 1 2 3 3 4 4 5 Chota Nagpoor. Pittooreea DOORUNDAH Ludma Longkelle G.Gi's Agent S. Govindpoor Western Frontier Kumdurra Bussea Longa Coleebeera Tinginnee Raiboga Kookroodee Sugra i Rugoonathpalee 13 4 Nakaree 11 4 12 0 8 0 8 0 90 6 O 6 0 10,0 12 0 13 0... 12 o Sunk 100 11 0 6 Gangpoor VOL. 11.) 163 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Sumbhulpoor. Territory. 71 0... Chupudee 12 0 Butlera 81 0 Sama Singa 81 0 Kutterbuga 91 Ol Susun 90 Sumbhulpoor 7 23 Total... 230 6 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable and water from several good wells. First part of the road low and bad over rice ground. The ghat commences 6 miles from Hazareebagh and continues to within 1 of a mile of Chandow. It is a moderate descent the whole way with a broad and good road. 2.- A very limited quantity of supplies procurable. Bad watet from a nullah. Road excel. lent all the way, the river is 100 yards broad and shallow. TheAugoo ghat is of easy passage. 3-Supplies procurable and water from a nullah. A short way froin Augoo, is a short but steep rocky ghat. The Deonud or Damooda is about 100 yards broad, uufordable after heary rain and no boats. Banks clay and easily levelled, road entirely through jungle. 4,-Supplies from Pittoorea and water from a large and excellent tank. The Nakaree is large and rapid after rain. The Peeraha ghat commences 74 miles from Jynugur, it ascends for one mile, the road rocky and bad. From thence across a plain 1 mile wide to Dontada ghat another ascent of 14 miles, very rugged and bad, which deboucbes on the ta ole land of Chota Nagpoor. For foot passengers there is a shorter way across the hills by the Dooarsanee ghat, which saves 1 of a mile. 5.-Supplies from cantonment bazar and from Burkagurh. Road level and excellent through an open country. Nullahs rugged and deep after rain. 6.- Jungle nearly the whole of this stage, and an easy ghat, more descent than ascent. 7.-In all the stages after entering Gangpoor there is jungle at intervals, and guns may travel with ease from Doorundah to Sumbhulpoor. The distance from Hazareebagh to Doorundah is measured, the remainder computed. S 2 British. 5 No. 190.-FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO ASSEERGURH. 14, 01 Bhugwara 7 01 3 Hoshungabad... SEONEE 90 3 Kotra 10 O Gunjill Charkhera 12 0... Mesingaon 14 01 Charwah 13 ol Assist. Political Gorapuchar River 12 2 Gorapuchar Agent of Mund- Gungapat 11 3 Gungapat laisir Ramgurh 11 o Bam & Sook Khirgaon 8 0... [ta Boregawn 9 Sookta British ASSEERGURH Pettah. Scindea's. 6 7 8 9 13 41... 10 11 13 Total ... 141 61 miles. 1. A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Country flat and well cultivated. Road good. 2-A small village. Water from a nullah, and supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Couniry and road as in last stage. 3.-A large town, Water and supplies plentiful. Road and country as above. 4.-A large village with abundance of water and supplies. Country as before. The Gunjill is erossed by ford at the end of the stage, banks very steep. 5.-A large village. 6.-A bazar. 7.-No supplies. 8.-No supplies. 9.-A bazar and water abundant. 10.-A considerable village. Bazar and water plentiful, 11.-Road bad, winding through hills ; pass the Kuttee Chat which is practicable for wheel carriages. 164 (PART 1, THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1 No. 191.-FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO MHOW. IST ROUTE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. British Hoshungabad 300 11 0 11 Gungill 10 o Nerbudda 2 1 1 Seonee, as in No. 190. Bissonie Nosur Beejulgong or Bee- julpoor Sundulpoor or Sil- dulpoor Mhow, as in No. 52 1 2 Scindea's. Pol. Agent at Sehore 100... 3 88 6 16 Total 160 6 1.-A small village. Water from a nullah. Supplies procurable after due notice. Road good. Country flat and cultivated. 2.-Ditto ditio ditto ditto. Cross the Nerbudda at the end of the march by the Jelowda ford. Supplies from Jelowda, a considerable village on left bank of river. 3.-A large village. Water from a tank and supplies plentiful aſter due notice. Country open and cultivated. Road good. N. B. In going from Seonee by Hindia to Sundulpoor the stages are Bissownie 11, Juloda 12, Hindia 12, and Sundulpoor 6m. 7f.. No. 192.–FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO MHOW. 2D ROUTE. Boodeni 2 o Nerbudda , 1 Ruttunpoor 11 6... 3 2 Rhetti 7 6 1 3 Koolar and Ralla 105 4 Pol. Agent at Umar Sehore Gopalpoor 15 o Cheep 2 5 A Nuddy, Jeeagong 71 4) name not 1 6 known Chunwanah 911 27 Muow, as in No. 52. 801 3 Scindea's. Bhopal 15 Total.. | 1441 1 miles. 1.-A small village on right bank of the Nerbudda. Cross the river by ferry. Supplies from Hoshungabad and water from the river. 2.-A small village. Water from wells and a nullah, and supplies must be collected from Rhetti and other villages. Road first part pretty good, latter stony and uneven, winding through jungle between hills the whole way. 3.-A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Cross several water courses and the nullah at the end of the march. Pass Lugonea at 5, and Bhya at 52 miles. 4.-A good sized village. Several buniahs' shops and supplies from adjacent villages Water plentiful. Cross the nuddies by indifferent fords. Road tolerably good. Pass Dhamunda at 14, Chacholee at 45, Nipanea at 6, and Nunilgaon at 9 miles. 5.-Abazar. Water and supplies plentiful.' Ford the nuddy and nullahs. Road pretty good. Pass Byronda at 23, Jowrasa at 51, and Burnugur at 9 miles. 6.- A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Pass Dewla at 5 miles. Cross the nuddy on the west of Jeeagong at the end of the march, 7.-A middle sized village. Water from a nullah. Supplies from adjacent villages. Country open and cultivated. Road good. VOL. 11.] 165 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 193.-FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO MHOW. 30 ROUTE. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. (F. Bhopal. 022 Boodeni Ruttenpoor Chuckuldie Bhelai Pol. Agent at DABREE Sehore .. Kheyree Bhowra Right bank Parbut. ? tee at Pugarea... S Tuppah 2) o Nerbudda.. 11 6 10 0 Koolar 3 1 11 0... 4 2 6. 01... 3 3 12 6 Koolar 4 4 14 o 125 Pupnas &? 7 6 12 2 Parbuttees 131 0.. 7 7 Scindea's. 14 o Kalli Sind.. 9 8 Resident at In-1 dore Peeplea, (Hathka).. GUITO Mhow, as in No. 52 41 6 14 Total... 148 4 miles. 1.-A bazar, and water from the Koolar, which is crossed by ford at the end of the mareh. Country for first 6 miles hilly, and covered with jungle of stunted trees, remainder open, flat and cultivated. Road first part stony, latter pretty good. 2.-A small village. No bazar. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Chuckal- die. Water plentiful from nullahs and wells. Road good. Country first part open and cultivated, latter part hilly , and covered with grass and tree jungle. 3.–A small village. Supplies must be collected from Peepulthone and other villages. Water from one well and a nullah about a mile distant. The road leads up the Dabree pass, is covered with large loose stones, and has several rather steep ascents, difficult for carts. Country hilly and covered with thick jungle. 4.- A small bazar and weekly market on Mondays. Water from a nullah and wells. Country much undulated and very partially cultivated. Much grass and dak jungle. Road a rough hackery track, not much travelied. Re-cross the Koolar by ford at the 2nd mile, (steep banks, difficult for carls), and at the 6th mile pass Peepulthone, a large village and small bazar. 5.-A large village and bazar. Weekly market on Fridays. Water from wells and a , nullah. Road a very good hackery track the whole way, not much travelled ; over high undulated ground, covered chiefly with grass and thin bush jungle. 6.-A small village. Two buniahs' shops, and market on Tuesdays. Supplies from Mug- qurda, 34 miles south west and from surrounding villages. Water from the Parbuttee. Country undulated and pretty well cultivated. The first 5 miles of road is little more than a pathway. The remainder a rough hackery track, 7.-A bazar. Water from wells and a nullah.' Country, much undulated covered with thick jungle. Road a hackery track, much covered with loose stones, and at the end of the 10th mile there is a rugged descent into the Tuppah valley. 8.- A large village and bazar. Water plentiful from wells and a nuddy.. Country for the first 3 miles hilly, thence undulated. Road very good, leading through jungle the greater part of the way. Pass Gowla at 5, Lussorea at 84, and Kujurea at ii, miles. At the 7th inile cross the Kalli Sind by a rocky, but not difficult ford. Of the above 3 Routes from Hoshungabad to Mhow the 2d is the best as well as the shortest. No. 194.–FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO NEEMUCH. Chunwana, as in No. 192 6716 S 81 5... Kunnode at Sehore 11 1 Resident at In- 5 Beejwar 1 2 dore Oonchode 9 1. 2 3 Neemuch, as in No. 54 177) 2 + .. Scindea's 11 5... ... 25 Total... 274 3 166 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A large village and bazar. Water from wells. Road good ; much jungle and little cultivation. At 5 miles pass Ninwassa. 2.--A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from a nullah, heavy jungle all the way. Road pretty good. At 34 miles pass Baghun Khera. 3.-A bazar and water plentiful, heavy jungle for the first 6 miles. Road pretty good. A ghat of gradual ascent for nearly a mile to the table land of Malwa. At 51 miles pass. Dhuntalao at the top of the pass. No. 195.-FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO NUSSEERABAD BY SEHORE, KOTAH AND BOONDEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Bhopali na Scin- dea's. : poor. Rajgurh. Kilchee- 9 0... Dabree, as in No. 193 40 6 Koolar & Shikarpoor 13 01 Patara 3 21 SEHORE 12 01 Nuddy 2 2 Nundney 12 4 Parbuttee..! 5 3 Political Agent at Sehore Eklaira 15 0... 5 4 Holkar 3 Kareyah 12 21 75 Left bank of the Newuj opposite 12 0 Newuje 36 Bhopalpoor old Cantonment Kuraree 17 Kilcheepoor 94 Ghar 38 Bhojpoor 9) Il.. 49 Bhalta 104 Chapee 2 10 Hoozar Rutlaee 12 2 or Hujar 3 11 1 teed Raichao or Reechwa 7 6... 3 12 Political Agent JALRA Patun 8 2 Kalli Sind. . 2 13 Kotah 191 Sukait 12 0 Ahoo 1 14 Mukundura 12 6 Amjar 2| 15 Hunoteea 14 4... 1 16 Jugpoora 8 0 3 17 KOTAH . ol 18 by NUSSEERABAD, as in No. 172 117 0 0 100.. is 35 Total... 358 1 miles. 1.-A small village. Two buniahs, and supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Water from l pucka and 9 kutcha wells. Country undulated, first part covered with dense jungle, latter part jungle and thin cultivation. Road rough at first, latterly a good hackery track. Ascent from the Koolar diflicult for carts. 2.-A large town and bazar. Residence of the political agent in Bhopal. Supplies abundant. Water from nuddy. Country much undulated, and at first partially cultivated, latterly much covered with grass jungle, Road good, low hills on left. 3.-A good sized village. Supplies must be collected if required in any quantity. Water plentiful. Country open, undulating and very partially cultivated. Road good, the ghat on the Parbuttee is bad for carts, bank steep and bed rocky, usual depth of water in dry season 1 to 11 feet. 4.-A small bazar. Water from wells and a nullah. Country and road as in last stage. VOL. 11.) 167 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 5.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water from wells. Country as before, road pretty good. 6.- Water from the river and supplies must be collected. Country and road as before. The ghat on the Newaj is rocky and banks steep. Water about knee deep at the ford. 7-A small village of 100 houses, 6 shops and 13 wells. Supplies scarce and must be collected. Country as before ; first part of road covered with loose stones, latter part pretty good. 8.-A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country undulating and covered with grass and jungle bushes, very little cultivation. Road pretty good. The Ghar nuddy is crossed under Kilcheepoor by ford and stone bridge. 9.-100 houses, 5 shops and 13 wells. Supplies scarce, and must be collected or taken on from Kilcheepoor. Country as in last stage, latter part of road covered with large loose stones. 10.-825 houses and 15 shops. Water plentiful, road very bad over heights, covered with loose stones the whole way. Many steep ascents and much high jungle, bad ghat on the Chapee, high banks and rocky bed, about 100 yards wide, water usually knee deep. 11.-230 houses and 10 shops. Water plentiful. Country hilly, hills covered with jungle and vallies well cultivated ; first half of road very stony, last half good. 12.–300 houses and a small bazar. Water plentiful. At 1} miles pass throngh ridge of hills, and thence the country is hilly on right and open on left. Road stony ; fine culti- vation pear village. 13.-A walled town. Supplies and water abundant. Road pretty good, with exception of the ford of the Kalli Sind which is excessively rocky and bad for cattle and carts, bed about 300 yards wide, banks steep and usual depth of water in dry season 11 feet. Pass Deoree at 11, Bhorasee at 24, Bunjaree at 44, and Gopalpoor at 7 miles. 14.-A small bazar and provisions procurable from neighbouring villages. Water abundant. Road rocky and rugged in parts. Country well cultivated. A range of hills runs parallel to the road on the right. Cross the Ahoo by pretty good ford near the end of the march. 15.-A middle sized village and small bazar, forming a long narrow street through which the road passes. Water from Baolees and a nullah. "Road pretty good through jungle and partial cultivation. Encamping ground within the valley of Mukundura, which is formed by two parallel ridges of hills running northwest and southeast between the Chumbul and Kalli Sind rivers. 16.–A small village. Supplies from adjacent villages after due notice. Water plentiful. For the first 24 miles the road leads through the Mukundura pass, and is very rough over rock and loose stones and winding between hills, angl for 2 miles more it passes over rocky ground and through jungle. For the last 10 miles the road is very good over an undulated and well cultivated country. 17.–A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road stony and tough the greatest part of the way. Much jungle, and little or no cultivation. 18.-A fortified city. Supplies and water abundant. Road over rocks and loose stones, bad for carts, through jungle the greater part of the way. 1 No.-196.–FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO SAUGOR BY BHILSA. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Political Agent ... Bhopal at Sehore Nuzurgunge Pepureinee Kulliaheree Chuklode Bunchore Raeseen BHILSA ... 3 7 Nerbudda. . 1 1 11 31 5 2 8] 2 5 3 8 1 4 1014 8! 5 8 0 Koohu 56 Damul or 2. 14 6 37 Dabur. S Newun & 1017 38 Siew... S 81 9 9 6... 9 10 Seindea's. Ja 30 Resident at Gwalior ... Kuree Garispoor Bagrode 12 6... 168 [PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. Right bank Beena, near Raatgurh... ) Babunad. } 10 11 13 1 Scindea's, under Bri- British. tish Management. Assistant Com- missioner at Saugor Gumereah Bhapyle 90... 8 1 Dussaun 7 12 3 13 SaugoR Cantonment 9 1... ... 8 14 ... 14 Total.../ 1375 miles. 1:-Supplies scarce and should be taken on from Hoshungabad. Water plentiful from a nullah. "Road pretty good through a goo:l deal of jungle. Cross the Nerbudda by ferry opposite the town of Hoshungabad, and by ford at the Goandree ghat, 2 miles above the cantonment, from November to June. The distance in going by the ford is 7 miles. 2.-A small village above the ghats. Water from a nullah and wells. Supplies from Ukulpoor, distant i miles. Country hilly and road stony and rather difficult for carts in ascending the Chouka ghat. 3.-A bazar. Water from tanks and wells. Road good through an open well cultivated valley. 4.-A small bazar. Water plentiful, first 4 miles through cultivated valley, last 4 miles through hills, and road stony in some parts but generally good. 5. bazar. Water Baolees and wells. Country hilly and road stony and bad through beavy jungle most part of the way. 6.-A town and hill fort. 'Supplies and water plentiful. Road good through a well cul- tivated valley. 7.-A walled town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good and mostly through an open well cultivated country. Hills at a distance on right and left, and at the ilth mile pass the western end of a low ridge. 8.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water from the Siew nud. dy and one well. Road pretty good. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Hills at a distance on the right. The nuddies are both fordable by good ghats. 9:-A town and small pucca fort on ridge of low hills on right of the road. Supplies and water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country open and cultivated, ridge of hills gradually approached and the road turus the northern end of it a little way froni Garispoor. 10.-A small bazar. Water from wells and 3 pucca baolees. Road good, leading through dak jungle all the way. 11.-Supplies from Raatgurh, a large town, protected by a hill fort about a mile to the right or southward of the road. For the first 9 miles the road passes over a gently undulated country covered principally with trees ; it then passes between hills into the Raat urh valley, and is a very fair cart road the whole way. Ford the river; the first at 5 miles from Bagrode, its bed 50 yards wide, bottom of rock and sand, banks steep, and depth of water 1 to 14 feet in dry season; the latter at the end of the stage by a rocky ghat, 170 yards wide, and depth of water from 1 to lf feet during the fair season of the year. 12.-Eight buniahs and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. The road for the first 7 miles leads over high undulated rocky ground, and is in parts covered with loose stone, the country is then open and partially cultivated, road good in dry weather. 13.-A middling village. Some buniahs, and supplies, procurable from surrounding villages. Water from 3 pucca wells. Country slightly undulated and partially cultivated. Hills at a distance on right and left. Road good. Cross the Dussaun by good ford at the 3rl, and pass Sehora, a good sized village, at the 4th mile. 14.-Country hilly. Vallics well cultivated. Road good. No. 197.-FROM HOSHUNGABAD TO SAUGOR BY SEARMOW. Chichalee 8! 4 Nerbudda. 1 Pol. Agent at Dhobee 42 Sehore Babaee 15 0... 3 Jamgurh Bugdaee 14 4 Baum 8 0... 1 VOL IL] 169 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Purtaubgurh 3 5 36 Bhopal. Silwanee Political Agent at Sehore Searmow or Nuz- urgurh Gurhea Assistant Com- Bilhaira missioner at Saugor SAUGOR Cantonment 8] 4 ... Goorran- 12 0 jee and Begum.. 10 0... 100... 13 0 3 7 8 5 9 British. 15 0 Beos 6 10 10 Total.. ( 114) 4 miles. N. B. The troops from Saugor under Brigadier General James Watson, C. B., marched by the above route in progress to Asseergurh in 1819. The guns and train marched by Bhilsa, the ghat at Searmow being impracticable for wheel carriages. 1.-A large village. Supplies and water abundant. Cross the Nerbudda by ford at Goandree that. Road along the right bank of the river through jungle, hills left. 2.-A large village. Water and supplies plentiful, Road pretty good over a flat culti- Fated country. Hills on left. 3.-A small village. Supplies from Baree 3 miles north, and from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country flat and cultivated. Hills left and running parallel to the road. 4.-Two large adjoining villages. Supplies and water abundant, Country as above. Pass Cheinpoor at 6 miles. 5.-A good sized village, situated on a stony ghat, which may be avoided by a circuit to the left. Country to the foot of this ghat flat and cultivated. Mill on left, 6.-A small bazar. Water from wells and tanks. Country undulated and cultivated. 7.—A bazar and water from wells. Country hilly and road impracticable for wheel carriages. Ascend the Searmow ghat near the end of the stage. 8.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from wells and the Beos river. Country hilly. Road tolerably good. 9.-A bazar. Water from wells and the Boes. Country and road as in last stage. 10.-Country and road as in last stage. Ford the Beos and nullahs. No. 198.-FROM JUANPOOR TO MIRZAPOOR. Marreyao or Munc} 11 4 Sye Juanpoor Rampoora Oogahpoor 12 4 Mirzapoor MIRZAPOOR Cantt.... 10 0 Ganges 9 4... British 1 22 23 4 Total...J 431 4 miles. 1--Sapplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiful and good. Road good. Ford the Sye about the end of the 5th mile, depth of water usually 24 feet from December to June. 2.-Supplies. Water and road as above. 3.-Supplies from Gooseah, distant about 3 miles. Water plentiful from wells. Road pretty good. 4.-Road pretty good. Cross the Ganges by ferry at the Nur Ghat, off the town of Mir- zapoor, which is a public ferry, and troops and stures passed free of expense. PART I, VOL, IL 170 (PART II. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 199.-FROM JUANPOOR TO PERTABGURH. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. British Juanpoor 14 Sye 12 0... 1 2 Kuppraha Sojangunge Chota Bunka Talao PERTABGURU :: :: 5 Resident at Lucknow ... Oude 3 4 14 0.. 8 0 Sye 4 Total 48' 0 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable. Water abundant Cross the Sye by an excellent pucca bridge. 2.-A bazar and water plentiful. 3.—No supplies ; water abundant. Road good at first, latterly very bad. 4.-Road bad through sandy ravines. Ford the Sye twice, banks steep and difficult for carts. No. 200.-FROM JUANPOOR TO SOOLTANPOOR, OUDE. British Juanpoor Rhunoo 12, 3... Singramow 13 0 Chanda Purtabpoor.. 103 Papper Ghat 12 1... SOOLTANPOOR Cantt. 10 5... 2 2 1 1 2 3 Oude. Resident at Lucknow... 25 5 Total... 581 4 1.-Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water plentiful, but not very good. Excel. Tent road through a fine country. Cross nullahs by bridges. 2.—Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water also scarce and bad, there being but one good well. Cross one nullah by bridge, and ford the other by bad ford. 3.-Supplies procurable on due notice to the Oude authorities. Water plentiful. Road indifferent. Country flat, partly cultivated and partly covered with thiu bush jungle. 4.–Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water plentiful. Road bad. Country much intersected by ravines and much covered with jungle. 5.-Road bad through ravines and jungle. No. 201.-FROM JUBBULPOOR CANTONMENT TO MIRZA. POOR. To Lallgunge, as 224 3 Seotie & 2 in No. 23 Belun... S Mirzapoor Rhugwan Talao 7 3... 1 MIRZAPOOR Cantt.... 13 4Oojla 2 British. 22 Total 245 21 miles. 1,-Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water abundant. Road excellent. 2.--Pass through the town of Mirzapoor at the 10th mile. Road good, VOL. 11.) 171 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 202.-FROM JUBBULPOOR CANTONMENT TO NAGPOOR BY SEONEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 7 4 Nerbudda 1 6 Ol... ... British. Assist. Commr. Left Bank Nerbud-2 at Jubbulpoor... $ da at Tilwara Ghats Ghat Pipurea Raichawul Seonee Dhooma Luknadown Chuppara Nagpoor, as in 2 No. 179 4 2 7 3 5 4 12! 01. Uli 14 4 Shair 16 5 Beejna 891 1 ::::: 5 15 Total i..' 156 71 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable from Tilwara Gurra and other neighbouring villages. Water from the Nerhudda, which is here generally fordable, excepting during the rains, and immediately after, One good boat at the ghat; and canoes procurable when necessary. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from 1 pucca well, and by digging in bed of a nullah. At 34 miles ascend the Pipuren ghat, short and easy. 3.-A deserted village. No supplies unless previously collected. Water from a small tank. Country hilly and the Cheerapownree ghats occur in this march, consisting of a succession of easy ascents and descents. 4.-A middling village. Some buniahs' shops and market on Thursdays. Water from wells. Country undulating and covered with jungle. Rough road, it being intersected with many rocky water-courses, and passing over several stony ascents and descents. 5.-Eleven buniahs and market on Mondays. Water plentiful and good. Country and road as in last slage. 9.- Country hilly and road rugged. Pass the Goonchee or Chokee Hill ghats in this stage. No. 203.-FROM JUBBULPOOR CANTONMENT TO SAU. GOR. 65 61... 5 JAssist. Commis- sioner at Dum- mow 9 1 British. iTo Dummow, as in No. 109 Sudgaon Puttureah Sunoda Saugor Cantonment, as in No. 30 9 1 Kopra 8 1 Sona Sajlee & Beos 28 6 .. Assist. Commis- sioner at Sau- gor 5 5 12 Total 111 6 miles. . -A small village. Supplies procurable from neighbouring villages. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country open and studded with villages. Ford the Kopra at Khoja- Kheree ghat at the end of the 4th mile. 172 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK: No. 204.-FROM JUMALPOOR TO PURNEAH BY RUNGPOOR AND DINAGEPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. - Nos. Nusseerabad Bograh 4 4 Jennie 8 0 10 0... 7 okonei Bhowanypoor { Chandgunge Dewangunge Mugree Ghat on right bank of Konei River S Bagorah Deereeapoor Dussalie Ramdhun Okera Baree RUNGPOOR Civil 2. Station Momunpoor Kolahattie r Mungulbarce Goojarea 2 10 & Munas s 74 94 7 0 100 Rungpoor 2 1 3 3 4 5 6 British. Dinagepoor .. ... Dinagepoor Singaon 10 0... 7 9 o Gogot 8 11 4 Jabunserie. 21 9 Kurteah 8 0 10 & Jubona Kankra 14 4 Attri and Il Gaboora Poorna- baba or 12 0 11 12 Puonur- buda 100 Tangan 1] 13 12 0... 2 14 12 O'Nagore 15 12 Soondany. . 1 16 Maha 2 6 0 1 17 Nuddy .S 8 4 Phanah 3 18 Panar or 12 4 3 19 Ballakhoor. Kurnie Bindole or Bindour.. Bhuplah Neheenugur Near Newabgunge Belgutchee PURNEAU Purneah 22 Total... 211 4 miles. 1.-Encamping ground on riglit bank of the Jennie, the bed of which is about a mile wide, and stream from 400 to 500 yards during the fair season. Plenty of good ferry boats procurable. Road good, with exception of the heavy sand in the bed of the river. Supplies from Jumalpoor. 2.- See No. 95. 3.-Small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water plentiful from the Munas river. Road good. 4.-Abundant supplies from surrounding villages. Water from wells. Country well wooded and cultivated. Road good. Bunds across the nullahs. 5.-Small village. Scanty supplies from surrounding villages. Water good from a tank. Country and road as in last stage. A better division of the distance would be Hathee Bundah, 2 miles further on, but the water there is bad. Temporary bridge on nullah, VOL. 11.) 173 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, 6.-Good water and supplies procurable in abundance. Road good. Cross nullahs by temporary bridges. 7.-Road good. Pass through the town of Rungpoor towards the end of the march. 8.-A hamlet. Scanty supplies from surrounding villages. Water from a nullah and not very good. Country and road as yesterday. Cross the Gogot nuddy by ford, and occasionally by temporary bridge, width of bed 60, and of stream in fair season 30 yards. Some parts of the road in this stage are liable to be flooded from rice fields and become swappy. 9.-Scanty supplies from surrounding villages and bad water from a nullah. Country and road as in last two stages. At 44 miles cross the Jobunserie by ferry or bridge of boats. Bed 180, and stream in dry season only 20 yards wide. 10.–Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from the Jubonah, which is crossed at the end of the march by ford and ferry, width of bed 60 yards, and of stream about 20 during the fair season. The Kurteah is also passed in this stage by ford or ferry, according to the season and state of the stream. Country flat, damp, and cultivated, well wooded. Road good. 11.–Supplies and water abundant. Road good and country as in last stage. The Kankra and Gaboora are fordable from December to June, and are passed by ferry during the rains. The Attri is never fordable, and is crossed by ferry, or temporary bridge, its bed is 50 yards wide, and its stream in dry weather about 20 yards. 12.- A small village. Supplies furnished by zemindars after due notice. Water from a nullah which is crossed at the end of the stage. Country and road as before. The streams are fordable, except in the rains and immediately after, when means for crossing them are provided by the zemindars. 13.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Water from the Tangan, which is crossed at the end of the stage. 11.-A small village. Provisions supplied by zemindars after due notice. Road generally very good, but swampy in one or two places from being inundated from irrigated rice fields. Nullahs crossed by ferries or temporary bridges. 15.-Supplies procurable as above. Water plentiful. Country as before. Road pretty good. The Nagore is passed by temporary bridge or ford. It is crossed at the 9th mile, and forms the boundary between the districts of Dinagepoor and Purneah. 16.-Ditto ditto ditto. Road indifferent. Cross the nuddy by ford or temporary bridge. 17—Supplies procurable as above. Road in different, Water plentiful. Cross the river at the end of the stage by Government ferry. Troops and stores free of toll. Bed and stream about 150 yards wide. 18.-Supplies, as above. Road indifferent. Cross the nuddy by ferry and nullahs by fords. 19.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Rivers and nullahs fordable in dry season, at other times crossed by ferries. No. 205.-FROM JUMALPOOR TO SYLHET BY MYMENSING. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. : 1 2 Nonda Kaida Left Bank Burum. pooter, opposite Nusseerabad or Sowarah Kasseegunge Elaspoor, 101 o Banar 11 o Sherukally Burumpoo- 14 0 ter 2 3 British. İNusseerabad Khurosh near Door- gapoor 6 4 Sonar 14 12 0 Powye and 1 5 Dolye. Kunks and 16 0 Sumaser- 1 6 rie 1 Nuddy 3 11) 0 2 7 times Teleegaon 174 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Bisherpasha British. Sylhet East Bank of the Baglye River .. Lour (Kusba) Left Bank of the ? Dumaleea River S Soonamgunge Dowaleah Chattuck Kazee ka hath SYLHET Horkikally 90 and Su 8 maserrie 11 0 Baglye 69 8 4 ... 6 10 Jadukutta 71 0 and Du-l 4 11 maleea.. 100 Soorinah 4 12 14 4... 61 13 9 0 6 14 11 0 Soormah 51 15 9 0.. 4 16 16 Total.. / 169) ol miles. N. B. The road from Mymensiug to Sylhet on the above route was opened for the march of troops at the close of the rains of 1824, but the only corps that marched it was Blair's, or the 3d Local Horse. The regiment reached Jumalpoor on the 1st of January, 1825, en route from Saugor, and continued its march to Sylhet without halting, and the above remarks refer to the state of the road as it then was. No other regiment has marched it since nor would it now be practicable for troops to proceed by it, unless the road was re-made and means provided, as on that occasion, for crossing the rivers and nullahs. This tract of country can never be passable for troops before the 1st or pro- bably the 15th December. 1, and 2.-See No. 130. 3.-Supplies and water abundant. Country and road as before. Cross the river at the end of the stage by a good ferry, bed 600 and stream about 300 yards wide. 4.-Supplies plentiful from surrounding villages.. Water from the Sonar, which is cross. ed at the end of the stage by bund or temporary bridge. Road good. Country flat and pretty well cultivated. 5.-Supplies from Nurainder and surrounding villages. Water from the Dolye. Coun- try as in last stage. Road good, it passes through several low swampy places, but is well raised and dry. The nuddies passed by temporary bridges and bad fords for cattle, espe- cially on the Dolye which is muddy bedded and very difficult for elephants. Bed of Powye 45, and stream 30 yards wide. Banks steep. Bed of Dolye 50, and stream about 35 yards wide, 6.-Supplies from Doorgapoor. Water from the Sumaserrie. Country 5 miles as above, and next 5 miles through heavy jungle, remainder well cultivated and sloping gradually towards the northern hills. Road excellent. At 7 miles it crosses the Kunks at Jereah ghat, and the Sumaserrie at the end of the march. Cross both streams by temporary bridges or ferries. The bed of the first 180, and stream 55 yards wide, and of the second the bed 300, and stream 120 yards wide. Many jheels to right left, and road made through one swamp. 7.-A hamlet. Supplies must be collected. Water from a nullah bad, and from a jheel good. Country covered with strong grass jungle, and occasional fields of mustard and rice, and slopes off gently towards a wooded range of hills, distant 8 or 9 miles left, and nearly parallel with the road which is good and crosses the two nullahs and several Jheels by bunds. The nuddy is only 20 yards wide and fordable with ease. 8.-A small bazar. Water from the Sumaserrie, which divides the villages into two, and is the boundary between Mymensing and Sylhet. Its bed is here about 60 yards wide, and stream 30, and is crossed by temporary, bridge and ford. The other uuddy occurs about midway, its bed 20 and stream 10 yards wide ; crossed by temporary bridge and ford. Country much the same as in last stage, but soil more moist and less cultivation. Road good and approaching the hills on the left. Bad en camping ground near a filthy jheel. 9.- No village. Supplies must be collected. Water from the Baglye, which is crossed at the end of the stage by ford and temporary bridge. Its bed 40, and stream 30 yards wide. Road good first 7 iniles, gradually approaching the hills through very heavy high reed jungle, afterwards along the foot of the hills with an extensive jheel on the righi. Bad encamping ground. 10.-A bazar. Water plentiful and good. Country swampy and covered with a dense grass and cane jungle. A very extensive jheel on the right and a small one on the left, Road not so good, but very passable, chiefly along the foot of the hills, but swamps in parts, exhalations from jheels very otfensive duriug this stage. 1 VOL. 11.) 175 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, 11.-Supplies from surrounding, villages. Good water from the Dumaleta. Country drier. For 2 miles forest trees with thick bush underwood, then low grass, and latterly open and cultivated with rice. Road good, diverging from the hills. At 2 miles cross the Jadukutta by ford and ferry, bed 800, and stream 250 yards wide. The Dumaleea occurs at the end of the march and is fordable. Bed 00, and stream 60 yards wide. 12.-A small bazar and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from the Soormah. Svampy country, covered chiefly, with heavy grass and reed jungle. Road in some places vet and swampy, but upon the whole pretty good. Cross the Soormah at the end of the march by good ferry. 'Bed and stream 250 yards wide, current sluggish. 13.-A small bazar, Water from the Soormah. Country low, flat and damp. Large jheel on the right. Much heavy grass and reed jungle. Road very indifferent, winding chiefly along the bank of the Soormah, and much intersected by nullahs and ditches. 14.-A bazar and water from the Soormah. Country low and damp, but pretty open and cultivated with rice. Road tolerably good, winding through rice fields. Between the Soormah and the mountains are a number of jungle covered hillocks. 15.--A bazar and water from the Soormah, which is crossed by ferry at the end of the march. Country drier and more open., Rice cultivation. Road good. 16.—Supplies and water plentiful. Country much the same as in last stage, but soil damper and road bad. No. 206.-FROM JUMALPOOR TO TITALYA BY RUNGPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. as in Rungpoor, No. 204 Gungepoor Jaffergunge Kassie Meida Tillae Bare Davi Dooba Mureah Poochagur Bujunpoor TITALYA old Cantt.. 83! 4 12 Gogot 8 0 70 i Nuddy 7 0 9 0 Teestah British Rungpoor 1 1 3 2 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 2 8 2 9 8 0'... 12 0... 11 02 Nuddy 100.. 19 Total.. 167 4 miles. 1.-Supplies from Gungepoor and neighbouring villages. Water plentiful and good. Cross the Gogot nuddy and nullah by fords and temporary bridges. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Cross the nuliahs by temporary bridges constructed usually of bamboos. 3.-Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful and good, Cross the nuddy by tem. porary bridge, 42 paces in length. 4.-Supplies abundant after due notice. Water from a nullah, over which there is a good wooden bridge. 5.-Supplies and water abundant. Road very good. Cross the river at the end of the march by ferry. 6.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Road good. 7.-Supplies from Poochagur and adjoining villages. Water good and plentiful. Road good. 8.-Sapplies from Bujunpoor and surrounding villages. Water plentiful. The nuddies are both named Kurtah by the natives, and are fordable. The first occurs at 3 miles from Poochagur, and the other at the end of the stage. Road good. 9.-Road good, with exception of parts which are sandy and heavy. Temporary bridges on the nullaus, 176 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 207.-FROM KURNAUL TO HANSI BY PANEPUT. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nos. M. F. :::: | Nullahs. British. 12 o Canal 100 12 2 Canal Canal, Roh- 161 4 tuck branch 1 2 3 4 Gurounda Paneput PANEPUT ISSERANA Rohtuck Bootana Jheend Pol. Agent at Umballa } Ludjwana Burchuppur British Hissar Bhatoul Hansi Cantonment.. 11 0.. . 11 21. 11 0 6 7 8 10 0.. 8 Total... 94 0 miles. 1.-See No. I. 2.-A large town. Supplies and water abundant. Road good. 3.-A middle sized village. Supplies procurable in abundance and water plentiful. Country flat and covered chiefly with jungle of grass and dak. Road excellent. Cross the Dehli Canal by pucca bridge near Neoltah. 4.-A large village. Supplies and water plentiful... Quit the high road from Paneput to Rohtuck near the large village of Moondlana, and thence pass through a well cultivated country by a hackery track not much travelled. Cross the branch of the canal by pucca bridge. 5.-A large village in the Jheend estate. Supplies and water plentiful. Road a very good hackery track. Much jungle and little cultivation. 6.- A small village. Supplies must be collected. A tank of deep dirty water surround- ing the village on three sides. No other water procurable. No wells near the place. Road tolerably good. 7.-Supplies procurable after notice. Water plentiful. Road good. 8.-Road good. No. 208.-FROM KURNAUL TO KHYTUL. Protected Sikh States. Pol. Agent at Umballa Neesingh Futtehpoor KHYTUL 14 2. 14 2 Choutung 106... 4 1 2 3 3 Total... S9 2 miles. 1.- Country flat, some patches of cultivation and a great deal of high dak jungle. Road good at all seasons, but after rain it is slippery and bad for camels. Water from tanks, and supplies must be collected. One small nullah is crossed 3 times, 2.-Country and road as in last stage. Supplies must be collected. Water from wells and tanks. 3.-A town and small fort, with wet ditch. Residence of the Khytul Raja. Supplies and water abundant. Country and road as above. 1 British. No. 209.-FROM KURNAUL TO MEERUTT. Left bank at Jumna, 6 4 Jumna Muzuffernugur Meergahun Ghat Bedowlee 71 0 SHAMLEE 14. 6 Canal 1 2 3 VOL. 11.] 177 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. 11 6 Meerut 12 4 Hindon 5 British. r Koorawah Left bank of Hindon at Nougawa Ghat, Sirdhana MEERUT Cantt., 8 0'... 11 0 6 7 7 Total... 71 41 miles. 1.-Water from the river. Supplies must be collected or taken on from Kurnaul, cross the Jumna by ferry at Mirgahun ghat. 4 good ferry boats belong to this ghat and others can be procured. 2.-A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Country open and pretty well cul. tivated. Road indifferent. Pass Nugra at li, Undera at 24, Munglora at 37, and Seetul- guree at 51 miles. town on left bank of the Doub Canal: Country, palienee al 5%, 'Jinjanah, a town, at 8, 3.-A large town. Supplies and water plentiful, ground of encampment West of the Road pretty good. Pass Julupgurh at 2, Singrah at 4, Tapranah at 1!, and Tetowlee at 12 miles. 4. -A middling sized village. Water from tanks and wells. Country well wooded and cultisated. Road pretty good. Pass through Shamlee at 1, Burlah pt 41, Bowree at 63, and Khurrur at 10 miles. 5.-Supplies must be collected or taken on from Boorhana or Sirdhana, according to the direction of the march. Water from the Hindon which is forded at the end of the stage, depth of water at the ghat from 2 to 24 feet, sandy bottom. Country as in last stage. Good road generally, but heavy in some parts, and near Boorhana it winds much and passes through ravines for some distance. Pass Ghuree at 31, Boorhana, a large town and bazar, at 5, Burkutta at 8, Koortull at 91, and Nougawa at 12 miles. 6.-Supplies and water abundant, Encamping ground on east side of town near the cathedral.' Country open and cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Molehra at 1, Choor at 2 and Kalund at 44 miles. 7.–Road tolerably good in dry weather. Pass Kirwah where the Begum Sumroo has got a Bungalow at 31, Publee at 6), and Jutowlee Dantul at 84 miles. Distance measured to the encamping ground between the lines of His Majesty's Dragoons and regiment of Foot. . No. 210.-FROM KURNAUL TO MUZUFFERNUGUR. Shamlee, as in No. 210 28 2 Keesnee Tutaoee 11/ 4 & Hindon British Muzuffernugur.. MUZUFFERNUGUR West Kel-1 13 4 li Nuddy 1 2 5 Total..! 53.2 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies scarce. Bad cross road. The Kusnee and Hindon forda- bile, except when occasionally swollen during the rains. 2.-Bad cross Road. The nuddy is fordable except occasionally during the rains, British. No. 211.–FROM KURNAUL TO REWAREE BY PANEPUT, ROHTUCK, AND JHUJUR. Paneput Isserana, as No. 209 34 2. Canal Gohana 14 o Canal 1 Jusseeah Rohtuck 100... 2 RoHTUCK 80 Deegul 3 PART I. VOL. II. Y 10 4... 178 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Slages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Jhujur. | Territory. JUUJUR 14 6.. 4 G. Gi's Agent at Delhi 10 0 15 4.. 5 6 Machrole Bikoneer Bharawas, near old 2 Cantt. of REWAREES British Goorgaon 9 0 ... 7 11 Total../ 126 1.- Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road good. Cross Rohtuck branch of Canal by Bridge. 2.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. 3.-A large populous village affordin; abundant supplies of all sorts. Water plentiful but not very good. Road good. 4.- A large towu. Supplies and water abundant. Road good. Pass Dojana, the resi- dence of Sumund Khan Jahgeerdar, at 7 miles. 5.--A small village. Supplies must be taken on from Jhujur. Water from a tauk Road very good. 6.- A middling village with 8 or 10 Buniahs' shops, and abundant snpplies procurable from Rewaree, water good, Road very good, with exception of a short distance about half way, where it is narrow and heavy. 7.-Road good generally. Of Protected Sikh States. No. 212.-FROM KURNAUL TO ROOPUR. Umballa, as in No. 1, part 10 55 2 Bunour 13 4Guggur Sohanna 13 01 Political Agent KHURUR 5 4 at Umballa Near Koralee 8' 3 ROOPUR 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 10 Total... 105, 5 miles. 1.--A town and bazar. Water and supplies plentiful. Ford the Guggur. Road good in dry weather. Residence of the Bydwan Sikh chief. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good in dry weather, Country well cultivated, 3.- A Town, water aud supplies plentiful. Road good. Country well cultivated. 4.-A middling village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable after due notice. Country as before. Road pretty good. 4.--A Town and bazar, Water abundant. Road pretty good, nå ata Begić Gume:} No. 213.–FROM KURNAUL TO SEHARUNPOOR. Left bank of Jum- 11 0 Canal and Jumna.. Serai Gogoe 8 o Sendellie... 1 British Seharunpore < Kherah 1 Doab Canal SEHARUNPOOR 12 4 and Dum- Civil Station oala 1 2 3 11 0... 4 Total,.. 42 41 miles. VOL. 11.) 179 TILE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. I:-Supplies must be collected from neighbouring villages. Water from the river. Country flat and well cultivated, Road good. Cross the canal by bridge and the Jumna by ferry, but others may be collected after due notice. 2.- A small bazar, and abundant supplies, and water plentiful. Country level and highly cultivated, adorned by numerous groves of Mangoe trees. Road good, but much wuler water during the rains. Pass Lucknowtee at the end of the 4th mile. Nuddy and nullah fordable during the dry season. 3.-Supplies from Ambytah and surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage, Pass Ambytah at 74 miles. 4.-Country level and highly cultivated. Road good in dry season, but much under water during, and for some time after the rains. Cross canal by bridge and ford the Dumoala nuddy. No. 214.- FROM KURNAUL TO SOOBATHOO. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. as 55 2 14 5 ... 1 Umballa, in No. 1, part 10... S Bussee Dera Poll. Agent at Munnymajra Umballa Pinjore Barth 10 7 Guggur and 3 2 British Of Protected Pergunna. Sikk States. Sookna.. 8 0... 81 0... 3 3 4 4 Poll. Agent at Subathoo Soobathoo 13/ 2 Gumber 10 Total... 1101 0 1.-A bazar, and water plentiful, good encamping ground close to Dåk stage Bungalow road good in dry weather, Country open, and partially cultivated. 2.- Country open, undulated and partially cultivated. Ford the rivers and nullahs by pretty good fords. Road good in dry weather, but is intersected by many kools (water courses) cut for the purposes of irrigation, and which occasionally overflow the road in parts and render it miry. The first nullah is crossed under Bussee and the water is some- imes 3 feet deep at the Ghat. 3.-A small bazar, and water plentiful. Road good, passes over the low range of hills which bounds the Pinjore Doon on the south, and then runs nearly parallel to the bed of the Guggur river on the right; having low wooded hills on the left at Munsa Devi, about 2 miles from Munny Majra. the ascent the low ridge of hills is rather difficult, but quite practicable for car 4.-Road good and nearly level for the first 5 miles, then a very gradual ascent up to Barth, which is situated immediately at the foot of the hills. A small bazar, and water brought by a kool, or cut, from one of the mountain streams. 5.- Anescellent made road, but is in the hills the whole way, and impracticable for laden eattle loaded as in the plains. Camels can go up with half loads, making the distance into Lwo stages, the water mill (Punchukee) near Kuttul, is the usual half way halting place. No. 215.–FROM KYOUK PHYOO TO AVA BY AENG AND SEMBEGHEWN. Commissioner Aeng 801 0... 1 in Arracan Sa wah 15 2 Aeng River 9 2 and Assist- 3 times.. ants Kyouk Woadah 106.. 3 Phyoo and Naiziegain or Na-2 Aeng 4 tyagain 62 British. f 180 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. I Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. On the bank of the Mine River. Doh Shoechatoh 14 4... .. 10 21 Mine, 15 ) 5 times .S Mine, 312 10 0 6 times .S Mine, 12 10 4 times, Doe 7 River once Mine, 3 105 times ... 38 9 15 4 10 9 4 S Mioung Modah... 1] 517 12 Chalain and 6 4 2 13 Irrawaddy, 111 4... 14 9 4... 15 12 0... 101 2 ... 17 12 0 18 10 19 7 o... 20 10 5 21 11 2 22 12 0 100 10 07 .. Kwensah Lehdine Poung’lahang Chalain Mew Sembeghewn, Ava ... Resident at Ava/ Pakang-yeh nito Sillay-mew Dzee-gew-been Yay-say Pullain Lutoup Yubbayern Tu,noun-dine, Goung-gway Yandaboo Sumikoum, Vali Ya-pa-dine Nuj-joon TT TEV | Lay-paun-zein woo | Meetha arbete L Ava or Ava 16 .... 8. 2... • 100 Bu 8 0 2 0 28 Total ... 359 7 miles. From Aeng to Pakang-yeh in the above route was surveyed by Lieutenant T. A. Traut, of His Majesty's 95th Regiment, and Deputy Assistant Quarter Master General, who ac- companied a Detachment, under the Command of Captain Ross, 18th Madras Native Infantry, from the Army in Ava sent by this route into Arracan at the close of the War in March 1826. Prom Pakang-yeh to Yandaboo the route is that by which the Army under Sir Archi- bald Campbell advanced ; and, from Yandaboo to Ava the stages are named from informa- tion obtained by Major J. N. Jackson, Deputy Quarter Master General, with the Army in Ava. 1.-By water, usually accomplished in 3 days. Vide remarks in route No. 15. 2.-Road good, at 94 miles leave the plains and enter hilly tract. The nullahs had originally been crossed by wooden bridges now fallen to decay, but they may be crossed without their assistance. Forage grass and bamboo leaves, water from Aeng river. 3.- Water from springs and forage grass and bamboo. Road generally speaking good, it is hilly and ascending, and occasionally ascend and descend abruptly. 4.-Water from springs, very bad forage, only bamboo tops. Naiziegain is a small stockade on the extreme summit of the highest ridge of the Roma Pokoung and is the boundary between Ava and Arracan, Road hilly and ascending very steep, but good, with exception of the last mile. 5.-Water from the Mine, and forage from the jungle and edge of the river. Road des- cending very steep, and not passable for carts. 6.-Water from the Doh river. Forage good. Road descending runs through a defile caused by the passage of the Mide river between the mountains and being in the bed of the river is considerably obstructed by rocks and stones and is not passable for carts. VOL. 11.) 181 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 7.-Water from the Mine river. Forage rather scarce. Road good, passes through a small valley contaiuing Napehmew and some villages, then passing through a range of hills, it runs along the bed of the mine. 8.-Water from the Mine. Grass forage. Road very good. At 54 miles, the rond descends from the lowest range of hilly ground connected with the great Mountains; the soil is arid and barren, producing no forage, and no water from the Mine till you enter the plain country. Jungle ends at Kwensah. 9.-Water from a Jheel. Road very good. Country highly cultivated wit rice, and full of villages. 10.-Water from a Jheel. Grass forage. Road very good. Pass two large villages Keoungdorh and Coongong, latter on the Moh river, good ground for encampment. Encamp on the border of the Jheel about 14 miles short of the village of Poung’lahang. 11.-Water from a Jheel. Forage grass and paddy straw. Road very good. Country highly cultivated and open. 12.-Water from the Chalain River. Grass Forage in abundance. Road very good. 13.-Road very good. Cross the Irrawaddy river at the end of the march by ferry. 14.-Road in the bed of the Irrawaddy, bad for guns and carriages from the number of ravines, and occasionally heavy sand intermixed with loose gravel and stones, 15.-Road bad and difficult for guns, from the nullahs and ravines which intersect it an dry, with steep banks and sandy bed. 16.-Road bad for the first 2 miles, remainder very good. 17.-Road pretty good. Soil light sand, occasionally deep, rendering it somewhat difficult for Guns. 18.-Road sandy in parts, but generally very good. 19.-Road good through cultivation, which is inundated when the river rises. 20,-Road good. Soil a rich mould. 21.-Ditto ditto ditto. 22.-Ditto ditto ditto. · No. 216.-FROM LOODIANA TO FEEROZPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Humbur 10 4.. Sidham ... 13 0... 2 100... Political Agent Indgurh at Loodiana. Aloowalea's. Futteh Sing Aloo-Maha Raja Run-Futteh Sing jeet Sing's. walen's. 3 Tulwundee-Nouba- har 11 6... 4 182 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Political Agent Mair-Sing-Wala 12 4.. 5 at Loodiana... Sing's. Feerozpoor Maha Raja Runjeet Chiefs Shair Khanwala 12 2... 6 Political Agent at Umballa ... FEEROZPOOR 9 0... 7 7 Total... 79, o miles. 1.-A village of 100 houses, 2 buneahs, 2 pucka wells 15 feet deep, water in one good and in the other not so. Road pretty good through an open and partially cultivated country. Soil right and sandy, low Kadir land of Sutlej right. 2.- Á bazar. Well water plentiful. Hackery track through an open, flat and partially cultivated country. The Sutlej river is about # of a mile North of Sedham. 3.--A village of 200 houses and 5 buniahs' Shops, 12 pucka wells 20 feet deep, water good. Country well cultivated. Soil loose deep sand. Heavy hackery track. 4.-25 houses, no supplies. Good water from 10 pucka wells 25 feet deep. Road tolerably good, heavy sand in parts. Country open, flat and well cultivated, to Dhurm- kote 54 miles and thence partially so. 5.-60 houses, 1 Shop. Good water from 1 pucka well 40 feet deep: Road a pretty good hackery track through a partially cultivated country with some bush jungle, 6.–40 houses, 2 buniahs' shops, 3 pucka wells 30 feet deep, water good. Road a good hackery, track through a wild barren country with grass and bush jungle, and a few scattered Sissoo trees. 7.-A town of 1000 houses, having a good bazar and 120 pucka wells 24 feet deep. A pucka brick fort, 100 paces long, and 40 broad, with high walls and a dry ditch 10 feet deep and 10 feet wide, only one gateway on east face. Road excellent, smooth and level, Soil a firm sandy loam. No. 217.-FROM LOODIANA VIA HURREEKE PUTTUN AND UMRITSIR TO LAHORE, AND THENCE VIA KUSSOOR, FEEROZPOOR AND WUDNEE TO SIMLA, MARCHED BY THE Head-QUARTERS' CAMP ON THE OCCASION OF His ExcELLENCY GE- NERAL SIR HENRY FANE's visit TO THE MAIIA RAJAH RUNJEET SING IN MARCH AND APRIL, 1837. Bhoonderi New Tihara Esikhan ka Kote 1 2 3 Political Agent at Loodiana... 16 41... 124 16 4 Old bed of the Sut 14 4 lej River, (dry) Mukho .. VOL. II.) 183 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory, Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. ii | Nullahs. Nos. ::: 5 Sutlej 16 0... 12 0... 5 6 7 13 7 4... ... 8 8 0... 10 o... " 9 10 Hureeke Sheeron Chubbah Encampment miles North of UMRITSIR Kuttanee Lahore Author- ! Near Attaree ities ... { Chabeel, (MollSing? ka) LAHORE Luckput Rae ka Kote Lullianee Kussoor Right bank Sutlej Rivers at Bareke Ghat British FEEROZPOOR Maha Raja Runjeet Sing. 10 0... 11 8 0... 10 4 ... 16 4... 12 13 14 15 100 Old Bed 8 6 of the Beah, dry 54 Sutlej 1. 16 17 Political Agent at Loodiana.. Sooltan Khanwalla.. 11 0.. 18 Moodkee 12 4... 19 Bhaga Purana 16. 01.. 20 Political Agent Umballa Chief's. Aloawala Malod Naba Maha Raja AloawalaJheendFurreed Kote Chief's. Raja's. 8: Runjeet Sing. Chief"s. Raja's. Chief's. Wudnee or Budnee.. 12 o.. 21 Busseean 15 4. 22 Lutalla 13 6.. 23 Political Agent Umballa Malod 12 4.. 24 Esroo Bootgurh Nudpoor Kulawur. 12 0. 11 o 15 o... 25 26 27 184 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. 10 0.. 4 28 Political Agent Khur or Khurrur Umballa hal Sing. Munnymajra Sirdar Ne- Raja. 8 0. Political Agent Soobathoo Munnymajra Pinjore Bar Soobathoo Syree Simla 12' 4 Sookahna.. 3 29 8, 0.. 3 30 4 31 13 4 32 33 10 4 ... 34 13 2. $ Road pretty 1.-A small village on the left bank of the Sutlej river. Supplies must be collected: Water plentiful. Country open and very partially cultivated. Road a pretty good hackery track, but not much travelled. Pass the villages of Mullicpoor, Ghvuspoor, Hambur and Buttatoah. 2.--A small village enclosed by a dilapidated mur! wall, a short distance from the left bank of a branch of the Sutlej river. Water abundaut, but supplies scarce and must be collected for troops marching this way, Country open and rather better cultivated than in last stage ; soil sandy and road heavy and bad for carts. Pass the villages of Til- wara, Pignee, Bumal, Sidhum and Gidurbinee, all bordering on the bed of the Sutlej river. 3.-A middling sized village with small brick built fort. Supplies procurable for a small detachment. Water plentiful. Country open, flat and partially cultivated. good generallySandy in a few places, but not bad for carts. Pass Kishenpoora, Indgurh or Indergurh, Lohyurli, Dhurmkote, a good sized village with small mud fort, and Sudder Khan ka Kote. 4.-A good sized village, enclosed by a mud wall, and having a small mud fort on the western side of it. A small bazar and water from wells. Country flat and thinly studded with hamlets, surrounded by small patches of cultivation, but the soil is unpro- ductive and covered chictly with long course, grass. Road good and much tra velled by carts, carrying grain and merchandize from the protected Sikh states into the Punjab. Pass Tilwandee, Muhul, Aboobukhar, Peer Muhumud Sod and Russoolpoor, and all very small villages: 5.-A midding sized village on the right bank of the river. A few buniahs' shops, and water from the river. The bed of the Sutlej at this putton or ferry is about a mile and half broad, but the stream in the dry season does not occupy more than 200 yards, and generally runs within a short distance of the right bank which is here about 40 feet high, whilst the left does not exceed 10 feet. There are 30 boats belonging to this ghat, and they are well adapted for the transport of carts and cattle across river, being flat bottomed with low sides and without cross beams, resembling rafts more than boats, they are broad at the stern and terminate in a point at the prow which rises high in a gradual bend, loaded elephants and camels step into and out of these boals with the greatest case, and carts are readily embarked on, and disembarked from them. Road good, with exception of that part crossing the dry bed of the river which is of deep heavy sand. 6.-4 middling sized village. Supplies collected and water from wells and tank. Country flat and very partially cultivated. Soil a hard sandy loam, úncultivated tracts covered with the kureel bush anti long grass. Road for the most part a narrow, winding bad hackery tract. Pass the village of Jowneckee (simall, ) Nuthoopoor (small,) Sirahelle or Surdhuna (large with small brick fort), 'Thullea (large,) and Noushehra (large.) 7.-A small village. No bazar. Water. Country flat and well cultivated for the first 5 miles, and but partially so for the remainder of the way. Road an indifferent hackery track, passing Russoolpoor, Adeelpoor, Turen Tarun, a considerable town and place of sanctity among the Siklis, Thutice:t Khara, Gohurmall and Ballachuk. 8.-The camp was pitched in fine cultivation abont l} miles North of the extensive walled city of Umritsir. Country open, flat and well cultivated. Road good, leading round the city to the West, and north-west, and keeping the fort at Gobindgurh, (which is about 500 yards from the city wall to the north-irest) on the right. Very little wood in the vicinity of Umriatsir. 9.-A small village. No bazar. Water from wells and canal. The camp occupied waste ground on the left of the road about half wity between Kuttanee aud Bhoperee. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Rua good along the left bank of a small canal cut from the Ravee under hills and passing Deenanugur, Buttalah and Umritsir, rejoins that river at Lahore. 10-A small town and castle held in Jageer by Sirdar Sham Sing. Country open and cultivated. Road good, passing Bhopeeree, Koulwal, Purdura, Rance kee and Rungurli, VOL. 11.) 185 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. quit the high road from Umritsir to Lahore, at the village of Purdura, Attaree being con- siderably lo the south of that line. 11-A few houses on the right bank of the canal. No supplies, but plenty of good water. Country open and cultivated for first 3 miles, then covered with Kurreel and other bush jungle for 3 miles more, and the remainder partly cultivated and partly waste. Road, an irregular hackery track for the first 3 miles then good, being the high road from, Umritsir to Lahore which is regained at Kunchunee pool and is thence skirted by the canal on the left, 12.-The camp was pitched in fine cultivation on the left bank of the Ravee about 13 mile north of the fortified city of Lahore. This distance was made in two days by halting in the vicinity of the Shahlimar gardens, only 3 miles from Chabeel Country highly cultivated, and between Shahlimar and the Ravee it is low and liable to be flooded in the rains. 13.-A village enclosed by a mud wall of considerable height and thickness, forming a square of about 150 yards each side, with bastions at the angles. Water from several good wells. Road very indifferent for the first 11 miles, passing round the East side of the Lahore city well to the Shahalmee gate, whence it passes through the ruins of the old city as far as Mujanha, and thence leads over high waste land and is very good. Country for the last 3 miles covered with thorny bush jungle. 14.-A considerable village, with several wells of good water. Country waste and covered with Kureel, Jund and other bush jungle, excepting immediately around the villages where there are patches of cultivation. Road hard and good, passing Gujumatta, Kanah, new an old Jowbee ke Assil and Keet. 15.–Formerly a place of much importance possessed by Pathans, and divided into 12 divisions or kotes, each surrounded by a brick wall flanked by bastions, but since sub- dued by the Seikhs the place has gone to decay, and its ruins extend for several miles along the high bank of the former bed of the Beah river, before that stream united with the Sutlej in the present position about 3 miles above Hurreeke. Country waste and covered with low bush jungle Road hard and good. No water near the road in this stage, except at the small village of Khara, and there it is brackish. 16.-The camp occupied very good ground immediately on the bank of the river near the village of Gundah Singhwaila. Soon after leaving Kussor the road leads down the high bank above mentioned, and thence over low alluvial land, for the most part well cultivated. Road a narrow winding Hackery track, sandy in parts. 17.- A small town, with an old brick fort of no strength. Supplies and water plentiful. Cross the river by ferry, stream 350 yards wide and very shallow for half that distauce. Road good, with exception of a mile on the sand of the river, only 4 boats belong to this ferry, which is not much frequented. The country between the river and Ferozpoor is fertile and well cultivated. 18.-A good sized village with 3 good wells. Country flat, road hard and good. Soil a rich mould, but uncultivated, excepting in the immediate vicinity of the few small villages met with and there the crops of wheat are very luxuriant. The Sookheemye, which is crossed twice in this stage, is a cut from the old bed of the Sutlej and is perfectly dry, its banks are steep, but being sloped off at the ghats present no impedimeni. 19.-A cousiderable village, Supplies procurable in small quantities, and water from wells. Country a dead flat, and mostly covered with an open jungle of Rureel and Jund bushes, through which troops and wheeled carriages may move in any direction. Road mostly made for this occasion and very good. Pass the small villages of Entawalla, left, Perozshehur i mile right, and Hukumutwala close ; at this last village there is one smali well, 70 cubits deep. 20.-A middling sized village, with only 3 wells 150 feet deep, water good, in one well plentiful, but not so in the other two. Road hard and good, with exception of the first 2 miles where the soil being sandy it is heavy and bad for carts. Pass Maulah Hurreawalla, Nuthoowalla, and Sujeana, very little cultivation after the first 2 miles, except immediately around the villages, and the country is covered with jungle of kureel and jund, thick in some places and open in others. 21. -A small town, having a small brick built Fort with mud or fausse braye. Supplies procurable and water from wells, 150 feet deep: Country flat and road good. Gooleah (little) and Runea kee. Partial cultivation, and much low and thin kureel and jand jungle. Wudnee is held iu Jabgeer by Sheer Sing, the adopted son of the Maharaja Runjeet Sing. 22. -A considerable village which with six others dependent upon it, recently lapsed to the Company from the Jheend estate. Water from wells good and plentiful. "Country partially cultivated with extensive open waste plains. Soil sandy, in parts, but generally bard and the road good. Pass Lopo, Mullali, Manooke, and Jutpoora Lamei, all con. siderable villages. 23.-A considerable village. Well water plentiful and good. Country open and pretty well cultivarea. Soil generally a dry sandy loam. Road pretty good, but very little travelled. Pass the large brick walled town of Raekote at 4 miles, the small village of Bussera and Bhynee at 8, and the large village of Andloo at miles. 24. -A small town. Supplies and water abundant. Country open and pretty well culti- Vited. Soil sandy and road good generally. Pass the villages of Chupur, Futtehpoor, Jundiala, Nuthoo, Majra and Rampoor, or Raongurh ; the latter is defended by a mud wall, and is the residence of one of the three sirdars' brothers, who possess the Malod estate. 25.-A considerable village neatly fortified. Water and supplies plentiful, open culti- våted country. Soil for the most part light and sandy. Road good. * Pass the small village of Berh, Saora, Jhanditi and Nusserla. 26.-A small village. Water from wells. Country, open and cultivated. Road very good. Pass Kotila, Eklaira, Russoolpoor and Kunha ko Serai. PART 1. VOL, IL. Pass N 186 [PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 27,-Two small villages. Water plentiful. Sapplies must be collected. Country well cultivated and road good, but very winding. 28.-A town. Supplies and water abundant. Country richly cultivated. Road as in the last stage. 29.-A town and good bazar. Water plentiful. Country slightly undulated. Road a pretty good hackery track. 30.-Å small bazar, and water plentiful. Road good, passing over a low range of hills which bounds the Pinjore doon on the south, and then running nearly parallel to the bed of the Guggur river, on the right having low wooded hills, on the left at Muusa Davi, 2 miles in advance of Munuy Major, the ascent to the low ridge of hills is rather abrupt, but quite practicable for Carts. 31. -A small bazar. Road good, and nearly level for the first 5 miles. Then a very gradual ascent up to Bar which is situated immediately at the foot of the hills. Water brought from a kool, or cut from one of the mountain streams. 32.-Made hill road. 33.-Ditto. 31,-Ditto. No. 218.-FROM LOODIANA TO LAHORE BY UMRITSIR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. . 7 7 2 Sutlej 14 01. 15 0 Beh 101 6 14 4 Beah 1 1 9 Lahore. Philour Noor Mahul Kalke Kuppoorthula Political Agent | Byrawul Loodiana Joondiala UMRITSIR Bunneah ka Dera Shalimar LLAHORE City 13 6... 12 o.. 15 0 15 0 Shah Nehr 6 7 8 9 10 5 4. 10 Total, 122 6 miles. 1.-Road generally good, but sandy near the river. Country open, flat, and well culti- vated. Cross the Sutlej by Ferry. 2.-Country flat, and cultivated. Road pretty good. 3.- Koad for first 11 miles good, remainder sandy. Country in general well cultivated, patches of dhâk and babool jungle. 4.-Road rather sandy. 'Country flat, and well cultivated. Puttah Sing, Aloowaleah resides here, 5.-Country fively cultivated. Road good, but sandy near the Beah river, which is crossed at the end of ihe stage by ford (for cattle) and ferry, stream about 200 yard wide. 6.-Road excellent. Cultivation very fine, interspersed with babool and dhảk trees. 7.-Road good, very little cultivation for the first 3 miles, and much dhak and babool jungle, remainder well cultivated, much sugar cane. 8.-Road good, and country well cultivated, patches of dhik and babool jungle. 9.- Ditto ditto ditto. 10.-Road pretty good, through ruius of Mosques, &c. &c. No. 219.–FROM LOODIANA TO SEHARUNPOOR BY UM- BALLA. Lapsed to H. C. Poll. Agent at Umballa. Umballa as No. 1... Khoodah Molanuh 69 7{Guggur.. 2.. 90 9 0. ... 1 2 VOL. II.) 187 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. . Mustaphabad Markunda 8 0 & Sursuttee 3 Poll. Agent at Umballa. States. Partly lapsed to H. C. Protected Sikh British, and partly belonging to Sikh States. BOOREAH 13) 4.. Canal and 10 O Jumna .. Doab 5 SChilkana Civil Stations.. } Seharunpoor SEHARUNPOOR 10 - Canal ... 16 12 Total.. 129 11 miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Country fat and well cultivated. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Country as above. 3.-A bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Road bad and heavy, especially in crossing the Markunda river. 1-A bazar, and water plentiful. At 9 miles pass through Jughadree, a populous thriving Mundee or Mart. 5.-A small bazar, and water plentiful. Country low Kader land well cultivated. Road pretty good in dry weather, but always difficult for carts owing to the depth of the Canal and branches of the Jumna which must be forded. The Jumna is usually divided into several channels at the ghat and only the main stream can be crossed by ferry, the others must be forded and being generally full of deep holes and quicksands, they form cousia derable obstacles to lauen carriages. The canal is generally from 2 to 3 feet deep, and the ford is bad, the bottom being full of holes. Good ferry boats to the number of 25 can be collected at this ferry on the Jumna, and the river can be forded by laden elephants and camels from December to the end of April, care being taken to mark the ford so as to avoid the quicksands. 6.-Road good. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Cross the canal by bridge and nullah by ford and ferry. No. 220.-FROM LOODIANA TO SIMLA BY ROOPUR AND RAMGHUR. 141 41 8 0 r Khoomb Mucheewara Chumkoor Poll. Agent at Umballa ROOPUR 1 2 13 11 0.. Hindoor Protected Raja's. Sikh States. .. 8 2.. Nallagurh Ramgurb, 14 0 Sursa 100.. 5 6 188 (PART 1. TIL INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 90.. 7 at - Protected 3. Hill States. Poll. Agent Soobathoo Sahee or Sahee-? huttee Konyar, Syree Bungalow SIMLAH 101 0.... 8 9 o... 101 4.. 10 Total...' 103 6 miles.' 1.-Water abundant, and supplies procurable after due notice. Road indiffetent. 2.- A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Road indifferent. 3.-Small bazar, and supplies scarce. Water from a nullah. Road sandy and heavy. 4.-Road indifferent. 5.-A town and castle at the foot of the hills. Residence of the Hindoor Raja. Road good. Supplies and water abundant. Ford the Sursa river, bed wide, banks low. Water shallow, aud bottom loose stones and gravel. 6.-Good hill road. 7.- A few buniahs' shops, and water abundant. Good hill road. 8.- A large village, and residence of the Konyar Rana. Supplies and water procurable. Road good. 9.-A small bazar. Water from a spring, rather scarce in April and May, Road very good. No. 221.–FROM LOODIANA TO SOOBATHOO BY ROOPUR AND BUDDEE. Roopúr, as in No. 221, 412 Bungalow on Bank of Sursa, 2 miles 12 Sursa West of Nalla- 1 gurh Poll. Agent at Umballa Buddee or Buddea...) 11 0... 2 100. ... Protected Hindoor Pergunna. Sikh States. Raja's. British Toojar Poll. Agent at Subathoo SOOBATHOO 12 0 Gumbeer ... ... 4 8 Total..., 86 2'miles. 1.-Supplies from Nallagurh. Water from the Sursa. Road good. Ford the Sursa, water shallow, bottom loose stones and gravel. 2.-A small fort at foot of the hills. A few buniahs' shops. Water plentiful. Road good along the valley of the Sursa, through partial cultivation and jungle. 3.-Good hill road. 4,-Ditto ditto. Protected Sikh States. No. 222.-FROM LOODIANA SOOBATH00 BY PINJORE. Douraha ke Serai 141 0 Kunha ke Serai 14 0 Poll. Agent at Bussee, (kusba) 11 21 Umballa Khurur 14 2... SOOBATHOO, as in 41 6... No. 218 -1 } 5 Total... 95 2 miles. VOLIL) 189 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small bazar. Supplies and water abundant. Country level and highly cultivated Road good in dry weather, miry in some places after rain. No. 223.–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO MYNPOORIE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. British Cawnpoor NANAMOW, as in No. 156 in No. 161 Mynpoorie, as in No. 1 61 4 71 o. 1 66 6 13 Total... 135/ 2 miles. 1.-A few buuiahs' shops, and supplies from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Road rather heavy. Pass Bacootee at 41, and Mena or Mendua at 6. No. 224–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO PERTAB- GURH. , 2 6 1 now S 2 Gosaingunge!" 13 5... 2 Saleempoor... 6) 2 2 Resident at Hydergurgh 14 3 2 Lucknow... Inhowna 102 JUGDEESPOOR 84 Amaneegunge 1014 13 Saegurh 10 2 14 Teingha 15 o 15 PERTABURH 15 0 Sye 46 ::: Oude. 10 Total... 110 2 miles. 1.-Supplies and water abundant, ground for encampment in the Char Bagh Gardens rather contined. First 34 miles of road very heavy, remainder tolerably good, cross the Goomty by fine bridge. 2.-A small bazar. Water plentiful. Road pretty good. Nullahs fordable. 3.-Supplies procurable aſter due notice. Water plentiful. Road very good. 4.-Water and supplies plentiful, Road very good. 5,-Ditto ditto. Fords. 6.-Ditto ditto. Fords. No. 225–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO SECRORA. Cheinhath Chokee 71 0 1 Nuwabgunge 11 7 2 2 Resident at Mussoulee 9 6 3 Lucknow Nuwabgunge 12 6 Gogra 4 SECRORA 15 2 Surjoo 5 Oude. 5 Total... 55) 21 miles. 1.-Supplies and water abundant. Encainping ground rather_confined. Road heavy in parts. 190 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 2.- A bazar, and water plentiful. Cross the nullahs by bridges. Road good. 3.-, small bazar, and water abundant. Road good. 4.- A bazar. Water abundant. Road good. Cross the Gogra by Ferry at theend of the Stage. 5.–Road good in dry weather. Cross the Surjoo by Ferry, and the nullah by Ford. No. 226–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO SEETAPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Oude. Resident at Lucknow... Mahona Baree Peernugur SEETAPOOR Cantt.... 13 C 14 2 10 4 13 C 2 3 4 4 Total...! 51 4 miles. 1.-A bazar. Well water plentiful. Road pretty good. Country open, and very parti- ally cultivated. 2.-A bazar. Water plentiful. Road tolerably good, through patches of jungle and cultivation. 3.-A small bazar, and supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Encamping ground on bank of the nullah (north of the village), which is crossed by a pucca bridge. Road indifferent, passing through a good deal of low jungle. 4.-Road tolerably good. Country partially cultivated. No. 227.–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO SHAJEHAN- POOR BY SHAHABAD. Tuckeah, as in No. 156.. 45 0 Sooltangunge 13 4 1 1 Belgram 164 3 2 Resident at Sandee 100 2 3 Lucknow Duleepgunge 1 4 Shahabad 9 4. 5 British Shahjehanpoor . { SHAJEHANPOOR Can- tonment 15 O Khanout.. 6 ... Oude. ::::: 161 O'... 10 Total...) 125 4 miles. 1.-A small bazar, and water plentiful. A wretched road through a great deal of bush jungles. 2.-A bazar, and water abundant. Road sandy and very bad. Ford the nullahs. 3.-A bazar, and water plentiful. Road as in last stage. 4.-A bazar, and good water plentiful. Road very bad and difficult for carts. A lake close to the encamping ground at this stage. 5.-A bazar, and water from pucca tanks close to the encamping ground. First part of road tolerably good, latter part very bad. 6.-Road good. Cross the Khanout by a good pucca bridge, N. B.-The shortest and best route from Lucknow to Shajehanpoor is hy Seetapoor, yide Nos. 226 and 279. No. 228.–FROM LUCKNOW CANTONMENT TO SOOLTAN- POOR. Jugdeespoor, as in No. 224.. 594 Paimsah ka Poorwa. 11 0 21 Resident at Daoodpoor 9 41... 2 Lucknow SOOLTANPOOR Can- tonment 12 6... 3 Oude. 9 Total... 92, 6 mniles. VOL. 11.) 191 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A small village. Supplies from surrounding villages. Water good and plentiful, Road generally much cut up and bad for carts, winding through a cultivated country inter- spersed with patches of low jungle. Cruss nullahs by fine bridges. 2. —A smalı bazar. Water plentiful. Rond generally bad and much cut up, first 6 miles country cultivated, and covered with low jungle the remainder of the way. 3.–The road for the most part lies through a low jungle with patches of cultivation, and Very good. is No. 229.-FROM MEERUTT TO BIJNOUR BY DARANUGUR GHAT. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. ME 11 0 14 British. Meerut Bijnour [ Chota Mohana | Bussomba Daranugur BIJSOUR Civil Sta- tion 1 2 3 11 4 Ganges 2 8 0 4 4 Total... 42 O, miles. .:-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice. Water plentiſul. Road a tolerably good hackery track. Nullah always fordable. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto. 3.-A bazar, and water from the Ganges, which is crossed by good ferry at the end of the march. Road had, great part of it through low Kadir land inundated in the rains. Nul- lahs fordable during the fair season 4.- Supplies and water abuudant. Road good. Country well cultivated, No. 230.-FRON MEERUTT TO MOORADABAD. To GUJROWLA, Mohao 2 as No. 69 401 6 British Moradabad AMROAH, (South 14 5 Soot ... 11 side of) Pointee 2 MORADABAD Cantt. 9 6 Gangun 3 10 5... :: 7 Total... 751 60 miles. 1.- A large town and good bazar. Water and supplies abundant. Country open and partially cultivated. Road indifferent. Pass Deriapoor at 21, Muhesura st 5, near Chand. hugur, at 8!, Bagerpoor at 111, and Goolurea at 124 miles. The nullah is crossed by ford at the 20 mile and is miry for some time after the rains. The dry bed of the Soot is crossed at 131 miles. 2.-Pointee is a small village at some distance to left of the road. Ground for encamp- ment close to pucca well on right of the road, and immediately opposite to the village. Supplies must be collected, good well water. Country and road as in last stage. Road very heavy at first near Amrorth. Pass Tellaphor at 41 miles. 3. -Country as before. Road good. 'Pass Packbura, a large village, at 4, and ford the Gangun at 6] miles, depth of water from 1ļ to 2 feet, sandy bottom. A Government ferry is kept at this ghat in the rains. British. No. 231.-FROM MEERUTT TO MUTTRA. To BooLUND- SHEHUR Civil Sta 43 4 Boolundshehur tion, as No. 35 Koorja, as No. 35... 54 51 192 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers, Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. ... Allygurh British. S|Chandous .. 12 11 Khyr 104 Loohee or Lohee 12 3 Maat 11 4 MUTTRA Cantonmt.. 12 1 Jumna 1 2 3 4 5 Muttra ... 10 Total.. 112 61 miles. 1.-Road good, soil sandy, and country open and partially cultivated. A small bazar and market on Mondays. Water plentiful. Pass Askurpoor at 34, and Kusseru at 7 miles. 2.-A small bazar and market twice a week. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Rampoor at 21, Bisarah at at 1}, and Bamoutee at 7 miles. 3. --Supplies from surrounding villages abundant after due notice. Water from wells. Country open and well cultivated. Road tolerably good. Pass Bhaneera at at 3, Pulla at 4), Anee ai 52. Nugurea at 81, Kaeru at 94, and Buddunpoor at I miles. 4.-A bazar and water plentiful. Country open and but partially cultivated. Road in- different, narrow and sandy in parts. Pass Jeysingnugra at 15, Khuujur at 2, Deresura at 24, Kurahuree at 31, and Hindoul at 6 miles. 5.-Country open and partially oultivated. Road very heavy and bad in many parts. Cross the Jumna by bridge of boats during the fair season and in the months of the rains plenty of good ferry boats are procurable, 1 2 3 No. 232.-FROM MEERUTT TO SEHARUNPOOR. Meerutt ... Douralla 8, 2 Kuttowlee 12 0 Muzuffernugur Muzuffernugur 15) 0 Kalli 2 Deobund 15 4 Nuddy s Seharunpoor Khujoorwala SEHARUNPOOR Civil Station 8 5 Hindon 1 British. 4 12 5 ... 5 6 6 Total... 72 of miles. 1.-A small village. A mart has been established here for the supply of grass, fuel, and carthen pots; other articles of the requisite supplies must be collected. Country open and pretty well cultivated. Road good. 2.-Supplies and water abundant. Country open and road as in last stage. 3.-Road good, with exception of a mile of sand where the Nullah intersects it about the middle of the march. The Nullah is a little miry at the Ghat but fordable ; and when a large detachment passes this way it is usual to construct a temporary bridge on it. 4. -A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Cross the Nuddy by a good bridge. Country open and cultivated. Road good. 5.-8 Buniahs' shops and supplies when requisite from adjacent villages. Country and road as in last stage. 6.-Country open and cultivated. Road good. The Hindon is crossed by a bridge and long causeway. No. 233.–FROM MHOW TO BHOPAWAR BY DHAR. Scindea's. Power of Dhar. Sagore Resident at In- dore { Dectaun 11 7 Anger 2 1 8 6 Anger and 3 2 Chumbull 12 5 Bageree? 1 3 Nuddy. DHAR 3 VOL. 11.) 193 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Resident at In.2 Amjhera Raja's. Amjhera BHOPAWUR 12 6.. 9 5 Mhye 14 4 5 dore. 5 Total... 55 5 miles. 1.-A middling village and small bazar. Water from the Angrer nuddy and from wells. Country much undulated and raised into ridges of low hills. Road a pretty good hackery track in dry weather. Pass Gopalpora at 5, Burdilla at 5%, and Koondah at $2 miles. Ford the Angrer nuddy at 6) miles. 2.- A large village and bazar. Water from a nullah. Country open and level and pret- ty well cultivated. Soil black mould, full of holes and fissures, and road bad in conse- quence. At 4 miles cross the Chumbul at Achana Munana Ghat 60 yards wide, steep Lanks, small stream throughout the year and sandy bottom. Pass Mangrole at 54 miles. 3.- A large town. Supplies and water very abundant. At 6 miles cross the Bageree by a fascine bridge, width 30 yards, steep banks and miry bottom. Country open, undulated and very partially cultivated. Road pretty good in dry weather. Pass Kurroundea at 14, Kurrunjua at 31. Ootawud at 67, and Jeitpora at 104 miles. 4.-A town. Capital of the Amjhera Raja. Supplies abundant. Water plentiful from Wells, and a tine lake on north side of the town. Country much undulated, having a gene- ral slope to the southward. Road a pretty good hackery track. Pass Gainpoora at 27, Titla at 41, and Sooltan poor at 74 miles, 5,-Town on left bank of the Mhye river. Supplies and water abundant. The canton- ment of the 5th local horse is 2 miles north of the town. Road good the whole way. Pass Menda at the 4th mile, and cross the Mhye at the end of the stage by good ford. Country waste, undulating, has a general rise from Amjhera to Menda, and thence slopes off' to the Westward. No. 234.–FROM MHOW TO BOMBAY BY MALLIGAUM AND NASS CK. Jaum 14 4 Chorur, 4 Resident at times 9 1 Indore Killora 3 2 Holcar's. 7 2 ... British 8 7... 4 O Nerbudda 23 4 13 6.. Holcar's. MUNDLAISIR Kusrode orKusrawud Billuckwara Wun or Oon Nagulwaree Assistant Poll. Agent at Mundlaisir Sindwah Palasnair Karoond Talneir Batawud Soonghier Dhoolia Civil Station 5 14 0 6 14 3 47 S Dees and 13 4 Goey 28 13 2 9 14 1 2 10 9 1 1 11 7 3 Taptee 10 4... 13 12 British. 14 Dhoolia Arvee 0 Panjra Toorsie 12 0 Nuddy 3 15 Booree, Dewah 120 16 & Ran- daree 9 o Moosum ../ 1 17 Chickulwar | MALLIGAUM Cantt.. 17 Total. .) 1901 0 miles. A A PART I. VOL. II, 194 [PART 1. TIIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. PART 2ND.-From MALLIGAUM TO BOMBAY. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. ... Omrah British. 8. 4.. 1 Doolia 14 3 18 Chandore 11 0 19 Surwara or Surora. 14 0 20 Wuzeer 11 0 Ahmednugur NASSUCK 11 0 22 Warewarah 13 0 23 Inkutpoora, 16) 4.. Kussarah 24 Kurdeh 11 4 25 Collector of 11 o Burnee Shahpoor 26 Northern Con- Bastah &? can Purgah 9 2 27 Kalloo Bhewndy 9 2 Oolass 28 BOMBAY 33 3.. 13 Total... 173 6 miles. 1.-A small village and fort within a mile of the crest of the Vindhya ghats. Supplies must be collected. Water from tank and wells. Country first 6 miles open and undulated, remainder pretty hilly. Road pretty good. 2.-A small village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells, descend the Jaum ghat, descent abrupt. Road narrow, winding and rugged for 2 miles. Three more rocky and bad through a hilly and jungly country, remainder pretty good. The descent of the ghat is nearly impassable for guns and wheel carriages, and very difficult for laden cat- tie. Six-pounders have been lowered down it. 3.-A town on the right bank of the Nerbudda, formerly a station for a regiment of In- fantry, now the residence of the Assistant Political Agent in charge of Neemar. Supplies and water abundant. Country slightly undulated. Road good. 4.-A small bazar and water plentiful. Road rocky and bad at the ghat on the Ner- budda, which is crossed by ferry... Boats large and unwieldy. Canoes are also procurable, and may be formed into rafts. There is a bad ford for unladen cattle in the hot season at of a míle above the ferry. Country round Kusrode open and cultivated. 5.-A middling village. A few buniahs' shops and supplies procurable after due notice. 6.-Site of an ancient town with ruins of handsome pagodas. Water from a large tank and supplies procurable after due notice. 7.-Supplies must be collected by previous notice to local authorities. Water from wells and a nullah. First 5 miles of road good over a high open country and rocky soil, then narrow through jungle for about 7 miles, the remainder open. 8.-A fort and village. The fort is built of stone and brick, and is about a mile in cir- cumference. Road tolerably good, through high grass jungle with trees and bushes. Fords of the two nuddies bad and rocky, and the thick jungle on their banks infested with tigers. 9.-Water from a nullah. Encamping gronnd confined by deep jungle. Supplies must be collected by order of the local authorities. The first two and the last 24 miles of road pretty good, remainder stony and very bad over hills and rocks and through dells-near 9 miles to the top of the Sindwah ghat, which is about 2 miles in length (descent) but in no part very steep. 10. --Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road tolerably good through thick jungle to within a mile of Karoond, where the country opens a little. 11.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road tolerably good through thick jungle for the first 8 miles. Ground for encampment about ļ a mile from Talnier and as far from the Taptee river. 12.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful from the Panjur river. Road generally good, pass through ravines to the right bank of the Taptee, which is crossed by ferry and ford fordable from February to July. 13.-Supplies procurable. Water from tank and wells. Soonghier is a considerable place. Road pretty good. 14.-Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road pretty good. 15.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells and by digging to the depth of feet in the sandy bed of the Toorsie nuddy. Road good for 6 miles, then rocky for 3 miles in crossing the Lulling or Nulling ridge of hills, the remainder good. The Lulling pass is about 200 yards in length and rather steep. 16.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from a nullah and wells. Road good, with exception of a short rocky ascent at the 4th mile from Arvee, VOL. 11.) 195 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 17. A cantonment on the right bank of the Moosum river, which is 180 yards wide and fordable. Supplies and water plentiful, Road very good. 18.-Supplies and water procurable, country open and good road. 19.-Large town. Supplies and water abundant. Country open and road good. 20.-Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Road good. 21.-Small villa ye. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful. Road good. 22.-A city, Supplies and water abundant. Country bad and cultivated. Road good. 23.- A small village. Water from wells, and supplies must be collected. 21.-At 5ų miles pass Tullgaon, and at 7 commence the descent of the ghat, which continues for 4 miles 74 furlongs, and much of it very difficult for carts. The villaye of Ekzaon is situated half way down the ghat on a favourable piece of table land with 2 wells, said to contain water all the year. From the foot of the ghat to Kussarah, the road winds through jungle, and is bad and intersected by many nullahs. No supplies. Water from nullah and wells. 25.—No supplies. Water plentiful. This march is through a completely ghat country, and presents perpetual obstacles from the impracticable nature of the nullahs' beds and their banks, many of which are of sheet rock, and very difficult. Continued jungle, and ascents and descents innumerable. 26.-Supplies procurable, and water from wells, and the Burnee, which is crossed at the end of the stage. Road bad, intersected continually by rocky-bedded nullals, and passing through thick jungle at 8 miles, descend the Toorancira ghat about 300 yards in length. 27.-Scanty supplies. Water plentiful, Road and country much the same as in the last stage. Jungle more open. 28.-Supplies procurable in great abundance, and water plentiful. Country open, no regular road, and sometimes passing over rice fields which must be impracticable in the rains, at 3. miles cross the Oolass river by ford. Rough rocky bed 200 yards wide, the stream usually 100 in fair season and about 2 feet deep, at 61 miles descends the Kazil Kynd, a stony pass in the hills. 29.-By water. N. B. A good made road has now been completed between Nassuck and Bombay, and the remarks opposite the intermediate stages in the above are no longer applicable. It is still difficult for carts to ascend from Kussorah to Inkutpoora, but they do ascend with the assistance of coolies. No. 235.- FROM MHOW TO MAHIDPOOR, VIA OOJEIN. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Holcar's.Scindea's. Territory. rTo Oojein, as in No. 9 48 5... 1 Resident at La-) Kaluhera hore 11 0 Sipra 2 MAUIDPOOR 12 4 ... 3 6 Total..! 72 1 miles. earts. 1.-A walled city, 64 miles in circumference. Supplies and water abundant, encamping ground on left bank of the Sipra on west side of the city. Country level, soil black mould, and partially cultivated. Cross the Sipra first at the end of the 6th mile by a rocky Tugged ford of about 100 yards in width, and secondly at the end of the march by a tolera ally good ford. Road good, with exception of the first ghat on the Sipra, which is bad for Pass. Dendia at 51, Gowla at G, Nanaklera at 8] iniles, and for the last 14 miles the road winds through the city. 2.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water from wells and the Bipra, which is cruesed at ihe Nanakhera ghat hy a rough stony ford. Country undulated, and rising into low hills E. and W. of the Sipra. Road tolerably good for carts. 3.-4 town on right bank of the Sipra. Residence of local agent and cantonment of Ilolcar's contingent of horse. Supplies and water plentiful, Road stony in parts, pass- ing along between a ridge of low hills and the Sipra river. 196 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 236.-FROM MHOW TO MANDOO. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Dhar. Scindca's. | Territory. Julwa 3 1 Gumbeer Anger 12 4 and Chumbul 14 6 ... Resident at In- dore 2 Nalcha MANDOO, Juma 2 Musjeed 6 0.. 3 3 Total... 33 2 miles. 1.-Afsmall village on left bank of the Chumbul river which is crossed by good ford at the end of the stage. Some buniahs and supplies procurable from surrounding villages, A good cart road the whole way over an undulated country. Pass Reechurbuldee, Akee, Kesurbuldee, Nandere and Kummunpoor. 2.-A small bazar. Water abundant from Baolees and tanks, encamping ground on the bank of an old pucka tank, called Nulgunga north of the village. Country pretty level and road good. 'Pass Billode, Bangla, Bachunpoor, Moondla, Sugree, Buğree, Koonda and Lonera. 3.-The ancient capital of Malwa, extensive interesting ruins. Supplies from Nalcha. Water from tank and wells. Rugged hackery track. Country hilly on right and cut into deep kohs or dells ; on left at the end of the 5th mile there is a short rugged descent, and then an ascent of 200 yards by a slippery causeway to the Delhi gateway, in the sur- rounding wall of Mandoo. S. Hol- Scindea's Seindea's. car's. No. 237.-FROM MHOW CANTONMENT TO NEEMUCH. Bara Baitmah 15% of Gumbeer... 4 1 Resident at In-Deypalpoor 12 4 2 2 dore Assowtah 12 o Chumbul... 2 3 Byru Puchlona 13 o Chumlee... i 4 Resident at In Bunderbaila 96.. 2 dore and Lo- cal Agent at Mahidpoor ... Kachrode 12 2 ... 4 6 Political Agents To NEEMUCH Baitum & Cantonment, as 800 2 at Neemuch.. Arkea s in No. 54 13 Total..! 155 4 miles. 1.-A large village and small bazar. Water from wells and a nullah, Country undulated and partially cultivated. A high ridge runs nearly parallel to the road at some distance to the left or west as far as Machole, and thence to Bara Baitmah, the road leads through a break in this ridge and is a good hackery track throu hout. Pass the village of Mhow at 2, Sirkundee at 31, Tee at 14, Dhuneer at 7, Gowla at 9, Machole at 10%, and Chota Baitmah at 12 miles. 2.- A large town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open and undulated. Soil black mould full of fissures and holes, and the road bad in consequence. Pass Sunowda at 3, Ajunda at 4, Attowda at 6, and Jellodea at 94 miles. A large lake to the east of the town. 3.-A middling village. Four buniahs and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from a Baolee. Country open and partially cultivated. Road good with exception of the ford on the Chumbul, which is rocky and difficult for wheel carriages. At 6 miles pass Santeree a small village on right bank of the Chumbul. 4.-A small village. Five buniahs and water from a nullah. Supplies should be taken on from Nollye or Kersode, according to the direction of the march. Road good in dry weather. Pass Omurea at 21, Nollye a large town at 6j, and Jondlu at 10 miles. VOL. 11.) 197 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 5.-A small village. Water from kutha wells, and supplies from Danasota 2 miles from the westward, and from Kersode which is passed in the march. Country undulated and raised into a low ridge running S. and N., and intersecting the road between Kersode and Bunderbaila. Road good with exception of about į miles, where it is stony in passing the said ridge. Pass Roudea at 3, and Kersode, a large village and bazar, at 6 miles. 6.-A large open town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country undulated and raised into ridge. Road good with exception of the distance between Badshahkheree and Lussorea where it is narrow and stonj. Pass Khajakhere at 11, Nundiassa at 31, Neem- Waree at 4, Badshahkheree at 5t, Lussorea at 74, and Cheerola at 8 miles. No. 238.–FROM MHOW CANTONMENT TO SAUGOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Scindea's. Resident at In- dore Peeplea, (Hath-> kee,) as in No. 52 ) Tuppah Gajna Ashta Umlar Sendula and 41 6 Bamore Nuddies 14 0 Kalli Sind.. 9 i Mhow 11 1 U 2 Nuddy 10 1 Parbuttee. 7 3 14 o Pupnas 4 4 Anjar & 13 0 Sehore 5 Nuddy Paruah 13 5 81 6 Nuddy 12 4 107 8 2 Bugra 38 127... 99 Bhopal. Political Agent' SEHORE at Sehore Kallakheree Goonga Left bank Bugra at Hindola Kamkhera Resident at Gwalior BHILSA SAUGOR, as in No.196 my : Scindea's. ... 12 6 Betwa 72 6 1 10 ... 21 Total... 237 6 1.-A bazar. Water from wells and nullah. Country for the first 11 miles undulated, fhe remainder hilly. Road very good, leading through jungle the greater part of the way. Pass. Kujurea at 9, Lussorea at 5, Gowla at 84: and Burumpooree at 134 miles. At the 61 miles cross the Kalli Sind by rocky, but not difficult ford. 2.-A neat small village, only 1 buniah. Supplies must be collected. Water from kut- cha wells and a nullah. At the 3rd mile there is a short and easy ascent from the Tuppah valley, and thence to Gajna the country is undulated, having a general slope from a ridge of low hills at some distance on left towards a nuddy, on right running to join the Parbut- tee river. Road narrow and winding for the first 3 miles, remainder very good, passing through thick jungle the greater part of the way; Pass Boosut at 1}, Chota Dooraha at 4, Koorlee at 7, ard Chota Koorlee at 9 miles. Nuddy and nullah all fordable. 3.-A large town and fort on right bank of the Parkuttee river. Supplies and water abundant. At the 7th mile ford the river at the Urolea Purolea ghat. Bed about 920, and Stream during dry season 25 yards wide. Bottom of rock and loose stones. Depth of war ter from 2 to 3 feet, and sloping banks at the ghat. Road winding and rough. Soil black mould, and well cultivated on left of the Parbuttee, and on right only partially so. Coun. try undulated, and the range of low hills on left terminate opposite Ashta. 4.-A middle sized village and small bazar. Water from wells. Country open and un- dulater, Road pretty good. Pass Killaram at 14, Bowlea at 5, Koteri at 81, and Lussorea at ll4 miles. 5.- A large town and bazar. Residence of the Political Agent in Bhopal. Supplies abundant and good water from the nuddy. Country and road much the same as in last blage, Hills to the right and one close to the road opposite Denkia. Pass Baka Pattoria at 3, Kokeri at 11, Jelakheree at 6, Goorbella at 8, and Dentia 104 miles. 198 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 6.-A small village. Two buniahs. Water from wells and supplies from surrounding villages after due notice. Country much undulated and raised into low hills and ridges at some distance on right. Soil black mould and partially cultivated. Road pretty good in dry weather, but excessively bad in rains owing to the soft adhesive nature of the soil. The Paruah is only 20 yards wide and crossed by a good ford. Some of the nullahs are deep and muddy-bedded and difficult for cart and cattle for some time after rains. Pass Chota Thoona at 34, Deoreea at 10, and Ruttunpoor at 124 miles. 7.-A small village. Supplies procurable from surrounding villages after due notice. Water from 2 pucka and 9 cutcha wells. Country undulated and raised into low ridges and detached hills, Soil black mould and as usual full of fissures and holes. Road an indifferent hackery track, and several of the nullahs which intersect it form considerable obstacles to carts and cattle for some time after the rains, their beds and banks being of soft black earth and miry. Pass Mungalia at 3, Japrea at 64, and Kothar at 10 miles. 8.-A small village on right bank of the Bugra nuddy, whence a good supply of water throughout the year. Supplies must be collected on previous notice to the local au- thorities. Country high and undulated, with small detached hills at a distance on right and left. Road a tolerably good hackery track. Pass Ruttua Bandokheree at 34, Sooklea at 51, and Peeplea at 61 miles. The núllahs are muddy-bedded and difficult for carts for some time after rains. “The Bugra is crossed at the end of the March by a deep but not bad ford. 9.-A middling village. A few buniahs, and supplies from surrounding village. Water from a tank and a Baolee, scarce in hot months when the inhabitants are obliged to go to a nullah nearly 2 miles off for this necessary article. Country slightly undulated, and to the north and south of Powa nullah it is hilly. Road an indifferent hackery track, some of the nullahs intersecting it are miry and difficult for some time after the rains. Pass Kejra at 3 miles and Powa nnllah at 6 miles. 10.-A walled town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open, slightly undulated, and pretty well cultivated. On approaching Bhilsa some small hills at a distance on right and left. "Road a tolerably good hackery track. Pass Billow ree at 4, Bemkhera Kumtulla at 5, Gowarea at 63, and Bagree at 8: miles. At 114 miles cross the Betwa by a tolerably good ford, a short distance below the junction of the Bhys or Beos river. This ghat waa made by a detachment of Sappers and Miners in Dec. 1822. The old road crossed both the Bhys and Betwa by rugged fords a short distance above their juuction. No. 239.-FROM MIDNAPOOR TO HIDGELEE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. 95... -Nie | Nullahs. oor ICO | Nos. Midnapoor British. Kurruckpoor 64 Kossye Muckrampoor Bailda 100 Kullyaghy Sowree Agrachour 1010 Bhowanee Chuck 81 0 CONTAI HIDGELEE... 8 0 7 Total... 62 1 miles. 10 0... Contai 1.-A few shops and supplies furnished by Zemindars at a few days previous notice. The river is fordable in the dry season, and boats ply on it in the rains. Good made road. 2.-A bazar and water from tanks. Made road. 3.-Water plentiful and supplies procurable iu abundance on due notice. Made road. Bridges on the river and nullah. 4.–From Bailda to Sowree there is no regular road, and the path leads over rice fields, and is passable for only 6 months in the year when the nullalis are dry. Supplies procura- ble by order on Zemindars. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 6.—There is a kind of road in this stage but usually much out of repair, and there is a bridge on the nullah. Supplies furnished by Zenindars on previous notice. 7.-Ditto ditto ditto. There is a bazar at Contai. VOL. 11.) 199 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK: No. 240.-FROM MIDNAPOOR TO NAGPOOR BY SUMBHUL- POOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. M.F. 1 British. 6 5 Cossee 8 6... 8 7... 8 7 Dooling 7 6... 1103 Subanreka 95 Nullahs. VOCHA CON | Nos. ... 93 4 8 8 9 ... Mohurbunj Raja's. 51 10 5 11 7 12 83 80 1011 1011 77 Khirbun-2 dum S 813 Byturne 90 4 13 64 11 14 11 15 1 16 Koonjur Raja's. 86 ... 4 17 51 18 66... Mhadeepoor Bajnadee Midnapoor Parooleah Goonteah Aurung Seirsah Jokaw Serindah, or Sur- gurah S Amdeah More Bamunhuttee Keirnah Commissioner in Deegpussah Gorahpulsah Cuttac Terintee Pudumpoor Katkarinjeah Aumlaungorah or Aumnaingorah. Kowalpoor or 2 Koonsalpoor ... S Goonwah Bundail or Bundul... Koorharee River Koraikelah Narinda Balung Kundrup Koosum or Koosmee Koochunda Rungloo or Runga- lee G. G's Agent Kutterbuggah Frontier Bamun Sasun at Hazaree- SUMBHULPOOR bagh Goorbaggah Kalapan Cheereegaon Oordunnah Geenoolah Laindurah Muldah Sarungurh Taureepar Doorug 8] 20 663... 2 19 116 73 Koorharee . 2 21 73 ... 77 Bamunee... 11 23 112 102 13 22 5 24 1 25 5 26 4 27 126 Sunka 2 93 Banga 5 853 3 28 S.W. Sumbhulpoor. 1 29 4 30 3 31 Maha ? Nuddy S 3 32 102 102 102 104 74 724 743 110 65 77 :::::::::wiiiwi: 2 33 2 34 3 35 2 36 3 37 5 38 2 39 3.40 2 41 200 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M.F 31 42 3 43 :: Nullahs. 26 Nos. 2| 44 ... } 1 45 Nagpoor. Resident at Nagpoor ... 9 3... Beliegurh 873... Mutteah 116 Kuthdol 116.Jong Maha Lowun 701 Nuddy Pungaon Duttaun 1024 Bynsah 11 0 Assoundah 11 01 Nurdah 8 51 Raeepoor 100 Nagpoor, as in No. 127 180 3 46 1 47 48 2 1 67 Total. . 646 0.1 miles. 1.-Supplies from Midnapoor. Water from the Cossee river, which is crossed by ford in this stage. 2.-Supplies must be collected. Water from a nullah, 3.-Supplies must be collected from Jhargaon. 4. -A small bazar. Water from tanks. 5.-Ditto ditto ditto. 6.- No bazar, Water from the Soobanreka. 7.-No bazar. Water from tanks. 8.-No bazar. Water from tanks and a nullah. A hillghat in this stage. 9.-Ditto ditto ditto. 10.-A small bazar and water from a nullah. 11.-No bazar. Water from a tank. 12. --Supplies from Juspoor. Water from a nullah. A small hill ghat in this stage. 13.-A small bazar and water from a nullah. 14.-A small bazar and water from tanks. 15.--Supplies from Jotepoor and water from the Byturnee. 16.-A small bazar and water from tanks. 17.-No bazar aud water from a nullah. 18.-No bazar. Water from the Byturnee. Continued hill ghats. 19.-No bazar, Water from a nullah. Continued hill ghats. 20.-No bazar. Water from a nullah 21-No bazar. Water from the Koorharee river. Hill ghats. 22.--Supplies from Bonie. Water from a nullah. Hill ghats. 23.-No bazar. Water from the Bamunee. 24.-No bazar. Water from a nullah. 25.-No bazar. Water from a nullah. 26.-No bazar. Water from tanks 27.- A small bazar. Water from tanks. 28.--Supplies from Syra. Water from tanks, and a nullah. 29.-A small bazar and water from tanks. 30.-No bazar. Water from tanks and a nullah, 31.-A bazaar. Water from the Maha Nuddy. 32.-Supplies from Sumbhulpoor. Water from tanks. Cross the river by ferry and ford, 33. -A small bazar, and water from tanks. 34.-Ditto ditto ditto. 35,-Ditto ditto ditto. 36.-No bazar. Water from a nullah. 37.-No bazar. Water from a tank. A small hill ghat. 38.-No bazar. Water from a nullah. A small hill ghat. 39.-A small bazar. Water from tanks and a nullah. 40.-No bazar. Water from a nullah. 41.-Ditto ditto ditto. 42.-A small bazar. Ditto ditto. 43.-A small bazar and supplies from Kuttingee. Water from a nullah. 44.-Supplies from Aspeed. Water from tank. 45—Supplies from Sooreenarain, and water from a tank. 46.-No bazar. Water from tanks. 47.-Ditto ditto ditto. VOL. II.] 201 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 48.-Ditto ditto ditto. 49.-Ditto ditto ditto. 50.-Ditto ditto ditto. 51.-A bazar. Ditto ditto. No. 241.-FROM MIDNAPOOR TO TUMLOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 8 0 Kossye 30.. 4 2 British. Midnapoor Moonibgurh Debrah Panchkoora Ghat, on Right Bank Kossye TUMLOOK 10 0 Kossye 3 14 0... 4 4 Total... 401 of miles. 1.-Supplies procurable in abundance on a short previous notice. Made road. Cross the river by ferry and ford. Pucka bridges on the nullahs. 9.-Ditto ditto ditto. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto. Cross the river by ferry. No charge for passing troops and pub- lie stores. The road to Calcutta by Budge Budge strikes off here. 4.-Road abandoned and not kept in repair ; there are pucka bridges over the nullahs. Supplies and water abundant. 1 2 British. No. 242 –FROM MIRZAPOOR TO PERTABGURH. Left Bank Ganges, opposite City of 4 Ganges Mirzapore Goopeegunge 100 Benares Ooj ke Chokee 7 2 Sydabad 13 4 Surson 13 0.. Allahabad Secunderpoor 7 0 Mhow 9 G... Resident at PERTABGURH 14 0 Lucknow 3 4 5 Oude. 8 Total... 75 6| miles. 1.-Cross Ganges by good public ferry at the Nanghat. 2.-A bazar, situated on the high road from Benares to Allahabad. Supplies and water abundant, Road pretty good through a fertile couutry. 3.-4 middle village. Some buniahs, and supplies procurable in abundance from sur. rounding villages. Water from wells. Quit the high road near Hannamangunge, 6 miles from Sydabad, and thence to Surson there is pretty good cart road. 4-A small bazar. Water abundant. Road indifferent, winding through a fertile coun- A bazar. Water and supplies abundant. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road gretty good. PART 1. VOL. II. в в 3 202 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 243.–FROM MIRZAPOOR TO SAUGOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. British Mirzapore S Bhugwan Talao Lallgunge To Saugor, 13 41... 7 3Oojlah 1 2 as in' No. 23. } 2663 Total.. 287/ 2 miles. 1.-Supplies scarce and must be collected or taken on from Mirzapoor. Good made road. Pass through the town of Mirzapoor. 2.- A small bazar. Water plentiful. Country open, undulated and partially cultivated. Excellent made road. Jubbulpoor. 1stJr.A.Commis- P. A. Commissioner, sioner at Dumoh. The above, as that in , No. 23, is the old road. The following route from Rewah to Saugor is now invariably followed :- Kutra .. 13 5 241 Uinurpatun 13 4 176 Myheer. 15 0 Kooseree 8 1 35 Niagaon 9 2) 165 Jogabi.. 11 5210 About 2 miles from this towards Chaka the road turns off by Poorena.. 9 4 01 Hurdwara... 8 2 0 Burzaon... 11 1 110 Koomari 13 5 50 Peepunea Ghat...... 8 2 1701 Rivers Biarmi. Bilthura........ 8 2 20 Dumoh... 101 0 0 Nem Sutgaon. 9 이 ​Puthereea... 9 0 Here it joins the old road. No. 244.-FROM MORADABAD CANTONMENT TO SEHA. RUNPOOR BY BIJNOUR AND MUZUFFERNUGUR. S Pointee 91 6 Gangun ... Amroah 10 2 Nougawa 8 21. 1 1 Sao, 1 mile in ad-2 131 4... 2 vance ofChandpoor Bijnour Daranuggergunge 13 o Chooia 3 BIJNOUR, (Civil 4 Station) Right Bank of the Ganges River at 7 0 Ganges 5 Rowlee Ghat. Muzuffernugur.. Bhokerheree 16 Muzuffernugur, 2 141 4 (Civil Station). S Seharunpoor, as in No. 232... 30 6 Moradabad British. 8 6... 10] 4 .. 12 Total...' 132 2 miles, VOL 11.] 203 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.- A large village and small bazar. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open and partially cultivated. Soil sandy and road heavy in many places and bad for carts. Pass- Muck dumpoor at 41, and Pelakoor at 6 miles. 2.-Chandpoor is a large town and abundant supplies are procurable from thence. Water plentiful. Country and road as in last stage. Pass Bura Soala at 34, Phena at 6, Goolee at 9. and throngh Chandpoor at 124 miles. 3.-A bazar and water plentiful. Country, soil and road as above. Pass Pipelee at 23. and Subdulpoor at 7 miles, and cross the Chooia by pucka bridge at the 9th mile. 4.-Supplies and water abundant. Road good and country well cultivated. Pass Dara- nugur at of a mile. 5.-Road tolerably good in dry weather. Cross the Ganges by ferry and encamp on the right bank on low Kadir land. "No supplies. Water from the river. 6.-Supplies and water procurable. Road bad through the Kadir or low lands of the Ganges. No. 245.-FROM MULLYE TO KATHMANDOO. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 9 3 Bagmuttee. British. Chuprah Right Bank of the Bagmuttee River Munneareeghat. Shekurgunge Muttearee Segowlee KATHMANDOO, as in No. 150... 15 0 13 0 14 0 98 4 15 Total... 149 71 miles. 1 No. 246.–FROM MULLYE TO PURNEAH. S British. Muzufferpoor ... 1 Seeta Murrie, Pooprie Kumtoul Durbungah PURNEAH, as in No. 152.. 12 0 16 0 12 0 11 0 1 131 16 Total...! 182) 4 miles. Bhurt- No. 247.-FROM MUTTRA CANTONMENT TO ALWUR. British Muttra Goverdhun 151 0 G. Go's Agent in Deeg 9 0 Rajpootana .. Nugar 15 0 JAOLEE or Jawullee 120 Bamoulee or Bam- 12 0 boullee ALWUR 120 ::: 1 2 3 Alwur. poor. } 6 Total.. 75 of miles. 204 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A town and bazar, Supplies and water plentiful. Country flat and cultivated. Road indifferent generally, and heavy in parts. 2.-A large fortified town. Supplies and water abundant. Country Alat and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. 3.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. Country open and partially cultivated. Distant hills seen on right and left. Road very good. No. 248.-FROM MUTTRA TO MHOW. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. : 2 British Muttra ... Rusoolpoor 13 4 Kuddun Kundy, 9 4.. G. G.'s Agent in near Bhurtpoor. Oochain 12 0 Rajpootana ... Mullick poor 6 0 Bangunga. Biana 101 o Gumbeer... Mhow, as in No. 9.. 364 4 Bhurtpoor. 3 5 38 Total.. 415 4 miles. 1.-A small village. Water plentiful and supplies procurable for a regiment after two days' notice. Country flat and open. Soil sandy and partially cultivated. Road a little heavy for the first few miles, afterwards very good. 2: ---Water plentiful from wells, and supplies procurable in abundance from Bhurtpoor, which is about a mile to the west of the encamping ground at Kuddum Kundy. Country well cultivated. Road pretty good and towards the end of the stage enters the jungle which surrounds the city of Bhurtpoor. Pass Rarh and Jungeenah in this stage. 3.-Water from wells and tank, and supplies abundant after due notice to the Bhurtpoor authorities. After passing out of the jungle which surrounds Bhurtpoor, the country is open and cultivated. Road heavy in some parts but generally very good. 4.-A middling village on right bank of the Bangunga. Supplies procurable after due notice and water sufficient. Country open and well cultivated, "Road heavy and especially so in crossing the dry bed of the river at the end of the march. 5.- A large town under an extensive fortified hill. Supplies and water abundant. Road heavy. Country open and cultivated. Hills at some distance on right and left and in front. No. 249.—FROM MUTTRA CANTONMENT TO MYNPOORIE. Muttra Buldeo 12 0 Jumna 1 Kundowlee 15 6 2 JAgra ETIMADPOOR 12 0 3 Feerozabad 13 6 4 Shekoabad 124 Aroul 8 2 6 Mynpoorie Bigraee 11 0 7 MYNPOORIE 12 0 Eesun 8 Total. 9721 miles. 1.-See No. 157. 2.-Ditto ditto. 3. See No. 158. 4.- Ditto ditto. 5.-Ditto ditto. 6.-Supplies procurable from surrounding villages. Water plentiful. Country flat and partially cultivated. Road tolerably good in dry weather, bui is under water til Novem- her, and varying in depth during the rains from 1 to 3 feet. VOL. 11.) THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 205 Territory. Nullahs. i Nos. 3 of Secund and partially cultivated, distant hills left. 7.-A small village. Supplies procurable from surrounding villages after due notice. Country low, flat and much nnder water in the rains. Road as in last stage. 8.-Country and road as above. Pass through part of the town of Mynpoorie at the 9th mile, and cross the Eesun by pucka bridge between the town and cantonment. No. 250.--FROM MUTTRA TO NEEMUCH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F Biana, as in No. 248. 51 0 Neemuch, 279 2 as in No. 12... 31 Total../ 330 2 miles. No. 251.-FROM MUTTRA CANTONMENT TO NUSSEERA- BAD BY BHURTPOOR, BALAHERA AND DEOSIR. British Muttra ... Russoolpoor 13 41 Sewur, near the Bhurtpoor Re- 1 sidency S Aroudeh 2 Busawur 15 0 Bangunga. 3 Hoorlah or Hooru 11 0l.. 4 G. G.'s Agent in Maunpoor 13) 2 5 Rajpootana ... KALAKOH 13 3 3 6 UDEOSIR 9 0 7 NUSSEERABAD, 113 4 as in No. 14... 20 Total.. / 215l 5 miles. 1.-Sapplies from Bhurtpoor. Water from wells. Gound for encampment on old parade in front of the residency. From the village of Jungeenah, which is passed in this stage, there are two roads leading to Sewur. One througl the city of Bhurtpoor, and the other round it on the west side. The latter road is the best for troops. 2:-Supplies procurable in abundance after due notice to the Bhurtpoor authorities. Water plentiful. Country open and highly cultivated. Road good. 3.—A town and bazar. Water and supplies in great abundance. Country as in last stage. Road heavy in crossing the Bangunga, in which there is very little water in fair season, otherwise very good. 4.-A small bazar and water from wells. Country flat and highly cultivated. Hills on left at some distance. Road goodPass Lallpoor at 3*, Mowah at 7, and Ramgurh at 8 miles. 5.—A bazar. Water from wells and the Bangunga river. At 31 miles from Hoorlah the road leads through the Balahera pass, which has little or no ascent or descent and is formed by a break in a ridge of low hills running N. and S. Country partially cultivated. Road a tolerably good hackery track, with exception of a short distance east and west of the pass, where it is heavy and much cut up by deep narrow ravines. Pass Gowarkee at 1, Bissara at 6, and Kerowlee at 94 miles. The Bangunga passes under Manpoor on the north, and its course is nearly parallel to the road in this stage. 6.-A small village with a few buniahs' shops. Water procurable from wells and a nullah. At 6 miles pass the large village on right bank of the Bangunga, and at 10 miles pass the village of Dubbee. A pretty good cart road. Nullahs fordable. 7.-A large walled town and bill fort. Supplies and water abundant. Country undulat- ed and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass near Kherlee, a small village, at 43 miles. 14 0.. 13 01... d. 206 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 252.-FROM MUTTRA CANTONMENT TO NUSSEERA. BAD BY RAJGURH-MACHERY AND DEOSIR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos, M. F. } 51 0 Jaolee, as in No. 247.. Alwur. Majpoor Rajgurh Bussowah G. G's Agent in Goodha Rajpootana ... Kalapahar DEOSIR Nusseerabad, 1 2 3 Jeypoor. 10 0 15 0 8 4 90 9 4 Tantya ... 6 0 Bangunga.. 113 4 6 14...) 21 Total..! 222 4 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable after due notice to the Bhurtpoor authorities, Road good. 2.-Supplies and water procurable in abundance. The last 4 miles of this stage through a hilly country. Road sandy and stony in some parts. 3.-Good encamping ground and water plentiful. Supplies from Rajgurh or Goodha. Good road, 4.-Supplies abundant and water from wells. Road pretty good, 5.--Good encamping ground and water from wells. No supplies. The road passes through deep ravines near the Tantya nuddy on the west of Goodha, and is exceedingly difficult for carts; the ravines are also very narrow, and one cart is sufficient to block up the passage. 6.- A large walled town and hill fort. Supplies and water plentiful. Road indifferent. The Bangunga becomes dry soon after the rains. No. 253.–FROM NEEMUCH CANTONMENT TO BOONDEE. Jaee or Jawee 61 1 Lahsoor 82 5 2 Pol. Agent at Dheenkur 11 5 111 3 Neemuch Goonjallee Ruttungurhkheree... 7 6 or Goon- jur 24 G. G's Agent in 5 Omaidpoor Rajpootana... Scin-S Pol. Agent at dea's Neemuch Singowlee 13o Bamunee.. 5 6 81 6.. Scindea's. ... 7 0.. Yodey- poor. G. G.'s Agent in Rajpootana. TilsOOAH, 7 6... ... Boondee. Oodeypoor. 15 8 Pol. Agent at Kotah Ebree or Daabee or Dhabee,... 15 2 2 Ehroo, Kullianpoora, 14 4 Boondee, 15 1 ... 1 9 8) 10 10 Total... 109 0 miles. 1.-A village of 100 houses. Two buniahs' shops, and supplies procurable from surround- ing villages. Water from wells. Country open, undulated and well cultivated. Road a tolerable good hackery track, though rugged in some parts, and miry in others after rain. Pass Molkhera at 41, Doulpoor at 6, and Bhoorkheree (Chutterboojkee,) at 7 miles. VOL. 11.) 207 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, 2.-A village of 100 houses. Four shops. Water from wells. Country much the same as in last stage. Road a very winding hackery track, rough in parts. Pass Kates kheree at 1f, Chirowlee at 21, Gadow lee at 41, and Dhamonea at 65 miles; the latter is a village of 100 houses and 6 shops. 3.-A large village and small bazar. Water plentiful. At 21 miles from Lahsoor com- mence an easy ascent of a mile in length, and near the end of the 8th mile there is a second ascent by a short and rugged Ghattee close to the site of Malgurh at 8, and Goorah at 9 miles. Country between the ascents much undulated, but having a general slope to the northward, or from the top of one ascent to the base of the other. Road a rugged, bat practicable hackery track ; between Lahsoor and Ahmudpoora there is a direct bridle road by the Chokee Ghattee which saves a mile in distance, and there are other near cuts for foot passengers and cattle. 4.-A considerable town and bazar. Water plentiful from wells and the Goonjallee. Country undulated in high swells, with a general slope to the front. Cultivation near villages and low stragyling jungle on waste ground. Road a practicable hackery track, Tough in many parts, and latterly it is particularly so in passing over slippery ledges and natural terraces of rocks. Cross the nuddy by ford at the end of the march. 5.—A village of 20 houses and shops. No Supplies. Water from 8 wells and a nullah, At one mile from Ruttungurhkeree, he suminit of a third and higher ridge of hills is reached, and a wild country is then entered, raised into long wavy swells and knolls sinking towards the north. Road rough and winding, but practicable for wheeled carriages after attaining the top of the ghat. The ascent of the ghat is nearly 5 furlongs in length, and forms an angle of from 15 to 35', but only some short distances are of the latter steepness, the road smooth, and sufficiently wide for guns dragged by men; it winds up the southeast side of the hill on which the fort of Ruttungurh stands, and is cut out of the side of the hill, partly within a parapet of earth, and in parts having its outer edge built up with stones to the level of the inner. The streets through the town to the foot of the ghat are narrow and winding: 6-A town and bazar, Water abundant from wells and the Bamunee. For half this stage the country and road continues the same as in last stage; the latter half is in the Falley of the Bamunee, which is rocky in parts and cultivated in others, and road tolerably good. Pass Khera at 31, Utta at 14, Jhatella, or Jhajra at 61,Mowpoora at 71, Sainutilace at 8, Mooteara or Mootaira at 81, Hureepoora a 114 miles. Ford the Bamunee at the 10th mile. 7.-A small village of 25 houses and 3 shops. Water from one well and a nullah, scarce in May and June; at 52 miles from Singowlee there is another ascent of 560 yards in length; the general angle of ascent 20, excepting for a short distance near the top, where it is full 3. and much blocked up by large masses of rock; the road is rugged all the way up, but only very difficult for laden camels at the steepest part near the top.; this pass is more dificult than the Ruttunkheree one, from being quite neglected, but a little labor properly applied would remove every obstacle to the passage of every kind of wheel carriage. From Singowlee to the foot or the ascent there is a gradual rise over a very rocky waste, thinly covered with low jungle, the road very rough over slabs of rock. From the top of the ghat the country and road resemble what was met with at the back of Ruttunkheree pass. &-Ten houses and 15 shops. Water from 8 wells and a nullah. Country hilly, but the hills not close excepting near Goorah or Goodha, where the end of a ridge approaches from the north; the road passes over many high undulations, is often rugged, and in many parts steep for short distances, but on the whole a practicable hackery truck, little culti. Pation and much thick but not heavy jungle. Pass Goorah at 7 miles, a village of 60 houses and 7 shops. 9.-Sixty houses and 4 shops, 5 wells, a shoulder of low hills from the N. W, is turned at 24 miles, from Daabee, thence many roky undulations are passed over, and there are some small hills immediately in front of Kullian poora. Country mostly bare, very little culti- Fation, some thin stray ling jungle. 10.-Capital of the Boondee state, and residence of Rajah. Supplies and water abun. dant. Pass Amthoon at lb, Lalpoora at 4, Burkhera at 91, Oomureh at 104, and Chuttem. poora at 131 miles. For the first 4 miles the country is undulaied and covered with thick fox jungle, and thence level and partially cultivated. Road rugged in the first part, and latterly it is winding and narrow, being sunk and contined between banks, but upon the woole it is a passable hackery track, and a good deal travelled. No. 254.-FROM NEEMUCH CANTONMENT TO JOUDPOOR BY THE CHITTERBOOJ PASS AND PALLEE. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. Scin-1 Pol. Agent at dea's S1 Neemuch 3 Nyagong 9 1.. 208 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. Nos. Neembhera ... 7 l'eelun .. Tonk Rampoora. 28 2... 2 11 4 Bailuch 15 5 ... Oodeypoor. G.G.'s Agent in Rajpootana ... To Sowal as in No. 12 CHOTA REWULEA Jasmah or Jasmee Railmugra Kankrowlee Puralee Jeelwara SOMAIR Bura Dulana Seeptawass Sonaee PALLEE Karhla Rohut Mogra JODHPOOR 11 10 2 3 5 4 65 6 7 1 8 9 2) 10 3 11 12 2 13 14 15 95 14 6 Banas 14 7 Goomtee 10 1 8 5 6 5 11 6 13 0 9 2 Loonee 9 31 8 7 12 7 Loonee 11 3 Jodhpoor. 19 Total ../ 1911 o 1.- A village of 60 houses and 2 shops. Water from 2 wells and a tank. Surface of the country raised into knolls and hillocks. Soil black mould, with rocks and stones, partial cultivation, long grass and straggling, bush jungle. Pass Joginee at 11, Cheegsee at 11, Sukwara at 4, Sirlaee at 6, Sagwarea at 7, Kuntarea at 73, and Soneah at 91 miles. Road rough near Joginee, but good generally. 2:-A village of 125 houses and shops. Water from 42 wells and 2 tanks. Country undulating and partially cultivated. Soil in parts black mould but mostly gravel, with rock and small stones. Pass Balahera at 6, and Kuppasem, containing 500 houses and a good bazar, at 84 miles. Road rough in parts and miry in crossing water courses from large tank near Kuppasum, but it is good generally. Partial cultivation in the first part of the stage, latterly a good deal of dak jungle. 3.—150 houses and 10 shops. Well water plentiful. Country undulated and raised into high swells and knolls, on the left to 64 miles where a ridge running N. and S. is crossed by an easy pass, the last three miles is a plain covered with low straggling dak jungle, Soil as before, partially cultivated for the first 6 miles. Road rough in parts, but good generally: Pass Kabirah at 31, Sonareakhera at 5, and Muckundpoor at 6 miles. 4.-A'large town and bazar, situated at the southern end of an extensive lake, called Raj Sumundur. Country pretty level near the road. Hills and knolls at a distance. Soil much the same and partially cultivated. No jungle. Road good. Sand near the Banas. Pass Mundra at 2, Choukree at 54, Bhoorwara at 64, Peeplea at 8), and Asotea at 14 miles, 5.—30 houses, 3 shops and 5 wells. Country hilly, or rather it is composed of a jumble of bare rocky hillocks and knolls, little or no jungle, and where there is any soil in the .valleys it is cultivated. Very rough road, but practicable for wheel carriages, it passes along the base of the embankment of the Kaukrowlee Lake for the first 1 miles, and then along the Eastern shore for about 4 miles more. Pass Bausole at 1, Bhanah at 31, Chopur kherre at 54, Bhoondul at 81, and Tonkura at 11] miles. 6. – 194 houses, 5 shops and 20 wells, Country, hilly: Soil chiefly rocky with gravel, having low thin jungle, but in many little hollows it is a rich loam and well cultivated near scattered huts. The road gradually ascending to the Chitterbooj ghat, winds along the stony channel of a wide nullah for the first 6 miles; and is very rough ; it theu enters amongst rocky heights, and is frequently rugged and confined between banks; it is nowhere difficult for laden cattle, and might be made good for carts without a great deal of labor. Pass Ithalee, a village of 54 houses and 2 shops, at 3, and Mavarea at 84 miles. 7.-20 houses, I shop, 4 wells and 3 tanks, "Pass over the Arranulli mountains, the rise for 24 miles to the top of the Chitturbooj or Somerea pass is gradual, and the road VOL. 11.) 209 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. tolerably good over and through small rocky hills; it then plunges into an excessively deep, narrow rocky pass, filled with jungle; the descent continues for 1 mile, of which 3 furlongs are very steep with zigzag road made evidently with great labor. A graduat slope for the next 5 furiongs with very rugged road amongst large stunes and rocks, in the bed of a nullah which it afterwards continues to follow to the 6th mile. This pass is practicable for laden cattle (with some difficulty in going down the abrupt descent to the kest,} but not for wheeled carriages of any description. There is a dense high jungle on the west of the Aravullia extending to Somerea. 8. -A small village on left bank of a nullah. Road good, but merely a foot path through jung'e for the first 2 miles, then an opeu cultivated country: Pass C. Dulana at 41 miles. 9.-Road excellent, oser a fine and well cultivated country. Pass Kair at 21, Khera at 4, and Bolakoora at 64 miles. 10.-- Rond over a plain and generally very good, the country about Boosee is very rich and beautiful, and particularly well cultivated. Pass Badolao at id, near Neembaira at 4, Boosee at 51, Sodawas at 10, and Goora at 114 miles. The Someree nullah is 900 yards to right. Well water brackish. 11.--A very large open town and famous Mart for all description of goods. Supplies and Faler very plentiful. Country level and bare ; very partial cultivation. Road tirin and good. Pass Arnaous at 34 miles. 12.-A middling village. Scanty supplies. Good water from tanks. Road excellent, over an open plain. 13.- A large village. Supplies procurable. Good water rather scarce here. sandy over undulating ground. 14.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from wells bad. Road hard and good in some parts, in others very sandy over an open plain. Cross the Lwone by ford. Small rill of brackish water. 15.-An extensive walled town, surrounding a stone fort built on a rock which is scraped all round so as to be almost perpendicular. Road very sandy and heavy. Very little cultivation and patches of jungle. Road very No. 255.-FROM NEEMUCH CANTONMENT TO JODHPOOR BY THE KOT DEWAR PASS AND PALLEE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M.F. 1 81 41... Oodeypoor. Chota Rewulea, as 39 6 in No. 254, Kuppasun, 51 Goolond or Gurrond, 104 2 Potelah, 81 2 Banas, 3 3 Chunder Goleah, 7 Bhaga, 4 24 times.... Chunder Lawah, 106 5 G. Gr's Agent in Bhaga, Rajpootana.... Amait, 36 Chunder Dewa or Debeer, 13 0 Bhaga, 3 13 7 times,... Kote, 94... 8 Bantah, -16 01 Nuddy.... 9 Khairwah, 9 21 Nuddy. 10 Pallee, 11 41 Nuddy... 11 JODHPOOR, 42 4 No. 254, 61 21... Jodhpoor as in 19 Total... 1926 miles. 1.-A considerable town and bazar. Water plentiful. Country undulated and partially cultivated, Road rough in parts and generally good. Pass Balahera at 6 iniles. 2.-300 houses, 35 shops, and water plentiful from wells and a tank. Country undulated and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. Pass Domanah at 5, and Soorajpora at if miles. PART I, VOL. II. сс 210 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 3.-A town and hazar. Water plentiful. Country undulated and partially cultivated. Road gooi. Cross the Banas at the 2nd mile by good ford. Small stream until June, and pass Soorwas at 15 miles. A ridge of low hills passed on right between Soorwas and Potelah. 4. Small village of only 20 houses, 4 shops and 4 wells. Country and road as yesterday. Pass Satileawys at 1], Kankulla at 14, and Goleah Kaljoorah at 62 miles. 5. -A town of 500 houses and bazar. Water plentiful from wells. Country generally level, but after passing Lodanah it is raised into knolls on the left. Soil gravelly, pretty, well cultivated, and is free from jungle. Road good for wheel carriages, but unfrequented and ill detined. Pass Chapree at ļ, Nugurea Khera at 1!, Phoonkea at 21, Kabiree at 4}, and Lodanah at 7 miles. 6.-A large walled town and good bazar, situated in a fine valley nearly surrounded with hills. Country generally pretty level near the road, but hilly on left and in front. A ridge too is crossed near Sawah by an easy pass. Soil gravelly and partially cultivated, Road passable for wheel carriages, but unfrequented by them. Pass Goosoonda at 23 miles. 7.–320 houses, 40 shops, and well water in abundance. Country hilly and soil rocky, some few hollows cultivated. Road for the first li miles good, the remainder very rugged, and only passable for ladlen cattle, and with difficulty even for them in many places. Hills covered with thin jungle. Pass Dewa- ke Goorah at 5}, Dengana at 71, Choakree at 8, and Doodea-ka Goorah at 102 miles. 8.– 150 houses, 10 shops and well water plentiful. At 1} miles from Dewa or Debeer commence a rugged descent of 6] furlongs road winding along a narrow rocky ledge with hills on left and precipice right. At the foot of this descent there is a Baolee (called Goorah ke) and Binjarah halting place, and thence to the end of the 7th mile there is a gradual descent, the road winding along the bed of a nullalı, in a deep dell, and over masses of rock, and loose stones, but passable for laden cattle. 9.- 400 houses, 10 shops, 32 wells and a tank. Country for the first 44 miles raised into small hills and knolls. Soil to this distance, of gravel and rock, afterwards country level and bare. Road good all the way; Pass Bura Bewee at 41, Chota Mewee at 54, Matajee ka Gorah at 7, and Hindoojee ka Gorah at 12 miles. 10.-700 houses, 40 shops, 40 wells and l tank. Country generally level, with few scattered small hills at a distance, well woodel and cultivated. Road generally good, but rather heavy latterly. Pass Doamree at 33, and Hengolea at 6ļ miles. 11.-A very large open town, and famous mart for all description of goods. Supplies and water very plentiful. Country open, level and studded with hillocks. Soil gravelly, very partial cultivation. Road firin and good. Pass Balera at 52 miles. No. 256.–FROM NEEMUCH TO KOTAH BY RUTTUNGURH, KHEREE AND SINGOWLEE. | Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F | Nos. Tilsovah, as in No: 641 253, G. G:s agent in } Goorah 71 0... 1 Kotah. Boondee. Oodeypoor. Rawut ke Goorah, ... Ehree or 8 0 Ehroo, 2 ic 0l... Pol. Agent at Kurreepoor, Kinaree, Kotah [ Котан, 131 0 2 ofChumbul... 3 4 5 12 Total... 10:11 miles. 1.-60 houses and 7 shops. Water from 4 wells and a nullah. Country hilly, but the hills are not close, excepting at the end of the stage, where the end of a ridge approaches from the north. The road passes over many high undulations, and is often rugged, and in some parts steep for short distances; but upon the whole it is a practicable hackery track, little cultivation, much thick jungle. VOL. 11.) 211 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 2.-A small village. Supplies from Daabee, distant 3 miles N. W., and from surrounding villages. Water from the Ehroo. Country much undulated, Road rugged but passable for hackeries. 3.-A small village. No supplies unless previously ordered. Water from wells and a nullah. Country undulated, and road a rough hackery track. 4.-A small village on left bank of the Chumbul river opposite Kotah. Supplies from Kotah, and water from the river. Country and road much the same as in last stage. 5.-A fortitied city. Cross the Chumbul by l'erry, plenty of good boats procurable, and ghat good on right bank, but steep and rocky on the left. No. 257.–FROM NEEMUCH CANTONMENT TOJKOTAH BY BHANPOORA AND THE MUCKUNDURA PASS. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. Bhanpoorah, Eas- tern Gate, as in No. 171, 62 1 Holcar's. 81 2 Rewah, ... 6 1 ... Pol. Agent at ] Sonarah, } Neemuch Khyrabad, Muckundura, Pol. Agent at Hunoteea, Kotah Jugpoora, Котан, , Kotah. 20... 11 6 Amjar, 14 41 81 0 1010 61 2 11 3 ] 4 315 11 Total...! 1221 51 miles. 1.-A considerable town and good bazar. Country undulated, and hills close on left, as far as Neeinture, whence the ridye runs off in a northerly direction. Road pretly good, Pass Ruttunpoora at 2, Neempore at 31, and Sumundkheree al 61 miles. 2.-A town of 400 houses and small bazar. Watrs plentiful. Country undulating and partially cultivated, distant hills on left and in front. Soil black mould, full of stones in parts. Pass Oon lua at 11, and Rowree at 54 miles. 3.-A small bązar forming a long narrow street through which the road passes. Water from Baolees and a nullah. Country and hills as in last stage. Road pretiy good. Pass Goondee at 29, Kotpepoor at 3, Morug at 5, Guneeshpoora at 71, Hurnow at si, Peepulda at 94, and Amjar at 104 miles. Encamping ground within the valley of Mukundura, which is formed by two parallel ridges of hills running N. W. and S. E. between the Chumbul and Kalli Sind rivers. 4-A small village. Supplies procurable from surrounding villages after due notice. Water plentiful. For the first 24 miles the road leads through the Muckundura pass, and is very rugged over rocks and loose stones, and winding between low hills, and for 2 miles inore it passes over rocky ground and through jungle. For the last 10 miles the road is very good through an open, undulating and well cultivated country. 5.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water plentiful, road stony and rough the greater part of the way. Much jungle, and little or no cultivation. 6.-Bad cart road over rocks and loose stones, and through jungle the greater part of the way. No. 258.-FROM NEEMUCH TO MAHIDPOOR. Pol. Agent at Neemuch Palsorah 11 4 Raitum H 1 212 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. Hersore 100... 2 Pol. Agent at Neemuch ... Nargurh 14| o Sieu 3 Holcar's. Dewas. Seetamow. Scindea's. Ilolcar's. Seetamow .. 18) ol... of 5 Resident at In- dore & Local Right Bank Agent at Ma-{ Allote Chumbul Rivers hidpoor. 12 5 Chumbul.. 14 41.. 6 Jutawud MAHIDPOOR 11| 2)... 100 Sipra 7 8 8 Total... 96 71 miles. 1.-Supplies procurable and water from the Raitumnuddy, which is crossed at the end of the stage. Country undulated and road good in dry weather, 2.- Supplies procurable and water from a nullah. Country as above. Road good. At half way pass Peeplea. 3.-Supplies and water procurable. Country and road as before. Pasa Boordeh, Gorowdea, and Apakhera. Ford the Sieu at the end of the 12th mile at Apakhera ghat, bottom rocky and unforda ble in rains. 4.-A town. Residence of a rajah. Supplies and water abundant. Country as before, with some detached hills. Road good as before. Pass Kujorea and Nuttarea. 5.--Supplies must be collected from surrounding villages, or taken on from Seetamow, Country and road as before. Pass Ludhona, Ishkapoor and Bagoree. Cross the Chumbul at the end of the March by a rough stony ford. 6.--Supplies procurable and water from a nullah. Country undulated, low ridge on right. Road good. 7.-Supplies procurable. Water from a nullah. Country as before. Ridge close on right, and Sipra river not far off on left. Road good. 8. -A town on right bank of the Sipra river. Residence of local agent and cantonment of Holcar's contingent of horse. Country undulating and rising into considerable ridges. Road good. Cross the Sipra at Mahidipoor by ferry or by a deep ford some distance higher up. 68.1. No. 259.–FROM NEEMUCH CANTONMENT TO NUSSEERA- BAD. Hameergurh, as in No. 12 68 1 Banas & koteree SANGANEER 14 ( 1 1 G. G.'s Agent in or kote- Rajpootana .. sircc Chota Lamba 13 6 2 Dabla 11 6 3 Oodeypoor. . VOL. 11.) 213 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers, Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Deolea Mansee 14 2 and Karee 1041.. 24 British. Ajmeer 81 01... . { Bhinace Kumarea NUSSEERABAD Centre of Cantonment ... 1 5 6 104.. 7 13 Total...) 143 41 miles. 1.-A large walled town. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Country open and undulated with some distant isolated hills and low ridges. At 11 miles cross the Banas 30 yards wide, low banks and sandy beds, becomes dry soon after the rains, and at the 6th mile cross the nullah, dry rocky bed, 15 yards wide. Road indifferent, being heavy in some parts and rough and uneven in others. Pass Gowalree at 1}, Murphia at 6, Arinee at 91, and Bheelwarra, a large open town, at 114 miles. 2.-A small village. Supplies from Bunaira, a large town, 4 miles to 8. W. and sur. rounding villages. Water from wells, rather scarce. Country slightly undulated, open on righi, and having scattered low hills on left. Road good. Pass Tooswarea at 24, Kherlea at 5, Konkelea at 9, and Nugur at 10 miles. 3.-Supplies procurable and water from wells. Road good through an open country. Pass Banskulee at 14, Chota Neembaro at 5, Digas at 7, and Buttaira at 94 miles. 4.-A bazar and water from wells and a tank. Country as in last stage, heavy in crossing the dry beds of the nuddies, otherwise good. Pass Buraintee at 3, Aunitea at 51, Byrıkhera at 6, and Kotee at 11 miles. 5.-A bazar and water plentiful. Country open and road good to within a short distance of Bhinace, where are low hills on the right and left, and the road is rugged upon gradual ascent to the town. Pass Lamgurh at 3, Gunnah at 61, and Tillarah at 8 miles. 6.-A small village. Supplies from Bhinaee or Nusseerabad according to the direction of the march. Water from wells. Country open and undulated, with small detached hills on right. Road good. Pass Kherio at 4 miles. 7.-Country open and undulated. Road good. Pass Jharwassa at 3, and Saat,h at 6 miles. No. 260.-FROM NEEMUCH TO OODEYPOOR. G. Go's Agent in Rajpootana.... Barree, 14 01... ..13 1 Pol. Agent Neemuch at Tonk Rampora. Scindea's Tonk Rampora. Nickoom, 12 2... ... 13 2 G. Gr's Agent in Rajpootana... Moarwun, 11 o Baagun, .' 6 3 214 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. sl 4... 6 5 5 81 5 14| 1 Bailuch, 716 r Heetah, Khairoudah, G. G.'s Agent in Oodeypoor Resi- 2 Rajpootana... deney, at Mairtah OODEYPOOR,(West Hatteepole Gate,) Oodeypoor. or 12 2 Arh, 6 7 7 Total... 80 6 miles. 1.-85 houses, 25 shops and water plentiful. Country undulated. Soil in parts stony and in others black mond, little cultivation and no jungle. Road a passable hacke track in dry weather. Pass Dhunerea at 21, and Daaroo at 7į miles. 2.-130 houses, 20 shops and well water plentiful. Country undulated and raised into low ridges and knolls, cultivation near villages only and patches of jungle elsewhere, the road pretty good. Pass Kishen poora at l{, Burwară at 1, Beenotah ai 6), Bhalote al 8, and Oontaileakhera at 104 miles. 3.--80 houses and 20 shops. Water plentiful from wells and tanks. Country undulated and partially cultivated, jungle west of the Bangun to near Chekarra, Road pretty good. Puss Beelree at 11, Chekarra at jà, and Soojakhera at 8 miles; the Baagan is deep bedded and unfordable during heavy rain, but it soon falls. 4.–60 houses, 14 shops and 25 wells. Country and road as before. Pass Mugurwar at 27, and Burnee at 67 miles. 5.-A large village and bazar. Water plentiful. Country and road still the same. Pass Bansirah at 3, and Umurpoora at 61 iniles. 6.-60 houses, 5 shops. Water from wells. Country pretty level for the first 5 miles and soil black mouli, afterwards it is undulated and soil rocky. Road at first good in dry weather and latterly rough and winding. Pass Khiran at :2}, Sooruck poor ke Serai in rains at 7, and Dabok at 134 miles; after passing Khiran there is much jungle and very little cultivation, 7.-A walled city and fort, residence of the Rana, and capital of the Oodey poor state. Road passable for wheel carriuges, but is rurred and passes over numerons sharp undula- tions in the first 64 miles. The valley of Oodespoor is entered at the 4th mile by the Deewaree or Debaree Ghattee, to which there is rather a steep ascent. Soil rocky and uncultivated. There is a fine lake on the West of Ovdeypoor, and hills bounding the valley all round. Pass Toolsee Dass ke Serai (ruins of) at 24, Jhirwa Serai at 51, Bairwas Serai in ruins, 6], and Arh at 102 miles. No. 261.–FROM NEEMUCH TO SAUGOR. Jabra Patun, as in No. 171 902 Raichao or Reechwa. 8 2 Kali Sind... 2 1 Pol. Agent at Rutlace 76 3 2 Kotah lloozar 2 Bhalta 12 2 3 3 or Hoojar Pol. Agent at Bhojpoor 104 Chapee 2 4 Sehore ... Rajgurh Kilcheepoor. Kotah. r Kilcheepoor 9 1 Ghar 94.. 6 Pol. Agent in Kurarec Bhopal at Sehore BHOPALPOOR old Cantonment is 94 Newuj VOL. 11.) 215 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. | Nos, M. F. Bysana 11 2.. 51 8 Nursinggurh. Nursinggurh 39 Pol. Agent in Bhopal at Sehore Duodea 13 6 and Soo- ker Parbuttee 12 4 & Parua twice Koolukheree 2 10 Bairseah 12 4 Ban 5 11 Scindea's Dhar. Kamkhera 14 0. Resident at Gwalior 6 12 12 6 Betwa 113 BHILSA Saugor, as in No. 196 72 6 28 Total 306 5 miles. 1.-300 houses and a small bazar. Water plentiful from wells and tanks; on the left a ridge of low hilis runs parallel to the road, which is pretty good, with exception of the ford of the Kali Sind which is rocky and bad for cattle and carts. Pass Gopalpoora at I, Bunjaree at 39, Bhorasee at 5, and Deoree at 6 miles. 2.-230 houses, 10 shops. Water from wells and tank, plentiful. Country hilly on left and open on right to 64 miles, when a ridge of hills is passed. Road pretty good, but slony in parts. Pass Rajoda at, 11, and Bourkheree at 2 miles, with many other villages at short distances, from the road; fine cultivation near villages. 3.-225 houses and 15 shops, 22 wells. Country hilly Hills covered with jungle and vallies cultivated. Pirst half of the road pretty good, last half rough and stony. Pass Teeklee, Teekla, Bowreekhera and Patreekhera in this march. 4.-100 houses, 5 shops, and 13 wells. Supplies scarce. Road bad over heights covered with loose stones the whole way. Some ascents and descents, and much high junyle, rather a bad ghat on the Chapee, high banks and rocky bed, about 100 yards wide. Water usual y knee deep. 5.-A town and bazar. Country much undulated. Soil gravel with stones and rock on the swells and stony black mould in the hollows. Road pretty good, though often rough and in some parts rather steep: Pass Dablec at 21, and Dhoraj at 54 miles. The Ghar is crossed at the end of the march by ford and stone bridge. 6.–100 houses, 6 shops, and 13 wells. Country much the same as in last stage. Road pretty good. Pass Dhamunee at 21, and Koorchunea at 5 miles. 7.-Supplies scarce and must be collected by previous notice to local authorities. Country open, undulated and partially cultivated. Road pretty good with exception of the gbat on the Newuj river, which is rocky and bad for cattle and carts. Banks steep, and usual depth of water during the fair season 14 feet. Pass Gorruckpoorith at l}, Rampoorah at 31, Chatukhera at 5, and Muraree at 7 miles. X-A sinall village. 2 buniahs, and a weekly market on Sundays. Water from 5 eutcha wells. Country open, undulated with distant hills left. Soil black mould full of small stones. Road pretty good with exception of the gbat, on the first nullah which is miry after rain, little cultivation, much long grass interspersed with thin dak bushes. Pass Kurnwas at 4, Bheelwarra at 7, and Rulytee at 84 milos. 9:-A town at the western foot of a fortified hill, and capital of a small state tributary to Holcar. A fine lake north of the town. Country as in last stage, but hilly imediately. around Nursinggurh. Road good, at 2 miles cross the Doodea nuddy, 10 yards wide. bottom ledges of rock and sand, depth of water at the ghat 24 feet, and at 54 miles cross the Sooker 100 yards wide. Rocky bottom. Water in pools in hot season. Pass Peeplea at 8, Moondlee at 91, Mudouree at 101, and Dham lore at 11 miles, 10.-A middling village. 15 bumiahs and market on Mondays. Water from a nullah. Road pretty level, and good, with exception of the ghats on the Parbuttee and Parua, which are bad for carts, owing to the steepness of their banks. Country mostly covered with thick Jak jungle. Hills right and left at some distance. At 64 miles ford the Parbuttee, bed 220 yards wide, bottom loose stones and sand over rock. Steep banks. Water usually 11 feet deep in dry season ; a dingy plies here in rains, at 8 miles cross the Parua, 70 yards Wide, sandy bottom and steep raviny bauks, and at 12 miles re-cross the same nuddy, 216 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. where it is only 20 yards wide with very steep banks broken into ravines. Water through- out the year in pools in hot season. Pass Moreea at 3, Buretta at 6, and Meengulyurh, a small hill fort and village at its foot, at 71 miles. 11.- A town and good bazar. Water plentiful. Country hilly, much jungle and little cultivation. Road pretty level and good, no impediment to carts, excepting the last nullah near Ramyura, which is miry for some time after rains. Pass Danora at 21, Ramgura at 7, near Imleah at 91, and cross the Ban at Il] miles, 40 yards wide, bottom of gravel and loose stones, banks steep and cut into ravines. 12.-A middling village, a few bunials and supplies from surrounding villages. Water from a tank and Baolee, scarce in hot monilis and brought from a distance of 2 miles. Country much undulated, with low hills on right, soil chiefly black mould, full of stones and partially cultivated. Rond good and presenting no impediment to carts, excepting the nullah on the west side of Koolhour, which is miry and diflicult to cross. Pass Munkiai at 3, Koolhourat 54, Dhamkhera at 71, and Saleia at 10 miles. 13.--A walled town. Supplies and water plentiful. Country open, slightly undulated and pretty well cultivated. On approching Bhilsa there are some small hills at distance on right and left, Road a tolerably good hackery track. Pass Bellowree at 4, Benkhera at 5, Gowarea at 63, and Bagree at 81 miles ; at 115 miles cross the Betwa by pretty good ford, a short distance below the junction of the Bhys or Beos river. This ghat was made by a detachinent of sappears and miners in December 18:22. The old road crossed both the Bhys and Betwa by rugged furus, a short distauce above their junction. No. 262.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO AJMEER. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. Nullahs. | Nos. British Ajmeer AJMEER 15 0... ... : 1 Total 15/ 0 miles. 1.-A large wallel town. Supplies and water abundant, and ground for the encamp- ment of a large force. No. 263.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO ALWUR. Alwur. Jeypoor. G.G.'s Agent in Rajpootanah. To Deosir, as in No. 14 Kalapahar Goodha Bussowah RAJGURH Malakhera AlwUR 13 3 6, 0 Bangunga Tantyn 3 94 Nuddy . ) 9 01.. 8 4 11 3 13 4 ..... 17 Total 73 21 miles. No. 264.–FROM NUSSEERABAD TO BEAWR CANTONMENT. 15 British. Ajmeer Pol. Agent at Beawr Leerhee BEAWR Cantonment 1 4 ... 2 Total 304 miles. VOL. 11.] 217 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 265.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO BEAWR CANTONMENT. Dist. Territory Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. மார்க M. F British Ajmeer Doomera * Govindgurh Thaut Гау Moorelah Rahun Neemree Moondwa G. G.'s Agent in NAGOUR Rajpootana Ullaee Bhuggoo Beekasur 01 Raseeur Oodeyramsur BIKANEER 11 0... 15 0 Soorstee 15 Loonee 100.. 6 0 14 0 12 0 Nullahs. OVOCIA CON9 | Nos. Jodhpoor. il 0... Bikaneer. 14 0 810 12 0 14 0 14 0 6 0 12 13 14 14 Total...) 162) O miles. 1.-A village of about 50 huts. Water from wells. 2.- A large bazar. Twenty wells. 3.-A small village of 20 houses and 10 wells. Road over bleak barren country, with heavy sand. 4.-Twenty or 30 houses. Two tanks. Country open and partially cultivated. Road pretty good. 5. ---Larger bazar. One tank and 50 wells. Road good over an immense plain, covered with scanty bush jungle. 6.-About 60 houses. Two wells. Country undulated and covered with small tree and bush jungle. Soil sandy. Road at first very heavy, afterwards finer but still sandy. Pass Rajond at 7, and Bootalee at 10 miles. 7.-200 houses. One tank. Road pretty bood at first through jungle, and then over fine plain. Pass Palree at 5 miles. 8.-A large walled town and good bazar. Four tanks and 50 wells. Road over a plain, with a good deal of jungle. 9.--80 houses. Two tanks and 3 wells. 10 -100 houses and I well. 11.-60 houses and I well, 12.-60 houses and 3 wells. 13.-100 houses and I well. 14.-Large bazar, &c, No. 266.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO GWALIOR BY KU. ROWLEE. British Ajmeer Ramsir 21 r Ghotana or Goteeana 42 101 3... ... .. 7 3.. gurh. Jey. Kishen- Rampoora. poor. Tonk Bura Lamba G. G.'s Agent in Ghưnpour Rajpootana Diggee 11 3i... 12 0 7 0 53 4 5 Mounee 10 O... .. 16 PART I. VOL. II. D D 218 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. si Nos. Jeypoor. G. G's Agent in Rajpootana. Bunhan.. Kurowlee. Dangurthul Jhullaee Gungwara Chour Mularna Meenapara KHOOSHALGURH Muhumudpoor Kurowlee Bugrar Mundrael Baoree or Bawlee Koolowlee Kylarus Right Bank Sonh Nuddy at Sikrowda Semowlee Paharee GWALIOR Residency. 11 o Mashee 17 13 4 8 12 0 ſ Dahil 7 . Nuddy. 49 13 0 1 10 Moreel and 15 01 11 8 7 21 12 8 41 13 12 02 Nuddies 14 3 15 13' 0 74 Chumbul... 17 10 4 18 9 4 Kowaree 19 9/ o|Sonh 20 12 4 Ahun 21 10 01... 22 81 o Sunk 23 9 0... 16 Scindea's. . Resident at Gwalior ...... ... 23 Total... | 241 of miles. 1.-A middling village. Supplies procurable. Water from wells and a tank. Road over stony undulated ground. Pass Beonjah at 3, and Sunoud at 7 miles. 2.-A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from tank and wells. Road pretty good over an open undulated country. Pass Myhaisa at 2, and Naipolee at 5 miles. 3 --A large town surrounded by a mud wall and ditch. Country open and undulated. Soil rocky. Road generally very good but stony and broken towards the end of the stage. Pass Jorapoora at 3), Jarota at 53, and Pandawara at 84 miles. 4.-A small village. Water from 5 wells and i tank. Supplies must be collected. Rood good. 5. -A considerable town surrounded by mud wall. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good. Pass Desmee. 6.--A village of 125 houses. Water from wells and a tank. Supplies must be collected. Road good. Pass Sora, a considerable village, at the 5th mile. 7.- considerable village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road good. Pass Chowgaen, Bunwara, Basra and Rambha. 8.-A fortified town of considerable extent. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good, Pass Chukana, Khundeawut, Chorpoora and Nowace. 9.-A village of about 100 houses. Supplies from Bowree, 4 miles N. E. and from neigh- bouring viliages. Water from wells. Road good, Pass Bhyroopoora, Jamrolee and Seesola. 10.-A middling village, surrounded by a mud wall and ditch. Supplies procurable, fuel scarce, good water from wells a jheel. Road good. i 11.-Supplies scarce and must be collected. Water from wells and the Banhan. Road good, excepting where it is intersected by the dry sandy bed of the Moreel about a mile wide, and the last mile and half which is rather henvy. 12.-A walled town. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road sandy and heavy for carts, 13.-A small village. Supplies scarce and must be collected or taken on from Khooshala gurh. Water from wells. Road indifferent. 14.-A large town and capital of the Kurowlee states. Supplies and water abundant. The town is enclosed by a kuteha pucka wall, and surrounded by difficult ravines to an extent of nearly 2 miles. Road pretty good, with the exception of the last 2 miles, where it passes the ravines. 5.-A middling village. Supplies should be taken on om Kurowlee. Water good from 5 wells Road bad first 2 miles through ravines, remainder stony and uneven. 16.-A pucka fort on hill and large walled town.' Suppies and water plentiful. Road very bad for the first 8 or 84 miles over hills and through the Needar pass, having descent towards the east. Pass Chokee on top of the pass at 7 miles where there is a tank, (water perennial) and a hunting seat of the Kurowlee Raja, and the village of Needur which gives its name to the pass at 9 miles, VOL. 11.) 219 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 17.-A small village. No supplies. Water from a Baolee said to have cost 21,000 rupees in constructing. Cross the Chumbul by ferry (about 12 small boats). Road Darrow and bad through ravines for the first 51 miles. Pass Uttar at the head of the ravines. 18.-A considerable village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful from wells. Road good. Pass Kaimaree, Pipergaon, Bairye aud Rampoora. 19.-A considerable village. Water from wells and supplies procurable after due notice. Road pretty good. Pass Sawoye and Naipree. Ford the Kowaree under the last named village. 20.-A good sized village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road good. Pass Doongerpoor and Siow tee. 21. -A large village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road good. Pass Joara, Allahpoor, a large village and bazar, and Thurria. 22.-A middling village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Road good at first, latterly very rocky and through jungle. Pass Kaimra and Chockye. B.-A bazar close to the British residency and water from wells. Road good. No. 267.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO JESSULMEER BY JODH- POOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. ... British Ajmeer Burgucheawass Nagela Rass or Rans Bussye Lotowlee G. G.'s Agent in Puchak Rajpootana ... Kapraira Beesulpoor Nandra JODHPOOR 100dypor 13 4 11| 2 13 4 13 0 101 4... 10 4 13 4 Loonee 10 21 12 4 7 ol 2 3 4 5 36 11 7 8 9 110 ... 12 6... ... Jodhpoor. 104... 10 Total...! 115 4lmiles. PART 2ND FROM JODHPOOR TO JESSULMEER. Near Basnee 121 ol... Teouree Chundallea 100 Chunmoo 12 41 Lourta Daichoo 8 3 Mundla 96) G. G.'s Agent in Lowah Rajpootana ... POHKURN,96 from? Jodhpoor Ooodanea Lauttee Chundun 13 2 Bura Basumpeer JESSULMEER, 66 ? from Pohkurn... 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 11 18 ...... 6 11 8. 5... 13 O... 13 2... 1 19 1.0 Jeasulmeer. 20 1 21 1 22 1 23 .. ... 141 0... 12 4... 24 24 Total... 277 6 miles. 1.-300 houses, 40 wells. 2.-160 houses. 10 wells. 3.--600 houses. 20 wells. 4.- 30 houses. 5 wells. 220 (PART 1 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 5.–150 houses. 20 wells. 6.-200 houses. 10 wells, 7.-500 houses. 4 wells. 8.-350 houses. 7 wells. 9.-250 houses. 2 wells. 10.-Water and supplies abundant. 11.- A small dry nullah on right and many wells in the fields around, but the water brackish. Road very good. Pass near Mundour at 5, and Deojur at 9 miles. 12. -A good sized village on right of road, which is very good throughout this stage. Pass Bampoora at 4, and near Rajasnee at 6 miles, 13.-A small vi lage. One shop. Two welis and I pond. Road very good for the first 7 miles; it then enters the desert, and is very heavy and bad. Pass Burla at 41, and Geourah, in which there are 10 wells, at 6 miles. 14--Five shops and I well, 150 feet deep. Road extremely heavy and sandy. Pass Panchla, with l good well, at 24 miles. 15.-A small village. One good well, 90 feet deep. Road almost entirely a very heavy Band. 16.-A good sized village, 4 wells, 150 feet deep. Water good but particularly sweet. Road sandy and heavy, with many sand hills around. 17:—Seven shops, 4 ponds and 5 welis, 90 feet deep.. Road very heavy, and for the first 5 miles winding through quite a desert of sand hills, with thin jungle. 18.-Seven shops, 3 ponds, and 3 wells, 90 feet deep. Road generally very good. Pass near Daideea at 6 miles. 19.-A walled town and small fort built of red stone. Supplies and water abundant. Road hard and good. At the 6th mile, the end of salt lake is close on right of road, and extends in a N. E. direction for about 4 miles. Average breadth about 4 miles. 20.-A small village. One tank and 3 wells, 90 ſeet deep. Good water. Road generally hard and good, over an extensive dreary waste, in parts rocky and all undulated. 21. -A small bazar. Five good wells, 180 feet deep. Road generally very sandy over a dreary desert. 22.-Four shops. One pond and I well, 180 feet deep. Water good. Road over a most dreary sandy country. Pass Lodakoor (I well of good water,) at the 5th mile. 23. -A small buzar. One pond of good water and I well, 240 feet deep. Ro ad good over an undulated country, the first part sandy, with a good deal of Kejra jungle.. 24:-A walled town and fort., Capital of the Jessulmeer principality and residence of ite Rajah. Supplies and water abundant. Road for 2 miles on low ground, then ascend a small rocky range, and thence gradual descent to the end of the stage, with low ridge of hills running nearly parallel to the road at short distance from the right. No. 268.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO JESSULMEER BY NA- GOUR AND POHKURN. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. 1 2 3 ... ... 94 0 7 5 10 1 11 6 8 2 10 5 15 21. 6 0 14 7. 8 4 94 Jodhpoor. Nagour, as in No. 265 Singur Dheensura Keemsur Panchla Kutola Muttora Nowsur Lohawut Cheelah Phulowdee Beetree Karrah POHKURN, 1431 From Nagpoor. JESSULMEER, as in No. 267 G. G.'s Agent in Rajpootana ::::::::::::: 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 5 1... 11 4... 15 1... ... 13 661 0 26 Total... 294 2 VOL. 11.) 221 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1:-Small village. One tank and I well. Water in well bad, and when the tank dries in hot weather the inhabitants are obliged to go to a well about 4 miles off for their water. Road good over a large plain. Pass Endawas at 5 miles. 2-Small village. One pond and I well of bad water. When pond dries, water brought from a distance of 3 kos. "Road for first 8 miles sandy, then hard over undulated country, with small jungle. Pass Loonda at 5, Radna at 5], and near Nundwanee at 8 miles. 3.-A good sized village. One pond and 4 good wells. Road over a most dreary country, of sand and sand hills and scanty jungle. Pass Ankla at 8 miles ; the small villages and hamlets in this part of the couniry are of conical or wigwam huts. 4-8 scattered good vi lage. Three wells, 200 feet deep. Road for the first 6 miles very sandy, then harder with pretty thick Kaijra jungle, a small tree, the bark of which is in times of scarcity, in this wretched country converted into bread, as is also a very small white Burr, with very sharp points, which is said to be very palatable. 5.-A small village. Two wells of good water, 200 feet deep and very narrow, not more than 3 or 4 feet in diameter ; the inhabitants of ten or twelve surrounding villages send here for water, having no wells of their own, Sand hills and thin jungle. Road generally heavy and bad. 6. -A small village. One good well, 250 feet deep. Pass Jackhua at 1}, and Bapeenee at 8 miles; in this last village there is one well, 300 feet deep. Road generally sand and sand hills, with thin jungle, in parts hard. 7.-A small village. One well 260 feet deep. Road sand and sand hills with grass and thin bush jungle. 8.-A good village iu two divisions, with 2 wells situated between them, 310 feet deep. Water in one of them quite good, the other not so. Sand hills and thin jungle the whole way. Pass Pullee at 7 miles. Bad water here. 9.-A small village. Three good wells, about 300 feet deep. Country more open. Road in parts hard and rocky. Latter part of stage very sandy. 10.-Pormerly a place of note mostly pucka with old stone fort and remains of walls, now (1821) in a most ruinous state, but is improving and will probably again become a considerable town. Water plentiful here. Road for the first 5 miles very sandy, after- wards harder. Country open and interspersed with low rocky eminences. il.- A small village. Two good wells, 200 feel deep. Road hard and good. 12.-A small village. One well of bad water. When their tanks fail them, most of the inhabitants move to Agrass, 5 miles off, and return in the rains. Road good over an im. mense plain, Avery horrid looking country. 13.-A walled town and small fort, built of red stones. Supplies and water plentiful. Road good, little sandy in parts latterly. Pass Ekah at 9 miles, and close to it descend a rocky ridge, which afterwards continues on the right from I to i of a mile off, whilst on the left there is a very large sheet of saltwater, the ground being very low and overflown; at times it is perfectly dry. No. 269.--FROM NUSSEERABAD TO JEYPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. To DamooDA, as in G. G.'s Agent in No. 146 Rajpootana...Jeypoor City, as in No. 3 43 4 Jeypoor. 41 4 8 Total...! 85] 0 No. 270.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO OODEYPOOR. British Ajmeer S|Bandurwara 12 41 Sukranee 12' 0 Karee Roopahelee 13 4 Kurra 13 0 Mansee 94 G. G.'s Agent in Bugwanpora Rajpootana Baghore or Bagheur.. 13 4 Gungapoor 12 4 Kotesiree... Joondah s Chunder- 11 6 Bhaga. Oodeypoor. . 222 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. ... 13 4 Banas 8 4 80 Oodeypoor. Rajeawass Sahrole or Sahlole Bura Pulana G. G.'s Agent in MairtahOodeypoor? Rajpootkna... Reeidency OODEYDOOR,(West or Hatteepole Gate) 13 4 2 } 12 4 Arh 13 Total.../ 154 2 No. 271.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO SAUGOR BY BOODEE, KOTAH AND RAGOOGURH. Chubrah as in No. 172.. }| 196 2 Underce Poll. Agent at Sehore Bholone or Boolain 8 4 Bytailee ... 2 i 11 Parbuttee. 4 2 Tonk Scin- Ragoo- Tonk Rampora. dea's gurh. Rampora. Resident at Gwalior Right Bank Parbut. tee River near Kuckwassa { Ragoogurh Araun or Airun Kheria 12 2... 6 3 14 5).. 12 4 Sind 8! 4 5 ...... 7 Pol. Agent at Sehore Daipoor or Deopoor. SERONGE, E. of Town 9 4 ... 7 0 Kaitoon 6 7 SAUGOR, as in No. 173 78 2 33 Total... 3501 1miles. 1.-A small village. Supplies scanty and must be collected. Water from the Bytailee nuddy, which is crossed at the end of the march. Road rough and bad over a broken country, mostly covered with low jungle and cut up by ravines. At the 5th mile pass through a break in a low range of hills. Pass Beenduraree at 45, and Ghattee at 6 miles. 2.-Supplies must be collected. Water from the river which is forded at the end of the stage. Bed 150 yards wide, rocky and stony bottom and fine clear stream. Road for the first 84 miles over a stony undulating country, in the midst of low hills with low jun- gle and but little cultivation, then for 3 miles more it passes over stony jungly hills and af. terwards through a fine valley well cultivated. Pass Baboha at 2, and Kurreya at 6 miles. 3.- Road over a jungly country in the midst of low hills with higher ranges beyond. Pass Sukutpoor at 21, and Bailka at 4 miles. 4.-A respectable village. Supplies procurable and water plentiful. Road for the first 84 miles bad being confined between ranges of low hills and 'intersected by numerous ravines and water courses, the hills then recede, and there is a gradual descent to the small village of Sarok, which occurs at 91 miles, and thence the road is tolerably good, through an open and partially cultivated country: 5.-A considerable village. Supplies procurable and water from wells. Road to the Sind river narrow and winding a good deal amongst ravines ; after passing the Sind it passes over a cultivated plain. Pass Bukaium at 45, Deoree at 8, and Chopna at 104 miles. Ford the Sind under Deoree, 100 yards wide, rock s boltom, low banks, aud depth of water 2 feet in fair season. VOL. 11.] 223 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 6.-A respectable village. Water from wells. Road good through a well cultivated country. Pass Bohura at 2, Chopna at 4, and Lossullah at 54 miles, 7.-kood stony, and) at the end of the 5th mile it descends from table land by a ghat of about 1 mije in length, declivity easy and practicable for carts, but the road is stony and bad at the foot of the ghat. Pass Duraira at 2 miles. No. 272.-FROM NUSSEERABAD TO TONK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 29 1... 8 2 Jey- Rampora. poor: Tonk Lamba, as in No. 266 Chindalea Chandsain G. G.'s Agent in Rajpootana ... { Jhurana 10 2 ... 5 11 22 113 11:4!... ToNK 12 o Banas 11 4 Water 7 Total... 72 1 miles. 1.-A middling village on a rock left of the road. Supplies must be collected. from wells and a tank. Road good but over a stony country, especially latterly. Pass Bagarea at 44 miles. 2-A small village at north end of a low ridge of hills. Supplies from Malpoora. Water from a nullah and wells. Road for first 7 miles very good over a fine open country, the remainder is sandy and heavy. Pass Malpoora a large town and fine piece of water X. E, of it, at 54 miles. 3.-A considerable village. Supplies procurable. Water from wells. Road sandy and brary for the first 21 miles, then good over a plain open country. Pass Amlee at 21, Chulraha at 6, and Nowateela at 91 miles. 1.-A wa led town and mud fort. The residence of Ameer Khan is about 1 mile to the south. Country open and partially cultivated. Rond for the first 5 miles good, it then baromes more or less sandy and heavy to the end of the stage. Pass Koraria at 5, and Golaid at 91 miles. The nullah is crossed at Koraria, bed dry and 160 yards wide, with steep banks. The Banas is crossed east of Golaid, its bed about a mile wide and heavy saad. Stream shallow and narrow. Oude. No. 273.-FROM PERTABGURH TO SOOLTANPOOR. Deamah Resident 13 0 Sye 11 at SOOLTANPOOR Can- ? Lucknow... 15 O... 1 2 tonment 2 Total... 28 Olmiles. 1.-A bazar and water plentiful from wells. Road indifferent. Cross the Sye at the commencement of the state by ford and ferry. The nullah occurs at the 7th miie, and is rather difficult for carts. 2.-Bad road, liable to be overflown by water from tanks rendering it miry in parts and Very difficult for wheel carriages. Nullah becomes dry after the rains. British. No. 274.-FROM PURNEAH TOWN TO BHAUGULPOOR. Hurda Ghat on thc Soorah & Right Bank Booree 71 0 Booree 1 Purneah Koossee River Koossee Goondwarah 11 0 5 2 Karagolah 83 1 } .. 13 4... 224 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. | Nullahs. Nos. M. IF ... 4 British. (Left Bank of Gan- ges, at Lallgolah Ghat Peerpointee COLGONG Bhaugulpoor ... Left Bank of the 2 Goga Nullah 3 BHAUGULPOOR Old bed 6 0 of the Koossee S 6 Ganges 15 0... 81 Goga 12 0... :: co: 6 3 8 Total... 721 ol miles. 1.-No village. Supplies readily procured after due notice to the civil authorities. Water from the river." Road pretty good. The Sooralı is crossed by bridge between the town and civil station of Purneah, and the Booree Koossee becomes fordable soon after the rains, but from the swampy nature of its bed, it is desirable that a bridge of boats should be constructed for the passage of a large detachment. Country a perfect flat, and cultivated. 2.--A middling village. Supplies procurable. Water plentiful. Country flat, partial cultivation and patches of grass. Road good. The nullahs become dry soon after the rains, and means of crossing them, when they are full of water, are readilý procured. 3.-Supplies readily procured and water plentiful; country as in last stage, and road pret, ty good through an avenue of fine old trees. 4.-Supplies as above, and water from the country as before, and road indifferent. 5.-A hamlet on right bank of the Ganges. Supplies procurable after due notice to the local authorities. Water from the Ganges. Cross the river by ferry. This is a private. ferry, and boats of sufficient size are constantly kept up at it, and any additional numbers required at any time to pass troops, may be readily collected. This is usually a bad ghat, the boats having to go about 4 miles, and sometimes against the stream, 6.-Country covered with jungle, intermixed with patches of cultivation. Road indir. ferent. Join the road from Berhampoor by Rajmahal at the 8th mile. No. 275.–FROM PURNEAH TOWN TO TITALYA BY KISHEN. GUNGE. 10) o Punar 6 0 Perwan 12 0 Kankye Maha 8 0 Nuddy 12 0 Dunk 1 2 3 Bareilly Solutgunge Doosmal KISHENGUNGE Khurkuree Kalleagunge TITALYA old Cantt. British Purneah ::: wis: } 2 4 12 0... 5 7 6 7 12 0... 72 0 7 Total... 1.-Supplies easily procured. Water plentiful and road good. Cross the Punar by ferry. 2.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. A Government ferry on the Perwan. 3.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 4.- Ditto ditto ditto ditto. 5.-Supplies, water and road as before. The Dunk is fordable during the dry season, at other times means for crossing it are constantly available. 6.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. Means available for crossing the pullahs when they are not fordable, 7.-Ditto ditto ditto ditto. VOL. 11.) 225 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 276.- FROM SAUGOR TO SEHORE BY BHOPAUL. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. Bhilsa, as in No. 196 Amkhera Bulampoor 21 3 2 Bhopal. Political Agent at Sehore 72 6 7 2 Betwa Ghora- 2 12 6 puchar Ghorapu- 13 4 char and Putura.... 12 4 9 0 BHOPAL 3 3 ... 1 3 Pandah SEHORE 4 5 12 Total... 127 6 miles. 1.- A small village. Supplies must be collected. Water from weils. Road first part level and good, last rough and confined by hills. Cross Betwa by a tolerably good ford at the 20 mile, and at 5} miles pass Sanchee where there are interesting remains of ancient temples. 2-A middling village. Supplies procurable. Water from tanks. Hills right and left. Road level and pretty gord, excepting near the Ghorapuchar nuddy, where it is rugged and bad. 3.-A fortified city on bank of an extensive lake, supplies and water abundant. At a mile from Bulampoor there is a short stony ascent, and with this exception the road is good through partial jungle and cultivation. The ghat on the Patura which issues from the lake is at times swampy and difficult to pass. 4.- A middling village. Supplies procurable and water from wells. Road stony at first in passing over a low hill on which the ford of Futtehgurh stands, afterwards good through an open cultivated country. 5.-A considerable town. Supplies and water abundant. Road tolerably good through an open country. Oude. No. 277.-FROM SECRORA TO SOOLTANPOOR. Ballpoor 71 0 Goonda 90 Wuzeergunge 12 4 Resident at Fyzabad 13 4Gogra Lucknow... Bhudursah 12 Sylkah 15 0 ( SOOLTANPOOR Cantt. 14 Goomty 7 Total... 183) Oude. No. 278.–FROM SEETAPOOR TO SECRORA. Khyrabad 51 4 Bisway Resident Ballapoor 100 at Lucknow Mahomedabad 80 Mahomedpoor 126 Newabgunge 14 Gogra SECRORA Cantt. 15 2 Surjoo 1 2 7 Total... 80 oliniles. PART I, VOL II. E E 226 [PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A bazar. Water abundant. Cross the Gogra by ferry at the end of the stage. 2.-Road good in dry weather. Cross the Surjoo by ferry and the nullah by ford. No. 279.–FROM SEETAPOOR TO SHAHJEHANPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. N | Nullahs. Nos. 161 2 12 o Kattina 6 4 Goomty British. Oude. Mohowly Resident at Nourungabad Lucknow Burhour Burhiah Sureyah Shahjehanpoor . SHAHJEHANPOOR? Cantt. S 2 1 2 3 1 4 5 111 0... 10 0.. 7 o Kanout : : : 6 ... 6 Total...) 621 4 miles. 1.-A considerable village and hazar. Water plentiful. Country open and partially cultivated, Road tolerably good. Cross nullahs by bridges, 2.-A large village and bazar. Water from wells. Country open and waste. Soil sandy and the road heavy in parts. Cross the nuddy by bridge at the commencement of the march. 3.-A middling village. Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Country a waste sandy plain the whole way.. Road heavy; at 5 miles cross the Goomty by ferry and ford. Boats are procurable at this ghat to form a bridge, (6 are sufficient) and one should be constructed when a large detachment is passing. The river is fordable for cattle from December to June, usual depth 3 feet. 4.-A small village. Water from wells, and sunplies procurable after due notice, partial cultivation and grass plains. At 3 miles cross deep muddy-bedded nullah, requiring fascine bridge. Road tolerably good. 5.-Supplies procurable after due notice. Water from wells. Country Ant and nearly waste for the first 5 miles to the Sooktawa nullah, which is passed by a fascine bridge, and forms the boundary between Oude, and the Company's district of Shahjehanpoor. Coun- try within the Company's limits well cultivated. 6.-Supplies with water abundant. Ground for encampment in a fine mangoe tope near the jail and close to the parade. Cross the Kenout by wooden bridge near Loodepoor, no ford near the bridge, which is not safe for laden elephants, but there is an excellent pucka bridge considerably lower down, and opposite the south end of the city, the can- tonment being at the north end. Road pretty good. No. 280.-FROM SEHARUNPOOR TO HURDWAR. Nagadeo Secunderpoor 13 4 Hindoun, 1 1 British Seharunpoor and Kalli, Dowlutpoor 13 7 Rathmow... 3 2 HURDWAR Town 13 2... 23 ... 3 Total... 40' 5 miles. 1.-A small bazar and supplies procurable from Bhugwanpoor and Juburhera. Water plentiful. There is a bridge on the Nagadeo and the other two nuddies are fordable throughout the year, except for a day or "so occasionally after a very heavy fall of rain, they fill very rapidly and run off as quickly. Road tolerably good. 2.—A bazar and water plentiful. So il sandy and road heavy, the nuddy and nullahs are fordable except for a short time after very heavy rains. 3.—A good bazar and water from the Ganges. Road very sandy and heavy. Nullahs dry during the fair season. VOL 11.] 227 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 281.- FROM SEHARUNPOOR FORT TO SOOBATHOO BY SIDOWRA AND PINJORE. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. British Seharunpoor Chilkana Doab Ca- 10 1 nal 1 BOOREAH Protected Sikh States. Pol. Agent at Umballa Jumna and 10 0 Delhi Ca- nal 7 0... 13 0 Chicherowlee SIDOWRA 1 1 2 Soobathoo as in No. 138.... } 6:16 11 Total... 1037 miles. 1.-A mud-walled town and bazar, water plentiful. Country open and cultivated. Road pretty good. The water in the uullah which is crossed a short distance N. of Booreah, is usually 24 feet (leep, firm bottom and low bauks. 2.-A large open town. Supplies and water abundant. Country open, undulated, and euitivatod, Road a tolerably good hackery truck. No. 282–FROM SEHARUNPOOR TO SOOBATHOO BY SIDOWRA AND NAHN. Sidowra, as in No. 281 40 1 MYNTUPPUL 10 0.. 1 2 Protected Sikh States Pol. Agent at Umballa Noha 81 0 Nahn SOOBATHOO, as in No. 139 541 0 10 Total../ 112 11 1.--A small village at the foot of the hills. Road very good across a flat country. No. 283.–FROM SIMLA TO MALOWN. Syree 101 41 Pol. Agent at Konyar 9 01... Soobathoo 101 01. huttee British MALOWN 101 01... ... 1 ... Sahaete em Sahce-} 2 .. 3 228 [PART 1. - THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.-A large village. Residence of the Konyar chief. Supplies and water procurable. Road good 2.-A few buniahs' shops and water abundant. Good hill road. 3.-A small bazar under the fort. Water rather scarce. Road but a steep ascent from the Gumhora nuddy to the heights of Malown. No. 281-FRON SIMLA TO SHIELKER IN RANAWUR BY THE BROANG OR BARENDA PASS AND NAKO. Dist. Rivers. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. or CO9 - Nos. 9270 121 0... 91 4 ... 141 0... 10 0 r Fagoo 1 Puralee 2 Kotkhaee 10 4 Giree 3 Deora 4 SARI 7) o 5 Rooroo Kotee 710 3 Nuddies 6 2 Bridges 1 Nuddy, Chirgong 1 7 Bridge i Nuddy, Pekhs 9 8 Bridges 2 Nuddies Janleg 9 Bridge 3 1 Nuddy or Torrent Pol. Agent at Leetee 100 with Bridge ... 10 Soobathoo ... of a few loose spars. Broang 13 41... 11 Poaree 12 4 Bupsa 12 Sutlej, PUNGEE 8] 0 13 (Jhulas Leepee 13) o Tetee 14 Lubrung 15 Songnum Zoong & 2 10 4 16 Durbung Hango 17 Leo or Lee 71 4... 18 ser Nako Spitee, (a) 41 0 19 Sanga) SHEALKER Spitee, (al 12 4 20 WIP Sanga) 20 Total... 1924 miles. 1.-A stage bungalow. An excellent made road the whole way, gradually ascending to the top of Mahassoő, a hill 9000 feet high, 9 miles from Simlah and thence descending, 2.-A small bungalow. A very good made road, descent from 2-3ds of the way to Synge. The residence of the Theog Rana, on right bank of the Giree river, and thence tolerably level and parallel to the course of the Giree. Protected Hill States. :::::: } 61 4... 94... VOL. II.) 229 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 3.-A very small bungalow. Kothaee is the residence of a hill chief, Road made and very good, gradually ascending along the course of the Giree, first on right bank and then on left. The river crossed by a fine sanga or wooden briilge, about 14 miles from Puralee. 4.-Deora is the residence of the Joobal Chief, and there is a small bungalow of one room built near it for the accommodation of travellers. The town of Joobal is about i mile distant. A pretty good made road all the way. Great ascent for the first 8 miles and then gradual descent. 5.-A small village and residence of old Ranek-it overlooks the valley of the Pabua and Racengurh. No bungalow here, and bad ground for tents. The road in this stage is pretty level and good. 6.-A good sized village on right bank of the Pabur river. Supplies procurable and water from the Pahur, in which there are fine trout at this place. Road good and gradual descent into the valley of the Pabur river, and then pretty level. 7.-A considerable village on left bank. A stream which is crossed by a sanga and joing the Pabur a short way below the village. Road very good and nearly level along the right hank of the Pabur river; at about ?iniles pass the village of Mundlee Kote opposite to which on the left bank of the Pabur, is the large village of Musaolee. Ponies may be taken thus far with care, and they have been taken further but not without much risk. Good encamping ground. 8.-A small village containing some fine houses, stone built and slated; many fine horse chesnut trees around the village. At 2 miles from Chirgong pass a narrow and rather dangerous part of road considerably elevated above and overhanging the Pabur, and at about 6 miles cross a stream by a sanga and commence a rugged ascent which continues with more or less abruptness to Pekha, which village is high above the bed of the Pabur, last 3 miles, a very rugged pathway. 9.-A small village and the highest in the valley of the Pabur. Huuses built of hewn stone and slated. Good encamping ground under large old horse chesnut and walnut trees. Road for the first 4! miies to the Supun nuddy is pretty good, with gradual descent, the remainder is abrupt ascent and path very rugged. The Supun is crossed close to its junction with the Pabur. 10.-No village. A house of two rooms on the right bank of Pabur, built by lady Wm Bentinck for the accommodation of travellers. A gradual rise for first 3 miles through a fine wood, then occasionally ascents and descents (not abrupt) along the face of grass corered hills, sloping down to the l'abur on the right, foot path rugged at first. 11.-A small village near the Bupsa river and about 2 miles from left bank of the Sutlej, cross the snowy range in this stage by the Barenda pass. For the first 3 miles the path is similar to what it was in the latter part of last stage continuing parallel to the Pabur and gradually ascending it, then turns to the left, and for 2 miles more to the top of the pass, the ascent is very abrupt, and the path very rugzed over large masses of granite and loose stones. From the top of the pass to Broang the descent is very great (upwards of 7.000 feet in perpendicular) at first over a bed of snow and then through an extensive wood of Tarions kinds of trees. Path often rocky and rugged. There is always snow on the Northern side of the hills at the pass, but it is practicable for travellers from June to November. No shelter at the top of the pass, and no water near it. N. B.-The pass is 100 miles from Simlah. 12.-No great ascent or descent in this stage, but road is extremely bad, Iying often upon the face of the vaked rock inclined to the horizon at a considerable angle, with a precipice of many hundred feet on the outside. Much caution necessary to prevent slipping off the rock into the Sutlej on the left. 13.-Cross the Sutlej by Jhula (a rope swinging bridge) and join Kennedy's made road from the plains to the frontier. 14.-A considerable village on leſt bank of the Tetee, a large stream, Houses built entirely of wood. Numerous vineyards here. 15.-A large village on right bank of the Zoong rivulet, about 2 miles distant from the Sutlej. The populous town of Kanum is within a mile of Lubrung. 16.-A town of considerable extent, inhabited chiefly by Lamas, situated on the left bank of the Darbung, which is a large stream flowing through a broad level and well cultivated dell about 3 miles in length. Cross the Roonung ghat, 14,508 feet high, in this stage. There is a sanga on the Dabrung at Songnum, and there are many vineyards and apricot trees around the place. 17.-A small village on the banks of a stream running to join the Spitee river near its junction with the Sutlej. Cross the Humgrung ghat, 14,837 feet high, in this stage. The valley of Hango contains five or six villages, round which there is a good deal of cul- tivation. 18.-A small village on right bank of the Spitee river. Road at first even and good, latterly it leads down a steep descent. 19.-A pretty large village inhabited by Lama Tartars, situated at a height of 12,000 feet above the level of the sea. A good deal of cultivation of wheat and barley about this village, enclosed by stone walls. 20.—A fort and poor village belonging to the Raja of Busahir. First 9 miles of road very good, lying about a mile from the left bank of ihe Spitee river, the remainder rocky aud bad, The Spitre is crossed under Shealker by an indifferent Sanga. Breadth of stream 92 feet and height of bed 10,000 feet above the sea. The fort is in a cominanding situation, but generally in very bad repair. 230 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 285.–FROM SIMLA TO SHEALKER BY KOTGURH AND RAMPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M. F. 2 3 5 6 7 8 Protected Hill States. Fagoo Matteeana Nagkanda KOTGURH Nirt RAMPOOR Gourakotee Pol. Agent at SURAHAN Soobathoo Turanda Nachar Cheergong or Tho-) long Meeru Rogee Chence Pungee Shealker as in No. 322... 12 0 15 0 13 0 10 2 8 6 12 4 Nagouree. 8 C 9 6 Munglad ... 13 0 80 11 0 Sutlej 5 0 & 4 80 101 0 ... 63 4 22 Total.. | 216] 2 miles. 1.-A stage bungalow of one good room. An excellent made road the whole way, gradually ascending to the top of Mahasgoo, a hill 9,000 feet high, 9 miles from Simla and thence descending. 2.-A stage bungalow of one room. Supplies procurable from the village, which is at some distance from and below the bungalow. Road good and nearly level, winding along a bare, stony and uninteresting ridge of mountains. About half way pass Theog, ihe ola fortified residence of the Rana, who has now abandoned it for Synge on the bank of the Giree river. 3.-A stage bungalow of one large and two small rooms, situated on top of the Nakanda Pass. The road is good, but this is a fatiguing stage, there being several considerable des. cents as well as long and steep ascents to be got over. From the Nakanda bungalow to the top of Huttoo, a well wooded mountain, 10,400 feet high, there is a passage road, and the distance is between 4 and 5 miles. 4.– A station for detachment of invalids from the Soobatho corps. There is no publie bungalow here, but there are two good houses belonging to Captains P. Gerard and Nicol. son, and accommodation for travellers is generally to be had in one or other of them by application to those officers. Road very good, and leading through a beautiful wood great part of the way. Rather a steep descent for the first 3 miles, remainder tolerably level. 5.—A village on left bank of the Sutlej. Road good, descending at first through a beauti. ful wood of pine and oak; the descent in this stage is about 3,500 feet in the perpendicular. 6.-The capital of Busahir and winter residence of its Rajah, situated immediately on the left bank of the Sutlej and closely encompassed by mountains. Road for the first 8 miles quite level lying near the Sutlej, and for the remainder of the way it passes over short rocky ascents and descents. At Rampoor and just under the Raja's palace, there is a jhula or rope bridge across the Sutlej on the road leading to Kuloo. "Breadih of river 220 feet. 7.-This is the halting place of the Raja of Busahir on his periodical journies between Ramoor and Surahan, it consists of 4 or 5 houses, and has no permanent inhabitants. Supplies are procurable from the village of Dhar, about $ mile to N. E. road level for first 3 miles, then a steep ascent for of a mile, afterwards a gradual descent for about 4 miles to a rocky rivulet, and then an ascent for about 1 mile. 8.- A summer residence of the Busahir Roja. Road good, with the exception of the passage of the Monglad, which is effected by an indifferent Sanga, there is a steep descent of 300 feel to the Sanga and abrupt ascent of the same extent, the path narrow and slippery. From Gourakotee to the Munglad there is a gradual descent, and thence a direct iscent of about 3,600 feet to the top of a hill whence to Surahan is about a mile of gradual descent. VOL. 11.) 231 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. .!!... No. 286.-FROM SIMLA TO SOOBATHOO. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Hill States. | Territory. Protected Pol. Agent at Syree Soobathoo 10 4... 1 1 Soobathoo 13 0 Gumbeer...... 2 2 Total...23 4 miles. L-A stage bungalow of 2 small rooms near which there is ground for a few small tents. A small bazar. Water scarce in hot months. Road good and nearly level for 24 miles, then a steep descent for about lĮ miles-afterwards tolerably level for about 4 miles, then a gradual ascent to top of a ridge of mountains, whence a gradual descent to Syree. Pass the temple of Jantee Devi at 7 miles. 2.-A'large public bungalow, also good cncamping ground. Supplies and water abundant. Road good descending to the Gumbeer 94 miles-and thep ce ascending gradually. The Guinbeer is fordable during the fair season, and it is crossed by a chaiu bridge in the rains. No. 287.- FROM SOOBATHOO TO MALOWN. |Nahrotee 11| Gumbeer....... 1 Protected Hill States. Pol. Agent at Soobathoo 8 4 2 Sahee or Saheehut. tee MALOWN British 101 0 3 3 Total... 29 o 1.-A brahmin village on the banks of the Jooar nuddy. Supplies procurable, and water plentiful. Road good and shady. Encampment ground close to the village. 2.- A few buniahs' shops and water abundant. Good hill road. 3.-A small bazar under the fort. Water rather scarce. Road good, but a steep asceut from the Gumbeer nuddy to the heights of Malown. No. 288.–FROM SYLHET TO COMILLAH (MARIHED BY Blair's HORSE IN MAY 1825.) r Dilburgunge 11 Soorma & 1 1 Eetwa Tajpoor Police 91 o Joorie 2 Chokee Left Bank Murka River, 1 mile short 11 0 Shadupoor 3 & Murka Sylhet of Sheerpoor Barak and Sudder Ghat 94 14 Goojlah Kurrung- Bohoo Bul 14 0 15 hee Saestagunge 8| 0 Khoại 26 Eetah Kollah 13 o sootung ... 7 British. 232 (PART 1. TNE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos. M.F. Chandura ka Bazar Undah Bazar gie and British. Comillah Sonai and 14 0 Looer Kattagun- 102 Üllea 19 Joorie Syndura, Hourah, Seena- 14 0 gunge. & 2. 10 Beejai Nuddee 12 o Nyanpoor... 8 11 9 o Goomty 12 Near Nonagawn, 1} miles South of Kutbah Chougaon L COMILLAH 12 Total... | 134 6 miles. 1.-Supplies from surrounding villages. Water abundant. Country level and undulated, well cultivated and wooded with bamboo and beetle nut trees, Road very winding for 4 miles along the left bank of the Soorma, then along left bank of the Busstah for 3 miles tolerably good, the remainder wet and muddy along the left bank of the Joorie, Cross the rivers by ferry and the nullah by temporary bridge. 2.-Supplies and water as at the last siage. Country flat, cultivated with rice and much under water. Road through rice fields, half leg deep in mud and water. Cross the Joorie by boats and raſts. 3.- Country as above. No vestige of roads. Proceed through rice fields from ankle to knee deep in mud and water, winding much to avoid the lower and more undulated parts of the country. Cross several water courses half thigh deep, and at 41 miles the Narkeela. At 6ļ the Shadupoor, 250 yards wide, where it receives the waters of the Boorie Barak and Aurungpoor, and the Murka, 200 yards wide, at the end of the stage. These rivers are crossdd by ferry, and the encamping ground is on the bank of the latter on irregular higher spots. No encamping ground at Sheerpoor. Supplies procurable in abundance. 4.- Country as above, but less wooded and more water, the whole being inundated except the immediate banks of the rivers and the peasantry going from village to village in canoes. Road for the first 3 miles to the Barak worse than in last stage, thence to the Goojlah 51, it runs along the banks of the Barak and Goojlah and is pretty dry, it is winding, crosses several water courses waist deep and the nullah close to camp 15 yards wide and also waist deep. The two rivers crossed by ferry. 5.-Country fertile in rice, and very populous ; on the left for 9 miles a low ridge of thickly wooded heights, thence it becomes high land clothed in a heavy tree and bush jungle. On the right for the same distance there is a deep inundation, and not a tree or bush to the seen, after which there is a higher, drier, and finely cultivated country. March along the foot of the heights through swampy rice fields, knee deep in mud and water for 7 miles, thence by a footpath tolerably good, and only miry in crossing an occasional hollow. Cross the nullah by pucka bridge and the Kurrunghee by ferry at the end of the stage. Path winding as usual and intersected by several water courses, 6.-Conntry drier and well wooded with bamboos, mangoe and beetel, and some peepul trees. Road also well improved but still wet and miry: Cross the nullahs by temporary bamboo bridges and the Khoai by ferry at the end of the stage. 7.-Country to the Sootung 44 miles as in last stage, from thence to within a mile of Eetah Kollah, on the left it rises abruptly into a table land of from 60 to 100 feet in per- pendicular height, and is thickly covered with tree and bush jungle. Road to the Sootung ferry as in last stage, and afterwards good, excepting a few wet and miry places. 8.-Country very low and wet, some short grass jungle, little wood and less cultivation, on the left distant high land covered with jungle. Road through patches of rice cultiva. tion and grass, from ankle to knee deep in mud and water to the Soonai, 8 miles, thence a pretty good footpath, only here and there a little miry, winding much all the way to avoid the deeper ground. 9.--Country to the Kattagungie 34 miles, wet rice fields, thence to the Ullea Joorie 24 more well wooded and people on the left, and an extensive j heel (Teetas) with not a shrub to be seen on the right for the remainder of the way, high land and wood on ihe left, whilst the jhcel and deep swampy ground continue on the right. Road less wet and miry, and comparatively good, VOL. 11.) 233 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 10.-Country to the Syndura 14 miles. Jheel on right, and high jungly ground on left. To the Hourah, 4 miles more, a jheel and open wet ground right, and a jheel with high ground and jungle beyond it on the left, and from the Hourah to camp low wet rice fields. Road for the first mile swampy and bad, then a pretty good footpath for 4 miles and after- wards very winding and swampy. Kusbah is the proper stage, but ground all round it under water. 11.-Country low, open and inundated rice fields. Table land runs along the left at a distance of 1 to 14 miles from road which for 34 miles is a good footpath on the left bank of the Beejai nuddy, then very bad, being wet, muddy and winding. Cross the Nyanpoor at 41 miles, and afterwards 4 swamps from 1 thigh to waist deep.. 12.-Country on right, low, inundated rice fields, and on the left high ground and bush jungle. Road along a bund wet and heavy. Cross the Goomty at the 8th mile, pretty good encamping ground at the Dhurum Saugor. The above march was made by the 3rd, or Blair's local horse, between the 5th and 17th May 1825, and was a most trying and harassing one for the horses and carriage cattle of the corps, and some of the bazar bulocks sank under the fatigue of it. The road had never before been marched by troops, and, from the nature of the country, it must always be bad; bat 1825 having been a particularly wet season, the difficulties to be overcome were more than ordinary, and a few days more rain would have rendered it quite impracticable. Binjaree bullocks, with a supply of gram, were sent from Sylhet 4 days in advance of the corps, but they were unable to proceed through the mud, and were passed in the second stage. By giving timely notice to the local authorities supplies can be procured in abundance, and boats collected or rafts constructed to cross all the rivers and streams intersecting the road. No. 289.–FROM SYLHET TO GOWAHATTY BY CHIRA- PQONJEE AND NUNKLOW. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. | Nos. British Sylhet : Pundua Soopapoonjee Orange Groves Chirapoonjee Surareem Mophlung Cossya Estates. 171 0... 1 Dolly and 5 6 3 2 Kornuttee Mussung 67) and Omus- 3 3 sung 6 ol. 24 Kalapanee or Oomyong 8 3 35 & Bhogga Panee 9 2 ... 5 6 Dumpol- 13 6 57 longsue . 8 o Bor Sorri... 48 Bor Neigu- 106 ra & Hoor. 99 hooree 91 5 Bor Juree. 4 10 Pol. Agent at Chirapoon- jee Numbree or Lum- ? bree NUNKLOW Mopea, (Bungalow,) Ongswye, (Bunga- low Jyrong, a Garrow Village Raneegong(Godown) Raneegong, end of.. ... GowAHATTY 5 4 2 11 Dowboo- 95 4 12 ree 0 1 Bhoralee ... 13 British Gowahatty 13 Total... 119) 5' miles. PART I, VOL. II. F F (234 (PART 1. THR INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1.- Supplies are procurable here and water plentiful. A considerable trade is carried on at Pandua with ihe Cosseahy. 2.-Country for 3į milos level and road good, last mile gradual ascent. 3.-Ascent for 34 iniles to top of Ghat, thence rocky table land. 4.-Road tolerably good over a wavy table land. 5.--Country hilly and road bad, the descents to and ascents from the rivers are steep and dificult. 6.-Hilly country, a steep descent from the village of Mophlung and thence road winds over a succession of ascents and descents. At 5 miles pass ihrough the village of Syung, 7.-Country hilly and road ascending and descending the whole way. Country free from wood jungle. 8.-Descent of about 3500 feet in the first I miles to the river which is crossed by a wooden bridge 60 yards long. Road pretty good last 4 miles. 9. ---Road fitficult for cattle over steep ascents and descents. Country pretty open for the first 2 miles-remainder covered with wood and jungle. 10.-Road difficult for cattle owing to the continual ascents and descents of hills which are covered with wood jungi-irst mile along a valley rather swampy. 11.-Iload narrow and diificult for first 4. miles winding over a succession of low hills- last mile tolerably good. 12.- Road for the first 44 miles through low jungle with hills on right, last 5 miles coun- try open, straggling village of Rancegong ou left and road good. 13. - Road indifferent-at 3 miles pass the village of Moolee Daree on the bank of the Burrumpooter, and at 54 miles pass through a narrow pass between low wooded hills. No. 290.-FROM SYLHET TO MUNNIPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. - I Nos. Cachar Superintendent of Cachar Banskandee Kumrungabad Khongnangpokpee.. Jeeree River Mookroo Nullah Barak River Aquee Village Eerung River Eeynce River Eeroo River Jaeenugur MUNNIPOOR 120 00 11 2 12 0 7 7 6 1 8 5 7 2 4 7 6 0 12 6 10 0 8 5 Munnypoor Raja's Pol. Agent in Munnypoor.. 12 Total... 214 61 miles. 1.-By water up the Barak river, trip usually accomplished in days. No. 291.-FROM MAW VIA HINDIA AND BAITUL TO NAG- POOR. Datoda Gambir 8 4 1 & Kanars Sonwah Dewas. Resident Indore { Akbarpoor Pepalia (Hath) Scindhias. Holkar's. 11 2 Kanar 8 2 10 5 Sipra 5 3 Sendula 11 3 and 1 Bamhori. 9 2 Kali Surdh' 1 Unchod 1 1. 235 VOL. 11.] THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK! Territory Nullahs. Scindhias. 5 Oct Nose ".. 112 Hoshan- gabad. ... 101 of... Ingaibe Baitul. } Chichundra sills ... Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. to on M. F. Aliam Canton Bijwar 9 1... .... 2 6 Khannod 11 51 Political Agent, Chunwana 81 5 1 8 Sandalpoor 8) 311 Sehore 19 Hindia 6 Narbadda....... 10 Piddegaon 13.00 101 4... 11 Timburni 100l... Principal As- sistant Com Uskalli? 135 V... 13 of Gangal 13 missioner Gawasen 10 01.. 2 14 Chirapatha 2 15 Chicholie 15 4 .. 2.16 saa Kumharia 9 al... 1 17 Badnur or Baitul ? 9 o Machna 18 Cantonment ... ) 1st Junior ditto tott Sohagpoor blola. Ditto and 2 6 0 19 Sampan ) .7 6...toda 6 20 Multai questa 10 2... 21 badagasca11 Chichundra (2nd) ... 8j 6 Wanda 22 Halon Tigaon 9 0... 2 23 ON bra toda |Seoni 55SYenot.. 12 2 Jam 3 times... 24 | Eritual Chicholi ...10 25 Nagpoor Resi-) Umri Tooqnac...11 4... 11 26 dent Kular & Barhampurilisi 13 21 Chander 5 27 Bhaga... Nagpoor Residency NE 2 14 4 ... ... 10 28 ilgoto Si 28 Total... 294 21 miles. FISLOS 1.-A fair road in dry weather, and River ghats easy. 9. -Tolerable road." River Swampy after rains.ro 3.-Black soil. ditto ditto. Nullahs troublesome. 4.-Good village. Road fair, and crossings good. 3.- Rord easy. A tolerable bazar, -Ghat descending into the Nurbudda valley. Ghat long, but gradual, heavy jungle at 7-4 good village, heavy jungle. Road fair. & -Small ditto. Road good, but jungly: - large village. Road good. Soil rich. 10.-River fordable after November. A town of importance, and residence of a native 11.-A small village. Road good. 12. -A respectable bazar. Road good. 13.-A small village. Road good, Country open, 14 petty village. Jungle and hill abundant. Road stony. 16.-A good village. Road latterly improved, 17.-Encamp on the bank of the Machria. Village insignificant. Road fair. 18.-Road pretty good ; but via Khairi from Chichobe preferable, though 3 miles longer. 1.9.–A sinal village near the town of Baital. Roal fair. Many. 71 3... Nagpoor. G. bottom. authority. 15.-Ditto ditto ditto. 236 (PART 1. TIIE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 20.-Village inconsiderable. A small ghat ascended. 21.-Residence of a Tehsildar. Road bad. 22.- Pitch on left bank, stream here small, village pretty, and country poor and Jungly. 23.-Ghat descended into plains of Berar, long and rather troublesome. Village incon siderable. 24.-A small village. Country rich and black soil. 25.-A small bazar. Road rather stony. 26.-Ditto ditto 27.-A small village, Road fair. Rivers fordable. 28.-Road good, and country open. A separate road to Kamptee Canton. Distance 13 miles. No. 292,-FROM BHILSA VIA HOSINGABAD AND BAITUL : TO ELICHPOOR. Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. Nos.rs M.F. ... 14 6 Dabar ... 31 gabad. Bhopal. Scindhias. Territory. Hoshan- .. :: Political Agent, Kalliakheri Political Agent Sehore, or Re- Raisen sident Gwaliar Banchor Chakhold on Sehore Pipraini Nazarganj Principal As-Hoshangabad sistant Com- misioner Harsi Kesla Bhonra Naddi 81 o Kuhu 52 10 4... 83 81 1 8) 2 5 5 11 3 56 27 Nurbudda.. 17 58 111 5... 101 6... 99 Dhar and 10 10 ... : Baitul. 1st Junior Ditto Shahpoor Nimpani Badnur or Baitull Cantonment Khairi Jhular Keolari Sanwalmenda 14 0 Sukhtawa Machna 7 1 911 & Bhonra 94... ... 8 (12 13 4... 9 13 8 o Machna 4 14 12 0 Tapli 6 15 8 0 Palrapati ... 3 16 Purna (4) 12 0 7 17 times) Ditto and 10 0 Dhaba 3 18 3 times. ... Dhaba ปรไป ... 10 2 Adna 319 Elich- poor. Nawab Khurpi Elichpoor or Pur- antiara Cant. 8 0. ...... 20 20 Total... 101 5 miles. 1.-A good sized town with fort. Road good. 2.-A bazar, Road good. 2.- A small ditto. Road stony and jungly. 3,-A bazar. Road fair ; at parts stony. 4.-A small village on crown of the ghāts. Road good and country open. VOL. 11.) 237 THB INDIAN ROAD BOOK: 3.-Chauka ghat descended, long and rather stony, a small village. 6.-A ferry, route by ford of Gondri ghat 7 miles. 7.-A small village Patrowra, (with Rusulpur intervening, 2 short stages of 6 or 7 miles) preferred as the halting places, on account of water. 8.-A small bazar. Road fair, but uneven. 9.-One shop; road ditto—the nuddi insignificant. 10.-Residence of ildar Road good, ford to all the streams. 11.-A long and troublesome ghat ascended. A small village. 12.-Road good, and country thriving. 13.--Ditto, but no supplies. 14.-Road bad ; and gha's numerous, and no bazar. or the following stages 15.-Bad road, 2 small ghats, no bazar. 1. Kalegaon, 16.-Road stony, ditto ditto. 2. Manderi, 17.-No supplies. Road stony and jungly with ghats. 3. Sataer. 18.-Ghat descended into valley of Berar. 4. Sarpoorah. 19.-Road good, and country open, Small village. 20.-Good road, fertile country.. No. 293.-FROM SERONJ VIA SAGUR, RAHLY, JABBALPOOR AND MANDLA TO RATTANPOOR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. coco | Nullahs. N | Nos. Tonk 3 Sagar. 9 4 Juari 13 o Ditto Betwa & 111 0 Rainli. 11 4 Bina 11 6 Narani 9 0 Dhasan 12 4.. 10 o Beos Political Agent, Sahalpoor Sebore Bhourasa Eran Principal Assist-Khurai ant to Com- Mundra missioner Nariaoli Sagar Cantonment... Dhana Rakly First Junior As- sistant Com- < Mohli missioner Biarmi River Tendukhera Patan Nunbar Principal Assist- Jubbulpoor Cant. ... Jumouni ant Commis- Battargunj sioner Shankargunj 4 5 6 7 8 9 15 6 ... Sonar or Dumoh. ... 114 Jubbulpoor. Sagarh 15 0 10 Kopra. 10 0 Biarmi 11 12 Goraia 12 10 o Hiran 13 90l... 111 0 Umti 15 11 o Gour 116 100... 17 7 0 Belai 18 Belai and 14 of 2 other 19 Streams 12 of 2 small 20 Streams. S Nurbudda 100 & other 2.. 21 Streams. 14 0 Kular 122 14 4 Holan 123 141 0... Ditto or furst Jr. } Mandla, ... Seoni. Aujamia First Jr. A. C. at Seoni Bichhia Motinala Rajadhar 124 TIB INDIAN ROAD BOOK. (PART 1 Nullahs. Nos. M. F. of Nagpore. Territory. Kamurdha . 9 (Hajah) } 90 Nagpoor. பாரகா 00772 Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. TA Datorte 120 pos,bon 3 Barla 15 0... 25 Pandu Talao 18 0..baon 26 JA Nuddy Pindrai 15) o 27 . Satgunga ...070 A, Nuddi....... 28 Ditto flows on the east Resident ...Mungeli 29 under the TAGAL Y JHL 3 AB 1 Utown. 80 00TUTTI OT AJOV A Nuddi cros- sed & another Jakhtpoor 12 o flowing under. 30 the town on the east of it. Gunyari 10 za 29 OA Nuddi. 31 Rattanpoor 11 0 A Nuddi... 32 32 Total... 363 4 miles. moocna sottrio I 1.--A good village, excellent road and ford. 2.-Ditto ditto, pitch near the Betuar. 3.-A good village on the Bina with police chakee, road fair. 4.-A considerable town and residence of Tehsildar. Road slightly circuitous to obtain the ford, which is rather troublesome, road fair. 5.-Small village, a hill range crosses by the Banhat ghat, which is easy. Road not good. "G.-A fine village, neither road nor ford good. 7.-A circuitous road very good. a direct one by Satgurh giving 9 or 10 miles not so. 8.-Road and ford bad, a ghat ascended at Cantonment, a tolerable village. 9.-A considerable town, a residence of a Tehsildar formerly of a Principal Assistant, whose kachary house is standing. Road indifferent. 10.-Road mostly good; village considerable; residence of a petty Thakur Tejgurh. Jun- gles, entered. 11.-River crossed by rocky ford at Jhampan. A good villaye on right bank. Jhalon, a better village l] mile onwards. Road stony, and through dense jungle. 12.–River crossed by an easy ford, and here forms the boundary. Road fair, but country poor and wild, a mere village with a poice guard. 13. -A large village or town with a native aulthority. Koni ghat descending into the rich lands of the Jubbulpoor. Havilli river considerable, but ford pretty good; road fair. 14.-Road excellent and made, village considerable. 15.-Umti passed by a bridge, nullahs also bridged, and road excellent. 16.-Road good, ford rather troublesome small village. 17.-Road indifferent and partially jungle, a heavy ghat, ascended into a poor country Gondi village. 7.18.- River casily forded, a mile from village, where there is a bazar and police authority ; above table land descended by a heavy ghat. 19,--River recrossed under the village. Ford easy. 20.-A small hill pass called Tap Ghali, crossed after leaving Shanks, and after passing Bambini; the Gorrar Ghat leads over a very troublesome' neck of forest high land, which runs down to the Nurbudda, and which is ascended and descended to Sugur, which is a small village by ghats at present very bad and infested by tigers. This is a heavy stage and a better and shorter route in the dry season, is obtained by crossing the Nurbudda 4 miles from Shankargunge, halting half way at Ghagha and recrossing at Maudla, or halting at Maharaj pore opposite to it on the left bank. The Banjar has then only to be crossed by a ford, whereas by en camping at Maudla, the Nurbudda must be crossed by a ferry, just above the junction of the Bungar which falls, in opposite the fort. Maudia is a large town of great beauty and the residence of a Tehsildar; and ford of the Nurbudda very difficult, exist 14 mile below the town, but-traders usually go from Sagur to Rampaggur higher up the river and a considerable village, where it is fordable and thence to Aujamea, 91.--A good village and road fair lying through a very rich country. 22.-Residence of Tilladar. The stream containing water at all seasons runs between Bhua nnd Bichchea, the former of which is hy some preferred for balting. 23:--A poor Gond village, the ford of the Halon not good, frequently infested by tigers. M.--A poor village at the top of the ghat country, desolate and barren. VOL. 11.) THB INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 1 23.-Ghat descended into Chatisgarh, tong and difcult; a circuitous route giving 18 miles, is preferrable for laden cattle, and stage may be divided at Barak in the midst of the ghat which is however a most ineligible halting ground; a small village. 20.-Road good country tolerably open; village considerable. 27.–A considerable market. Road fair, a road which leaves Burla for Kamerdha, 10 miles, rejoins here viâ Piparia 9 miles, and last stage 9 miles. 28.-A place of sanctity at the source of some streams and inconsiderable place. 24.-A respectable village. Road good, and country open and populous. 30.-A large village. Road and country as before; streams all fordable. 31.-A good village country as before. 32.- Residence of a Sooba, and a large town, Road and country as before, river con- sider-able but ford not bad. • Of the above the portion from Seronj to'Sagur is pretty good, from thence to Rehly, it is very indifferent, but beyond this up to the Konighat the country being silicious is well fitted for road making and passable by carts, though not yet made wood being conveyed into Sagur in large quantities from the Tejgarh jungles which it traverses. From Koni The road has been recently made to Jubbulpur. Thence to Rajadhar it is exceedingly bad for the most part, and the country very wild, but after descending into Chhattisgarh it is excellent. No. 294.-FROM JHANSI, VIA NAGORE, NARSINGPOOR, AND BARA, CHHINDWARA TO NAGPOOR. 1 Dist. Civil Authorities. San Names of Stages. Rivers. M. F. Nullahs. Nos. Jhansi. | Territory ... Barcuri & 12 2 7.1 Batwa. 12 4 8 2 13 6 113 12 3 9 5 .. D. 115 10Jamnau ... 76 Superintendent Barwa Sagor at Jhansi Perthipoor Bamhori G. G.'s Agent at Banda Belgaon Tehai Kiriadhamna Ghat 2 of the Jumna ... S Tehri. 12 4 13 G... 101 41... ...127 88 Sagor. Sahgurh. 119 1 101 6 10 ... Damoh. G. G.'s Agent at ) Saidpoor Jubbulpoor ... ) Saonrai TV Dhamoni 071139 Bahul Principal Asst. Commissioner Marwasi Sagor Cantonment.. Suckhi Gooaghama Ditto or 1st Ju- nior at Damoh. Deori Moharajpoor Bamhuri Principal Assist- ant Commis- Kirpani or Nurbudda or 2 Narsingpoor sioner, or De- Garrawara 3 puty Collecter at Narsingpoor Bachai Chhota Mundra 81 o Dhasau 6 11 8 Oh. 12 16 0 Beos 13 12 4 Drahar Lowar- 101 6 sukh chain. 15 4 16 102 Panari 4 17 104... 3 18 12 4 Nurbudda.. 8 19 101 4... 20 11 2 Machul Hoshunga- bad. 21 240 (PART E TUB INDIAN ROAD BOOK.' Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. M. F. :::: Nullahs. Harrai 11 21. 9 22 Sakkar Nad 8 2 Sakkar 23 Irugwani 24 as Amarwara 16 5 Tail 25 Singwani 101 6... 26 Chhandwara 13 4 Tonch 27 Lě Resident ... Ekulbari 13 6... 28 Ramakona on the 2 13 5 Kahur 29 Kanhun Lodhi Khena 10 2 Jaun 30 Nundapoor 13 1. 31 Patne Seongi 10 1 Nerandgam 32 Mad Nagpoor 130 Kular 33 33 Total.. 371 1 miles. 1.-A good village and bazar. Road good, but ford of Betwa very troublesome. 2.-A small village. Road good. 3.- Ditto ditto. 4.-Ditto ditto. 5.-A respectable town, and residence at times of the chief, a Bundela of the Chandiri family: 6.–River easily forded. Asthon, 2 miles north, sometimes preferred as halting places. Road fair. 7.-A strip of land belonging to thanna Kumheri. Village not considerable. Road fair. :-A respectable village with a fort and residence of the Rajah's brother. 9.-Road fair. There is another road from Asthon to this place, halting either at Geroh- li or Sarumal, both at Sahgurh vindhya range ascended. 10.-Road bad, but ghat not difficult village considerable with Pollce chowkee. 11.-A small village. Road pretty good; the river has had a causeway wide over it and the road made throughout being a new line; village is large. 12.-Several streams crossed; but all bridged, 2 hill range crossed, but ghat and road made throughout. 13. -Road made the stages to Suckhi, is occasionally broken by halting at Chitora, off the road, and it is undoubtedly desirable to have the distance to Goorghamar divided into 3 stages, perhaps at Samnapur and Nur was a hill range ; is crossed in reaching Goorshamar which is a good village with Fort and Police Chowkees. 14.-Suckhi is an ordinary village. 15,- A large village with a Police Naib. Road ſair. 16.-An ordinary village. Road fair. 17.-A good village and residence of a Thakur. 18.-There is a ghat descended by a made road into Narb valley ; village not consider- able. Road good. 19.-A large town, Formerly an European Station, now a residence of a native De- puty Collector. Road good, but streams and savines occasionally tronblesome. 20.-A respectable village with police station, 21.-A poor village, road strong and jungly, 22.-Hills ascended to table land of the Satpara. 23.-Road indifferent; no village. 24.-Three ghats ditto. Small village. 25.-Tolerably sized village and bazar. 26. --Small village ; indifferent road. 27.- A large town. Formerly an European post ; now the residence of a Sobah. 28.-Road fair ; a small village. 29. -Tara ghat descended into plains of Berar ; abundant forest wild and strong. 30,-A tolerable village ; road strong, and ravines. 31.- A small village; abundant ravines. 32.-A good sized village and rich country. Road good. From Patne Seongi to Kampti is a direct road; 124 miles from Lodh Rhira there is another main road to Nagpur via Kelooh. 33.-Sanee and Bhamarwara. Note.-of the above route, the distance from Jhansi to the foot of the Dhamsni ghat, composed of a silicious soil, well adapted for roads, and offers no serious impediments From thence to the valley of the Nurbudda entered at the Jheria ghat, the road has been constructed from the road fund; and across the valley, the country is level, allowing carts VOL. 11.) 241 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. readily to travel in the dry seasons. On mounting the ghat to Harrai, the Salpara route left again at the Tara ghat, offers, in many parts, serious obstacles to wheel carriages, But after descending into the Berar plains, though the road is often stony, no material impediments afterwards occur. No. 6.-FROM HIRAPUR ON THE ABOVE ROUTE VIA DA. MOH TO JABBALPUR. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Panna. G. G.'s Agent at Banda Baxwopa 11 0.. . 5 1 1 st Junior Asst. Damoh. ... Ramsaugger Harat on the Sonar... Baugawan Damoh Abhana Hardwa Jabera Singhrampur Kalangi Baghouri Jabbalpur 14 4 8] 1 8] 5|Sonar 13 1 11 4 7 O Biarmi 8 0 8 3 8 5 12 o Hirran ::::::::::: 62 3 3 4 715 5! 6 47 48 19 10 311 5 12 ... Jabbalpur. Principal Asst. Commissioner 101 2... Total 1211 il miles. 1.-Hirapur ghat easily ascended. Road stony in parts, and jungly. A respectable vil- lage. 3. -The residence of a petty Rajah or Thakur, Road pretty good until reaching the hilly frontier, where it becomes stony; and the country poor and wild, 3.-A respectable village, but the Sonar is usually crossed at the end of the march, and the encampment made on the opposite bank. Supplies being brought from Hatta. 'Road fair, bnt the river crossing deep and difficult. 4.-A small village ; road pretty good ; and country open. 5.-Residence of 1st Junior Assistant Commissioner ; road fair. 6.-A respectable village. Road excellent. 7.-Ditto ditto, ford very stony. 8.-Ditto ditto ditto. Bhander hills descended by an easy ghat. 9.-Small village; road good ; but occasionally stony; country wild. 10.-A very fine village; road good. 11.-A small village; road excellent; ford deep and troublesome until January. 12.-Resident of Governor Genl.'s assistant agent and principal assistant. Road excellent. NOTE.-Prom Damoh to Jabbalpur the road is macle, and yearly repaired by prisoners, under the direction of the executive officer; and at present, the communication between Sagur and Jabbalpur is carried on almost exclusively by this route. No. 7.-FROM PANNA VIA SEHORA ON MIRZAPUR AND JABBALPUR ROAD. Pannah 11 G. G.'s Agent at Banda Kakrohti Lohurgaon Murwara Bisaini Sainaggur 10 6 Mir Husen. . 61 1 9 0 2 2 100L 1 3 16 0 Kian or Cane 4 10 o Do recrossd. 3 5 GG PART 1, VOL. II. 242 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. | Nos. M. F. 10 4 Aloni 2 or Jabbalpur. Nitarra Principal Assist: 1 ant Commis- sioner Kanria Sehora 13 0 3 6 47 8 15 61... Total 95/ 0 miles. 1.-A bad stony march. A tolerable village. Pitch on the south bank. Cart road 144 miles. 2.-Formerly a cantonment, aud bungalows standing. Road tolerable. The usual road from Kokrohii to Bisaini is by Ghonor 9-4, Rupa 12, Peparia (at foot of ghat) 6-4, Bisaini 11-4, or Kian crossed. 3.-An inconsiderable village. 4.-A very bad ghat ascended after crossing the Kian. This is a very long and trying march, and route by Peparia preferable; but there is no village there for haling at. 5.-A small town on the Kian. Residence of an authority. Road tolerable. 6.—A small hill range (Bhandar), crossed at Doogaon (6 miles) ; road tulerable. A fair village. 7.-Road tolerable. The old road was by the town of Bilahri, but it is off the road. A good village. 8.-A considerable town. Instead of the last 2 long stages, the distance may be divided from Nitarra to Khirchini, a fine village 12 miles, Kuan a good village 9 miles, and Sehura 9 miles; but this involves twice crussing, the Rathna Kherchni being situated to the east of it, and off the road. Note.-Bilchri, the latter portion of this route, formerly constituted a portion of the great Mirzapur and Deccan road, which now, after leaving Chaka towards Jabbalpur, keeps Bilchri 3 miles to the west, and rejoins this route at Sehora. It is but an indifferent road for wheeled carriages, but is extensively travelled by laden cattle going to Panna, as above given, leaving Bilchri to the east. No. 8.-FROM MIRZAPUR CANTONMENT VIA JABBALPUR AND SEONI TO NAGPUR. Mirzapur. Bhagwantail Lalgunge 13 4 Ujla 75... 1 2 Collector Allahabad. Drummond Gunge, at the foot of Kattra pass Seoti & 2 15 6 Belun } .. 3 ... Hunnomana Khatkhari Mowgunge ::: 4 5 3 Lour Rewan. G. G.'s Agent Jabbalpur 7 11 0... 9 o Gurma 77 Gara & Bar- ghat 10 7 Oddo & 2 Silar S 9 2 Pakrair 9 5 Sengri 11 o Mohana 11 7 Bihar 127 ... Mungawa Raipur Rewan Kattra Moharri Omarpatan 8 39 31 10 11 12 VOL. 11.) 243 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK, Dist. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Machyur. Territory. G. C's Agent, Machyur Ghunwara 15 3 Topse 12) 3 Gusru Jabbalpur 4 13 15 14 26 15 Sewagunge 13 2. r Marwara Piprodh Salimabad 15 o Kathna 8! 7 Niwar 9 o Kathna 117 16 7 17 18 Sehora 14 1... 19 Ghosulpur 7 5 Heran 20 All bridged or supplied with stone pavements. Jabbalpur. Principal'Assist- ant Coinmis-< Panagar sioner 91 2 ... 21 Jabbalpur Cant. 10 3 Paryat 22 Tiiwara Ghat of Nurbudda 23 or Seoni. (Ghat Piparia r Raichhor Dhuma Lakhnadown Ganeshgunge Ditto Ist Chapara Bandol Junior Assist- Seoni Cantonment... ant at Seoni. Mohgaon Khurai Kawasa U Dungartal Ramtok Resident Kamti Cantonment... Nagpur.Cantonment. 6 O'Nurbudda. . 4 24 12 0... 7 25 uli 5 26 14 4 Serh 4 27 8 2 Bijna 3 28 8 3. 2 29 11 WainGunga 30 10 6 31 12 6 WainGunga 4 32 recrossed 8 6... 33 10.0 34 102 35 15 1... 9 36 14 4 Kanhun 437 Nagpur. 10 O... 4 38 38 Total... 416 1miles. 1.-Excellent made road; small village. 2.-Ditto ditto ; good village. 3.-Road excellent; village small; a bungalov; a very fine causeway across the Belun. 4.-An inconsiderable village; ghat ascended by a beautifully made road. 5.-A bazar; road as before. 6.-A good village and staying bungalow ; formerly the residence of a petty Rajalı. 244 [PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. 7.-A small village. 8.-A large village and a fine country. The road from Allahabad falls in here. 9.-Small village ; country as before. 10.-A large town, with staging bungalows, and residence of the principal chief or Raja of Baghalkhund. 11.-A small village, river forded close under Riwan. 12.-A large bazar, residence of one of the Riwa family. 13. —A fair sized town, residence of the chief. A staging bungalow erected here. 14.-A fair sized village ; road made throughout. 15.-Ditto ditto ditto. 16.-A large town, with a police writer. A dâk bungalow erected here. 17.-A small village and bazar. 18.-A considerable bazar ; residence of a tehsildar. 19.-A very fine town, and likewise residence of a tehsildar. The preceding route joins in at this place. 20.-A large village : if a more equal division of the road, from Salimabad to Ghosalpur be desired, it can be effected by halting at a stream adjoining the village of Bargi-called the. • Bargi-Nala.' 21.--A very fine village and bazar. 22.-A military station, and head quarters of the civil authorities of the division. 23. -A small bazar. Encampment sometimes made on the opposite bank of the river, if the camp be large. Road good. 24.-Very bad road. Ghats ascended. A small village. These two stages sometimes made in one. 25.-A small village. This stage is frequently divided at Chirapondi; between which place and Kaichor, a succession of ghats, usually denominated the 'Sat-ghattia' occurs- and indeed the whole road is exceedingly bad. 26.-Road rough and uneven. A tolerable bazar, and the residence of a tilladar or po- lice officer. 27.-Residence of a tehsildar. Road somewhat better-but far from good. 28.-A very indifferent road. A steep ghat descended into the Bijira valley. A small bazar. 29.—A fine village and bazar. Ghat ascended, and descended. Road very bad and try- ing. 30.-A small village. Road excellent. 31. - Residence of Ist Junior Assistant. Road excellent, and the nullahs, or these two stages, bridged. 32.-Road fair. Bridges in progress over some of the streams. A small village. 33.-A small village at the foot of ghat, descending into the Dungartal Pergana ; which is a continuous forest. Ghat exceedingly bad, and road stony and uneven. 34.-A small village. Road good. 35.-A tolerable village, with a fine talao. Residence of a Police jemadar. Road good. 36.-A large town, and place of pilgrimage. This stage is occasionally divided at Modhi. a small village, in British Territory, 54 miles from Dumgartal. Road stony, but fair. 37.-An excellent road in dry weather. Ford under the cantonment deep. 38.-A made road, and bridged throughout. Note.-Of the above route, the portion extending from Mirzapur to the Nurbudda has been made by Government at great expense, under the superintendence of the Execu- tive department: nearly the whole of it has been metalied, and a great portion of it bridged, though many nullahs still remain, which are at times exceedingly iroublesome, having merely galleries cut down through their banks, leading to the stone pavements laid in the beds of most of them; which galleries become choked up with mud after floods. The Kattra Ghat is a work probably not surpassed in excellence; though doubtless in extent, the height of the cliff falling considerably short, it is believed of 300 feet, and on the whole this line of road must be considered as one of the finest in India. It was originally intended to complete it to Umraoti, a great commercial mart of the Deccan ; but it was unfor. tunately never carried further than the Nurbudda. Still the immense advantage already Tesulting from it may be deduced from the fact communicated by the executive office of the division; that from 1826 to 1828, previous to the completion of the Kattra pass, scarcely 100 carts of any description passed annually along the Deccan road-whereas between the Ist August 1840, and 30th July 1841, official documents shew that 15,252 wheeled carriages ascended and descended the pass.' Measures are happily in contemplation for continuing the road from Jabbalpur to Nagpur, over the Satpara range, which is at present, from "Tilwara to Chapara (60 miles) almost impracticable for wheeled carriages ; 'besides the descent from it on the south at VOL 11.] 245 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Khurai, which offers at present a most serious obstruction. A survey has been partially completed by Government, and a line selected from Jabbalpur to Dhumo, leaving Tilwara and the present to the right. It is to be hoped that nothing will now intervene to delay the completion of this most important work; the effects of which, in stimulating the trade with the Deccan, it seems almost impossible to overestimate. No. 9.–CHATTARPUR VIA SAGUR AND HOSHANGABAD TO ASIRGURH. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. Chirkhari. Mahatgaon 11 2 ... .. 411 ... Bija- Gulganj 11 0.. .. 1 2 war G. G.'s Agent at Banda Malhara Saurwah 11 2 61 5.. 4 3 4 4 Hirapur 94. ... 45 : Sagur. Sahgarh. Panna. Chirkhari. Panna. Sanwahi 10 5.. 3 6 G. G.'s Agent at Jabbalpur ... Katara 12 5... ... 7 100.. 10 3... 90... 14 Beas 13 0... 10 0.. Bhopal Banda Principal Agent Karrapur Sagur Sagur Cantonment.. Bilehra Naga Garbia Sinorman Silwani Political Agent Pertabgurh Sehore Jamgurh Chainpur Maljhir Dhobi Chichli Hoshangabad Cantt. Dularia Principal Assist. Bhagwara Seoni Kotra 100 Gorauji & 12 0 Begam. 84 8 0 Bam 12 4.. 10 4 8 0 8 4 Nurbudda 14 o.. 7 0 90. 10 0 Ganjal 28 1 9 5 10 6 11 5 12 13 3 14 3 15 3 16 4 17 6 18 4 19 4 20 4 21 4 22 3 23 3 24 25 Hoshanga- bad. 246 (PART I. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Civil Authorities. Territory. Rivers. Names of Stages. Nullahs, M. F. . 26 12 0.. 14 0... 27 13 01 28 Gorapach: 29 Sindhia's Charkera Mesingaon Charwah Gorapachhar River.. Gangapat Bamgurh Khirgaon Borgaon A sirgurh Political Agent Mundlaisur 30 : : No.not ascertained. : 12 0 har 11 3 Gangapat Bam and 11 0 Lukta.S 8 0 Luktare- 90 crossed 13 4.. 31 32 33 British 34 34 Total 359! 2 miles. 1.-A small village. Good road. 2.-A bazar. Many ravines, but road good. 3.-A small village. Ditto ditto. 4.-A small village with bazar. Country hilly, but road good. 5.-A fair sized town and bazar. Road mostly good. 6.- Vindhya range surmounted by a made ghat of some length. 7 and 8. -A small bazar. Road good. 9.-A good sized village and bazar. Road indifferent. 10.-Road fair. 11.-Road fair. Beos ford rather deep. 12.-Road indifferent. A small village. 13.-A considerable village. Road indifferent. Country poor. 14.-A small bazar. The Siarman ghat, leading down to the Nurbudda valley very difficult. 15.-A good sized village. Fair road. 16.-Ditto ditto. Good road, and fine country. 17.-A considerable place. Road good. 18.-A small village. Road fnir. 19 and 20.-A good village. Ditto. 21.-River crossed at the Gondri ghat. Road for some distance along the bank. 22.-A good village, and road good. 23.-A small ditto ditto. 24.-A good sized town, and residence of a tehsildar. 25.-A good village. The ford rather troublesome, owing to steep banks. 26.-A good sized village. Road indifferent. 27.-Small ditto. 28.-A small bazar, 29 and 30.-No village. Road indifferent. 31,- A bazar. 32.-A small village. 33.- A considerable village. 34,--Road bad and hilly, Note. --After leaving Sagur, the above route is not practicable for carts, until reaching the valley; and throughout the latter, they are by no means the most eligible kind of carriage. VOL. 11.] 247 THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. No. 10.–FROM PANNA via BISSANI GHAT TO SEHORA, ON MIRZAPUR AND JABBALPUR ROAD. Dist. Civil Authorities. Rivers. Names of Stages. Territory. Nullahs. M. F. GON - | Nos. 9 0. 100.. Panna. G. G.'s Agent at Banda Kakrahti Lahargon Marwara Bisaini Ssinaggar. Nitara 10 Mir Husen. 6 1 21 2 3 Kian (or 16 0 4 Cane).. 10! O do recrossed 31 5 101 4 Aloni 2 Jor 3 6 4 7 15 6 8 Jabbal- pur. Principal Assist. Commissioner 13 0.. Kauria Sehora ........ Total 951 o miles. 1.--A bad stony march. A tolerable village, Patch on the south bank. Cart road 145 miles. 2.-Forning a cantonment, and bunga The usual road from Kakrahti to lows standing. Road tolerable. Bisaini is by Ghoseor,.... 9 4 3.-Ditto ditto an inconsiderable village. Kopa,..... 12 0 or Kian 4.-A very bad ghat ascended after Piparia (at foot of ghat), 64 (crossed crossing the Kian. This is a very long Bisaini,... 11 4 and trying march, and the route by Piparia preferable ; but there is no village there for halting at. 6.-A small town on the Kian, residence of an authority. Road tolerable. 6.-A small hill range. Spar of the (Bhander) crossed at Deogaon (6 miles). Road toler. able. A fair village. 7.-Rond tolerable. The old rond was by the town Bilahri, but it is off the road, and involves the ascending and descending the Kaimer range ; and twice crossing the Kathna river. A good village. 8.-A considerable town. Instead of the last 2 long stages, the distance may be divided from Nitarra to Khirchni, a fino village 11 miles, Kuan, an good village, 9 miles ; and Sehora 91 miles; but this involves twice crossing the Kathua ; Khirchni being situated to the east of it, and off the road. Nute.-From Bilchir, the latter portion of this route, formerly constituted a portion of the great Mirzapore and Deccan road; which now, after leaving Chaka towards Jabbalpur, keeps Bilchri 3 miles to the west, and rejoins this route at Sehora. It is but an indiferent Toad for wheeled carriages, but is extensively travelled by laden cattle going to Panna, as abore given, leaving Bilchri to the east. No. 11.-ROUTE FROM JOGEHI ON THE PRECEDING (3 MILES S. OF SEWAGUNGE) via DAMOH & SAGOR TO SEHORE. Principal Assist. Saida Commissioner Bhartalla } 13 6 Aloni Kian, 91 01. Panna. Jabbalpur. : Very numerous. G. G.'s Agent Raipura ... Bonda 8 3 Patna 3 97... Damoh. 1st Junior As- sistant Kumhari Ghat Piparia Biltarra Damoh Sadagaor IPatharia 7 6 Biarmi 85 81 4. 9 o Kopra 8! 1 Sonar 4 22 5 24 6 15 7 98 248 (PART 1. THE INDIAN ROAD BOOK. Dist. Territory. Civil Authorities. Names of Stages. Rivers. Nullahs. M. F. Nos. 96... 9 4 Beos 9 4!... ... Sagur. ... Shahpur Dungasra Principal Assist. Sagor Cantonment... Commissioner Bhapail Gamhiria Bina River Bagrodh Resdt at Gwalior | Gyaraspur or Pol. Agent Karri at Sehore Bhelsa 9 1 8 1 Dhasan 9 0 Bina 13 1 Babana 96 12 6 107 Seo & 4 10 6 11 5 12 8] 13 3] 14 7) 15 101 16 9 17 81 18 Scindia's. ... Newan.com 3 19 Bhopal. Amkhera Ballampur Pol. Agent Se- hore Bhopal Panda (Sehore Cantonment 7 2 Betwa 21 20 12 6 Ghora- 3 21 pachhar 13 Do.& Pathra 3 22 12 41. 3 23 90 3 24 24 Total... 237 6 miles. 1.-The Thakur of Bijai Raghergurh is at present building a staging, bungalow at the junction of the roads, 2 miles south of Jogabi, at which point, if a ganj be established, as is in contemplation, the distance to Saida will be 11 miles and 6 furlongs. The road is good, but rivers and nullabs troublesome. Repairs yearly made. 2.-Road as before. A small village, with police jemadar. A staging bungalow con- templated here. 3.-A fine village, and a native functionary resident here. Road as before. 4.-A poor village, and wild country. Road ditto. The stages from Jogelia have been heretofore ill detined but a small Puraina of Panna 9 miles. Hurdwara off Jabbalpur 8 miles, Bargaon of ditto, 10 miles and Kumhari 12 or 13; but Puraina is a most ineligible balting-place ; and the stage from Bargaon very trying. 5 and 6.-An inconsiderable village. Road as before. River forded. 7.-Residence of Ist Junior Assistant. Road as before. 8.-A small village. Road as before. 9.-A good sized town, with a staging bungalow. Road as before. Old road viê Hatta joins here, ford rather deep, but good bottom. 10.-A good village, and road good ; and bridged. 11.-River crossed by a beautiful iron bridge. A good village. Road good in dry weather 12.-Road good and bridged throughout, with annual repairs. Two ghats. 13.-A good road, and a fair village. 14.-Road as before. An ordinary village ; with a Police chowky. 15.-A bad hilly road, and ford rocky and very bad. Ralitgurh, a large town, with hill fort, and police establishments, passed Is miles before reaching the river. Supplies from. thence. 16.-A tolerable village, with a native Amil. Road pretty good. Ford somewhat rocky. .17.-Good sized town, with fort, and tolerable road for carts throughout; rounding the 18.-A small village. A good fair weather road. 19.-A large town. Road good, and rivers easily crossed. Roads to Seronj and to Ho- shangabad, from hence. 20. -A small village. Road indifferent. 21.-A middling village. Road and ford indifferent. 22.- A large town. Residence of the Nawab. Road not very good, and Pathra crossing muddy. 23.-A middling village. Road fair. 24. -A good sized town. Residence of the Political Agent. There is a route from Bhilsa to Sehore, avoiding Bhopal; by Kankhera 12-6, Hindola 12-7, Gunga 8-2, Kalakheri 12-4, and Sehore 13-5. But it is 5 miles longer; and not otherwise a preferable one by any means. NOTE.-The portion of road from Jogeni to Damoh, where it joins road from Jab- balpur, is of but recent construction, and it has not yet by any means supplanted, in the estimation of the natives, the old road from Mirzapur and Rewan viâ Bohargaon; and Hatta, which follows, although somewhat shorter, is infinitely less rugged, and passing through much less of native states. From Sayur to Sehore the road is not a made one. hills. STATISTICS. C PART I. VOL. II, H H SANATARIA. NOTE.-In our last series we gave the following : Mahabaleshwur Hills.. Bombay, Neilgheries Madras. Simlah..... Himalayas. Cherra Poonjee... Cossyah Hills. Darjeeling..... Bengal N. E. Frontier. Our present space will only admit of the insertion of the Darjeeling rules and bye-laws; and of an account of Mussoorie and Landour, omitted in our last. MUSSOORIE. TOPOGRAPIY. Mussoorie (or Masuri) adjoins Landour on the west, and consists of a series of ridges about five miles in extent, running almost east and west, with frequent peaks, and with spurs or shoulders issuing irregu- larly, down to the valley of Deyrah Dhoon on the south, and to the river Uglar or Uggulwar on the north, with deep-wooded gorges between. Banôg,' a hill to the west of the settlement, has been ascertained to be 7,545 feet above the level of the sea, and to be in about 30° 28' 29" north latitude, and 78° 3' 23") east longitude. The river Jumna flows around the northern face of Banog, and Badray' bounds the settlement of Mussoorie on the west. Mussoorie was first resorted to as a sanatarium, by persons from the neighbouring stations, in 1823. Tents were pitched on a level piece of ground, called the 'Potatoe Garden', and the adventurous visitors remained till the mists and heavy rain of July drove them to the shelter of Deyrah and Saharunpore. The following year, three or four small wattle and dab cottages were erected in the vicinity of the first encampment; these were subsequently improved, and rendered more substantial, and as the facilities for building encreased, they were pulled down, and comfortable bungalows, and large puckah houses arose on their sites. Mussoorie is built upon at heights varying from 6,400 feet to 7,200, the majority of houses being situated at probably the mean elevation of 6,800 feet. There is no table land of any extent, and almost every building stands on a site, which it was necessary to level either on a peak, a ridge, or the southern slope of the mountains. There are few houses on the northern face. The buildings are generally a considerable distance apart, but they are closer together towards the east, and in the centre, than towards the west which is the direction in which the settlement is extending. The number of private houses in Mussoorie exceeds one hundred at pre- sent (1841). They are either bungalows with choppers, or puckah buildings, with terraced roofs. The view of the snowy mountains to the north (which, on a clear day, appears to be within a few hour's journey,) and of the beautiful valley of the Dhoon, spread out like a painted map at the foot of the hills to the south, has been greatly admired. The rivers Ganges and Jumna are visible from many parts of Mussoorie, not only as they foam over their rocky beds in their impetuous race through the valley, but stretching far away into the plains. The station of Saharunpore is also to be distinguished with a glass, bounding the horizon over the Sawalik range of hills, which shuts in the valley of the Dhoon to the south. Comparisons have been made between Simla and Mussoorie, to the disadvantage of the latter, on account of the nakedness of the hills, or at least the want of forest trees, and particularly of the Deodar, which gives such a peculiar character to the scenery at the first mentioned Sanatarium. 252 [PART 1. SANATARIA. The appearance of the settlement has been greatly injured, doubtless, by the indiscriminate felling of large trees by proprietors of estates, for the purposes of building, burning bricks, lime, &c. This course of destruction has however been put a stop to, and what the station has lost in beauty, it has gained in salubrity ; the unhealthiness of Simla, at this season, being attributed to the unpruned luxuriance of the trees and underwood in the vicinity. Agra, CONVENIENCE OF SITUATION. The following table gives the Post-office distances between Rajpore at the foot of the hills, and the principal stations in Upper India. Miles. Saharunpore, 50 Kurnaul, 98 Meerutt, 105 Delhie, 177 Hansie, 179 267 Muttra, 240 Futtehgur, 309 Bareilly, 198 Cawnpore, 400 Moradabad, 137 Nusseerabad, 414 Rajpore is the last stage in the plains (Dhoon). The ascent from Rajpore to Mussoorie is performed in a chair (jhâupan) or on horseback. The distance is about 7 miles. There are two good hotels at Rajpore, where jhâupans, ponies, and hill-porters, can always be obtained on the shortest notice. CLIMATE. The climate of Mussoorie must be very similar to that of the other mountain sanataria, as may be inferred from the following comparison of heights. The highest dwelling house in Mussoorie is a little more than 7,200 feet above the level of the sea, and the highest building in Landour (the hospital) is 7,406 feet. That of the highest part of Darjeeling 7,218 feet. SEASONS. In January and February, the weather is wintry, always with frost more or less intense, and occasional falls of snow. In the course of March, the frost entirely disappears, and many trees put forth their new leaves. Showers of rain, and sometimes of hail, with thunder storms, are ex- perienced in this month, and in April, after which, till the setting in of the rains in the middle of June, there is generally settled summer weather. The rains are considerably heavier than at the neighbouring stations of the plains. They cease on or before the 18th of September, and are succeeded by a beautiful equable season, which lasts till Christmas, and sometimes till the middle, or end of January. In this space, scarcely a closed door is to be seen, and the temperature gradually sinks from 640 in the shade, in the beginning of October, into that of sharp winter, the frost becoming strong in the course of November. VOL. 11] 253 MUSSOORIE. 1 TEMPERATURE. The temperature of a spring on the north face of Mussoorie is nearly 5410, which may be assumed to be the mean temperature of the place. The equability of the temperature of the air is shown by the fact, that the mean extreme daily range, as determined by a thermometer in an open north verandah, in March (1838,) the most variable month of the year, was less than 51. Mussoorie is found to be from 20 to 25 degrees cooler then the neigh- bouring stations. WINDS. A breeze from the south, (the Dhoon breeze') rises in the morning, generally before 10 o'clock, and blows till late in the evening, throughout the range. At night, there are generally light airs from the north. Tempests are very rare. SUPPLIES. Mussoorie is bountifully supplied from the Landour bazar, which resembles a sudder bazar in the plains, and which contains several excellent shops for the sale of European wares. Wheat, gram, dāll, barley, &c., are imported from the plains, the hills supply superior rice, and small quantities of other grain. Honey, turmeric, ginger, onions, garlic, and potatoes, are abundant, and of superior quality. Apricots, and walnuts, are produced in great quantities. • Kheerrous' (hill sheep,) and sheep and cattle from the plains, furnish meat. Excellent milk and butter are abundant, the hill pasturage greatly improving the quality of the milk, and curds brought from the plains. There are two European merchants, of whom wines, liquors, &c. &c., may be procured at very reasonable prices; and indeed it is a matter of surprise to visitors, to find that articles of European manufacture gener- ally are cheaper at this mountain Sanatarium than in the plains; such is the competition amongst the numerous native shop-keepers. PUBLIC BUILDINGS. Christ Church, built principally by subscription, and completed in 1837, a pretty object, with its slated roof, and turretted steeple. The Himalaya Club House, built originally by Mr. ebb as a hotel; and purchased from him for a large sum by the members of the Himalaya club. This club was instituted in February, 1841, and contains, up to this period, 155 members, which number is rapidly encreasing. The buildings consist of a lodging house, affording accommodation for 16 resident members, who have each a sitting-room, bed-room, and bath. In a separate building is a very handsome ball-room, running the whole length of the upper story, with two billiard rooms below. There is also a dining, and coffee-room, and the requisite out-offices are nearly com- pleted. The members take their meals at the “Table d'Hote' attended upon by the servants of the club, so that when the arrangements now in progress are perfected, any members of the club visiting Mussoorie, need merely take with them their clothes. In this respect the situation will be found a most useful and convenient one, and as the reading-room will be furnished with all the best periodicals and newspapers, the club house will be the most agreeable residence at Mussoorie for a bachelor. 254 (PART 1. SANATARIA, THEATRE. This building is private property, but is annually hired for the purpose for which it was originally erected, by the united subscription of the residents of Mussoorie and Landour. Schools Mussoorie Seminary was established in March, 1834, by Mr.J. Mackin- non, who in that year, removed from Meerut with a few of the boys, who had attended his school there. In 1840 and 1841, the number of pupils averaged ninety (90), consisting of children from the stations of Upper India, with a few children from Calcutta and the Lower Provinces. More than two-thirds of the pupils will probably complete their educa tion at the school, the rest att the junior classes for a few years, and then proceed to England. Greek and Latin, Mathematics, and other branches of a liberal educa- tion are taught at the school. The boys enjoy excellent health, and many consecutive months often elapse without the occurrence of a case of illness of any kind. This fact alone speaks volumes for the climate, as well as for the care, and attention of Mr. Mackinnon. The school is situated in a romantic dell, at the foot of the eastern scope of Banog, and nearly at the western extremity of Mussoorie. A beautiful stream of water meanders through the grounds, and a sufficiently extensive play- ground for the boys has been levelled by Mr. Mackinnon, at a great expense. It is a novel and interesting sight to a visitor from the plains, to witness here the well-remembered sports of his boyish days enjoyed by the rosy- faced and sturdy lads with all the noisy hilarity of England. Mr. Mackin- non has given universal satisfaction and possesses in a high degree the peculiar task of bringing on his pupils, as well as of attaching them to himself personally, by the kindness of his manner. Mr. Mackinnon has erected an observatory for the amusement and instruction of his pupils. SEMIMARY FOR Young Ladies, (CAMVILLE.) This school was established in March, 1834, by Miss Mackinnon, and the number of her pupils increasing rapidly, she removed in about a couple of years from the vicinity of her brother's school, to the present commodious house, and retired situation, on one of the numerous spurs running down to the Dhoon, from nearly the centre of Mussoorie. For the last three seasons the average number of the pupils has been from forty to fifty in the hot weather, and from twenty-five to thirty dur- ing the winter. Miss Mackinnon's sister bas lately joined her from England, and the services of a dancing master (Monsieur Dupuis) have been secured, whose Annual Juvenile Ball is one of the most attractive exhibitious at the settlement. A first-rate artist attends the seminary, to give lessons in drawing; and an accomplished French and Italian teacher has been sent for from Europe. VOL. 11.) 255 MUSSOORIE. MANOR HOUSE SEMINARY. The Manor House Seminary, for the daughters of gentlemen, was founded by Captain Frederick Angelo, and was opened by Miss Richard- son, who was selected as head teacher, under the patronage of Mrs. Fre- derick Angelo, on the 1st of February, 1841. The establishment is got up in the most complete manner, no expense having been spared to make it of the highest stamp. The site is well chosen, with beautiful walks over the grounds, and the building capable of affording the most ample accommodation to 60 scholars. Every branch of an English education is taught there, on the latest and most approved plan, and also French, Italian, music, drawing, and danc- ing. The young ladies are attended entirely by European servants. Every possible attention is paid to the morals of the children, and from the known healthiness of the climate, this establishment may be considered as a blessing to all parents who wish to educate their children in India. BREWERY. Amongst the novel sights of Mussoorie, to a long banished European, is Mr. Bohle's brewery. It is situated in the same dell with Mr. Mackin- non's school, and was established by the enterprising individual above named, in 1829. Mr. Bohle bad previously carried on a brewery at Meerut, for some years, but removed to Mussoorie, in the hope of being able to make beer with less difficulty than he had encountered in the hot and variable climate of Meerut. His anticipations were completely realized, and the liquor which he produced, met with a ready sale to all classes of Europeans. In 1831, however, the brewery was discontinued, partly owing to other engagements, and partly to Mr. Bohle's finding that he had not the means to extend his establishment to the degree necessary to secure a sufficient return for his trouble. In 1836, Mr. Bohle visited Mussoorie for his health, and brewed a small quantity of beer, since which period five small brewings have been made at intervals. The quality has been unequal, owing, as Mr. Bohle alleges, to his inability to remain long enough to complete all the processes himself, and to ignorance, and carelessness, on the part of the natives, whom he is obliged to trust, in his absence. However, the beer when most success. fully prepared, is relished at the best tables in the settlement, and all meets with sale in some quarter or other. The malt is made of barley, some of which is the hill produce, and is considered superior in quantity to that grown in the plains. The quantity is bowever small, and the chief supply is obtained from Bunneahs at Raj- pore, who have either bought it of the farmers, or imported it from Saha- runpore, and other districts beyond the Kechrie Pass. The hops are all imported from England, viâ Calcutta. New hops, with the aroma fresh, would enable Mr. Boble to give beer a superior flavour, and experience having proved that the plants will thrive at Mussoorie, the Allsops and Basses of future years will have a formidable rival in the proprietor of this brewery, should hops be cultivated in sufficient quantity On the whole, although Mr. Bohle's speculations at Mussoorie, as a brewer, have been little more than experimental, the result has been so 256 (PART 1. SANATARIA. SO as encouraging, that he has begun the construction of a large concern on a regular plan, on a site a little below the original brewery; when this is com- pleted, and when the projected road from Mussoorie to Rajpore is made, to afford an easy and cheap mode of conveying beer to the plains, Mr. Bohle intends residing permanently at Mussoorie, and carrying on the business of brewing on a large scale. At least a thousand dozens of beer (quarts) per annum, have been made in every year, during which the brewery has been at work, and it has all been consumed by residents in Mussoorie and Landour. The beer is sold at four rupees for a dozen quarts. Roads. The public roads in the settlement, were at first merely the old paharee (hill) tracks widened. They were consequently very steep, and difficult in many places, these mountaineers invariably ascending a hill at its steepest acclivity, and even to this day avoiding the level roads, and clambering up a rugged, and almost perpendicular path, with heavy loads on their backs, when by so doing, they can save twenty or thirty paces of actual distance. In the course of 1840, the Political Agent assembled the owners of houses, and recommended to their adoption a plan, for the improvement of the settlement, by the voluntary imposition of a rate on the annual value of a house, by which to raise a fund for making and repairing roads; and secondly, the appointment of a committee to carry the object into effect. The plan was unanimously adopted, and a petition was drawn by the settlers of Mussoorie, praying the Government that the rate fixed might be enbodied in a law, and further praying that a mu- nicipal management to a certain extent might be instituted at the settle- ment. A code of proposed bye-laws was at the same time forwarded, for the sanction of Government, which was considered adapted to the wants of the rising and important settlement. The Government were, in this petition, prayed to allow a portion of the local revenue to be appropriated towards local improvements, and a new road to be cut from Rajpore to the Mussoorie church, and further to sanction the appointment of a resident magistrate at Mussoorie. This petition met with the favourable consider- ation of Government, and the local committee, appointed by the votes of house holders, have already commenced active operations. The proposal for the construction of a new road between Rajpore and the Mussoorie church, at the very moderate gain of seven feet in one hun- dred, has been so favourably received by the Hon'ble Mr. Robertson, that as the necessary funds will, it is thought, be readily advanced, when a survey of the line has been effected. Government would be reimbursed by a toll, which could not fail of being very productive on a good road, judging from the great traffic carried on by the present most difficult and barely prac- ticable path. Numerous hair-breadth, and most wonderful escapes have occurred since the formation of the settlement, but only one fatal acccident ; the death of Major Blundell, of Her Majesty's 11th Dragoons, some years ago, caused by his pony backing over a precipice several hundred feet in depth, when both horse and rider where killed on the spot. It is most extraor- dinary that this should be the only fatal occurrence of the kind, as Euro- peans, and particularly ladies, appear to lose all sense of danger, after get- ting a little accustomed to the gaping chasins of Mussoorie and Landour, and gallop about, over bad roads, at a pace, and with a reckless fearless- ness, which they would have shuddered to imagine possible, previous to inhaling the mountain air. VOL. II ] 257 MUSSOORIE. EFFECTS OF CLIMATB. . The following Summary has been kindly furnished to the writer of this sketcb by Doctor Grierson, the medical officer of the settlement. FEVERS. Fevers of the Intermittent and Remittent type are eventually cured by a residence here, but they generally require a permanent residence of two years, before they are eradicated entirely. No cases of fever prevail at Mussoorie. Malaria is abundant in the Dells, or Valleys at the end of the rains, and produce fevers of a virulent kind—and which often prove fatal to both Natives and Europeans, if so imprudent as to expose themselves to its action. DISENTERT. Climate favourable, and even when accompanied with Hepatic affections, the results have been generally favourable. DIARRHEA. This climate is not suited for Chronic Diarrhea ; it is a most intractable disease here, and snch cases have almost all proved fatal ;-officers having this complaint should go to sea, or to Europe, in preference to resorting to a Hill climate. DYSPEPSIA. This climate is highly beneficial to the Dyspeptic, or those suffering from torpor of the bowels-and functional derangement of the liver. This class of patients derive great advantage from a residence here, and generally return to the plains relieved of all their complaints, and with invigorated constitutions. HEPATIC AFFECTIONS. Hepatic affections are relieved by a residence herc. PULMONARY AFFECTIONS. incipient Phthisis the climate is decidedly favourable, and although this is at variance with the generally received opinion, yet I have ample proof for making the assertion. Several cases have come under my care, and all have derived benefit from the climate. These would have ter- minated fatally in the plains. AFFECTIONS OF HEART. The hill climate is unfavorable for diseases of the heart, all the cases sent here during the last three years have terminated fatally. RHEUMATISM. When contracted below is relieved by a residence here. A few cases of smart attacks of Rheumatism have come under my care, generally in ladies with a previously weakened constitution, and living in exposed situations ; these have occurred during thc rains. BRONCHOCILË. Two cases have come under my care here in children of five and fifteen years of age, both induced apparently by a residence here. They were both cured by the use of lodine. 258 (PART 1. SANATARIA. DEBILITY. Debility induced by fevers or other diseases in the plains, or from the effects of heat or a long residence in India is speedily recovered from, here. 'The climate is admirably adapted for those of a weak debilitated constitu- tion. CHILDREN. This place is very congenial to the constitution and growth of children. Many are sent here annually in the last stage of cachexia from dentition and other causes, and speedily recover, which cases I have no doubt would have terminated fatally in the plains. A few cases of hooping cough and measles have occurred within the last three years. They were milder than in Europe. Vaccination succeeds well. At the three seminaries kept by Miss Richardson, Mr. and the two Misses Mackinnon, the children thrive remarkably well, and are peculiarly exempt from any serious malady. There are few villages near Mussoorie, and the coolies employed here, come from a distance ; consequently I have had few opportunities of ob- serving what diseases are peculiar to them. Fevers of the Intermittent type are common, small pox and measles prevail annually, cases of Syphilis in its most virulent form come frequently under my care. Bronchocile is common amongst them. Many have applied for medical aid, but coming generally from a distance they have become impatient under a protracted treatment, and left before time was given for a cure. BANK. Amongst the latest and most useful of the public institutions of the set- tlement, is the Mussoorie Bank, which was established on the 1st Febru- ary, 1841, by Captain Frederick Angelo, Mr. Solavoli, Mr. Troup, and subsequently on the great increase of business, was divided into shares, and conducted by Captain Angelo as Secretary, nearly on the plan and conditions of the Agra Bank, and has already proved of the greatest con- venience and utility to the rising settlement. Indeed 1841, has proved a prolific year for Mussoorie, a Bank, a Club, a young ladies' school, a municipality, are all the offspring of this season, and the three former are in full operation. There is no plan or (sketch) map of Mussoorie ; and a regular survey of the settlement is very much required. LANDOUR. The invalid depôt of Landour was established by Government in 1828. The station is connected with Mussoorie by a narrow spur running due * North. At the foot of this spur, adjoining the Mussoorie ridge, is the bazar, a handsome and extensive one, forming a narrow street, generally crowded in an evening with all the beauty and fashion of the two stations. At the extremity of the bazar, the spur ascends rather abruptly, till it unites with the parallel range of Landour proper, which runs nearly east and west. Along this ascending spur, barracks and private dwelling houses are scattered, the public road zig-zaging to the summit, where it branches off to the east and west, and sweeping round the opposite extremities of the parallel ridge, anites again on the northern face. The ridge itself is studded with public and private buildings, as well as all the western, and many of the northern slopes of the mountain. VOL. 11.) 259 ĻANDOUR. These slopes are very precipitous, and indeed the character of the scenery altogether is much more savage than that of Mussoorie, particu- larly on the northern face, from whence the view of the snow is truly magnificent, and the intervening mountains bold and sublime. BUILDINGS. There are five barracks for European invalid soldiers ; forty-two private dwelling houses ; an hospital, temperance room, and library; a large hotel, the property of Mr. Theodore :- 7 officers' quarters, (one burnt down.) I mess-room. 1 guard-room, and congee house. 1 Goorkah guard-room. 1 store-room and magazine (building.) I quarter for steward. 1 ditto hospital serjeant. 1 godown for commissary stores. i ditto barrack department. 1 bake house. 1 mule shed. 1 post-office. 1 church. The average number of officers doing duty with the depôt is 8. The average number of European soldiers sent up annually, 110. Average num- ber sent back to their regiments, 100. A few convalescents are annually passed by the medical committee, to remain a second season with the depôt, to perfect their recovery. The results of the establishment of this sanatarium have been highly satisfactory, and hundreds of valuable lives have been saved to the state. TEMPERATURE. The following return shews the range of the thermometer in the Landour Hospital for 1840. Months. Maximum. . Minimum. Remarks. 58 January, 53 31 February, 603 32 March, 67 44 April, 763 55 May, 78 The variations June, 791 54 are taken between July, 75 61 6 A. M. and 6 P. M. August,...... 72 60 September, 70 58 October, 69 November, 58 34 December, 56 39 There is no pluviometor either at Landour or Mussoorie ; the quantity of rain therefore cannot be given. The height of Landour above Mussoorie, is about 300 feet, and the dif- ference of temperature 3 degrees. It is not necessary to recapitulate ob- servations already made on climate, &c., as they apply equally to Mussoo- rie and Landour, the two places forming indeed one straggling station, 45 260 (PART 1 SANATARIA. distinct only in name, except that within the limits of the depôt; the com- manding officer possesses the same powers as in all military canton- ments. The burial ground of the united stations is situated on the northern face of the western extremity of Landour, and the number of tombs it contains, shews that even in such a climate, mortals must die. It should be borne in mind, however, that these mountain sanataria are the refuge of all the sick and ailing of Upper India, and that many of them seek change of climate when too late. There is no map or regular plan of Landour as it now is. BOTANICAL CHARACTERS OF THE HILL STATIONS OF MUSSOORIE AND LANDOUR. By DR. FALCONER. ! CON- On the ascent from Rajpoor, at the foot of the hills, to Landour, the traveller passes through a vegetation, which graduates insensibly from the tropical into that of temperate regions. The Dhoon contains numerous forms, which are strictly tropical ; such as (among forest trees,) the Aca- cia elata, which extends up along the Tarai, from the banks of the Ira- waddi; the Saul or Shorea robusta, and species of Pterospermum, &c.; while the slopes of Mussoorie and Landour are covered with forests of Oak and Rhododendron, together with the other temperate forms, gene- rally associated with these. The Pine and Deodar forests, which constitute the characteristic feature of Simla, and add so much to the beauty of the station, are nowhere seen at Landour and Mussoorie. This is chiefly owing to their lower eleva- tion, and partly to their situation on the outermost ridge of the Hima- layahs, overhanging the Dhoon. Premising that the Oak and Rhododen- dron form the main features, the following are the principal forest trees, or subarboreous plants in the vicinity of Mussoorie and Landour :- Cupulifera.--Quercus incana, or Banj,' the prevailing form, -- stitutes the principal fuel : wood hard, but warps, and very subject to dry rot, (the other oaks, sych as dilatata and semicarpifolia, occur in the interior, at greater elevations). Carpinus viminea (Hombeam), wood soft, not used except as firewood. Alnus obtusifolia, (alder); wood soft. Betula cylindro- Juglande@.-Juglans regia (walnut). Engelhardtia colebrookiana. Myricacea.--Myrica sapida or kaephul : yields an edible fruit. Salicineæ.--Populus ciliata, with species of Salix, Conifere.--Pinus longifolia cheer :'wood soft, and little used : does not stand exposure to the weather. Erioineæ.-Rhododendron arboreum ; Borans,' and Andromeda ovali- folia · Jar,' both arboreous, the wood of the former is much used for turn- ing vessels for domestic purposes. Laurinee.- Machilus odoratissimus, and species of Daphnidium and Do- decadenia ; Cinnamomum albiflorum, which yields the 'tej-pat,' and the kind of cinnamon called 'tuj;' grow in the low vallies. Ulmacea.-Ulmus virgata. Artocarpeæ.--Morus serrata. Ficus laurifolia and foveolata. Euphorbiacea.-Glochidion bifarium. Buxus emarginatus, which yields an excellent box wood. Eleagnea.-Eleagnus Ghuwaeen ; yielding an edible acid fruit. Betulaceæ. { stachya. 1 1 VOL 11.] 261 BOTANY OF MUSSOORIE AND LANDOUR. Oleacea.-Orus floribunda. Olea glandulifera and ferruginea. Sy- ringa Emodi occurs in the interior. Styraceæ.--Symplocos paniculata : yields the yellow dye bark, called ‘Lodh.' Corneæ.-Benthamia fragifera • Thirmul:' yields an edible fruit. Cornus oblonga, nervosa, and macrophylla. Caprifoliacee.-Viburnum cotinifolium, punctatum, and Mullaha. Abelia triflora. Rosacea.-Pyrus Pashia' prehul;' Cotoneaster affinis and acuminata. Persica saligna. Cerasus Puddum and cornuta. Leguminosa.-Acacia mollis, a remarkable instance of a species of this genus growing so high as Mussoorie. Anacardiaceæ.-Rhus vernicifera, acuminata and velutina. Rhamnee.-Hovenia dulcis. Rhamnus virgatus. Celastrinee.-Euonymus tingens, echinatus and pendulus. Aquifoliacea.-llex dipyrena and serrata. Coriariæ.-Coriaria nepalensis, called Mussoorie : the station named from its prevalence. Xanthoxylea.-Xanthoxylum hostile. Millingtoniacea.-Millingtonia pungens and dillenifolia. Hippocastanea.—Pavia indica. acclimated from the interior. A noble tree. Wood valuable for turning large vessels. Acerineæ.--Acer (maples) oblongum, cultratum and candatum. Negundo fraxinifolium introduced. Ternstræmiacea.-Eurya acuminata. Saurauja paniculata. Tiliacea.-Grewia sclerophylla, oppositifolia, didyma. Pittosporeæ.-Pittosporum eriocarpum. Staphyleacea.-Staphylea Emodi. Menispermacee.-Cocculus laurifolius. The shrubby vegetation consists chiefly of species of the following genera: Clematis, several species; Cissampelos, Stauntonia latifolia; Sphærostema grandiflorum; Mahonia nepalensis, and several species of Berberis ; Hypericum several ditto ; Ampelopsis himalayana, and Vitis, several species. Ruta albiflora ; Indigofera and Desmodium, several species ; Astilbe rivularis ; Prinsepia utilis, called "Bhekul, affording an edible oil: numerous species of Spiræa and Rubus ; Rosa Lyellii ; Cratægus, Philadelphus, Deutzia; Hedera Helix; Lonicera several species; Myrsine, several ditto; Jasminum; Roylea, Daphne, Urtica, Pachysandra, &c. The herbaceous vegetation, which comes out in force in the rains, is very rich,'consisting of species of Ranunculus, Geranium, Viola, Silene, Valeriana, Campanula, Plantago, Hypericum ; numerous Compositæ, and Labiatæ ; Cyrtandraceæ, Balsamineæ and Acanthaceæ, Gentianeæ, Primulaceæ. Of the Scitamineæ Roscoea and Hedychium, with numerous species of Platan- thera, Habenaria and Satyrium nepalense among the Orchideæ; Liliacea, Asphodeleæ, Irideæ, and Aroideæ; Grasses and Ferns; the great majority of these belong to genera common in Europe: and a small sprinkling of the species are indentical with European forms. Such genera as Hedy- ' chium and Roscoca among the ginger tribe, indicate the proximity of a tropical region. One species of Roscoea attains even to heights above Landour. The indigenous fruits are the common Walnut, Apricot, hill Peach, a small kind; Cherry produced by the Cerasus Puddum, small and bitter; Mulberry; Limes and Plantain grown at low elevations in the hot vallies. The wild fruits are Currants, called · Papier' and · Angra,' from the higher elevations, produced by the Ribes acuminatum and glaciale ; Raspberries called "Anchoo' and · His-aloo,' produced by several species of Rubus ; 262 (PART 1. SANATARIA, 6 6 Barberries called “Kushmul' and 'Chitra,' from several species of Berberis; Jamnoo' produced by the Cerasus cornuta; ‘Mehul,' a crab Pear, produced by the Pyrus variolosa ; two kinds of medlar pear, called • Paltoo,' from the Pyrus lanata and crenata; “Thirmul produced by the Benthamia fragifera ; Ramkela,' by the Stauntonia latifolia ; Darmi, or wild Pomegranate; Kaephul,' fruit of Myrica sapida ; ' Surrowla or Hazel-nut', from the Cory- lus lacera; • Puharee Angoor, from species of Vitis; and the fruit of the Sphærostema grandiflorum; berries of species of Viburnum and others, which are hardly worthy of notice. The principal articles of vegetable produce, exported from the hills in the neighbourhood and interior, are: Bojputtur, or birch bark; Betula Bogputtra ; large quantities. Jatamassi, or balcher; root of the Nardostachys Jatamansi. Medicinal; large quantities. Bisk; root of Aconitum ferox, medicinal. Atees; ditto of Aconitum heterophyllum; medicinal. Koot-ki; ditto of Picrorhiza Kurrooa; medicinal. Archoh, or Rewund Chenee; Rhubarb; Rheum Emodi. Kurroo; root of Gentiana Kurroo; medicinal. Cheyratta; from several species of Swertia. Pathan-bed ; root of Saxifraga ciliata; medicinal. Pelijurree; ditto of Thalictrum foliolosum; medicinal. Birmi; leaves of Taxus baccata; medicinal. Kakra Singhi; galls of Rhus acuminata; medicinal. Darmi; fruit of the wild Promegranate. Russawut; extract of several species of Berberis,- -a valuable medicine, and yellow dye. Zurd-huld; wood of Barberry ; yellow dye. Lodh; bark of Symplocos paniculata ; yellow dye. Dhaè; flowers of Grislea tomentosa ; a red dye. - Kelon ka-tel ; ' Deodar oil ; medicinal. Bansi; from species of Thamnocalamus, the small hill bamboo: largely exported for native hooqa snakes. Churrus; Hemp resin ; intoxicating. Tez-pat; curry leaf ; Cinnamomum albiflorum. Tuj ; Cassia bark; cinnamon from ditto. Opium, green and dry Ginger, Turmeric, Capsicum, Hemp sackcloths call- ed Bhungela ; Bans mutti, a very superior kind of rice, &c. The beauties of Mussoorie and Landour have been most injuriously affected by the reckless and wanton destruction of trees, chiefly oak and rhododendron, every where in the neighbourhood, by the residents and house proprietors. Simla, in this respect, is in a most enviable state of contrast. It is to be hoped that the new station regulations will prevent the evil from going further. MUSSOOREE GARDEN. The Government garden at Mussoorie, established on the recommend- ation of Dr. Royle, when the station was formed, as an experimental nursery subordinate to the Botanic Garden at Suharunpoor, for the cultiva- tion of European fruits and productions generally, was abolished during the administration of Lord William Bentinck, in 1831, and re-established by the present Governor-General in 1839. It is situated about 6,500 feet above the sea, and comprises about 15 beegahs under cultivation. It has a northerly exposure, occupying the upper slope of a deep dell, backed on the southern side by Blucher's Hill. In consequence it has the dis- advantage of being greatly in shade during the winter months, and its VOL. 11.) BYE LAWS AND OFFICE RULES AT DARJEELING. 263 vegetables come in generally later than the other gardens at Mussoorie. A number of excellent fruits from Europe, Cashmeer and Caubul have been introduced into it, and thrive very well: such as apples, pear, quinces, apricots, cherries, &c. The apples are hardly behind the best English ones of the same sort such as the ribston pippin. Numerous species of pines and firs, and other trees from the interior of the hills, have been introduced: perennial shrubs from Europe, such as the Spanish and Eng- lish broom, furze, &c.: herbaceous species from England, such as Digitalis, Hyosciamus, and Atropa, &c., with a variety of annual and perennial flowers, are grown on it: several species of rhubarb, and some very rare plants, such as Assafatida, Prangos, Ammoniacum, &c. It is a favorite resort of the resi- dents at Mussoorie, and is importantly subservient to the Botanic Garden at Suharunpoor, the object for which it was instituted. It is kept up wtih a small native establishment at a charge of Rs. 66 per mensem. GEOLOGICAL CHARACTERS or MUSSOORIE AND LANDOUR. The rock strata of Mussoorie and ndour belong to a great transition limestone and sandstone series. The strata dip towards the N. E., and present a steep and abrupt front to the south. The road, up from Rajpoor, passes through aluminous, talcose and clay schists. The limestone com- mences near Jerra panee, and continues upwards, in strata of vast thickness, forming the crest of Mussoorie. It is a hard and compact rock, of a blue or bluish grey colour, uniform, or more or less mottled, and sometimes passing into black. It is of a very craggy and rugged character, cavernous and honey-combed on the surface. It generally effervesces, and burns into an excellent lime. In some places, such as Blucher's Hill, it quarries into a good building stone, but is usually in amorphous masses. It often contains thin layers of black selicious chert, into which it passes, exhi- bited along the Mall, especially near the Club house. A thin stratum of ferruginous earthy slate generally underlies it, or alternates on bed with it. Above Suhunsudhara, and below Jerra panee, it contains great beds of gypsum; and in the dell below the Landour hospital, called the ‘Dhobee's khud,' Sulphate of Barytes is met with. Iron pyrites also occurs in it in nodular concretions. No organic remains have yet been detected in it, probably owing to the metamorphosed character of the rock. At Landour the limestone is cap'd by a great stratum of quartzose sandstone, which passes at different places into conglomerate and grey wacke. This sandstone is developed to a great extent, eastward, on the same ridge with Mussoorie, at Soorkunda. Igneous rocks, of the greenstone trap series, occur in great abundance in dykes near Mussoorie. They are seen on the road between Jerra panee and Mussoorie ; near Kyar koolee, below the abbey ; near Hatti Paon, above the village of Chamussari, &c. • BYE LAWS' AND OFFICE RULES AT DARJEELING, 1st AUGUST, 1841. 1. Building sites of 200 yards square are granted on lease of 99 years, at a rent of 50 rupees per annum. No more than 4 sites to be granted to one person. (Sanctioned by Government.) 2. Messrs. Hepper, Martin and Co. are making skeleton surveys of the building sites to be lodged in the Superintendent's Office. Each settler to pay to the superintendent 10 rupees on this account, copies furnished by the surveyors to the proprietors at 5 rupees each, complete surveys at 100 rupees per location. 264 (PART 1. SANATARIA. same. 3. Where clearance of underwood has been made by Government on building ground not assigned, the assignee to pay a clearance fee not exceeding rupees 50. 4. When the opening of a new road has been decided on, whether at the expence of Government, or by the voluntary contributions of settlers, the laying down the line of said roads to be left to the superintendent, under the advice of the executive engineer, and the amount claimable from each subscriber to be regulated by the estimate of Captain Napier. In no case will a station line of road be allowed to interfere with the site of a settler's house. 5. When the objectors to contribute to the making of a road do not exceed one to two of the proprietors on the proposed line, the recusants to be taxed their quota, as provided for in Rule 11. 6. When an unfinished public road or proposed line of road forms a boundary to an estate, the proprietor will not put up his railings without a reference to the superintendent, or the executive engineer. Along com- pleted roads, railings are not to be put up nearer than 4 feet below the outer edge, or 6 feet from the upper edge of the road. 7. The amount of Quit Rent,' and rent to be applied to the making and keeping in repair of station roads, and the road from Punkabari to Darjeeling: Each traveller passing a night in the dâk bungalows at Siligari, Punkabari, Mahaldirum and Puchaém, to pay I rupee for the use of the Travellers halting at the bungalows merely to take refreshments to pay 8 annas. The receipts being applicable to their repairs. 9. The rate of 1 rupee per mile for a set of 8 bearers has been sanc- tioned on the road to and from Udilpoor and Darjeeling, and 8 rupees for a Government elephant from Siligori to Punkabari, and the same from Titalya to Siligori. 10. The rates at the Siligori ferry are as follows: Carriage and Pair, 2 0 0 | Saddle Horse,.. 0 8 0 Buggy, 1 0 0 Palkee,.. 1 11. One rupee per mensem has been fixed as the rent for a shop in Darjeeling bazar for 1841. 12. Prices in the bazar, and rates of servants' wages, are left to regulate themselves by the amount of demand and supply, unfettered by Nirikhs, or other authoritative interference. 13. A set of standard scales and weights are kept at the kutcherry, and in the bazar, for reference in all case of dispute about weight. 14. Drafts on the treasury, when due, are cashed on all days of the week, Sunday excepted. Stamps are sold on Tuesdays and Th lays. Civil cases heard on Tuesdays and Fridays. Criminal ones, and police matters on all days at all hours. 15. The dak leaves Darjeeling at daylight every morning. Letters and parcels' Post Paid' for despatch are received at the post office from 3 P. M. to past 6 P. M. There is a locked box for the deposit of' Bear- ing and Service letters,' at all hours of the day. Letters are distributed immediately after the opening of the dâks up to 9 P. M. and after 6 A. Bills for postages are not allowed, and travellers requiring, bearers are called upon to pay in advance. 16. The bazar sirkar is allowed to assist the public in procuring return bearers at the following rates for 1841:-10 Puchaem 4 annas; Kursiang 12 annas ; Titalya 1 rupee; with a fee of 1 rupee to the sirkar for every 20 coolies provided, and a moiety for half that number. 17. All residents and visitors, subscribers to the Coolie charity,' or Charity Hospital Fund, have the privilege of sending their servants to the hospital for medical advice and attendance. 0 0 M. VOL 11.] BYE LAWS AND OFFICE RULES AT DARJEELING. 265 18. Lithographed copies of the · Rules,' Bye Laws, &c., ' to be had at the kutcherry at 8 annas each. (Signed) A. CAMPBELL, Superintendent. Rules for regulating the assignment of building locations and grants for lands in the Hill tract, attached to the Station of Darjeeling, anıl for the adminis- tration of the said tract, passed on the 4th September, 1839, to be in force from the date of promulgation. Rule 1.- All lands not previously assigned, or occupied with consent of the Officer in Civil charge, to be open for selection by parties themselves, and to be assignable by the officer in charge to parties applying, in the rotation of the receipt by him of their written applications. Rule 2.-Any person holding or occupying land not under a grant or title from the officer in civil charge duly registered, who shall refuse to engage for, or to remove from the land within one month from the date on which he shall be called upon to do so in writing, by the officer, shall be subject to ejectment. This rule will of course not apply to ancient resi- dents, and parties in possession at the time when the territory of Darjee- ling was made over by the Rajah of Sikkim. Rule 3.—The police and magisterial authority within the tract ceded, | by the Rajah of Sikkim, will be exercised by the officer in civil and poli- tical charge, until otherwise ordered or directed by the Government of India. If at any time, these functions should be separated, the magis- trate shall aid on the requisition of the officer in civil charge, in enforcing the ejectment of persons occupying or holding lands without authority and any such unauthorized holder, who shall not vacate when duly ordered by notice in writing, shall be liable to a penalty of 50 rupees ; and if he shall resist the officers of the magistrate, who may be aiding to enforce such ejectment, he shall, on the offence being duly proved before the ma- gistrate, be liable to a fine of 500 rupees, leviable by distress. Rule 4.- l'he officer in civil charge is vested with the power and autho- rity of civil judge in respect to all claims, complaints, and disputes that may arise, and be cognizable in the Civil Courts of the settlement, un- der the acts arid regulations in force for the Bengal Presidency. Rule 5. All deeds of grant or lease, shall be signed by the officer in civil charge, and shall specify the name of the grantee or lease-holder, the quantity and boundaries of the land included in the lease, and the rate of quit rent for building locations, and of rent per acre for garden, farm, or other ground, to be paid per annum. Rule 6. On furnishing a settler with a deed of grant or lease, the offi- cers in civil charge shall require the individual to set up good and solid land marks for the distinct demarkation of his boundaries, and it shall be a condition in every deed of grant or lease, to maintain the boundaries in good repair. Rule 7.-When the officer in civil charge, is satisfied that the prescrib- ed land marks are in such a state of disrepair as to lead probably to dis- putes about limits, he shall call upon the settler in writing, to conform in this particular to the terms of his grant, on failure of which, at the end of one month, it shall be competent to the officer in civil charge, to cause the proper repairs to be made, and to levy three times the cost of PART 1. VOL. II. K K 266 (PART 1. SANATARIA. such repairs from the holder or occupier of the land,—the amount to be levied in the same way as provided for the collection of rents. Rule 8.-When the boundary marks are put up to the satisfaction of the officer in civil charge, he shall note the same on the back of the lease, without which, the lease or grant cannot take effect. The offence of re- moving or effacing boundary marks shall be cognizable by the magistrate, and parties duly convicted shall be liable to a fine of 100 rupees for each offence, which line shall be leviable by distress. Rule 9.-Deeds of grant or lease shall be issued by the officer in civil charge, bearing dates the 1st of January and 1st of July respectively. Parties, however, desiring possession at intermediate periods, shall be put in possession according to their application, and shall be charged rent as provided in Rule 16. Rule 10.-A duplicate of every lease or grant shall be entered in a register to be kept by the officer in civil charge. Rule 11.—The officer in civil charge will collect the rents by demand in writing, to be presented within 15 days after the same may be due, and if not paid within one month from the date of such demand, the officer in civil charge may levy distress upon any personal property found upon the location in arrears, and the charges of such distress and of interest on the arrears at 12 per cent. shall be taken from the proceeds of the sale of the property 'distrained. Rule 12.-A transferree failing to register shall be liable to double rent until the transfer is registered. Rule 13.—On the registry of a change of title to lands, the new holder to pay a fee of 5 rupees, to be applicable to the same purposes as the money received as rent. Rule 14.- A space of 200 yards broad on either side of the principal line of the road from Kursiong to Darjeeling being reserved for building locations, grants for land for farm or other cultures cannot be made in that space. . Rule 15.—Building locations of an extent not exceeding 100 yards square will be allotted to applicants, subject to the payment of a quit rent of 50 rupees per annum for each allotment. Rule 16.--Rent shall be chargeable upon all locations from the begin- ning of the half year, if the application be made in the first two months of the half year, otherwise from the commencement of the next following half year. Rule 17.-The officer in civil charge is vested with discretionary power of allotting larger locations (than 100 yards square), where the nature of the ground, and other considerations may appear to him to warrant it. All allotments of building locations made previous to the date on which these rules came in force, will be binding on Government, according to the conditions, but parties desiring to change their locations, have the op- tion of doing so on the above terms. Rule 18.-Lands for agricultural purposes will be assigned to appli- cants in lots of not less than ten acres, and leases will be granted for the same for a term of not less than 30 years. An exemption of five years payment of rent on uncleared spots will be allowed, after which rent will be leviable at the rate of 2 rupees per acre per annum. If there be no clearance made, or actual occupation with implements of agriculture at the end of 5 years, the lessee to forfeit his tenure. VOL 11.] 267 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. Rnle 19.–At Darjeeling, Mahaldaram, Kursiong and Punkabaree, clear. ed spaces shall be allotted for shops and the dwellings of trades-people within which locations, a frontage of 10 yards will be let in annual lease, at a rent of not less than 10 rupees; any increase on this sum to be left to the discretion of the officer in civil charge, who shall regulate the amount of rent by the offers received. Rule 20.-Government reserves to itself the right of making and con- structing such roads and bridges as may be necessary for public purposes in all the lands connected with Darjeeling; and also the right to such in- digenous timber, stone, and other materials, the produce of the land aş may be required, for making and keeping the said roads and bridges, &c. in repair, and for any other public works. Government also reserves to itself all mines, as well as elephants' ivory, and other natural productions of the tract at the bases of the hills, also free access for all persons to all the known springs of water within the tract allotted for building locations. Rule 21.-The officer in civil charge to be vested with the powers usually granted to collectors as regards attachment and sale of property for arrears of rent, &c. (Signed) H. T. PRINSEP, Secy. to the Govt. of India. instead of N. B.-Building land is now given on lease of 99 years, at 50 Rs. per annum, on a quit-rent tenure. NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. MODES OF COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PERSIA AND TURKEY. Two principal roads join Turkey with Persia, that from Erzeroom to Tauris, and that from Bagdad to Kerman Shah ; the country between these two lines of communication is inhabited by nomadic brigands. Bag- dad only sends into Persia dates, coffee, country sugar, goat and camel hair stuffs, and some spices received from Bussorah. Its caravans bring in return raw silk and Persian stuffs. Most of the goods that cross Turkey on the road from Trebizond to Tauris come from, or are sent to Europe,-for exchanges between Turkey and Persia are of no importance. Shouster pipes and Persian_toumbeki, some silk stuffs, some cotton from Khoï for the consumption of Erzeroom, and some Cashmere shawls, are now the only articles purchased by the Turks, who can give, in exchange, but European goods. COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN PERSIA AND Russia. Tauris is the rendezvous of the caravans coming from Turkey, and the great entrepot of Europe goods in Persia ; the intercourse between that city and Russia through Tiflis is also very active. Por a period of nearly 10 y years, good's purchased by Trancaucasic Armenians at the fair of Leip- sig were sent to Tauris by Redout Kaleh and Tiflis. The charge for cart- age from Redout Kaleh to Tiflis (380 versts'; 252 miles Eng.) is 40 to 50 copecks in specie (100 copecks = 08. 11d.) per pood (36, 104 Eng. d.), 268 (PART 1. STATISTICS. and from Tiflis to Tauris (615 versts ; 408 miles) 60 to 80 copecks also in specie, both ways cheaper than from Trebizond to Tauris. Besides, the road through Tiflis is practicable to waggons, and in the bad season only the roads in Imeretia and Misagrelia become very difficult. However the charges for purifying goods in the quarantine stations bring the ex- penses for cartage nearly to the same rates. Now the road between Redout Kaleh and Tiflis has ceased to be re- sorted to, since the abolition of the transit pass, granted in 1821, except for the few exchanges necessary to the wants of Georgia. Russian goods from Moscoa to Tiflis will reach by waggons in 60 to 90 days, at a rate of between 7 to 11 Roubles, (6s. 5d. to 10s. ld.) per pood ; but mostly come down the Volga to Astrakan, whence they are sent to Tiflis by land. Goods intended for Persia are shipped to Resht direct, and particularly packages of great weight or bulk. Those sent to Persia in 1836, from the fair of Nijnii-Novgorod paid to Astrakan, from 30 to 40 copecks, and from Astrakan to Enzellee 60 to 80 copecks per pood. Freight from Astrakan to Meeted esser, to Astrabad or to Resht, is at the same rate. PORTS ON THE CASPIAN SEA, There are but two good harbours on the south coast, viz. Astrabad and Enzellee in front of Resht; Meched esser, the road of Balfroosh, is of no shelter to vessels. On the east coast water is so shallow that even a boat cannot come nearer the shore, than by 20 to 50 sajēnes, (45 @ 70 yards), and in order to maintain a depth of 20 feet, shipping should keep at from 4 to 7 versts, (24 to 4] miles) from the shore. Half a score of large boats, belonging to some Tatars of Astrakan, sail once a year from this latter place to Manghishlak, there to load such goods, as have, been carried thither by the caravans from Khiva, and which they exchange for Russian produce. Turcoman coasters, in flat-bottomed boats, ply in the other parts of the coast; yet in these latter times some Russian and Persian traders have visited by sea, the tribes that camp near the mouths of the Attrock and of the Gourgban, and obtained from them fish, sea-birds down, furs and felts, in exchange of woollen and cotton cloths, brocards, iron-ware, flour and spices. ASTRABAD. The Persian government claim rights of sovereignty on all the Turco- mans that inhabit between the Turkish frontier and the Attock. Their encampments extend towards the south, to the river Kara-sou, which run in the Bay of Astrabad, together with numerous rivulets, all abundant in fish. The bay is 56 versts (37 miles) long and 14 (94 miles) broad. Its great- est depth is 4 sajēnes (28 feet English) ; at the entrance it is 15 sagēnes (17] fathoms English), and vessels may anchor at 1 verst (nearly 1 of a mile) from the mouth of the Kara-sou by 2 sagēnes. or 14 feet English. The port of Astrabad is visited by coasting vessels only carrying salt and naphta. Its trade is confined to exchanges with Turcomans. About 200 horses, each averaging 25 or 30 tomans* (165 at 200 Company's (1) By J. Prinsep's tables 100 Persian tomans man = 6,23 sicca, or 6,10 a Company's very near. 622,785 sicca rupees, therefore I to. VOL. II.) 269 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. rupees) a piece, camels at a price of 5 tomans (Company's rupees 33), sheep, felts, carpets, and other stuffs of wool or of camel and goat's hair, are there carried by Turcomans, who will truck against cotton and silk stuffs, broad cloths, spices, Mazanderan sugar, tobacco, rice, wheat, iron, copper and cast iron-ware. Turcomans have frequently committed acts of piracy on the coast, and made descents on the Persian territory. MECKED ESSER. The trade of this port with Astrakan and Bakou may amount yearly to 50,000 tomans (something more than 3 lakhs of rupees). Russian goods, such as chintzes, cloths, linen, iron and iron-ware, copper, glass, porce- lain and earthen-ware, sugar and tea, are imported from Astrakan by four or five vessels reaching in the month of October, the time for fishing ; from Bakou importations are confined to salt and naphta. The exports from Mecked Esser consist of cotton, in wool and in twist, Persian tissus, rice, sugar and fish. Resht. This place carries the same trade in exports as Mecked Esser, but the principal article for Russia, is silk ; gall nuts and fruits are also exported. Resht is the entrepôt for all the heavy goods from Russia. As to manufac- tured articles, this port receives only such as will be consumed in the Ghilan territory; all the rest is sent by land, from Tiflis to Tawris. The city is built between two rivers, the one of which to the north, and named Siah- Roubar, runs to the very foot of the walls of the place; but its navigation is blocked up by some trees barring the channel. Goods are conveyed by cattle accustomed to pace in the mud, as far as Peelé Bazar, a distance of 8 versts, (nearly 6 miles), and there come down in boats, on the river running to the south of Resht, till they have reached the Bay of Enzellee. This river is from 25 to 30 feet wide, and the water 4 to 8 feet deep. The run from Peelê Bazar to the bay is between 6 and 7 versts, and the distance from the bazar to Enzellee is 25 or 26 versts (about 17 miles). NAVIGATION ON THE CASPIAN SEA. The Bay of Enzellee is 45 versts (30 miles) from east to west, and 22 (15 miles) from north to south ; its depth is from 2 to 7 sagēnes, (14 to 50 feet). Its entrance from the Caspian forms a channel of about 580 yards in length, and 120 to 130 yards in breadth. Every sort of shipping can enter the bay; but the sea, on account of many shallow parts, and of frequent hurricanes, is of a rather dangerous navigation. Some hundred vessels ply on its waters, and belong chiefly to Persians settled at Astrakan and at Bakou. Enzellee owns very little shipping, but Turcoman-Yamouds have about 100 large and 60 smaller boats, built of Persian oak. The environs of the city of Rouba, at a small distance of Bakou, supply also the dockyard of this latter place with similar oak; but most of the craft on the Caspian is built of pine. Their owners, to save expense, purchase the hulls in the province of Nijnii- Novgorod, or the boats that come down the Volga to Astrakan, and make sailing vessels of them. The seamen, mostly Mussulmans, are as igno- rant as their boats are wretched. 270 (PART 1 STATISTICS. Those vessels were chiefly employed in 1836 in carrying stores and am- munition for the Russian army in the Caucasus. Freight for trading goods is much less profitable. The small Russian shipping, and all that of the Turcomans are only engaged in carryiug naphta, salt, and in fishing, All that is connected with the navigation on the Caspian is in the most miserable state. PRINCIPAL ROADS IN PERSIA. The Elbourz range, that separates the districts on the Caspian from the rest of Persia, and of which the passage is extremely difficult, is a great bar, particularly in winter, to the communications between Resht and Balpoosh on the seaside, and the two first trading places in the empire, Tauris and Tehran, in the interior. Besides, the road bordering the sea- shore is almost impracticable by its muddy portions. The Elbourz mounts are crossed principally in three places, from Resht towards Tauris, and towards Tehran, and between Tehran and Sari. Although Tehran is an insignificant place by its natural situation, yet its importance as a commercial capital is considerable. From it radiate the principal roads of the empire, towards the west on Tauris, the east on Meshed, by Shahroud and to the south towards the Persian Gulph by Ispahan and Shiraz. Secondary roads lead to Kerman, Yezd, llamadan, and Kerman Shah. Country produce, as well as goods from Europe or from India, are carried in all these directions. The latter, if of European origin, are seldom sent further than Ispahan to the north, and those that come from Tauris very seldom reach as far as Shiraz. Shiraz is the entrepôt of goods sent from Bushire, although the trade with India is mostly carried by the merchants of Ispahan. Since the port of Bunder Abass has been deserted, Bushire is the only place of import- ance Persia possesses on the gulf. BUSHIRE, AND NAVIGATION ON THE PERSIAN GULF. Bushire's harbour is good; yet ships will run to Karak Island, a distance of 15 miles, during very heavy weather. Some large vessels from Europe, or the United States of America, occasionally reach there ; but the greatest trade is carried in Arab craft, built in the gulf itself, or in the west coast of India, at Cochin or Demaun. They are from 30 to 300 tons by register, and altogether of a much better seafaring kind than the generality of oriental shipping. As the pieces of timber in them, are not iron bolted, but maintained by rope or leather fastenings, these vessels have much elasticity, lightness, and carry sail very well. Arab pirates, the Wehabees of the Djevassim tribe, used often to cruise in the gulf ; their chief harbouring place was at Razul keine, near Cape Mosseldom, at the mouth of the gulf, and their stations extend to the Bahrein islands. In 1821 the English raised some fortifications on Kishon island, opposite Bunder Abbas, and after having for a time seemed to abandon them, they since 1838 appear inclined to keep a second one on Karak island. Their commerce in the gulf is surely of a sufficient importance, to justify their measures. During a period of seven years, ending in 1827, the amount of value exchanged between sub- dry points of the coast and India, averaged yearly £1,337,163 stg. It may be supposed that this sum has become less, since the demand for Indian produce is less active in Turkey and Persia, and since Europe goods reach these countries at lower charges by Trebizond, Samsoun, &c. VOL. 11.) 271 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. The goods now sent to Bushire are : Sugar-candy and brown sugar, spices, tea, colors, cotton stuffs, chintzes Indian and European, broad cloths, steel and sundry manufactured articles. Those taken in exchange are tobacco, horses, silk, gall nuts, Kerman shawls, dried fruits, copper, lead, &c. Since all the trade was concentrated in Bushire, and the port of Bunder Abbas deserted, the city of Kerman lost most of its importance; its direct communications with the sea, formerly through Bunder Abbas, and with India, through Yezd, are now of no moment. Such were the consequences of a lessened consumption of Indian produce in Persia, in Turkey and in Europe, and of the trade being carried in preference through the Persian Gulf, thus secured against the exactions of the Sin- dhee or the plundering Belootchees. The same causes have stopped the communications between Persia and Affghanistan; yet as late as the last events, the road between Mushed and Herat has continued to be resorted to as being, the most advantageous. From this latter place they export country carpets, assafoetida, saffron, manna, lead, pistachios, rosin, mastich, &c.; and at Mushed caravans take in return raw silks and silk stuffs. This last-named city draws also some importance from its relations with Bokhara, whence come those celebrated black sheep skins, with which Persians make their caps, and which they seem unable to do without. According to some estimates, the importation of this article would amount to 1,20,000 skins yearly ; but it is supposed also that a yery small portion of this quantity belongs to the true Arab sheep of Karakoul, the rest being purchased from the Kirghiz. The Bok- harans export besides Cashmere shawls, tea, rhubarb, and some Russian goods, although these latter ought to be cheaper at Mushed were they imported by the Caspian. The returns from Persia consist of opium, tur- quoises, Kerman shawls and carpets. In crossing the steppe of the Tur- comans, caravans from Mushed to Bokhara are exposed to the greatest dangers, to guard against which they will never venture to penetrate the desert, without the escort of some Turcomans, whose family or friendly relations with the sundry tribes will protect them, and without a safe con- duet delivered by the Khivian authorities at Merv, a province lately subdued by the Khan of Khiva, and through which passes the road of Bokhara. One made road only exists in that steppe of the Turcomans, and once or twice a year is followed by the caravans from Astrabad to Khiva, which carry dyed silk, silk scarfs, and waistbands, Kerman shawls, furs, sugar, pepper and other spices. The same will take in return Russian goods. Turcoman-Yamouds are the carriers of these goods, and will always avoid entering such parts of the desert inhabited by tribes hostile to them. On all the frontier of Turkistan and Persia, there is carred a consider- able trade in exchange, and which might be much more so, but for the continued attacks or invasions from the Turcomans. The road from Astrabad and Shahroud to Mushed is however kept much animated by the passage of no less than 60,000 pilgrims, who at the peril of their liberty, go yearly for their devotions, visiting the tomb of Imaum Rizah at Mushed. COMMERCIAL ROADS IN AFGHANISTAN. This country, now that its relations with the westward are so severed and that Persia has ceased to receive much Indian produce by land, bears a commercial importance quite distinct from that of the regions we have just examined. 272 [PART 1. STATISTICS. The several roads by which the Afghan country communicates with India, and Turkistan with Russia, tend in radii towards Cabool and Bokhara on both sides of the Hindoo Koosh, which caravans cross on the principal road that unites these two great commercial entrepôts of central Asia. Other roads lead to Cabool, to the westward by Herat and Candahar, to the eastward by Peshawur, to the southward by Ghuzni, and Mooltan. This latter track is not the only one towards India, and the Candahar merchants can reach in 18 days march Someany, a seaport on the Indian Ocean, or go to Shikarpoor on the Indus. The districts of Afghanistan have very little exchange to carry between each other, as their produce is nearly the same in all; yet the high and cold regions of Ghuzni and of Cabool are obliged to purchase cotton and silk from the milder districts of Herat, Candahar, and of Peshawur, from which latter they buy also sugar. Articles intended for India are all carried to Cabool : green fruits packed in cotton, dried fruits, madder, Herat saffron, opium of Candahar, Persia silk, assafoetida from Herat and the hills near Cabool, also horses brought from the Turcomans, and of the country itself. The returns consist in Indian and English goods, viz. cotton and silk stuffs, sugar, spices, steel, &c. The road from Herat to Candahar is good, but from this latter place it becomes more and more difficult as it approaches the mountains of Cabool. It is however all the way better than the straight track between Herat and Câbool, which runs through arid and rocky hills, and is hardly a practica- ble path. In winter no caravan can reach Cabool, all passes being blocked up by snow. Brigands infest all the surrounding country, the Hezarehs' to the north, the Beloochees to the south, and between both Afghan tribes, besides the exactions committed by the native chiefs ; for all these circum- 'stances caravans are often obliged to take long turns out of the main road.* The Seikhs of the Punjaub have imposed so heavy dutiest on caravans crossing their country, that the traders of Peshawer now draw all their goods from India through Cabool, while formerly it was through Peshawur that caravans went from India to Cabool. Even the 'Cashmere shawls pass through India to reach Afghanistan. The principal trade between the two countries is carried by the Lohanis, an Afghan nomadic tribe. They start from Cabool in autumn, after fruits have ripened, cross the Indus at Kaheeree, and thence penetrate British India. They keep from 2,000 to 2,500 camels that only serve between Cabool and the Indus, where their encampments are erected. They travel with their families and all their cattle in large flocks. Their number and their relations keep the brigands at a distance, and habit has indurated them to the fatigues of the voyage in almost a desert country. They return to Cabool in summer. The usual rate of a camel's load (12 pounds 4 cwt.,) from Cabool to Mooltan is about 16 rupees, or 3 roubles about per poud. The road from Candahar to India is much less visited.* All these serious difficulties will be avoided when the Indus will be freely opened to Steamers. NAVIGATION ON THE INDUS. From Attock to the mouth of the Indus, there is a distance of nearly 1,200 miles of navigable water, and it is now known the Sutlege, the Jelum and the Ranee, in the Punjaub, are accessible to flat bottommed boats These two paragraphs are hardly applicable, now, that British influence is being rightly applied and appreciated. * Now being revised. * Now done, FOL. 11.) 273 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. drawing no more than six feet. Such as are to enter the mouths of the Indus, sandy and ever changing as the latter are, should not draw more than 5 or 6 feet, and although the depth of the water increases in its superior course, yet keeled boats are much exposed to ground, and thence only flat- bottomed vessels can be used. The stream, from Attock to the Rocksalt Mounts is very rapid, but below it is very slow. The ordinary boats usu- ally take 40 days to reach from the mouth to Mooltan on the Chenab, and thence 20 days to Lahore. A steamer could go from the sea to Mooltan in 10 days. Coal mines have been discovered in Cutch, near the very mouths of the Indus, on the banks of the Sutlege, and at Attock, which are of the greatest moment for the establishment of steamers. ROADS BETWEEN TURKISTAN AND AFGHANISTAN. Besides the main way of communication between Turkistan and Af- ghanistan, by Cabool and Balkh, there are two others, one from Herat to Bokhara, the other from Peshawur to Badakshan. This latter has been entirely abandoned since Badakshan fell in to the power of the Khan of Koondooz, who scattered away its population. The former passing through the country is much safer, and much traversed in times of peace. There remains the main road of Cabool, the highest pass of which is not less than 12000 feet above the level of the sea ; although soine- times caravans have been threatened by Hazarehs tribes, and the Ouzbeks of Koondooz, yet this road is much better than, and preferred to, the other two. The distance from Bokhara to Cabool is only 24 days' march, but caravans usually take 35 days. They bring horses and camels, raw silk, cotton, tea, China porcelain cups and bowls, gold, silver, and Russian pro- duce. The returns consist only of goods coming from India. COMMERCIAL ROADS IN THE TURKISTAN. Bokhara should be considered as the centre of all commercial relations with Turkistan, the same as Cabool is for Afghanistan ; but the roads in the former country are much more numerous. Those in the north lead to Khiva, Orenburg, Orsk, Troitsk; and by Tachkend to Petropawlowsk and to Semipalatinsk ;-those in the last go to Kachgarby, Khoktran, and to Yarkend by Badakshan ; the southern roads lead to Koondooz, Cabool, and to Herat, and the western to Mushed. For some time past Kokhan bas taken a very active part in the trade with Russia ; its caravans have indeed the advantage of crossing a much less dangerous country than the western steppes of the Kirghiz, which are continually exposed to the in- vasions of the Khivians, notwithstanding it is the passage of the transports from Bokhara. The goods from Russia, such as iron, copper, hides, colors, cotton, woollen and silk stuffs, hardware &c., together with tea, musk, porcelain bowls, and silver in yambs or ingots from China, reach Bokhara by all the roads leading thereto. Russia draws from Turkistan all the country produce, such as cotton and silk stuffs, cotton in twist and in wool, furs, seed of Zitonard, Lapis- lazuli , and cornelian stones from Badakshan, turquoises from Persia, rhu- barb from China, and Cashmere shawls. PART 1. VOL. II. L L 274 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Kachgar and Yarkend, the two great emporium of the Chinese Turkis- tan, communicate with the great Bokharia by Khokhan and Badakshan, and barter their produce for Persian opium, Lapis-lazuli, and rubies from Badakshan, for slaves, cattle, indigo and other India merchandise, as also for some Russian goods, which also reach these two places in a direct line by Kouldja. Of all the roads of Turkistan that from Bokhara to Kokhan is the best, open to waggons and safe, which last circumstance commands preference as long as the Bokhara and Kokhan chiefs are in good terms together. The other roads that cross steppes could seldom admit wag. gons, and the nomadic tribes do not use such mode of transport. As the Kirghiz country is a desert in its Oriental part, caravans often prefer the road from Tachkend to Semipalatinsk and to Petropawlousk, to the more direct track to Orenbourg, and hy so doing they avoid the deserts of Kizil Koom and of the Kara Koom. Those deserts are however cross- ed in winter, when snow can be used as water,* although the best time of the year is the month of May, before the sun has scorched all vegetation. The dangers which at all times threaten traders crossing the Kirghiz country are greater towards the western parts, not only on account of the tribes of the small horde being more inclined to plunder than those of the middle horde, but also because Khivians keep fixed stations near the mouths of the Syr, and on the Koowan Deria. The Kara Kirghiz bet- ween Kokund and China have been much restrained by the Governments of these two countries, and the effect of this has been to render communi- cations much safer. The road through the Beloortagh is excessively diffi- cult, and no less so in that of Yarkend to Badakshan: caravans to Bokhara and Kokhan have not only to overcome a mountainous and rocky country, but are always exposed to the attacks of the Koondooz Ousbecks. The roads from Bokhara to Herat and Mushed, towards the west, are partly through an arid country, where no water and no pasture are to be found, and are besides infested by plundering Turk tribes that inhabit neighbour- ing regions. TRANSPORT OF GOODS THROUGH THE STEPPE OF THE KIRGHIZ. This is done on camels hired from these nomadic tribes. Merchants elect a chief with whom they settle their bargain, and afterwards the ca- ravan is placed under the control of a guide, whose relations amongst his countrymen serve as a guarantee to those merchants. His salary is usu- ally one per cent, on the value of the goods, or 3 roubles per camel . Be. sides him several other guides accompany the caravan, and also Kirghiz who have charge of the camels. Each of these men watches over 16 camels, and their duty is a very hard one, in winter specially, when they have to clear off the snow, to disclose the grass, which will feed their cat- tle. Asses or horses carry the guides and the merchants , who keep besides each a camel to carry provisions and water. The price of transport is paid in advance to the Kirghiz, as they place no confidence on the Bokharan merchants. These latter only are well armed, while the Kirghiz carry hardly any weapons of defence ; but when they are attacked, all run away, be they armed or not. It would be very easy to set caravans in a proper order of defence, by placing a well-armed guide for each ten camels, and * Notwithstanding : the inclemency and want of supplies and water of these deserts proved fatal to the Russian expedition to Khiva, VOL. 11.) 275 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. by keeping these animals on line of 40, instead of having them on a very long file. The price of transport from Orenbourg to Bokhara is from 4 to 6 rou- bles per pond (1 R. 13 to 2 , 12 ans. c. per 36 pounds). Caravans generally leave Russia in October or November, and when arrived at Bokhara, the Kirghiz make their own way to their abode. They therefore hire out their camels at a much cheaper rate, cross the desert so long as the soil is covered with snow, and afterwards disperse towards their encampments, where they stay till the spring. Traders in the meanwhile barter with the nomadic tribes. Some caravans leave Bokhara in May or June, and should they not reach Russia in time to be at Nijnii-Novgorod for the fair, the merchants will try to direct their goods towards Siberia. Caravans mounted on horses are more difficult to manage, as loading and unloading, and forage take much time. One guide is needed for each 4 horses. 276 1. STATISTICS. [PART Places. Days of Number oj March Wersts. State of the road. Dangers in the road. Mode of tra- Price of trans- velling and port per Rus- transport. sian Poud.+. Guide. Traders. Imports. Exports. From Trebizond Tauris to 30 a 50 720 are Tiflis to Tauris. 16 a 20 615 Tauris to Tehran 14 658 The first part During summer Horses. 6 Roublest in Turks or Per-European, Silk, gall-nuts, European goods; very hilly, and caravans paper. siang. Greeks and Ar- Tobacco, Pipes cotton,silk and difficult of pas- exposed to be menians from Persianberry, woollen stuffs ; sage ; becomes plundered by Constantino safflower, spe- porcelain, eas- more even from the Coords who ple; Armenians cie. then and glass Azzeroum, camp near Dia- from Georgia; ware, sugar, dine and Baï- Persians. iron, &c. azid. Hilly, but prac None. Ditto...... 60 to 80 Co-Persians or Rus- Trans Caucasic Persian goods ; Russian goods ; ticable to wag- peeks in sians sometimes Armenians. cotton, silk & cotton stuffs ; gons. specie. of the Armeni- woollen stuffs ; porcelain, glass an, sometimes furs. and iron ware; of the Mussul- gold and silver man faith. specie. For the good Ditto Horse & Mules 3 Roubles in Persian... Persians. Persian goods .. European goods season practi- paper. cable even to waggons. Very good. Travellers are Ditto ditto .. 150 to 200 CO- From Ispahan sometimes at- pecks in pa- or Laristan. tacked by the per. tribe of Bakh- | ziares whose camps are to be crossed thro. Govt. keeps ar- med posts in the dangerous stations. This latter route Very little dan- Ditto ditto .. 220 to 300 Co- is good. ger. pecks in pa- per. Tehran to Ispa- han 10 441 553 Ispahan to Shi- 12 by the raz hills, 15 by the winter route. • 1 Werst = 1167 yards ; 100 miles Eng. = 150,814 Wersts (Kelly.) + 1 Poud = 40 oz. Russian = 36,104 oz Avoirdupois (ditto.) #1 Rouble = 100 copecks = 1ld, very near. VOL. 11.) 277 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. Place. Days of Number of State of the March. Wersts. road. Dangers in the Mode of tra- Price of trans- road. velling and port per Rus- transport. sian Poud. Guide. Traders. Imports. Exports. From Shiraz to Bus 10 406 Extremely Caravans always Ditto ditto Ditto....... Coords & Per-Persian, Arab, English & IndiGali-nuts ; silk hire mountainous & risk being at- siang, Hindoo andAr- an cotton stuffs; horses ; Tur- difficult in pas- tacked by the menians from Indian silk. quoises; specie, sage. Coord tribe by India. stuffs ; English &c. Mamassena. broad cloths: Cashmere Shawls; Indian Sugar; Steel; Indigo; Spices. Tauris to Resht 18 a 20 The passing the No danger. Horses, 2 Roubles in Persian..... Persian.. Russian goods ; Europe goods, Elbouzr mounts paper. Iron ware gall-nuts. is extremely Ghiban silk difficult. Tehran to Resht 9 a 10 309 The passage of Ditto Ditto... Ditto. The same; also Persian goods. the Elbouzr is Sugar. always difficult and impracti- cable in winter. Tehran to As- 12 by Sari 504 The first road is Ditto Ditto......... Ditto trabad 15 at 16 by very hilly; the Bostam. second is ex- cellent. Astrabad to 480 by the The first of these Caravans are al-Horses and Ditto... Persian...... Black sheep : Ditto ditto. Mushed N. road roads is more ways exposed Camels sking of Bo- passing hilly, but more to the attacks khara ; Russian through abundant in of Turcomans, goods. Cabochan water than the specially by the 560 by Ni-second. north road. chapoor. Mushed to He 9 420 Good; water & Infested by the Camels...... Ditto.. Persian and Al- Indian goods ; Persian goods ; rat pasture in plen- brigand tribes ghans. Herat carpets ; Ghilan silk. ty. The coun- of Aimaks. Assafætida. try is rather populous. Herat to Canda 13 630 Ditto Besides the Be- Ditto....... Ditto.. Afghans, India Goods Assafoetida ; saf. har loochee errant fron; fruits Afghans often horses, &c. attack travel- lers, • Much less since British Influence has been felt and appreciated. 278 1 STATISTICS. (PART 1. Days of Number of State of the Wersts. road. Dangers in the road. Mode of tra- Price of trans- pelling and port per Rus- transport. sian Poud. Guide. Traders. Imports, Places. Exports. March. From Candahar to Ca- bool 555 10 13 2 Roubles in paper, Goods from In- dia and Bo- khara, Very hilly and Few or none Horses. impraeticable since British In- during winter. fluence. More diffieult Ditto. than the fore- going. Hlerat to Cabool 15 a 16 Ditto....... Ditto..... to Astrabad Khiva 194 700 Mushed to Bo- khara India to Cabool Sandy and Aria The warlike dis- Camels. ...... 3 to 4 Roubles Turcomans Persians, Turco- Russian goods ; Persian goods ; desert; very dif- positions of mans. horses, sugar; spices. fieult to cross in the Turcomans summer particu- make it a dan larly near Khiva. gerous passage. Sandy desert Ditto. Ditto.........6 to 8 Roubles Ditto Persians & Bou- Russian goods : Kerman shawls; but fresh water in paper. kharas. Sheep skins ; carpets ; Tur- may here be Rhubarb, quoises ; opium found in greater abundanee than in the foregoing road. Goods sent from Few or none Ditto.........Ditto...... of the Afghan Afghans.... .... Asgafætida: Indian and Eng- Delhi to Moul- since British In- tribe; Lohania. madder; fruits; lish shuffs ; in- tan, cross the fluence. horses ; gold in digo; sugar ; Indus at Zachi- specie. spices. ri and pass thro' a sandy & hilly country reach Ghuzni and Cabool. The road till Infested by Ha- Horses to Ditto......... Afghans & Ous. Cotton ; wool Balkh is very zarchs andOus- Balkh, after- beks. horses hilly; after it beks. wards camels. nankeens; broad is a sandy plain, cloths ; hides paper ; Russian ducats ; China silver ingots Tea: Kirghiz camels. to Cabool to Bo- khara 215 silk; 3 VOL. 11.) 279 NOTES ON CENTRAL ASIA. Place. Days of March Number of State of the Wersts. road. Dangers in the road. More of tra - Price of Trans- velling and ſport per Rus- transport. sian Poud. Guide. Traders. Imports. Exports, From Bokhara to Khi va 12 700 Sandy desert. . Infested by Khi- Camels vians. 6 to 8 Roubles Kirghiz. in paper..... Khivians Bokharas. and Slaves ; Khiva Cotton in wool stufts for errant and in twist; tribes; apples; silk; Bokhara Djidda; fish in goods ; indigo; winter. Indian sugar; tea; China sil- ver: black sheep skins. BOSS Ditto. Infested by Tur- Ditto.. comans, Ditto. Turcomans. DED Khiva to Kras - 13 to 134 novodsk on the Gulf of Balkhan Khiva to the 12 Fort of Novo- aleksandrovski Bokhara toOren 60 berg, (Ilek road) Ditto.. 1,600 Hard steppe. Infested by Tur- Ditto.. comans and Kirghiz. Sandy desert ; Exposed to the Ditto.. most arid at the attacks of Khi- pass of Kizib- vians and Kir- coum and of ghiz. Kara-koum. Bokharans 4 to 6 Roubles Kirghiz in paper. Broad cloths ; Cotton in wool cotton and silk and in twist; stuffs ; hides ; cotton stuffs ;; lace; glass & Turkistau silks, iron ware; iron; Cashmere copper: furs; shawls; camels' sugar; colors and goat, and and ducats, camels hair stuffs ; zedoare seeds; turquoises ; rhubarb; la- pis lazuli. furs ; 50 Ditto... Ditto. 90 Bokhara toorsk Bokhara to Troibsk Bokhara to Pe- tropavloosk by Tachkend Khiva to Oren- bourg Khiva to Sarat- chik Khiva to Mang- hislak! 1,300 Ditto. Ditto Ditto..... Ditto. Ditto Ditto...... The steppe is Much less dan Ditto..... much less wid. gerous. Steppe. Infested by Kir-Ditto..... Ditto. Ditto Ditto...... 490 miles. Hard steppe. Infested by Kir- Ditto. ghiz and Tus comans. ghiz. Ditto. Residents of Bokhara and of Khokhan. 34to 4 Roubles Khivians...... in paper. Ditto. Ditto. Kirghiz & Tur- comans. 13 24 26 280 'I STATISTICS. (PART Place. Days of Number of State of the March. Wersts. road. Dangers in the Mode of tra- Price of trans- road. velling and port per Rus- transport. sian Poud. Guide. Traders. Imports. Exports. . 45 From Bokhara • to Kachgar by Kokand Residents of Tea; musk ; Cattle ; Russian Kokhan and rhubarb ; silver & Indian goods; of Bokhara. in ingots. Indigo. 66 miles. Till the end of The Kara Kir. Till the K0-34 to 4Roubles the Khanat of ghiz on the khan country in paper. Khokhan the Chinese fron-on wheels, road is excel- tier, although after on horses lent and prac- compressed by ticable to wag- the adjacent go gons ; after it vernments, still is very difficult, sometimes at- by the moun- tack caravans. tains bordering China. 840 Till Khooloom Caravans have Camels and Ditto.. the road passes more fear from horses. through a flat the exactions & sandy coun- of the Khan try, after are of Khoondooz mountaius of a than from the very difficult errant brigands passage. Ousbeks, or from the Kara Kirghiz. 65 Bokhara to Yar- kend by Bu dakshan Residents Bokhara. in NOTA.- Long journeys are severally performed by relays of camels; it is scarcely possible to fix the number of haiting days as a general rule. A camel march is 30 miles, and if one third is added to the map distance, the number of marches may be calculated pretty nearly, always allowing extra days for hill country, &c. VOL. II.] [ 281 ] SIKH PROTECTED STATES. List of Chiefships with their estimated Annual Revenues. Annual Revenue. Rs. Annual Revenue. Rs. ... ... British, Ranjeet Singh, Mehrajkeean, Nalagarh, Kotaha, Furreed Kote, Nahan, Munneemajrah, Belaspoor (Kuhlore), Pateeala, Kythul, Kotela Mulair, Alloowallea, Jheend, Nabha, Bhuddour, Mullode, Koopjpoorah, Thuneisur, Shahabad, Ladwa, Khunna, Singhpooriah, Zynpoor, Bhuddul, British Putteedars, Chiloundee, Hills, Sand Hills, Shahzadpore, Jhoomba, Tungore, Ramghur, 3,00,000 Sealba Majree, 17,00,000 Seekundra, &c. &c. &c. 25,000 Bhore, 50,000 Shamghur, 10,000 Leelok heiree, 45,000 Booreah, 1,00,000 Hallaher, 60,000 Pateeala Misseldars, 60,000 Seekree, 22,00,000 Kulseeahs, 6,00,000 Nahung Kotela, 1,00,000 Kheiree, 4,00,000 Sarun, 3,00,000 Shamsingeans, 4,00,000 Pyalgurh, 50,000 Ledah, 35,000 Moostafabad, 50,000 Khizrabad, 80,000 Raeepoor, 1,00,000 Khurh, 2,47,000 Roopar, 18,000 Koomanoo, 1,20,000 Kukrala, 6,000 Ludran, 13,000 Looteiree, 1,66,000 Kheiree Choornee, 25,000 Bydwan, Byrsaul, Urnoulee, 65,000 Koomreh Burreil, 31,000 Jubbomajrah, 35,000 Bagreean, 16,000 Raeekote, 52,000 20,000 7,000 5,500 4,000 50,000 12,000 30,000 6,400 1,65,000 7,000 15,200 5,000 62,000 30,000 27,000 10,000 5,000 8,000 14,400 65,000 14,000 11,000 25,000 7,000 1,600 30,000 3,000 40,000 32,000 2,400 12,000 5,500 Total, Rs. 71,91,000 Note.-There are many more petty Chiefships too intermixed and too insignifi. cant to be exhibited in this list. PART I. VOL. II. M M 282 [PART 1. STATISTICS. BOMBAY DISTRICT BOUNDARIES. Zillahs. Collectorates. Definitions. Bounded on the north by Jagheer Lands and the Belgaum Collectorate, on the south by part of Mysore, and Dharwar the North Canara Collectorate. On the east by the ceded districts and the Nizam's Territory, and on the west by the Yoonda Balaghat and the Canara Collectorate. Dharwar.... Bounded on the north by the Kolapoor Raja's Country, extensive Jageerlands of the Putwurduns, and a small portion of the Sattara Raja's Territory. On the south chiefly by the Dharwar Collectorate. On the east Belgaum... chiefly by the Nizam's Territory. On the west by that of the Sawunt Warree state, and by the Portugnese Territory. Bounded on the east by the Sattara and Kolapoor Raja's Territories, south by the Sawunt Warree and Concan... Rutnaghurry Portuguese Territory, north by the Hubshees Territory, and Thannah Collectorate. Bounded on the north by the Surat Collectorate, the Portuguese, the Guica war, the Punt and the Dhurumpore Concan.. Tannah. Raja's Territories. South by the Rufnabgherry Collectorate, east by the Sattara Raja's Territory, Poona and Ahmednuggur Collectorates, and west by Angria's and the Hubshee's Territories and for the remainder by the sea. Poona......... Poona. Sholapore Bounded on the north and east by the Ahmednuggur Collectorate, south by the Sattara Raja's Territory, west by the Tannah Collectorate. Bounded on the north by the Candesh Collectorate. South by the Poonah Collectorate. East by the Nizam's Abmednuggur.. Ahmednugur 2 Territory. West by ihe Tannah Collectorate and the Punt Raja's Territory. Bounded on the north by the Territories of Scindiah and Holkar. South by the Ahmednugur Collectorate. Kandeish... Kandeish East by Scindiah's and the Nizam's Territories. West by the petty states of Dhurrumpore, the Dhang, the Mandvee, Rajpeeply, and the Guicawar Territories. Bounded on the north by the Myhee, separating it from the Cambay state and the Kaira Collectorate. South by the Portuguese Territory of Damaun, and Tannah Collectorate. East by the Territories of the Dhur- Surat..... Surat and Broach rumpore, and Baunsda, the Guicawar's, Mandvee, and Rajpeeply Chiefs, that portion north of the Keem river constituting the Sub-Collectorate of Broach. Bounded on the north by the Gaicawar Territory, on the south and east by the Cambay district, and Myhee Kaira.. Ahmedabad... river, and the west by the Ahmedabad Collectorate. Bounded on the north by the Districts of Deghan, Kurree, and Puttun, and Guicawar's Tributary states. On Ahmedabad the south and west by the possessions of the various Tributary States in Katly war. VOL. 11.) [283] THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. The description, statistics, &c. of Singapore, Prince of Wales' Island and Malacca, individually, will be given separately. First of the conjoined colonies : the officials are ;- The Hon'ble S. G Bonhamn, Esq., Governor of Prince of Wales' Island Singapore and Malacca. The Hon'ble Sir William Norris Kut, Recorder. ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE. The court of judicature is held before the Governor, Resident Coun- cillor and Recorder, and administers the law of England--the decision is by a majority of votes, the Recorder having the casting vote when the court is composed of only two members. The court has the same powers, both civil and criminal, as those of the Supreme court at Calcutta. There is also a court of requests, which has jurisdiction over simple debts to the amount of thirty-two dollars, or Co.'s Rs. 71. 13. 8. Criminal cases, not amounting to treason or felony, are tried before the Court of Quarter Sessions, which is composed of a judge of the superior court (usually the Resident Councillor) and any of the magistrates who may see fit to attend ; and this court is authorized to inflict any punishment not extending to life or limb, banishment or perpetual imprisonment. The Revenue cases are tried before two magistrates, generally the Assis- tant Resident, and one of the Honorary justices. The latter officers are appointed by the Governor, under powers vested in him by the letters. patent constituting the court of which he is president, and holds the seal. The number of civil and criminal cases tried before the court at each of the three stations during the past three years, will appear as follows :- CIVIL CASES. Singapore. Priuce of Wales’ Island Malacca. Number of cases instituted. Number of ac- tions adjudged. Year. Sp. Dirs. Ct's 1838 141 78 46,994 82 70 34 89,249 40 1839) 180 86 59,451 58 83 43 34,198 68 1840 182 114 67,005 0 109 56 51,032 63 CRIMINAL CASES. 26 32 22 10 21 10 15,309 19 16,500 86 6,460 83 Singapore. Prince of W. Island Malacca. Number of cases. Number of pri- soners indicted Number of pri- soners convict- ed. Number of cases. Number of pri- soners indicted Number of pri. soners convict. ed. Number of cases. Number of pri- soners indict. ed. Number of pri- soners convict. ed. Year. 58 17 1838 1839 1840 103 66 51 139 137 85 85 59 40 61 57 97 83 79. 102 24 14 12 26 23 21 67 9 284 (PART 1. STATISTICS. COMMERCE. The Import and Export trade for the five years stands thus : Singapore. Penang. Malacca. 1835-36, 16,540,960 1836-37, 18,509,694 7,687,465 985,526 Imports, 1837-38, 19,939,349 8,956,161 972,384 1838-39, 18,561,277 7,140,544 879,114 1839-40, 23,750,336 6,618,418 1,088,965 Sp. Dlrs. Exports, 1835-36, 15,662,183 1836-37, 17,529,207 6,578,011 698,030 1837-38, 17,896,632 8,393,843 802,074 1838-39, 17,063,347 6,844,511 705,993 1839-40, 20,968,584 6,541,964 1,104,801 SINGAPORE. BO 1 The island of Singapore is situated in the Straits of Malacca, at the south- ern extremity of the Malay peninsala ; lat. 1° 15' N., lon. 104° E. Sir Thomas Raffles took possession of this island on the 26th January 1819, under a treaty concluded with the Tomogong, or native chief, who held his lands from Mahomed Shah, Sultan of Johore. In 1824 a regular cession in full sovereignty of this, and the islands for ten miles round it, was ob- tained from the Sultan and Tomogong, and became recognized as part of the British empire, by a treaty with the Dutch, done at London, in March of the same year. Statement of the proper Receipts and Disbursements of Singapore for 1840-41 Exclusive of Military and Convicts. RECEIPTS. Amount of Excise Farms received in 1840-41... 2,71,730 39 Ditto of Quit-rent ditto in ditto 19,272 13 5 Ditto of Transfer fees in Land Offices in ditto 571 13 4 Ditto received on account of Lands sold on Building Leases in ditto .. 11,661 66 Ditto of Fees received from Court of Judicature in ditto.. 10,063 8 8 Ditto Fees received from Court of Requests in ditto 7,304 13 6 Ditto ditto Sitting Magistrate and Quarter Session in do. 3,192 15 2 Ditto ditto for Postage in ditto ... 1,839 12 6 Ditto ditto on Local Passes granted to Vessels in ditto... 407 14 5 Ditto Rent of Government Houses in ditto ... 1,077 12 2 Ditto of presents and old stores sold in ditto ... 800 5 7 Ditto Premium on Bills of Exchange in ditto... 10,273 3 8 ... Co.'s Rs. 3,38,196 10 8 DISBURSEMENTS. Salary of Resident Councillor for 12 months Ditto of Asst. Resident for ditto inclusive of Military Pay Resident Councillor's Establishment for ditto ... Court of Judicature for ditto 24,000 0 0 6,874 8 0 3,744 00 12,354 0 0 .. VOL 11.] 285 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. 5,040 0 0 1,379 6 0 2,400 0 5,076 9 3 3,007 14 0 10,440 0 0 11,940 00 1,200 0 0 3,960 0 0 6,840 129 3,927 00 Sheriff's Establishment for ditto Coroner's ditto Court of Requests for ditto Chinese Poor House, Pauper Hospital, for ditto Rent of Court House, including Mr. Burrow's Salary as in charge for ditto... Chaplain's Salary and Establishment for ditto Senior Surgeon's Salary and Establishment for ditto Post Office Establishment for ditto Import and Export Establishment for ditto... Land Department including Mr. Coleman's Salary for do. Master Attendant's Department and Establishment for do. Magazine Department exclusive of Conductor W. Deare's Salary for ditto Overseer of Public Works for ditto Signal Department for ditto... Political Pensions for ditto Local Pensions Schools... Loss on Disbursing Salaries at 220 per cent. Doll. Amount expended in erection of New Buildings, large repairs Canal embankment, and New Harbour Roads, for ditto... Contingencies in the several departments from the 1st May 1840 to 30th April 1841 inclusive... ... 1,854 0 0 600 0 0 540 0 0 17,648 5 0 2,229 15 0 5,214 6 0 2,729 10 6 12,986 11 6 ... 19,191 11 5 1,65,178 13 5 ADD. of the Nett Salary of the Governor and Establishment for 12 months 13,400 00 f of the Nett Salary of the Recorder and Establishment for 12 months 15,001 13 4 of the Nett Salary of the Register of the Court of Judi- cature for 12 months... 5,973 5 4 of the expences incurred on account of the Steamer Diana, 3 Gun Boats, Superintendent, and Contingencies for 12 months 16,240 6 2 ... 50,615 8 10 Excess of Receipts... .., ... ... 1,22,402 4 9 Co.'s Rs. 3,38,190 10 8 Statement of expences incurred for the Military Serving at Singapore from the 1st May 1840 to 30th April 1841.. Amount advanced to Madras Troops at Singapore 83,167 11 2 Ditto paid at Madras on account of ditto 64,200 0 0 Provisions issued to Troops (estimated value).. 20,000 0 0 Stores ditto ditto ditto (unknown) 0 0 0 Periodical relief of Troops to and from Madras (unknown) 0 0 0 Paid suudry smull contingencies 437 15 3 Salary of Conductor 2,339 12 0 Military Pay of Assistant 1,207 00 Co.'s Rs. 1,71,352 6 5 286 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Statement of expences incurred for Convicts at Singapore from the 1st May 1840 to 30th April 1841. Establishment exclusive of Mr. Coleman's 1,153 Salary ... 6,982 0 0 Rations to Convicts as per margin including 167 645 341 1st May 1810 1st May 1841. Bengal.....175 Madras....561 Bombay...291 money allowance 34,518 8 0 Passage to Bombay 2,490 00 Total...1,027 Clothing to Convicts 5,854 7 6 Contingencies 5,162 97 Co.'s Rs.... 55,007 97 Singapore, from a statistical report submitted to the Government of India a few years ago, is reckoned to be about twenty-six miles long in its greatest length, and thirteen miles broad in the broadest part. The plan from which this area has been computed is from the Surveys of Captain Franklin, of the Bengal Quarter Master General's Depart- ment, and of Captain Jackson of the Bengal Artillery, who for several years officiated as Executive Officer at the station. About nine miles south of the Island runs a chain of Islets under British sway, frequent- ed by fishermen and petty native traders, the whole within a circum- ference of about one hundred miles. The channel between them and the Island, forms the present strait of Singapore, the great thoroughfare of European, Indian, and Chinese traffic. The number of acres of waste land is estimated at 128,500, a great portion of which is now under cultivation in a more or less degree. From a view taken from one of the most elevated spots about the Town, the whole Island appears to be pleasingly diversified with hill and dale and covered with luxuriant foliage to the water's edge, presenting to the eye of the voyager a scene that has repeatedly excited much admiration. There appears to be only one hill of any elevation in the Island, namely Buket Temah, which is situated near the old straits, and which appears to be about five hundred feet, in height. The climate of Singapore is justly celebrated for its salubrity. There are few places in India in the possession of the East India Company that can boast of so charming a climate as this Island; this has been abun- dantly shewn by the concurring opinion of medical men founded from the experience of a residence of from fifteen to twenty years on the Island, as well as from the annual resort here of a great number of invalids from all parts of India. Situated nearer the equator than either Penang or Malacca, the changing influence of the monsoon is less felt here than at at either of those places, the Island being kept in state of perpetual verdure by frequent tropical showers. The mean temperature of the Thermometer for the past three years has been 82º. The Harbour is situated about four miles to the N. N. East of St. John's Island, and affords a safe anchorage to vessels during all seasons of the year, and being clear of hidden danger, the approach to it is easy by day or night. Its position is also favorable for commanding the VOL, II] 287 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. Straits, the track which ships pursue being distant about five miles. Ships and vessels resort here from almost all quarters of the globe during the whole year round; and from its proximity to the China Seas, and the rapid encrease of the trade, and other advantages which the Island possesses, it cannot fail to become ere long one of the most flourishing and valuable of the colonies in the possession of the East India Company. A school is established in the building originally designed by the late admirable and lamented founder Sir Stamford Raffles, as the Anglo Chinese College, towards which Government pays a monthly donation of Co’s. Rupees 434-8-6. The building has recently undergone considera- ble repairs and improvements; it is spacious and well adapted to the objects for which it is now appropriated. The number of scholars including Chris- tians, Chinese, Klings &c., amount to upwards of two hundred, who are divided into three or four classes, under the constant attention of two masters and an assistant ; three classes in the upper department, are kept vigorously engaged at their various studies which consist of Roman History, Geography, the English Grammar, Mental and Written Arith- metic, Algebra and Astronomy, while the children in the lower depart- ment, under the tuition of another master are as actively employed in other studies, and in the acquisition of knowledge on a simple and com- prehensive plan, which can be properly appreciated only on a personal inspection of the school. The population of the Island of Singapore from the year 1824 to 1836, will appear in table A. which shews the rapid progress since the forma- tion of this settlement in 1819, when the British Flag was first hoisted here, at which time the population amounted to about one hundred and fifty souls only, consisting of fishermen and pirates. The population of the Island from a detailed census taken in Jan. 1840, See table B, may be estimated at 40,000 souls. A POPULATION. Census of Singapore from 1824 to 1836. 1824. 1825. 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1836. . 28 Europeans, 81 111 87 108 122 92 105 119 138 141 Indo Britons, 29 91 96 113 117 Native Christians, 74 132 206 188 193 272 3451 4:20 300 326 425 Armenians, 16 9 18 19 25 24 23 26 35 34 Jews,....... 9 5 6 Arabs, 15 10 17 18 17 32 61 96 66 41 Malays,... 4,580 5,130 5,697 4,790 5,336 5,750 5,173 7,215 7,131 9,452 9,632 Chinese, 3,317 3,828 4,279 6,088 6,210 7.575 6,555 7,762 8,517 10,767 13,749 Natives of Coro- mandel and Ma- labar Casts, 390 690 605 777 1,095 1.440 1,491 1,414 1,819, 1,728 2,318 Do.of Hindoostan, and Bengal,.... 366 226 384 241 291 45. 422 529 505 591 582 Javanese, 146 267 35. 63 607 611 595 669 903 Bugis, Bolinese,&e 1,851 1,704 1,412 1,242 1,253 1,361 1,860 1,427 1,726 2,364 1,952 Cajíres, 2 51 8 37 62 41 Parsees, 2 Siamese, Total,.. 10,683 11,851 12,907 13,72) 14,883 17,664 16,634 19,715 20,977 26,329 29,984 2 88 [PART 1. STATISTICS. B Census of Singapore, taken in the month of December, 1840. Campong Country and Grand Chinese Town. Glam Dis Total. Islands, Total. tricts. 100 Europeans Indo Britons Armenians Native Christians Malays Chinese Bengallies Klings Arabs Javanese Balanese Buggnese Caffres Jews Siamese Parsees 42 16 51 4 3 73 19 17 132 95 130 1,0481 1,145 596 6,0571 1,053 1,335 78 35 270 1,835 116 460 21 21 19254 8 17 68 2 11 8. 19 8 12 37 9 12 102 65 1 67 60 7 61 84 69 153 19 17 36 31 7265202 467 754 3,336 2,115 4,980 4,052 9,032 125 8,126 493 15,518 1,661 17,179 133 9 10 357 183 540 26 160 & 2,455 152 2,607 2 21 7 28 1981 373 160) 648 386 1,034 35) 218 85 524 137 64) 1,147 715 1,215 779 1,994 8 3 13 11 24 8 8 19 8 27 12 12 298 661 Itinerants Military Continental Convicts Local Prisoners 26,240) 7,729 33,969 4,000 450 1,182 80 Total 39,681 Singapore, 19th January, 1841. RESIDENTS AT SINGAPORE. Thomas Church Esq., Resident W. R. George, Deputy Sheriff. Councillor. J. S. Clark, Coroner. Major Low (Madras Establishment) D. L. McSwiney, Sealer. Assistant Resident. B. Palmer, Bailiff. Rev. E. White, A. B., Chaplain. F. Johnston, Jailor. W. Montgomerie, M. D. Senior J. Tegg, Constable, China Town. Surgeon. J. Duncan, ditto, Compong Glam. W. Scott, Assistant Master Atten- M. McRae, night Constable. dant and Post Master. G. D. Coleman Superintendant of Attorney and Notary Public. Public Works, Overseer of Con- William Napier. vict Labour, and Land Surveyor. Assistants in Public Offices. Officers of the Court. Allan M., Assistant in the Dispen- C. H. Caldwell, Senior Sworn Clerk sary and Medical Stores. to the Registrar. Bell, T. H., ditto Land Office. W. Rodyk, second ditto ditto. Burrows, J. F., ditto Record Office, A. T. Fransiz and W. Anchant, In and in charge of the Recorder's terpreters. House. VOL. 11.] THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. 289 Campbell T. Parish Clerk. Belgian Consul. Carroll J. Assistant in the Maga- Auguste Moxhet, Esq. zine. Cropley J. J. ditto in the Convict Military. Department. Lieut. Colonel A. Cook. Comdt. Cuppage W. ditto Master Attend- Captain H. Prichard. ant's and Post Office, and in Lieut. J. Scager, Quarter Master. charge of the Signal Department. Ditto G. H. S. Yates, Acting Ad- Decosta A. Under Overseer of Con- jutant. victs. Ditto T. Carpendale. Gandoin R. ditto ditto. Ensigu A, W. Simkins. Gomes F. D. Assistant Governor's Ditto J. Curtis. Office. Ditto W. R. Aikman. Hewetson W. ditto in the Court of Surgeon G. A. C. Bright. Requests and Assessment Depart- Lieut. T. H. Campbell, Artillery. ment. Ditto C. M. Elliot, Engineers. Hewetson T. ditto Police Office. J. Harton, Overseer, Commissariat Holloway C. P. Deputy Register of Department. Imports and Exports. W. Hunt (Bengal Establishment), Leicester E. B. Assistant in the Ac- Deputy Assistant Commissary of countant, Treasury and Pay De Ordnance, in charge of the Arsenal partments. and Magazine. Leicester W. S. Do. Governor's W. Deare, Conductor of Ordnance. Office. Leicester E. Do. Import and Export Houses of Agency, 8c. Office. Messrs. Johnstone and Co. Loyd. H. Apprentice in the Dispen- Ditto Hamilton, Gray and Co. sary and Medical Store. Ditto McLaine Fraser and Co. Marsh J. A. Assistant in the Sur- Ditto Shaw, Whitehead and Co. vey Department. Ditto Armstrong and Co. Nicholson G. ditto in the Import Ditto Spottiswoode and Co. and Export Office. Ditto Syme and Co. Perreau, G. ditto ditto. Ditto Ker, Rawson and Co. Richards J. H., Head Overseer of Ditto Paterson and Co. Convicts. Ditto Guthrie and Co. Rebeiro C. Under Overseer of ditto. Ditto Purvis and Co. Woodford J. Assistant Apothecary. Ditto Boustead, Schwabe and Co. Harton J. Overseer of Roads. Ditto G. F. Davidson and Co. McCulloch H. Under ditto. Ditto Almeida and Sons. McSwiney D. L. Overseer of Public Ditto Crane, Brothers and Co. Works. Ditto Behn Meyers and Co. Consul for the United States of J. Stephen, Merchant and Agent. Ditto Rappa and Co. America. J. Gimmell, ditto. J. Balestier, Esq. W. S. Duncan, ditto. French Consul. G. A. Paterson, Agent of the Union Bank. M. M. Eugine Chaigneau. J. S. Clark, Merchant and Agent. PART 1. VOL. II. N N 290 [PART Ti STATISTICS. GENERAL LIST OF INHABITANTS. Bishop Andreyo F., Auctioneer. Crane T. O., Merchant and Planter. Alanson W., Clerk to Messrs. Bou William. stead Schwabe and Co. Courvezy H., French Catholic Allen M., Assistant Apothecary. Almeida Joze D., Senior Merchant. Coombs I. W., Clerk to the Deputy Almeida Joakim. ditto. Assistant Commissary General Almeida Joze, ditto, Junior, ditto. (China Special Service.) Almeida A. Cropley J. J., Clerk in the Convict Almeida F. Department. Anchant. W., Interpreter, to the Cuppage W., ditto in the Master Court. Attendant's and Post office, and in Armstrong J.,Merchant. charge of the signal Department. Apcar M. T. ditto. Coleman G, D., Supt. of Public Balestier J., American Consul, Mer. Works, Overseer of Convicts, and chant and Planter. Land Surveyor. Balestier R., Clerk to American Con- Davidson G. F., Merchant. sul. Davidson M. F., Clerk to Messrs. Bain G. A., Clerk to Messrs. Mc Shaw, Whitehead and Co. Lain, Fraser &c. DeWind A., Clerk to Messrs. Bou- Brennand R. Merchant. stead, Schwabe and Co. Bondeville J. J., Clerk to Messrs. Dunman T., Clerk to Messrs Pater- Purvis and Co. son and Co. Boustead E., Merchant. Drysdale G. C., ditto to Messrs. Barton C., Clerk to Messrs. John Johnston &c. ston and Co. Dickenson, T. D., Missionary and Bell T. H., Clerk in the Land De Teacher, Singapore Institution partment. Free School. Bird I.R., Carpenter and Blacksmith. Duncan, W. S., Merchant. Barton C., Shipwright and Keeper of Deutronquoy. 'T., Tavern Keeper. a Lodging House. DeCosta A., Under Overseer of Behn A., Merchant Convicts. Ball,-Missionary Duncan J., Constable Compong Bennett T., Plantor. Glam Division. Barroios F., Clerk to Messrs. Joho Farquhar, W. Clerk 'to Messrs. ston and Co. Boustead, Schwabe and Co. Beurel J., French Catholic Missi- Fraser J., Merchant and Agent. onary. Fraser L., ditto ditto. Burrows J. F., Clerk Record office, Fitch T., Taylor. and in charge of the Recorder's Fitzpatrick J., under Teacher, Sin- House, gapore Institution Free School. Caldwell H. C., Senior Sworn Clerk Frederick M., Printer and Book to the Registrar. Binder. Carapiet, M. I. Clerk to Messrs. M. Foster W. H., Watch Maker. and G. Mones. Fransiz A. T., Interpreter and Crier Chaigneau E., French Consul. to the Court. Campbell T., Parish Clerk. Gilman J. E., Merchant and Agent. Carroll I., Clerk in the Magazine. Guthrie A., ditto. Clark I. S., Merchant. Guthrie J., ditto. Clark J., Waterman. Gemmill J., ditto Carnie C., Merchant. George W. R., Book Keeper in the Conolly J., Senior Merchant. House of Messrs. Shaw, White- Conolly J., Junior Clerk to Messrs. head and Co. Spotteswoode, Conolly and Co. Graham, T. 1 VOL. 11.) 291 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. port Office. Goymour C., Waterman. Leicester W. S., Clerk in the Gog Goldie P., Shipwright. vernor's Office. Gordon A., Engineer and Black Leicester E., ditto Import and Ex- smith. Gandair R., Under Overseer of Con- Leicester J., ditto to Messrs. David victs. son and Co. Gomes T. D. Clerk Governor's McDonald W., Merchant and Office. Agent. Gabriel J., ditto to Messrs. Bous- McBryde, Missionary. tead, Schwabe and Co. McSwiney D. L, Overseer of Pub- Gregory M., ditto to Messrs. Apear lic Works and Sealer. and Stevens, Martin G., Merchant and Agent. Hardman J. S., Professor of Music. Martin M. J., Surgeon. Henry J., Shopkeeper. Martin F., ditto: Hewetson W., Clerk to the Cocert Meyer V. L., Shipwright. of Requests and Assessment De- McIntyre W., Clerk to Messrs. partment. Syme and Co. Hewetson T., ditto Police Office. McIntyre J. R., ditto to Mr. Bales- Hewetson H., ditto Messrs. Arm. tier. strong and Co. McCullock H., Under Overseer of Holloway C. P. Deputy Registrar Roads. of Imports and Exports, Moss M., Merchant. Harton J., Overseer of Roads. Maxhet A., Belgian Consul. Jack R., Clerk to Messrs. Johnston Markis L., Clerk to Messrs. Syme and Co. and Co. Jarvis --ditto to Messrs. Hamilton, Montgomerie W., Junior Clerk to Gray and Co. Messrs. Shaw Whitehead and Co. Jaggert W., Waterman. Mosses M., Shopkeeper and Auc- Johnston A. L., Merchant and tioneer. Agent. Mosses G., ditto ditto. Johnston, W. Mosses J. M., Watchmaker. Johnston F., Jailor. Mosses C., Merchant. Johanness J., Merchant. Melany J., Retired Shipwright. Joachim M. C., to Messrs. Apcar Myotte T., Clerk to Messrs. Arm- and Stevens. strong and Co. Keasberry, R. K., Missionary. Moor T. H., Head Master, Singa- Ker W. ř., Merchant and Agent. pore Institution Free School. Kock D., Shopkeeper. Maia F.S. P., Portugueze Priest. Kock G., ditto. Murray M., Master Royal Navy. Kock J., ditto. Marsh J. A., Clerk in the Survey Loyd H., Apprentice in the Dis- Department. pensary and Medical Stores. McRae M., Night Constable. Lorrain F., Clerk to Messrs. Paterson North A., Missionary. and Co. Nicholson G., Clerk in the Import LeCerf G., ditto to Messrs. Ker, and Export Office. Rowson, and Co. Nicholos, ditto. Leffler J., ditto to Messrs. Boustead Napier, Notary Public and Attorney. Schwabe and Co.. Orr R. W., Missionary. Lewis T., ditto to Messrs. Hamilton, Oliver, J., Punch House Keeper. Gray and Co. Palmer B., Sheriffs Bailiff. Light W., ditto to Messrs. Paterson, Paterson G. A., Agent to the Cale and Co. cutta Union Bank. Little E., Surgeon. Perreau C., Clerk to Messrs. Hamil- LeDein, -Superintendent of Coffee ton, Gray and Co. Plantations. Perreau G., ditto in the Import and Leicester E. B., Clerk in the Accts. Export Office. Teasury and Pay Offices. Purvis J., Merchant and Agent. 1 292 (PART 1 STATISTICS. Pereira L., Clerk to Messrs. Crane, Trevallies J. S., Missionary. Brothers and Co. Tegg J., Constable China Town. Pereira L. J. G., Macao Merchant. Vitalis J., Clerk to the Notary Place L., Clerk to Messrs. Syme Public. and Co. Vasconcellas A. J., Macao Mer- Phanoos Carapiet. chant. Rangel R., Clerk to Messrs. Spottes- White S. D., Clerk to the Calcutta woode and Co. Union Bank. Rimmer W. R., ditto to Messrs. Wilkinson W., Shipwright. Ker, Rowson and Co. Winter C., Clerk to Messrs. Pater- Ross J., Clerk to Mr. Melany. son and Co. Ryckmans, E. F., Professor of Music. Wingfield T., Clerk to Messrs. Roys G. F., Navigator. Syme and Co. Reimer J., Sailmaker, Woodford J. J., Assistant Apothe- Richards, J. H., Principal Overseer cary of Convicts. Woodford G., Clerk to Messrs. Ha- Rebeiro C., under Overseer of Con milton, Gray and Co. victs. Wood S., Mill-wright, &c. Rodyk W., Second sworn Clerk to Wooden J., Butcher and Shop- the Registrar. keeper. Scott Wm., Assist. Master Attendt. Wilson, J. and Post Master. Zechariah G., Merchant and Agent. Salmon J., Pensioner. Zechariah J., ditto ditto. Shaw W. D., Merchant and Agent. Zechariah A. T., Clerk to Messrs. Shaw C., Clerk to Messrs. Syme and G. and J. Zechariah. Co. Scott T., Merchant and Agent. Armenian Inhabitants. Scott A., ditto ditto. Carapiet Phanoos. Stephen J. Merchant and Agent. G. Zechariah, Merchant. Stewart W., Clerk to Mr. Stephen. Isaiah Zechariah, ditto. Stewart G. G., ditto to Messrs. A. J. Zechariah, Clerk to Messrs. Purvis and Co. G. and T. Zechariah. Stewart ditto ditto. A. Sarkis, Merchant. Stevens S., Merchant and Agent. M. Mosses, Shopkeeper. Siamie, J. L. G. Mosses, ditto. Merchant. J. Mosses, Watchmaker. Sutton C., Clerk to Messrs. Hamil- C. Mosses, Merchant. ton, Gray and Co. J. Johanness, ditto. Spottiswoode W., Merchant and M. T. Apcar, ditto. Agent. S. Stevens, ditto. Spottiswoode C., Clerk to Messrs. Seth A. s., ditto. Purvis and Co. Seth P. S., ditto. Shircore, A. M. Seth J. A., ditto. Stronack J., Missionary. J. Gabriel, Clerk to Messrs. Bous- Santoos, M. tead Schwabe and Co. Santoos, A. M. J. Carapiet, ditto to Messrs. M. Stansfield, T. and G. Mosses. Sykes A., Merchant and Agent. A. M. Shircore. Sarkies A., Merchant. M. C. Joakim, Clerk to Messrs. Seth P. S., ditto. Apcar and Stevens. Seth J. A., ditto. M. Gregory, ditto ditto. Seth A. S., VOL. 11.) 293 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS, MARINE INSURANCE SOCIETIES. Amicable Insurance Office. Bengal Insurance Society. Calcutta Insurance Company Calcutta Insurance Office. Canton Insurance Office. Commercial Insurance Company. Equitable Insurance Company. Hindoostanee Insurance Com- pany. Tropic Marine Insurance Com- pany. Universal Marine Insurance Com- pany. G. and J. Zechariah. A. S. Johnston and Co. McLaine, Fraser and Co. J. S. Clark and Co. C. Thomas and Co. Guthrie and Co. Spottiswoode and Co. Boustead, Schwabe and Co. Agents. Shaw, Whitehead and Co. Syme and Co. PRINCE OF WALES' ISLAND. This island, called Penang by the Malays, from some imaginary resem. blance its shape bears to the form of the betul put, of which Penang is the Malay name, is situated off the west coast of Quedah, and about two miles distant between latitude 5° 15' and 5° 29' north and longitude 1000 25' east; and was first taken possession of by the English in 1786. Its greatest extent is from north to south, it is upwards of fifteen miles long, and about twelve broad, and contains an area of about one hundred and sixty square miles, of which a little more than one-fifth is under cul- tivation. In regard to location, this island offers the greatest temptation on account of the success, with which the cultivation of spices there, bas been prosecuted. The climate is beautiful though decidedly not so healthy as that of the sister settlements of Singapore and Malacca. Almost the whole of the northern part is mountainous, and through the centre of the island runs a range of hills which are bigh at the north end, but decrease in magnitude as they extend towards the south. The highest point is that where the flag staff is placed, 2,248 feet above the level of the sea. There is no river of any magnitude. Two or three rivulets of excellent water descend from the hills into the sea. Many of the hills have been cleared, and planted with nutmegs and cloves : country houses adorn their summits. The hills and the low grounds, where not cultivated, are thickly covered with wood. Vegetation is splendidly luxuriant, and for miles the eye dwells only on one dense mass of mountain forest. In the valley grow various fruit trees, indigenous and imported. Tin ore has been found at the base of the hills, and elsewhere. The thermometer on the plain ranges between 76° and 90° Farenheit, mean temperature for the past two years 82º. On the higher hills from 64 to 76º. The climate of the high lands is delightful, and said to resemble that of Funchal in Madeira. The settlement has a school to which the Government monthly contributes 200 rupees. The population of the Island, according to the census taken in 1836, was 38,454, and that of Province Wellesley on the main land, which was. ceded to the English about the commencement of the present century, amounted to 47,555. making a total of 86,009, being an encrease of nearly 294 [PART 1. STATISTICS. On the 31st December, 1822, the 1 1 * thirty-five thousand in twelve years. numbers stood as follows: Malays and Buggerses, Acheenese, Battas (Samatrans), Chinese Chulias, Bengalese, Burmese and Siamese, Arabians, Armenians, Parsees, Native Christians, Caffres 24,520 651 924 8,900 6,915 1,670 819 153 19 13 1,172 119 > 45,775 Floating population, ... 2,000 Military, followers, and convicts, 3,032 Europeans and their descendants, 400 Grand Total, 51,207 Such a variety of different races are congregated here, that it is said there are twenty-two languages spoken on Prince of Wales' Island. J. W. Salmond, Resident Coun- J. Felix, ditto. cillor. J. Ross, Accountant's Treasury and W. T. Lewis, Assistant Resident. Pay Offices. Lieut. J. Ferrier, (Madras Establish- C. Wiseman, ditto. ment) 2nd Assistant Resident. T. G. Mitchell, Assistant in the J. J. Jones, A. B., Chaplain. Police Office. J. C. Boswell, Surgeon. A. DeCruze, ditto. G. Dawson, Harbour Master and J. Rodyk, Junior ditto Harbour Post Master. Master's and Import and Export Office. Officers of the Court. A. Mock, ditto Post Office. A. J. Kerr, Registrar and Clerk of J. Rodyk, Senr., Pensioner. the Crown. E. Jeremiah, Assist. Marine Store- A. Rodyk, Senior, Sworn Clerk to keeper's Dept. the Registrar. J. Jeremiah, ditto Harbour Master's J. Anderson, 2nd ditto. Office. C. Rodyk, Clerk to the Recorder. G. F. Gottlieb, ditto in the Assess- G. Stuart, Sheriff. ment Department. S. Herriot, Deputy Sheriff. J. Rozario, Overseer of Roads. N. McIntyre, Coroner. J. C. Smith, Parish Clerk. J. G. Symons, Hindoostanie and A. Reinhard, Organist. Malay Interpreter. J. Ash, Assistant Apothecary. M. J. Gandart, Chuliah Interpreter. A. DeRozario, Dresser. C. Williams, Jailor. McIntosh, Overseer, Chinese Poor S. Rentens, Bailiff. House. J. Peterson, Constable. J. Stacey, in charge of the Signal R. Jeremiah, ditto. Department and Government Hill. Assistants in the Public Offices. R. R. Light, Principal Overseer of the Convicts. J. Dragon, Resident Councillor's C. Capel, Under ditto. Office. N. McIntyre, Assistant, Land Office, E. Loureiro, ditto. A. DeSouza, ditto ditto. 1 VOL. 11.) 295 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. J. Hogan, Assistant, Province Wel- List of Inhabitants. ' lesley. W. Balhetchet. J. Sneider, Medical Assistant at do. F. Brown, Merchant and Planter. J. Leicester, Quit Rent Collector at G. Scott, Merchant. ditto. C. Scott, ditto. W. Angus, ditto ditto ditto. C. Smith, Surgeon. J. Mariano, ditto ditto ditto. C. F. Harcourt, Pensioner. Houses of Agency. J. Carroll, Senior, Pensioner. A. Reinhard, Clerk to Messrs. Revely Messrs. Brown and Co. and Co. Stuart and Co. E. Loureiro, Senior, Pensioner. Hall and Co. W. Phipps. Revely and Co. J. Phipps, Shopkeeper. C. Scott and Co. C. Baumgarten. Dennet, Shaw and Co. J. Palmer, Apothecary (Pensioner.) MALACCA. The town of Malacca is situated on the Malayan Peninsula, in latitude 2° 12' north and longitude 102° 10' east, is distant from Penang about 240, and from Singapore about 120 miles. The territory attached to it lies between the Malay states of Salengore to the northwest, and that of Johore to the southeast; interiorly and to the east, it is bounded by Rum- bowe and Johole, and on the west by the Straits of Malacca. Its mean length is about 45 miles, and mean breadth, including Nanning, 25, compri- sing an area of about 1,000 square miles. The earliest account of this settlement is of A. D. 1,252, when the Malays, driven from Singapore by the King of Acheen, migrated northwards and founded the town. In 1,290 it was peopled by the Arabs, and the Malay inhabitants converted to Mahomedanism In 1509, it was taken by the Portuguese under Albuquerque, who continued its rulers until 1642, when it was taken by the Dutch, who were in their turn deprived of it by the English in 1795, In 1818 it again reverted to the Dutch, and by them was again transferred to the English in 1825, by the treaty of London dated 17th March 1824. The climate of Malacca is celebrated for its salubrity, and supposed to be preferable either to that of Penang or of Singapore : the average range of the thermometer being generally from 76 to 88,mean temperature 81º. The rain falls at intervals of a few days through-out the year, keeping the face of the country in a state of perpetual verdure. The violent squalls, termed Sumatras, prevail during the south-west monsoon, which commences in May, and terminates in October. It was formerly a place of great trade, concentrating what is now shared and almost monopolized by its sister settlements, Penang and Singapore, but since the pogsession of the latter, its trade has dwindled away to insignificance, and almost limited to its own produce, manufactures, and consumption. The population including that of Nanning by the last census amounted to 37,706 bouls, principally Malays. Li Census of Malacca for the year 1840. Malays and Balayes,.... Chinese, 36,825 6,182 296 (PART 1 STATISTICS. Battas, Hindus, Chuliyahs, Siamese, Professing Christians, Caffres, Arabs,... Bengalese, Javanese, 217 915 121 29 2,600 2 7 27 121 Total, 47,046 souls. Residents at Malacca. A. Mijnoot, Assistant in the Police Office. S. Garling, Esq., Resident Councillor. W. Baumgarten, ditto Assessment T. Oxley, Assistant Surgeon, Super- intendant of Police, and Commis- G. D. Sharnhorst, ditto Import and Dept. sioner of the Court of Requests. J.B. Westerhout, Assistant ResidentJ. C. Nenbronner, ditto Land Dept. Export Office. Coroner, and ditto. W. Valberg, Surveyor. Officers of the Court. F. J. Nenbronner, Assistant in the B. Rodyk, Senior, Sworn Clerk to G. Gostelow, ditto Post Office. Marine Dept. the Registrar. P. R. Vansomeren, Deputy Sheriff . Military T. Nenbronner, Interpreter of the C. Sinclair, Major, 24th Regt. M. Dutch, Portuguese, and Malayan N. I. Commanding the Troops. languages, and Crier. M. C. Spottiswoode, Lieut. 24th Assistants in Public Offices. Regt. M, N. I. F.B. Lucas, Captain 8th Regt. M.N.I. P. R. Vansomeren, Accountant's and R. Mackenzie, Lieut. ditto. Treasury Offices. H. G. Napleton, ditto ditto. C. F. Keun, Record ditto. W. Shedden, Assist. Surgeon, ditto. GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION. No. 178. FORT WILLIAM, GENERAL DEPARTMENT. The 18th March, 1840.—The Governor-General in Council is pleased to appoint the Governor for the time being of Prince of Wales' Island, Singa- pore and Malacca, to be a Commissioner for the purpose of inquiring into and deciding upon the claims to hold lands within the Settlement of Prince of Wales' Island, Singapore and Malacca, under the pensions of Act. X of 1837. (Signed) G. A. BUSHBY, Secrctary to the Government of India. VOL. 11.] 297 THE EASTERN SETTLEMENTS. 29 With reference to the above Notification the public is hereby informed that leases for twenty years renewable at the expiration of that period for thirty years, at the option of the Lessee, will be issued to persons oca cupying or wishing to occupy ground in the Station of Malacca for Agri- cultural purposes on the following terms. Rent-free for two years. From 2nd. year to 5th year at 4 Annas per Acre. 5th 10th 8 10th 20th 1 Rupee and, at the expiration of the above period, the leases to be renewed, if required by the Lessee, at a maximum rate of 3 Rs. per acre for a further term of 20 years. Persons who have been allowed to settle on and clear land upon the understanding that they were to pay such rent as might be determined on by Government, will be entitled to leases on the above terms and rates. The period of lease and rate of Quit-rent to be calculated from the date of occupancy. The arrears of rent for the period of past occupation will be remitted on condition of prompt attendance to take out the lease now tendered, and the subjection of the tenure to competition bid for assess- ment of the rent value will be excused out of a consideration for the per- missive occupancy. Persons in occupation of ground without the sanction of Government intended for gardens or for building, and in the immediate vicinity of the town, will be entitled to leases on terms that may be mutually agreed upon between such occupants and the Commissioner, which will be regu- lated with regard to the value appertaining to such lands, according to the circumstances of soil and locality. Adverting to Mr. Commissioner Young's Notification of the 7th September, 1837, it is to be understood that Lessees taking land under the condition of the Notifications are to be altogether unrestricted in re- gard to the nature of the cultivation, the amount of their outlay, or other circumstances connected with their undertaking. The attention of all persons holding lands, without a legal tenure, is requested to Section VI. of Act XVI. of 1839, which directs that previ- ously to the issue of leases, solid land-marks to enable the land to be surveyed, shall be set up by the occupant at his own expense. It is further notified that the powers granted to the Collector under Act XVI. of 1839, are vested in the Resident Councillor at Malacca-or in the Superintendent of lands with his express sanction. (Signed) S. G. BONHAM, Governor of P. W. Island, Singapore g. Malacca, and Commissioner under Act X. of 1837. Malacca, 10th August, 1840. PART 1. VOL. II. 0 0 298 (PART 1. STATISTICS. NAGPORE. EXTENT.-BOUNDARIES.-GENERAL APPEARANCE.-SOIL.—&c. &c, Extent and Boundaries..-The territories of the Rajah of Nag- pore, are situated between the 18° 40' and 20° 40' degrees of north ſatitude, and the 78° 20° and 83rd degrees of east longitude. Their ex- treme length from north to south may be stated at 450 miles, and their breadth from east to west about 350 ; but their average length and breadth cannot be taken at more than 300 miles. The area of these territories has been computed by the late Colonel Blacker, not to exceed 70,000 square miles. They are bounded on the north by the Saugor and Nerbudda districts; on the west by the Wurdah and Wyne Gunga rivers, which divide them from Berar ; on the south and south-west by an imaginary waving line, extending westward from Goomsoor in Ganjam, to the source of the Indiroutee river, and along the course of that river to its junction with the Godavery below Chinnoor; on the south and south-east by uncivi- lized districts belonging to the Nizam ; and on the east by Sirgoojah and Sumbhulpore, the Sirgoojah and Koorbah ranges of hills, and the Hutsoo river and Tooljah and Sonakhur mountains. On the north and west the boundaries are well defined and strongly marked; on the south and east imperfectly, from the want of a regular survey. General Appearance and Elevation. The general aspect of the country, with the exception of the plains immediately in the vicinity of Nagpore, between the Wurdah and Wyne Gunga rivers, and those of Chuteesgurh, which are extensive, and reach from the foot of the Langhee range of hills to the banks of the Mahanuddee—is mountainous and woody ; to the north and east, and south-east, the country is hilly and much covered by jungle, but occasionally fertile, and tolerably well cultivated valleys are met with. Towards the north, the Puchmurree hills rise to an elevation of 4200 feet; but the levels of the different parts of the country have not yet been fully ascertained : that of the plains near Nagpore, and of those of Chuteesgurh, may be about 1,100 above that of the sea. Soil.-In the open country and in the valleys of the hilly parts, the soil is almost invariably black loam, swelling from the absorption of mois- ture, and when drying, leaving large cracks or crevices, which give free exit to the effluvia arising from decomposed vegetable matter. In the hilly parts of the country, and in some parts of Chuteesgurh, the soil is red, showing the presence of iron. The black soil, however, predominates greatly in quantity over that of any other description. The Nagpore terri- tory is divided into five Soubahships, and these again into Pergunnahs. The Soubahships are those of Nagpore or Deoghur, below the ghats ; Chendwarah or Deoghur above the ghats ; Bhundarah, or the Wyne Gunga district ; Raeepore or Chuteesgurh, and Chandah or Chunderpore. The inhabitants live in open towns or villages, in the more open and best cultivated parts of the country, unprovided with walls or hedges. In the jungle tracts, the villages are provided with bamboo fences. Towards the Wurdah mud forts are numerous ; and forts, constructed partly of mud, partly of stone, are scattered all over the open country. Generally speak- ing, the houses are of a very poor description. The principal towns are Nagpore, Raeepore, Ruttenpore, Chandah, Bhundarah, Powney, Oomrer, Khappa, Moharree, Poomsur, Hingenghat, Arvee, and Rainteak. Rivers.—The principal rivers of the Nagpore territory, west of the Langhee Hills, are the Wurdah and Wyne Gunga ; the latter river, after VOL. 11.) 299 NAGPORE. receiving the contents of the former, falling into the Godavery near Chin- noor ; and their tributaries, the Kunhun, the Pech, and the Čolar. These are all navigable during the rains, from the middle of June to the end of September, or middle of October, for rafts, canoes, and boats of light draught ; but they are little used for the transmission of produce, and hardly ever for the purposes of irrigation. Their banks are generally high and abrupt, but becoming less decided in character, as the rivers flow through the open country; their beds are sandy, but occasionally rocks obstruct the passage of their waters. East of the Langhee hills are : The Mahanuddee which rising near Shawah in Bustar, passes through the eastern part of Chuteesghurh, and is navigable from July to February, for boats of consid- erable size, but its channel is much obstructed by rapids, which render its navigation somewhat dangerous. The Sew Nuddee rising in Wyraghur, passing through Chuteesgurh, and falling into the Mahanuddee. The Kuroo rising in Kakain, passing close to Raeepore, and falling into the Sew. The Jouk rising in Nowaghur Beundy, and falling into the Mahanuddee, after flowing along the eastern boundary of Chuteesgurh. The Hutsoo rising in Lohajepore running along part of the eastern boundary of the same district, and falling into the Mahanuddee. The Aeep which passes Belaspore. All these rivers are navigable, as are those in the western districts, during the rains. Lakes and Tanks. There are no natural lakes in the Nagpore territories. Tanks are numerous, particularly in the Chuteesghur and Wyne Gunga districts : some have been formed by excavation, but the mode generally adopted is more simple,—it is that of throwing a bund of earth, faced with hewn stone, or of solid masonry, across the gorge of any valley favourably situated, by which the water falling or flowing into the valley is collected. The most remarkable of these are the Nowagaun bund of Pertaubghar, 24 miles in circumference, and the Sewnee bund in Sahun- ghurree, 6 miles in circumference. There are three fine pucka tanks at Nagpore, which supply the city with water, and many others of lesser note, in different parts of the country. Wells are chiefly used for domestic purposes, irrigation being practised almost wholly from tanks. Climate and Diseases. The climate of the Nagpore territories is subject to considerable variety. In the plains severe cold is seldom felt, though hoar frost has been observed a few marches east of Nagpore ; but in the more elevated tracts, and at Chendwarah, ice forms in water exposed to the night air in the cold months. The cold weather extends from Novema ber to February. February is pleasant; March warm; April, May and June are the hot-weather months, for though rain generally falls in June, the weather frequently continues to be hot. July, August, and Septem- ber are the rainy months. October is frequently close and sultry; hail storms are not unfrequent, and do much damage. Europeans and natives are apt to suffer from fever on their first arrival at Nagpore, but after the seasoning of their first year, do not appear to be more unhealthy than in other parts of India, similarly situated. Fever, varying in type from the common intermittent, to the more deadly remittent, is the prevalent disease, and cholera, though it seldom visits the vicinity of Nagpore, appears to the eastward near Raeepore with severity. Small pox, dysentery, syphylis, rheumatism, and foul ulcers are the other diseases which are most frequently met with among the people of the country, and over these, the native practitioners appear to have little power. No regular register of the thermometer or barometer having been kept at Nagpore, it is out of our power to state the average height of either, at the different hours, and seasons of the year. The quantity of rain which has fallen at the Residency, taking the average of five years, is 363 inches. 300 STATISTICS. [PART 1. Population.-By the census of 1825, the last which has been taken, the population of the Nagpore territories amounted to 2,470,552 souls, inha- biting 10,899 towns and villages; but it now probably amounts to nearly 3,200,000. In the year above quoted, the number of souls to the square mile, in the best inhabited parts of the country, was 95}, but if the jungle tracts be included it will not probably amount to more than half that number. From a register of births and deaths kept in the Nagpore district for two, and in the Wyne Gunga district for five years, the births appear to have been 1 in 25, i in 24, 1 in 29, and 1 in 26. The deaths 1 in 47, 1 in 43, 1 in 53, and 1 in 42. Division of the Population.-Moosulmauns, 58,368 Gonds, 291,603 Hindoos, 2,124,795 Castes.—The number of different castes into which the population is divided is 114, viz. Bramins, 9 Divisions. Agricultural castes, 13 Manufacturers and Artizans, 29 Merchants, Bankers, and Shopkeepers, 14 Coolies, 16 Miscellaneous castes, . . 12 Mendicants, Moosulmauns, Out-caste Gonds, &c. 21 ... ... ... 99 .. ... ... ... 99 ... 114 Gonds, Koonbees, and Mahars are more numerous than any of the other castes. Languages. The languages chiefly spoken are the Marhatta, Telinganah and Hindoostanee, and the Goondee and its dialects by the Gonds and Hill tribes,—the last is not a written language. Religion.— The Moosulmauns and Hindoos follow their religion without any particular departure from, or addition to the usual forms; but the Gonds are idolators, exceedingly superstitious, attending to omens, signs, and times, and having their own peculiar rites. Human sacrifices were once publicly offered by the Rajah of Bustar, at the shrine of Dunteewar- rah Davee, and it is still doubtful, and a subject under investigation, whe- ther they are not now secretly practised. General Character of the Inhabitants.—The inhabitants of the plains are, generally speaking, industrious in their several callings, peaceably dis- posed, and, with the exception of their fondness for spirituous liquors, which leads to excesses and to poverty, are not viciously inclined." To- wards strangers, if well treated, their manners are civil and obliging; and it surely speaks well for the generally good character of the people, that crimes of a grave character are, comparatively speaking, rare, and that to officers travelling through the Nagpore territories, a guard is hardly neces- sary. Of the hill tribes it is difficult from our ignorance to speak ; they are reported to be fond of sport, to work just enough to supply their own wants, and the demands of their superiors, and though stained by crimes which superstition induces them to commit, and given to intoxication, they are not more vicious than their want of civilization and education would lead us to expect. Natural Productions. There are no wild animals peculiar to the coun try. The jungles abound with game of the larger kinds, such as tigers, leopards, panthers, bears, jackals, hyenas : of deer, the antelope is found in the plains, in considerable numbers ; and the neelgaie, elk,and spotted deer in the jungles. The wild buffalo frequents the banks of the Mahanuddee, and VOL. II.] 301 NAGPORE. the plains in its vicinity, and the wild hog is met with in almost every part of the Nagpore territory. Troops of wild dogs have been seen occa- sionally. Hares are numerous, but not of large size. The tanks of Chutees. gurh are covered by wild fowl,-many of the more rare kinds-during the cold season. The paddy fields teem with snipe ; and the bustard, floriken, black and grey partridge, and quail in all its varieties are always to be found by the sportsmen, in the localities suited to their respective habits. The different rivers abound with excellent fish. The domes tic animals are those common to other parts of India. Cows, bul. locks, buffaloes, sheep, goats, pigs, asses and tattoos,—horses are not bred except by the Rajah, for his own use. The forests of Cheetus- gurh abound with dye stuffs, gums, honey, bees-wax, lack, and the wild silk, called tusser. The Teak tree, the Aeen Rujasall, Tendoo, and other large trees proper for building, but the Saul is found only in the Ummur- kuntuk range. The plants, pulses and grains chiefly cultivated, are the cotton, sugar-cane, hemp, oil plants of five different kinds, tobacco, opium, arrow-root, and the beetle plant. The pulses, those common to other parts of India, wheat, gram, rice, joar, with Indian corn, bagra and barley,—the three last mentioned in small quantity. To these may be added the pro- duce of garden cultivation, ginger, coriander seed, aniseed, cuminin, sweet fennel, chillies and turmeric. Metals and Minerals.- Iron is found in profusion, and smelted from the ore in considerable quantities; gold in small grains, but not to any extent, has been found in the sands of the Jouk Nuddee, Maha Nuddce, Sew Nuddee, Deo Nuddee, and Marree Nuddee. The diamond mines of Wyra. ghur were once famous, but have ceased to be worked. Marble, capable of receiving a fine polish, has been found in different parts of the country. Talc, red and yellow ochre, and limestone abound, but good clay for bricks is scarcely to be met with. Coal has not been discovered, but scientific research and experiment would probably bring to light many valuable minerals, and fossil remains, hitherto unknown. Agriculture.--The system of husbandry pursued in the Nagpore domin- ions, is much the same as in other parts of India. The principal crops are the khureef, of which the chief grains, besides rice, kootkee, kodoo and suwa, are joar and toor. Those of the rubbee, wheat, gram, linseed, moong, till, mussoor, and the castor-oil plants. The preparation of the land for khureef crops, consisting in ploughing, takes place in May; the sowings im- mediately after the first fall of rain, and the corps reach maturity in all November and December. The cultivation of rice is laborious, as it is generally transplanted, and set by the hand, and the land requires to be carefully manured, ploughed, and weeded. The return of rice is generally 10 fold. Rubbee.—The ground for the rubbee crops is generally prepared in June and July, and then remains untouched until near the end of the rains, when it is again ploughed to free it from weeds. The seed is put in on single or triple rows, by a drill plough or drill rake, in the months of November and December, ripens in February, and is cut down in March. The produce of either crop is always trodden out by bullocks. Garden Cultivation. In addition to the productions already enumerat- ed, there are to be found oranges and limes of excellent kinds, plantains, many varieties of native vegetables, and melons of good quality, and in the gardens of the Europeans, peaches, strawberries, loquats, apples, &c. and most of the European vegetables; carrot, lettuce, and beet root, flourish, and attain a great size ; grapes have failed. Manures. The dung of cattle, sheep and goats, and ashes, stubble decayed leaves, and other refuse, are used as manure. 302 [PART 1. STATISTICS. Instruments of Agriculture. The chief implements of husbandry are the paring plough, two kinds of ploughs adopted to strong and light soils respectively, the hoe plough for weeding, and the drill plough or rake for sowing: to these may be added the sugar mill, with three horizontal rol- lers, a powerful machine, and the common oil-mill. Means of Transport.-Bullocks and buffaloes are extensively used, so are hackeries, which being set upon low narrow wheels, furnished with iron tires, do fearful damage to the roads which they traverse, and cannot be used in wet weather. Trades. The trades principally exercised are those of masons, stone- cutters, carpenters, blacksmiths, potters, sawyers, lime burners, rope and basket or mat-makers, braziers and burnishers, goldsmiths, cotton carders, thread spinners, weavers, dyers, tailors, makers of bangles, oil makers, brushmakers, saddlers, shoemakers, workers in lacquer, distillers, confec- tioners, and gunpowder makers. Manufactures.-White cotton cloths called bhyroos: selas, doputtas, turbans, doreeas, sahrees, dotees, roomals, and khadees varying in size, and at all prices, from 12 annas to 50 rupees, according to order. Besides these there are other kinds of cotton cloths, manufactured from the thread after being dyed, with silk borders or plain, and sometimes embroidered at the ends and on the edges with gold. Cloths are also manufactured of silk, or from a mixture of silk and cotton, sometimes plain, sometimes richly bordered with gold thread, interweaved, but the more ex- pensive kinds varying in price from 50 to 500 Rs. are only made to order. Utensils of copper, brass, and mixed metal are extensively manufactured in the towns of Bhundarah, Ruttenpore, and Chanda. In the country, coarse woollen blankets and taut puttees from the sun or hemp plant are made in considerable quantities. Imports.-Salt from the coast, also cocoa. nuts. From Mirzapore, shawls, kincaubs, silks wrought and raw, muslips, piece goods, chintzes, some sugar and sugar-candy, indigo, spices and drugs. From Bundlecund, piece goods, sugar, kharwa, salt petre. From Bombay, Europe and China goods, woollens particularly, coral and salt. From Aurungabad and Poonah, gold in coin and bar, gold thread and lace, vessels and metals of all kinds, sandal wood, drugs, spices, and numerous other articles. Exports.-Cotton cloths, and silk goods, raw cotton, goor, gram and lack, bees wax and honey. Of the value of the imports or exports no satis- factory account can be given. Zemeendars.—There are many zemeendars who hold their lands from the Rajah of Nagpore, by payment of tribute or quit-rent, and are almost independent in the exercise of their power in their own zemeendaries : of these, the most considerable are the Rajas of Bustar, Karonde Kahair; the chiefs of Khyraghur, Nandgaon, Kumundhah, Pandareea, Koondnan, Sona- khan, Komptah, and Puchmurree, with many more of lesser note, too numer- ous to insert; and number and the extent of talooks which they hold on re- gular engagements, very great, though the tribute is small. These chiefs and zumeendars seldom visit the capital unless semmoned to the pre- sence of the rajah, and that summons, the more distant do not always find it expedient to obey. They are a wild class of beings: the most civi- lized persons among them would appear to be the zemeendars of Nand- gaon, Khyragurh, and Komptah. Map.— The territories of His Highness the Rajah of Nagpore have been partially surveyed, and a map, as far as that survey went, was prepared, VOL. 11.) 303 NAGPORE. and may be found in the Surveyor General's Office. From that map the one here given has been prepared. Military Establishment.-- The Rajah of Nagpore is by treaty bound to hold in readiness, and furnish to us, according to the terms therein set forth, 1000 Marhatta horse, armed, equipped and disciplined after the fashion of the Marhattas. Over this body of horse we have no controul, but might object, if in time of service, when called upon to march, they should be found wanting in efficiency as to horses or equipments. The Rajah's army consists of the troops under noted. Infantry. 3 Battalions of regular Infantry, and 2 Rifle Companies, mustering men and officers included, 2449 i Khas Rissalah irregular Infantry, 484 Cavalry. 4 Regiments of horse and 200 silladars, mustering men and officers included, 1939 Horsemen, relations of the Rajah, and Munkarries, 347 i Troop of regular cavalry, trained, armed and accoutred, on the model of our native cavalry, 223 Artillery. 10 Foot and 2 Horse artillery guns, artillerymen, and drivers, with syces and grass-cutters: 315 Men attached to elephants with the force, 6 Magazine establishment, 119 Military Kutcherry establishment, 51 ... ... ... ... ... Total... 5933 Recapitulation. Foot Soldiers, Horsemen of all kinds, ... Artillery, Magazine establishment, Office, &c. ... 2933 2509 315 119 57 5933 The foot soldiers of His Highness' army are an orderly, well-behaved class of men, and many of the officers, commissioned and non-com- missioned, having served in the force from the time of its being first raised up to the present day, the system of discipline introduced whilst His Highness's army was commanded by European Officers, though some- what relaxed, still continues in force. The horsemen are respectable in character, and family, generally speaking, and have, when sent on service within His Highness's territories, shown on more occasions than one, that spirit which animated them in former days. On the whole they are well mounted, clothed, and armed, and may be termed a very efficient body of men. Indeed the Rajah's army may be pronounced superior to that of any native prince, which has not the advantage of being com- manded by Europeans. Pay was formerly issued to the troops of the Nagpore army very irregularly, and though there never occurred any serious disturbance on this account, the men were much distressed, having to borrow money for their subsistence at exorbitant rates of interest. His Highness has lately made an arrangement for the payment of his army once in three nonths, with which both officers and men appear to be satisfied. The Rajah's principal cantonment is situated at Paldee 6 miles east of Nagpore, but considerablc bodies of horse and foot are 304 (PART 1. STATISTICS. stationed at Bhundarrah and Raeepore, and smaller bodies in different parts of the country for the purpose of escorting treasure, and preserving tranquillity. Judicial Establishment.-Police. The Soubahs of the districts of Chuteesgurh, Bhundarah, Chandah, and Chendwarrah, are Magistrates within their respective jurisdictions. The district of Nagpore being more extensive, the Soubah in his duties as Magistrate has the assistance of a Superintendent of police. The duties of the Police Department in the Pergunnahs are performed by the Kumaivishdars, who act as our Daroghas do, and in their respec- tive villages by the Potails assisted by one or more Kotwals according to the size of their villages. At each Thannah the Kumaivishdars have an esta- blishment of Burkundazes, and in some Pergunnahs where required, Cho- kies are established, particularly on those parts of the roads where their is much jungle ; but it is creditable to His Highness's arrangements as well as to the general character of the people of this country, that robberies are much less frequent in the Rajah's Khalsa country, than in any part of our provinces. Judicial Courts.—The Soubahs of the several districts investigate all criminal cases, submitting their proceedings to the Rajah with their senti- ments appended, as to the punishment which should be awarded. Sentence is passed by His Highness, and orders are then issued to the Soubahs directing them to carry it into execution. The Superintendent of Police in the Nagpore district, possesses the same powers as the Soubahs of the other districts. Punishments affecting life are hardly ever awarded by His Highness, or if awarded seldom inflicted. Confinement in irons with labour on the roads for a term of years or for life, and fines, are generally resorted to. Mutilation within His Highness's Khalsa dominions is unknown, but has been practised by wild uncivilized Zemindars such as the Rajah of Bustar. Civil Jurisdiction.—TheKumaivishdars can entertain and decide suits for claims not exceeding 300 Rs. An appeal lies from their decisions to the Soubahs. The Soubah can entertain and decide cases to any amount, and from these decisions an appeal can be made to the Rajah. Punchayets are much in use by all the Civil Courts, and when fairly constituted, their decisions, particularly in the Mofussil, are generally satisfactory. In the city of Nagpore there is a Superintendent of Police who also possesses the same powers as Criminal Judge, as the Soubahs of districts. There are also two Civil Courts, the lower of which can entertain and decide suits for sums not exceeding 300 Rs. and the higher, claims to any amount. In these Courts too, Punchayets are much employed. Suttees, during the time when Mr. Cavendish was Resident, were prohi- bited by the Rajah throughout his territories, and none have since oc- curred. REVENUES AND CHARGES FOR THE YEAR 1249 FUSLEE. Receipts, Land Revenue, 36,18,038 14 11 Oobury or (tribute) from Zemindars, 2,59,347 0 0 Abkaree, 1,61,192 4 9 Pandree, 60,242 14 15 Sayer, 6,18,776 0 11 Servaee, 66,657 7 115 Ayeen Duffu, , 75,170 6 83 Mint, 7,439 10 6 ... ... ... ... 48,66,864 14 5 VOL. 11.] 305 NAGPORÉ. Disbursements. Gond Rajah's share, ... 1,21,389 1 0 Pensions and Jageers, ... 4,69,951 7 6 Religious and Charitable expences,... 1,56,034 15 10 Expences of Police and Collections... 5,96,787 15 81 Court of Appeal, Road Repairs, 12,790 96 Personal expences in the different Departments, 12,00,888 11 103 Army, 14,13,774 14 5 Paid to the Honorable Company, 9,50,441 7 63 49,22,559 3 5 ... Balance 55,694 4 111 By this statement, His Highness' disbursements exceed his receipts by the balance above noted; but for the last twelve months His Highness' attention has been carefully and constantly turned to the improvement of his finances, and the decrease of expenditure. The success which has attended his exertions in the detection and reform of abuses, and in the more equable distribution of the revenue in some pergunnahs of the Nagpore district is considerable; and there is good reason to hope that having now seen the good effects of a sedulous attention to his affairs, he will not relax, but rather encrease those exertions which have led to results so important and beneficial to his interests; and that in the course of a very few years, His Highness' income will so far exceed his expenditure, as to leave a surplus sufficient to relieve him of the debts he has incurred, and to provide for any unforeseen expences. It may not be deemed out of place to add that His Highness is humane, charitable; and well-disposed, possessing fair talents, and the wish to act well; but unfortunately his education was against him, and until lately indolence, carelessness, and a turn for extravagance and for amusement, rather than business, enabled designing persons to take advantage of the powers with which they were vested, very much to the injury of his good name, and to the detriment of his interests. The day of their power has passed away; His Highness has been successfully impressed with the danger likely to arise from so indolent a course, and has shown that he not only can attend to the administration of his own affairs, but has also evinced a determination to persevere in the line of conduct he has adopted. It now remains to conclude this memorandum; by adverting to the duties imposed on the Resident and his Assistant. Previous to the surrender of the Nagpore territories into the hands of His Highness which event took place partially in 1825-26, and wholly in 1830, the conduct of the affairs of the Nagpore country was vested in the Resident and his assistants; but on the Rajah succeeding to the undivided administration, the powers of the Resident were limited, and his duties strictly defined. With respect to His Highness, the Resident has power, by treaty, not only to afford his advice to the Rajah when applied to for counsel on any particular occasion, but has also authority, when circumstances shall appear to the Resident to point out the propriety or necessity of such a course, to tender his advice, and urge His Highness to compliance. Should the Resident become aware of the prevalence of any improper system, of any abuse or flagrant irre- gularity, he would be justified, in pointing out to His Highness, and urging him, by all proper means, to alter and reform the same. Generally the duties of the Resident are to cement and cherish the good understand- ing which has so long prevailed between the British Government and the Rajah of Nagpore, and to forward all complaints or applications made by the British subjects to His Ilighuess, and vice versa. With the PART I. VOL. II. PP 306 (PART 1. STATISTICS. exception of interference in points affecting the good Government of His Highness' territories, the duties which the Resident has to perform, do not differ in any respect from those imposed on the Residents at other native courts. The Resident has only one assistant, who has charge of the Treasury, the Post Office and Thuggee Department, and who has lately been appointed Superintendent of that part of the road from Calcutta to Bombay, which passes through His Highness' country. The police duties of the residency bazars are entrusted to the Commandant of the escort, which escort is supplied by the troops stationed at the British cantonment of Kamptee, 9 miles distant from the residency. In all cases in which there may exist a necessity for that measure, the Resident can call upon the Brigadier commanding the Nagpore subsidiary field force stationed at Kamptce for troops, to such an extent as may be deemed advisable, as well as for any portion of the body of horse, which the Rajah is bound by treaty to maintain. The force at Kamptee consisted, until within the last two years, of four regiments of native infantry, one of Europeans, one regiment of native cavalry, one troop of horse, and two companies of foot artillery ; but, by the detachment of troops to Jubbelpore and Hossingabad, it has suffered a decrease of two regiments of infantry. Routes from Nagpoor as far as they run through the Rajah's Territories*. Distance. From Nagpore to Cal- cutta. Rivers. M. | F. Y. Kanaun 8 11 8 8 5 7 11 11 1 53 6 73 6 71 Wyne Gunga 5} 6 1 9 3 Bagh River 0 Το Apowlee... Matnee... Kurbee... Bundarrah... Kokungurh... Laknee... Sakoolee... Urjoonee... Moondeepar... Sirreepoor near the Bagh River... S Chotabrinjara... Chechowlee... Oorarbaad... Indermarrah... Kamgakattarah Droog... Joorah Treaw... Batung... Raeepoor... Nurdah.. Apowndah... Bynsah... Duttaun... Pungaun... Lowan Kutdhal Mutteah... 8 8 10 Water and forage always procurable, and supplies to any extent on reasonable notice to the Durbar. 23 7 Sew ... Karown ... 11 11 8 8 9 10 8 11 11 10 9 7 11 ... WOWOOCO Mahanuddy Jong .. See also Road Book-Part I, Vol. II, VOL. II.) 307 JANSEE. Distance. From Nagpoor to Bom- bay. Rivers. M. F. Y. To Deyghow... Sabdabah.. Upowla.. Kaleghur. Saloo Elekalee.. Miss Kindaghow Cowtah... Wurdah... 8 6 7 7 6 7 6 8 2 6 1 4 7 1 165 143 42 187 75 118 67 142 73 5 2 From Nagpoor to Mad- ras. 0 Kurruck River.. Sindee.. Hingooghat... Naugree... Waroora. 11 17 18 10 15 13 1 4 7 3 84 | Noq 208 Kurruck 185 Winda 86 95 201 Wurdah Water and forage in abundance, and supplies always procurable in any quantity, on reasonable notice to the Durbar. Woody.. From Nagpoor to Bai-j tool. 170 198 Burranpoory.. Oomree.. Cheecholy.. Pandoona .. Ghatberrooly... 14 13 11 13 15 5 5 5 2 72 172 0 From Nagpoor to Jub- bulpoor. Pech River .. 1 Mile west of Ramteak Bowlee . 14 11 5 0 3 0 181 205 0 Soor JANSEE. UNDER BRITISH MANAGEMENT. This estate has been progressively improving, since it was taken under our management in 1838-39. Entering upon the duty at the close of a year of awful visitation from famine, with the country almost laid waste of its population; with a turbulent soldiery, clamorous for arrears of pay, devastating the few villages which still retained their inhabitants ; with an empty treasury, and the territory mortgaged to a ruinous extent, the prospect was melancholy, and abundantly discouraging: yet, with partial exceptions, the surviving cultivators have returned to their homes, and a 308 (PART 1 STATISTICS. five years' settlement has been concluded with them; the soldiery bave had their fair claims equitably adjusted, and discharged; funds for pressing want were procured on credit, and, after repaying our new loans, we have a large balance of surplus cash to meet the old demands of the creditors of the state. The land revenue assets of the estate on its new settlement, averaged nearly 7 lacs of rupees per annum; and, as engagements in almost every case have been made with the zemindars, and the assessments are not heavy, at the expiration of the existing settlement, a moderate increase may be calculated upon. There is a very large quantity of the best land estimated at about 2 lacs of beegahs, held by pundits and others, as charitable grants, &c.; but we believe the grants have been for the most part personal. We understand that at least an addition of i lac of rupees to the revenue may be calculated upon, whenever enquiry shall be instituted into these tenures ; but as many of the holders are persons in indigent circumstances, or of the brahminical class, it has been the plan to avoid all interference with them. There is a superior class of land-holders, known in this part of the country as Ghurreedars, who possess lands, some under sunnuds, and others under the right of long occupation, on the payment of an annual quit-rent, and the obligation of military service. These have already been investigated, so far as to show that the tenures are valid, and the duties of Tenancy observed. The only remaining source of revenue is the Department of Customs, yielding, at present, an income of about 30,000 rupees. If Government assume the territory, and this is relinquished, in harmony with the general custom arrangements, limiting collections to the river Jumna, as a fron- tier line; then, as stamps will in the event contemplated, be introduced, these will, in all probability, besides paying for the courts of civil jus- tice, yield a surplus, equivalent to the amount relinquished. The amount, moreover, even if collections were continued, would be much reduced, owing to the necessity for a revision of the whole department, and the rejection of many of the items which are of a character open to objec- tion for the system generally is said to be burthensome to the people. Altogether, therefore, the probable income of the territory, after a year or two, may be taken at between nine and ten lacs of rupees, which is chargeable with the ordinary expenses of the establishments, civil and military, and the extraordinary expenses of paying the debts of the state, and providing for the old adherents of the family. The ordinary expenses of the Civil Establishments * Revenue,..70,000 are about 1,30,000* Balashahee rupees per annum, Judicial, -. 60,000 + Note.-1 per cent and if to this be added about 20,000f rupees for con- on the land revenue tingent expenses, the whole charge becomes about 1,50,000 rupees. Civil courts have not yet been bursement for mak- ing roads ; it is dis established, the parties in civil matters having been bursed in communi. referred in all cases to arbitration for the settlement cation with the Agent to the Lt. Governor. of their claims: but this is, of course, merely a tem- porary expedient : when Civil courts shall be estab- lished, the fees or stamp duties (if stamp paper be introduced) will more than provide for the expense. The only military charge is on behalf of the legion, which is credited with two lacs of rupees yearly. If the civil charges therefore be calculated at 1,50,000 rupees, the le- gion at 2,00,000 rupees, and the allowances to old dependants of the family of the chief, together with former pensioners, be estimated at 1,00,000, the total annual charge on the revenues of the territory may be is allowed as a dis- VOL. 11.) 309 JANSEE. Record Office 880 8 stated at about 4 lacs, leaving a surplus to provide for the pay- ment of the debts, the erection of public buildings, &c. of between four and five lacs. The public buildings already erected, or in progress of erection, are a kucherry at Oraee, at an expense of about 4,227 ru- Kucherry... 3,346 8 pees; a treasury at Oraee 8,500; a public kucherry for each of the assistants at Oraee, Jaloun, Mote and Balance Rs. 4,227 0 Muhaba at 650, and a Huwalat at each of these places at 1,100. A tuhseel kucherry, where it may be found necessary, has also been sanctioned at a cost of about 300. The treasury has necessarily been rather expensive from the special necessity in this part of the country of adopting every precaution for the security of the money. The treasure is deposited in a well, the mouth of which is protected by two strong iron gratings, the communication from above being provided for by a moveable ladder; a strong wall 12 feet high, with a parapet of 4 feet, loop-holed at the bastion, has been thrown round the whole enclosure, and includes within the ravelin, the treasury office. The public are admitted only into this outer court, the guard alone into the inner; and as there is a strong door with a wicket between the two courts, and the door is to be kept shut, the guard are effectually protected against surprise, whilst the treasure being below the surface of the ground, the whole space within the inner walls is left free from obstruction of any kind, and might be readily held by 25 men against a large attacking force. Independent of the above, a bridge of pucka masonry has been built over a nullah at Oraee, but the expense is only 1577 Balashahee rupees. At present there is no jail : the prisoners under examination, or con- victed of petty offences, are lodged in the assistant's huwalats, and as respects these no further provision, is required. Those convicted of heavy offences are kept in huts of the description provided for working parties on the great trunk road ; but eventually, other arrangements must be made, and should the Government of the country become ours, it may perhaps be a good opportunity to try the experiment of a central jail, of the description recommended to the Supreme Government by the Prison Discipline Committee. The only remaining subject of importance to be noticed is the amount of old debts, due to individuals. În endeavouring to ascertain the valid- ity of the claims, the local officers have experienced the greatest difficulty and embarrassment : in cases in which accounts have been pre- sented, they have been palpably unworthy of credit: whilst, in others, no accounts have been rendered, and at last, as regards the claims on mort- gages, the officers have been compelled to adopt a system of calculation, which, in some respects, gives great advantages to the public creditors, but in others is open to objections. It would unnecessarily swell this, to enter upon the details here. It will be sufficient to state generally, that it is estimated that the amount of claims liable to adjustment, ranges from 10 to 14 lacs of rupees. Although so much progress as was at first anticipated has not been made in the liquidations of the claims of public creditors, this has been owing to their offering no satisfactory explanations, accounts, or vouchers in support of their claims, notwithstanding repeated notices have been issued to them, reminding them of the omission. The income also has fallen short of the estimated revenue, but the expenses, in like manner, have been kept much within the authorized outlay. When it is recollected therefore, that on entering on the management of the territory, we had to reduce dis- organization to order, without any available funds or troops ; that for the first six months we provided for the wants of the young chief and his sister with borrowed money; that we satisfied the demands of the old soldiery, and 310 (PART 1. STATISTICS. raised a body of men, both horse and foot sufficient for the exigencies of the times; that a perfectly new system of police has been framed and organ- ized ; and that authority is now respected, and prosperity rapidly ad- vancing ; that all borrowed money has been repaid ; the claims of the old soldiers, to the amount of about 1| lacs of rupees satisfied, and that about 4 lacs of rupees surplus cash were, at the expiration of little more than 2 years, forthcoming in the treasury, whilst to produce the favorable results the local officer asked for no assistance from Government, in troops or treasures (with the exception of two companies on the occa- sion of the disturbances in Jansee) the management may be deemed satisfactory. . NIMAR. The district of Nimar, situated east of Baroache, and extending from about 21° 28', to 22° 25' north latitude, and ongitude 74° 48' to 760 45'; is bounded to the north by the Vindhya range, elevated above Nimar from 1,600 to 1,700 feet, and separating it from the table-land of Malwa: to the south by the Satpooras dividing it from Candeish: the small state of Burwanee (included) forms the western boundary, and it extends eastward to the Tuwa river, on the confines of Sindeea, Per- gunnahs of Hurda and Charwa, (forming the Bhowana district), and more southward to the Taptee river, separating it from Gundwana. It compre- hends within these limits, patches of territory belonging to several different states, viz. The British, Sindeea, Holkar, the Dhar and Dewass Powers and the Burwanee chief. The general appearance of the country is that of an undulated valley, intersected in various directions, by low rocky ranges, mostly clothed with jungle, in some parts thickly, of a stunted growth, consisting of the dhảk, babool, and other shrubs, which also cover con- siderable tracts in the plains. In the vicinity of the two bounding ranges, it becomes more rugged and wild; as well as on the Nurbudda, to the east- ward, where the banks rise into bold and romantic features, covered with jungle, and forest of a small description, consisting of teak, unjun wood, small bamboos, &c. &c., in other parts with smaller jungle; and again composed of bare and precipitous rocks, confining the stream: the scenery altogether being extremely beautiful. To the west the con- fines of Nimar are very rugged and mountainous, hemmed in by the prongs, of the two principal ranges, which unite about Burwanee, the Nurbudda flowing between. The entire area of Nimar may be estimated at about from 7,000 to 7,300 square miles, far more than one-half of which is uncul- tivated, in some parts not even one quarter of the land being under culture. SOIL. The low flat lands in Nimar are generally of a fine dark mould on the slopes, and the higher tracts of a poor, and red gravelly description, in parts very stony. The seasons of sowing and reaping are the same as in other quarters of India. The khureef crop being laid down soon after the rainy season, and ready at different periods up to March. The rubbee during the rains, and ripe soon after the close of that season. RIVERS. The Nurbudda is the principal river in Nimar, intersecting it from E. to W. with the Vindhya range, distant N. about 14 to 15 miles, but VOL. 11.] 311 NIMAR. gradually trending towards it, on the west, till its spurs form the northern bank in the vicinity of Burwanee, those of the Satpooras doing the same on the opposite side. The Baida, a good-sized river, rising in the neigh- bourhood of the Satpoora mountains, traverses Nimar in a N. N. W. course for about fifty miles, when it falls into the Nurbudda, two miles east of Mundlaisur. The B'ham and Sookta, two small streams, rising from more easterly parts of the same range, flow, the former in a N. W. direction, the latter N. E., and uniting after a short separate course form the Tawa river, which, with a sweep to the east, runs northward, and enters the Nurbudda about sixty miles east of Mundlaisur. The Deb, a small river, takes its course from the Satpooras in a northerly direction, along the east boundary of the Burwanee state, to the Nurbudda, thirty miles west of Mundlaisur. The Goee rising almost in the same spot, takes its course N. W. through the hills, which here incline towards the Nurbudda, into which it falls some 39 miles further west. To the north of the Nurbudda, the principal streams, (none of which are of magnitude) are the Ooree Bagnee, running in a southerly direction, and entering the principal river, nearly opposite the mouth of the Goee. The Maun flowing in a course rather east of south, and falling into it 30 miles west of Mundlaisur. The Karum running south, enters the same about 10 miles west. The Charud, south-east and south, also flows into it, about 26 miles east; and the Karee, taking a sweep round to the east, joins the Nurbudda nearly 60 miles on that side of Mundlaisur. Many sınaller tributaries take their course in all directions through the country, mostly dry in the hot season, or exhausted in parts. Neither the Nurbudda nor any of the inferior rivers in Nimar are navigable : boats ply in various quarters from village to village, where, for short distances, no obstacles are met with. The character of the principal streams is that of continual rapids over rocky beds, which at present completely shut up general navigation. The boats used are all flat-bottomed, com- posed of very solid timbers, closely fitted together, and united by long stout nails, and wholly uncaulked, but so nicely adjusted as to be per- fectly water tight, and very substantial. The fall of the Nurbudda averages about 2 feet a mile: most of its course between high banks, in many parts of rock; it is consequently of little or no use for purposes of irrigation. About 50 miles east of Mundlaisur, nearly the whole stream comes down in one mass, forming a beautiful waterfall, of about 16 or 18 feet descent, in the dry months, with a deafening roar. About 5 miles north of the fall inland, are two small ranges of hills, rising about 100 to 250 feet, entirely composed of basaltic pillars, mostly horizontal, at about right angles to the ranges, but on the summits in parts highly irre- gular, lying over each other in confusion, and in great numbers. The pillars are regular, though varying in formation: the greater part are hexagons, and generally from 6 to 8 feet long, and from 8 inches to a foot in diame- ter. They are of a blackish hue, giving out, when struck, a metallic sound : these ranges extend a few miles, running about E. N. E., nearly parallel to the river, and at no great distance from each other, and are situated in a very wild part of the country, covered with forest and brambles. There is also a small basaltic hill lying about 2 miles N. N. E. of Mundlaisur ; parts of which that have been exposed, display very beautiful specimens of the pillars, closely fitted together in a vertical position. The general formation of the rocky strata in Nimar, and on its boundaries, is trap: a few masses of granite are here and there met with in the Nurbudda. The river rises in the rainy season from 30 to 40 feet: occasionally, but fortunately very rarely, flooding to the height even of 60 and 70 feet, and such inundations. of course causing great damage. 312 [PART 1. STATISTICS. CLIMATE. The seasons are the same as in other parts of India. Europeans very rarely attempt to pass through the jungles during the months from August to January. The eradication of the heavy masses of vegetation, which occupy so much of Nimar, will alone remedy this evil, and that gradually proceeds. The range of the thermometer inside the house, throughout the year, may be stated at from about 60 to 94. Storms of any great violence are rare in Nimar. Intermittent fevers prevail during the rains, and for a time, after them ; but they are not generally severe. POPULATION. Nimar, since its rest from the 20 years state of misery, caused by the ravages of Pindarees and other plunderers, and from being reduced to a wilderness, in some parts literally without an inhabitant, has, since the possession of part of the country by the British, gradually progressed towards prosperity, and a considerable increase in its population has taken place. It may be now estimated to contain about 250,000 inhabitants, or about 35 to the square mile ; they were probably at the close of the Mahratta war in 1818, about a quarter less, and, in former times, must have amounted to upwards of 400,000. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS. The inhabitants of Nimar are of a mixed description, though chiefly Hindoos, with a small portion of Mahomedans, Gonds Nahals, and hill tribes of Bheels,--the two latter assimilating in their habits, though not precisely the same. The Goands are an unsettled race, seldom remain- ing long in one place. The Bheels, robbers by birth and profession, hasty in their quarrels, linked intimately with the interests and wishes of their chiefs, are nevertheless kind and tractable if well used, and equally trust- worthy. They are a good deal addicted to the use of spirituous liquor, which is obtained at a low rate, and the indulgence in which, unfortunately leads to many a quarrel. They are highly worthy of consideration, with a view of gradually bringing them into a more civilized state, and weaning them from their worst habits. They live in a kind of clans, ander their respective chiefs, (Bhomias and Turoees,) principally inhabiting the wilder parts of the country, in small hamlets, the huts usually a little apart ; they frequently have some strong hold on an elevated spot (called a Nuttee), and are seldom seen without their bows and arrows in their bands. Their wants are few, and they are averse to any labor, but what is abso- lutely necessary, cultivating but small patches of the soil. Fond of the chase, they follow it both for amusement and food : eat cattle that may have died a natural death, and steal and kill them also for the same purpose. They freely partake of victuals cooked by any other caste; they occasionally bring grass and wood for sale to the neighbouring villages, as well as guins and honey. Their most solemn oath is to swear by the cat. The other Hindoo inhabitants are generally of a peaceable and tract- able disposition, timid, and extremely superstitious, and, like all the rest in Nimar, as a general feature, addicted to falsehood. They are tolerably industrious : women work in the fields as well as men ; they assist in looking after cattle, and have the whole labor of domestic concerns on their hands. The inhabitants are mostly of slight make, rather under- sized, and by no means a handsome race : their customs, with some excep- tions, are the same as in other parts of India. In the higher castes, persons expelled can (except in some cases of unlawful co-habitation) on pay. ment of a fine, and providing a feast, be readmitted. In Nimar no VOL. 11.] 313 NIMAR. Bramin, of whatever caste, eats meat or fish, nor do any of them take their food clad in cotton clothes: either silk or woollen fabric must be worn when they eat. The symbolic string is changed once a year on a fixed day, cailed Rakce, and at no other period. If cattle sold, die before the period of payment agreed on, the money is not taken, but if a note be given for the same, stating the amount to be a debt, and not mentioning it as purchase-money, it is. Marriages are only celebrated once in twelve years, when even the youngest infants are joined in wedlock, and any not so united, and the opportunity lost, find it difficult afterwards to enter the state. It occa- sionally, but rarely happens, that the tenth or eleventh year is fixed on : this is done by the priests of a famed Koonbee temple in Guzerat, giving out that the door of it has opened of itself, by which lying device, they reap a good harvest in the shape of offerings. Another custom amongst all Hindoos in Nimar prevails every 12th year, called the Sun- ghut, when, on a fixed, day the inhabitants of each village respectively, carry out to one spot in its immediate vicinity, their common domestic utensils, such as wooden spoons, grain trays, brooms, earthen pots, &c., and there throw them away, providing themselves with new ones; but this does not preclude their furnishing themselves with any they may require in the interim: they neither build : nor celebrate marriages in the Sunghut year; during which pilgrimages are more common, and sweetmeats, ghee, and sugar become cheaper, the demand for them being less, from no wed- dings taking place. The Bullaee swears by the dog; other low castes by Jowar. Witchcraft is universally believed in. A strong spirit is distilled from the flower of the Mowah tree, of which there is great abundance: this is the only spirituous liquor used. Brahmins, Buneahs, and Koonbees never drink; all other classes do. The Mahomedans of the community are few in proportion to the others, probably about five per cent. NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Wild animals, from the density and quantity of jungle, are numerous in Nimar. Tigers, leopards, bears, hyænas, lynx3, porcupines, jackals, mon- kies, neelghaee, deer of various kinds, and foxes, are found, and in the vici- nity of Asseerghur, a wild bull of great bulk and height, which appears to be the guyal. Alligators although met with in the rivers, do not abound.. Birds are much the same as in other parts of India, there being, however, considerable variety amongst the smaller kinds, some of them very beautiful. The Boa Constrictor is occasionally met with ; snakes and rep- tiles as in other parts of the country. The Nurbudda produces excellent fish; the rooee, mahaseer, kalabans, eels, &c. In the rains, prawns of a large size are found, but are even then not common. Fine timber is produced in parts of Nimar,—the best in its southern quarter, and to the eastward ; it consists of Teak, which is abundant and good : Kijra, not very large, used principally for ploughs, and other agricultural implements ; Kuhoo, a good hard wood, and Mowah for beams; Becah for posts and uprights ; Unjun, a very strong wood, similarly used, and too brittle for beams ; Sissoo, but not in large quan- tities ; Salee, a soft wood, cut into planks ; the Samel for anoes; the Mowah tree, from the flower of which liquor is extracted, is met with in abundance, great numbers having been planted in addition to those which have been casually produced, with a variety of small kinds. Common gums are gathered in considerable quantities from several, viz. the Khyn, D'houra, Salee, Kijra, used for medicinal and other purposes. Babool for PART I, VOL II, . QQ 314 [PART 1 STATISTICS. ink, &c. Wax is made from the gums of the Peepul, Koos'm, Bair, Pheepah, Koonar, and Burr. Fine wild honey is procured in most quarters, the best when the Jowar, which is grown in great quantities, is in flower; and very good iron is found in some of the northern parts of Nimar. AGRICULTURE. The chief products are Jowar, grown in great quantities, and forming the staple food of the inhabitants; it is very luxuriant, sometimes rising to the height of 12 feet, with five full heads : Thoor, Tillee, Cotton of small growth, but good, and a good deal of Bajra, Mohaleea, a superior des- cription of cotton, used for fine cloths, and formerly a staple article of trade with the manufacturers of Chundairee muslins, for which purpose, it sold at higher rates, is now but little grown, owing to the decrease of that branch of commerce. Europe cotton cloths undersell it, and the raw material itself does not fetch better prices for exportation than other cotton. Several kinds of native vegetables are grown, and Europe ones thrive admirably in the cold season. Mangoes are the principal fruit; they are abundant, and many of them exceedingly fine. Guavas, custard apples, limes, sweet limes, pomegranates, papiahs, tamarinds, plantains, &c. are produced in good private gardens,—the latter, as well as the oranges, are very fine. IMPLEMENTS OF AGRICULTURE. The plough used in Nimar is somewhat larger than that of the pro- vinces, with a larger share to it, and requires good strong cattle to draw it. An implement called a Bukkur is used for clearing fields : driven, as the plough is, over fields already turned up, it carries before it the old stubble, brambles, &c.,. which are thus collected in heaps, and the field dressed. The frame is like that of the plough, having a piece of iron about a foot and a half long, 2 or 3 inches broad, about half an inch thick, and slightly curved upwards, fixed across, and so drawn over the loose soil. An- other instrument, called a Teefun, is used for sowing. It is a hollow bamboo, fixed a little above, and immediately behind an iron spike, with a cup at the top : this is tied by a rope to the plough, and held lightly and nearly upright in the furrow; seed is supplied by the person holding it, (generally a woman,) which falls through the bamboo, as the plough pro• ceeds. Another mode of sowing with a Teefun is, that instead of one prong behind the plough, an instrument like a plough, having behind 3 prongs, with 3 hollow bamboos, fixed from one central reservoir, immedi- ately behind each of them, is drawn by bullocks over the prepared field, which it turns up in 3 small furrows, the seed being supplied, as in the former case, by falling through the three channels as the implement proceeds. Behind this another frame like a double Bukkur, called a Goteea, held very lightly, and drawn by bullocks, performs the office of filling the furrows, and covering the seed : this latter kind of Teefun is used for so ving Jowar, Thoor, Indian corn, Wheat, Tilleee, Bajra and Rice; the former for Cotton, Moongh, Ganja, Gram, Linseed, at times' Wheat, and for several other kinds of grain. Another implement, named a Kool- pah, merely a small Bukkur, is brought into use for weeding between the furrows after the crop is in blade, being made of the proper width for the purpose, and saves the trouble and cost of handweeding. VOL. 11.] 315 NIMAR. Tobacco, onions, garlic, chillies, and others which may be afterwards transplanted, are sown by hand, the sower scattering the seed in any direction over the field. Carts are scarcely ever used during the rains, and it is usual then to take off the wheels, and lay them by, until the season closes. Manure is much used, consisting of dung, burnt stubble, and other vegetable matter. The same crops are not grown on the same land in consecutive years, (or at least extremely rarely, the custom being always to change, as more produc- tive. A very fine breed of cattle is produced in Nimar, especially in its western parts; they are abundant throughout the country, as well as buf- faloes ; pasturage being so plentiful. There are also sheep, goats, pigs, dogs, cats, fowls, &c. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURES. The exports from Nimar consist principally of coarse cloths manufac- tered in the country; cotton, ghee, the mowah flower for liquor, jowar, bajra, ganja, jhoon, tillee, in tolerable quantities : the two latter to a con- siderable extent. Some tobacco and condiments, a few bullocks, and a small quantity of timber, &c. The yearly average value of exports way be estimated at about 280,000 rupees. The imports are Europe cotton piece goods, broad cloths, chintzes, &c., but not sold to a great extent in Nimar ; country cloths, wheat, gram, salt, in considerable quantities ; with some sugar, dates, almonds, spices, rice, tobacco, and a little opium. Buffaloes also, and some timber. "The yearly value may be about the same as that of the exports. The merchandize which passes through Nimar is on a much more ex- tensive scale, comprising Europe piece goods in large quantities, proceeding to Central India to an average yearly value of 3 or 4 lacs of rupees ; Europe supplies for table consumption, sugar, spices, teas, iron, salt, and occa- sionally Arab horses. The average value of all proceeding northward may be about 6} lacs. From Malwa, opium to the value of about 21 or 22 lacs is yearly exported to Bombay. Guzerat silks, Marwaree looes, salt, kirana, shawls, and a few young bullocks. Altogether the value of mer- chandize, passing through to the southward, may be about 22 to 23 lacs. The principal road passing through Nimar, is that from Bombay to Central India, via the Sindwa pass in the Satpooras, and the Nalcha and Seewrole ghats of the Vindhya range. The Jhaum ghat, between Mund- laisur and Urkow, situate about equidistant from the two above men- tioned, is the most direct route, but impracticable to carts. SCHOOLS &c. Vernacular schools have for several years been established in Nimar ; there are at present twenty-two in operation, affording instruction to up- wards of 700 pupils ; and an English one is just forming at Mundlaisur. The Nimar Bheel corps, consisting of 100 horse, and 300 peadahs, forms, together with portions of the pergunnah establishments, the police force, and is distributed over the country in various directions;--they arm and clothe themselves. A jail, with a guard consisting of a darogah and 30 burkundazes is es- tablished at Mundlaisur: the number of prisoners now in confinement amounts to 130, but of these 83 are from Malwa. There is also a trea- sury, the duties at which are taken by regulars. 316 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Asseer, JURISDICTION. The administration of that portion of Nimar under British rule, covering an area of nearly 3,000 square miles, is conducted in all departments by a Principal Assistant stationed at Mundlaisur, subject to the authority of the Resident at Indore. An assistant surgeon, with two native doctors from the medical establishment, and two companies of sepoys from the troops at Mhow, perform the military duties of the post, and are relieved every five months. • Districts South of Nerbudda, Kusrowd, British. Billokwara, Holkar's. Bulkwee, Tekree. } Dhar Powar. The Nimar political jurisdiction, south Bamungaon, Nagulwara, of the Nurbudda, extends westward along Kungong, Holkar's, the course of the river, to the village of Surusgaon, Chomaree, Bamungaon, on the border of the Burwanee Bheikungaon, state, and from thence, following the line of Khundwa, the Satpoora range to Asserghur, strikes Peeplode, Sinceea's, under out south to the Taptee, the Rawair district Bamghur, British” manage- Bounding it to the west. It continues N. Mooudee, Atode, E. along the course of that river as its boundary, to Batalghat; thence, in an irre- Seylande, Sumawd, Holkar's. gular course west and north to the Nurbud- da near Poonassa, having for its' bounds on } British. Kanapore, that side, the Charwa and Hurda districts Holkar's. Amiata, under Sehore, and includes within these + Distrirts North of Nerbudda, limits, the several pergunnahs named in the Dhurumpooree, Dhar Powar, Myhaisa, Holkar's. margin.* Choolee, To the north of the Nurbudda, from the Mundlaisur, British. Sindeea's, under river to the Vindhya mountains, bounded Durgong, manages on the west by the district of Barkapair, and on the east by the Hindia Mahal, it Dewass Powar under Bagode, includes these districts.t. Burwaee, Sindrea's, under ditto. Kalkoot, Holkar's. Semampore, Dhar Powar, The authority of the officer in charge of political duties at Bhopawur, extends to the following mixed states and pergunnahs : ment. Poonassa, Bureea, Murdana British ment. British ment. manage- States. R.Bank Nurbud- da. Sindeea's, Holkar's, Powar Dhar, Alleo Mohun, Anjhira, Pergunnahs Baug, Bankanair, Dawud. Chikulda, Dheg, Soosaree, Loharee. Kookree, Kotera, Loharee. Jobet, Aee, Rajpoor, Babra, Mutwar, Kutteew rea, Chuwall, Nanpore. .... Munnawur, Jaanda, Balwarra, Neenkhera Kutchonda. Burwanee, Rajpore, Ramghur. L. Bank Nurbudda, VOL. 11.] 317 NIMÀR. Malwa. Nimar..... 3.. Divisions, District or thorities. gunnah au- mar and Per-1 sistant at Ni- PrincipalAs Before Before what Tri- bunal. } ..o..... CO Total.../3.1 66 701 57 1 6 | Committed. Convicted. 1 Committed. | Convicted. Committed. Dacoity with mur- der. Dacoity without murder. Highway Rob. bery, Burglary, and Theft without mur- der. 32 Total Number de- pending at the com- mencement of 1840. 15 14 .. Convicted, Receiving stolen property. Committed i Convicted. Committed. 295 Instituted or ad- mitted in the course of the year. : 1 3 13 Willful murder. victed in the year 1840, by Principal Assistant, Nimar. Table shewing the Number of Persons apprehended, and the Number con- of Principal Assistant, Nimar, during the year 1840. Statement of Civil Suits depending, admitted, and disposed of, in the Court Convicted Committed. Homicide not a- mounting to murder. 295 Total disposed of in the year. Convicted. : ... 10 ZI Committed 2 Affrays without Homicide. Convicted, 32 2 15 / 14 Total depending in the 1st of January, 1841. Committed, Various other of- fences. Convicted. 11' 45 28 141 104 9381 Committed. Value of amount of property contested in suits now depend- Total. Convicted. ing. 318 [PART I. STATISTICS. Tabular statement of the Internal Trade of the district of Nimar, for 1840-41. Exports. Average va- lue Rupees. Remarks. Coarse Cloths manufactured in the country........ Mowa Flower for Liquor, Ganja,...... Fine Dhotees and Patuls, .... 32,000 To Malwa, and Candeish. 3000 To Malwa. 13,000 To Malwa, Guzerat, and | Bundelcund. 20,000 To Gwalior, Oujein, Indore, Bittoah, exported only from Myhaisa (Holkar's). 75,000 TO Malwa, and Candeish. 40,000 Soorat, and Guzerat. Grain, of kinds, Awul (a red dye,) Ginger, Huldee, &c. &c. under head of Kirana, Indigo, .. Ghee, Cotton, Young Bullocks for guns, Total,... 28,000 To Malwa, and Bhowana. 3,000 To Malwa. 40,000 Soorat, Guzerat and Malwa. 25,000 To Bombay. 3,000 To Gwalior. 282,000 Imports. Average va- Remarks. lue rupees. Europe Piece Coods, . Country cloths, Wheat and Gram, Country Sugars, Salt,.... Dried fruits, spices, &c. under head of Kirana, Rice, .. Buffaloes,.. Copper, Brass, and Iron,..... Koos’m (red dye), .. 44,000 From Candeish, Nagpore, 72,000 1 Guzerat, Malwa. 28,000 From Malwa and Bhowana. 31,000 From Calpee, and Mirzapore. 43,000 From Soorat, Sambhur, Lahore, 7,000 From Bombay, Malwa, Soorat. 7,000 From Gundwana. 10,000 From Malwa. 18,000 From Bombay. 7,000 From Candcish, Berar, and Bhowana. 6,000 From Malwa. 5,000 From Bombay and Ebla ; only imported to Myhaisa (Hol- kar’s.) 1,000 From Gundwana. Opium, Raw Silk, Timber, Total.... 279,000 VOL. 11.) 319 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. + Tabular Statement of the Trade passing through Nimar for 1840-41. Merchandize passing South-| Average va- ward. lue Rupees. Remarks. Opium,... Young Bullocks, Kirana, viz. Sujjee used in making soap, &c. &c., As- safætida, Dried fruits, Spices, Salt,.. Silk Pieces, 22,04,000 From Malwa. 60,000 Ditto. From Malwa. The dried fruits 17,000 and spices from Guzerat, to Bhowana eastward. 10,000 From Soorat to Bhowana. 2,000 From Guzerat to Bhowana. 1 Total... 22,93,000 Merchandize passing North- Average va. ward. lue Rupees. Remarks. 350,000 127,000 From Boorhanpore, Nagpore, (Berar.) Larger supplies are forward- ed via Baroda. 30,000 Europe Piece Goods ...... Country Cloths, .. Europe and China articles for table consumption, Kirana, viz. Spices, Dried fruits, Salop misree, Me- dicinal roots, Sandal wood, &c. Pearls and Coral, 55,000 From Bombay and Berar. Brass, Copper, Iron, 25,000 From Bombay. From Bombay and South- 37,000 ward. The Berar iron good for making swords. From Berar, Candeish, and 35,000 Bhowana, a little goes to Guzerat, westward. Koos'm (red dye),... Total... 659,000 SAGUR* AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Introduction. This interesting country, separated as it is by a wide interval, consisting of either foreign territory, or wild forest regions, from the rest of the British possessions in India ; destitute at present of all water communication ; and possessing heretofore a character for insalu- brity, for the most part hastily formed, and tenaciously adhered to, has continued more generally unknown to Europeans perhaps, than any other part of this continent, with which we are immediately connected. Situated as it is in the midst of those native states, old Hindu, Mahommedan, and Mahratta, which have heretofore taken an important part in the revolutions of Hindusthan, and must ever; from their position, be intimately connected with its general policy and history ; through whose territories its com- merce largely passes ; whose subjects are necessarily in a thousand ways We have not disturbed the writer's orthography of Indian names, for though uncom- mon, it is doubtless most correct. 320 (PART 1. STATISTICS. brought into constant communication with it; and who must watch the progress of its institutions, and the success or otherwise of its manage- ment with great interest; not only as affording to many of them their only opportunity of witnessing our system of administration, but as intimately connected with their own immediate and ultimate welfare ; it seeins in- possible not to regard its advancement, the development of its abundant resources and capabilities, and the maturing within it of a sound and phi- lanthropic policy, as fraught with unusual importance. Under the impres- sion that almost every thing remains yet to be learned, or generally made known in regard to this region, and that its being virtually unknown to those of the European community, who are interested in agriculture, com- merce, and the arts, has been the principal cause why none have as yet turned their attention hitherward, the following remarks are offered, to aid toward its removal; and with a view to clearness of arrangement, they are divided into two parts: 1st, Physical Statistics ; 2nd, Statistics con- nected with administration and industrial domestic economy. PART I.-PHYSICAL STATISTICS. Section 1.-EXTENT, BOUNDARIES, AND GENERAL CHARACTER. Extent.—The Sagur and Nerbudda territories are situated between the parallels of 21° 30' and 24° 35' N. latitude, and 77° 15' and 81° 50' E. longitude or thereabouts. They are bounded on the north by Riwair, Maihyar, and the other small states of Bâghelkhand; the Eangi estate of Shahgurh and Pannah, and other states of Bâghelkhand, of which one named Chanderi, on its western limit, has long been subordinate to Sindhia, and is an unceasing source of trouble and contention. . On the west by the Bhêlsa Pergunnahs of Sindhia, Bhopal, and a petty Mussalman estate named Kurwahi; and south of the Nerbudda, the Hurda-Hindia Pergunnahs, also belonging to Sindhia, all of whose possessions in this quarter, as indeed all the estates immediately west of the Sagur territories, are in some degree politically subordinate to the Political Agent at Sehore. On the south by Elichpoor, belonging to Haidarabad; and the Nagpore territory. On the east by the Paindra estate, belonging to Nagpore; Kunria belonging to the Governor General's Agency of the South-West frontier ; and parts of Rewan. Their total area may be roughly estimated at about 30,000 square miles. Northern Range.-A continuous elevated table land extends in a direction nearly parallel to the Nurbudda: the northern liinit of which plateau is reached at no point save one; where two small pergunnahs of the Sagur district, named Narhit and Sindwaha, exceed it, lying below the northern ghats. The western limit or confor- mation of this range is not well known ; but, on the east, we believe it to terminate at Ruhtasgurh. On its northern ascent, it is usually termed the Vindhya or Vundachal ; celebrated in Hindu story ; and it is surmounted by the Nárhat, Malthone, Dhamoni, and other ghats, on entering the Sagur district from the northward; by the Hirapur pass, on the road thi- ther from Cawnpur ; and by the Bisrâmgang ghat between Bânda and Panna ; Sohagi ghat between Allahabad and Rewan; by the Rattra ghat between Mirzapur and Rewan ; and south of Chunar, it is believed that the lower portion or spurs of this same elevated land, yield the well known quarries. On the southern face, the cliffs of this range froin the northern VOL. 11.) 321 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. boundary of the valley of the Nurbudda ; with which, from the far west to the junction of the Hiran and Nurbudda rivers in the Jabbalpur districts it runs nearly parallel ; and at a distance never exceeding a few miles. On this face, after leaving the romantic ruins of the ancient capital of Mândů, which was built on its brow, it furnishes the Jâmghât and other ghats between the cantonment of Mau and Mandlêsar; the Unchôd ghất on the road thence to Hindra ; the Dâbri ghất between Bhopal and Hoshanga- båd; the Sirmau, Jhirủa, and other ghats, between Sagur and Hoshanga- bâd; and the Malkuhi and Bikrampur ghât of Tejgarh overhanging the junction of the Hiran and Nurbudda, at Hirâpur Sankal. At this point the range leaves the Nurbudda, bending in a north-westerly direction, having now acquired the distinctive appellation of the Bhândêr mountain. At this point also commences a very remarkable conical-shaped range, named the Kaimur, which runs parallel to the Bhândêr, and in close propinquity to it; but usually of a harder consistency of sandstone, and its strata wholly or nearly vertical ; while those of the Bhândêr are usually more or less horizontal. This range is lost at intervals, but rises up again in a con- tinued direction; sometimes emulating the Bhândêr in height, at other times crossed with but little perceptible rise, until the Maihyar valley is reached, where these two ranges bound the high road on either side, forming this picturesque valley. Here their distinctive character would appear to be lost, the high road gradually surmounting by an almost im- perceptible rise the elevated platform ; the cliffs of which continue in a direction slightly north of east : turning the Sôn river from the northerly and westerly course it pursued in the first portion of the course, and being ascended east of the Maihyar valley by the Bhaddûpur ghất, by which formerly lay the main road between Mirzapur and the Nagpur territory, a route still much used by traders, for the sake of its more abundant water and forage, as well as to avoid the numerous torrents of the Maihyar valley. Whether the above be a correct theory of the direction of this range, which forms so important a feature in the central portion of Hindosthản, we cannot undertake with certainty to assert : but we believe it to be so in all its main features. It will not be supposed that what is termed the tableland on its surface is strictly a plane. On the contrary, it is for the most part abundantly supplied with hill and dale, valleys with their rushing streams ; forests of considerable extent and density ; and in fact every desirable variety of surface. The various hill and mountain ranges which intersect it, may sometimes suffice to obscure the main features of cliff and plateau above described ; as in the case of the Maihyar valley, the gradual slope caused by the junction of a parallel range, has served to disguise them. Such would appear to be the case on that portion of the southern face which lies directly north of the Jabbalpûr district ; between Raipur of Pannah, where it crosses at a reduced elevation the new Sa- gur road, and the bluff head which occurs again at Jogehi : along which line the range does not appear to be very distinctly developed ; though an amphitheatre of level surface, bounded by hills, is there formed. From the lithographical book of routes executed by Mr. Herklots, it would appear, that at the Bisramgang ghất, this range on its nor- thern face is likewise named the Bhândêr. It is very probable that in this part, the same name may be applied to both its faces, but if other- wise, this circumstance would seem to indicate, that the range termi- nates at Maihyar ; the cliff taking from thence a north westerly di- rection and that the mountain ascended at Sohagi and Kattra, forms a se- parate range. This, however does not appear probable. Southern Range.-As on the north, so likewise on the south of the Nur- budda, an elevated table land of great extent, usually termed the Satpâra- PART I. VOL. II. R R 322 (PART 1 STATISTICS range, runs in a course nearly parallel to the river ; and at a distance rarely exceeding two ordinary stages. This range it is, which, at present, forms the principal obstacle to communication by wheel carriages, between Hin- doosthân and the Dakhin--for while the northern range has been surmounted by one excellent road, and several passable ones; this continues to the pre- sent time, almost in its natural state, as far westward as Asîrgarh ; where it contracts, and affords by the Burhânpur pass, an easier passage; by which it is believed the principal communication from Malwa and the northern parts of Hindoostban, with Kandesh and Berar, passes. Opposite to Jab- balpur, this range almost touches the Nurbudda; after which, proceeding eastward, it recedes and advances at intervals, as far as a little beyond Mandla ; where it becomes united with the range, which commences at Jabbalpur north of the Nurbudda, and skirts that river in like manner on its northern bank. The valley of the Nurbudda, may thus be considered, as extending with more or less of interruptions, as far as the liinit of the rich Havelli lands immediately adjoining Mandla ; in fact to the town of Ramnaggar; where it ceases. The united range proceeds in an easterly direction, gradually rising higher and higher; until it reaches the elevated point of Amarkantak, said to be 5,000 feet above the level of the sea, from whence, the Nurbudda flowing westward, the Johla flowing into the Son river northward, and feeders of the Mahanaddi, flowing into the Bay of Bengal, take their rise. At this Holy spot, Hindoo princes have been emulous of possessing a • Rood of Land :' and accordingly, Sohagpur, Mandla, and Nagpur, each has its separate 'para' or village, on the edge of the pool, from whence the deified waters spring ; ornamented by numerous picturesque temples. It is remarkable that this range possesses two such elevated points—for at Pachmarhi, on the Mahadeo hills, not far from Hoshangabad and Baitul but within the Nagpur territory, a point or small portion of elevated land, consisting of sandstone, and five or six miles in diameter, occurs ; of similar height, and similarly consecrated, --while further eastward, within the contines of the Agency of the South West Frontier, occur the Main-pat and other elevated plateaus, upon what must be considered as a continuation or renewal of these mountains. It would seem that along this belt, has ranged the principal force of those subterranean fires, which in former ages, have heaved up the central portion of Hindoosthan; and introduced so much of variety in its aspect, its temperature, its productive powers; and, most striking, perhaps of all, in its inhabitants, language, and manners, It is remarkable that almost the whole of this range, has been overflowed by volcanic matter, while this is rarely the case as regards the northern range. Although at Amarkantak, a precipitous cliff of several hundred feet on three sides, indicates the termination of this particular range ; and the country immediately beyond it presents no abrupt cliff towards the north ; yet-on the southern face, it would appear that the cliffs still continue, in an easterly direction; though with a less elevation : rising however in height gradually, as they advance. From the south, as may be supposed, the ascent to Amarkantak is exceedingly troublesomc, lofty, and abrupt,- from thence, as the range trends westward, it gradually diminishes in height; until, on reaching the point between Seoni and Nagpur, where it is descended by the Khurai ghat, the perpendicular height, but little exceeds 200 feet. The northern face between Jabbalpur and Seoni is about the same height--and from 200 to 250 feet, may perhaps be con- sidered as about the average elevation of the range, throughout that por- tion of it, overlooking the valley, as far as the limits of this territory; ex- cepting of course, the greatly elevated portions of the Mahadeo or similar mountains, situated upon it, vol. 11.) 323 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. It remains to speak of the valley of the Nerbudda, lying between these two ranges, and while in richness it is not perhaps excelled by any portion of country, and but rarely equalled ; its position will render it a matter of no surprise, that in point of temperature, free circulation, and bracing qualities, it cannot bear comparison with the higher parts. Its popula- tion is dense throughout ; and agriculture and commerce active. All it now requires, to invest it wth all the charms and all the value, which be, long to our Gangetic provinces, is that the noble stream, from which it derives its name, was made navigable-an undertaking of which, how- ever arduous, it may be allowed us to hope for the execution, at some future period. It has been stated, that Amarkantak whence it rises, is thought to be 5,000 feet above the ocean : but from thence to Râmnaggur, where the valley may be considered to commence, it falls very rapidly ; and at Jabbalpur, it little if at all cxceeds an elevation of 1500 feet, which, in fact, compared with the length of'its course from thence to the ocean, will furnish a general idea, as to its availability for the above purpose. At Mandla, to which point it is extensively navigated from Râmnaggur by small boats, its still deep waters, reflecting the images of numerous temples and ghâts, many of them in ruins; and of a dismantled fort and city wall, the me- mentos of former dynasties, and of by gone days of regal dignity ; added to a landscape, rich with varied hill and well cultivated plain, rude forest in the distance, luxuriant groves upon its banks ; make the whole scene, one of romantic beauty, difficult to find surpassed. Proceeding onwards, down the stream, the constant alternations of mountain and valley, wild bamboo forests, and inhabited villages, give a constant interest to the banks of the Nurbudda. Below Jabbalpur the rocks of Bhera Garh where the river flows in a deep narrow stream, between two high perpendicular cliffs of snow-white magnesian marble, have long been a favourite object of admiration : and further downwards still, as we approach towards Mandle- sar, banks of columnar basalt, sometimes in horizontal, sometimes in vertical strata, afford a fresh and unusual object of interest, to the en- quiring traveller. Pergunnahs below the Southern Ghats. There is yet one other portion of these territories, differing essentially in character, from the parts which have been described; where the Seoni district descends below the southern ghat, and includes a narrow strip of land, intervening between them and the Nagpur, territories. The western portion of this strip, which is that traversed by the high road, to Nagpur, is rocky and comparatively unpro- fitable, hence it continues a dense forest to the present day ; remarkable only for its teak and other timbers, which supply the Nagpur market, and the fine breed of cattle it produces. On leaving this single Pergunnah, however, (named Dongartál) the eastern portion, though apparently sandy in its soil, is highly cultivated and irrigated ; supporting as dense a po- pulation as any portion even of the valley, and a much more industri. ous one. The soil becomes more sandy and less profitable the nearer it approaches the hills : but on its southern boundary, in th? vicinity of the Wyne Gunga river, where the large Katang or hollow bamboo occurs, it becomes of an exceedingly rich and fertile character. All the various portions which constitute this territory, have now been separately adverted to, in so far as they are distinguished by grand fea- tures of difference ; which will render the following remarks more brief, as well as more clear. It may be observed in conclusion, that while some parts even of the valley still remain available for the energies of the agri- cultural capitalist ; this is eminently the case with the more elevated por- tions of country ; 'especially those lying east from Jabbalpur. Here rich virgin soils and temperate climate, offer great advantages ; of which the want of population and capital, have heretofore precluded the use. While 324 STATISTICS. (PART 1. **] to those indisposed for mixing with the rude races scattered over them, the central position of this territory, and the circumstance of its being unoccupied as yet by the enlightened capitalist or manufacturer, may serve to point out its towns and cities as a profitable field, for the enterprise and outlay of such persons. Section II.-STRUCTURE, Soil, AND NATURAL PRODUCTIONS, ALSO AGRICULTURE, AS CONNECTED WITH THESE. The basis of the northern range of table land, would appear to be sand- stone ; for the most part finely stratified, so as in many localities to resemble, if not to equal, what is found in England, and employed under the name of tiling stone. Râhtgarh, Khurai, Málthone, and a part of Sagur, are almost entirely roofed with these : and just beyond the western frontier, the little estate of Pathâri, is remarkable for the great strength and beauty of its slabs. The writer has used, as a beam for a portico 11 feet wide, one of these stones, measuring 14 feet by 2, and 9 inches in thickness : and in the part where they are obtained, timber is hardly ever used for beaming. These stones are likewise excellently adapted for carving; the beautiful sculptures of Gyâraspur, Udipur, (chhota), and other antiquities having been executed in it: and it is still universally sought for temples and other substantial buildings. North of Sagur, at Maswâsi, quarries of the tiling stone occur, which are invaluable to that cantonment : where, on the introduction of the late Colonel Presgrave, it is generally used, for roofing out-houses and offices; being applied in squares of from 15 to 20 inches, by half or three fourths of an inch in thick- ness, diagonally laid upon bamboos ; to which each is attached by a sin- gle pliant nail wound round it. This is a vast improvement, on the pro- miscuous manner in which they were used and still are employed by the native of the country: and recently this graceful and substantial mode of roofing, has been applied to a Gothic church erected at Sagur. Pro- ceeding eastward, we find again at Damnoh, that this same feature con- tinues, and substantial slabs, of still larger extent, are quarried; but the stone has here become much more argillaceous, being in fact in some parts, a clay slate, rendered so exceedingly porous from its lamination, that in the immediate vicinity of the kacherry, recently erected there, water has not been obtainable by digging wells, and an attempt made to procure it by boring, has failed ; though a more complete one would doubtless prove successful. Proceeding yet further the Bhândêr and Kaimûr' range, in numerous parts, the latter almost throughout, yield the same description of sand stone ; but it has not yet been successfully applied to roofing. Further than the road from Jogehi to Sagur, it has not been traced by the writer, but doubtless the same character con- tinues onwards; and as we approach the extreme limits of the range, we find at Chunâr, that the quality of its quarries, have in no way diminished. From a little to the west of Rahli, to the western limit of the Sagur district, the above formation is entirely overlaid by basalt : the sand stone only occasionally (as at Sagur itself) making its appear- ance, in hillocks or small ranges, above the surface. In the portion thus overlaid, the soil is fertile, and the population dense; but such is not the case in the other portions. Its eastern limits are exclusively occu- pied by the wild Pergunnahs of Pataria, Tejgarh, Mângarh, Mardângarh, Salaia, and Kumhâri, principally inhabited by Gonds and cattle breeders: and although, in the lower portions, enriched by deposits, and watered by streams, the appearance of fertility greatly encreases, and the whole, doubtless where the soil may be of sufficient depth, is capable by means VOL. 11.) 325 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIE3. of embankments and artificial irrigation, of being rendered very profi- table ; yet at present, the general aspect of the country in the sandy portions is drear and wild, and the people far from industrious or wealthy. Character of Range lying south of the Nurbudda.—The southern range, as has been before observed, is almost entirely overlaid by basalt, to which laterite is frequently superposed. In the northern portions, as also in scattered parts every where, the surface is rocky and unprofitable, but as central portions are entered, the soil becomes exceed- ingly rich, like the Pergunnahs of Sagur proper, yielding every descrip- tion of crop, but especially the Rabbi crops of wheat, gram, masur; &c. and sugarcane also, where there is sufficient moisture, thrives with great vigour in it, especially where the laterite prevails, and in Baitul in parti- cular, this crop is cultivated both in this and in the sandy soil, with great success, and in great abundance : but only for the production of gür, sugar being still, strange to say, imported into these territories and Nagpur, from Mirzapur exclusively. In the Seoni district, however, large portions of this rich soil, still lie waste, and as we advance further to the eastward, this is the case in a still more marked degree, a few years of neglect, rendering the brushwood which lines its streams, the abode of numerous tigers, and other beasts of prey, so that reclamation becomes frequently a matter of danger and difficulty. Eastward of Mandla as far as Amar- kantak; where the Hindus and Mussulmen are but few, and usually in the character only of plunderers, of the simple and besotted Gonds, who form the mass of the population ; almost all is wildness and desola- tion, though here and there, a rich oasis occurs, to gladden the eye. The Pergunnahs of Partâbgarh, Dharbar, &c. in the immediate vicinity of Amarkantak, within a range of 30 or 40 miles, are in particular, of surpassing beauty and richness, presenting noble plains of the most fertile virgin soil, wholly unbroken by forest, but adorned here and there by small picturesque ranges of hills. The air here is peculiarly bouyant and invigorating in the hot months, as might be expected from its eleva- tion, and it is said, at Amarkantak, 15 or 20 days rarely elapse without showers. The writer has seen the grass quite verdant there, at the end of May, and the streams gushing in all directions ; vividly reminding him of the mountain burns of Scotland. Throughout these Pergunnahs, the grazing is so highly prized, that cattle are during the dry months col- lected here, from distances of two and three hundred miles, and tall green grass is found in abundance in all its slopes. What might not European energy and capital make of this delightful, but neglected region, and of the basaltic soil which principally covers it ? It has been observed that this basaltic soil yields almost every des- cription of crop. In all those parts where water does not lodge during the rains, cotton is produced in it, of very good quality, though inferior to that of Berar, and also to that raised immediately on the banks of the Nurbudda, and of the rivers flowing into it. Sugarcane, it has also been observed, is pretty extensively cultivated ; and all garden crops, opium inclusive, may be produced to any extent—but its principal staple is unquestionably to be found, in the common rabbî or spring crops of the country, wheat, gram, alsi (fax), masur, &c.; all of which are produced with a vigour, not, it is believed, surpassed in this country, in any part where artificial appliances are almost unknown—for the quantity of mois- ture, which it imbibes is so great, that irrigation has been found impracti- cable hitherto, except in garden plots, and where manure is used : and although great efforts have been made by the present Commissioner, to in- troduce the system of embankments ; there are very few villages in any parts above the ghâts, where it has been persevered in ; the people assert- ing, that the soil is not sufficiently tenacious for their construction. It is a 326 [Part 1. STATISTICS. most remarkable feature in this soil ; that although thus unaided by the ingenuity of man ; the system of rotation of crops which is in use, being hardly worthy the name, and manure nowhere employed ; it is almost inexhaustible under rabbî crops; that is, fields have been certainly in un. remitting cultivation for generations, and beyond the memory of any man living; yet inue to yield average crops, though doubtless less abundant than in new soils. The same lands are available also for the kharif crops, and the lighter kinds of these, such as kodo, kutki, tilli, jawar, and more rarely rice, are almost the only ones produced bt the Gonds and poorer classes ; whose cattle (cows being very generally used by the Gonds, in their ploughs) are rarely strong enough, to break up these rich lands for the dry weather crops. But the same property of inexhaustibleness, by no means belongs to the land, when under the rain crops ; for after the third year, such is the rank growth of weeds, that the cost of their removal, leaves no profit to the cultivator. Hence it is, that the Gond tribes are justly chargeable with wandering propensities. For their drunken and improvident habits, keep them poor; poverty confines them to rain crops; and the rapid exhaustion resulting from these begets in them so unceasing an habit and desire for change, that they will rarely remain above three, four, or five years in one spot, or even village. Where, however, their circumstances have become improved, superior cattle are procured ; rabbî cultivation is comme ced, and their character in this respect becomes remarkably changed. The Southern Portions described as Silicious ; with admixture of Clay. -As the southern limit of this basaltic range is reached, and the southern cliffs of gneiss and other primitive formations approached, the soil in many parts becomes silicious : and such is likewise, the cha- racter of the soil, in the few Pergunnahs below the ghats, which belong to us. This soil, in those parts which are not rocky and covered with jungle, resembles in appearance, the best portions of the sandy tracts of the north- ern range; but it probably contains a larger proportion of clay, from the decomposition of Feldspar and Mica, contained in the primitive formation. Here however exists (especially below the ghats) a race of Mahratta cultivators named Panwârs, with a few Lodhis, Mussulmen, and even Gonds intermingled, who are not excelled in industry and agricul- tural skill, it is confidently asserted, by any class in India ; and they have converted this sandy looking tract, a great part of which was forest-land when the country passed into our hands, into a perfect garden. The crop is almost exclusively rice; into the midst of which, as the rains approach their termination, the seeds of various descriptions of leguminous crops are scattered ; which spring up, and ripen, after the rice crop has been cut; thus yielding two crops per annum, with but one ploughing. The whole country, is covered by small embankments, for retaining the water of the rains, and whenever a suitable slope is obtainable, a strong bank is raised across the lower part of it ; so as to form a tank or lake, from which, if required, as is usually the case after the rains have ceased, water is drawn off to irrigate the fields below. Of these two, three, or more, of greater or less extent, are to be found in almost every village, (as is also the case to the southward in the Hydrabad territories); and thus the success of the crops, is rendered in a manner certain, and independent of seasons. Almost all of the rice is sown thickly, in the first instance, with manure, and then transplanted into the little fields enclosed between the embank- ments ; the soil of which has been previously, by laborious ploughing when drenched, been reduced to a complete slough. This method being generally practised in the Gangetic provinces, need not be enlarged on, but it may be observed, that it is here found to be so laborious, and to require so many hands, every member of the cultivator's family, even VOL. 11.] 327 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. dowo almost to the infants, being impressed for the task, and paddling in the mud from morning till night ; that it is most difficult to introduce it, amongst other - less energetic classes. The ploughing causes too great a mortality amongst the small breed of cattle from Chattisgurh ; which, being procurable for three or four rupees apiece, are almost exclusively employed in it ; that the export of hides from this part, constitutes a considerable item of traffic. The crops produced by these laborious means, however, are not to be surpassed—the rice raised is of the best quality, and of numerous varieties ; and the people are in more thriving circumstances, probably, than in any other part of these territories. Soil of the Nurbulda Valley-Upper portion. The soil of the valley of the Nurbudda, appears to be very various, the cliffs forming its two boundaries, of which the detritus has washed over it for ages,--differing greatly as has been stated, and the understratum or uprising rock, being in different parts, sandstone, coarse conglomerate, limestone, and other carboniferous strata ; dolomite (magnesian lime), stealite (soapstone), mica-slate, or pricacious schist, ebloride schist, clay-slate, laterite, or ba- salt. To commence from its earliest point, the Mandla Haveli ; in all the northern portion of which the deposit is almost exclusively basaltic, while the southern becomes silicious; it is probable that the richness of the soil is there as great, as in any other part whatever. The whole is divided into embanked fields, from almost all of which, in the basaltic portion) two crops, one of rice and one of gram or other Rabbi grain, are yearly taken ; but tanks for irrigation are not in use, nor the transplant- ing of rice practised. The people consequently are by no means so thriving as those above described ; nor do they evince in any respect the same energy and industry. Passing down the stream as far as Jabbalpur ; wherever the valley opens out, it possesses much the same character : and the hills on either bank, being of basalt, that soil greatly predominates, if it does not exclusively prevail throughout. Around Jabbalpur.-On reaching Jabbalpur, the character of the country greatly changes; and this spot and its immediate vicinity, are fraught with very great interest to the Geologist. On the east of the station, at a distance of a mile or more, is the low basalt cliff: to this suc- ceeds (proceeding westward) in immediate contact, a compact silicious formation, exposed at some time, it would appear, to great heat, and abounding in fossil wood ; which at the south east extremity of the sta- tion, passes into a pure white sandstone ; and on the nerth east, at a short distance, is in contact with limestone: to this succeeds a low range of primitive rock ; which runs down nearly to the Nurbudda ; and on porti- ons of which, and its immediate vicinity, the town is built ; whence per- haps its name which may be translated rock town.' These formations have created a sandy soil, of but limited extent ; which has been most judiciously selected, as the size of the cantonment; the result of which has beer, not only that the roads of this station, are greatly superior to those of any other in this part, but also that a degree of freshness and greenness prevails here, at all seasons, to an extent quite unknown at stations loca- ted on basaltic soil; while the undulating smoothness of the surface, co- vered with green sward, and the vigorous growth and numerous planta- tions of trees, give the landscape a character, which may well remind one, of rural English scenery. To the north east and north west, an exceedingly rich and open plain opens out; the whole of which, constituting the Per- gunnahs of Kumbhi, Sehora, and Garha, is formed by small embankments into separate fields, devoted entirely to rabbi crops ; a species of husban- dry which the writer has not seen practised elsewhere. No manure is used, but the land having been slightly run over by a bullock plough before the setting in of the rains, both to turn it, and eradicate all weeds which 328 (PART 1. STATISTICS. may have formed, all the water which may fall upon the surface of the field, during the season, is confined within its ' bunds', and when the sow- ing season comes round, any surplus of moisture remaining is drawn off by cutting the embankment. This process appears to have a powerful fer- tilizing effect, and when the land has dried, no ploughing whatever is re- quired, further than passing through the ground the Nagar or drill plough by which the seed is sown. Where Iron occurs.-Beyond the limits of the Pergunnahs named, in the directions indicated, the soil becomes entirely sandy, and all its small ranges are of sandstone ; partaking of the character of the Kaimur and Bhander, within their confines however, an iron-bearing formation makes its appearance. The most remote point at which traces of this are known to the writer, is almost at the extremity of the district, north east of Sohagpur ; and beyond the Son river where there are excellent iron mines, in the midst of a region of sandstone. But the most impor- tant occurs from 20 to 30 miles N. E. of Jabbalpur, in the Kumbhi Per- gunnah ; where a black iron sand is quarried, and becomes an article of extensive traffic under the name of Dhao,' and having been smelted, principally at Baghraji in the vicinity, is largely made up into all descrip- tions of native utensils, ' chiefly at Panagar, the first stage towards Mir- zapur; and into guns at Barela and Katangi of this district ; which are famed far and wide for this article, so that the iron trade from this dis- trict is a considerable item in its exports. The above vein, which seems to take in common with most of the other formations, a direction more or less parallel to the Bhander, crosses the high road about Ghosalpoor in the form of laterite, and here the sandstone formation in contact with it, bears remarkable indications of fusion. Again it breaks out at Benaiki, 6 miles west of Jabbalpur, in the shape of laterite ; and at Punsar 4 miles fur- ther on, in the form of an insulated hill ; where, in contact with sandstone, a rich black iron-ore occurs in a laminated form ; which the natives have not yet turned to account, asserting that it flies to pieces in the furnace, and is excessively brittle : indicating the presence of other ores besides iron. At other points in its onward course it doubtless repeatedly occurs ; but is not worked, the writer believes, until reaching Tendookhera, in Hoshangabad, on the north bank of the Nurbudda ; of which place the mines are celebrated. Nature of Soils on the River Banks and its Beds.- In this part of the valley, on the banks of the Nurbudda, as well as of the Hiran and other rivers where the waters of the rains cut deep ravines, the soil remaining in irregular eminences between these, is of a clayey con- sistency, abounding in nodular limestone or kankar, and in these localities it is that the finest cotton of these parts is produced, slightly inferior only to that of Berar. Within the bed, and on some parts of the banks, a great variety of formations occur, within a distance of 10 miles. A coarse conglomerate for the most part prevails, at the ghats crossed in going to Nagpur: below this point, limestone, sandstone, and basalt alternately make their appearance; and at Lamhita Ghat, 7 or 8 miles below Jabbalpur, has been found a coal vein, of most excellent quality, in the very bed of the river ; which last is the only circumstance, that may interfere with the extended use of a discovery, of which, should Jabbalpur, as is likely, become an important manufacturing town, or the Nurbudda be rendered navigable, it is almost impossible to overrate the import- A coal vein it may be mentioned, was discovered by the party of the present Commissioner in the Rewan Pergunnah of Chandia-kanria, which adjoins Kumbhi, on the north east; and as it occurs again, and of superior quality, in the Hoshangabad district, on the south bank of th Nurbudila, it may be presumed, that these are connected with one ance. VOL. 11.) 329 SAGUR AND NURBUNDA TERRITORIES. another, and with the Palamo coal field. Adjacent to the coal, on the north bank, occurs micacious schist, which furnishes excellent roofing slab for the station of Jabbalpur; and after this, at Bhiragurh, we have the dolomite in connection with steatite, and micacious and chloride schists, all traversed at one point, by a remarkable vein of basalt, which has deeply tinged it on either side. Character of the Valley in Narsingpur and Hoshangabad.-Throughout a great part of the length of the Narsingpur district, while the northern bank, from below the junction of the Hiran becomes sandy, the southern bank' continues of the same character, as that described above, in which cotton is produced : and a portion of this tract being named Bhanwar Garh, the cotton of this part universally bears that name in the market. As the confines of lloshangabâd proper are approached, and throughout that district, the soil of the valley becomes yet richer, producing the most abundant Rabbi crops, which are very largely export- ed from thence, and from the adjoining Bhopal pergunnah, in so much, that this tract has obtained the appellation of the Garden of Central India. It does not appear however that embankments, artificial irrigation, or any superior modes of husbandry, are practised ; but the population is most dense and thriving. Concluding Remarks regarding Agriculture.-Of the agriculture ge- nerally throughout these territories, it may be observed that it is carried on with most inferior implements. The plough, commonly used, is small and miserable, not materially differing, it is believed, from that of Bengal, and drawn by a single pair of bullocks; besides which, there are in use the Bakhar or bullock-hoe, employed for loosening the surface, and eradicating weeds ; and the Nagar or drill-plough, a heavier kind of plough, is sometimes used by substantial farmers, for breaking up new soil. The Kharif crops, (when not transplanted) are invariably sown broad-cast, and the Rabbi as invariably, by the drill; the cultivators assert- ing, that the dryness of the soil, at the season for sowing that crop, would not admit of the seed germinating, if merely thrown over the sur- face, and the latter levelled over it. Hence difficulty occurs in sowing the flax seed so densely as it is required to be for the perfection of the fibre: a branch of husbandry, from which it is confidently hoped that important benefits will be derived, as the Alsi, or flax plant, is invariably raised in this part for the sake of its oil seed, but the stem thrown away as useless. A Dakhuni plough, or one of the kind used in Khandêsh, has been recently introduced at Jabbalpur, by way of experiment. It is drawn by 3 pairs of bullocks, and though constructed on much the same principle with the common country plough, it is a noble instrument as compared with it, and in practice preferred by the ploughmen, though unquestion- ably inferior in principle to the American plough, as constructed in the Madras foundry. Several of these last were introduced at the same time, but employed for a short period only, as the sandy soil around Jabbalpur has been found, in a very short period, to wear out the share, which there is no means of renewing on the spot. The Kaus grass (Saccharum Spon- taneum) is here the great enemy of the husbandien, springing up wher- ever ground, in ang degree exhausted, is left fallow, or indifferently tilled, for even a year, sending down its roots to amazing depth, and forming a complete reticulation of roots, throughout the entire extent of land, covered by it; so that to subdue it, when once fairly established, becomes a most difficult matter. And as its properties are exceedingly exhaust- ing and heating, the poorer cultivator has no resource, but to throw the land out of cultivation; until, in a period of 10 or 12 years, the weed dies out of itself. The power of the Dakhuni plough in particular, in rooting out this noxious weed, has greatly astonished the people, several PART 1. VOL. II. S s 330 (PART 1. STATISTICS. of the most substantial of whom, have declared their intention of keep- ing one for the express purpose ; but as good powerful bullocks are required for it, they are all of opinion that, for ordinary ploughing, it would not be remunerative. When first introduced, a sowing implement was introduced along with it, which sows 4 drills at once ; 4 bamboos diverging from a single funnel or hopper, and leading to the 4 perforated tongues, which penetrate the soils : this is likely to be admitted by the people as an improvement, where the Rabbi embankments prevail ; as the great softness and evenness of surface, afford every facility for its use. Rice was tried with it last year, and the produce found decidedly superior to that sown broad-cast; besides which, greater facility was afforded for weeding : and if sowing the drills, at sufficient width to admit of a small bullock-hoe being introduced, be at- tempted and found to answer, a most important era in Kharif cultivation will have been attained. A single experiment made at Rahli, leads to the belief that the same method may be applied with the greatest advan- tage to Rabbi crops, which it is not at present the practice to weed ; and turning over the soil likewise, by means of the American plough, has been found entirely to destroy the weeds, which, under the present system, of mere superficial loosening, are apt to rise up afresh, with renewed vigor ;-but it were endless to speculate on the improvements which enterprise and ingenuity may effect, and these remarks have already become too diffuse. Breeding Cattle.-Cattle breeding is extensively practised in some parts of this territory. To the north of it, a very celebrated breed exists in the pergunnahs watered by the Kian (commonly written Cain) river ; not so remarkable for their size, as for their blood. These would appear to have been imported largely, at different times, into Râmgurh, and other parts east of Jabbalpur, where, from the fine grazing before spoken of, they seem to have even improved on the original stock, and are highly prized. The breed of Tezgarh is also celebrated, and of much the same character, but somewhat smaller. In the pergunnah of Kumbari, which occurs on the road from Jogehi to Damoh, and which nearly adjoins the Kian tract, the cattle are also excellent, as indeed generally on that frontier; and it may be said that, throughout the grass and forest tracts which so abound in the Jabbalpur district, and partially in that of Damoh and other parts, cattle of greater or less excellence are largely bred. Throughout the Sagur district, the cattle of Malwa are generally used; a very stout, heavy animal, well suited for the plough, but rather dis- posed to be sluggish. In Hoshangabâd and Baitool, there is a consider- able admixture of the Nimâwar and Berar breeds; the former of which are well known under the name of Mandlêsur bullocks, to officers cantoned at Mau-a fine graceful animal, very generally spotted, of good height and great blood, with short horns sloping backwards, but not possessing very large carcase : and the latter, the very best description of working animal, in all these parts; possessing, for the most part, the same characteristic of horns sloping backwards, and usually very short, but ordinarily of no great height, and of amazing carcase. They are indefatigable in work, and so hardy, that they are rarely to be seen out of condition. The finest breed, however, obtainable in this part, as regards appearance, is unquestionably that of Dungartâl, which greatly resembles the Nagore breed, but is of somewhat smaller size. Their herds, which during the rainy season, roam through the wide forest of Dungartál, and during the dry season, are driven up to the grazing lands towards Amarkuntak, are so wild, that it is dangerous for a stranger to approach them ; and the pro- duce, which are largely disposed of in the Nagpur market, are almost exclusively reserved for the Khasar, or Mahratta Sawari carriage, preva- VOL. 11.) 331 SAGUR AND XURBUDDA TERRITORIES, lent there ; or bought up for Ruths, and other vehicles, used by the higher classes elsewhere. Buffaloes are likewise bred in the same locality : but in no part of this territory does the breed of this animal deserve par- ticular commendation. Neither are any of the foregoing breeds of cattle desirable as milkers,—the best cows rarely yielding above 3 seers, and requiring to be well féd and cared for; while the small indigenous cow of the country, usually called the Gondi cow, yields 4 seers, and some- times even 5, with very little care or feeding: The large breeders indeed never milk their cows, trusting to the buffaloe alone, for this article and ghee ; while the male produce of the former, therefore, constitute their entire source of profit, that of the latter are barbarously destroyed at their birth: in Dungartal especially, Horses, Sheep, and Camels.-Horses are bred in very small num- bers here, and only by a few Thakurs or Barons ; or here and there by an enterprizing farmer of substance. No adequate precautions are taken, even by these, for selecting good stallions; and hence the breed offers nothing remarkable. But as in the adjoining estate of Bhopal, where the existence of a Native Court creates the demand, a very excellent breed is raised ; there is no doubt that the country and climate are sufficiently favourable for it. Sheep are not reared here to an extent by any means sufficient even for the consumption of the country itself ; while Bundel- kund, and part of Bagelkhand, to the northward, are celebrated for this branch of farming. They are to be found, however, in small flocks, here and there, and appear to be by no means inferior in either size or fleece; indeed superior in both these respects to those of Bundelkund : and considering the fine bracing climate, and magnificent grazing, which prevail in many parts, it is matter of surprize that sheep-rearing is not more extensively practised. Camels, it may be mentioned, are not bred here; and though used to a considerable extent, especially by Europeans, for purposes of carriage, the soil and climate are certainly somewhat unfa- vorable to them, though much less so at the sandy station of Jabbalpur, than at the other stations. Natural Productions-Minerals.-It remains only to speak of the natural productions of the country ; of the mineral portion of which, the greater number have been already noticed. In addition however to those formerly named, most excellent lithographic stone have been quarried at Murwara, where the Mirzapur road enters the Jabbalpur district; but not yet in suficiently thick slabs, to be practically avail- able. Another site of the same is believed to have been found in the north of Damoh district. Excellent roofing slate occurs at Kuap, about 30 miles north of Jabbalpur ; but has not yet been' turned to account, except for sharpening razors, to which purpose it is universally applied. Dyeing earths occur in various localities, and chalk is said to have been recently found in Sohagpur; while to the north of that locality, in the direction of Chunar, Corundum occurs. At Saletekri, over- looking the plains of Chuttisgurh, it is said gold dust is found in the sandy beds of rivers ; and, in truth, the variety of products is endless. At Jabbalpur in particular, and around it, a greater variety of formations occur, probably, than in any other part; and it is impossi- ble to doubt, that the application of scientific knowledge and skill will, hereafter, there develope most important resources for the production of superior pottery, and the cultivation and perfection of many im- portant arts. Organic remains are found in many parts, but more especially in the valley of the Nurbudda, in vast abundance and variety: to which fact, it is believed, that distinguished officer Major Sleeman, first directed attention; and it is much to be regretted that no professed geologist has recently visited Jabbalpur, and inspected the magnificent 332 (PART 1. STATISTICS. collection of geological specimens made by the present Commissioner, aided by bis Medical Staff, which cannot but throw the most important,- perhaps complete, light, upon the formations of this central part of the Continent. Vegetable Products.-In regard to their vegetable products, it may be almost said that the extensive junguls of these parts are as yet unexplored ; and it is certain that they contain much which is highly valuable, as well as, in all probability, a great deal that is entirely new: this opinion having been recently expressed by a distinguished botanist, who procured a few specimens, and has been in some degree enabled to judge. The wild fruits are, such as those of the Khumhir, Tendu, Chironji, Makoi, wild Karunda, wild Khajûr or date, termed Chhind, Bhilawan, Bamboo seed, wild Plantains at Amarkantak; to which, in some parts may be added the wild Mango, especially abounding at Pachmurhi; and in all parts numerous edible roots (termed by the Gonds, Kanda), of which one is a wild Yam; and another, termed the Bagayan Kanda, has a tuber, greatly resembling the potatoe, though the plant is entirely different ; besides numerous other varieties. All these serve as a main part of the subsistence of the Gonds, when their crops have been nearly es- hausted; especially of that wild 1. rtion of them, named Baigas : while a traffick exists in the Tikhur (or wild Arrowroot), Baichândi, Bach, Chironji nuts, Harra-Bahera, and other dyeing materials ; especially Man- jit or Madder, Bhojraj, Tejraj Balraj, and various umbelliferous, or other aromatic herbs, possessing medicinal properties; Dhuna or resin from the Sal trees ; Tassar or wild silk, obtained by Dhimars and others, who, with many superstitious ceremonies, rear the worms upon the Saj, (or Asan) tree ; Lac produced in great quantities, with almost similar care, upon Palas, Kusum, and a few other varieties of trees, ainongst which the Kusum, however, holds the first rank ; Katha, (or Catechu) which is pro- duced in several localities from the Khair tree ; Wax and Honey ; Dika- mali, and various gums and resins, such as that of the Palas, and that of the thuriferous Salha, a spurious kind of frankincence ; and above all, it may be said, the produce of the Mahwa tree, the great stand-by of the Gond population, of which the flower yields their favorite spirit, besides furnishing a nutritious food when dried, and savoury treacle when boiled down ; while the fruit yields the thick oil, which has given it the name of the Butter-trce. All of these, and numerous articles of greater or less value, are exported very largely from various localities, but principally from the hill tract east of Jabbalpur, as regards the Nurbudda territo- ries, and in still larger quantities from the Khaloti, (or Chattisgurh), Kurba, Udipur, and Sambhalpur below the ghâts. The former of these districts, it may not be out of place to mention, is here regarded as a land flowing with milk and honey, wheat and grain being rarely less than 2 maunds per rupce in the season, and hence largely exported to Rewan, Chitrkot, and even Mirzapur ; Gûr 24 seers or upwards ; Ghee 7 and 8 seers; and many other products in proportion ; while its clothes are almost exclusively worn by the hill tribes, in consideration of their cheapness and strength. Forest Trees. Of the forest trecs occurring here, the writer has not memoranda, or leisure sufficient, to enable him to give the botanical Dames ; but the following are the popular pames of the principal ones, which however, it is feared, may prove of little service. The Teak, and a wood closely allied to it, named the Dahman, of which specimen has been obtained for examination and report, of which the wood is cxceedingly elastic, nuch resembling the lance wood; Têndu or ebony trec ; Sisou of two kinds, one yielding a wood closely resembling Rose-wood, in colour and texture ; Hardu or a vol. 11.] 333 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Chakolta ; Khumher or Gambir, a light, excellent timber, for the uses to which deal is applied ; Dhawai, a very close-grained wood, the charcoal of which is generally used in the manufacture of gunpowder; Bijesar, a very admirable wood for furniture, in some degree resembling oak, in its colour and appearance ; Koha and Saj, both excellent timber trees; which may also, in some degree, be said of the tree here called Lanraya, elsewhere Sejo ; Jamrási, of the tribe Myrtaceæ, the wood of which exhibits the most delicate pink veins, though difficult to obtain in large, clear pieces, or to work up, when procured; the Sal or Sakher tree, here called the Sarraij, the Mahwa, which, in addition to its other merits, yields an excel. lept wood, and of larger dimensions than almost any other tree of the forest ; the Kusum ; the Rohan, a mahogany furnishing febrifugal bark, and believed to be one of the most durable and heavy woods known, and of a blood-red colour ; the Tun, which is not abundant, and a tree called the Mahanim, closely resembling it; the linsa, closely resembling in appearance the Palas, considered by the natives to be the toughest wood they possess, and furnishing a bark, which is used by them for poisoning fish; the Dhamin; the Dhobain ; the Sirras ; the Rosalla ; the Ritha, or Soap tree ; the Semal or cotton tree; the Gabdi, of which, from its abundance of resin, branches are used by dawk-run::ers as torches; Tinjar; Bair; Bel; Bhilawan ; Chironji ; Erna ; Khair; Reongha; Kanji; Kenkar; Sulhai ; Jhagra ; or Cassia tree, yielding the Amaltas; llarsingar, yielding a deliciously scented flower, from which a yellow dye is prepared ; Duudhi, prized by turners ; Aonla, an acacia, yielding a red-tinged wood, used for gun-stocks, and bearing an exceedingly astringent fruit, which is made by the natives into 'chatni ;' the Mahol, a gigantic creeper, yielding fibre of great excellence, and in general use ; besides very many others, which it is not necessary further to specify. Many of the above are common to both the sandy and the ba- saltic soils ; but the Sarrai, in particular, is considered to be exclusively confined to the former, and it may certainly be observed generally, in regard to this soil, that the vigour of growth in it, and consequent size of its timber, excces that of the pure basaltic soils, though not so as regards the laterite, in which the growth of timber, of almost all kinds, is truly magnificent. One of the most remarkable features of the basaltic soil would seem to be, its aptitude for producing aromatic plants. All those of this part, as well as Manjit, and many other valua- ble herbs, and the Raunsa grass, yieldiug an oil, not unlike the Cajiput; all are believed to be confined to this description of soil. The Coffee tres likewise planted in it, grow with great vigour, and yield most delicious Coffee ; while in the sandy soil, they exhibit great delicacy, and it is not believed that they have in it any where as yet yielded berries. The Guli Bakaoli, a lily celebrated in oriental song, is found growing wild in this soil, close to Amarkantak : the beautiful and fragrant wild flowers it yields are very various, and the thriving condition of gardens at Sagur, where this soil prevails, shows it to be most favourable for the purposes of both flower and kitchen gardens. The sandy soil, on the other hand, has its points of superiority, one instance of which may be mentioned in the case of the pineapple, which is reared in it without difficulty, and of exquisite flavour; while in the basalt, it entirely fails. A plant, exceedingly like the wild vine, called by the natives Imlausa, flourished in it. It would seem, also, if an account recently published of the Bohea hills in China can be relied on, that in this description of soil, the Tea tree thrives; and, as at Jabbalpur, both descriptions of soil, and many other varieties occur in the immediate vicinity of the station, while the climate is fine and bracing, and European enterprise abundant, a more desirable locality for experiment, upon this and other vegetable pro- ducts, could scarcely be found. 334 (PART 1 STATISTICS. Beasts of prey, and of the chase, are likewise in great abundance. The lion has been met with, and destroyed, in at least two well authenticated instances. The tiger, it has been mentioned, is but too abundant, as also are the leopard ; hunting leopard ; panther, billae bag; lynx; wild cat ; hyæna ; wolf; wild dog, or Sonela Kutta; jackal and fox; besides weasles, pole cats, and bears also are very abundant, probably of various kinds; and the armadillo, porcupine, otter, ich- neumon are also found : monkeys and baboons of the common kinds abound, as also a variety of squirrels, amongst which a large reddish brown one, with yellow belly, found on the Mahadeo hills, and named after Mr. Elphinstone, is perhaps the most remarkable. In the vicinity of Amarkantak, and there only, is found, though not in abundance, the Gaur, (Bison ?) which rarely or never leaves the hill ranges, to show itself on the plain. The wild buffaloe, wild cattle, (which are be- lieved to have been met with, though this is not yet satisfactorily established) the samler, the spotted-deer, the gauna (Bara Singha ?) which, unlike the samber, keeps to the plains in large herds, and has its horns always erect; the nilgai, antelope, ravine deer, hog-deer, mouse- deer, and wild hog; these, of which several varieties are to be found in almost all parts, afford an abundant field for the sportsman. Besides which, the feathered race here afford him, the bustard, floriken, leek, wild goose, wild duck, widgeon, teal, curlew, peacock, partridge, black, painted and grey snipe, quail of many varieties, jungul fowl, rock pigeons, or- tolans, &c.; and exclusive of these, birds of beautiful plumage, one of which, found in the vicinity of Jabbalpur, greatly resembles the bird of para- dise,' abound for the gratification of ornithologists. Many varieties of ex- cellent fish, also some of them probably not yet described, abound in the streams, of which the mahseer, rahu and karcha, às also occasionally sanwar, are those most in favour with Europeans ; save in the vicinity of a few streams, where the trout occurs, the three first named being the kinds most usually sought for, by those devoted to this sport, for which the Nur- budda territories have now gained a celebrity, inferior only, perhaps to that of the Dera Dun. Of the reptiles, nothing need be said, as they are believed generally to correspond, with those of other parts, though doubt- less not so numerous as in less elevated regions. Section. III.-RIVERS. As the Sagur division consists of perhaps the highest portion of the central table land of India, with declivities on every side, it results from hence, that all our rivers take their rise within its limits ; excepting one or two, of which the sources are just beyond the frontier :: and owing to this cause, none of them, with the exception of the Nurbudda, attain to consi- derable dimensions, until after they have left us. They naturally arrange themselves under three divisions, viz. 1st. Those flowing northward to the Ganges ; 2nd. Those flowing westward to the Indian ocean, and 3rd. Those flowing southwards and eastwards to the Bay of Bengal. Several of them present occasional fine deep reaches, where boats are required at all times for crossing them, and in some of these places, they become navigable for 2 or 3 miles continuously. But none of them are used to any extent, or for any useful purpose, excepting the Nurbudda, and even this noble river, though extensively employed for floating timber-rafts, and for communica- tion, and occasionally traffic, from pergunnah to pergunnah ; yet is so broken by rapid and petty falls, that it is not available for continuous navigation, in its present state. Under the first division, we have the following, the Son: flowing north- wards to the Ganges; and the Johla and Ghurchhittra; the Mahanaddi, with the Niwar and Kathna rivers as its feeders: the Kian (or Cain) flowing into the Jamna ; and the Aloni, Pathna, Bearmi, Kopra, Sonar, VOL. 11.] 335 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. and Beos as its feeders : and lastly, the Dhasan and Bina rivers, which after leaving the Sagur district, join the Betwa, and thus flow likewise into the Jamna. Under the second head, we have the Nurbudda and the Tapti, the only two considerable rivers which have a westerly course across the peninsula of India, as the western ghats, commencing immediately south of the Tapti, preclude the exit of the waters in that direction. The Tapti, rising at Multai, (the name of which is considered to mean the source of the Tapti') has but a short course to run, before leaving the western boundary of Baitul; and hence, has no considerable feeders within these limits; while those of the Nurbudda are numerous, as follows, and many of them fine streams, passable only by boat during the rains. On the north bank it has none, until considerably below Mandla, as the surface there presents an elevation, the streams from which flow northward. The first that occurs is the Balai, passing under Shankargunj; then the Hingna; then the Gour, a very beautiful stream, a little east from Jabbal.. pur; and the Paryat and Hiran north of it, which drain the waters of almost all the Haveli pergunnahs, of the Jabbalpur district. After passing the junction of the Hiran with the Nurbudda, the occurrence of the Bhander cliffs, in almost immediate contact with the river, the rivulets rising upon which, all flow to the northward, precludes the supply of any further considerable rivers in the direction: and a little west of Tendukhera, an unimportant stream, forms the boundary. On the south bank, the number is much more considerable, The Makrar, Chakrar, Kharmer, Burhner, and Halon, with others Jess considerable, occur in the wilds of Ramgarh and Raigarh. The Banjar empties itself just opposite to Mandla. From this point, owing to the propinquity of the cliffs, of which the table lands slope to the south, no more occur 'until we meet the Jemar, a considerable stream falling into the Nurbudda, above the Gour. Next we have the Sanai, forming the boundary between the districts of Jabbalpur and Narsingpur; and within the confines of the latter and Hoshungabad, the Umar; the Serb ; the Sakkar ; the Dudhi ; the Machna ; and the Tawa. Under the fourth head of rivers flowing into the Bay of Bengal, we have numerous streams 'rising on the brow of the southern cliffs, from Amarkantak to a little south west from the Rajadhar ghat, all of which ultimately find their way into the Mahanuddi : but none of these are considerable, and their names are not known to the writer. South of Jabbalpur, in Seoni, we have the Wain Gunga ; and near Multai, in Baitul, the Bel and Wurda ; all of them flowing into the Godavery: and the feeders of the former, which, on reaching the confines of Nagpur, becomes a very noble stream, are the Bijna, Aloni, Jhanwar, and Hirri, with a few other inconsiderable streams, rising in the Seoni district ; and the Pench, rising from the vicinity of the Mahadeo Hills. Under the cantonment of Kamti, flows another con- siderable feeder, named the Kanhan, into which the Pench disgorges itself a little higher up. Concluding Řemarks.—The above include all the streams, of which there is any occasion for making mention. There is none of them, even including the Nurbudda, which is not fordable during the dry season; either at the point which the high road crosses, or very near to it: and hence, with the single exception of Mandla, from which the ford is dis- tant upwards of a mile, no ferry is any where maintained by the authori- ties, beyond the duration of the rainy season. Besides the rivers, there are no natural pieces of water whatever; the only fine lake, that of Sagur, which measure upwards of a mile across, and presents with the town and fort on its bank, a most picturesque view, being artificial: but such 336 (PART 1. STATISTICS. artificial tanks, though of smaller dimensions, are very abundant around Jabbalpur; a good one exists at Seoni, and several very fine ones below the ghats, probably little, if at all, inferior to that of Sagur. The Nurbudda has a fall of 90 feet, 3 miles from Amarkantak, named the Kapila Dhara ; and the Johla is said to have a much finer fall, named the Kankan Ghogra ; where it leaves the Maikal table lands : but this has never been visited by a European. The beauties of the Nurbudda have been already adverted to, and nothing more remains to be said in con- nexion with this branch of the subject. Months, Coolest day. Hottest day. , Medium, Min. Max 40 67 61 83 Section IV.-CLIMATE. Temperature.—The temperature of these territories is, for an Indian district, extremely inoderate, the hot season scarely lasting two months ; while the nights are, comparatively speaking, cool throughout the year, especially in higher portions. The civil and staff medical officer at Jabbal- pur, who is one of the oldest European residents, and the most observant of such matters, remarks in regard to that station, which is by no means the coolest, though upon the whole much the pleasantest, that it is only just before the rains set in, perhaps for 5 or 6 days, that any thing like great heat or oppressive weather is experienced, and even this, no- thing to compare to the Doab. Again he observes; The rains usually commence on or about the 10th of June, and take off at the autumnal equi. nox: the greatest quantity of rain usually falls in July and August. The prevailing winds are westerly, varying a few points in the rains to south, and in the hotwinds, as much to the north. The coolest weather is from N. and S. E. : westerly winds- in the cold weather usually bringing clouds and increased temperature. A southeast wind is rather uncommon. Northwesters are rare, hail storms by no means so: and when they occur January, { in February and March, often occasion extensive damage to the Rabbi-crops. February,.... {Nax The worst I ever saw occurred in April, the hail falling in such quanti March, ties, as for hours to whiten the surround 72 | 100 ing hills; and ice in cart loads was April,.. brought in four days after its occur- 1 rence :' Annexed is a register of the thermometer for a single year, kept by May, 1013 the same gentleman, which gives, as the average of the whole 12 months, 67-June. :1 901 min., and 833 max., on which he ob- serves; “the lowest point of the ther-July, mometer that I have witnessed, is 29° and the highest 114°, at which time August,. it was 118° *t Cawnpur.' This regis. tcr and the above remarks, refer to the september, .. Max Min.. station ofJabbalpur. Sagur and Dumoh will be somewhat more temperate : October, :{ Seoni and Baitul, considerably so. Narsingpur will probably be about November, ..Mas the same : and Hoshangabad, 'which 803 is the lowest of all, and enclosed on December, the north and south by high cliffs, 81 40 10 68 58 89 Min.. Max 52172 62 86 Min.... 58 91 82 105 70 98 Min. {Max 76 99 88 110 Min.... 90 81 Max Min.. Max 72 76 ŞMin. 77 71 779 93 75 Min... Max 5+ 78 8 &) Min.. 42 63 84 521 39 Min. Max 39 68 le VOL. II.] 337 SAGUR AND NUR BUDDA TERRITORIES. has a temperature considerably higher, and much more trying. At Sagur, it is stated by the superintending, surgeon, that the thermometer rarely falls below 50° in the cold season, or rises above 95° in the hot; but this, I apprehend, must have reference to the inside of the house. The same authority states, that the quantity of the rain which falls dur- ing the year, varies from 34 to 46 inches.' Climate and range of Thermometer at Amarkantak and Pachmarhi.- The high spots of Amarkantak and Pachmarhi have been already alluded to. At both of these places so severe is the cold, that gram, arhar, masur, flax, cotton, sugarcane, and other delicate crops, cannot be raised, as the frost inevitably nips them; and even wheat, which at present, owing to the poverty of the inhabitants, is not cultivated at the former place, is said to be much endangered from this cause. At the latter, where the soil is sandy, ferns are abundant; and the Wild Mangoe flourishes with amazing vigour. At Amarkantak, where it consists of ba- salt and laterite, neither of these are found ; and with the exception of Wild Plantain, Gul-i. Bakaoli, and numerous herbs, as yet not examined or explored, the vegetation does not there appear materially to differ from the usual forest vegetation of the country. This may perhaps re- sult from Amarkantak not being an insulated peak, but gradually as- cended from the westward by, an extensive inclined plane; Amarkantak itself being but a little raised above the planes in question : for in point of coolness, the annexed register will show that, during the hot months at all events, it differs not, in any great degree, from the other; and the writer, who visited it during the present year, 1841, on the 30th and 31st May, found the temperature truly delightful. Every thing around was green and fresh-looking ; the air elastic and buoyant, with dew falling every night : and although it may have been cooler than usual, from the circumstance of rain having fallen somewhat out of season, almost throughout the district, yet he was assured by the residents that such the temperature always was at that season. It is to be regretted that the accompanying register for Amarkantak, which was. PART 1. VOL. II. Τ' Τ 338 1 STATISTICS. (PART 1. KANTAK, 1838 A.D. 9 A. M. Noon. Morn. Afternoon Sun Set. 61 89 ::::::: 78 78 75 71 68 66 62 91 91 86 84 79 82 861 88 89 88 86 86 93 93 91 90 92 1 76 79 76 76 78 79 89 86 93 89 81 79 80 85 REGISTER OF THERMOMETER. kept by a native, has omitted to indicate the AMAR- days upon which rain PACHMARI ON THE MAHADEO HILLS. 1839 A. D. fell; for it is spoken of by the people as one DATES. of the distinguishing Remarks. characteristics of the climate of that region, that 15 or 20 days 1st May... 70 88 Note.—This table gives seldom or never elapse, 2nd ditto the following average for 3rd ditto 74 90 the month of May. without showers ; and 4th ditto Amarkantak 73.1 •&89. certainly, the register 5th ditto Pachmarhi..764,88 ] & 84 for Pachmarhi bears 6th ditto But as neither the high-out the remark as re. 17th ditto 8th dilto est, nor the lowest range 9th ditto during the day has been gards the latter place, 10th ditto.. 84 observed, it is difficult to while the few visits effect a comparison. Taken while ascending. made by Europeans to 11th ditto... 72 88 83 | 89 87 Tatties, previously in Amarkantak, confirm it 12th ditto... 72 88 use, heredispensed with. there likewise. Cap- 13th ditto...62 88 Cloudy; with high wind. 14th ditto... 72 tain Franklin in 1821, Westerly winds. 15th ditto... 75 76 90 Close. visited Pachmarhi, of 16th ditto... 76 87 84 Clouds, wind & thunders. which he estimated the 17th ditto.. 77 Clouds, and rain. 18th ditto... 76 height from baromet- 86 Clouds. 19th ditto.. 75 86 rical observations to 20th ditto... 71 | 89 95 904 be 4500 feet above 21st ditto... 76 22nd ditto.. 92 84 Rain and thunder. the sea ; the peak of 23rd ditto.../ 75 94 81: Heavy rain and thunder. Dobgarh being 4800, 24th ditto. 78 72 78 Ditto ditto and wind. 125th ditto... and that of Chaurader, 74 76 Thunder and rain. 26th ditto.. 75 Clouds and thunder. the highest peak of 27th ditto... 81 Cloudy;clear in afternoon all, still more. He, on 28th ditto 76 85 Clear. 29th ditto.. 88 87 Ditto. that occasion, found 30th ditto.. 77 84 Rain ; clear by forenoon. the thermometer show 31st ditto... 78 80 Thun.showery, heavyrain 850 at 5 P. M. of the Ist June... 70 80 Thunder and clouds. 2nd ditto 71 84 78 Ditto and showers. 21st at Dobgarh ; 71° 3rd ditto 92 20 Note.-It may be at 8 A. M., and 86º at 4th ditto,.. 81 95 generally gathered from 5th ditto... this table, that the tem. noon at Pachmarhi on 6th ditto... 76 86 perature of these places the 22nd; and 989 at 5 7th ditto... 76 85 is in the hot months from 8th ditto... 82 12. to 15. below Jabbal-P. M. of the next day at pur. Kanchari, a place above Hoshangabad ; while it is considered that, in the valley, the thermometer would at that period have exhibited 105° or upwards. Salubrity of Sagur and Nurbudda Territories. The principal com- plaints of this part are fever and dysentery, to which may perhaps be added affections of the spleen ; and in the higher parts particularly, rheumatic_complaints. Affections of the liver very rarely occur, even amongst Europeans, unless brought from other parts; and although a severe attack of that form of remittent fever, termed "jangal fever,' or repeated occurrence of fever and ague, very generally compel the European patient to seek a teniporary change of air, yet without doubt that portion of the community are, on the whole, much more robust than in Bengal ; and considerably more so than even in most parts of the provinces bordering the Ganges and Jumna. Fevers prevail from after the setting in of the rains, until the middle or end of November, chiefly from the middle of September to the end of October ; and when dysentery supervenes upon this complaint, it almost invariably proves fa- tal. Such, at least, is the experience of the jails, and if these can be re- garded as a criterion by which to judge of the country at large, the follow- ing table will be valuable, 68 68 74 91 88 85 87 87 86 81 87 73 71 72 93 91 94 95 93 93 91 90 89 89 82 88 85 85 78 78 80 80 88 93 92 9th ditto.. 78 VOL. 11.) 339 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Statement shewing Amount of Sickness and Mortality in the Jails of the Sagur and Nurbudda Territories, NUMBER OF CASES OCCURRING DURING THREE YEARS. JABBALPUR. SEONI. SAGUR. Damon. HOSHANGABAD. BAITUL. TOTAL. NAMES OF DISEASES. A. D. A. D. A. D. A. D. A. D. A. D. A. D. Average. Average. Average. Average. Average Average. 1838 1839 1840 1838 1839 1840 Average. 1838 1839 1840 1838 1839 1840 1838 1839 1840 1838 1839 1840 1838 1839 1840 Average No. of Prisoners..... 850 984 956 930) 167 208/ 176 184 280 308401 330 95 90 93 93) 243 267) 304 271 84 90 86 86 1719 1947 2016 1894 Fevers.. Dysentery. Other Complaints. 269 143 129 180 159 302 193 918 728 453) 489 557 382 211 143 245 205 233 250 229 83 75 1000 86 1826 1417 1304 1515 109 189 193 161 50 98 69 7:2 245 313 205 254 45 921 86 74 71 97) 1151 94 26 36 181 27 506 825 686 285 173 232 268 224 132 137 116 168 722 656 666 681 236 365 444 349 234 333 258 276 195 157 124 159 1692 1880 1812 1817 Total of Cases 557 561 590 568/ 341 537 378 418 1695 1422 1360 1492 663 668 673/ 668 510 663 623 599) 304 268 242272 1064 1222 3866 1067 Deaths by Fever..... Ditto by Dysentery......... Ditto by other causes ........ 17 12 2 11 23 16 6 8 2 11 14 7 Not given. 4 14 5) 10 38 4 2 15 2 5 22 4 Not given. HAR Not ascertainable. Total of Deaths.... 311 50 16 321 38 20 / 231 52 29 31 18 14 17 11 14 19 192 15 0 3 57 150 1800 641103 . 340 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Judging from this return, which includes at. Jabbalpur the Thug and Dakoit prisoners, as well as those properly belonging to the district, it appears that the salubrity of that station, as compared with all the others, is marvellous ; while the vast amount of sickness at Sagur may be considered apalling. At the latter, however, it is generally agreed, that the position of the jail is radically bad, and the proportion of sickness there is greater than in the town and cantonments; while at Jabbalpur the opposite would appear to be, to some extent, the case. Epidemics.- Influenza and cholera are the only epidemics, which have of late years visited this territory ; excepting of course the small- pox, of whicli the ravages are in some years fearful. Cholera, since it first made its appearance in Hindostan, has been a frequent visitor; more than three or four years rarely elapsing without its recurrence. In 1837 it committed great ravages ; and in the present year, (1841,) it has again been exceedingly severe. At Sagur, in the former year, it is stated by the superintending surgeon to have carried off from 60 to 70 persons daily, in the town and sudder bazar : but at Jabbalpur it is a most singular fact, that however severe in the town, it has never yet made its appearance in the cantonments, which are somewhat higher, and to the S. E. of the town; nor in a village a mile west of it, unless in the case of persons who have slept in the town; although the distance between them cannot ex- ceed a mile, and the intercommunication is constant and abundant. In the jail likewise and Najib lines adjoining them, instances are exceedingly rare ; although these are in the very suburbs of the town, and not raised above it. Of this dreadful disease, the civil surgeon of Jabbalpur strikingly remarks: • I may notice as a very peculiar feature in this scourge, its mode of tra- velling gradually from place to place, by slow but sure steps; and seeni- ingly not at all by the streams of population, as the course of intercourse was often greatest in an opposite direction; viz. eastwards towards Mir- zapur, at the time the disease was gradually progressing westward. At the head of Maihyar valley, there is a range of the Bhandher hills, which divides the disease into two streams; one proceeding up the valley, and towards Jabbalpur ; the other, via Lohargong and Hutta, to Sugur, &c. On leaving Jubbalpoor, it again divides into two streams; the one pro- ceeding to Gurra and Tilwara ghat, the high road to Seoni and Nagpur ; the other to Jhansi ghat, and so down the valley of the Nurbudda, to Nursingpur and Hoshangabad.' Salubrity of Elevated Spots.—Of the healthiness or otherwise of the elevated spots above spoken of, nothing can be said with certainty, as no European, nor any person competent to judge, has resided there during the rainy season. Owing to the sanctity of those spots, however, brahınins and others from the plains, frequently take up their abode there ; and their accounts would not lead to the supposition that fevers are unusually prevalent there, as is stated to be the case at Abu, and some other similar elevated table lands of this continent, and at Amarkantak in particular ; as on the west, from whence the wind blows, there are fine open plains, for a distance of 50 or 60 miles: there seems no sufficient reason for sup- posing they should be so. Certainly in the month of May, the temperature has been found such as well to suit a European constitution, however delicate ; while the cold season is intensely cold and invigorating; so that as the rainy season, at all of the sudder stations, is throughout cold and pleasant, the possession of a bracing climate, to which to retreat during the remaining months, cannot but be regarded as an important privilege. It may be mentioned also, that at Multai above Baitul, the climatę, though not nearly so cold as the above, is perceptibly different from, and greatly superior to that even of Baitul. VOL. 11.) SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. 341 Closing Remarks. It is now full time to close these remarks, enough having been stated in the preceding sections, to indicate, as far as the writer is able, the general structure, appearance, and capabilities of these fine territories. A bracing climate ; mineral treasures of unexplored value; rich and unappropriated lands; abundance of moisture for all agricultural purposes; beautiful scenery ; and a vast variety of products of almost every description that can be desired; these are all to be found here, by those who will seek for them : and are not less to be valued, because for genera- tions past they have mostly lain neglected. The Father of Mercies has been truly lavish of His gifts ; but man has not here been taught as yet to prize them. PART II.-MORAL RELATIONS AND INTERNAL ECONOMY. SECTION I. -Past HISTORY AND POLITICAL CONSTRUCTION. It is probable that there is no portion of the continent of India, of which the attempt to penetrate the remote history is attended with greater difficulty, than that which is now treated of ;-for possessing as it did, in common with the entire forest belt, extending from Guzerat in the west, to Midnapur and Rajmahal in the east, a population formerly con- sisting entirely of the rude hill tribes, who, to the present day, pos- sess no written languages, written records are not to be looked for, excepting for periods comparatively recent; while, as this belt, which has in ali ages formed a marked barrier between the great and Auctuating empires prevailing in the northern and southern portions of Hisdostan ; and which further west, forms but a narrow strip between the two great arepas ; here commences expanding into much more formidable dimen- sions. We find that very rarely was any portion of it chosen, as the route by which armies passed to and fro, and as rarely was the eye of the foreign despot or adventurer directed towards its then uninviting wilds, as an object of conquest. Hence, even after the period when history begins to assume something of reality, as regards other parts ; but little is to be found that can throw light upon this. It is certain, however, that the whole of this territory, as well as much beyond it, was held long before its present and late possessors obtained it, by the hill tribe chiefly named Gonds. To the north of Sagur, the representative of a royal household, styling themselves Raj-Gonds,' still exists in Bundelkhund, and is regarded with great deference by the scanty Gond population now to be found in that quarter. On the west, in the Bhopal territory, similar traces of a formerly powerful dynasty are to be found, and acknowledged as such by the still considerable Gond zemindars, thakurs, and rajahs, who abound in the south of Sagur, and in Hoshangabad and Narsingpur: while as regards the whole of the cast- ern portion, the royal houses of Deogarh-Balaghat (or Chundwara), and Garha-mandla retained more or less sway until a very recent period, the representative of the former being at present a pensioner of the Nagpur government, and that of the latter, of the British. In the western portion, or Sagur, it would appear that the Gonds were subjected by a tribe named Dangi, to which the present chief of Shahgarh belongs, and of the ruling house of which, the representative still exists at Bilehra of Sagur. These were, in their turn, subdued by the Bundelas, from whom the territory passed to the Peshwa. In all other parts, it would appear, that until the tide of the Mahrattas poured 6 342 (PART 1 STATISTICS. in, the Gonds, with the exception of occasional struggles, as in the time of Akbur, when the heroic Rani Durgawati fell in fighting against his generals, remained undisturbed : unless we must except the territory of Sohagpur, from whence they, or else some other similar tribe, such as Kols or Palis, were doubtless expelled by the Rewan family of Baghels, who are still its nominal holders under us. When, however, the representative of the Peshwa had established himself at Sagur, no long period elapsed, before he turned his thoughts further eastward; and marching an army towards Garha, and thence to Mandla, took possession of those towns, and of the entire territory, and made its ruler, first a dependent, and then a prisoner. This portion of territory, together with the whole of Chatis- gurb, Deogurh lying south of the Nurbudda, and the valley itself, to near Hindia, afterwards passed into the hands of the Bhonsla, or Mahratta ruler of Rajpur, from whom we obtained Garra-mandla, Narsingpur, Ho- shangabad and Baitul; besides a portion of Deogurh, constituting the south- ern pergunnahs of Seoni, while Sagur continued, until the transfer, with the family who heriditarily held it as a dependency of the Peshwa. Present political importance and circumstances of transfer.--That the political importance of these territories has greatly increased with the changed aspect of Hindostan has been sufficiently indicated by the transactions of the last 30 years. When the extensive plans of the Marquis of Hastings obliged him to take a general view of all the Native States scattered over Central India, and to regulate his alliances, so as best to command their co-operation, and prevent their intrigues from proving dangerous, he early determined that a friendly understanding with the chieftainship of Bhopal and Sagur would be the most effective means of raising a barrier between Sindhia and the Ruler of Berar; and of connecting, in some degree, our possessions and resources in the north of Hindoostan, with those of our allies in the Dakkin. Negociations were ac- cordingly opened, through the Governor-General's Agent in Bundelkhand, with both the Nawab of Bhopal, and the Nana Governor of Sagur ; thus treating the latter as an independent power, which the remoteness of his principality from Pûna virtually, though not nominally, rendered him; and although circumstances at the time prevented them from being drawn to a successful conclusion, yet when a treaty was ultimately made with the Peshwa, Sagur was included in the territories transferred by him to the British. In like manner, when the Bhonsla Ruler of Berar broke his en- gagements, and commenced hostilities with us, Jabbalpur was at once taken possession of by our troops, after some resistance; and when a fresh treaty was entered into with him, he was required to surrender to us in perpetuity Jabbalpur, and all the possessions south of the Nurbudda, now held by the British, together with the separate fort of Dhamoni, on the brow of the Vindly, a range, north of Sagur. Though thus ceded to us by their Lords Paramount, these possessions were not, in all instances, peaceably surrendered. The Sagur ruler, or rather Binaik Rao, the manager of the Bai Sahibah, widow of the late Nana, who then held the territory, made every demonstration of holding out against us; and it was only the conviction of the utter hopelessness of opposition, which induced him ultimately to surrender the fort and terri- tory, on the condition of 2 lacs being laid apart from the revenues, as pensions to the members and dependants of the Mahratta government. Dhamoni held out, and was only evacuated after a regular siege. Mandla the same ; the Killadar having received, as was satisfactorily proved, pri- vate injunctions from Appa Sahib of Nagpur, not to surrender without a struggle: and Chauragurh, or the brow of the Satpura range, was prepared to do the same, had not our overwhelming success, shewn the absurdity of such a course. The wild pergunnahs of Sohagpur, the Baghel chief 2 VOL. 11.) 343 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. of which had been deposed and imprisoned by the Mahrattas, but after- wards pensioned, were transferred, along with the district of Jabbalpur (or Garha proper) and Mandla ; but their satisfactory annexation and management was rendered a matter of some difficulty, owing to their remoteness, and the chief was restored to their management as zemin- dar. In a very short period, peace and tranquillity were established throughout these entire territories, where constant inroads of Pindaras, and other sources of trouble and turmoil, had previously prevailed. From that period to the present, their prosperity has continued steadily to ad- vance; especially of late, since the completion of a reduced land assess- ment: and who but must perceive how different would have been the character of British supremacy, and the intercommunication of Native States, in Central Hindostan; but for the possession by us of this in- sulated portion of territory? It may be well here to add, that in the Sagur district, besides the possessions above pointed out, we afterwards ob- tained, by negociation, the five Deori mahals, belonging to a dependant of Sindhia. And we still manage, on behalf of the latter ruler, the per- gunnahs of Rahtgurh (a pergunnah and strong hill fort, formerly held by the Bhopal family ); a half of Malthori, and Garrakota, (a rich pergunnah and strong fort, only recently taken by him by force, from the present Shahgarh chief,) the net proceeds of which contribute towards meeting the expenses of the Gwalior contingent. Military arrangements, and their importance.-On taking possesion of Sagur, it was immediately made the head-quarters of a military division, which it still continues to be, although the head-quarters of the civil establishments have been transferred to Jabbalpur ; and at present three corps of native infantry, a company of European artillery, and a corps of irre- gular cavalry, are stationed there, under the major general commanding the division, the whole of which, excepting Sagur, at present, and since the commencement of the Afghan campaign, consists of Madras troops, viz. a corps of native infantry at Jabbalpur, and one at Hoshangabad, fur- nishing detachments to Seoni and Baitul. The position is no doubt an important one, in a military point of view, as although the complete sub. jection to which the surrounding states have been reduced, the insigni- ficance of most of them, and the friendly relations which they have all hitherto desired to maintain, have for the most part obviated the neces- sity for troops being called out: yet such occasions have arisen, and in- sulated as the territory is together with the recollections of former power, and of the frequent changes of rulers, still fresh in the minds of the people, and with many turbulently disposed members among its own inhabitants, it is certain that their presence is absolutely indispensible. SECTION II.-ADMINISTRATION. Civil Arrangement made subsequent to the Cession.—When we first ob- tained these territories, Sagur (including Damoh and Hatta) was man- aged separately from the districts ceased by Nagpur, being regarded as suitably situated for annexation to Bundelkhand. After a short period, however, the whole was formed, as at present, into a single charge, and placed under the Governor-General's Agent at Jabbalpur, who, in addi- tion to controling their entire territorial management, has to maintain our political relations with the Baghel state of Rewan, and with the petty chieftainships of Maihyar, Kothi, Uchehrah, Sohawal and Shahgarh. The whole was formed into the districts of Jabbalpur, Seoni, Narsing- pur, (or Garrawara,) Hoshangabad, Baitul, Sagur, and Hatta, to which was added, after the permanent annexation of the Deori Mahals, the small 344 (PART 1. STATISTICS. & district of Rahly, adjoining Sagur. . The districts thus divided, were very unequal in extent and importance, and they were entrusted, each, to a Principal Assistant to the Governor-General's Agent, who conducted the entire administrative duties in all departments : these officers drawing sal- aries varying from 1000 to 2500 rupees per mensem, according to their standing, and the importance of the charge held by them; and having junior assistants to aid them, where the work was heaviest. In 1835 A. D. however, these arrangements were entirely remodelled; nearly simul. taneously with the completion of the 20 years' settlement of the territory which is now in force, and the following substituted for them. The whole territory or division has been divided into three districts ; each under a Principal Assistant Commissioner, on a salary of 2,000 Rs.; viz. Jabbalpur formed of Jabbalpur and Seoni ; Sagur of Sagur, Hatta, and Rahly, and Hoshangabad of Hoshangabad, Narsingpur and Bai- tul. Under each of these officers, is a deputy, or first junior assistant, on a salary of 1,000 Rs. per mensem ; to whom are entrusted the entire crimi- nal duties of the portion of the district allotted to him, subject only to the supervision of the principal assistant; and so much of the revenue duties as may be made over to him by the latter, through whom all the correspondence with the commissioner passes ; but as yet no portion of the judicial civil duties have been committed to this class of officers. They are stationed as follows: the first junior of Jabbalpur at Seoni; of Sagur at Damoh ; and of Hoshangabad at Baitul. There is also a native Deputy Collector stationed at Narsingpur, who has criminal and revenue powers, and executes decrees of civil courts; and from the present year, a similar officer has been appointed to the Sohagpur, and Ramgurh mahals of Jabbalpur. These, with the aid of one junior assist- ant or more, at the principal stations, perform the entire criminal and revenue duties of the districts ; including the department of customs, ab- kari, &c.; and, with the exception of Jabbalpur and Sagur, the post-office likewise. In the judicial civil department, the principal assistants, whose court is merely appellate, (unless the parties be connected by re- lationship or otherwise with the officer presiding over the court below); is assisted by two sudder ameens, one for each division of his district : as also by an experimental description of courts, named pergunnah courts, established at each tahsildari, and consistiug of four assessors, two selected by each party out of twelve named by his opponent, with the tahsildar as president; and with power to hear cases not exceeding 400 Rs. in amount ; but which courts appear to have afforded so little satisfaction, that an en- tire remodelling of the arrangements for administering justice in this department, is under contemplation. Commissioner and Superior Authorities.-From the principal assistant, an appeal lies in all departments to the governor-general's agent and commissioner, whose duties, exclusive of his political ones, combine those of commissioner, civil and session judge, superintendent of police, as well as controller of the departments of customs and post office. He is usually aided, principally for the conduct of details of the political office, by a junior assistant, and might doubtless, upon occasion, einploy on po- litical duties, as well as on others, any of the assistants subject to his or- ders: but virtually the duties of the latter, excepting the one personally attached to the agent, are exclusively confined to the administration of our own territory. For many years after the transfer, the governor-gen- eral's agent was responsible to the Supreme Government alone, in all matters : but now the revenue control is vested in the Sudder Board at Allahabad ; and the criminal in the Nizamut Adalut : the spirit, and for the most part the letter of the Regulations being enforced in both these departments ; while in the judicial civil, the code differs in some matc- VOL. 11.) 345 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. rial points ; and the control is vested in the government of the North Western Provinces direct. Business performed.—The following tables exhibit the quantity of work transacted in these three departments, during the year 1840 A. D., in all the districts of the division. CRIMINAL BUSINESS. Cases UC-, Per sons punish- curred dur- ed. ing the year. Other- wise. District, Heinous cases, in- Egcluding Burglaries. Theft and trifling Iu Heinous cases, 10 - Capitally. Persons pending. o Prisoners in Jail. Property Plundered. Property Recovered, Jabbalpur, Seoni,.. 921 466 1 1 54 21 408 463 372 151 173 191 32 22 354 181 24,031 3 4 2,859 9 9 13,594 2 9 1,302 14 9 37,635 6 1 4,162 8 6 Total,.. 75 Tills) $8/8/58 | In triling cases. 559 636 563 54 535 157 44 899 : 46 24 645 691 555 107 330 354 166 33 381 77 Sagur, Damoh,........ Total,.. 66,208 0 08.073 0 0 11,388 8 3 1,674 14 9 201 1313 70 | T3 1043 721 140 1435 7,596 8 3 9,747 11 : 366 89 86,023 7 10 3,432 8 11 2,756 11 5 160 70 Hoshangabad, 495 2114 1 62 662 725) 749 109 Baitul, 42 282 1 6 128 135 177 17 Total,.. 537 2396 2 68 790 860 926) 126 Grand Total, 1184 5126 4 213 232125112210 320 455 88,780 3 3 3,592 15 11 1448 204,002 1717,503 7 2 PART 1. VOL. II. 346 (PART 1 STATISTICS. CIVIL BUSINESS. Cases in Pergunnah Courts. Cases before Sudder Amin. Not exceeding 400 Rs. Exceeding 400 Rs. Appeals to Principal Assistant, In Perg. Crts. From Sr. Am. Appeal to Com- mission- er. Name of Zillahs. Dismissed. Decided ex parte. Nonsuited, adjus- ted, or withdrawn. Decreed. Total. Dismissed. Total. Reversed. Nonsuited, adjus. 5:1:: Decided ex parte. Reversed. Av Upheld. 1000 Upheld. 36 E 15Total. 8 Jabbalpur, Seoni... 265 230 61 20 3 315) Pending. 807 319 Decided ex parte. Nonsulteu, aujus- lied, or withdrawn. 8 ve Total. 1133] 181 660) 112 569 109 212) 42 58 200 1030 189 20 131 26 293 213 6 Ear Pending. 19 861 8 25 2 1 3 2 12 Reversed. CEE 10 Upheld. 11 $15 allez Dismissed. 4 So 55. Decreed. 15 27 111 10 3 :: :: 1 i 4 4 18 14 54 3 6 5 60 8 78 46 22 7 ::: 8 32 57 Total, 495 81 1126 1702 290 872) 1511 71 226 1323 702 26 2.. | 4 | 32 42 Sagur, 418 50 13 505 9861 17 952) 149 673 1774 143 19 5 9 33 Damoh, 852 73 6 573 1504 52101€ 305 18715101 287 15 8. 1 28 Total, 1270 123 19 1078 2490 69 1970 451 8603281 530 34' 13 10 57 39 Hoshangabad, 1691 335 36701 5696 6151 182 71 ? 129 385 14 33 20 1 5 8 Baitul, 656 92 431 979 19 588 15 36 294935 6 1 7 1 Total, 2147 4.27 4101 6675 631 770 41 20 1839 20 1 | 6; 66 9 Grand total, 3912 651 19 630310867 993 36 12 694/ 1121509 5927 1150 99 35 1 20 155 90 Add cases of Sudder Amin not above 400.. 3612 694112 1509 5927 1150 1 3 71 90 8 11 8 11 11 68 100 53 28 36 126'140 18 29 40 26 1 46 65 166 166 3 61 | 148 293 330 15 86 71 423 1320 79 101 19 46 65 5 56 89 145 87 9 Total of cases not exceeding! ditto rupees, ........: 7512 1325 131 7814 6794 2 143 Add remaining cases of Sud- Note.—The cases received by the Principal Assistants to be heard by themselves in the first in- 99! der Amin,............... 35 1 20 155 96 stance, being very few, are excluded from this statement. Cases nonsuíted, adjusted, or withdrawn from before them are entered amongst the decisions upheld. The cases pending before Commissioner Total of original cases of all it has not been considered necessary to enter. kind, ........ 7623 1360 132,7834 16949 2233 *..... 23 , 1360 13 VOL. 11.] 347 SAGUR AND NURBUFDA TERRITORIES. REVENUE BUSINESS. Jabbalpur. Sagur. Hoshangabad. Nature of cases. Principal As- Junior sistant. Assistant. Ist Principal As- Junior sistant. Assistant, Ist Principal As- sistant. 1st Junior Assistant. Grand Total. Total. Total. Total. 42 89 1281 118 246 253 44 297 632 85 471 53 264 174 5 20 35 94 268 386 13 48 3 1003 75 7 Ist. Selllements, Leases, and Boundaries, 47 2d. Claims to Ownership or farm; by underletting, trans- fer, inheritance, &c. 211 3it, Balances, 15 4th. Summary suits ; cases of Patwaries, and execution of Decrees, 377 5th. Rent-free grants and pen- sions, 53 Gth. References from Commis- sioner and from other Courts, 102) 7th. Castoms, 8th Appointments &c. of establishments, 9th. All other matters, 638 95] 472 195 179 374 3661 123 489, 1335 1 54) 369 275644 388 246 634 1332 17) 119 160 132 292 571 167 741 42 42 2161 516 .... 1152 258 114 42 156 4 642 674 5511225 1278 619 1892 156 3759 9702 1443 21711660)1891 1404|3295 3459|1288 4747| It is to be regretted that the above return for Hoshangabad, although it includes, does not separately exhibit the work performed by the De- puty Collector of Narsingpûr, the only officer, of that grade, employed in this territory, during the year in question : but there is no doubt that his duties were very heavy, and very satisfactorily performed, though the natives of the pergunnah have never ceased to regret the abolition of the European station. Of the above statements, that alone which is allotted to the revenue business cannot be regarded as strictly correct, it appear- ing that the modes of entry adopted by different officers, materially differ. But there can be no doubt, from their inspection, that the amount of work in the Hoshangabad district, greatly exceeds that in any other, and see- ing that it includes almost the entire length of the richest and most popu- lous portion of the Nurbudda valley, thi not to be wondered it. Tahsildars and other Subordinate Officers.—The executive detail is car- ried on by tahsildars, or Native collectors, receiving variously from 70 to 150 Rs. per mensem ; to whom, from the period of the transfer, police duties have been entrusted as well as revenue. Subordinate to these, and at stations apart from them, are police officers, denominated variously ; Naibs, Zilladars, Police Muharrirs, or Thannadars ; drawing from 15 to 30 Rs. per mensem, in most instances, though in some cases as much as 50 Rs., when employed partially in revenue duties. And below these again, a class named Jammadars, drawing from 7 to 12 Rs. per mensem, who are stationed with a few peons in those localities, from whence it is de- sirable that written reports should be transmitted. The distribution of all these functionaries in the three districts is as follows: 348 (PART 1. STATISTICS. venue and Police Officers . lice Officers . \ lice Officers . Llice Officers . lice Officers . penue and Po- . Superior Po- Superior Po- JABBALPUR. SAGUR. HOSHANGABAD. Superior Re- Po- Superior Re- venue and Bo-- lice Officers. lice Officers. lice Officers. lice Officers. Shapura........ Baraila, .. Sagur. Naraoli. Hoshangabad. Sohagpur.... Kahtgurh Jabbalpur... Kistanpur..... Panagur. Gambirra, Seoni ... Rahatgurh. Sohagpur.... Sehora... Ghosalpur..... Khunlasa. Srinaggarh... Salimabad... Murwara . Khurai.. Malthon. Nurhat, Narsingpur.. Champatra .. Eran Shahpur ... Bachai .. Locations not given. Seoni.. Keolari. Dangartal. .... Binaika.. Dhamoni.. Baitul. Atnair Lakhnadon ... Dhuma. Banda... Maltai Saonligarh Mandla.... Damoh........ Tejgurh........ Satheria Katangi... ... Rahly.. Deori. Garrakiota. Hatta... ... VOL. 11.) 349 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. The above being the present scale, though many changes have from time to time taken place, and are still in progress. Of the latter, the most important regards the Mahals of Sohagpur and Ramgurh in Jab- balpur, which cover an area of nearly 7000 square miles, containing in some parts well cultivated plains ; yet have been hitherto administered exclusively by a single zilladar, on a salary of 40 Rs. per mensem, with 10 peons or chaprasis for his establishment. This arrangement has of course been virtually tantamount to no Government at all; and as it has been found that in consequence, fine territory has remained stationary, if not retrograded, since we obtained possession of it, and its population wholly surrendered to the tender mercies of zemindars or feudal barons, who, on various pleas, plunder them almost of all they possess, it has at length been determined that a reform shall be effected in this respect; and increased establishments allowed to that quarter. Customs.—The customs arrangements of each district are at present carried on independently, and the duties are principally levied on goods crossing the Nurbudda ; or on the western boundary in conformity with an improved system, introduced in 1829, at the suggestion of the then governor general's agent. South of the Nurbudda, goods pass from east to west without paying any duty; and east of Goari Ghat (near Jabbalpur) none is levied, even on crossing the Nurbudda ; unless the goods pass afterwards through Jabbalpur, or some other customs station. În the districts north of the Nurbudda, however, duties are still levied to a considerable amount, on production and internal traffic, giving rise to much peculation, and considerable inconvenience : and as it has been found that the present system is on several grounds not satisfactory, chiefly because the duties of the department cannot be efficiently superin- tended by officers overburdened with other miscellaneous duties, and acting without concert, it is now in contemplation to introduce new ar- rangements, with more of European controul; a main feature of which will be, the concentration of all the stations upon a single line, extending along the entire west and south frontiers, from the extreme southwest point of the Hoshangabad valley, to the northeast corner of the Jabbal. pur district. By means of which line, it is anticipated, that while inter- nal traffic will be entirely exempted, together with the small amount of import and export between the territory and the south, the whole of the transit trade passing through it, will be effectually intercepted. Through- out the whole of the tract lying cast of Jabbalpur, it may be mentioned that the entire customs heretofore collected through the zemindars, have recently been entirely remitted. 350 [PART 1. STATISTICS. TOPOGRAPHICAL DIVISIONS ; CULTIVATED AREA; POPULATION; REVENUE. EXTENT IN BIGHAS OF 3025 SQUARE YARD OR PER ACRE. Names of Districts. Government Population. Assessment. Remarks. Rabbi. Cultivated. Arrable waste. Kharif. Cultivated. Arrable waste. Unfit for Tillage. Total of Area. Jabbalpur. ... 255421 Seoni. 174620 120775 102149 207753 119333 255499 126248 92075 |355297 931523 877637 445865 274677 Total 430041 222924 327086 381747 1447372 1809160 720542 Sagur 213998 10 112703 9 1765033 97100 16 194180 181 694986 167 255946 Damoh. 217564 4214810 71|116816 18 123065.138|217648 151 889905 192 305727 Total 431562 14: 327513 164/193320 1 220166 93411829 134 1584892 151 561673 This census was 488190 obtained in 1827 A. D. from enquiries through 158125 the Patwaris and can- oougoes; the mea- surements were made 646315 in the year 1825 A. D. As regards the wilder parts,the measurements are wholly conjectural. 398860 The measurements of 417571 this district, excepting the portion included in Tejgurh, are probably 814431 more nearl y correct than any of the others; but the free tenures are not included. The 512807 population is consider- ed to be more nearly 9 162645 lacs than what is here given. The measure- ments were made from 675452 1830 to 1836 A, D., and census taken in 1830- 31. The census here ex- 95119 hibited is taken from the Patwari Papers of 1837 A, D., and the esti- 2231370 8 mates of area at the same period, Hoshangabad. 370437 133 174702 1228041 16 120701 23 694025 2 1587907 151 462523 Baitul. 164393 194 88402 1 123871 11j117581 4 137497 93 631746 53162805 Total. . 534831 13263104 1 351913 81 238282 68 831522 1142219654 1 625328 54 8489161 186475_64172802 93 6760651 of 1 Scindia's Perg 48022 123 33542 11 19331 12 23879 9 31168 4 155944 9 63510 Grand Total. . 144445 84847084 87 891641 864075 53 1722392 93 5769651 511971053 2231370 . VOL. II.) 351 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. A detailed tabular statement, exhibiting the several taluqs and per- gunnahs of the entire territory, with their capabilities and resources, is add- ed at the close. Neither the measurements nor the census can be relied on as correct, having been made entirely through the instrumentality either of the fixed establishments, who had already abundance of other labour ; or of Natives still less educated or trustworthy. In those parts especially, which abound with hill and forest, and the population is scanty and fluctuating, the entries cannot be regarded otherwise than as a rough approximation, the cultivated portions being calculated from the quantity of seed sown ; while the estimates of those unfit for tillage, are little better than fanciful, and the aggregate area of the entire territory thus deduced, cannot exceed } of the reality. At the present period, more- over, both the population and cultivation must materially differ from those here represented; but as no connected attempt to ascertain either has been made of late years, they are not at present obtainable: and these returns can be viewed only as in some degree valuable as a standard for comparison hereafter. Detail of Castes, constituting the population of three districts in the Sagur and Narbudda Territories. No. of Houses. No of Persons. Names of Castes. Remarks. Hoshan- Jabbalpur, not includingSa- hagpur. Seoni. gabad. I Mosulmans, 2 Brahmins, 3 Rajputs and Jats, 4 Kayaths and Khatries, 5 Kurmis and Bagries, 6 Lodhis, 7 Kocbis and Malis, 8 Gonds and other hill Tribes, 9 Kirrars, 10 Mahrattas of Rajput and Powar castes, 11 Ahirs and Gaulis, 12 Kori and other weaver castes, 13 Kallars and other spirit sellers, 14 Blacksmiths and Carpenters, 15 Kahurs, and other of the bearer castes, 16 All other castes, 3,539 7,244 16,433 9,830 7,046 29,047 3,235 2,955 34,505 811 1,081 5,002 5,212 12,344 53,106 7,949 6,166 33,261 3,587 2,625 14,924 *18,301' *22,515 1,37,585 2,382 15,339 11,986 26,715 18,438 9,709 4,553 71,569 21,565 31,259 19,512 13,868 • It is quite certain that these must be greatly under estimala The chief portion of the Mahratta tribes, which are numer- ous in Hoshangabad, must have been included uuder other heads, e 45,915 5,688 20,157 1,33,230116,591 Total Houses, Add Sohagpur, Total Houses, 98,379 12,289 1,10,668 Total Population, 4,45,865 2,74,677 4,62,523 352 1. STATISTICS. (PART For comparison with the above Population Returns, the following table, prepared by the Governor General's Agent in October 1831, may be useful; but as the territory has been subsequently differently subdivided, a comparison of the several districts cannot well be instituted between the two. The only new census taken in the interval between them, is that of Hoshangabad ; and were these returns worthy of confidence, it would be mortifying to learn, that the population has retrograded --but such is certainly not the fact. Males. Number. Name of Districts. Females. Of what Religion. Grand Total of Mahome- Adults. Children. Total. both Sexes Hindoos. dans. Remarks. Adults. Children. Total. 1 Sagur, 92,462 64,323 1,56,785 90,672 44,227 1,34,899 2,91,684 2 Jabbalpur, 4,47,236 ... 3 Nursinghur, 90,8201 68,311 1,59,131 57,054 1,44,074 3,13,205 87,020 14,705 2,76,979 The dates of the several calculations 14,012 4,33,224 correspond with the last settlement ac- 9,855 2,93,350 counts, except Ho- shangabad, which was 5,681 1;57,274 'made this year, (1831). 6,832 2,68,620 4 Hatta, ... 87,055 ... 75,900 1,62,955 5 Seoni, ... ... *** 2,75,452 ... 6 Baitul, 79,633 78,844 1,58,477 2,725 1,55,752 7 Hoshangabad, 61,755 45,224 1,06,979 60,520 38,793 99,313 2,06,292 7,713 1,98,579 8 Rahly, 42,701 36,628 79,329 . 41,451 29,752 71,203 1,50,532 4,5101,46,022 Total, ... ... ... ... ... (19,95,833 66,03319,29,800 VOL. 11.) 353 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Detail of Population.—Above is annexed a distributive list of the different classes composing the population of those portions imme- diately available to the writer, in which the principal divisions only have been entered, as the detail would otherwise become inconveniently ex- tended. In the Sagur district, a considerable number of Mahratta pun- dits, and retainers of the former Government still remains; at Sagur prin- cipally; but also at Hatta, Rahly, Kheinlasa, Patharia, and other consi- derable towns : pensions to the amount of 2 lacs having been laid apart from the revenues by treaty, for distribution amongst them, of which, however, the greater portion has lapsed by deaths ; including that of the Bai Sahibah herself, to whose family 10,000 Rs. per annum has been continued by Government. A few of the same class of persons exist at Jabbalpur and other places : and at Seoni and Chapara, are the remains of a colony of Pathans, the head of whom, as having been the former local rulers on the part of the Nagpur government, is now a pensioner and jagirdar ; with these exceptions, it may be said, that the body of the agri- cultural community is principally constituted as follows : Kurmis and Lodhis in all parts, as well as Brahmins; to which are to be added in Sagur : Danghis, Bundelas, and Grassia Panwars ; in Kumhari and other breeding parts: Ahirs; in Sohagpur: Baghels ; in Seoni: Bagris and Kirrars : below the southern ghats, and in some parts above them : Mah- rattas of the castes Panwar, Lodhi, and Goculi ; and in all the hilly and wild parts; Gonds and Kurkus; to which last may be added, in the eastern portions, Kols, Palis, and Kanwars, all of them analogous tribes. To these must be added a sprinkling of Musalmans, and the usual classes of traders, writers, and artizans, and we have the entire popula- tion of these territories. Hill Tribes. Of the above, almost all those which differ in name from the castes ordinarily met with in other parts, are still members of the Rajput, or other great tribe of the Hindu family; or else separated from them by some very immaterial line of distinction : but the Gonds and their congeners are so entirely peculiar to this part, and so far removed and different in all respects from the rest of the community, that a notice of these territories must be incomplete, without some special reference to them. The Gonds include amongst them several different sections: the Baiyas, who are very generally regarded as sorcerers, living apart from all, in solitary habitations, in the most dense forests, where they clear spaces with their axes, and sow their grain, without further labour, in the ashes left after the felled timber has been burned ; but subsisting, for the most part, on the roots and fruits of the forest, (with which they are espe- cially familiar,) the wild honey, or the beasts of game, which, in some parts, they occasionally destroy, with bows and poisoned arrows--the Bhumias, a nearly similar, and almost equally wild race, without whose consecra- tion, a village is not considered babitable, or safe from tigers, and who are universally the referees in all disputes regarding boundaries, and estab- lished usages amongst these tribes--the Pardhans, who preside at their orgies, are their beggars and bards, and unquestionably the most roguish and worthless part of their community,—the Patharis, who greatly assimi. late to the latter, with some other divisions. All of these, together with the Kols, Palis, Kanwars, and Kurkus above alluded to, are universally sup- posed to be the aborigines of at any rate the forest portions of this country, and are doubtless allied in origin and characteristics, to the Kunds, Hos, Mondas, Mankis, Santals, and other Pahari races on the east ; and with the Bhils, Sonds, Kulis, Minas, and other races in the west. As yet, however, very little indeed is known, as to the domestic economy, habits, and sentiments of that section of this primitive race, to which re- ference is more immediately made, as they possess not any written V V PART I. VOL. II, 354 (PART 1 STATISTICS. language, nor has any European as yet thoroughly acquired their spoken one; and although most of them can make themselves understood in Hindi, and the Thakurs and superior persons amongst them communicate nearly as freely with their European rulers as any other class, yet no one has yet allowed himself to be brought into such close contact with them, as to break through that reserve which a contemned race never fails to show; or to enable him to penetrate below the mere surface of their feel. ings, customs, and superstitions. Their Superstitions, and other Customs.- This race nowhere worships idols, excepting where persons of the superior ranks have been cajoled by Brahmins into aping Hinduism. They are however filled with supersti- tions; and when it is said that the One Supreme Being is their object of worship, it must not be supposed that there is any purity in their con- ception, or fervour in their adoration of Him. They offer to Him sacrifices, principally of pigs and fowls, in the thirst of the most abominable drunk- enness; and intoxicating spirits—(that made by distillation from the flower of the Mohwa being the only one in general use)-would seem to consti- tute the main and indispensible ingredient in all their ceremonies, whe- ther of oblation, gladness, or mourning. Insulated peaks of hills are viewed by them with great awe, being generally named in a manner to convey this sentiment ;-trees will be frequently met within the forest, having chickens' feathers and claws suspended in numbers from their branches, which are similarly regarded by them; as well as heaps of stones or 'cairns' raised on the sides of the road by the contributions of travellers, and even in some instances, 'an unshapen stone, with a little red earth and oil plastered over it. Their dead are buried, not burned,- and little earthen platforms, with ornamental pillars, raised over the spot : or if a person of importance, a shed with a pole and flag, though the writer is not aware that they ever place a monumental stone, permanently to mark the spot, or preserve family sepulchral grounds, as is said of other similar tribes. They are usually dirty in their persons, wearing a mere rag around the loins; but very particular in purifications prescribed for females, and even males, under certain circumstances. They are said also to be most sensitive in the observances of caste amongst themselves, — the subdivisions established being alleged to be numerous : and although the writer cannot say how far this may in reality be carried, he is well aware that the · Raj-Gonds' and others, considering themselves of superior orders, would utterly repudiate the idea of connecting themselves, or having any close communication with the members of inferior ones. Their freedom from Priestcraft, &c.-It is however an unquestionable cause for thankfulness, as regards this people, to the philanthropist, that they have not over them a priesthood, fortified by the power of a sacred literature, and a code of direst pains and penalties : so that in their case, it is but the depravity of the human heart, and the ignorance or indifference of the individual which has to be struggled against; and instead of being hemmed in by the conventional restraints and terrors, which surround the Hindu or Musulman who seeks to come out from amongst his bre- thren, it is confidently believed that a great majority of the nation would regard with gratitude as emancipating them from a degraded and uncared-for condition, any efforts made to lead them into the paths of true knowledge and wisdom. Thus it has, in all instances been found, that the success of missions, established amongst such races, greatly surpasses that of almost all others; and it is earnestly hoped that a similar privilege will, ere long, be extended to the races here spoken of. VOL. 11.) 355 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Sec. IV.-COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURES. Direction, and Character of Trade. Imports and Exports.—The subjoined statement of Government dues collected upon merchandize, though far from satisfactory, will perbaps exhibit more clearly, than can be done by any other means, the actual amount and description of traffic carried on during the official year 1840-41 A. D., which does not differ materially from that of preceding years, excepting in the single article of cotton from Umraoti, paying duty in Hoshangabad; on which, during the present year, there has been an increase of duty nearly to the amount of a lac, owing to the China war, or some other cause having led to its export to Mirzapur, instead of to Bombay, as heretofore. In explanation of this table, it may be observed that the principal branches of export and import trade are the export of cotton from all the districts, (through Jabbalpur, for reasons which need not be mentioned; it is all entered under the head of transit), and the import in return of groceries, &c.; from Mirzapur; the import of salt from the westward, for the supply both of this territory, and of a considerable extent eastward, all of which is paid for by bills on other parts, as little or no export trade exists from bence in that direction : to which may be added the export of iron to a very considerable extent, especially from Jabbalpur, as also jungul pro- duce, gûr, and cotton cloths of the coarser descriptions. It will be perceived that this statement exhibits the startling fact of the exports being of more than double the value of the imports; but this is fully accounted for; exclusive of the incomplete manner in which these returns are kept; by the circumstance that entries are made not for the whole territory collectively, but for each district independently, while duty levied in one district in most instances exempts the article from demand in another. Hence the large quantities of salt imported into Jabbalpur through Sagur, do not appear in this statement, after having been entered in that district as in 'transit,' and the same in many other instances; so that the statement cannot be regarded as a fair index of surplus produc- tions and expenditure, though proximately correct in the aggregate as regards the entire amount of goods entering or leaving the frontier, of descriptions on which duty is levied. It must be borne in mind, however, that grain, our chief article of export, is wholly exempted, as is also gold and silver in the shape of coinage; of the former of which, the writer has been credibly assured by monied dealers, that not less than 2 lacs of Rupees worth is annually imported into the Jabbalpur district alone, for the manufacture of ornaments, or for deposit in treasurepits ; while of silver, the expenditure must be still greater. 356 (PART 1. STATISTICS. JABBALPUR. Imports. Exports. Transits. Names of Articles. Total Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Cotton, 458 12 0 11 4 6 601 0 0 15 0 3 5,16,015 8 0 22,158 11 22,158 5 11 Cotton Cloths, 13,143 20 479 14 6 52,632 00 169 92 3,69,188 00 1,822 11 I 2,472 29 Silk and Silk Cloths, 4,780 00 60 12 7 74,480 0 0 88 11 112,21,139 12 O 2,066 2 10 2,215 10 6 Iron and Metals, 12,314 4 0 73 2 6 99,312 12 0 578 10 03,21,314 12 0 1,837 9 4 2,489 5 10 Salt, 78 00 0 14 8 26,418 0 0 311 10 51 1,865 00 22 1 7 334 10 8 Sugar and Gür. 12,202 20 163 9 11 87,202 0 0 20,911 6 10 2,94,145 4 0 7,093 15 4 9,248 14 9 Kerana or Groceries, 1,26,556 00 737 10 03,02,860 0 0 3,015 6 1 8,77,062 00 5,112 9 10 8,865 9 11 Miscellaneous 91,355 0 0 1,914 11 5 44,155 60 336 2 4 1,02,988 4 0 1,115 11 01 3,365 14 7 Total,.. • 13,03,907 4 0 17,47,659 3,442 0 117,47,659 2 0 1237,08,688 6,606 8 137,08,688 8 041,200 2 51,250 JO 3 VOL. 11.) 357 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. SAGUR. Imports. Exports. Transits. Names of Articles. Total amount of Duty: Value. Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Cotton, 17,376 8 0 545 8 96,52,412 12 0119,901 2 104,30,129 0 01 9,230 9 2 29,677 4 9 Cotton Cloths, 11,21,276 0 0 975 4 0 3,97,415 0 0 3,262 15 42,36,716 0 0 2,700 0 31 6,944 3 7 Silk and Silk Cloths, 85,076 0 0 464 20 4,839 0 0 28 2 3 78,255 00 474 11 2 966 13 7 Iron and Metals, 75,742 0 0 637 5 5 18,859 0 01 105 7 2 63,694 0 0 536 4 3 1,27900 Salt, 19,958 8 0 19,162 12 02,60,482 0 0 11,315 10 41,60,971 0021,459 60 57,937 12 4 Sugar and Gûr, 1,87,819 8 0 3,019 20 0 0 0 1,762 10 0 558 12 0 0 00 01,05,757 0 0 561 12 11,96,717 0 01 Kerana or Groceries, 1,59,427 00 5,362 5 2 19,99900 5,018 5 8 10,942 6 11 Miscellaneous, 1,18,865 1201 2,020 142 56,592 40 766 12 9 53,976 0 0 3,887 19 6,369 13 4 Total, |9365,101 19,65,101 4 1|1,38,600 32,987 4 41,38,600 0 0 35,936 14 913,26,215 0 0 45,075 0' 31,13,999 3 4 9|13,26,215 358 I. STATISTICS. (PART HOSHANGABAD. Imports. Exports. Transits. Total amount of Duty. Names of Articles. Amount of Duty. Value. Value. Amount of Duty. Amount of Duty. Value. Cotton, 25,580 10 1,094 10 9 6,47,233 0 0 20,323 10 6 15,29,478 80 93,059 7 6 1,14,477 12 9 Cotton Cloths, 70,652 12 0 1,079 1 11 1,22,450 80 1,552 13 5 1,90,716 40 2,773 12 9 5,405 120 Silk and Silk Cloths, 56,708 12 0 198 8 2 13,631 00 72 11 10 2,417 00 144 9 0 415 13 0 Iron and Metals, 17,666 12 0 230 7 9 31,345 00 814 11 4 52,220 00 651 8 0 1,696 11 1 Salt, 10,71,453 0 0 14,901 4 0 86 10 0 10 13 31 32 14 0 3 15 9 13,915 13 4 Sugar and Gur, 5,747 80 122 10 9 12,567 36 1,359 7 10 3,818 00 126 15 0 1,609 17 Kerana or Groceries, 82,403 13 0 1,695 5 1,44,989 16 2,955 9 9 1,71,023 12 0 · 4,109 15 9 8,790 14 55 7,689 13 0 72 14 5 3,09,320 19 Miscellaneous, 3,641 14 0 7,850 14 0 398 13 9 4,113 10 2 3,72,994 10 3 19,894 11 12,81,420 8 9| 30,761 u 11/19,79,157 404,01,289 1 61,61,425 8 51 l'otal, VOL. 11.) 359 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIFS. GRAND TOTAL. Imports. Exports. Transits. Names of Articles. Amount of Duty. Value. Total Amount of Duty. Amount of Duty. Value. Amount of Duty. Value. Cotton, 63,415 50 1,661 8 013,00,246 12 40,239 13 72,475,623 0 0 1,24,422 11 41,66,313 7 5 Cotton Cloths, 2,05,071 14 0 2,534 4 5 5,52,497 80 4,985 5 11 79,66,004 00 7,302 8 0 14,822 24 Silk and Silk Cloths, 1,89,584 12 0 723 4 11 92,950 00 1899 213,23,411 12 0 2,685 70 3,598 51 Iron and Metals.... 1,05,123 00 940 15 8 149,514 12 0 1,498 12. 64,37,228 12 0 3,025 5 7 5,465 19 Salt, 3,06,741 11 3 34,064 11 02,76,986 10 0 11,638 2 0 1,62,868 12 0 21,485 7 4 67,188 4 4 Sugar and Gúr, 2,05,769 2 0 4,105 6 81 99,569 3 6 3,450 14 8 4,03,720 40 8,983 6 4 16,539 11 8 Kerana or Groceries, 3,68,386 13 0 7,795 4 2 5,27,848 1 0 16,560 11 11 12,44,802 12 0 14,240' 15 3 28,598 15 45 Miscellaneous, 2,17,910 90 4,008 8 8 4,10,066 11 9 4,739 13 0 1,64,815 20 5,401 5 0 14,149 61 Total,...... 16,42,003 2 3 55,823 15 634,09,679 10 9 75,305 2 970,09,070 12 01,87,546 3.98,16,675 6 05 360 [PART 1 STATISTICS. Transit.— The transit trade consists principally of Nagpur and Haidarabad cotton, going towards Mirzapur; salt from Rajputana, going to the eastward and southward ; sugar and other groceries from Mirzapur, for the Nagpur market ; cloths of Nagpur manufacture (which is very superior) for Gwalior and other places; and return cloths of Chanderi and other places on the northward; a trade in hardware or 'maniari,' from the Dakkin to Bundelkhand ; Europe goods from the northward ; and a trade chiefly in cocoanuts, from the direction of Kattak, with Boghelkhand and Bundelkhand. Manufactures.-Of manufactures there is none for which this territory is remarkable. Sugar, it has been mentioned, is not manufactured here; nor is Indigo, except a very minute quantity ; nor any other important articles of agricultural manufactures. The inferior trade, necessary to the mass of the people, such as weaving, shoe-making, carpentry, &c., being as rude as can well be; if we except the cloths of the pergunnahs below the southern ghats ; while superior branches of workmanship must be considered as in their infancy. Paper of good quality is manufactured at Salimabad in Jabbalpur, and Panchampaggur in Sagur ; but not equal to that of Chanderi. Gold chains of great beauty are made at Sagur, usually denominated Rose chains. The iron manufactures of Kattangi and Barailla have been already mentioned'; especially the guns, which though much inferior to those of Tehri and other parts of Bundelkhand, are in great repute throughout the wild districts to the eastward, being procurable at 3 Rs. each. And at Mandla, there still exists the remnant of a small party of blacksmiths and braziers, of great excellence, formerly settled there by the Gond Rajas, who make guns and pistols, and other weapons, in imitation of European manufactures, which they are said to have Icarned from an European military deserter, who lived and died there some years ago; and to the present day hawk their delicately finished wares throughout the southern districts, going as far even as Haidarabad. These probably include the entire list; but the establish- ment at Jabbalpur, of a school of industry,' under the superintendence of the officers of the department for Suppression of Dakaiti and Thuggi, promises to effect a most important change in this respect. SECTION V.- REVENUE AND EXPENDITURE. Remarks on Tabular Statement of Receipts and Expenditure. The detail of Land Revenue has already been given ; as also that of the Customs receipts. The subjoined table exhibits an abstract view of the entire sums received and expended under all general heads, during the official year 1839-40, showing a surplus of upwards of 19 lacs per annum on the wbole territories, to meet the charges of the military ; division and station staffs ; an arsenal ; a company of European artillery, with complements of native artillery and lascars ; 5 regiments of native infantry; and a corps of irregular horse: besides the Nurbudda Sibandi corps of 10 tumaps, which takes the principal jail and guard duties of all the districts, save Sagur and Damoh, and of which the charges are about 71,000 Rs. per annum, exclusive of additional tumans employed under the officers of tlie Thuggi Department only.. The Post Office, it will be observed, is here Post through the station of a very losing concern, though doubtless of Jabbalpur. very great and increasing importance, as regards Jabbalpur at all events, as indicated Years. Letters. Parcels. by the number of letters conveyed in 2 618 years, noted in the margin, this being the 1839-40. 59,370 871 thoroughfare between part of the Gangetic 1840-41. 81,670 VOL. 11.) 361 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. provinces and Bombay. The ferry funds and road funds being of the nature of deposits for a specific purpose, levied on behalf of the people, are not here entered; but the former, it may be mentioned, amounts, in round numbers, but to Co.'s Rs. 700 in Jabbalpur ; Rs. 380 in Hoshangabad; and Rs. 270 in Sagur. The expenditure on public buildings also, and on all works under the superintendence of the Executive Department, are excluded from this statement, as the controul is vested in other quarters, although doubtless properly chargeable to this territory. All other items, whatever, it is be- lieved will be found included under one head or other. PART 1. VOL. II. Jabbalpur. Sagur. Hoshangabad. Total. Items. Receipts. Charges. Receipts. Charges. Receipts. Charges. Receipts. Charges. 3 7 0 0 0 0 Land Revenue and Revenue charges Gene- ral, 6,46,092 9 831,69,307 9 18,14,431 8 89,921 8 036,75,545 0 0 1,00,921 1 1321,30,029 1 84 3,60,150 2 3 Sewai Roqams, including Ab- karee, 35,360 0.0 18,094 15 74,088 00 1,27,551 15 7 Customs, .... 50,603 3 3 4,230 3 9 11,25,5758 0 8,791 4 0 1,08,224 15 11 6,059 12 11 2,84,403 1 9 17,2814 8 Stamp duties,.. 5,330 8 204 4,95900 204 0 8,372 8 0 148 8 9 18,602 0 0 556 8 Judicial charges General, 5,549 1 1 65,350 371 5,228 13 21 63,906 13 15 9,141 98 45,604 15 10 19,929 8 041,94,862 1 5 Pensions, 13,730 4 89,988 15 3 3,459 120 1,06,579 1 10 Post-Master, 1 6,397 15 9 13,059 8 0 8,327 5 03 14,377 14 0 3,130 111 9,725 1 2 17,855 6 8 87,462 7 2 Profit and loss and Interest, 2,405 12 10 on Loans at 5 107 13 6 4,708 03 108 1077 6,906 3 03 1,751 4 14,020 0 25 1,967 955 per cent., .... Total, ... 7,51,748 2 8 2,65,389 2 189,81,325 2 9 2,65,799 111 8,85,308 6 641,67,670 5 2 26,18,591 12 0 6,98,859 3 7 9 0 1 $ 2,69,360 :2 1873,8 362 (PART 1. STATISTICS. To which may be added on account of Receipts, 95,119 00 Sindhia's Pergunnahs, Expenditure, 8,567 5 1 The receipts under the head of Abkaree or Excise probably exhibit a larger proportion to the other branches of revenue in Jabbalpur and Ho- shangabad, than in most other districts ; and if so, it must be attributed to the fondness of the hill tribes for spirituous liquors,- villages inhabited by them, frequently paying much more per annum for the privilege of dis- tilling, than in the shape of land rent. Charges of Establishment and Surplus.- In the charges of Jabbalpur are included, under the head of . Revenue Charges General (under which are entered the salaries of all the Covenanted officers in civil employ), the entire establishment and expenditure of the Governor General's Agent and Commissioner, amounting in this year to Co.'s Rs. 86,845 14; together with the few other items chargeable to the Political department, as it appeared unnecessary to devote a separate head to these. Sudder Establishment. 07 Districts. Judicial. Jail. Kotwalee, city and Mo- fussil Estab- lishment. •489 8u7 Customs. Total. Jabbalpur Seoni 220 75 511 298 403 247 98 54 2,047 1,103 336 0 3,615 1,777 Total.. 293 809 650 (152 3,150 336 5,392 Sagur, includ- ing Sindhia's 327 80 371* 60 Damoh 611 235 282 | 46 2,954 8 1,612 573 0 4,916 8 2,235 Total. 431 846 609 126 4,566 8 573 7,151 8 Hoshangabad. 300 Baitul 85 592 203 409 257 70 42 2,209 1,053 476 12 0 4,056 12 1,640 Total.. 385 795 666 112 3,262 476 12 5,696 12 Grand Total .. 1,11 2,450 | 1,925 390 | 10,978 1,385 12 18,240 4 The charges of the several subordinate establishments in each of the districts are as noted above per mensem, exclusive of the salaries of covenanted officers ; in regard to which last, it may be observed, that as a portion is entered in the Military Department, the sums entered in the preceding table on this account, do not exhibit the entire amount of the actual charge for this portion of the civil administration. In the Jabbalpur treasury, after meeting all current expences, a surplus usually remains to some extent, which is, for the most part, withdrawn for the use of the provinces to the northward; while that of Hoshangabad contributes to meet the expenditure of Mau, Indore, and Sehore: and in Sagur no surplus ever remains, but the contrary, though in consequence of the large remittances made by all classes of our military establishment, the drain upon the treasury is much reduced. The transmission of trea- sure has, of late, seldom been found necessary : all requisite remitment being effected by bills. VOL. 11.) 363 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. Sec. VI.-EUROPEAN RESIDENTS ; AND PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS CONNECTED WITH THEM. European community, and their Religious services. Hitherto the Euro- pean inhabitants of this country have been confined exclusively to the officers of Government and the army, and those attached to them. Re- cently, a gentleman who was a pensioner of the Nagpur government, settled himself in the Seoni district, where he farmed some villages ; but he died before his plans and undertakings had become matured : and no others have as yet established themselves in any part of this division. At Sagur, the European community is of course considerable, numbering some hundreds. At Jabbalpur, it amounts to 58 adults and 35 children ; besides Christian dependants, Catholic and Protestant. At Hoshangabad, it is something still less considerable. At Sconi and Baitul, it is confined to the first junior assistant, a medical officer, and a captain and subaltern (or sometimes but one officer), accompanying the detachment. At Damoh, the civil officer is entirely alone. At Šagur, a chaplain is allowed ; and a convenient church of the Gothic order has been recently erected. At the other stations no ordinances of the Christian religion are ad- ministered, saving when the chaplain at Sagur renders them a hasty visit, which occurs but seldom, and of course to the detriment of his own more immediate congregation. At Jabbalpur, the erection of a small church is in progress, from subscriptions of the residents, liberally assisted from the church building fund; and it is earnestly hoped that, before long, a means may be devised of having its ministry supplied. Government Schools. Of schools there are at present two, supported by the Government, viz. one at Sagur, and one at Jabbalpur. The former is the most liberally provided in respect of establishment and authorized outlay; and is somewhat the largest at present; but both the institutions are progressing most satisfactorily, though they have not as yet, by any means, reached a mature state ; a year only having elapsed since they were placed on a really efficient footing. That ai Sagur is of the longest standing, having been established, as a vernacular school, about 14 years ago, by Captain Paton, of the artillery, from his private funds, with the hearty co-operation, and through the instrumentality of Rao Krishna Rao, a well educated young Mahratta gentleman of the town, with whose exertions and demeanour, the late governor-general, Lord W. Bentinck, was so much gratified, that he invited him to Calcutta, conferred on him a gold medal, bearing an appropriate inscription, with the title of Rao, and obtained for him the grant of a jagir, valued from 600 to 1,000 Rs. per annum; besides a personal salary of 100 Rs., for the continuance of his services. The_languages originally taught, were Persian, Hindi, and Mahratta ; but Persian and Mahratta were abolished everywhere, on the suggestion of the late governor-general's agent, Mr. Shore, and English intro- duced. Of late, however, it has been found, in consequence of the Hindi possessing at present no running hand, that it is quite im, possible to supersede, as had been desired, by this language written in the Nagri character, the use of the Urdu in our courts; and in consequence, on the recent revision of establishments, the Urdu was introduced on the earnest recommendation of the local authorities : so that English, Urdu, and Hindi, constitute the languages at present taught ; instruction in geography and arithmetic being partially introduced into the two latter classes, though for either of them, or for history, it is at present impossi- ble to procure competent teachers : while to the former, or English classes, must be entirely confined for some time to come, all real advancement, in these branches, in geometry, and in all other subjects connected with 364 (PART 1 STATISTICS. 1 1 . 1 literature and science. At Sagur, a convenient tiled school-house has been built from Government funds, aided by local subscriptions; and is about to be enlarged ; and at Jabbalpur, an exceedingly fine hall, with flat roof and tiled veranda, has been nearly completed, as a school, principally from local subscriptions amongst both Natives and Europeans, aided by a grant of 1000 Rs. (similar to that allowed to Sagur) from the General Committee of Public Instruction. At Hoshangabad there likewise existed & Government school, until the late revision, when, from inability to fur- nish it with a competent teacher, and from other causes, it was abolished. Private, Indigenous, and Regimental Schools.- At Seoni, a small vernacular school is privately maintained ; and at Sagur, a well ordered school was introduced by the late chaplain, into the artillery lines, with such aid of funds and means, as Government allows for such undertakings : while in several of our native infantry regiments, means of instruction in the ver- nacular languages, of a more or less efficient character, are supplied. Of the indigenous schools of the country, little can be said; but that they are but few in number, and most humble in their character, learning being as yet but in little repute here, as compared with other more advanced parts of India, and those pretending to its possession being confined to a few (who are in most instances mere pretenders), at Sagur, Jabbalpur, and other places, where the authorities under former Governments resided. The Mahrattas, who are a polished race, are generally skilful writers; but as their language is not in use with us, and they had never been trained to the usages of our courts, very great difficulty has been always experienced, especially previous to the abolition of Persian, (of which this territory, under Mr. Shore, set an early, if not exclusive, example,) in procuring per- sons qualified for the duties we require. Our officials have in consequence been extensively imported from Behar and the Upper Provinces ; and al- though a race is now rising up on the spot, who are in some degree avail- able for our purposes, their scholarship is for the most part discreditably humble, and their efficiency not to be compared with the Sagads, Shaikhs, Kayaths and Kashmiris of the provinces. It may with confidence be asserted, that here as yet the administration generally has not become so corrupt or demoralized as in most other parts ; partly from the simplicity of the people and their customs; partly from the European officers being early introduced to revenue duties; and remaining in their districts long enough to know them, and be interested in them ; and partly perhaps from other causes: yet, strange to say, it is universally admitted, that the natives of the spot, when fitted to our purposes, are, generally speaking, less to be trusted, than those of the provinces on the Ganges and Jumna. Jabbalpur School of Industry.'—The writer cannot quit this subject, without adverting to an institution of a most unusual and interesting charac- ter, established at Jabbalpur. The · School of Industry,' formed for instruct- ing and employing in various branches of workmanship, members of the murderous fraternity of Thugs. It is generally known, that for a series of years past, this territory was the head quarters of the operations carried on for the extermination of this race, which operations had their origin here ;--not as being a principal resort of the thngs, or their members being abundant, for none of them had their homes in this territory, but because a party of them chanced to be arrested here under circumstances of great suspicion; and there happened to be those on the spot, who were capable of foreseeing what might be effected by turning the circuinstance to account, and possessed the practical ability to give reality to their anticipations; nntil step by step, securely, yet almost imperceptibly, a fabric has been reared, which, in the space of about 10 years, has almost entirely obliterat- ed the traces of this formidable and diabolic fraternity, and will un- doubtedly, if carried onward, effect the same result in regard to every oue VOI. II. 365 SAGUR AND NURBUDDA TERRITORIES. of the numerous analogous fraternities, which still abound throughout this darkness-ridden land. A work which will reflect lasting honour upon those who effected, and upon the Government which supported it, and which has afforded a practical exhibition, if they will but accept the les- son, of the only true principle on which professional and hereditary break- ers of the law can be adequately competed with. The members of this fraternity, while fresh from their murderous occupations, were con- strained, by hopes of extreme punishment being remitted, to furnish all the information they possessed, towards the detection of their accomplices in guilt; and when their services are no longer available in this way, they are made to assume the new character of useful artizans. Being all sen- tenced to imprisonment or constraint more or less rigorous for life, they have been collected in large numbers in a single establishment, superin- tended by a highly respectable and competent European. Here they are taught various trades, by means of which they will, probably ere long, ccase to be any burden to the state ; while the admirable opportunity thus afforded, for introducing superior methods of manufacture, and the use of machinery, promises to bring about quite a revolution in the manufactures of Central India. Their children are here, at the same time, instructed in the same or similar trades; and during a portion of each day, are taught reading and writing, and receive an elementary vernacular education : so that these unfortunates are at least put in the way of becoming honest members of the community, and that which they have been used to regard as the ruin of their household, has been rendered to them an unspeakable blessing : a suitable termination of this labour of mercy, GENERAL AND CONCLUDING REMARKS. Conclusion.—All the subjects have now been touched on, which were proposed for exhibiting the character and condition of the Sagur and Nurbudda territories. A table* of the routes passing through them alone remains, and is added in the form of an appendix : these now voluminous notes having already swelled to a bulk which will render them unaccepta- ble. After all, it is but the surface which has been touched upon, and very much remains to be done before the condition and resources of all the parts of this Central Kingdom'shall have been fully ascertained and developed. But we may be permitted to hope, more especially now that steam-communication viâ Bombay has rendered it the high road between the • Father-land,' and the upper portion of the Gangetic provinces, that the idea long prevalent is now passing away, that nought is here to be found of interest or of value, and that the Nurbudda territory is but a remote and insignificant dependency, to be shunned by all for its unhealthiness and its barbarism. The writer at least has not found that years of intimate acquaintance have shorn it of its charms; but, on the contrary, can with truth declare his belief, that there is scarcely any taste which may not here be gratified ; any acquirements or abilities which may not find an appropriate sphere; nor any branch of research, in regard to which Nature will not here amply reward the diligent enquirer, from her bounte- ous, yet often hidden stores. APPENDIX. List of the principal Routes and Lines of Road passing through the Sagur and Nurbulda territories. It is presumed that to furnish those portions of road only, which lie within these territories, would prove of little value, and accordingly, • Want of space obliged us to umit this ; sec however natnes of stations in Road Book. 366 (PART 1. STATISTICS. those principal and generally travelled routes, which pass through them, have been selected. The routes are as follows: 1. From Mau via Hindia and Baitul to Nagpur. 2. From Bhilsa via Hoshangabad and Baitul to Elichpur, on the road to Umraoti. 3. From Seronj via Sagur, Rahly, Jabbalpur, and Mandla, to Rut- tanpur. 4. From Jhansi via Sagur, Narsingpur, and Chhindwara (Bara) to Nagpur. 5. From Chhattarpur via Sagur and Hoshangabad to Asirgarh. 6. From Hirapur, on the above route, via Damoh to Jabbalpur. 7. From Panna via the Peparia Ghat to Sehora and Jabbalpur. 8. From Mirzapur via Jabbalpur and Seoni to Nagpur. 9. From Jogehi, on the preceding route, via Damoh and Sagur to Sehora, 10. From Riwan, on the same, via Sohargaon and Hatta to Patharia and Sagur. ll. From Jabbalpur via Narsingpur to Hoshangabad. 12. From Narsingpur to Guneshgung and Seoni towards Nagpur (a modification of No. 4). 13. From Sehore to Hoshangabad. An inspection of the map will shew the bearing of all those lines of road, of which those from Mirzapur to Nagpur and to Sagur, and from Jabbalpur to Damoh, are, it is believed, the only ones on which, at present, palanquin dâks are regularly laid, through the Post Office departments, though, on several of them, arrangements for palanquin travelling, more or less efficient, may be secured, by making timely appli- cation to the authorities, Exclusive of the above, the following lines of road are considerably used by the trading community. 1. From Sewas of the Bhopal territory, passing 3 miles west of Raht- garh via Jhirra, Barodia, Khurai, Dogaha, and Malthon, to Bundelkhand and the northward. 2. From Sagur to Hirdennaggur (Garrakota), and thence to Narsingarh and Hatta. 3. From Deori in Damoh to the same ; and from Deori also to Damoh. 4. From Hirapur,--Sankal. at the junction of the Hiran and Nurbudda rivers, via Khari,-Deori , and Tejgarh to Nanta on the Jabbalpur and Damoh rvad ; and thence northward via either Hindoria or Jujhari. 5. From Jabbalpur and the pergannahs north and west of it, via Boh- riban, Salaia, and Raipura of Panna, to the northward. 6. From Jabbalpur, Panagar, and Ghosalpur, to Umaria ; or from Mandla via Imlai and Bagkraji to the same place via Majhgawan ; or from Ramgarh, and the eastern pergannahs via Shahpura and Silonri of Kum- bhi, to the same place ; and thence northward, either by Sulimabad on the high road, or via Barenra and the Bhadanpur Ghat into Riwan. 7. From Majhgawan and Umaria, above named, via Khudra-Kham- tarra on the Mahanuddi, to Chandia-Kanria of Riwan, and Bandugarh. 8. From Jahbalpur to Lalbarra below the southern ghats, via Piodrai ; or else by Salema. 9. From Seoni to Mandla via Keolari, and thence via Ghugri and Ram- garh to Amarkantak. 10. From Seoni to Katangi below the southern ghats. 11. From Jabbalpur eastwards to Shahpura ; and thence either to Amarkuntak or to Sohagpur. VOL. 11.) 367 BHOPAL AND DEPENDENCIES. 12. From Chhattisgarh via Paindra ; or else by the Ramgarh high lands, to Sohagpur ; and thence northward to Baghelkhand and Bundel- khand. 13. From Seoni in the Hoshangabad district, to Baitul. 14. From Baitul to Asirgarh, along the banks of the Tapti. This list might be greatly extended, but as regards Sagur, Damoh, Seoni, and Jabbalpur, unless we except some routes through Jaisinghnaggur in the former, not known to the writer, it is believed to comprise the prin- cipal lines : those of the Hoshangabad district are not so well known to him ; but doubtless in the rich valley of the Nurbudda, they must be numerous. The levy of one per cent. as a road fund, from all holders of villages, in excess of the Government assessment, has been universally introduced into these territories, with their consent, during the last four years. This fund thus yields in each district a handsome sum annually, for the forma- tion and repair of those roads, in which the people themselves are locally most interested ; as distinguished from those formed by the government, with reference to general, military, commercial, or other considerations. It is managed in each by a local committee of which the principal as- sistants and first junior assistants are ex-officio members, and conduct the principal details of management, with the Commissioner as President, and two or more other members, selected with reference to their tastes and aptitude for such undertakings, one of these being, if possible, the Executive officer. It has been in contemplation, either by means of sub- committees, or otherwise, to associate the Natives themselves in the man- agement; but as yet this has not been satisfactorily effected. Important works, however, are now in progress, by means of these funds, of which the principal are, the road from Narsingpur via Deori and Sagur, to the Dhamoni Ghat, leading into Bundelkhand ; and the direct road between Jabbalpur and Sagur. BHOPAL. Nawab of Bhopal, Juhangeer Mohummud Khan, 20,00,000 Rs.* Was sur- veyed by Captain Johnston ; its boundaries are well defined. The villages of Oonchode and Jamnair in the Shoojawulpore Pergunnah ; and the 124 villages of Peklone near Khoorwaee are the only detached posses- sions of the Bhopal State. The villages of the Begum's jagir are scattered, and occur in almost every pergunnah of the state. The jagir of the Begum, as well as all other jagirs, are included in this estimate: Judical receipts are also included. BASODA. Nawab Asud Ulee Khan, 7,000 Rs. The Nawab is maternal uncle of the Nawab of Bhopal, whose minister he now is. His small jagir had been seized by Şindhia, by whom it was restored to him at the request of the Marquess of Hastings, who lent his kind offices to please the Nawab of Bhopal; pays no tribute to Sindhia, and wishes to be regarded as a de- pendent of the British Government. These sums indicate gross Revenue, including jaghirs. 368 (PART 1. STATISTICS. MOHUMUDGUR. Nawab Ahmed Koolee Khan, 8,000 Rs. The Nawab is a kinsman of the Basoda Nawab; and they are both kinsmen of the Nawab of Koorwaee whose common ancestors made themselves masters of large tracts of the surrounding country (since lost) on the downfal of the Mogul empire. The Nawab pays no tribute to Sindhia, and wishes to elude the claim by representing himself as a dependent of the British Government. KOORWAEE. Nawab Akbur Khan, 90,000 Rs. This is a large principality, consisting of nearly 100 villages ; pays no tribute to Sindhia, who, as well as the Peshwa in former days, overran the territory, and possessed himself of a large portion of it. The Nawab also affects to regard himself as a dependent of the British Government. The Nawab is a careful and economical ruler. His rents have been more than quadrupled in the last 23 years. He has to pay his brother, Iradut Mubumud Khan, 6,000 rupees per annum, as tixed and guaranteed by the British Government. SERONGE AND GOKOOL CHUPPRA. Nawab Wuzeer ood Dowlah of Tonk, 2,50,000 Rs. The fine pergunnah of Seronge has, for the last 20 years, undergone constant deterioration, under the oppressive rule of the old Pindara chief Ameer Khan. Better hopes are entertained of his son, but his embarrassments preventing the display of his more humane feelings, and of his better sense of justice, have also prevented any improvement of this rich pergunnah. BAIRSEEA PERGUNNAH. British Government, 70,000 Rs. This pergunnah is held by the British Government of the Dhar Chief, on a fixed rent of one lac of rupees. Its net revenue does not amount to one-half of that sum* ; but it is rapidly improving. Its gross revenue is now about 70,000 rupees. ZEERAPOOR AND MACHULPOOR PERGUNNAHS. Holcar, 75,000 Rs. In this pergunnah are situated the fourteen villages forming the jaghir of Sooruj Muli Thakoor of Gagoornee. The Thakoor has to pay a fixed rent of 1750 Rs. per annum to Holvar. The Thakoor is included in the list of guaranteed Chiefs for whom settlements were ef- fected by Sir John Malcolm, and he has invariably appealed to the British Government officers when oppressed, though they have striven to withdraw from interference; the late contest for the succession between the two brothers, Futeh Sing and Sooruj Mull, disturbing the country around, we were again compelled to interfere. * See Dhat page 229, Part II. Vol. II. of 1811, VOL. 11.) 369 BHOPAL AND DEPENDENCIES. KHELCHEEPORE. Dewan Shere Sing, Kheechie Rajpoot, 100,000 Rs.-The Raja is a tribu- tary of Sindhia, to whom he pays a tanka or tribute of about 13,000 Rs The jagir, allotted to his half brother, Madhoo Sing, was fixed by the Agent, and yields nearly 7,000 Rs. RAJGUR, INCLUDING THE TULAIN PERGUNNAH. The Rawut Motee Sing, Oomut Rajpoot, 2,50,000 Rs.-Pays a tribute of 85,000 to Sindhia, for the Tulain Pergunnah, and a further tribute of 1,050 Rs. for the small talooka of Kaleepeet to the Maharaj-Rana of Jhala- wur. Holcar has a half share of the Cusba town of Tulain, besides one whole village, viz. that of Lataheree. The guaranteed Grassia chief, Rao Koomair Sing, resides in Ramgur of Rajgur. NURSINGUR. Dewan Hinwunt Sing, Oomut Rajpoot, 3,50,000 Rs.-Pays a tribute of 85,000 Rs. to Holcar ; has been admirably managed by the present Raja, ever since he was put upon the gudee in 1824, by Mr. Maddock. SARUNGPORE PERGUNNAH. The Raja of Dewas, 60,000 Rs.—The management of these chiefs has always been wretched in the extreme. SOONDURSEE PERGUNNAH. Sindhia, Polcar, and Madhoo Rao Powar, 27,000 Rs.—This small per- gunnah, consisting of about 29 villages, has been divided by the three joint owners, except the town of Soondursee itself, in which the Amils of the three chiefs exercise joint authority to the misery and ruin of the people. SHOOJAWULPORE PERGUNNAH. Sindhia, 2,60,000 Rs.—The Eastern half of this pergunnah yielded to the British Government about 1,10,000 rupees ; Sindhia's renters raised the rents full 50 per cent, and have thus involved the pergunnah in utter ruin and devastation. They still levy from the pergunnah thus deteriorat- ed, what the British Government did forin it, when flourishing. In this PART 1. VOL. II. X X 370 [PART 1 STATISTICS. pergunnah are situated all the jagirs of the Grassia Chiefs of the Bur. goojur tribe ; and also other jagirs, viz. Oonchode and Jamnair, belonging to Bhopal. Tinguchpoor,........ ditto to Holcar. Peeplianugur, and its four dependent late Pindara chief Ranjun, | Granted in jagir to the villages, & now held by his 5 sons. Dadyakheree, held by Scodan Sing Burgoojur ; Kumalpore ditto,.. Motee Sing ditto. Dhobla Ghosee ditto, Gopal Sing ditto. Dhabla Dheer ditto, Soobhag Sing ditto. Kankurkheree ditto, Lal Sing ditto. SONE-CUTCH, INCLUDING BURODIA, JONKUR, EKLAIRA, UMLA AND QONCHODE. Sindhia, 1,30,000 Rs..— Tuppa with its dependencies, held by Thakoor Prutap Sing Grassia, is enumerated in the list of guaranteed jagirs by Sir John Malcolm. It is situated in the Sone-Cutch Pergunnah. The Amil has informed me that the amount of the rent payable by him to Sindhia, is 95,000 rupees for the year. BHILSA, GUNJ BASODA, SHUMSHABAD, PERGUNNAHS. Sindia, 4,00,000 Rs..— Thakoor Chuttur Sah's guaranteed Talooka of Agra Burkhera, which consists of 12 villages, is situated in Shumshabad; for this he has to pay a quite rent of 1000 rupees; the Thakoor, holds the Talooka of Burwa Khar on a quit rent. NIMAWUR PUNJ MUHAL. Sindia and Holcar, 75,000 Rs.- This pergunnah, consisting of 5 Muhals , belongs to Sindhia and Holcar ; the Cusba of Nimawur is held in com- mon, whilst the Muhals have been divided by them. Sindhia's Amils reside at Nimawur and Sutwas ; Holcar's at Nimawur, Kunnode, Kantaphor, and Hurungown. The guaranteed Gond Grassia Chief Rao Ram Sing, resides at Heerapoor of Kantaphor, for which he pays 600 rupees fixed rent to Holcar, and Rao Bheem Sing at Chandgur of Sutwas. The Chandgur Thakoor's villages are 17 in number. The cession of other 17 villages, formerly held by him to Sindhia, has freed him from the payment of tribute. HURDA AND CHARWA. Sindhia, 1,50,000 Rs.-The Gond Thakoor Mookoond Sing's Talooka of 36 guaranteed villages, is situated in this pergunnah, to the south of the VOL. 11.7 371 SINDHIA'S OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Nurbudda. Tembhornee which is part of the Bhoos-cutte's jagir, is also situated in Hurda. MUKURAEE. Raja Detee Saha, Raj Gond, 20,000 Rs.--He pays no tribute to Sindhia, or to the British Government; the territory of his ancestors, which was formerly considerable, was overrun first by the Peshwas, and afterwards by Sindhia. The Raja wishes to shelter himself from the demands of Sindhia's Amils by alleging that he was taken under the protection of the British Government in 1817 and 1818. His country was last seized by Sindhia who after retaining possession for some years, conferred Mu- kuraee, and its present dependencies, on him. The management of the Raja's late Kamdar was most admirable. This Talooka consists of 92 villages. NOMUNPOOR, MUKAR, INCLUDING AHEERWAS. The Raja of Dhar, 4000 Rs.-A wild jungully tract, on the northern bank of the Narbudda; yields scarcely sufficient to pay its expenses. The duties levied on forest timbers exported to Indore and Oojein form the principal item of revenue. The late guaranteed Grassia chief of Heerapoor Rao Ram Sing, holds the Talooka of Aheerwas (of 20 villages) at a fixed rent of 600 rupees per annum ; but he derives but a very small portion of that sum as revenue from the Talooka; and is ever begging for a reduction of the rent. Total.-Rough estimate of the Gross Revenues of all the territories included in the Bhopal Agency 43,26,000 Rs. SINDHIA'S OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Ancient History aud Extent. In the day of Acber Sha (A. D.'1582), Gwalior formed a Sircar only in the Soobah of Agra, containing the fol- lowing Mehals :- Anhour. Dundrowly. Sirbundeh. Budruhteh. Roypoor. Alapoor. Chentowur. Sirseeny. Gwalior. Jelhowda. Simawely. Kehtowly. Measurement 1,146,465 beegahs, 6 biswas. Rs. As. Ps. Revenue 754,361 9 2 Seyurghal S This Sircar then furnished 2,490 cavalry, and 43,000 infantry. Abul Fuzul remarks that the Fort of Gwalior was famous in his days;. containing many stately buildings, and having a stone elephant over the gate. The air and water were considered good. The city was celebrated for fine singers, and beautiful women. 372 (PART 1. STATISTICS. 4 During the Mogul empire, the fort was a state-prison, where the obnoxi- ous branches of the royal family were confined, and a large menagerie of lions, tigers, and other wild beasts was kept for their amusement. Tradi- tion states, that the prisoners were at first forcibly compelled to swallow daily potions of strong decoction of poppy heads, so as to induce a per- petual state of semi-intoxication, keeping up a degree of indifference to all around them; the insidious poison soon became necessary to existence, and was eagerly sought by the captives, as affording their only pleasure- able moments, passed in the society of dancing-women, during the period of temporary excitement, Rajas of Gwalior are mentioned as early as A. D. 1008. The fort was first taken by the Mahomedans in 1197, after a long siege. The Hindoos must again have regained possession, as the Patan Emperor of Delhie, Altumsh, re-conquered the Sircar in 1235. In A. D. 1519, Gwalior sur- rendered to the forces of Ibrahim Lodi, Emperor of Delhie, after having been again occupied during a hundred years by the Hindoos :-subse- quently to this, the fort must have been acquired by the Emperor Hima- yoon, as in 1543, his governor delivered it over to Shere Khan, the Afghan. Thus, notwithstanding a reputation for impregnability, it would seen to have changed masters very frequently. After the dismemberment of the Mogul empire, Gwalior came into the possession of the Rana of Gohud (himself of a new dynasty ;) from whom it was wrested by the Mahrattas. In 1780, it was taken by escalade by the troops under Major Popham, and afterwards made over to the Rana of Gohud, who, failing in his engagements, was abandoned to the resentment of the Mahrattas. Madhojee Sindia invested the fort, and after a fruitless siege of many months, prevailed, at last in 1784, by corrupting part of the garrison. In 1803, Raja Umbajee Inglia engaged by treaty to deliver up the fortress of Gwalior, then in his possession, in consideration of obtaining favourable terms from the British Government. When the period for surrender arrived, the commandant, clandestinely instigated by Umbajee, refused to deliver it up. It was in consequence invested by a detachment under Colonel White; batteries opened against the fort, and on the 4th of February, a practicable breach having been effected, the garrison made overtures to surrender, on con- dition of receiving a donation of 50,000 rupees. This proposal was rejected by Mr. G. Mercer, the Commissioner, and by Colonel White; but an arrangement having been subsequently effected, by which the garrison was to receive the value of certain articles of provisions in the fortress, the British troops were put in possession of all the gates on the night of the 4th, and on the 5th February 1804, the fort was evacuated. By the final treaty of 1805, when the Bengal government abandoned all territories south of the Chumbul, Gwalior came into the possession of Dowlut Rao Sindhia, who up to 1810, was generally in motion with the greater part of his army, Oojein being merely his nominal capital. Shortly after the resumption of Gwalior from the family of the deceased Umbajee, he pitched his camp a short distance to the south west of that fortress, and as his court has never been moved from the spot, except for occasional pilgrimages, a second city has arisen on the site of his encampment, surpassing the old one in population and magnitude. PRESENT HISTORY AND EXTENT. The term Gwalior, still applied to Sindhia's territories, can only very faintly express an idea of the vast extent of country including a great portion of the remains of the overwhelming Mahratta conquests from VOL. 11.) 373 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. the southwest ; the city and pergunnah being in fact at the most northern extremity, rather stony and barren than fertile, and solely preeminent as containing the sovereign's capital. The figure of these territories, though they are connected throughout, is so extremely irregular, as to defy mathematical designation. Except in the very central part, they intersect and are intersected in every direction. The most northern point is at Pinnahat, on the Chumbul, in latitude 26° 48' 0" north ; and the most southern point is the Waugpoor river, in latitude 20° 37' 0' north ; the direct line from the northern point trending S. S. W., and by S. The most eastern point is near Jaloun, in longitude 79° 16' 0" east ; and the most western point is close to Jerrode in Baroda, in longitude 73° 25' 30" east ; the direct line from the eastern point trend- ing S. W. The greatest length being 425, and greatest breadth 396] in English miles. Owing to the great irregularity of figure, it is extremely difficult to ascer- tain the square surface ; and few actual measurements of parts have been as yet completed. The above space also includes some of the possessions of Holcar, and some petty states. The estimated square surface is 29,760 miles. The approximate measurement on the best maps given by weighment is 32,944 square miles. Soil.-In this very extensive country, traversing six degrees of latitude north and south, a very slight variation of soil occurs ; the central and southern portion being almost invariably a deep black stiff loam, exceedingly rich and fertile, retentive of moisture, and less dependent upon rain; the northern portion alone extending from Nurwur on the Sinde, to the junc- tion of the Parbuttee with the Chumbul, being of a yellow loan, generally light; but in some parts rich and stiff, and abounding in small fat portions of "oosur' or soda ground, yielding only short and stunted spear grass, or ' lampa.' This northern portion, with a sufficient supply of water, is very productive, and easily worked by the plough ; but the khurreef crops are exceedingly dependent on a plentiful supply of rain, the loam drying very rapidly; but, in favourable years, giving abundant returns. South of the line of demarcation, the country, especially in the more central part from east to west, is the most naturally rich and productive in India. Every variety of crop, both rubbee and Khurreef, yielding almost certain returns. Hills.-Many ranges of hills, either connected, or small and interrupteds bound, or are scattered over, the country. The low scattered ranges of sand- stone hills occur chiefly about the city and fort of Gwalior. A more elevat- ed and continued range of the same formation, commencing at Loharghur, runs in a nearly southerly line to Digdollie on the Boondee frontier; the same range in nearly the same direction, recommences near Gunesskheira, and terminates in a line with Budrunjghur, west of the Sinde. Another chain of similar sandstone hills, commencing at Mulhownee runs S. S. W., and by S., adjoining the extremity of the Mokundurra range, to the Bhopal frontier, having Seronge nearly in the centre. Very considerable ranges of sandstone hills occur to the north and east of Neemuch, especially at Ruttunghur, Dilwarghur, Tanair and Jawud. By far the most extensive and elevated hills are however the Vindhya range (also of sandstone) which, entering from the Bhopal frontier near Hurngaon, cross in an easter- ly direction to Airwa on the frontier of the Indore territory. This portion 374 (PART 1. STATISTICS. of the Vindhya hills is considerably elevated, dipping as does the whole range, to the southward. A spur of the Vindhya enters the Sindhia coun- try again to the extreme west, running beyond Chumpaneer, near the Gwicwar's frontier. The only other hills of note are the Satpura range (also sandstone), south of the Nurbudda, which twice cross the narrow strip of country from east to west, the one north of the Tapti river, the other south, from Narnulla in the Nizam's dominions, to Indalabad on the Poorna river. Thus it appears by the map, that the hills form not more than one- thirtieth of this extensive tract. The remaining portion consisting of immense plains, more or less elevated, especially towards the centre of the country. Rivers.-Of the numerous rivers which irrigate this fertile region, the Chumbul is the most deserving of mention, as, although rising from the northern aspect of the Vindhya mountains in Ilolcar's dominions, nearly its whole course either passes through or bounds Sindhia's territories. The Chumbul enters near the twenty-third degree of north latitude, and run- ning in a meandering course to the northward, impinges on the Kotah principality, bounding the southerly district of Gungarar, and again after a short distance separating Sindhia's from the petty principalities of Rampoora, and Narpoor ; from Doondra, passing through the most grand and beauti- ful scenery in Sindhia's country, by Neembad and Shamgurh; twenty miles beyond which, it enters Meywar, and running as far as Bansrøre through that principality, afterwards in a northeast course bounds Harowtee and Meywar, nearly as far as the city of Kotah; it then traverses the centre of Harowtee to Pally in the Jyepore state, from which place it again skirts Sindhia's dominions, separating them from Jey- pore as far as Ramaiser; and from thence forms the boundary be- iween Sindhia's, and the petty states of Kerowly and Dholepoor, to near Sumonah in the Hon'ble Company's territories, forming the line between the latter and Sindhia's to twenty miles beyond Biswarra. Thus the extent of it's course through, or by Sindhia's territories, is very great indeed ; and cannot be less than three hundred and eighty miles. The Chumbul is joined by the Sepra, the Peepuldeo and Chota Sinde, the Kali Sinde, the Sodurra, the Newaz, and Parbuttie on the right side ; and by the Bonass on the left. This river is in the rains throughout unfordable ; and in the dry season is crossed in many places by fords, while ferries are still constantly re- quisite at others. Between Gwalior and Agra, fords and ferries are available after the rains ; the breadth of the channel at the ford of Keyteree near Dhole- poor is i of a mile. • This splendid river, having half it's course north, and half northeast, is, in many parts, of a very winding course. At considerable distances. impediments to navigation occur; some that might be rectified; others, such as the beautiful falls of the Chumbul ka choola' (or Chumbul's cauldrons) near Bansrore, are quite insurmountable. Parts of the river, however, for a long course of miles, are clear of obstruction. When the river is in flood, boats of the most heavy, unwieldy construc- tion can descend uninjured from Kotah to Dholepoor ; as was evinced, this year, 1841, by a large boat belonging to Kotah, which had broken loose, arriving safely at the Dholepoor ghaut. From the depth of the bed, the Chumbul is no where available for irrigation. The boats are everywhere of a clumsy, unscientific descrip- VOL. 11.] 375 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. tion, alone adapted for ferries, or for proceeding a few miles for wood from the banks; and instead of improving, they deteriorate in make and shape, the nearer the Chumbul approaches the Jumna. Thus the remarkable fact, though by no means a singularity in India, is exhibited, that this splendid river, which to other and more enterpris- ing countries would be made the means of diffusing the necessaries of life and foreign luxuries throughout the land, is absolutely a very great obstruction to intercourse, and only benefits the few ferry and fishermen employed on its banks. There appears to be no doubt that a very extensive commerce might be carried on with the aid of light and properly constructed iron boats, or even those of wood, at all seasons of the year, resorting to land car- riage by men or buffaloes, whenever obstruction occurs, and having relays of boats, both above and below. Thus the Chumbul might be made the means of diffusing the comforts of civilization along its far extending banks, which afford specimens of almost every race of men now in India. The Nurbudda is a still more important and beautiful river than the Chumbul in reality; though of less importance in Sindhia's dominions, as it has only a short passage of forty miles, commencing at Cheepaneer, at the corner of Bhopal, and terminating at Chandgurh, on the Indore frontier. Nearly midway on the southern bank, is the ancient and large town of Hindia. In this space the Nurbudda is navigable ; the boats, which are large and strong, and built of teak, are almost exclusively used to ferry across. Sir John Malcolm had this river surveyed to Baroach; and according to the opinions of the surveyors, the falls and rapids presented insur- mountable obstacles to rigation. Only a few years since, that very zealous officer, Major J. R. Ouseley, at his own cost, sent a party on an exploratory expedi- tion down the Nurbudda. The same obstructions occurred, insur- mountable to boats; but these obstructions were by no means numer- ous, and the overland passage between, was never of any great distance, though sometimes very steep, and through very heavy jungle. This jungle was the great cause of failure to a rapid completion of the journey, as the whole party was attacked by bad remittent fevers. Major Ouseley, we believe, decided that the difficulties could not be overcome, except at an expense not to be thought of. We however offer our humble, but stedfast opinion, that light iron boats, of a peculiar construction, placed above and below each obstructed passage, with buffaloe carriage between; and clearing away, by cutting and burning, the intermediate jungle; would open an unfailing line of commerce from Baroach, to the most fertile and productive regions of Central India, yielding the finest wheat, and other grains, singularly cheap; dye woods, and other dyes ; teak and ebony, and other most valuable timber; cotton, indigo, excellent iron, and marble ; at the same time opening a really inexhaustible market for common British manufactures. The iron boats alluded to could be constructed with facility at various places on the banks of the Narbudda, affording abundant materials and workmen ; so as to draw, even when loaded, not above eight inches of water, and so covered over, as even to undergo a temporary submersion, uninjured. The boats to be propelled by poles, or occasionally by paddles or the Archimedian screw, worked by the hands on board ; and often driven rapidly by the wind, which almost invariably blows east or west, the course of the river. 376 STATISTICS. (PART 1. This river has its source at Omercantne, in the province of Guudwana, close to that of the Sone, in latitude 22° 54' 0" north, and longitude 82° 15' 0" east. After descending a table land at Omercantne, a Hindoo. temple is found, nearly in the centre of it, where the Nurbudda rises from a small well; and gliding along the surface of the high land, is pre- cipitated by a high and beautiful fall close to Mandlah, on reaching the western end, where being joined by other streams, the bed expands, and assumes the appearance of a river. From hence its course is nearly due west , with few curvatures, passing through Gundwana, Khandesh, Malwa and Guzerat, and reaching the sea near Baroach, having a course of upwards of 750 miles. In the great floods, during the height of the rains, the Nurbudda often presents an appearance, terrible for the fury of its onward course. At such times either progress up or down, or across, is at an end. The Tapti is the next considerable river, and crosses Sindhia's from the Hon'ble Company's territories in a southwest and by west course to Boorhanpoor, skirting which city, it turns south west to Chandwy, at the Sungum or junction of the Poorna and Tapti; separating thus far Khandesh from the Sindhia country; the length of course in the latter is ninety two miles. The Tapti rises near the cantonment of Baitul, among the lojardy hills, from whence it pursues a westerly direction through the provinces of Khandesh and Guzerat, until it joins the sea about twenty miles below Surat. The whole course, which is very winding, may be estimated at five hundred miles ; passing through a fertile country, producing much of the cotton exported from Surat and Bombay. This river is only navigable a very short distance, above Surat ; the greater part of its course consisting, in the hot and cold seasons, of pools and dry beds. The confinement of its banks renders it occasionally liable to cause the greatest devastation by pouring down the most over-powering floods on Surat, Ranier, and the towns adjacent, that have often occasioned immense damage. The Poorna river also rises in the Injardy hills, and entering Sindhia's territory close to Surgaoun, after a course of thirty miles W. N. W. and by W. joins the Tapti at Chandwy. The Poorna is fordable during the dry and cold season. The Parbuttee has a very long, irregular course, bounding Sindhia's territories; rising froin the northern face of the Vindhya mountains in Bhopal, traversing Bhopal and several independent states, bounding Chuppra, Rajgur, and passing through Harowtee, to Baogurh, from whence it forins the line of demarcation between Sindhia's and the Kotah countries, till arriving opposite Pally, it forms a sacred union with the Chumbul. The Parbuttee is nowhere adapted to navigation (except at ferries), and being fordable almost everywhere in the dry and cold seasons, forms less obstruction to travelling, than would at first appear to be the case. The Parbuttee, as the name implies, is in many parts a hill stream. The Sinde river is a considerable stream, and has its source in the high table land of Malwa, to the west of Seronge; and after a winding course, falls into the Jumma near Juggurmanpore, about forty miles west from Calpee. This river, after leaving its origin, runs nearly due north through Sindhia's country, as far as ten miles east of Kalarus, from whence it forms the boundary between the former and the Bundelkhand country, in a northeast course, as far as Mattaoli. The Sinde has a deep rapid stream in the rains, when ferries are every where necessary; in the cold and dry seasons fords are frequently met with, fishermen and ferrymen VOL. 11.) 377 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. alone benefit by this river, which instead of increasing, obstructs com- merce and travelling; in some places where the banks are low, the ground close adjacent is irrigated from the river for a small space. Many parts of the banks are clothed with tree jungle. The Newuj is a river chiefly in the rains ; during the hot and cold seasons being almost dry; it rises south of Tappa in Bhopal, and im- mediately entering Sindhia's country, pursues a course winding, but nearly due north, passing through the petty state of Rajgurh as far as Papprail, from whence it continues a north course to near Rajgurh in Harowtee, and joins the Kali Sinde. Except in heavy rains the Newuj is almost every where fordable. The Kali Sinde is a considerable river, and rises near Oonchode in Sindhia's territories, on the northern aspect of the Vindhya mountains. Its course is due north nearly, till it enters Ilarowtee, ten miles south of Jalra- Patan; it then continues its northern course to Nomairah, where it joins the Chumbul. The Kali Sinde in Sindhia's territories, seldom forms an obstruction to travelling during the cold and hot season; but during the rains, ferries are everywhere in requisition : heavy jungle is often found on the banks of this river; generally however the country traversed is exceedingly fertile and well cultivated. The Betwah river is the last of importance which waters these domin- ions, rising from the northern side of the Vindhya range, in Bhopal, it enters Sindhia's dominions two miles south of Bhilsa, and running in a N. N. E. course, enters Bundelkhand, ten miles S. S. W. of Oorcha, and falls into the Jumna below Calpee, after a course of three hundred and forty miles. In part of its journey it runs through beds of iron ore; but the waters are reckoned highly salubrious by the natires. Near Érech in November, it presents a serpentine stream of clear water, passing vast ravines, with cultivated fields, and a broken chain of hills opposite; a ledge of rocks, originating from these hills, crosses the river, forming a barrier, and two hundred yards beyond, a reef of rocks is seen above the surface of the water, over which the stream rushes with a roaring noise. In the cold and hot scasons, this river is fordable everywhere almost; in the rains ferries are established. This is a very beautiful stream, the banks being in many places highly cultivated ; especially about Chanderi. The other rivers of lesser note, though obstructing intercourse in the rains, are the Chota Sinde, the Sipra, the Chota Parbuttee, and the Ahsin and Koharry between Gwalior and Dholepoor. The other inferior streams or nullahs are innumerable in this well- watered country, and generally contain partial supplies of water, though often quite dry in the hot winds. These inferior streams are very much applied to irrigation. General Appearance.- This term can hardly be adınitted to head the description of so vast a country, necessarily admitting of great diversity of appearance. This diversity however will be found to be much less than the great extent of country might be supposed to indicate. For while the smaller northern division almost everywhere affords prospects more or less barren, the southern division, without exception, exhibits the richest lands, cultivation, and luxuriant jungles, only awaiting the hand of man. The northern division extends from Chandpoor on the Sinde, to Ramaisir at the junction of the Bonass with the Chumbul; the plains of this portion consist of a more or less rich yellow loam ; detached lines of sandstone hills are numerous ; these are generally, unclothed with trees. Large patches of oosur' soil occur, unclothed with verdure. In the hot season, this division generally presents a very desolate appearance, the surface dried up and nearly white. In a tolerable rainy season the khurreef crops PART I. VOL. II. Y Y 378 (PART 1. STATISTICS, dot the soil around, appearing from an elevation like distant' oases' in comparison to the uncultivated lands. In those villages where tanks are maintained, rice is largely cultivated, and in the green ear, waves in beauti- ful extended surface. The intermediate spaces are either jungle grass preserves, called ' rhoonds, or nearly barren ; yet having a green coating of indigo, coarse grass, and the small jujube bush. The sandstone bills generally so bleak, or hot and barren, in copious rains are clothed with a soft and fragrant short verdure, often causing remembrance of the distant downs of England. Trees are few and far between ; not owing to the impossibility of rearing them, but from the carelessness of the Patails in allowing the trees to be cut down as soon as possibly adapted for carpenter's purposes, and the want of protection afforded by the Mahratta government; the common wood being chiefly babool and neem, the former in great demand for hackeries, the latter for domestic uses; hence miles may be travelled, and the country found all barren.' The southern division, as far as the Waugpoor nuddie in the Dakhin, is throughout a beautiful country, the superficial soil being a deep black loam, rich in the extreme, where cultivated affording the highest returns, and where neglected shooting forth the most luxuriant jungle; the variety of foliage, and enormous size of the trees, affording the most delightful prospects. The copiousness of the rains here forces nature into her most energetic action, and the coolness resulting from the elevation of the land, perpetuates the grateful verdure. Where portions of undulating elevations are covered with the beautiful ucchar' (Buchanania Latifolia), in full blossom in March, a more delight. ful prospect cannot be imagined ; and the pleasure is increased by the fragrance diffused around. Many are the ornaments of nature which adorn this rich, beautiful, and scarcely peopled land. This description applies to the country extending as far as the base of the Vindhya hills; to the southward of those hills and the Nurbudda, the country is equally fertile ; but having a higher temperature, the produc- tions are somewhat different. The most beautiful and useful feature in the landscape of this division throughout is the great abundance of extensive, lofty, and umbrageous groves, which occur near every town and village, affording a canopy to the traveller, almost impervious to the solar rays. Elevation.—The central part of Sindhia's territories is the highest plain ground in India, between the base of the Neilgherries to the south, and tha base of the Himalayas to the north. The highest portion of this pla- teau is on a line running through Seronge and Oojein. The whole south extent is bounded by the Vindhya hills and spars attached, having a steep descent of, in many places, 1,000 feet in trap-like form, dipping to the south along the vale of the Nurbudda. The northern portion, along the line of the Chumbül, the Sinde, and Parbuttee, has, within a considerable distance of those rivers, the same general elevation as their banks, excepting where low sandstone hills occur in interrupted chains ; the bed of the Chumbul at Dholepoor is probably 1,050 feet above the level of the sea, and the average height of the banks may be 50 feet ; thus the most northern plain is probably 1100 feet above the level of the sea. From Gwalior, in the centre of this plain, there is a rise, in some places abrupt, but generally gradual, as far as Sheo- poor ; where, judging from the diminished temperature during night, and the greater abundance of rain, the difference in height may be estimated at 800 feet, giving a total height of 1900 fect, extending in a carved di- VOL. 11.) 379 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. rection from Shahabad to the banks of the Sinde, and gradually sloping off to the Parbuttee, as far as the junction with the Chumbul. From this line to Oojein and Seronge in the centre of Malwa, the rise in the land is imperceptible; except in those places where hills occur, and which have an equal counterbalancing descent: this general rise, indicated by the rivers all flowing to the north, has its maximum at, and in a line with, Oojein, and probably amounts to 200 feet, giving a total height of 2000 feet for Central Malwa, calculating the bed of the Nurbudda at Ho- shangabad at 1000 feet above the level of the sea. To the north of Neemuch, commencing at Jawud, a considerable portion of the patar,' or table land of ancient Rajasthan forms part of Sindhia's dominions, nearly in the centre of which is Ruttunghur. This plateau extends in one direction, from Jawud in Sindhia's, to Shaha- bad in the Boondee country, forming a level interspersed with hills, and is almost everywhere 1500 feet to 1800 feet above the level of the sea. This table land prevents the chief streams of Meywar from joining the Chumbul ; those flowing from the Aravulli mountains, running northeast to the Beris and Bonass, with which they unite. This plateau abounds in minor ranges of hills, and is in some places divided by narrow steep-sided vallies. In passing from Ruttunghur in Sindhia's country, through Harow- tee to the eastern frontier, there is a very abrupt descent from the table land to the level of the Sinde ; the ascent to the surface is marked by three steppes, from the Sinde to Shahabad ; from Kotah to Rampoora ; and from Rampoora to Ruttunghur, Temperature.—The northern and lower portion of territory has a high temperature, dependent on lesser altitude, deficiency of rain, the reflected rays from the light-coloured soil, and greatly because the radiation from the light, coloured surface is very much interior to that from a dark or black surface; a cause atly adding to the excess of temperature is the absence of forest, and the scarcity of detached trees. The much more extensive country to the south has a temperature con- siderably lower, resulting from greater elevation, generally regular and copious rains; forests shading the soil, the exudation from the leafy surface of which is returned in the form of dew; and owing to the soil being so retentive of moisture as to continue plastic at a depth of 3 or 4 feet even in the hottest season; this moisture being given off through numerous deep fissures, latently consuming the heat; but, above all causes, the lower temperature is to be attributed to the black surface of the soil. This fact may appear doubtful; but can be easily proved. It is true that the black soil powerfully absorbs heat during sunshiny days; so much so, as to burn, in a painful degree, the bare feet: but this, even at such times, is more than compensated by the absence of reflected heat from the black surface; a journey, then, over light-coloured soils being much more intolerable. The powerful radiation from the black surface during clear nights is however the grand moderator of heat. This will be clear when we consider that, in all bodies, as the surface increases in darkness of colour and roughness, the power of radiation augments. Radiation and reflection are perfectly opposite qualities ; yet a bright polished plate of silver (necessarily an excellent retiector) by covering its surface with launp black, holding it over a light, so as to give a rough velvety exterior, may be at once converted into a powerful radiator. The effects of a dark roughish surface in augmenting radiation may be proved by a simple experiment. Let a polished silver tea urn be full of water, kept boiling by the heated iron inside ; place it on a table, protected from currents of air ; then place a differential thermometer at three feet distance in the proper focus, and, after a few minutes, observe the height of the mercury; ihen over the silver urn, with a thin black silk handkerchief tied tightly 380 (PART I. STATISTICS. on, and the rise in the thermometer will be immediately great; thus proving the fact held forth; the tea urn cooling in half the time. The copiousness of the rains also greatly cools the southern division, being greater as the country approaches the Nurbudda, where the true line of the monsoon's are east and west : and being less as the country recedes to the nort and the monsoons gradually veer to N. W. and S. E. At the same time the greater or less prevalence of clouds every where vastly influences the degree of heat, as while clouds prevail , radiation is neutralized. In December and January, when a cool breeze has blown during the day, subsiding as the sun goes down, the sky remaining per- fectly clear, the radiation is so great during the night, that boarfrost is deposited, and thin ice formed. If the slightest film of clouds obscures the sky, the temperature of the days, but especially of the nights, is augmented by very many degrees; the weather becoming hot even in January. This effect is entirely owing to the film of vapour preventing the radiation from the surface of the earth into space. In the same way, in a clear frosty night in England, a thin gauze veil, stretched out at a short distance over a delicate plant, will entirely protect the plant, and prevent the deposition of frost thereon, by radiating the beat back again. Thus we see that while radiation is the all-powerful diminator of heat, clouds or vapours are the regulators of the degree of diminution. The actual temperature in the southern portion never becomes very high: the nights are always tolerable: in the rains cloth clothing is requi- site, and sometimes fires agreeable ; in the winter the cold is seldom very great, owing to the southern latitude. In the northern division, the heat in the hot winds and rains is very great, the thermometer often rising to 98° in the shade, and varying only a few degrees for many days. The cold season is, when favourable, suffici- ently bracing ; sometimes ice and hoarfrost being formed. On the other hand, frequently, the temperature is disagrecably high in December and January especially during the day. Seasons. The seasons throughout the whole country are three; the hot, rainy, and cold. In the northern division the hot winds blow fiercely day and night, varied only by oppressive calms, suddenly followed by most distressing dust squalls, running all round the compass. A wet northwester sometimes affords a temporary relief. The periods between the hot winds and the setting in of the rains is, beyond measure, oppres- sive to the European constitution. The rains, when copious, and accom- panied by light breezes, are not very unpleasant, though the thermometer seldom fålls below 820.' The cold season, so called, extends from the end of October, to nearly the termination of Marchi in clear weather fires are agreeable in December and January ; the nights are then almost always cool enough to insure sound sleep. Deficiency of rain is the great curse to this northern division. In the large division to the southward, the hot winds are mild, and cease during the night; the rains are almost always copious, and often excessive, the temperature falling very much ; the cold season is milder, and tires are rarely resorted to. Excess of rain is the chief cause of dis- tress in this division; copious falls, when happening in December and January, rotting the crops in the ground. Hail storms are common causes of destruction in February. Climate.—Under this head it may be remarked that, owing to the north- ern portion of Sindhia's territories, especially at and about Gwalior, being situated on a superficial sandstone formation, with a soil of a light loamy description, it would seem a natural conclusion that the climate must be very healthy, especially when we consider the total absence of natural ‘jheels' of great extent, and the very little jungle of any kind to be VOL. 11.) 381 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. found. This however would be found a very erroneous conclusion ; the fact being, that the northern portion, especially around Gwalior, is re- markable as being exceedingly unhealthy during the latter part of, and after the rains ; fevers at such season being nearly universally prevalent. This will appear the more unaccountable, when we consider that the sand- stone formation is generally a very salubrious site, that during the cold and dry seasons a very great degree of aridity prevails, and that before, and since the time of Abul Fuzul, “the air and water' have always been considered excellent. We believe that the following will be found the just explanation of the apparently anomalous deterioration from climate, which annual- ly occurs; for during the months of November to August, the cli- mate is not unsalutary ;-the sickly period commences about the middle of August, and terminates in November. During this time it will be shewn, that a state of things prevails, highly favourable to febrile exhala- tions. This northern portion, though abounding in low hills, has numerous ex- tensive plains in every direction. Three small rivers, the Sunk, the Ah- sin, and the Koharry chiefly drain this space : these rivers, when filled during heavy rain, are impetuous and deep, though narrow floods, insuffi- cient to carry off the whole superfluous moisture ; and, when run down to a certain level, remaining for the time nearly stagnant; into these rivers enter, from every direction, innumerable, meandering, parrow, and deep nul- lahs, cut through the superficial loam, filled to the surface with the back water of the rivers when in flood, penetrating far back into the plains, dividing ultimately into narrow ditches, and every part retaining water, during and after heavy rains, and rendered still more permanent by na- tural banks at their embouchures,' obstructing the flow into the rivers which form the only drainage of the country. Hence it is evident that this back water, pressing, in every direc- tion, causes the greater portion of moisture to be retained in the loose loamy soil. This evil would, in a very great measure, have been devoid of pernicious effects, if a perfect percolation had carried off the excess below the surface ; but over the whole country, at a depth of from 15 to 20 feet, very compact horizontal strata of sandstone occur everywhere, which admit very gradually of the passage of water, the superimposed loose mass of loam and “marram' absorbs rapidly, till saturated with moisture, after which, owing to the obstruction below, whatever rain falls on the surface, is very slowly removed. At this time, a state of excessive moisture, in contrast with that of the usual aridity, is marked by mould on doors, leather, and furniture, &c., and especially by the oppressed state of the skin, giving rise to clammy exudation on the surface, and frequent cutaneous disorders. Thus it seems probable that excessive moisture, at the surface of the soil, aided by a temperature known to be favourable to paludal cxhala- tions, operating on the wide-spread vegetable and animal remains every where abounding, is the cause of the great unhealthiness, at this season, of the northern division. The number of artificial shallow tanks aid to increase this state. In other respects this division is not unhealthy; nor liable, in the hot or cold seasons, to epidemics of a fatal character. The climate of the southern division resulting from copious rains, re- tentive soil, and superabundant vegetation, is characterized by the preva- lence of miasmatic action in a greater or less degree, according to situation. The most active period is during the latter part of, and after the rains. From October to December, in the more jungly tracts, travelling is at the 382 (PART 1, STATISTICS. peril of life. Both the hot season and the cold are often liable to very fatal epidemics. As a general rule, it may be remarked, that the nearer we approach the southern border and the Nürbudda, the greater is the fatality of epidemics when they appear. The climate of the northern is less pleasant ; but less deleterious to life ; while the reverse applies to the southern division. Diseases.--In the inore northern portion, the fevers which are so very frequent during the season, are chiefly of intermittent type, and only dangerous in weak, or otherwise diseased subjects when neglected; in this case the sequelæ of diseased liver or spleen often prove fatal. Under proper treatment, these fevers are very manageable, and easily cured; their chief characteristic is debility not admitting of depletion be- yond a carefully judged extent ; this debility often long remains to a de- gree the previous symptoms would not have seemed to warrant ; great tendency to dysentery and to congestion in, and subsequent more or less acute disease of, liver and spleen, require to be carefully guarded against. Remittent fevers are rare, and require more active depletion, after which recovery under treatment is usually complete, though not rapid. Chronic enlargement of spleen is very common after fever, and yields to proper treatment ; when neglected, however, the person affected often becomes a truly pitiable object. Schirrus and chronic enlargement of the liver are less frequent, and much more difficult to cure than the former. Small pox appears almost every hot season, and is very fatal. Cholera is most fortunately not often epidemic, appearing as such about once only in several years; and then no alarming mortality has prevailed. Sporadic cholera happens every hot season ; but the cases are few and mild. Hepatitis is rare in occurrence. Dysentery is often common and very severe. Rheumatism, and common catarrhs are frequent, when the tempera- ture of day and night varies much. Nyctalopia or night blindness is very common after fevers. Dracunculus, or guinea worm is almost unknown; the few cases that occur have been brought in the body, from Rajpootana; or from the districts to the south of the Nurbudda. In the much larger southern portion, by far the most frequent disease is also fever, in its various types. As a general rule, we may safely conclude that epidemics increase in severity the further south we proceed in these territories. In some years, owing to causes unassignable, the prevailing type of fever is remittent ; the fatality is very great ; the treatment re- quired is most active; the recovery slow; and much protracted by debility: subsequent change of climate is almost always necessary to a European. We have endured the evil personally, and have had several years, experience of the different types of fevers in the vale of the Nurbudda, and we here add our testimony to the immense and certain benefit derived from that great boon to the human race, sulphate of quinine, sufficiently and properly adminis- tered, after the most careful preliminary treatment. Hepatitis, terminating in abscess of the liver, is not in this part uncommon, even amongst the poorer class of natives. Enlargement of the spleen is a less frequent sequela of fever than in the northern division : nor is the same degree of debility present during and after the fevers in the south. The fevers contracted by passing through, or residing in, the jungles in various parts of Malwa, during October and even November, are almost universally fatal ; delirium ushering in the attack, so on passing into coma, from which the patient is only aroused by death. Epidemic cholera, which first appeared as a dreadful scourge in the vale of the Nurbudda in 1816, has ever since, both there and in southern Malwa, continued to maintain its fatal sway at short intervals, frequently appearing twice during the year. Regarding the very many cases which we have personally treated, we may say that when of the asphyxia or pulseless type, recovery uever occurred, though saline VOL. u.] 383 Sindhia's, or GWALIOR TERRITORIES. injections into the veins, and all other powerful remedies were resorted to. In the next degree, where the pulse had not disappeared, the recovery was by po means hopeless; the treatment required to be the most carefully delicate and persevering, to maintain the benefit gained, and guard against relapse. In both these types, opium, and all narcotics were manitestly injurious. As an instance of the occasional dreadful fatality of cholera, we may state the case of a young and stout khulassie, who, apparently in perfect health, was using his full strength driving in tent pegs for a sepahie's “pal,' for the reception of the additional sick, during a heavy shower of rain ; the man suddenly dropped the mallet, and complained of faintness ; he did not vomit, and only passed one small watery stool; yet he became almost immediately pulseless, and notwithstanding the most powerful stimulants, so rapidly did he sink, that he was dead in less than of an hour from the time of dropping the mallet. By far the most numerous cases are those of common cholera, where bile is still excreted ; this species, under proper treatment, is very certain of recovery. Our limits will not admit of further enlargement. We shall merely remark that a flow of urine, however small, was a sure precursor of returning health. The small-pox is not so extensively destructive as in the northern division. The other common diseases having no peculiarity, do not seem to demand particular mention. Longevity.—The Hindoo tribes of these extensive territories are by no means long-lived, and the appearance of a person of very advanced age is rare; in this respect, differing from the more hardy and opium-consuming denizens of the cooler climate, and more barren soil of Marwar, &c. Population. The population of Sindhia's territories has been computed at four inillions; this, as the extent of territory, is calculated at 29,760 geogra- phical square miles, gives a population of 168 and a fraction, per square mile, equalling almost exactly the population of Ireland. This estimate, we believe, is erroneous in under calculating the square of territory, and in greatly overestimating the population. Let any one who has traversed Malwa in various directions, recal to mind the vast portions of land of the most beautiful description passed over, covered with a low jungle, only requiring the hand of man to cut down and burn, and the simple Indian plough cultivation, in order to yield the most luxuriant crops. It is true that in many parts the villages are placed almost in a line, with only small inter- vals between; but this is by no means generally the case. On the contrary, we feel convinced that these territories to the south could support at the least six times the population. The fact is that even in the very best vil- lages, there is little, if any, annual increase of numbers; and this results from the prejudice against receiving strangers; but chiefly depends on the mortality occasioned by the small-pox, and other epidemics, especially fever, dysentery, and cholera. The prejudice of castes, and the want of energy thence resulting, keeps every thing stationary. The mortality of children in any large village in Malwa, during a period of ten years, would to any one appear fearfully great. It is a common saying that, amongst the gene- rality of poor cultivating and other families, out of ten children boro, two can be reared. This mortality in no way depends upon the occurrence of famine in the great southern division ; in which, on the contrary, the very best kinds of grain are both very common and exceedingly cheap ; add to which that during famines, Malwa and the surrounding countries are the grand resource of the people of the Doab and Berar, as well as Raj- pootana ; hundreds of thousands flocking thither for food. The popula- tion, therefore, appears to be only žth of what these fertile regions could, under other circumstances support. 384 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Throughout these territories the population is almost exclusively Hin- doo; the Mussulmans, except in the districts around Bhopal, and about Boorhanpoor, not forming one per cent. in the aggregate. In general appearance, the people are a small, dark, irregular featured, and by no means athletic race. The poorer classes of the northern divi- sion have a much slenderer appearance, resulting from insufficiency and inferiority of food, than those of Malwa and the south. Government.—The ruler of this fine country is Maha Raja Ali Jah Jankojee Sindhia Bahadoor, who is independent of the Hon'ble Company by treaty.* It may suffice to say that this Government, by no means exhibits a state of connected order and prosperity.—The executive government at present is placed in the hands of a few individuals chiefly interested in aggrandizing themselves, and accumulating money. The government may be considered therefore as irregularly despotic, the object of those in power being to maintain it, and of the expectants, as in other countries, to thwart the proceedings of, and oust the foriner ; while the whole agree in deducting the royal and civil list expenditure; from the annually diminishing revenue, and with the remainder maintaining a large regular and irregular army, ill paid, and under nominal control, only a very small portion of which would be required for state and police purposes, and the whole of which could not for one instant, withstand the British, the only power this Government could now come into collision with. Civilization. As the Mahrattas first emerged from a state of simple pastoral prosperity into the almost universal profession of war, itself whol- ly opposed and destructive to civil improvement, it cannot be expected that those whose course was always marked by a spirit of rapine and ac- cumulation, can feel any regard for promoting the civilization in its various branches, of those countries now under their rule. Their agricultural origin seems actually to have had the effect of rendering them more indifferent the cultivating tribes, who are ruthlessly made over to the tender mercies of speculators in revenue; perhaps as the caste of the generality of Mahrattas closely approximates to that of the common Hindoo ryot, the slavish con- tented state of the latter may be considered in some degree, a reproach to, and excite contempt in the more martial spirit of the former. A state of advancing improvement nowhere is seen ; either matters remain perfectly stationary or are progressively deteriorating. In those few cities and districts, where a few finer kinds of manufactures were in- troduced by Acber Sha and his successors, the articles are still pro- duced ; but, in diminished quantity, and vastly inferior quality. At the head quarters of the state, itself a modern capital, ruins and new buildings are in juxtaposition. Merchant's shops are small and ill supplied. Articles of all kinds are dear and brought from a distance. The accom- modation of strangers is little considered ; and to such the demeanor of the community and soldiery, is often very rude. Neither good roads nor bridges of any kind are to be met with. Lately a considerable sum of money, has been granted to aid in con- structing the grand road, from Agra to Bombay ; and for many years past the demand of opium for the China market has caused an extensive cultivation of the poppy to the south. These are the only points that we are aware of in which improvement, tending to increase civilization, has taken place ; the first conceded solely to British influence ; the latter resulting from ve of increased gain, and probably detrimental to the people by decreasing the cultivation of wheat. See Part II. Vol. II. page 246, of 1841. VOL. 11.) 335 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. The ferry boats, on all the rivers except the Nurbudda, are execrable. In the court a rigid observance of a certain degree of repelling etiquette, prevails, by no means either very refined or imposing ; but which, however, fully effects the object of the state, in confining all intercourse with British visitors to the strictest ceremony ; very different from the common idea of the simple Mahratta with his horse, spear and tent. In the numerous very fine villages in Malwa, and to the south, a state of stationary prosperity is observed ; the land yields abundance of food ; but, the cultivator though never in want, does not acquire riches. Between the fort and the Lushkar, an extensive tank has been dug, at the expense of some lacs of rupees; but the site has been unscientifical- ly selected, not admitting of an approach to the water level of the country, and hence the natural result has been a scanty supply, and sometimes total want of water. The improvement in the breed of horses and cattle, once greatly cele- brated to the south and in Malwa, and greatly encouraged by the wise Acber Sha is now entirely neglected. Trees of a useful nature in the northern division, except where protected by Hindoo potails, are prematurely and ruthlessly cut down, the supply being left entirely to chance : hence results a great scarcity of that highly fiecessary article, of which scarcity is a real curse, as depriving the poor of the benefit of a cot to raise them from the damp ground, and entirely pre- cluding the common use of doors, and little articles of domestic furniture, so greatly adding to the comfort of the mass. The southern division being further removed from the operating cause, does not suffer in this respect ; in addition to which, the fertile soil, copiously watered, yields a more than ample supply, In many of the small states of Rajpootana previously subjugated by the victorious Mahrattas, we have heard the rulers, of a noble descent, regret with the deepest indignation, the wanton way in which their conquerors for the time, had cut down and destroyed the noble ornaments of the tanks and forests, under which their forefathers had reposed, or pursued the chase. Habitations. The habitations of the superior classes are very inferior and unornamented ; even the palaces of the Government are confined, ir- regular, apparently inconvenient, and of a very mean appearance. There is not one building at all worthy the ruler of so rich and extensive a coun- try. The material used is stone, where procurable, as it is in the north abundantly. The houses of the poorer classes are generally composed of mud, thatched with grass, or have flat roofs of clay and concrete beat in over stones, or a frame of withes; these are sufficient for the wants of the people. Éducation. This is at a low ebb here. There is no scarcity of teachers however, there being an abundance of Moolas in proportion to the Maho- medan population, where such exists, and at Gwalior there are two petty Madrassas conducted by them. In the large towns, especially Oojein, there are several Vidiya salas and Dharumsalas, where Hindoo astro- nomical and other doctrines are propounded ; and in every village of any size, there is a pundit or kait, oostadjee or teacher located, to initiate the young, villagers in the rudiments of the Vedas and common arithmetic, with Devanagari writing. Brahmuns, Bunyas, and Seths are the educated classes; their education extends to reading, writing, and casting accounts in a simple manner. The most learned Brahmuns are only very superficially acquainted with their Pooranas', and more modern doctrines of sect. Among the few Mussulinans of superior class, a certain knowledge of Oordoo and PART I. VOL. II. Z Z Own 386 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Persian reading and writing is attained, just sufficient to enable the parties to act with respectability as vakeels, or office employées; this degree of lore is generally obtained at Delhie. The generality of the people are quite without education of any kind. The Government has in no way exerted itself to extend or improve education. Of the doctrines taught, the nature of which is justly of infinitely. more importance to the welfare of the community, than the number of schools and teachers, it may be remarked, that the astronomy, though founded often on errone- ous data, is sufficiently certain for making the annual calculations, and fully adapted to the wants of the people; the arithmetic, though not very progressed, is adapted for rapidity in calculating even complicated accounts. Beyond these, the doctrines taught are wholly unprofitable, and most are highly immoral. Ethics are not even understood ; and generally sexual incontinence is unblushingly avowed. Science.--Astronomy is the only science which is partially successfully cultivated ; their system differs little from that of Ptolemy; and they utterly reject the correct views, as revived by Copernicus. The only other, even, pretence to science is that of alchemy; in prosecuting which, most are dupes, to a few cunning, wise-looking, solemn men of supposed art. The practice is called 'rasan', and the professors are generally peripatetics, as, for obvious reasons, a long residence at any place would be inconvenient. Gold is always at least demanded as an essential in- gredient to cause the other materials to enter into form ; and very laugh- able instances of cheating occur. Medicine. There are a sufficient number of Hindoo beeds and hakeems for the population. These evince an obstinate pride in the belief of their own superiority, fostered by the superstitious credulity and carelessness of the community. Their practice is entirely empirical, founded on no first principles, and marked by an obstinate belief in the improbable, and even impossible action of substances often of a perfectly neutral nature. Their experience in the ordinary diseases carries them through ; and in cases of failure, they call in the aid of superstition, and refer to some supernatural cause the death of the patient, to whose fate they have an enviable indifference. They are always paid in advance, the materials used in prescriptions are often the most incongruous, and laughable even to themselves, when they are asked on what principles they prescribe, and what is the method of action of the various substances. Surgery.--Operators on the eye exclusively sometimes visit the various towns and villages, coming from Oude or Delhie. There are also wander- ing lithotomists. Bleeding, bone-setting, and chopping off the hands &c. of criminals, and applying boiling pitch, or hot iron, to stop the hæmorr- hage, are comprised in the indigenous surgery. Materia Medica.—The Gwalior country, even at the head city, is ill supplied, and indebted even for that amount, as for almost all useful articles, to other and distant parts of India. The substances of any real efficacy, but which are very little employed by the natives, are found in our own pharmacopæias ; such as gamboge (rewand kutaie); impure calomel (ruscapur); pure corrosive sublimate (dal shikara); arseni- cous acid (sum bhulkhar); senna (sunna putti); cassia fistula (amultas); sulphur (gundhuk); mercury (para); musk (mushuk); castor (jhoonj bai- dustur); croton tiglium (jumalgota); rhubarb (rewandchini) ; turbith root (turbad); impure potash (moolikhar); soda (sujee mittee); &c. &c. &c.: many other productions now imported, may be found indigenous. In to the greatest number of latter articles, on inquiry the reply is, that the efficacy is not in the substance itself, but in the combination; and that an individual may take a chittack' of it, and remain uninjured. regard VOL. 11.) 387 SINDHIA'S OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Hospitals.-Throughout this extensive country there is not a single hospital, for the reception of the sick; nor any public or private means and appliances for their benefit. The regular troops are equally unpro- vided ; and on the line of march or field of battle, the wounded sepahie must rely upon his own resources; or be left a prey to wild beasts, or scarcely less savage human plunderers ; and if disabled, has neither pension, nor present support to cheer him. Charity.--A certain degree of ostentatious and indiscriminate charity there is ; but that true charity that vaunteth not herself, there is none. There are numerous and daily doles to support thousands of professional vagrants, under nominally religious characters, with generally remarkably able bodies, and who are altogether a great curse to the country. But for those who have become indigent and helpless by disease, or other misfor- tune, there is neither public, nor even private aid, deserving of the name, to relieve them, and they fully experience the miseries of want, to endure which, even native apathy cannot reconcile them. Annually thousands of pahariyas,' or hill men, are brought down from their distant hills, to re- ceive a sum of money from the Maha Raja ; the poor creatures travel this weary distance, to the great distress of their half-starved, often young, fa- milies, and arrive wretched-looking objects, in a miserable plight; they are paid generally about seven rupees, and get a blanket ; the poor wretches are very little benefited, besides contracting habits leading to expect other means of subsistence, than that which careful domestic industry would amply supply them. The total sum per annum given away in this indis- criminate manner is very large. The whole, or a portion of this amount, appropriated to the establishment of hospitals for the sick poor of these territories ; or to afford assistance to the maimed and destitute, who are unable to work; or to the construction of roads, caravansaries, and tanks, to facilitate trade and general intercourse, would of course ultimately increase the prosperity of the country ; but the Gwalior court ' understand none of these things.' Arts and Manufactures. These, in accordance with what has been pre- viously said, are at a very low ebb. Chunderi has long been famous for the manufacture of a fine sort of muslin called muhmoodie ; formerly pieces of great fineness were constructed. The manufacture seems to have been introduced, or at least brought to the state of its perfection, by the Maho- medans; the designation of the weavers being still momeen julahee.' For many years past the trade in the article has greatly decreased, and in consequence, the fabric has greatly fallen off in quality. The pieces are made of very various degrees of fineness ; and the difference of price is quite disproportionate to the degree of superiority. The district of Chan- deri affords a rather fine and long stapled kind of cotton ; a good deal of care is taken in collecting cleanly the best kinds ; the spinning is per- formed both by men and women. The system of manufacture being quite destitute of combination, the greatest trouble and waste of la- bour necessarily occurs. The weaver of the finer kinds having to proceed from village to village, to collect the spindles of thread, as nearly as pos. sible, of one degree of fineness. These spindles are purchased by their weight in rupees, sometimes three times the weight being paid,-a rate truly extravagant. The thread of the warp and the woof are alike irregu- larly and loosely twisted. The warp, in fine and coarse pieces, is never straight. The very finest pieces are not only thus irregular, but examined through a high magnifying glass, exhibit the greatest difference of texture. The pieces are five yards long, and half a yard wide. They are highly valued for dresses, for Mahrattas and Hindoos : in general, owing to the slight twist of the thread, being exceedingly pliant and soft, and washing well. The finest pieces cost from eighty to one hundred Chanderi 388 (PART 1, STATISTICS. rupees ; a price quite enormous ! Contrast this fabric with that of the finer Scotch or Manchester cambrics : the latter to the eye are infinitely more beautiful, the warp and woof alınost mathematically straight, no irregularity in the thread, which is of the finest Sea Island cotton, and en- tireness ensured by the superior degree of twist given to the thread, to allow the requisite tension in weaving. It is this higher degree of twist- ing, which causes the Scotch cámbrics to be difficult to wash in native hands, the woof threads breaking sometimes across. Hence they are less valued by natives of rank. On the other hand, no judge would compare even the finest muhmoodie in point of beauty to the fine Scotch cambrics; while one fine muhmoodie piece, costing one hundred rupees, would pay for ten pieces of the finest Scotch cambric, which ten pieces would certainly out wear eight fine muhmoodie; the price being as eight to one. Fine low twisted Scotch cambrics would be extensively used, if introduced at moderate prices. In no other part of these territories is the cotton manufacture carried to any degree of perfection; the common kinds of cloths are made of inferior and coarse quality. The only other articles of clothing of superior manufacture in these territories, are the silk and cotton embroidered fabrics, made at Boorhan- poor in Khandeish. This business is chiefly in the hands of the Borah tribe of Mussulmans; the raw silk used, is not indigenous ; the greater part is imported viâ Bombay and Surat ; the gold and silver bullion thread used, is made in the city; and the brilliant dyes of crimson, lake, and scarlet are there concocted ; these dyes are fugitive in the extreme. The articles woven are turbans, khin-kwabs, kummerbunds, saloos, soilahs, and misroos. Some of these are beautiful, graceful in patterns, and gorgeous in bullion fabric. These having a large proportion, are very high-priced. Almost all made up, is consumed in these territories in the durbar, and by the chiefs. Formerly a good number were exported; but lately the manufactures of Benares have beat those of Boorhanpoor out of the market; the former being nearly as beautiful, and much cheaper. Silver coin, of a low degree of purity, struck at Gwalior. Brass guns are cast in the Lushkar, in the Maha Raja's arsenal, under semi-European superintendence : the bore of the guns is irregular; the metal is an amalgamation of copper and zinc, and is of course not regular gun metal ; hence the touchholes must necessarily run sooner in quick firing, and the guns become useless, or require repair; they also droop speedily at the muzzle. Gunpowder and fireworks are extensively made for the use of the court, In these wide territories, there are no other arts or manufactures culti- vated to a noticeable extent, saving the smelting of iron and steel ores, which is extensively carried on in the usual simple way; the iron produced is superior. All the other petty hereditary arts are carried on in the towns and vil- lages, in the same degree of stationary moderate perfection, as in other parts of India. Trade.—The rich and powerful of the predominant power being few in number, the wants of the mass, supplied by the same simple domestic means employed by their progenitors, give very little encouragement to import- ing trade. English and other European manufactures are extensively imported into the Lushkar and city of Gwalior, viz. of silks, gauzes, and muslins, fine and coarse, together with all varieties of long cloths, for the use of the court, and other inhabitants. In all of the larger towns and villages, European long cloths and muslins are much sought after, and preferred for their cheapness, in proportion to quality. In the cold sea- son, at such places, coarse English woollens, and all varieties of European and army. VOL. 11.] 389 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. chintzes are in great request, and would no doubt be more extensively purchased, if the means of the generality permitted. Rough diamonds and emeralds are brought from Bundelkhand, and pass through Vojein. Cornelians and agates from Baroda : moss agates, &c. from the bed of the Caine river at Keitah. Pearls, universally much prized, are imported from the Persian Gulph and Ceylon, via Bombay and Calcutta ; sometimes the pearls are of very great value. Gold, silver, mercury, cop- per, lead, zinc, not being found in these territories, are necessarily im. ported. Shawls from Cashmere are brought to Gwalior in considerable quantities, for private use; but especially for offerings on state occasions. Dried fruits from Caubul yearly arrive in small quantities; the chief part of which proceed onward to the Dakhin. From the latter country carda- moms, and black and other peppers are imported. The many thousand muskets used by the army are of French make; but by what route imported, is not openly known. Articles of cutlery, both English and French, are brought in small quanti- ties to the large cities and towns, as is also bijouterie of French manufac- ture, which finds a sale, at an extravagant rate, amongst the chiefs and court in the Lushkar. It is a singular fact, that though these territories include the greater portion of fertile Malwa, the chief part of the gram used in the Lushkar and Gwalior, is brought from the Doab. The whole importation is remarkably trifling; of the amount no re- gular account can be obtained ; probably none being kept by the authori- ties : and this widely intersected country presents particular difficulties to the correctly ascertaining the aggregate sum of imports. The stationa- ry degree of civilization, the uncertain tenure of the chiefs, and the un- ambitious mass, seldom or never possessing superfluous money, to enable them to give way to a momentary enticement for foreign articles of cloth- ing, or other domestic use, may be considered in some degree to account for the insignificant demand. The greatest hindrance is the want of precise regularity in the Cus- toms department; instead of an unvarying rate of duties on the frontier, they are levied at various points on the different routes, the amount greatly depending on the avarice of subordinates, who, by threatening delay, ruinous to the merchant, enforce compliance with claims, however unjust. The exports are chiefly opium and cotton. The first article, opium, is exported very largely viâ Bombay, and amounts in value to a very great sum, yielding a highly profitable return to the producer. Of the total quantity exported, there can be no accurate account, as besides the large amount annually sent to Bombay, there is a great deal smuggled by various roundabout routes. Cotton of good quality is also largely exported to Bombay, and by Mirzapoor and Calpee; the value is very considerable, and remunerating to the producer. Munjith, the root of rubia munjistha, and Al, the root of morinda tinctoria and citrifolia, both valuable red dyes, are cultivated, and ex- ported in considerable quantities. Iron, and a little Bhilsah tobacco of superior quality may also be mentioned. Muslins and embroidered silks are still exported to a small amount. Thus in this fine country which produces in general a superabandance of food, and all common necessaries to supply the wants of the inhabitants, the imports are a mere trifle, compared to the amount and value of the exports, which yield immense returns. Such, however, is the system, that the government is yearly becoming more involved in consequence of dimi- nishing revenue. The speculating traders, and some potails of villages amass great wealth occasionally; the labourer however becomes by no 390 (PART 1. STATISTICS. means the richer under this middlemen' system. The petty speculators frequently fail in their gambling schemes. The great amount of value of produce remains in the hands of one or two millionaire' seths and sahookars or bankers. Police.-There is no regular system of police; hence the protection afforded to life and trade is by no means to be depended on as certain. In the city of Gwalior, and the Lushkar, there is a regular Cotwal, and set of chokeedars kept up; even there, however, the only reliance in case of commotions is on regular troops, with guns, being called out. Dojein, and some other large towns, possess a sort of police. The small towns and villages have no police establishments; petty offences, and even felonies, if investigated at all, coming under the jurisdiction of the Tehseeldar, or other revenue agent, who usually resides in some cen- tral village. Bribery has an unlimited range ; the blandly murdering thugs, and the fierce dacoits, finding gold a certain protection. These latter preyers upon mankind have lately met with a check in the appoint- ment of an officer (Captain Ellis), with a requisite establishment, for the suppression of thuggee and dacoitie in Sindhias's territories, and it may be confidently hoped that Captain Ellis's exertions will completely cripple, if not exterminate, the gangs. Altogether the goddess Justitia of Gwalior may be said to be blind only on one side ; her scales depressed by the most weighty considerations, and her sword one of lath. Cultivation. In these territories the cultivation is a good deal various. In ordinary seasons, the soil will everywhere yield crops in superabundance, in proportion to the inhabitants. "Both khurreet and rubbee crops are produced. In the portion north of the Sinde and Shahabad, the soil being a light sandy loam, the khurreef crop may be considered the staple ; thought the rubbee by irrigation is frequently sufficiently abundant. In the vast portion south, the staple is certainly the rubbee crop; though the khurreef is almost always superabundant. To the north the grain chiefly cultivated in the rains is the bujra, which yields large returns ; joar is next in amount; maize is also cultivated ; with these, moong, oord, and urrhur, which produce very abundantly ; rice is cultivated wherever a supply of water is secured in tanks ; sessamum is also very luxuriant and productive. Cotton, wherever the ground suits, grows well and gives good returns : sun, i.e. hemp, is little cultivated. In the cold season wheat is sown, wherever the ground suits, in accordance with the number of wells, irrigation being almost every where required ; the usual return is considerable ; barley grows on the poorer lands, also requiring watering ; mustard as a mixed crop is luxuriant and prolific; linseed and mussoor also grow well; gram or chuna is sown wherever the soil suits; it is not watered; but, is like sugar cane scarce in the northern division, where the wheat is of inferior quality and is almost always high priced; the dals and other grains are of the average price elsewhere: and oil is cheap. In the southern division joar, maize, moong, and oord, rice of superior quality, sessamuin, with cotton and hemp are largely cultivated during the rains, and yield almost always immense returns. In the cold season wheat of the finest quality is produced in superabandance; and from the prevalence of retentive black soil, irrigation is not required. To the partial neglect of wheat, the poppy is now extensively sown; the very best ground is required, divided into small kearas with water courses ; irrigation being absolutely necessary; the return is not very uncer- tain; and is so remunerating as to render the indolent ryots content with the rapid acquisition of mere sufficiency, instead of the much greater amount that superior exertions in grain cultivation would in- fallibly produce. Mustard, linseed, and mussoor are' abundant corps. As an annual crop, sugar cane is grown, and thrives well, yielding VOL. 11] 391 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. an ample supply of coarse sugar for the inhabitants. About Sagur the Otaheitan species has been extensively introduced. The dyes, indigo, munjith, and al, also annual crops, thrive exceedingly well ; indigo is only grown to a trifling extent; munjith and al are in some districts largely cultivated. About Bhilsah, a quantity of tobacco is reared, which has a great name, and is eagerly sought for in India ; the species seems to be the same as the common kind, and owes its superiority to the careful cul- tivation ; being a most exhausting crop, excessive quantities of manure are used, and on each plant, only three on four leaves are allowed to re- main, all the blossom buds are nipped off , and weakly plants torn up; the greatest attention is also paid to weeding and watering. In the rich soil of this southern division bujra will not grow to advantage. Two very common aad inferior kinds of rice, are highly deserving of mention ; they are called “ kodhoo' and 'kootkee' (paspalum scrobiculatum and paspalum kora), they are very small fine grains, and grow almost spontaneously in light soil, wherever hilly ground occurs. These grains are sweet tasted, and in favourable seasons at the end of the rains become particularly cheap, in the small villages, near which they grow; they are generally very wholesome food occasioning no injury. When, however, eaten new at particular seasons, the use of these grains produces most extraordinary effects. It is evident, that when these grains are thus unwholesome, some peculiar disease of the plant, must be the occasion ; though the cause is not perceptible to the eye, like the ergot of diseased rye. On reaping and winnowing a crop, the whole ipnabitants of a village, commonly largely consume it as food, the grain being very palatable. For a day or two little effect is produced : at length the whole or part of the consumers become maniacal, only differing in degree according to their various tem- peraments, the general being madmen gay: all work is neglected, and the village is without regulation : this state lasts a day or two, sometimes much longer ; deaths sometimes, though very rarely, occur. The disease excited differs from Raphania, produced by eating ergotted rye. Both diseases are marked by aberration of mind ; but, the Indian disease differs from Raphania in making its appearance much more rapidly, in the general absence of convulsions, the nonproduction of ulcers, and in having no permanent bad effect on the constitution. The sight of many indi- viduals or a whole village labouring at once under the effects mentioned, has a very extraordinary appearance. One other grain is worthy of mention, the raj-girra' (eleusine stricta) as being the only one which the brahmuns of the ruling power, are allow- ed to partake of in a parched state on upasec' or fast days. It is a fine round small grain, very pleasant to the palate ; it is cultivated in gardens. The contrast between the price of grain in the northern and southern divisions is exceedingly great ; evincing the wretched state of the roads, as well as want of enterprize ; in the north, wheat is seldom sold above 22 seers for the rupee, while in the south, for one rupee from 40 to 60 seers can, in good years, be purchased on the winnowing ground. Add to this that one grain of the finest southern ‘julalia' wheat is fully equal to three grains of the pisea' and 'kutea' wheats of the north, The common garden vegetables are every where cultivated. Agriculture. The implements used are of the usual simple kind, and are not so neatly made as those of the northern tribes, whom necessity compels to be more careful, both on account of barrenness of soil, and scarcity of materials. The single plough, the hoe spade, the hoe, a sort of harrow, a beam or tree to break the clods, a broad and weighty iron blade attached to a beam, and drawn by bullocks, to cut and root up thorn bushes, the small sickle, and a hollow bamboo with funnel attached, as a drilling machine, are the whole of the instruments employed. The 392 (PART 1. STATISTICS. khureef grains are generally sown broad cast, and when young the plough is run through the crop, in regular lines, giving much the appearance of drill husbandry. The ground for the poppy is often carefully prepared with the spade. Whenever manure is procurable it is employed for all crops ; especially for sugar cane, the poppy, Indian corn, and tobacco. The breed of cattle is superior. The water for irrigation is generally raised by skins and leather ropes attached to a pair of bullocks. In some parts a rude Persian wheel is used. Water and Wells.- These are sufficiently abundant, and the water is every where near the surface, except on the sandstone plateau, where the wells are very deep. The quality of water of the northern division, which occurs in sandstone or rolled granite, is very superior to that which is found in the black loam, yellow clay, or schistus to the south. Famines.—The northern division, owing to the khurreef crop affording the staple articles for food to the mass, and that crop being quite dependent on favourable rains, is peculiarly liable to suffer when famine is widely extended. To the south, famine, properly speaking, seldom or never happens in those territories north of Berar; in a comparative degree no doubt want occurs; thus in 1833 the poor near the Nurbudda bitterly complained at being compelled to eat good rice at 16 seers per rupee, instead of the finest wheat at 40 or 50 seers per rupee as formerly; while at that very time 16 seers of rice per rupee would have been a perfect Godsend at Gwalior. In accordance with this fact, the southern division has always been liable to an immense ingress of starving popula- tion during times of famine either to the south or north There is no provi- sion made by the ruling power to avert the consequences of scanty seasons ; and the character of the people is here, as elsewhere in India, both naturally and morally opposed to preconception of evil ; or, to making the efforts necessary to avert it when impending. Let this fact be looked to ; there is always some rain falls, be the season ever so dry, and there is always water in some of the wells; the provision immediately required is that for about four months. The inhabitants of a village remain listlessly inert, according to old routine, watching the bounty of the clouds, in the meantime expending all property, even their cattle, in the purchase of food, and when quite destitute, they desert their homes and wander forth trusting to chance. If instead of this, as soon as the old wise men' should decide that the rains were to be ruinously deficient, the whole of the inhabitants would strenuously unite in eultivating small patches, wherever wells and water occurred, raising the hardy inferior legumes, and hill rice, with Indian corn, and vegetables, such as egg apple, ockur, native spinach, pump- kins and pepper ; a sufficiency of food would be obtained, at least to keep them alive, till the rain should fall, or the cold season set in, of which they could then take immediate advantage. Revenue.--Monsieur Balki has calculated the revenue of Sindhia's do- minions at one million forty thousand pounds sterling ; or one hundred and forty lakhs of rupees. This estimate is greatly erroneous. There is the greatest difficulty in ascertainiug with any thing like accuracy the immediate amount, as the Court is most chary in giving information ; besides it is probable there are no general returns of revenue kept as re- cords, and those of the different pergunnahs are perpetually fluctuating; more according to the rascality and dexterity of the renters of revenue, than owing to any falling off in production. The accounts are very much complicated in consequence of the singular division of towns, villages, and districts between Sindhia and Holcar, all on one side of a district belonging to Sindhia, and on the other to Holcar : this is the case in numerous in- stances. The great curse on the country however, and the cause of VOL. IL] SINDHIA'S, OR GWALION TERRITORIES. 393 diminishing revenue is the system of collection ; every large district or mu- hal being either farmed by the military ruler, or by bohoras or brokers, who, provided they pay a stipulated amount to Government, are permitted to screw whatever sums in excess they can, out of the cultivating tribes. The bohoras themselves are generally agents of wealthy Seths; the mili- tary ruler or chief again subrents the revenue to the highest bidder, or whoever will give the largest sum of ready-money. Neither take the least interest in the welfare of the cultivator. The latter can seldom commence agricultural operations until he has received an advance from the bohora, who consequently has him under complete control; and in case of failure of crop, the cultivator's household property and cattle are ruthlessly sold. Thus the cultivator's only tenure of property is in a succession of fertile seasons. The village accounts are kept by the bahoras, who advance money to the ryots, and who calculate the interest, measure the produce, of which they generally become the purchasers at a very cheap rate, and so manage, that the cultivating tribes never accumulate even moderate wealth. Be- sides the land revenue, almost every other department is farmed out by the state, and similar peculation occurs. Under a proper system of supervision and collection, it is not improbable that this fine and exten- sive country would ultimately yield a revenue exceeding Monsieur Balbi's calculation. As it is, the revenue has been long, and is still, falling off. In 1834, the revenue was stated to be eighty-two lacs of Chanderi rupees; at the present time, 1841, the court state the total revenue to be about sixty lacs of Chanderi rupees. In 1834, the private treasury, called Gungajullee,' was said to contain twenty million of Chanderi rupees: now, the amount is only conjectural; but is probably still very considerable. The wealth possessed by the court in jewels, and other valuables, is very great. Army-Regular and Irregular.— The large military force kept up is the grand drain of the amount of revenue still collected. The force is vastly large in comparison to the real wants of the state. The degree of discipline, and amount of the force, would render it very formidable to any of the other native powers of India, were there any field for action ; bat, surrounded as these territories are on every hand, by British possessions having cantonments, with a highly disciplined compact force ready to start for action, Sindhia's army, though the state is independent, is under complete control, and could not advance beyond the borders unpermitted, even if there was sufficient combination to excite to such a movement. Contention with the British is hopeless, and that power will not allow contention with any other power; hence it is evident, that a few regular troops for state purposes, and the necessary number of irre- gulars to ensure collection of the revenue, and for police purposes, would be amply sufficient,and would leave a large sum of money at the Maha Raja's disposal. This large body of troops is by no means under effectual control; they are chiefly mercenaries, actuated by no love of country, or "esprit de corps :' those battalions, under semi-European leaders, are the best and most to be relied upon; but the whole being very irregularly and ill paid, their faith is little sustained. Indeed it may be matter of question whe- ther, in case of any great commotion, the ruler could safely rely upon any but his own household troops. The regular army so called has, in former instances, evinced a determi- nation, like the Protorian bands, to be the controlling, instead of the merely executing arm of power. PART 1. VOL. II. A 3 394 (PART 1. STATISTICS. The Statement of the present force appears to be as follows: } cers Designations. Numbers. Remarks. Cost 23,000 rupees per mensem; consider themselve Ekas, 200 champions, ; some have been dismissed for mutiny ; paid very highly. Each man paid 25 rupees per mensem; total cost Household Horse, 4,000 100,000 rupees a month; the horses are the Maha Raja's. Each-sowar paid from 20 Silladar horse ; to 30 rupees ; total cost of Mahrattas and 5,000 125,000 rupees ; the men all castes, provide their own horses. 25 Regular In- Each man receives, on an fantry Regiments, average, 7 rupees per men- Telinga Regiments. sem ; total cost with offi- Each Regiment 13,255 ; muskets. cers 130,250 rupees. Offi- from 450 to 550 chiefly semi-Euro- men, peans. í Each man receives 6 Rs. a month; total cost with Nujeebs; Irre- native officers, 16,000 rupees gular Foot; four 2,000; matchlocks.k a month. These Nujeebs Regiments, are more to be depended on than the Regulars, by the Maha Raja. Cost 2000 rupees per Horse Artillery, ?| 200, with four four- Each man paid 6 rupees a Foot Artillery ; 2000; with three month; cost 16,000 rupees four Regiments, .. Slof common brass. hundred guns, chiefly per mensem. These men are very staunch. Total 9,000 sabres; 16,000 muskets; 300 guns; the whole having no esprit de corps; ill paid, and badly disciplined." Mazology:-No animals of kinds peculiar to these territories occur ; under this head, therefore, a very short notice may suffice; all the usual animals, domestic and savage, are to be found. Common Wild Animals. Hindoo Names. Simia Apedia, Yellow short-tailed Monkey, Bundur. Simia Aygula, Grey Ape, Lungoor. Dysopes Murinus, House Bat, Ubabeel. Pteropus Indicus, Flying Fox or "Row- sette,' Chumgcedur. }\pounder guns. mensem. # From this force all detachments are supplied to the various forts &c. Thus we see the astonishing fact that while the revenue is asserted to have fallen off to six million of rupees, the annual expense of the troops supposing the whole regu- larly paid and properly equipped is abore five million of rupees. Even supposing the revenue to be actually greatly above what is slated, still what an enormous and use- less expenditure is here exhibited ? VOL. II. 395 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Common Wild Animals. Hindoo Names. Manis pentadactyla, Pangolin, Bujr-keet. sal Canis ferus, Wild dog (hunts in packs), Sona-kootea. Canis aureus, Jackal, Geedur. Canis lupus, Wolf, Bheriya. Canis hyæna, Hyæna, Jherruck. Canis tulpes, Fox, Lomrie. Felis tigris, Tiger, Bagh. Felis pardus, Leopard (entire spots), Tendooa. Felis onca, Ounce (ring spots), Bhagaira. Felis pardalis, Hunting leopard, Checta. Felis catus, Wild cat, Bun-bilae. Felis lynx, Indian lynx, Shia-gosh. Viverra mungos, Ichneumon, Newul. Viverra Bengalensis, Civet cat, Mooshk-bilae. Lutra vulgaris, Otter, Jul-manush. Ursus fuscus, Dark brown bear, Reech. Ursus meles, Badger, Beejoo. Gulo Asiaticus, Wolverine, Kala-beejoo. Sus scrofa, Wild hog, Jungli-suer. Sorex Indicus, Shrew; musk rat, Choochoondur. Hystrix cristata, Porcupine, Sahee. Lepus Orientalis, Hare, Kurgosh. Mus musculus, Common mouse, Choohie. Mus rattus, Rat; bandicoot rat, Burra chooha ; ghoose. Mus amphibius, Water rat, Paniya chooha. Sciurus striatus, Striped squirrel, Giluhree, Cervus hippelaphus, Elk, Gous. Cervus Aristotelis, Large deer, Sumbu : samur. Cervus axis, Indian spotted-deer, Cheetul, Antelope gazella, Gazelle antelope, Guwuzu. Antelope cervicapra, Common antelope, Hurun. Antelope picta, Ox deer, Nylghau. Bos bubalus, Wild buffaloe, Urna. Ornithology. The same remarks apply to the birds in Sindhia's country, which are no way peculiar, excepting perhaps the buceros :- Common Wild Birds. Hindoo Names. Vultur fulvus, Tawny vulture, Gidh. Cathartes Orientalis, Indian condor, Chumar-gidh. Aquila fulvus, Brown eagle, Ookab. Falco palumburius, Goshawk, Baz. Falco nisus, Sparrow hawk, Shikra. Falco milvus, Kite or gled. Cheel. Falco buteo albus, Indian buzxard, Sufaid cheel. Strix candida, Grey owl, Burra Ooloo. Strix noctua Indica, Indian owl. Ooloo. Buceros monoceros, Malabar hornbill, Burrear; donak. Corvus Bengalensis, Bengal crow, Kouwa. Corvus corax, Raven, Puhari kouwa. Corvus monedula, Jackdaw, Huzar-dostan. Garrulus pica. Magpie, Dheyur. Gracula religiosa, Myna, (sacred,) Dial. Coracias Indica, Common myna, Myna. Edolius Bengalensis, Kiag of the crows. Doomela. 396 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Common Wild Birds. Hindoo Names. Lanius Indicus, Bush shrike, Boolbool. Lanius cærulesceus, Indian butcher bird, Kurchool. Psittacus severus, Large green parrot, Ghagas tota. Psittacus pertinax, Small green parrot, Totiya. Pica Bengalensis, Indian jay, Leel khunt. Cuculous scolopaceus, Brown spotted cuckoo, Kokila. Picus Bengalensis, Indian woodpecker, Khat-phooriya. Alcedo erithaca, Kingfisher redbreast, Ghotukhori; kilkila. Merops viridis, Green bee-eater, Muhoka. Upupa epops, Ноорое, , Khôd-burraie. Certhia purpurata, Creeper bird, Toontonee. Trochilus mellisugus, Black humming bird, Sukkur-khora. Trochilus mango, Mango bird, Peelak. Ploceus textor, Weaver bird, Bhaia. Anas Indica, Wild Goose, Rajbauns. Anas boscas, Wild duck, Moorghabi. Anas Penelope, Wigeon, Kubri-moorghabi. Anas crecca, Teal, Teekla. Pelicanus onocrotalus, Pelican. Huwasil. Pelicanus piscator, Scarf cormorant, Kaoli; ghok. Platalea leucorodia, Spoonbill, Khoonj. Ardea antigone, Sarus, Sarus. Ardea ciconia, Stork, Khoorch. Ardea nigra, Black crane, Dhenk. Ardea nigrorostris, Black-billed heron, Bootæmar. Ciconia Argala, Adjutant, Ghuroor. Scolopax arquata, Curlew (white & black), Koolkoola. Scolopax gallinago, Snipe, Chaha. Fulica porphyrio, Water hen, Julmoorghie. Otis Arabica, Indian bustard (rare), Sone-chirriya. Otis houthouri, Florican (very rare), Hookna. Pavo cristatus, Pea-cock, Mohr. Phasianus fuscus, Crow pheasant, Koel. Tetrao perdis, Grey partridge, Teetur. Tetrao Orientalis, Black partridge, Khut-teetur. Tetrao coturnix, Quail, Buter. Columba Asiatica, Blue pigeon, Jungli kabootur. Columba turtur, Turtle dove, Pundook. Alauda Indica, Indian lark, Ugan. Fringilla domestica, Sparrow, Gaoreya. Fringilla amandava, Amadavat, Lol moanea. Motacilla luscinia, Nightingale, Shama. Motacilla Bengalensis, Indian wagtail. Dhobee-chirriya. Ilirundo urbica, Indian swallow, Ubabeel Icthyology.-A great variety of fish abounds in the rivers, and numerous streams, especially during and after the rains. The carp tribe are the most common, Cyprinus Rohita, Rohoo. Cyprinus Calbasia, Kalabans, Kalabans. Cyprinus religiosus, Narayn, Narayn Salmo faria, Trout, Goolabee. Silurus maximus, Indian pike, Boollee, Silurus singee, Singee, Singee. Pimelodus Tengra, Tengra, Tengra. Rohoo carp, VOL. 11.) 397 SINDHIA'S OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Coluber naga, Macropteronotus argenti- Puftah, Puftah. nus, . Macrognathus muræna, Spotted eel, Baum-muchee. Ophiology.--All the species of serpents common to India are to be met with ; one or two may be enumerated. Python tigris, Spotted boa, Ujgun. Hydrophis obscurus, Water snake, Paniya samp. Typhlos lumbricalis, Indian blind worm, Domaie. Spectacled snake. Gohoona. Coluber albo-lineis, Kurait, Kurait. Coluber severus, Black-spotted cobra, Korila. Coluber Saturninus, Livid red cobra, Rukt-vausee. Pseudo boa fasciata, Yellow clouded snake, Peelora. Anguis saltans, Leaping snake, Oorunpuveyroa. Anguis flagellans, Whip snake, Koraia. The Crocodilus Vulgaris, or“ muggur,' is the only kind in these territories. Botany.-A great variety of plants are distributed, varying according to situation. A few may be enumerated. Curcuma lencorrhiza, White rooted turmeric, Tikoor. Curcuma longa, Common turmeric, Huldi. Zingiber officinale, Common ginger, Udrak. Alpinia nutans, Nodding flowered al- pinia, Poonag-champa. Nyctanthes arbor tristis, Weeping nyctauthes, Hursingar. Jasiminum zambac, Arabian double jas- Motiya (many species). nime, several Justicia adhatoda, Notched hyssop, Bhoomia neem. Piper betel, Betel pepper, Tamboola ; pawn. Valeriana jatamansi, Spikenard valerian, Jub-lukri ; billi-lotun. Dwarf spider wort, Hanshira several species Kyllingia monocephala, One-headed kyllingia, Jungli nirbishee. Cyperus rotundus, Round cyperus, Mootha; nugur mootha. Penicillaria spicata, Bull rush, Pathera. Cenchrus lappaceus, Bar cenchrus, Bruit ; boor. Saccharum cylindricum, Hare's tail grass, Oola. Saccharum-pontaneum, Spontaneous saccharam Kas; kagara. Saccharum officinarum, Sugar-cane, Ikh ; gunna ; latha. Softy saccharum, Sirkunda ; sarkara. Arrow saccharum, Sur, shura ; goondra. Rope saccharum, Surpat; surpata; moorja Andropogon muricatus, Sharp pointed 'andro- pogon, Gandar; khuskhus. Andropogon sorghum, Indian millet, Joar. Andropogon schænan. Lemon grass, Gundba bena. Paspalum scrobiculatum, Punctured paspalum, Kodu ka choul. Paspalum kora, Round-grained rice, Kora. Panic-grass millet, Bujra. Doob grass, Doob; doorba. Three flowered fescue Bunjooa. grass, Malabar-nut justicia, Alusa, bakus { kindersa Gratiola serrata, Commelina nada, Saccharum procerum, Saccharum sara, Saccharum munja, thus, Panicum spicatum, Panicum dactylon, Festuca triflora, 398 (PART 1. STATISTICS. } Common Wild Plants, Hindoo Names. Festuca fusca, Ruhoosa oil grass, (Ruhoosa. 5 Holcus regalis, Elensine stricta, Royal seed, Raja girra. Poa cynosuraides, Dogs tail meadow grass, Cusa ; kusha. Arundo karka, Hooqua pipe reed, Nurkut; nursul. Hordeum hexastichon, Winter barley, Jao. Triticum æstiorum, Summer wheat, Gioon; gehoon. Rubia munjistha, Indian madder, Munjith ; Munjeet. Ixora bundhooka. Scarlet iswarra, Ruktuka. Ixora parviflora, Small flowered' iswarra, Jilpai; ghundul-rungun. Plantago ispaghula, Indian plantain. Uspagool; isupgol. Ammandia vesicatoria, Blistering aminania, Daud-maree. Tropa bispinosa, Double-spined water caltrops, Singhara. Santalum myrtifolium, Bastard sandal wood, Sundul; chundun. Plumbago rosea, Rose lead wort, Lal-chitruk. Convolvulus turpethum, Turbith root, Teoree; turbad. Convolvulus batatas, Sweet potato. Sukur-kund. Convolvulus argentaceus, Silver-leaved climber, Sumoondr-sokh. Ipomea cærulea, Blue ipomea, Kala dana ; neel-kulmi. Ipomea quamoclit, Love's ringlets. Issuk pucha. Nauclea cadamba, Kadam, Kadain. Vauguiera spinosa, Thorny vanguiera, Myna ; mynphull. Morinda citrifolia, Broad-leaved morinda, Burra-al. Morinda Tinctoria, Dyeroot morinda, Al; ach. Datura fastuosa, Purple thorn apple, Kala datura. Datura metel, Common thorn apple, Datura. Physalis flexuosa, Bent winter cherry, Asgandh. Solanum rubrum Red nightshade, Mukoe. Solanum melongená, Egg plant, Baigan. Strychnos nux vomica Vomic-nut tree, Kuchla. Cordia latifolia, Broad-leaved cordia, Burra lusora. Pectona grandis, Teak, Sagoon. Zizyphus jujuba, Jujube tree, Byer. Carissa carandas, Karonda, Karonda. Gardenia florida, Cape jasmin, Gundharaj. Wrightia antidysenterica, Oval-leaved wrightia, Inderjau. Allamanda cathartica, Purging allamanda, Peela-kanel. Plumieria acuminata, Tri-colouned plumioria, Gool achin. Taberuæmontana coro- Rosebay tabernæmon- naria, tura, Firki tagur. Asclepias gigantea, Large swallow art, Mudar. Semicarpus anacardium, Marking-nut tree, Bhilawan. l'amarix dioæca, Tamarisk, Jhaoo. Gloriosa superba, Superb lily, Cariari. Bambusa arundenaeea, Bamboo, Bans. Oryza sativa, Rice, Dhaun, Grislea tomentosa, Wooly grislea, Dhawri-phool. Mimusops elengi, Point-leaved mimusops, Maulsari. Mimusops kanki, Obtuse leaved mimusops Kirnie. Ximenia Ægyptica, Egyptian Ximenia, Hingot. Sapindus detergeus, Soap berry tree, Reetha. Banhinia variegata, Vuriegated Banhinia, Kachnar. Cassia fistula, Pipe cassia, Amultas. Poinciana pulcherrima, Spanish carnatious, Krishen-churrun. VOL. 11.) 399 SINDHIA's, or GWALIOR TERRITORIES. Coesalpinia sappan, Sappan wood, Puttunga. Coesalpinia bonducella, Bonduc nut, Kutkaranja. Hyperanthera moringa, Horseradish tree, Suhajna. Boswellia thurifera, Olibanum tree, Salahie ; salar. Buchanania latifolia, Broad-leaved buchana- nia, Churanjee ; piyal. Melia azederachta, Common bead tree, Neem. Melia sempervirens, Evergreen bead tree, Buckain, Swietenia febrifuga, Febrifuge mahogany, Rohunna. Feronia elephantum, Elephant apple, Keitha, Aquilaria agallocha, Aloe wood, Ugur. Terminalia bellerica, Belleric myrobalan, Bahira (several species). Eugenia Jambolana, Indian plum, Jaman several species). Alangium decapetalum, Ten-petaled alangium, Akol. Bassia latifolia, Broad-leaved bassia, Mawa. Diospyros ebenum, Ebony, Abnous ; Tendooa. Mimosa sirissa, Siriss, Siriss, Mimosa Arabica, Gum Arabic tree, Babool. Mimosa catechu, Catechu tree, Keir, khair. Capparis kurela, Wild caper tree, Kurela. Argeinone mexicana, Mexican poppy, Sheal-kanta. Egle marmelos, Bengal quince, Bela; Biloa. Grewia Asiatica, Asiatic grewia, Phulsa. Garcinia cowa, Common cowa, Kowa. Dillenia speciasa, Yellow-flowereddillenia, Gir-nar. Helicteres isora, Screw plant, Maror-phulli. Sterculia urens, Stinging sterculia, Kutila. Bombax heptaphyllum, Sevenleaved bombax, Semul. Tamarindus Indica, Tamarind, Imli. Dolbergia sissoo, Seesum, Seesum. Butea ferondosa, Branching butea, Dak; Pulass. Æschynomene grandiflora, Great flowered æschy- nomene, Agust. Æschynomene sesban, Lesser æschynomene, Jait ; Jyunta. Hedysarum alhagi, Prickly hedysarum, Juwasa. Ficus Indica, Banyan tree, Burgud. Ficus religiosus, Sacred Ag, Peepul. Ficus infectoria, Veiny fig tree, Pakur. Ficus glomerata, Bunched fig tree, Goolan. Morus atro purpurea, Mulberry, Shatook. Phyllanthus emblica, Emblic myrobalan. Anola ; Aola. Phyllanthus longifolius, Cheramella. Harpharewri. Croton tiglium, Twiggy croton. Jamalgota. Jatropha curcas, Physic nut. Bhagrendi. Ricinus communis, Castor-oil plant. Arendi. Pandanus odoratissunus, Green-spined pine. Keora ; Kateki. Phænis syloestris Wild date. Khujoor. Menispermum glalerum, Smooth moonseed. Neem-gilo. MenispermumCordifolium Heart-leaved moonseed. Gulancha. Rottlera tinctoria, Dying rottlera. Shorea robusta. Sal tree. Sal; Sankho. screw Poonag. The above are a few of the common jungle and garden plants; space does not admit of farther enlargement. 400 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Tribes.—The ruling, or Mahratta tribe, is few in numbers, north of the Nurbudda. Brahmuns. Mahrattas. Roogvedi, Divided into ten sub-l Worship Vishnu and Jujurvedi, divisions ; five south of Mahadeva ; these brah- Samvedi, the Nurbudda, and five muns may eat meat, fish, Utturwuhunvedi. north of that river ; each and even fowls; though party rejects eating, or those who are bhug- either marrying with the guts' do not : they do other. not confine their wo- men. The remaining divisions of caste are the same nearly as amongst the other Hindoos. Cshuttree, Rajpoots, Not acknowledged by the Northern Raj- poots. Vaisiya, Seths ; Sahookars ; and Chiefly from the north some Bunyas, originally. Soodra, Bunyas; Cultivators, and all inferior castes. Most numerous. To the latter, or Soodra tribe, the Maha Raja belongs ; being of the Khoombin caste, a kirsanie or cultivating people. The Maha Raja's father held a jaghir of one hundred rupees a month, in the village of Chumargonda in Khandeeshı; which village is still retain- ed, along with many others, isolated in the Company's dominions in the Dakhin. From these places annual importations of poor expectants take place; and to these places large sums are annually remitted. General Hindoo Tribes. Brahmuns......... Gour, Meithul, The Purohit, or Sarasoot, household Brahmuns. Kankobj, Sonourca, Priests and culti- Kanaugea, vators. Jujodea, Paliwul, Traders. Goozurgour, ? Priests and culti- Goozurattee, Svators. A very ancient race; r Pramar or Powar, few now remain locat- ed near tbe Chumbul. Also an ancient Cuchwaha, race, few remain about Nurwur. Inferior; not ac- Burgoozur, Gour, and knowledged by the Gorawatee, northern tribes; are cultivators chiefly. 5 Seetumber, 7 of the Jain Digumber, ) faith. Cshuttree or Rajpoots. Vaisiya ; Byess or Tra-{ Suraogee, ding division, VOL. 11.) 401 SINDHIA's, OR GWALIOR TBRRITORIES. Maiserie. S Artas Bohoras. Uggur Wal- 2 General Vaisiya, Byess or Trad- ing division. ... Writers. ... Oilmen. Soodra, or Working Tribes. lah Khut. Traders. ST ree. Of Brahmun faith. Perfum- Gundee. ers or Uttars. Numer- Bunya. ous tribes Many Bunya. tribes. Of Brahmun faith; Koit. of this division was Thailie. formerly the class of Jaut. Cultivators. artificers, who, as so- Cowherds ciety increased, became Aheer. and culti- absolutely necessaries; vators. they were then separ- Bearers ated from the Soodra of the Kuhar. under the head of higher the eighteen divisions. sort. Durzee. ... Tailors. Malee. ...Gardeners. Khatie. .Carpenters. Saddlers, and fine Mochee. leather workers. Pawn cul. Tambolee. tivators. Portrait Chitram. Painters. Koomar. .Potters. Braziers Thatera ; and brass Kusera. founders. Of Brahmun faith ; Gold or no longer pure Soodras, Sonar. Silver they are divided into smiths. different degrees of pu- Rungkar ; Dyers & į rity as follows; lst Rungsaj. į Painters. Ootum; 2nd Muddim; Dhobee. ... Washermen. 3rd Adhim. r Weavers, and used as guides or • dour- abas ;' & Bulabie. 'beegaris, or press- ed porters from time immemo- rial. Fishermen Dheemurs. and often bearers. B 3 ... Athara Pon; eighteen divisions. or the PART 1. VOL. 11. 402 (PART 1 STATISTICS. | Messen gers and Diya, or or eat repo the Kasid or * Gucha.' expresses or Standard Of Brahmun faith : Nishan bur- bearers. dar. no longer pure Soodras; Athara Pon the Munnee Jewel they are divided into different degrees of pu- eighteen divisions. katuk. cutters. Weavers, rity as follows ; 1st Ootum ; 2d Muddim; Korie or porters | 3d Adhim. Kolie. & work- men gen. erally. L\Raj. ..Masons. Below these, removed entirely from the · Soodras,' are the Untez.' Gipsies ; Kunjur. Chiefly of Brahmun tiles of faith. all kinds. Eat car- Dhoom. rion. Camel Of these the Bheels Rowarrie. men. of Sathmalla and Salt and other parts are doubt- Kharol. saltpetre less the aborigines of makers. Sindhia's territories. Chraun and 2 Bards. They are divided into Bhat. Oojla,' or pure Churum kal , Shoe Uptez. Bheel stock, and the Mochee. makers. mylah, or impure. ſ Skinners The former claim con- Kutik. and car- pection with the So-. Chumar. riers ; eat laukhi Rajpoots. The Raegur. the dead Grassias were plunder- cow. ers of all tribes, and Bheel. 7 not a distinct caste. Meena. They are now nearly Mair of unknown; about 1000 Mairwarra. Abori are in the Bhopal ser- Kooli of i gines. vice. Ramghur and Guz- erat. Below these again, are counted . Mleech,' or out-casts. |Thorie. Perform Hindoos; some semi- Mleech. Mihtur, any filthy Mussulinans. (Bunghie. offices. The Mahomedans are few in number; and are chiefly Sheikhs, Pathans, Moguls and Syeds. ViThey distinguish their sect by the name of Ismaeeliah; Peculiar tribe of Mus Boohra ; live chiefly their origin from one sulmans. 3 at Boorhanpoor, in of the followers of Khandeish. Mohamed, who lived in the century after his death ; numerous; wealthy; industrious. } { derive VOL. 11.] SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. 403 TOWNS, &c. Gwalior comprises the old city, and the larger permanent Lushkar, between which is the ancient fort : 80 miles south of Agra, in north latitude 26° 18', and east longitude 78° 14'. The fort is upwards of a mile long, and where widest, only 300 yards broad ; the greatest height is 342 feet. The fort is in bad repair ; it has been repeatedly taken. The front, of masonry, over the entrance gate, built by the Mussulmans, is rather fine. The interior is little worthy of perusal. One object of curiosity is, a massive “Jain' temple, built 700 years since, now in ruins ; and of the same period there are several gigantic images of Purswanath, cut out of the solid rock, on the face of the re-entering angle to the north. The only other object wortby of attention, is the “Thailee ka lath,' a lofty temple, now in ruins, built with part of the accumulated wealth of an oilman, in Acber Sha's time. There are several good tanks, and some huge cannon in the fort. The other buildings are extremely mean. The city and Lushkar are chiefly of stone, and are exceedingly dirty. They still possess a good deal of wealth and trade. Gohud.-North latitude 26° 21', east longitude 78° 21'. A fortified town, 65 miles southwest from Agra ; formerly dependent on Gwalior; till the “Jaut' zumeendar raised himself to the throne as Rana ; seized by the Mahrattas, and now belongs to Sindhia. Nuruur.–North latitude 25° 41', east longitude 78° 12'. Ancient town, formerly large, when the chief city of the Cuchwaha Rajpoots. Has belonged to Sindhia since 1810. Chanderi.— North latitude 24° 50', east longitude 78° 25', formerly large town ; now nearly ruinous; fine muslins still woven here. Ragoogurh.-North latitude 24° 23', east longitude 77° 12'; a con- siderable town, and fort now much in ruins ; ruled by its own Raja. Bheehut-North latitude 25° 4' east longitude 780 15'; a small town and fort ; iron mines still worked ; 24 miles from Gwalior. Mogul Serai.--North latitude 24° 17', east longitude 77° 37'. A very elevated town near Seronge ; the Nawab of Tonk's city. Koorwey and Surassoo.-- Two large towns almost united, the first hav- ing a large stone fort. The inhabitants are chiefly Puthans. Khimlussa.- North latitude 24° 14', east longitude 78° 25'. A large walled town and fort. Runnode.-North latitude 25° 6', east longitude 77° 10'. A large town, which has a great trade in grain. Senwaho.-North latitude 24° 31', east longitude 78° 48'. A large town. Mohupoor.-North latitude 24° 47', east longitude 77° 56'. A large town. Mungrowlee.-North latitude 24° 24', east longitude 77° 0'. A con- siderable town. Bassouda.-North latitude 23° 53', east longitude 78° 0'. town, walled. Omedwarra.-A small district, containing Chaunchra, Rajghur, Cujneer. Soomeer.-North latitude 23° 59', east longitude 76° 8'. A considera- ble town. Sumbulgurh.—A large walled town. Paharghur.-A large walled town, under its own Rajah. Mundessor.- North latitude 24 6', east longitude 75° 8'. A large town; considerable trade. A large 404 (PART 1 STATISTICS. Gungram.--North latitude 23° 38', east longitude 75° 40'. A con- siderable town, under Kotah Rajah. Parkandy.- North latitude 24° 8', east longitude 75° 26'. A small town. Rutlam.-North latitude 23° 24', east longitude 75° 5'. Situated in a wild track; inhabited by Bheels; a large town, having a small fort. Taundla.—North latitude 23° 4', east longitude 74° 38'. A consider- able town. Somel.-North latitude 24° 23', east longitude 75° 56'. A large, well built town. Bampoorah.—North latitude 24° 37', east longitude 75° 53'. A con- siderable place. Oneil.-North latitude 23° 21', east longitude 75° 35'. A town. Oojein.---North latitude 23° 11', east longitude 75° 52'. A large and very ancient city, the proper capital of Sindhia's territories. Ptolemy describes it under the name of Ozene; and one of the Hindoo mytho- logical poems is devoted to its description. The most renowned ancient Raja was Vicramajeeta. The place is very elevated above the sea, situat- ed on the banks of the Sopra. It is now surrounded by a stone wall with towers, and is about six miles in circumference. The inhabitants are chiefly from the Dakhin. The houses are built of brick and wood, with roofs of lime terrace or tiles. The principal bazar is spacious and regular. Sindhia's palace makes a poor appearance. There is an obser- vatory built by the enlightened Raja Jay Sing of Jyepoor. This city is unhealthy during the rains. There are many Bohras in the place. European and Chinese goods can often be bought very cheap here. Pearls come via Marwar, and diamonds from Bundelkhand on the way to Surat. Grain and vegetables are cheap and abundant. There are some very ancient excavations. Marks of volcanic action bound ; and submerged ruins are to be seen. There are two cocoanut trees growing in the city. · Dewas.—North latitude 22° 58', east longitude 77° 6'. A very con- siderable town. Sonecutch.-North latitude 23° 1', east longitude 76° 23'. A large town. Shajehanpore.-North latitude 23° 26', east longitude 76° 20'. A large town on the Sagurmuttie river. Sarungpore. -North latitude 23° 36', east longitude 76° 30'. A large town. Bansrode.-North latitude 23° 25', east longitude 76° 37'. A small town. Shujawulpore.-North latitude 23° 24', east longitude 76° 44'. A large walled town. Bhilsah.–North latitude 23° 32', east longitude 77° 55'. A large walled town, famous for its tobacco. Ratghur.-North latitude 23° 51', east longitude 78° 31'. A town and fort. There is a deep tank in the fort ; and one cocoanut tree grows on the top. Hindia.—North latitude 22° 31', east longitude 770 10'. A large town, with a ruined fort on the south bank of the Nurbudda. Boorhanpoor.–North latitude 21° 20', east longitude 76° 20'. A large and ancient walled city, very wealthy ; contains many Bohrahs. It is famous for the manufacture of embroidered silks. Powarghur or Chumpuneer.-North latitude 22° 31', east longitude 730 43. Situated on a high mountain in Guzerat. This is the most famous fortress in Sindhia's doininions, in which state-prisoners are kept : it is 22 . VOL. II.] 405 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. miles northeast of Baroda. There is a temple, to the goddess Kali, in the upper fort. This is surrounded by a very jungly tract. Geology.-Sandstone and sandstone hills abound from the Chum- bul to the north, and chiefly from the Sathpura range, to the extreme south. The vast range of the Vindhya hills are of sandstone throughout. The fort of Chumpaneer to the west, is on a sandstone hill ; and the central plateau of Malwa and Kotah is of variegated sandstone. Hence it is evident that the geological formation of these territories is secondary silicious sandstone. In no part, south of the Chumbul, does the olă red, or primary sandstone occur; the last place where it is met with being to the north of Dholepoor. Throughout the northern division this silicious sandstone everywhere occurs at a short distance beneath the surface, lying in horizontal strata. In the Vindhya hills, the strata are also horizontal, but have an overlying inclination to the south. The northern sandstone is nearly white, and is of every variety, from the most compact and massive, to sandstone slate. The stone is easily split into slabs, and abounds in carboniferous remains of minute water plants; coal has not yet been discovered. Angular pieces of hæmatile and other hard stones are often found. The ripple mark of water waves is very frequently to be observed, with the superimposed mass retaining the impression. To the south the sandstone is of the solid hard variegated kind; entire, exhibiting no remains. The substrata to the north is alluvial, abounding in large and small rounded masses, of a very hard, compact, black granite, that has undergone nearly perfect fusion. These masses have not been rounded by mutual attrition in water; but have evidently been ejected upwards, in a state of semi-fusion, and from centripetal force, have retained the form. These granite masses not only are found to underlie the sandstone in digging deep wells, but may be seen in immense quantities to the cast and north of the base of the fort of Gwalior. Primitive hills of granite also occur near Vojein. That this northern sandstone has repeatedly undergone elevation and depression to the regions of central heat, is manifest from the recurrence of the ripple mark at certain distances. To the soutb, especially in the bed of the Nurbudda, the sandstone overlies amygdaloid, abounding in organic remains. In many places, especially to the north, the sandstone strata have been ruptured perpendicularly, and permeated by fused or semi-fused masses of igneous rocks, an hpyogenous effect during the depression of the strata. About Gwalior, the standstone is everywhere penetrated by more or less perpendicular dikes or veins of jasper slate or ribbon jasper abounding in iron streaks. The sandstone in juxtaposition with the jasper has, in many places, undergone semi-fusion from the heat ; forming quartzose grit. Similar veins of aluminous and silicious iron ore frequently occur. Large and small rhomboidal masses of pure nearly crystallized felspar, coloured externally by iron clay, are abundant. About Oojein, lava, or trap volcanic ashes, occur abundantly, and ancient volcanic eruptions are still traditional; submerged ruins are to be found. From this portion of Malwa, the round volcanic stones, called rories' or 'rollies', descend in the bed of the Chumbul, and are held sacred to Vishnu and Mahadeo. Near Shamgurh in these territories, and at Bansrollie in Marwar, the bed of the Chumbul is deeply cut down through soft white sandstone ; at the latter place forming falls of con- siderable height, where the sandstone has been cut by the powerful 406 [PART 1. STATISTICS. vortices into round hollows, called “cholies' (cooking places), in the bottoms of which, circular masses of basalt are abundantly found ; these are washed down from (ojein during the foods, and, as before said, bear the name of 'rorie' or ' rolli,' and worshipped as Mahadeva, and much valued. This basalt fuses easily before the blow pipe. It is curious that the brahmuns are aware that these stones are of igneous origin, and hence they are devoted to Surujajce or Mahadeva. Near Shapoora in Marwar (200 miles distant) are a pair of basaltic stones, fashioned like the sun, supposed to have been doolkies' or drums; they are still held sacred. The sandstone at Shamgurh overlies pure quartzose grit, and very compact quart zose rock. It has been customary to attribute the origin of the deep black loam of Malwa, and the vale of the Nurbudda to the decomposition of basaltic rock, decomposed trap' as it is called : this idea has arisen especially owing to a great quantity of zeolites, and masses of chalcedony being found scattered in the soil; but from analysis, it is clear, that the much more probable origin of this black soil has been from the de composition of dark argillacious slate, which can even now be often viewed in a state of rapid decomposition, and abounding in large zeolites and chalcedomy. At one small hill , near the Chumbul, composed of argillace- ous and hornblende slate, the soil at the foot of the hill, and for a long way around, was composed of the debris, which, though granular at the base of the hill, was at a certain distance, a rich stiff black soil ; no basalt was any where discoverable near this hill, or in that part of the country. At the base of the Vindhya range, innumerable portions of sandstone that protrude above the surface to the height of 20 or 30 feet, shew the most clear marks of having been surrounded, to a considerable height, by a soft material, that has gradually left them. Below this black loam, especially near the Nurbudda, at about 20 feet depth, a bed of light yellow, very stiff, and slippery soda clay occurs in a compact strata. Of Lyell's eocene formation are the granite and compact felspar; of the miocene forination, the white and variegated sandstones ; of the pliocene formation, are the volcanic rocks of Oojein, the jasper dikes of Gwalior, and the alluvial deposits. Iron ores abound in these territories ; both silicious and argillaceous ; the latter only are smelted. At Gwalior, magnetic iron ore, of an undescribed nature, is very plentiful; it is argillosilicious, and is stratified in regular layers ; the layers abound in the granular magnetic iron ore, or sand of Jamieson, to which they owe their property. The pieces near the surface are the most highly magnetical ; each piece possesses north and south poles. The hills of Naogong and Raipoor, south of Gwalior, afford the best specimens. The ore also occurs at Girwai, Ujnpoor and Beejapoor, southeast of Gwalior. Metal is not extracted from these ores. Red ochre is found in great quantity at the Nur-hills, where mines are worked. Porcelain clay, or kaolin, is in great abundance near Barrai. A bed of fosil shells occurs in a hill near Rae, in the Nurwur pergun- nah. Finally, the low sandstone hills near Gwalior, exhibit perfect horizontal marginal lines of the former level of water. The Mahratta Dusserah.—Sindhia's having always been an essentially military power, the period of the breaking up of the rains, and the com- mencement of Military operations, has always been one of great festivity and rejoicing ; and in accordance with custom, since the days of Sivaje, the Dusserah of Kartik has been ever devoted to a grand military spectacle. VOL. 11.) 407 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. As the Mahrattas have, on all occasions, been notable for the most deceptious cunning in policy, so have they ever in war affected the plainest soldierly bearing; caring little for shelter, content with the horse, blanket and spear; and this is still apparently the case in the fixed Lushkar at Gwalior ; even the Maha Raja's palace being a mean, inferior building ; while those of the chiefs, and others are little better than stables. This plain exterior however is in every grade merely a cloak to the most rapaci- ous accumulation ; and so far from resulting from a fine military spirit of Roman honor, plainness and poverty are universally indued, both by high and low, to conceal the possession of wealth, whether honestly or disho- nestly acquired, and which if openly shewn, or any way vaunted of, would inevitably, under some pretence, become the prey of the more powerful. In this respect all are equally deceivers, and deserve the credit of at least preserving appearances. On the Dusserah, however, every thing seems devoted to the military shew, and some appearance of splendour. Formerly the great cause of rejoicing was that immediately after this ceremony,Šindhia's armies marched to those unfortunate territories destined to be overrun and ruined by his rapacious plunderers ; hence all were on the ' qui vive' for rapine and conquest. At the present day, it might be amusing to ascertain the reflections of the grim old Mahratta chiefs, amongst all this apparent festivity, useless as their army, and paralyzed as their power are, while surrounded by British predomination. The Resident and party are ceremoniously invited to attend the dis- play, several days previously. In the cool of the morning, on the day expected, the party proceed on elephants, with the Resident's escort, to pass the earlier part of the time in the Phool-bagh, a garden house belonging to the Maha Raja, pleasant at that season for its coolness and abundance of trees around. On the road down, numerous hurkaras are stationed, each clothed in a new dress, to relieve each other, and run with the earli- est intimation of the progress of the Resident. Every officer of the Maha Raja's household, all the court, the officers of the corps, and some of the troops, are clothed in entirely new, and generally brilliant garments; as are the Maha Raja's elephants and horses of state. To wear old garments on this day the Mahrattas consider particularly unlucky. Above all, a consi- derable amount of pay is distributed to the troops, and all, any way de- pendent on the Maha Raja ; hence a great degree of hilarity prevails, and the bright sun, lighting up the people's cheerful faces, causes a very gay scene. At a certain point of the road, the Maha Raja's Vakeel or minister with the British, advances, with other chiefs on elephants with new and gaudy trappings, to the ceremony of Istikbal,' or welcoming and inquiring after the health of the Resident ; after which, the other gentlemen are slightly noticed, and the whole elephantade' proceeds. The Vakeel is preceeded by spearmen on foot, and gold sticks of the Maha Raja, and is followed by horsemen in the rear ; the whole in new garments ; forming a gallant display. Ön arriving at the garden house, the party take chairs in the long open low room, where the Resident holds a polite conversation with the Vakeel, wbo, after a proper time, invests the Resident, and other gentlemen, with necklaces and bracelets of jasmin flowers; offers numerous dollies' of garden produce, to the Resident, and then takes a cerimonious leave, being led hand in hand for some distance on his departure. About 3 P. M. gold sticks arrive from the Maha Raja, to intimate that His Highness is prepared to receive the visit of the British chief, who accordingly, accompanied by his staff, in uniform, proceeds on the elephants prepared followed by his escort, through the long and Darrow streets of 408 (PART 1 STATISTICS. the Lushkar ; in which he is again met and welcomed by some chief ; when all pack on to Sindhia's palace, little worthy of the name. On this occasion, the palace court is filled with 50 or 60 fine elephants, in splendid cloth of gold or silver, and many fine horses of different chiefs, in gold and silver housings, surrounded by numerous cavalcades, with small crimson banners waving on their long spears. On dismounting at the palace entrance, the party are received by Sin- dhia's master of the ceremonies, and a great crowd ; and is then ushered up a close, and very narrow staircase to the left, almost quite dark, to a long upper low-roofed room, at the entrance of which, shoes are deposited by the British, who in stockings, are ceremoniously led up the room, between a row of courtiers standing, who, clad in cloth of gold and silk, look very awkward from the clumsy nature of their garments. On arriving at the upper end, the Maha Raja rises from his throne of cushions, and salutes the Resident, and afterwards the other members of the party; all then sit down, the Resident on the right hand of the Maha Raja, not how- ever touching his cushions: the others according to rank. Whatever complimentary language passes, is through the medium of the Vakeels, and the Resident does not address the Maha Raja. On this occasion, Sindhia is elegantly clad in green satin garments, his turban having splendid jewels, and the numerous massive rows of large pearls and emeralds around his neck, being truly worth a prince's ransom. The Vakeel first presents each member of the party with a fine piece of new white muslin, saturated with rose water; a most grateful refreshment, to remove the dust from the countenance. After a minute's space the Maha Raja then distributes with his own hand, uttur, pawn, gilded spices, and rose water to the British, in rotation; when all rise, and descend to the lower room, at the upper end of which the Mahratta Khrishna's worship is being conducted, at which place the Resident again meeting the Maha Raja, takes his hand, and conducts His Highness to his howdah of state. On this occasion, Åis Highness' elephant is an immense and beautiful male, covered with gold bosses and rings, with a superb gold embroi- dered jule;' the howdah of state, called in Mahratta® • Ambharie', is of solid gold, embossed plates, with gold cushions; until his Highness is seated, he notices no one; but when arranged, turns, as if casually, to the British Resident, who rises with all his party, who gravely lift their hats, in salutation : the Maha Raja's elephant then arises, and preceded by the large crimson nag nishan or snake standard borne on an elephant, with the royal nakaras also beating, carried on other elephants , and then a large body of foot spearmen of state, followed by heralds, crying out: The Honors of Sindhia,' after which the Mahee Mahrattah', or insignia of state, follow, consisting of gilt tiger's heads on poles, with a gilded ball having a human face on one side, together with the chutr. chamar over the golden howda-palkee, and the large silver fish suspended from a pole (a mark of the greatest dignity, conferred by former emper, ors of Delhi and still much valued), finally come the “bullum-ban? or spears and rockets, with chirri-burdars carrying red spike sticks, sur, rounded by small silver sticks; followed by the chattab of purple, or royal velvet, and gold sticks in abundance; all preceding the Maha Raja ; OD whose right side is the Resident and party; the whole being followed by numerous elephants, and an immense cavalcade. Thus the procession slowly moves through the long streets of the Lushkar. On the road the blue jay or leel-khaunt is repeatedly let loose. The whole would be a splendid show, was it not, that latterly, on joining the loose ground, the dust becomes dreadfully annoying, quite obscuring the prospect. On reaching the plain, about 10,000 troops, regular and irregular, are drawn up in battalions, forming a street extending to the figure of Rayun, erected as VOL. 11.) 409 SINDHIA'S, OR GWALIOR TERRITORIES. in the common Hindoo ceremony of the Ram-leela, called by the Mah- rattas Srilingum. At regular distances, above 200 guns are drawn up in brigades, mostly eight-pounders ; the whole forming a splendid sight. On the Maha Raja's arrival, a royal salute is fired by the horse artillery, and from the fort ; the whole procession then moves up the vista, towards the image of Ravun, near which the Maha Raja, the British, and the Court alight from their elephants. llis Highness then enters an open square space, in the centre of which large branches of the two sacred trees, called in Mahratta, 'Shimee and Aftah,' are placed upright, beneath which His Highness conimences a short pooja ;' while the British, seated on horse housings, look on. At the end of the ceremony, His Highness rises, and the trees, called in Hindustani Choukur', are greedily torn to pieces, the common impression being, that great luck follows the possession of the leaves (hence called golden, Sonaputtee'), which the Maha Raja himself distributes. The image of Ravun is then exploded, and the Maha Raja and the whole party return slowly ; during which passage, the thunder of the 200 guns, all firing as rapidly as possible, without the least intermission, is grand in the extreme; the more especially as the heavy ordnance in the fort are seen to flash far above the dusty cloud around. At a certain point, the parties separate ; the Maha Raja returning to his palace; the Resident to the 'phool bagh: the dust then soon subsides, while the guns, high up in the fort, continue to flash and reverberate in the clear moon light. In the evening, the buildings in the garden are illuminated, and a pleasant party terininates the day. A Dinner to the British.--On the occasion of giving a dinner, the pride and self-sufficiency of the Mahrattas is amply shewn in the total rejec- tion of advice as to the conduct of the affair ; and hence a most anoma. lous scene occurs. The place selected for the ceremony is in the building in front of the phool-bagh, built for the purpose, on the occasion of Lord W. Bentinck's visit ; and in the two long upper rooins of which, having an extensive canopied verandah in front, the present Governor-General was lately received. The wide verandah in front was carpeted with scarlet baize, and had a sloping canopy of crimson satin, with white stripes; the floor of this verandah is elevated above twenty feet from the ground with- out. In the first room, open in front throughout by arches towards the verandah, a long double row of lamps and small chandeliers were suspend- ed, the lamps common blue and white hall ones, and the chandeliers inferior, with bad wax lights. On the walls, girandolles of various kinds, common looking-glasses, and the most interior French prints ; the floor carpet of commoa red · kharwah,' with a long row of old Bareilly chairs at each side, and a sort of throne at the upper end. On the arrival of the Governor-General and brilliant cortège, the Maha Raja received His Lord- ship at the foot of the stairs leading from the verandah, from whence His Lordship was led by the Maha Raja, to occupy with him the seat on the throne ; all other parties, the British in bright uniforms, the Mahrat- tas in gold tissues, occupied the seats on either side, according to respec- tive rank. Somc common nautch women came forward, and were suffici- ently discordant to render their absence a pleasure, after they had received the usual douceur of a bag of rupees from His Lordship. After a short time, the curtains leading to the inner room were raised, when the Maha Raja led His Lordship to a throne of gold and silver, covered with jewels and gold cloth ; but shaped like a bedstead, placed at the head of the table. On either side of this throne, somewhat removed from the table, the chiefs of the Court had chairs; around the table, the Resident and British officers sat according to rank. This room had some large and handsome French chandeliers, and numerous inferior lamps ; the walls dis- played some large mirrors, and a variety of trumpery ornaments. On the PART 1, VOL. II. C 3 410 (PART 1 STATISTICS. scarce. table were several handsome cut crystal triangular branch candlesticks on pedestals, with some common brass and bed-room japanned candle- sticks, without shades between; a motley group stood in gazing wonder around the walls; amongst whom were conspicuous the cooks, or pre- parers of the Hindoo dishes. At the farther end stood a guard with fixed bayonets, lounging about, in a sort of old French uniforip; and within a foot or two of the end of the table, a sentry, bayonet in hand, walked his ground, taking a leisurely survey of the whole party. On the table was the most promiscuous variety of dishes, white plates and blue, red and green, old or quite out of keeping, with heavy silver trays, looking like coarse pewter, from want of care and workmanship; the knives and forks were few, and of the commonest description, and neither in this matter, nor the spoons, did the Mahrattas seem to consider a set for each person in the least essential. Wine glasses and tumblers were equally bad and The viands were thin and tough fowls, roasted and boiled; with mutton, and made dishes. Those of really native kind were good, and tempting to look at, being gilded and silvered over, and spicy in odour; the thin span bread deserves particular mention, as do some of the 'pil laus.' In the corner, to the right of the throne, the ground was covered with the same massive clumsy silver trays in great numbers, filled with every variety of Mahratta dainty : each tray was in rapid succession presented to the Maha Raja, who forwarded them to His Lordship on the right hand, and after being glanced at, they were carried away. Though a mere matter of ceremony, it was a point of courtesy to partake, in a trifling extent, of some viand. The beer and wines were scarce, and very execrable. After a sufficient time, the Maha Raja led His Lordship to the front room. followed by the party, when a most superb exhibition of fireworks took place, concluded by a tremendous explosion of crackers, superior to any in Europe, each being made of the empty shell of the hingot fruit, Alled with powder and white fire, and thousands exploding at once. DISTRICTS OF THE HONORABLE COMPANY SUBORDI. NATE TO THE BENGAL GOVERNMENT. TENASSERIM WASTE LANDS. Grunts of Waste Land, viz. Forest and Jungle, or Reed and long Grass land, in the Provinces of Tenasserim, will be made by the Local authori. ties, on application, on the following terms. The lands comprised in each grant, which shall in no case be of a less extent than 100 English acres, nor of greater extent than 10,000 English acres, and which shall be, as far as possible, in regular and compact lots, shall be rent free for ten years. From the 11th to the 15th year inclusive, they shall be subject to a rent per acre of ſth the full rate. After the 15th year, and to the end of the 20th, to a rent of th the full rent per acre. From the 21st, to the 30th year inclusive, to balf the full rate, and from the 30th year to the expiration of the grant, to a rent of the full rate of per acre. 2. The local authorities will give, or withhold, grants at their discre- tion, subject to the usual appeal to higher authority, and eventually to VOL. 11.] 411 TENASSERIM WASTE, AND TEAK LANDS. Government. They will exercise the same discretion in respect to the term of years for which a grant may be made in each case, but no grant will exceed the term of 99 years. 3. One-eight of the land, comprised in a grant, shall be cleared, and cultivation commenced, to the satisfaction of the local authorities, in 3 years from the date of the grant, and one-fourth in 5 years; and failing this, the grant may be resumed at the expiration of either term, at the dis- cretion of the local authorities. 4. A tax, not exceeding 10 per cent. of the gross produce of mines worked within the limits of any grant, will be levied by the local authori. ties, on the part of Government, in such manner, and under such rules, as may hereafter, from time to time, be determined on. 5. All transfers of grants to be registered in the office of the local au- thority, according to such rules, and in such manner, as may be hereafter provided. 6. Government erves to itself the right to resume from grantees, when required for public purposes, all land situated within 200 feet of high water mark of all rivers, nullahs, &c., and of the water line of lakes, natural tanks, &c., on payment to the grantees, of four years of the highest rate of rent. 7. Government reserves to itself the right of opening roads at any time, through any portion of a grant, upon paying to the grantee such compen- sation, as may be awarded by arbitrators, for crops, produce, or property, actually to be destroyed or injured ; but no compensation will be given for the land itself taken up by the road, or the ditches or fences on either side of it. 8. All grants will be surveyed, as soon as possible, at the expense of Government, and no rent will, in any case, be demanded, until the lands of the grant have been surveyed. TENASSERIM TEAK FORESTS. These are now leased or farmed out to individuals, for a period of twenty years, under certain rules, viz. : 1. 'That the fariner keep up an establishment, for the proper preserva- tion and working of the forest. 2. That no tree shall be felled or killerd, of less girth than 6 feet, at 10 feet from the ground. 3. That every tree shall be properly killed, and this only done in the months of January, February and March, before the sap commences to rise. 4. That no tree shall be felled, till the expiration of at least two years after being killed. 5. That every tree felled, be removed, with the least possible delay. 6. That for every tree removed, five young ones shall be planted. 7. That every tree shall be removed and brought down as felled, (the branches being removed) and not cut up into small pieces. On a breach of any of the above rules, the locality on which such breaches may have been effected, will be resumed by Government A duty of 155 per cent. is to be paid to Government on the arrival of the timber at Moulmein. 412 (PART 1. STATISTICS. FORCE OF CUTTACK MEHALS IN TRIBUTARY PAIKS. . Moherbunge, Keonjur.. Neilgurh.. Dhekanal.. Angool.. Joormoo Duspullah. Talcheer .. Hindole.. Nursingpur.. 8000 15000 500 7000 5000 500 500 250 1500 Tegreeah... Burrumbah.. Kundecapara.. Niagurh.. Runpore... Atgurh.. Bankee.. Boad.. Atmullik.. 300 1500 2000 7000 1500 1500 1500 2000 500 MEASURES AUTHORIZED WITH A VIEW GRADUALLY TO SUPPRESS HUMAN SACRIFICE IN THE GOOMSOOR COUN. TRY, &c. &c. that purpose. The opening of routes and passes through the wild tracts, more particu- larly between Asha and Goondgudda. The encouraging of the commercial intercourse between the hills and the plains, by all available means, and the establishing of fairs or marts for The raising a semi-military police force, from among the hill men, upon a footing similar to that of the Paik Company of Cuttack. For the accomplishment of these measures, the Government of India concurred with the Government of Fort St. George, that an officer, subordi- nate in all respects to the present Commissioners might, with a reasonable prospect of success, be sent, suitably accompanied and escorted, to nego- ciate for the assistance of the Raja of Gona Gudda, towards the opening of the communication above adverted to. It was further directed that he should communicate with the Governor General's Agent at Sumbulpore, and with the Resident at Nagpore ; and that he should cautiously approach any in- quisition into human sacrifices, and confine himself very closely to the im- mediate purposes of his mission. Yet it did not seem that it would be otherwise than prudent, if opportunities occurred of discussing the subject with friendly chiefs of influence, that he should declare the extreme ab- horence with which this custom is regarded by the British Government, and its right and determination unrelentingly to punish every attempt to entrap or to steal British subjects, for the purpose of inmolation. EAST BURDWAN. I.-EXTENT, GENERAL APPEARANCE, AND Soil. The district extends from 23° to 24° north latitude and from 870 to 880 east longitude. The length from north to south may be about 65 miles, and the breadth about 45 miles. It is bounded on the north by the Adiye and the district of Beerbhoom ; on the east by the Bhaugruttee and the district of Kishna- ghur; on the south by the districts of Hooghly and West Burdwan ; and ou the west by the districts of West Burdwan, Maunbhoom, and Beerbhoom. VOL 11.) 413 BURDWAN. (EAST.) The principal towns are Burdwan, Culna, Cutwa, Ombeeka, Kundghose, Woohary, Santgutcha, Bompas, Sreekundo, Ryepore, Mankore. There are 64 Pergunnahs in the Collectorate jurisdiction, viz. : 1 Pergunnah Burdwan 33 Pergunnah Byrah 2 Ditto Choteepore 34 Ditto Mondleghaut 3 Ditto Gopeebhoom 35 Ditto Shairghur 4 Ditto Shabad 36 Ditto Pandooah 5 Ditto Muzufurshye 37 Ditto Indranee 6 Ditto Satsyka 38 Ditto Chowmooah 7 Ditto Raneehattee 39 Ditto Tupa Burda 8 Ditto Mazookooree 40 Ditto Bhoorsoot 9 Ditto Koobezpore 41 Ditto Babruck Singh 10 Ditto Dhauyah 42 Ditto Aurungabad 11 Ditto Monshurshye 43 Ditto Aukbarshye 12 Ditto Baugha 44 Ditto Futta Singh 13 Ditto Rookoonpore 45 Ditto Rajshye 14 Ditto Khanpore 46 Ditto Chundrokonah 15 Ditto Patoolee 47 Ditto Chatooah 16 Ditto Somurshye 48 Ditto Bathchala 17 Ditto Ryepore 49 Ditto Asumghur 18 Ditto Mamdaneepore 50 Ditto Nolooye 19 Ditto Jahangeerabad 51 Ditto Pollassey 20 Ditto Ameerabad 52 Ditto Wookrah 21 Ditto Sha Seeleempore 53 Ditto Saleempore 22 Ditto Mohanundy 54 Ditto Fyzellapore 23 Ditto Baleeah 55 Ditto Paut Mehaul 24 Ditto Auzmutshye 56 Ditto Khalur, 25 Ditto Habaly 57 Ditto Pawoonun. 26 Ditto Ombeeka 58 Ditto Bundeepore 27 Ditto Beenudnughur 59 Ditto Brahmunbhoom 28 Ditto Tarajoo Beenjorah 60 Ditto Joynabad 29 Ditto Kootubpore 61 Ditto Baleeghury 30 Ditto Aursha 62 Ditto Moozforah 31 Ditto Kundghose 63 Ditto Sainpalary 32 Ditto Champanaghur 64 Ditto Bristnopore. The chief town is Burdwan. It is situated 75 miles northwestward of Calcutta, and is the residence of the Maha Rajah and family ; Covenanted and Uncovenanted servants, several respectable Zemindars ; and the Amla of the different courts. The rajbaree, or residence of the Rajah and fa- mily, is a very extensive building ; in the vicinity and around it, he has several extensive gardens and tanks. The present Rajah, Mohatab Chund, Bahadoor, is the youngest son of Praun Chunder Baboo'; he was adopted by the late old Rajah, Taiz Chunder, Bahadoor. On the demise of the old Rajah, and during the minority of the present Rajah, the zemindary was under the management of the guardian and aunt, Maha Ranee Kumul Koomaree, and her father, * Praun baboo, was the surbarakar. In 1840, Rajah Mohatab Chund, becoming of age the zemindary was registered, in his name. Soil.—The district is one of the most fertile in Bengal : the soil is of course varied, but capable of producing any thing that will grow in Bengal. The country is in general fat, undulating a little towards the western parts, "Praun Baboo's sister, Ranee Kumul Koomaree, and also his daughter, Ranee Busunt Kvomarve, were married to the old Rajah, from whom there wis no issue. 414 (PART 1 STATISTICS. where the soil gets more kankary, poor, and arid. In the western part of this district alone there are jungles (chiefly saul), and that is small, and fit only for fuel, and for rafters of Native houses. II.-RIVERS. The chief rivers are the Damooda and Adjye. The Coonoor nullah runs almost parallel with the Adjye, till it falls into it at Munglecote. The Curri nullah flows also between the Adjye and the Damooda, as also does the Banka, both of these flowing into the Bhaughrutty near Culna. The Damooda during the rains, is navigable to Burdwan, and boats can pro- ceed without much difficulty, 60 miles higher. Beyond that, the stream gets too impetuous : indeed it is often (when much rain has fallen to the westward) so very rapid, that people find it impossible to float down any wood of a large size ; and at every great flow, the channel of the river often changes from the great quantity of sand brought down. The Adjye, during the rains, is also navigable for small boats to Mauley- ghaut, near Soopoor, and during rises in the river the boats can proceed some 40 miles higher ; but the passage is very uncertain, and navigation iv- tricate. The Curri and the Banka nullahs, during the height of the rains, allow of small boats being brought up near Burdwan. The difficulty and uncertainty of the navigation have, however, forced the boatmen to give up these nullahs. Both the Damooda and Adjye are subject, during the rains to very sudden rises and inundations; and as both of them bring down large quan- tities of sand, it was found necessary to defend the lands near them by embankınents. Prior to 1809, the bunds were repaired by the Rajah of Burdwan. In that year the Government undertook the management of them under a Committee, consisting of the Collector, Magistrate, and Com. mercial Residents of Burdwan and Hooghly, with three subordinate super- intendents; the Rajah paying, annually, the sum of sicca rupees 57,324-12-9. The system, in 1832, was changed, the management being made over to the Military Board, and the superintendence to the Executive officer of the district. Many of the bunds have since been given up; but, during the time of the Committee, complete census of the bunds under its management on the Damooda and Adjye, gave upwards of 1000 miles. Both these rivers (Da- mooda and Adjye,) are subject to very sudden and unexpected rises, the wa- ter rushing down at times as from a sluice in a body, from one to 3 and 4 feet in perpendicular height. These, Hurpa Bawns, as they are called, occur during all states of the river, when it is nearly empty. Many are the instances in which men, cattle, carts (which have been crossing in the bed of the river) have been swept away, so sudden has been the irruption. When the river is more full, boats tied at the ghauts are frequently upset or destroyed by being dashed against each other, or against the bank, causing, in fact, from their being unexpected, more damage than the bores. Sometimes these Hurpas die away almost as suddenly as they rose; at other times, a succession of them keeps the river flooded for some days. The most severe inunda- tion, ever experienced on the Adjye, was in 1817, when all the bunds were overtopped and carried away. Many villages, with men and cattle, were swept away, and much lands destroyed by sand, especially in Sainpahary pergunnah. In that year, the rise in the Damooda was less remarkable, but it was much outdone in 1823, when the Damooda rose higher than ever it had done before ; the destruction of property and lives was incalculable, scarcely a trace of embankments was left, and, in many places the face of the country was completely changed, and sites of fine villages, tanks, and reservoirs, in the midst of the finest cultivation in Barohazary and Burdwan, were made a level plain of sterile sand. The water that flowed through the VOL. 11.) 415 BURDWAN. (EAST.) town of Burdwan, averaged 4 and 5 feet in depth; the Curri, Banka, and Da- mooda, were united, and a sheet of water, more than 6 miles in breadth, and 3 or 4 in depth, flowed over the country eastward toward Culna, and across the Hooghly.* The devastation was overwhelming, and, in many places, all the inhabitants were carried off, a few only being saved, while floating down the river, on the roofs of huts. In 1834, another severe inundation took place; but'in Burdwan, the level of the water was from a foot to a foot- and-a-half under that of 1823, and as the lower situated villages were all rebuilt on higher spots, much less damage was done. In 1840, the Damoo- da again fose to a great height; so much so, as to overtop the embankment, and, in many places, large breaches were made. The extent of bunds now kept in repair, is 308 miles, viz. : Miles. Miles. On the Damooda, 166 On the Biscullee, On the Adjye, 91} On the Mondoira Nullah,.. On the Moosraka Tetal,... 308 The expenses of repair for the last two years, and the estimated amount for 1841, are as follows, viz.. Repairs of Bunds. Establishment. Total. 1838-39,.. 5,588 13 10 7,210 11 4 12,799 9 25 5,510 3 5 6,593 0 3 12,103 3 83 Estimated amount. 1840-41,.... ..27,607 08 8,634 15 2 36,241 15 10 15 241 11 1839-40, Co.'s Rs....38,706 2 0 22,438 10 9 61,144 12 9 The bed of the Damooda has been gradually rising, and fears have been entertained that, during some great rise, a cut may be made, and unite the beds of the Damooda and Banka at Burdwan, and for 30 miles above. The breadth of the Dainooda varies from halfa míle, to a mile. A little below Burdwan, the bed is scarcely 4 of a mile broad. NOTE.—There are two bridges across the Banka, one near the Rajbary, built by Rajah Taij Chunder, Bahadoor, and the other on the public line of road from Hooghly, built by Georre Thompson, Esq. Judye and Magistrate of Burdwan in 1801. ble tablets, oue, in English, and the other in Bengalee and Persian, of the English, as fol- Erected A, D. 1801, under the auspices of His Excellency the Most Noble Richard Marquis Wellesley. By George Thompson, Esq. Judye and Magistrate of Burdwan. The Architect was Capt. Thos. liobertson, of the Engineer corps. The tablets, it is Supposed, were destroyed by the middle part of the brid e having been carried away by the inundation of 1834, alhough it stood the great one, in 1823; it was sinee repaired by Captain W. M. Smyth, of the Engineers. There were two mar- lows : III.-CLIMATE. The climate of this district is certainly superior to that of the lower districts of Bengal, and the station has been deemed uncommonly heal * In that inundation a good sized pinnace sailed through the Sooksagore bazar, Many people took refuge on the high banks of the late Mr. Joseph Baretto's tanks urd faclory, and who humanely afforded them foud, and every assistance, till the waters sub- sided." This inundation laiủ Chinsurah and Chandernagore under water: at Kishuayur the rise was scarcely perceptible. 416 (PART 1. STATISTICS. thy for the country: it may not be so healthy as the neighbouring stations of Bancoorah and Soory, but it is in general more pleasant, not being so hot, during April and May, nor so cold in December and January. From the returns of the diseases, which have been prevalent in the Jail, from 1837 to 1840, and six months of 1811, as also from a return of the Charity Hospital, from 1st January to 30th June 1841, some idea may be formed as to the salubrity of the station. Statement of the Sick, &c. &c. in the Native Charity Hospital of Burd- wan, from 1st January to 30th June 1841. Disease. Remug. on the 1st Jan. 1841. Admitted from 1st Jan. to 30th June. 5 0 0 1 66 0 0 1 0 7 0 Diarrhæa, 243 247 442 | Bilious, 0 5 5 2 Cholera Spasmodic, o 9 9 9 Asthma, 65 65 Fractures, 2 2 2 Remittant, 1 137 138 138 Fever - Intermittant, 130 130 126 Continued, 0 70 70 70 Gonorrhea, 0 177 177 176 Gangrene.... 77 77 223 223 216 81 81 81 Splenitics, 70 72 72 207 214 197 12 12 12 Scorbutic,.. 59 59 59 Ulcers, 257 263 258 Vulnera, 7 7 7 Elephantiasis, 15 15 15 Epilepsy,..... 2 2 2 134 S Premative, 137 136 Syphilis, Consecutive, 3 87 90 90 Ophthalmia, ...... 174 174 170 Tumor, 84 84 Hydrocele, 4 26 30 30 Anasarca, 0 30 30 29 Other various Diseases, &c. 2 50 52 50 Total... 32 2,434 2,466 2,418 Rheu natism { Cronic, Dysentery { Chronic, OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 84 1 2 9 39 This IIospital is supported partly by Government and Charitable indi. viduals. The medicine is supplied at Government expence. VOL. II) LIB BURDWAN. (East.) Statement of the Prisoners in the Jail of Zillah Burdwan, Diseases, g'c. góc. during the whole of 1840. PART I. VOL, II. Remarks. Average number of prisoners, sick and well, in the jail each month. Number of sick pri. soners in the Hospital during each month. I 12 2 1 15 January 1840 February » March April May June July August September, October November, December 469 470 436 424 472 470 455 447 440 436 463 469 95 109 115 82 127 91 10+ 108 124 111 125 140 S 4 1 16 12 9 10 17 107 124 131 94 136 101 121 116 132 121 135 152 28 26 27 20 13 23 18 22 12 11 15 29 30 34 42 29 58 35 33 33 21 63 74 48 49 64 62 42 61 42 70 60 98 86 106 112 67 101 68 86 70 93 0 2 2 1 During these six months, 19 the health of the prisoners in the Burdwan Jail has been ex- 17 tremely satisfactory: the death 19 from the above cases averag. 27 ing only 1 in 306, although 33 sickness has been prevalent in 31 the bazar. The total cases are considera- 34 bly greater than during the first 41 six months: this increased mortal- 27 ity is owing to the prevalence of 40 cholera, which was epidemic dur. 46 ing the month of Sept. and Oct. Dysentery ...... 10 37 Fevers, &c. ...... 3 Phithises........ 1 Pulmonary................ 0 Cholera.............. Asthma........ 3 371 Wound............ 2 33 17 46 79 97 8 10 10 12 1 1 1 2 12 2 3 3 0 0 45 73 86 112 3 .... 14 Total in 1840 5,451 1,331 139 1,470 244 500 0 14 712 1,066 *33 418 (PART 1, STATISTICS. From 1st January to 30th June 1841. Averuge No. of prison- ers sick and well in the Jail during each month. No. of sick prisoners in the Hospital during Hospital during each Sick prisoners out of each month. Total sick, as specified in the preceding co- month. Various other complaints. Remarks &c. Total of sick remuining 8 out of Hospital at the end of each month. Total Cured. Dysentery. Total Deaths. lumn. Fevers. :::::Hepatitis. - | Syphilis. 1840, 123 January February, Maruh, April, May, 98 438 432 414 397 390 111 64 64 4 5 4 127 102 116) 68 69 30 21 19 18 22 43 30 34 19 19 52 50 63 31 27 90 76 89 43 43 2 2 1 36 24 25 24 The health of the prisoners during these 6 months has been very satisfactory, six deaths having only occurred from the follow- ing diseases. 26 June, 414 73 4 77 7 25 45 58 19 Phithisis Pulmonary,........ Dysentery,............ Mania, 1 Total... 6 Total of 6 months of 18+1. of 18419 months} / 2,485 533 26 559 117 170 4 268 399 *6 154 1837 from Jan. to Dec. 8,120 1,652 359 1837 do. to do. 7,701 2,016 251 1839 do, to do. 5,655 918 165 1839 do, to do. 5,451 1,331 139 6 months of 1841, 2,485 5331 26 Abstract of four years anul half. 2,011, 601 543 112 855 1,507 2,267 591 615 36 1,025 1,878 1,083 215 422 22 324 749 1,470 244 500 14 712 1,066 559 117 170 4 268 399 62 45 20 33 442 344 314 371 154 91 Total, 29,412] 6,4501 940 7,3901 1,768 2,250 1883,184 15,599 166 1,625 VOL. 11.) 419 BURDWAN. (east.) 10 IV.-POPULATION. Reckoned extremely populous, the population of ten thannahs could only be ascertained. Vide Magistrate's Court. Detail of Estimated Population at Burdwan.-( Town.) Priests, 100 Widows, 500 Zemindars, 4 Prostitutes, 400 Government Servants, 185 Mendicants, 500 Zemindars ditto, 150 Sweepers, 50 Private ditto, 800 Lodging House-keepers, General Merchants, 5 General Shopkeepers, 143 Cloth ditto, 50 Barbers, 45 Physicians and Doctors, 70 Washerman, 53 Lawyers, 100 Grocers, 23 Agents, 100 Grain Merchants, 62 Money-changers, 56 Hindoo Bakers, 8 Labourers, 400 Wheat-grinders, 25 Blacksmiths, 12 | Toy Shops, 16 Tinmen, . 9 Tobacco ditto, : 25 Coppersmiths, 11 Firewood Merchants,... 6 Goldsmiths, 36 Vegetable Shops, 4 Potters, 27 Armourers, 26 Weavers,... 10 Fishmongers, 32 Carpenters, 5 Cotton Merchants, 12 Shoemakers, 15 Ghee ditto, 7 Tailors, 31 Otter and Rose-water ditto,. 4 Bricklayers, 100 Booksellers, 4 Painters, 25 Tinkers, 4 Umbrella-makers, 6 Ironmongers, 6 Bookbinders, 12 Lime Manufactures, 8 Mat-nakers, 7 Beetle-leaf sellers, 12 Butchers, 8 Repairer and washer of shawls, 1 Confectioners, 76 | Tape-makers, .. 9 Oilmen, 8 60 Paper Manufacturers, Milkmen, 25 Basket-maker, 1 Bakers, 6 | Musical Instrument-makers, 6 Dyers, 5 Embroiderers, 1 Musicians,... 100 Cloth Printers, 2 Firework-makers, 10 Hooka merchants, 6 Astrologers,... 150 Ditto Snake Manufacterers, . 7 Midwives, 40 V.-Division of CastE AND Religious Sects. It has been stated that one-fifth or sixth of the population of the Burdwan district are Mahomedans: there are however few villages entirely inhabited by Musselmans, but more commonly they occupy. a separate portion of the same village with the Hindoos, who almost, without exception, form the majority. There is probably no district in Bengal, in which a larger proportion of the population is composed of Brahmins : they literally live upon the fat of the land. In the jungle districts of Beerbhoom and Bancoorah, where the soil is less productive, their number is small; whereas in these parts, in every village of some consequence, it will be found that one-sixth or one-eight are Brah- mins. They exercise an overwhelming influence, and rule over society by the three powerful agents of religion, wealth, and literature. With few exceptions, the Zemindar and Mahajuns are Brahmins; the priests 420 (PART 1, STATISTICS. and gooroos (or spiritual guides) of course always. The Koysto caste is, after the Brahmins, the most active and intelligent class of people. Many youths belonging to this caste, after finishing their education in the patsalah or dative school, go abroad to engage in service; and these young men in the capacity of sirkars and writers are found all over Bengal. There is a certain sect which lately sprung up in the district of Hooghly, called Kurta Bhojah, found in considerable number in the northern and eastern parts of this district : its adherents belong to all castes, but they have renounced idol worship, and, in many of their religious tenets and ceremonies, they ap- proximate a purer religion, and a considerable number of them have ac- tually embraced Christianity in the district of Kishnaghur. They meet at certain places, in number about 300, and at night, and sing hymns at these meetings. All distinction of caste is laid aside by them: they eat and drink together, but after returning home, they probably, from fear, bow down to the idols again. This remarkable sect is rapidly increasing. Their leaders go through the country, and are successful in making converts, particular- ly from the Boistoms, or worshippers of Vishnu-a class of Hindoo, whose religious worship is more refined, and less sensual and gross, than that of the other castes. It is very remarkable that, in the town of Burdwan, there are scarcely any respectable families, either of Brahmins or Koysto, who may properly be called the inhabitants of the place. Mohamedans, Khettrees, and people of low caste principally compose the population of the town. There are a few resident Brahmins, Koysto, and other of the respectable class, but these are chiefly Amlah, belonging to the Rajbaree and Government Offices. VI.-SCHOOLS. There is an English school in the town of Burdwan, under the di- rection of the Missionaries of the Church Mission Society. It is con- ducted in a suitable brick building, * erected in 1834, chiefly by the aid of the Rajah of Burdwan : attendance, 70 to 80 of the most respectable classes, chiefly Hindoos. The principles of Christianity are taught, being considered by the Church Missionary Society, as the foundation of good education ; besides this, the various branches of history, geography, me- chanics, geometry, &c., are duly attended to. Another English school is carried on in the town, under the auspices of the Rajah of Burdwan, which, at a late examination, contained 65 scho- lars. There are also 5 Rengallee schools, at a short distance from Burdwan, conducted by the Missionaries; they number at an average, 300 scholars : besides elementary instruction, the different classes read various parts of Scripture moral lessons. The Missionaries have also established an Orphan Boys' and Girls' School :f each of these institutions number 30 children ; they were brought together in a time of famine, and additions are occasionally made to them by poor natives offering their children, when in great distress. Joined with these, there is an infant school, in which the children of native Christians, A marble slab contains the following inscription :-Church Missionary Society English School, erected through the liberal aid of Maha Rajah Mohutabchund, Baha- door, and other benevolent friends, by the Revd. J. Weiibrecht, A. D 1834. The English School, in the town of Burdwan, is entirely supported by the Church Missionary Society, as also the Bengalee schools, in connection with the Society, are chiefly supported by it. † The Orphan establishment, both for boys and girls, has been hitherto entirely supported by private and local subscriptions and donations ; also the building for them has beeu erected by funds thereby obtained, VOL. 11.) 421 BURDWAN. (EAST.) and the younger orphans receive instruction, upon the infant school system. The number of converts, in connection with the Church Missi- onary Society, is about 120; but a considerable number of these are child- ren. The adults belong mostly to the laboring classes : those who have received an education, are engaged as teachers in the schools. Of late years the natives of this district have manifested an increasing desire for the benefits of education, and particularly of English education. Many rich baboos are keeping teachers for their sons, and others send them into the town, for instruction. In every considerable village, there are patsalahs or native schools; the teacher is paid in money, either by the zemindar of the place, or by a small allowance of from two to four annas per month, from the parent of each boy: the poorer ones frequently pay him in rice or other grain. The instruction imparted in these village schools is con- fined to cyphering, writing : only a few of the boys are found with some vocabulary parts of grammar, or more rarely the Hitopodesh in their hands. In that large and conspicuous town, the Culnagunge, there was an English school, supported by the Church Missionary Society. But the catechist who superintended it, having been drawn to new labors in the Kishnaghur district, it has been given up. This is much to be regret- ted, as there is scarcely any place in the Burdwan district, where there are more respectable Hindoos, than the Culnagunge and its neighbourhood. VII.-ROUTES AND ROADS. The chief roads are from Burdwan to Soory (Beerbhoom), by Koyra- pore, Gobindpore, Soopore, Soorool, &c.: from Burdwan to Culna: from ditto to Cutwa. These roads are in very bad repair; but an amazing deal of traf- fic is carried on by them, especially by the Culna road, which is at times partially repaired by the Rajah. Besides these, one from Burdwan to Midna- pore, and from Burdwan to Bancoorah: this last road was at one time to have been a portion of the great trunk road, but it was afterwards given up, and the present road made. The great trunk road passes from Hooghly through Burdwan. In the western parts of this district, there is fine cunkry materials for roads. The line of road westward is highly spoken of, and certainly the best road in Bengal. The soil in Burdwan is not adapted for roads, and between Burdwan and Hooghly, the road is further liable to be broken up by the Damooda, when any breaches it its embankments below Burd- wan take place. No road in India is probably more frequented, than this portion : not only is it the commencement of the great road to the Upper Provinces, but it may be said to be the chief outlet of all the articles of commerce, not only of Burdwan, but of Beerbhoom, Bancoorah, and of the jungly districts. Beyond it, as there is no other metalling for this road but coah or gooteen*-(a species of calcarious nodule)—these are rubbed to dust (from the great thoroughfare of carts) as soon as laid down; and, during the dry weather, it is consequently deep in dust; and in the rains, in many places, a perfect quagmire, in spite of all the care and expense continually incurred. Since the opening of this new road, a curious change has been made in the carriage or conveyance of one branch of the inter- nal commerce of this country. The Moguls and other merchants who car- ried woollen cloths, piece goods, and other less bulky and lighter articles, to the Upper Provinces, have in a great measure given up the more tedious voyage up the river, and now take these goods to Benares and Cawnpore by carts. The greater expense by this mode, a cart costing about 50 rupees from Burdwan to Benares, and 60 more rupees to Cawnpore, is more than made up by the time saved. The carts go in 1} months, while 4 and 6 * The gooteen however has been found better than bricks. 422 (PART 1 STATISTICS. months were consumed on the vogage by boats. Since last year, Arab horses have come this route from Bombay. From Burdwan Bridge to Hooghly. Distance Ditto Dâk Name of Village. from each Bun- other. Stage. galoro. No. 1 7 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 11} 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 9 i From Burdwan Bridge to Kunnye? Natsal, 2 3 Beam, 4 Ellia, 5 Kundersonah, 6 Noura, 7 Saktighur, (D. C.) 8 Kumulpore, 9 Daudpore, 10 Shakeepore, 11 Bagloot, 12 Dullee Bazar, 13 Rosselpore, 14 Sanwee, 15 Shaik Dangha, 16 Echeepore, 17 Mamaree, (D. C.) 18 Bakta, 19 Kolsi, ... 20 Chautkoond, 21 Nepore, 22 Bowagur, 23 Cooch Malee. 24 Bulkee, 25 Naldadighy, 26 Baoonchee, (D.C.). 27 Gwara, 28 Chapaltee, 29 Aklia, 30 Teernee, 31 Paroowah westward, 32 Ditto Tower, . 33 Symoor, . 34 Bensor, 35 Kunnyan, 36 Koyra, 37 Choaka, 38 Taragoonce, (D. C.) 39 Koodpoker, 40 Mugrah Bridge, 41 Bunceapooker, 42 Satghaw, 43 Nycserai, B 23 8 B 24 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 40 41 42 43 44 111 8 Bandel Church,.. From ditto ditto to Pultaghaut, Ditto Pultaghaut to Calcutta, 10 18 Burdwan to Calcutta, . 72 Miles. VOL. 11.] 423 BURDWAN, (EAST.) Dâk Runners and Bearers' Chowkeys and Dâk Bungalows from Burdwan towards Sheerghotty. Dák Runner's Stage. Miles. Dâk Bearers Chowkeys. Miles. Dak Bungalows. ... Burdwan Post? Office to Soshung S Poorsah Urjoonpore Gopaulpore Mohunpore Amrasotah Assaunsole Kooldhee Neersha.. Dawolee Barawa Kotaldhee. Pooapore Rangha Matee Doomriah Movlodhee Balcopee Bursut Burree Ditto ditto ditto ? 9 to ditto S 9 Ditto 9 Ditto 9 Ditto 8? Ditto 9; Ditto 9 Ditto 9 Ditto 9 Ditto 8. Ditto 9 Ditto 9 Ditto 9} Ditto 9 Modoopore 9 Ditto 9 Ilaslah 9 Atka 9 Barkata 9 Burree 1 at Burdwan. 9 l at Sarool 12 9 1 at Boodbood 12 9 1 at Kyrosole 143 9 1 at Bucktornagore 13 8}|1 at Assaunsole 13 911 at Taldangha 13 941 at Gyrah 13 9 1 at Fitcooree. 12} 911 at Topechanchee 13 81 at Doomriah 9 1 at Bagadar 12 9 1 at Barkata 931 at Burree.. 15 8} 172) 14 15 172 172 Burdwan Post Office Establishment. Rs. A. P. Post Master, 100 0 0 1 Head writer, 30 0 0 1 Under ditto, 10 0 0 1 Moonshee, 20 0 3 Hurkarus at 5 Rs. each, 15 0 0 Contingent, 10 0 Mongulpore Dâk Chowkee Moonshee,... 17 0 0 Burree ditto ditto, 15 0 Total, Co.'s Rs....... 217 0 0 VIII.-NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Burdwan Coals. These coals are got from the Shairghur pergunnah, in the Collectorate of this district. The beds of coal are said to be very exten- sive, and so near the surface, that the out crappings of the strata is ob- served in all deep nullahs, and often even on the surface of the plains. The strata are of varied quality and thickness at different places. When it was first discovered it is difficult to say ; but the Natives seemed to know that it could be burnt, although they made no use of it. The late Mr. Marriott used to bring some cart-loads to Burdwan, before the Govern- ment, in conjunction with Mr. Jones (in A. D. 1812), opened a mine, or 424 (PART 1. STATISTICS. sunk a few shafts at Raneegunge (Eghaira). After Government had ex- pended about 20,000 Rs. on it, without any return, the property was given to Mr. Jones, who conducted it in a small, but profitable way, till his death in 1821 or 22. It was then purchased by the late Captain James Stewart, who, with the assistance of Messrs. Alexander and Co., got up a steam en- gine, to keep the mine clear of water. The mine soon passed into the hands of Messrs. Alexander and Co., and was carried on more extensive- ly; and, at their failure, was beginning to be a valuable concern. The scar • city of money at that time, made people fearful of taking up the concern, and it passed for a small suin into the hands of that enterprising native gentleman, Dwarkanath Tagore, since which time, it has been a most flou- rishing concern in the hands of Messrs. Carr, Tagore and Co. Messrs. Jessop and Co. opened another mine at Narain Kooree, and close to Raneegunge; but it does not appear to have succeeded so well; or the coals to have been so good. The late Mr. Thomas Betts also opened a mine at Chinakooree, about 20 miles above Raneegunge. He did not sink shafts, but opened galleries on the side of a hill. His avocations prevented his going on with it. He subsequently made it over to Messrs. Macintosh and Co., who again made it over to the late Mr. C. Betts, under whose management the mine suc- ceeded, the coal being pronounced by the late Mr. James Prinsep, better than any that was dug in a more easterly direction : this mine was also purchased by Messrs. Carr, Tagore and Co. The quantity of coal taken down of late, annually, may be from 13 to 14 lacs of maunds (from 43 to 46,000 tons). Many people have expressed astonishment that, lucrative as the trade in coal must have been, no other people have been induced to take up the speculation. The attempt has been made frequently, but the reasons of failure have never been made public. There are however, in this country, many more difficulties, expenses, and uncertainties in coal-mining than in England. It is not an easy matter in this country to procure an assistant at a moderate rate, who is at all acquainted with mining. The coals dug out must also be kept nearly a year on hand, ere they can be sold; for it is only during three months in the year, that boats can come so far up the Damooda. The coal raised from the mines during 9 months, must first be taken down to the river side, where it remains regularly piled up, till boats can be sent up; when it is taken down within the influence of the tides to Amptah (some 120 miles from the mines, and 74 miles from Burdwan). From this depôt.the coals are taken to Calcutta as wanted. Boats are not yet plenti- ful on the Damooda, and none above 5 or 600 maunds can ply easily in the higher part of the river. Establishments have consequently to be kept up at the mines for digging and for filling the boats (the latter requires to be done with all dispatch on the arrival of the boats :) also at Amptah to pro- cure the boats, receive the coal and send it to Calcutta as wanted, and at Calcutta to sell and weigh out the coal and supply the steamers, all which establishment requires a large Company effectually to supply. Coals are also brought down the Adjye, but the navigation there is so much more obstructed than on the Damooda, that the quantity which is brought down, is very small. Sandstone of a very good quality is also procurable in the Shairghur pergunnah. Messrs. Alexander and Co. had a quarry at Choorooliah which was worked for sometime, but found unprofitable ; sand stone slabs have been brought down to Calcutta for flooring, but found too soft. This was chiefly owing to the natives taking the stones from the exposed portion of the rock, finding it more easy to work. If quarried from a proper depth, the stone would be found very good, but the difficulty of carriage is against any speculation in this article. VOL. 11.) 425 BURDWAN. (EAST.) A black clay-stone is also procurable; which, having a slaty fracture, would also do for flooring: the stone takes a very good smooth polish, and is much used by the natives, for making their images of Seeb. Stone plat- ters and cups, in large quantities, come down from thence; but they are made higher up the river, in the Maunbhoom district. Iron stone, of a good quality, is also in abundance in Shairghur: the manufacture of iron has however receded as the jungle failed, but it is still smelted in the Beerbhoom, Maunbhoom, and Bancoorah districts. Hotsprings have been found by the late Mr. C. Betts, in the bed of the Damooda, a little above Cheena Kooree, of the same kind as the famous hot wells in Beerbhoom. Animals.-There being few jungles in this district, wild beasts are scarce. Bears, in the western part, are however numerous. In the cold weather, a leopard, too, may now and then be seen, and on the plains, sometimes, a pair of wolves. IX.--AGRICULTURE, AND AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Of the agricultural products, rice and sugarcane are the most abundant. Potatoes are also very extensively cultivated to the south and east. Mul- berry is also grown there. Coffee has been tried, but has not succeeded. Indigo is very extensively cultivated along the Bhaugrutty, and is also cultivated in the inner part of the district, in the vicinity of the Damooda and Adjye, where it is used as a rotation crop after sugarcane: the culti- vation is consequently very expensive to the ryots, who are generally obliged to irrigate, and are in consequence allowed to sow teel with their indigo, which makes the indigo crop later, and much more precarious. Cot- ton is also cultivated, but only sufficient for domestic purposes. The dif- ferent specis of paddy, which are cultivated in the district, are very numer- ous : very little broad cast, mostly transplanted during the rains,-mustard, linseed, teel, hemp, tobacco, &c. As in other districts, irrigation and ma- nuring is generally used. There are numerous tanks and reservoirs, without which the crops would often suffer. When there is a scarcity of rain, irrigation is resorted to, in which the ryots are very industrious and indefa- tigable. The agricultural implements are very simple, and the plough very small; that, and the hoe, or kodalee, and mohee, or harrow, are the most used throughout the district. X.-COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE.. The chief commerce of the district is probably sugar; but Burdwan is also an emporium for most of the articles in the neighbouring districts of Beerbboom and Bancoorah, in exchange for which, articles are brought from Cutwa, Culna, and Hooghly. Cotton, salt, and tobaco form the chief imports. The moiras (confectioners, or sugar manufacturers) at Konchunnagore and Burdwan, are famed for the manufacture of Dobarrah sugar, which will vie with the finest refined sugar in the country. European sugar manufac- tories have been erected, on an extensive scale, at Dhoba and Bowsingh, between Culna and Cutwa: there are also others across the river, in the Nuddea district, which depend for much of their goor on Burdwan, the quantity of sugar, goor, and molasses exported, is, as nearly as possible, as follows: In 1839-40, thirty-six certificates, or passes, were obtained by different merchants from the Burdwan Collectorate, amount- ing to maunds 1,21,963 In 1840-41, eighty certificates. or passes, about 1,40,000 Total... 2,61,963 PART 1. VOL. II. E 3 426 STATISTICS. (PART 1. of appointmt. Names of Officers. Grade Location or Cho- It is supposed that much sugar, goor, and molasses, is exported without passes. At Bonepass, a large village, about 10 miles to the northwest of Burdwan, has long been famous for its cutlery, equal in look, and superior in quality, to the Monghyr. The families of kamars, or blacksmiths, have however either died off, or emigrated to Calcutta, and other places. Much lac dye and shell lac has been made at Dignagur. Tussar cloths are also extensively manufactured there, and at Maunkore, cow and buffa- loe hides and horns are exported. Wood comes down the Damooda river to Kotgolah, and large beams are brought from the jungles beyond Bancoo- rah by carts. XI.-CIVIL AND SESSION JUDGE's Court. 1. In Government employ There are two Principal Sudder Aumeens in from 1800 A. D. this Zillah Kazee Syud Rosool Buxsh', and 2. Ditto ditto from A. D. Syud Jinab Ullee'. The former has requested permission to retire, and has been recommended to Government for a pension in April last. 3. Appointed on the 16th Four hundred rupees is the monthly allowance November, 1833. of the Principal Sudder Ameen, exclusive of an establishment of 150 Rs. One Sudder Ameen is attached to the district, who also conducts the duties of Town Moonsiff, Opendro Chunder Nyaruttun Bhuttacherjea, and receives a salary of 250 Rs. and establishment 80 Rs. There are 13 moonsiffs : in this zillah ; exclusive of the above town moonsiff: four are of the first grade, drawing a are located 150 Rs. each, and the remaining nine receive 100 Rs. They salary of as follows, viz. : |Date and year . . . . to key. tuation. 1806. Number. They have an Establishment of 40 Rs. to each. 1 July 8, 1837 Gureebulla, ... 1st Khand Ghose. 2 June 1, 1832 Nuſurchunder Chow- | dry,... Do. Saleemabad. 3 Dec. 14, 1837 Noseerooddun Mo- hamed,.. Do. Bohar. 4 Oct. 4, 1833 Dwarkanath Roy, Do. Mungulcote. 5 Aug. 19, 1835 Ullee Ukbar, Do. Kytee. 6 June 18, 1841 Peeareemohun Ba- 1 nerjee,..... Do. Seebrampore. 7 Dec. 1, 1832 Fuzzel Ullee, Do. Samuntee. 8 Ditto ditto Bunda Ullee Khan.. Do. Culna. 9 Feb. 16, 1841 Gopalchunder Ghose Do. Bhattooriah. 10 Sept. 22, 1837 Mohamed Ahmud, Do. Mohamedpore. 11 June 1, 1832 Ilahee Buxsh, Do. Cutwa. 12 Uct. 4, 1833 Dubeeruddeen Mo 1 hamed, Do. Madpore. 13 July 24, 1837 Ullee Hydur, Do. Bamonara. Since the division of the district into two zillahs, east and west Burd- wan, and the transfer of two moonsiff's chowkeys to zillah Beerbhoom the area of the civil jurisdiction of East Burdwan has not been regularly, ascertained: the following may be reckoned: from the sudder station, or town of Burdwan, northward, to the Adjye river; distance about 36 miles; southward about 17 or 18 miles; eastward to the Hooghly river (Culna) about 35 miles; westward about 7 miles. ... VOL 11.) 427 BURDWAN. (EAST.) Memorandum of Civil business in the several Courts of Zillah East Burd- wan, from 1st January to the end of June, 1841. Names of Court and description of Suits. Number of Suits pending on the 31st Dec. 1840. Instituted & re- ceired during 6 months. Total. on Transferred to the Court, Remaining Trial. Decided on Trial. Adjusted, with drawn, &c. Pending, 30th June. Remarks. 2 436 438 436 Before Judge: Origi, nal Suits, Collector's Appeals. Sudder Ameens do. Regnlar and Special ditto ditto, Noonsiffs ditto,.... 2 11 110 i 5 57 57 53 110 This is a statement 1 of regular and ap- 5 peal snits, extract- 49 ed from monthly statement No. 1, 9 furnished to the 140 Sudder Dewanny Adawlut. 24 51 10 296 34 347 10 1551 24 192 14 48 138 802 940 601 339 125 | 10 204 One of the Principal Sudder Ameens has been absent on leave from the 23d 72 March, 1811. 41 80 121 25 Before two Principal Sudder Am eens Original Suits, Sadder Ameen's Ap- peals. Moonsiff's ditto,.... 96 14 10 18 181 13 193 31 374 51 40 26 334 13 175 1 35 12 124 240 286 526 70 456 202 46 208 Before Sudder Ameens, and 14 Moonsiff's Original Suits,.......... 2,419 2,892 5,311 299|5,012 1,891 847 2,274 2,797 3.980 16,777 900 5,807 2,218 903 (2,686 Summary Suits and Miscellaneous business of every description. Name of Court. Total. of June 1841. Remarks. Before Judge &two Sudder, Extract from statements Ameens, 704 3,513 4,217 3,342 127 3,469 748 2 & 3 sub- Ditto Sudder mitted ta the Sudder Ameens and Dewany Moonsiffs, .. 2,214 2,638 4,852 1,686 1,1582,844 2,008 Adawlut. -O 2,918 16,151 9,069 15,028 11,285) 6,313 2,75 1 428 (PART.I. STATISTICS. Session Department. Description of business. Commetment made by Ma- gistrate....... 22 60 28 24 uo or Pending on the 31st Decem- ber 1840. called for du-se Referred ring 6 months Total. Reversed. Confirmed. Struck off the June 30, 1841 Pending File. The Principal Sudder Ameen & 2 6 Sudder Ameen As- sist. the Magis- trate in the dispo- sal of petty cases, and are also em- ployed in preparing for record before the Magistrate such cases as are beyond their cognizance. For detail of cri- 1 5 minal business vide Magistrates state- ment. Regular and Miscellane- ous appeals from decision of Magistrate 71 7131 34 30,46,723 91 11,386 12 9 30,58,110 5 10 ... ... 14,62,083 3 0 XII.-ZEMINDAREES, TALOoks, &c. There are 2386 Estates in Burdwan which pay into the Collectorate Exclusive of which are resumed Chaukraun Mebals, Co.'s Rs. Estates. 9 The Principal Zemindars are Moharajah Dheeraj Mohatab Chund Baḥadoor, Pergunnah Bur- dwan, &c. 6 Moha Ranee Komul Koomaree Pergunah Habalee, &c. 1 Gudadhurprosad Tewary, Pergunnah Bristnopore, &c. 1 Tarachannd Baboo, Bahata Bazar 346 Mehals of different Pergunnahs and Estates 4 Ditto under Courts of Wards... 4 Ditto under Khass management 9 Ditto in Farm 2008 Ditto Aymahs Total ... 10,07,100 70 63,799 15 11 24,316 94 4,42,227 6 4 1,020 19 949 2 1 1,080 15 7 44,145 11 2 ... ... 30,46,723 9 10 Chakran { Unsettled :: . resumed 5,122 15 85 6,263 13 1 11,386 12 9 Amount paid in to the Collectorate by the Rajah, on account of Embankment. 57,324 12 10 31,15,435 2 8 Total Co.'s Rs. VOL. 11.) 429 BURDWAN. (EAST.) The Collectorate Jurisdiction included in the Thannahs of the following District :- No. Zillah Thannah. No. Zillah Thannah. IN BEERBHOOM. 1 Sakoneepore. 2 Salpore. 3 Wookrah. IN BURDWAN. Burdwan. Gangoorah. Culna. Saleemabad. Munglecote. Cutwa. Rynah. Purbotole. Montaishur. Balkishen. 6 7 8 9 10 In Hooghly. 1 Badsbereah. 2 Bagnan. 3 Doneeahkolly 4 Pandooah. IN MOORSHEDABAD. 1 Bhurulpore. 1 2 IN BANCOORAA. Potenah. Awsghaw. 1 IN NUDDEA. Augrodeep: 1 IN MIDNPPORE. 1 Kulmeejole. Summary Cases under Regulation VII. of 1799 and Regulation V. of 1812, pending instituted, decided, and remaining, in the Collectorate from January to end June 1841. Pending 1st Jan. 1840, Instituted from 1st Jan. to 30th June. Total, Decided. Remain. Of Regulation VII. of 1799. 789 1461 2250 1740 510 Of Ditto V. of 1812. 41 55 96 68 28 Total........... 830 1516 2346 1808 538 UNCOVENANTED DEPUTY COLLECTORS. The seven Deputy Collectors of Burdwan were, under the Special De- puty Collector, and Superintendent of Khass mehauls (as were also those of Hooghly and Bancoorah) till the month of May last, when they were transferred to the Collectorate, and who are now under the Collectors. The collections and settlements of the resumed mehauls have also been transferred from the Superintendent of Khass Mehauls. The following is a memo. of the Deputy Collector's salaries :- 430 [PART 1. STATISTICS R. T. W. Betts 400 Brought over.... 1,400 Baboo Russick Mullick. 400 Baboo Seeb Chunder Palit 300 J. A. Haynes .. 300 Baneemadub Ghose 300 W. Pitt 300 | Tareenee Churn Banerjee 300 Carried over .... 1,400 Co.'s Rs. 2,300 Including Amla, stationery, and travelling charges; average amount of establishment, 70 to 90 Rs. per month. 5 XIII.-MAGISTRATE'S COURT. Memorandum of cases Decided and Pending from 1st January to 30th June, 1841. Decided. Pending 41 574 79 259 1,245 7 205 12 17 6 Thannahs, Establishment, gc.gc. | Number. Darogah. Mohurir. 10 | Jemadar. Burkundaszes. Salary, &c. Popula- tion. No. of Pharies No. of Villages. 1 Burdwan, 2 Cutwa, 3 Culpa, Mungcole, 5 Saleemabad, 6 Gangooreah, 7 Rynah, 8 Muntisser, 9 Purbotole, 10 Balkishen, 371 233 0 26 337 1,08,242 151 1190 91 1 38 61,219 2 15 125 0 14 332 1,03,402 10 89 0 9 185 31,040 1 10 89 0 51 334 74,028 >832 12 0 351 2 16 1190 12 345 83,300 12 92 0 171 252 97,8851 10 84 0 5 247 43,700 13 102 0 12; 249 77,235 87 1 8 152 71,520) Sudder Estab. cluding the Ci. vil Surgeon's Criminal &Civil JailEstablishmt. Sulary. Average number of prisoners for first 6 months. The extent of jurisdiction is 2214 square miles. 397 11 10 10 12 13 149 1,139 072,571 7,51,571 832 12 0 351 397 The salary of the Civil Surgeon is included in this sum. VOL. 11.) 431 BURDWAN. (EAST.) Ferries under the Magistrate's Control. Amount of Names of Ferries. Jumma per On what River. No. Remarks. annum. Farming leases renewed Bhaugrutty. yearly. are 1 Culna 2 Cutwa 3 Sautgutchia. 4 Dewangunge 5 Goopeepore. 6 Khai Mirzapore 7 Sudder Ghaut 8 Kbat Golah..... 9 Eklak hee.. 1,166 10 8 1,150 0 0 1,050 0 0 950 0 486 10 8 950 0 0 660 0 0 675 0 0 46 0 0 Damooda. Dulkishur. 9 7,134 5 41 XIV.-ABKAREE DEPARTMENT. This was transferred from the Collectorate to the Commissioner (appointed for that particular department) on the 1st of January 1841, and the Abkaree of this zillah has been placed under the charge of an uncovenanted superintendent. There are three Government distilleries in this district ; 1 at Burdwan; 1 at Jamalpoor ; 1 at Culna. The abkars distill country spirits in these dis- tilleries, and provide the material and cost of manufacture from their own funds, conveying the liquor to their shops to vend. There are five chowkeys or divisions under the Superintendent, as follows: 1 Burdwan ; 2 Culna; 3 Cutwa ; 4 Jamalpoor ; 5 Mankore : at each of these chowkeys an establishment of 1 darogah, 1 mohurir, 1 jama- dar, and chuprassees are kept. Statement of Shops. What Shops. No. of Amount of daily Shops. Tax. Remarks. 110 Putchwye, Country Spirits, Tauree, Gunjah, European Wine, Muddutt, Opium, 400 144 48 13 1 3 3 68 48 6 6 0 6 6 • A licenced wholesale shop of Europe wive, and spirits 108 in the town of Burdwan, for 2 111 which a fee of 16 Rs. was 4 paid for permission to open 0 ihe same from 1st January. 0 0 12 103 12 103 612 136 24 The abkars make a deposit, in lieu of security, equal to one month's tax. Opium.— There was to the 30th of June 1841 (but since con- ducted by a paid Government vender) a licenced opium shop in the town of Burdwan, receiving 7 seers of the drug per month from the 432 STATISTICS. (PART 1. Superintendent, by paying 175 Rs. 14. There are also two other licenced shops, one at Culna, and one at Cutwa,—the former taking 8 chittacks, and the latter 10 chittacks per month, and paying 12 Rs. 9 and 15 Rs. 11. 3. Demands, Collections, and Balances. From what period. Demand. Collection. Balance. From 1st Jan. to 21,329 1 9 18,427 128 *2,901 5 1 30th June 1841. Number of Cases of illicit Preparation and Sale of Country Spirit, &-c. Instituted. Decided Pending on the 30th June. Remarks. r 27 Illicit Preparation and sale of Country Spirits. 7 Ditto ditto Putchwye. 7 Gunjah. 316 Opium. 7 Tauree. 54* 50 54* XV.-COVENANTED AND UNCOVENANTED SERVANTS, AND WHERE LOCATED. Covenanted. James Shaw, ...Civil and Session Judge. C. D. Russell, Officiating Collector. Burdwan E. E. Woodcock, .Ditto Magistrate. R. Abercrombie, Asst. Collector and Magst. Sudder Station. Capt. Anderson B. E. Executive Officer. James Macaush, Civil Surgeon. Uncovenanted. Kauzee Syed Russool Buxsh, . . Principal, Sudder Aumeen. at Burdwan. Syed Jinab Ullee,.. ditto ditto ditto. Opendur Chunder Nyaruttun Battacharjai, Sudder Aumeen. ditto. B. T. W. Betts, Uncut. Deputy Collector. ditto. J. A. Haynes,.. ...Ditto ditto ditto. W. Pitt, Ditto ditto at Hooghly. Baboo Russick Kisto Mullik, ......Ditto ditto at Burdwan. . This balance would be realized in July. VOL. 11.] 433 BURDWAN (EAST.) 39 UNCOVENANTED. Baboo Seebchunder Palit, Uncvt. Deputy Collector, At Burdwan. Baneemadub Ghose, Ditto ditto Ombika. Tarrenychurn Banerjee,* Ditto ditto Burdwan. James Musselbrook, Abkaree Superintendant. Ditto. Baboo Brindabun Chunder Roy, Assistant Superintendant, On the move from place to place. Gurreebulla, Moonsiffs Kundghose. Nokoorchunder Chowdry,... Ditto Saleemabad. Noseeruddeen Mahomed, Ditto Bohar. Dwarkanauth Roy, Ditto Munglecote. Ullee Ukbar, Ditto Kytee. Pearymohun Banerjee, Ditto Seebrampore. Fuzzel Ullee, Ditto Samuntee. Bunda Ullee Khan,. Ditto Culna. Gopalchunder Ghose, Ditto Bhattooreah. Mahomed Ahamed, Ditto Mahomedpore. Illahee Buxsh, Ditto Cutwa. Dubeeruddeen Mahomed,.. Ditto Madpore. Ullee Hydur, Ditto Bamonara. XVI.-GENERAL REMARKS. The value of this rich district would be incalculably increased, if water, carriage were procurable through its centre. The eastern extremity of the district alone is, washed by the Bhagrutty, which, during the whole year, admits of small boats going up to Cutwa, and larger to Culoa and Muggra Khaul near Hooghly. To these places, as has been mentioned, there are roads ; but the carriage of the bulkier, heavier, and lower-priced articles over 30 or 40 miles of indifferent roads, adds too much to the price of most of them, to make them articles of export. The Damooda affords, for 3 months only, a most tedious carriage down to its mouth (where it also becomes dangerous, the river manjees being unacquainted with the management of boats in such strong tides), and from its mouth up to Cal- catta. The rice and goor carried down the river, are chiefly deposited at Rajbulubhaut, an extensive mart for those articles ; and the coals are landed a little below that at Amptah, and Nowparah, a little lower down. To remedy this want of water-carriage, it has frequently been proposed to render the Curri, or the Banka, a navigable canal, by making some re- servoir near their sources. The country below is so level, that little water would be wasted in lockage, and very few locks would be required to keep either of those rivers navigable, at least up to Burdwan. Bunds made across the Banka, for the sake of irrigation, a few miles below Burdwan, retain from 3 to 6 feet water for 3 and 4 miles above the bund. A late Collector of Burdwan, proposed carrying a canal all the way from Culna to the Collieries ; or if the acclivity for the last 30 miles was found too much for the small supply of water in so arid a country, to carry the canal as far westward as was easily practicable, and to join this with the Collieries by a rail-road, the iron of which might be furnished from Shairghur : thus holding out encouragement, and giving great as- sistance at the commencement, for the erection of iron works. . In the room of Chander Sekur Day resigned. The Deputy Collectors are out in the district from 6 to 7 months in the year. PART I. VOL. II. F 3 434 (PART 1. STATISTICS BEERBHOOM. 1.-EXTENT, GENERAL APPEARANCE, AND Soil. The district of Beerbhoom extends from about 23° 30to 24° 40 north latitude, and between the parallels of 85° 30' and 86° 35' east longitude : is bounded on the north by Bhagulpore ; on the south and west by Ramghur, Jungle Mehals, and Burdwan; and on the east, by Moor- shedabad. The extreme length of the district, from northwest to south- east, is 120 miles; and extreme breadth, from northeast to southwest, is 90; but from its irregular form, the average may be taken at 75 miles long, and 44 broad: within these limits, there are 7000 villages, and 20 thannahs. The superficial area may be estimated at 3,300 square miles. The general appearance of the country is flat and interesting, but well suited for rice cultivation. To the northward, it is more diversified with hills, and undulating ground, and there is a range of hills, wooded with high trees, and thick jungles, extending for some miles at the northern extremity of the district, visible from the station, which generally is called Soory. "The soil in the northeast and southeast, is sandy and clayey, and in other parts, it is mixed with stone, and kind of talc. The color generally is black, grey, dark brown, and red—the latter two seem to be combined with iron. The crops are cultivated, sown, and reaped at the same season as in the neighbourhood of Calcutta ; manur. ing with old cow, and sheep, dung, is generally practised, but very scantily. II.-RIVERS. There are but two rivers of any size in this district,--the Adjye and Mooraky, and these are only navigable for a short distance during the rains. The remainder of the year, they are little more than nullahs, or streams, with about 3 or 4 feet depth of water. III.-CLIMATE. The year may be divided into three seasons; the hot, from the begin- ning of March to the middle of June; when the rainy season generally commences, and continues until October; the cold season then begins, and lasts until February. The warm season is very severe, when the hot winds blow all day, and great part of the night; and the thermometer is frequently as high as 90, with the house shut up. During the rainy season, it is frequently excessively close ; if there are a few days without rain, it becomes very sultry; but the cold season is pleasant, and a fire in the evening agreeable : upon the whole, the heat of this district is greater than other parts of Bengal, but the climate is much dryer. IV.-POPULATION. The population of this district is estimated at about 15,80600. Division of Castes and Manners. They consist of Hindoos, Maho- medans, Santals, Dhangurs, Domes, Harrees, Baurees, Moochts; and the subdivision of their castes is as follows :- Brahmuns, Priests of several denomination. Kaits, Court omlab, farmers, &c. Bustums, Beggars. VOL 11.) BEERBHOOM. 435 Rajpoots, Burkundazes, sepoys, &c. Khetree, Ditto. Boidoos, Native doctors. Dybugga, Fortune-tellers. Buniabs, Pedlars, shopkeepers. Myras, Confectioners. Telly, Ploughmen, shopkeeper. Sutgope, Farmers, ploughmen, &c. Napits, Barbers. Baroes, Cultivator of the pawn leaf. Kanars, Blacksmiths, braziers, &c. Kyburtos, Ploughmen, fishermen, coolies. Jellia, Fishermen. Koomar, Makers of earthenpots. Tanty, Weavers. Chootars, Carpenters. Malee, Preparers of sola flowers for weddings, makers of gunpowder, and gardeners. Coloo, Makers and sellers of oil. Shekra, Gold and silversmith. Poddar, Cashkeeper, treasurer, &c. Shroffs, Shopkeepers. Bagdee, Ploughmen, coolies, &c. Dhoby, Washermen. Lohar, Blacksmith, ploughmen &c. Khowra, Ploughmen, coolies, and men of low caste. Chundal, Ditto ditto ditto. Gowala, Milkmen. Soory, Distillers and spirit sellers. Lurry, Preparer of lac and lac dye. Mall, Coal-seller, fishermen. The Mahomedans are subdivided into Syeds, Sheikhs, Patans, and Jolahs. They are omlahs, tailors, peons, khidmutgars, khansumahs, farmers, cart-drivers, butchers, shoemakers, and coolies. The Santals and Dangurs marry among themselves. Infidelity is almost unknown among them. They are remarkable for their adherence to truth. They worship the demi-gods, and fear the demi-devils of the Hindoos. They believe in witchcraft, and swear by the tiger's skin ; inhabit the forests and jungles, and eat snakes, jackals, fuxes, wolves, and all kinds of animals. If the Zemindar attempts to raise their rent, they will imme- diately abandon their abode, and settle in another place; but if he tells them he requires a certain sum of money for any particular purpose, they will immediately hold a council among themselves, and willingly give him as much as they can afford. Their mode of keeping an account with the Zemindar for rent, is by having a piece of string hung up in their house, with as many knots in it, as they have rupees to give for rent; and whenever they pay one or more rupees, they untie as many knots. Domes are a dirty, drunken, ignorant race; their widows re-marry : they are basket-makers, bearers, coolies, grooms, tum-tum players, and they keep pigs. Harrees, ditto. Baurees.—The greater part of the palkee bearers are from this class. Moochees obtain their livelihood by dressing skins, making shoes, and performing low offices. The greater part of the lower, and some part of the higher orders, are given to drinking, opium-eating, and smoking. 436 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Females are more industrious than the other sex. The act of giving alms to beggars is almost religiously observed by every family. The peo- ple are naturally rude, yet cowardly when oppressed, disposed to prefer interest to character, and entirely ignorant of the advantages of education. V.-NATURAL PRODUCTION. Animals.- In the jungles are to be found tigers, leopards, bears, wolves, deer of different kinds, hogs, jackals, foxes, baboons, buffaloes, peacocks, and game of various sorts, snakes, chiefly the cobra-de-capella, and boa constrictor. The domestic animals are the same, as in the other parts of Bengal. Trees. The most common are mangoe, jack, saul, toon, teak, sitsaul, ebony, and the other common trees of India. Medicinal Plants. The Caoutchouc tree. Convolvulus Turpethum. Cassia Fistula, or Purging Cassia. Euphorbias. Strychnos nux Vomica. Ricinus Communis. Senna obtusa. Ammonia Vesicatoria. Erythorium Indicum. Asclepias Gigantica. The Tamarind, & E. I. Gum trees. Semicarpus Anacardirum. Croton Tiglium. Arbus Precatorius. Gentiana Chrytta. Aniseed and Carroway plants. Minerals.-Coal, iron, chalk, lime stone, sulphur (doubtful). At Buklepur (about 7 miles from the Sudder Station) there are some hot wells, the waters of which are said to be of a similar description as those of Harrowgate, and to possess the same medicinal qualities. VI.-AGRICULTURE. Agriculture is at a low ebb throughout the district. The implements of agriculture are the common Indian plough, harrow, and hoes: the pro- ductions are rice, sugarcane, mustard seed, linseed, gram, sesamun, tobacco, turmeric, arrowroot, red pepper, ginger, onions, garlic, Indian corn, pawnleaf, brinjals, mangoe, jack, guava, lime, plum, custard apple, pine apple, water melon, cucumber, kudoo, yams, and kullie of kinds, &c. VII.-COMMERCE AND MANUFACFURES. The articles of trade are caoutchouc, shell lac, lac dye, indigo, sugar, buffaloe horns, buffaloe and cow hides, rozin, gum Arabic, ebony, sitsaul, toon, teak wood, silk, tussur, and coarse piece goods. VIII.-COVENANTED AND UNCOVENANTED OFFICERS. Judge stationed at Soory. Collector Ditto. Magistrate Ditto. Assistant Surgeon Ditto. Superintendent of Khas and Resumed Mehals, during a part of the year. At present there are two uncovenanted deputy collectors, who move about the district as required, VOL. 11.) 437 MOORSIEDABAD, IX.-ROUTES. Of these there are none; the high road to Benares skirts the borders of the district. X-SCHOOLS. There is one school at the Sudder Station, where the boys are taught English and Bengalee, under the superintendence of the missionary, who gratuitously affords bis services. It is supported by voluntary contributions. There is likewise a school at Raepore, kept up by the Zemindar, where the boys are likewise taught English and Bengalee. XI.-STATEMENT OF CRIMINAL BUSINESS DURING THE YEAR 1840. Number of cases disposed of . 1,310 Number of ditto pending... 10 Number of persons acquitted .. 673 Number of persons convicted... 1,566 Number of prisoners in Jail at the close of the year.. 528 .. MOORSHEDABAD. Moorshedabad, or, as some call it, Mucksoodabad, in the province o Bengal, latitude 24° 11' north, longitude 88° 15' east, is bounded on the north by the districts of Malda and Bhagulpore ; on the south by Kishnagur and Burdwan ; on the east by Rajshehye; and on the west by Beerbhoom and Burdwan. Moorshedabad became the seat of the Bengal Government A. D. 1704. It was transferred to this place from Dacca, by the Nabob Jaffier Khan, who was appointed Soubadar of Bengal by Aurungzebe. Jaffier Khan died A. D. 1725, and was succeeded by his son-in-law. Shujah-ud- Dowlah. Shujah-ud-Dowlah, continued till A.D. 1739, when on his decease, his son, Allah-ud-Dowlah Sirferaze Khan, ascended the musnud, but was dethroned and killed, after a reign of one year and two months, and his place usurped by Aliverdi Khan, a chief of Patan or Afghan extraction, possessed of great military talents : after an active and event- ful reign, he died A.D. 1756, and was succeeded by his grandson, Gholam Hossen Seraje-ud-Dowlah, a dissolute and tyrannical prince. Two months after his accession, he attacked and took Calcutta, and consigned 146 Europeans into a dungeon, called the Black Hole, which consisted of a space 15 feet square. The following year he was defeated by Lord (then Colonel) Clive, at the battle of Plassey, and soon after assassinated by Meeran, the son of his successor, Meer Jaffier Khan, the most distin. guished military character in the Bengal army. He afterwards degene- rated to an indolent, voluptuous, tyrannical ruler; the country was neglected, and the English replaced him, A. D. 1760, by his son-in-law, Meer Cossim Ali Khan. This prince is said to have applied himself, with talent and vigour, to the task of government; but being inimical to the British, he was expelled, and his predecessor, Meer Jaffier Khan, reinstated. Meer Cossim made a stout resistance against the English, but was defeated by Major Adams, on the plain of Gyreah, upon which he fled for protection to the Court of Oude. Meer Jaffier, after reigning one year, died, A. D. 1764, and was succeeded by his son Nujcem-ud-Dowlah. 438 (PART 1. STATISTICS. 1 Pharrie Chattua. Nujeem-ud-Dowlah, a youth of twenty, was reduced to a more depend- ant situation than his predecessors : he died A. D. 1766 and was succeeded by his brother, Seif-ud-Dowlah, who died A. D. 1762. His successor was Mubaric-ud-Dowlah. This prince died A. D. 1769, and was succeeded by his son, Nazim-ul-Muluck, who died A. D. 1810, and was succeded by his son, Seid Zin-ud-Deen Ali Khan, then 17 years of age. He was succeeded by his brother, Wallah Jah, who was succeeded by his son, Humaioon Jah, who died A. D. 1838, and was succeeded by his son the present Nazim, then 14 years of age : his name and titles are as follows: Moontazim-ul-Moolk, Mohsen-ud-Dowlah, Fureedoon Jah Meensoor Ali Khan Bahadoor, Nasrut Jung. During the reign of Aliverdi Khan, a palace was erected at Moorsheda- bad, which was ornamented with pillars of black marble, brought from the ruins of Gour; this building is still in existence, but appears mean and contemptible, compared to the magnificent edifice, erected by Govern- ment. The new palace was commenced upon in the time of the late Nazim; the sum expended on it, up to, August 1838, was 13,14,683 Rs., and it is estimated to cost, when completed, about 20 lacs. The annual allowance granted to the Nizamut family, was originally 24 lacs, but in 1772, it was reduced to 16, of which, 9 lacs are paid to sti- pendiaries, and the other 7 form the personal income of the Nazim. The city of Moorshedabad continued to be the seat of the British Government, until A. D. 1771, in which year it was transferred to Calcutta. The station of Berhampore, six miles south of the city, is now the Sudder station of the district. The Zillah is divided into 36 thannahs,* •]. Gorabazar, with 28 subordinated fauries, and contains 2. Sooja Gunge, a population of 9,94,739 souls, of whom 1 Sydabad. 3. Kalkapore, two-third are Mahomedans, and one-third I Bishanpore. Hindoos. The river Bhagrutty divides 4. Cossimbazar, the district into two divisions, the eastern or | Sanasudaugh. 5. Janmahamudpore, Bagooree, and the western or Rara. To the 2 Peutala and Moy dapore. eastward, the country is level, and the soil is 6. Mooragowan, 1 Barhamgunge. generally alluvial. The principal crops are, 7. Shanaghur, paddy, indigo, inustard seed, linseed, peas 1 Amaneegunge. and mulberry: there are two crops in the 8. Mucktadallee, year, the Bhadooee and Choitallee; the for- 9. Rajabazar, mer is during the periodical rains, the latter 2 Coomrapore and Samgunge. is in the cold weather. This division of the 10. Goondeetalao, 11. Pool-i-Ahsinullah Khan, district is very low, and subject to inunda- I Mobaragunge. 12. Maheemapore, tion. During the overflow of 1838, which 2 Neeamutgunge and Kha was very severe, the most elevated villages were fooded. The foundation of the vil. 13. Mahajantolee, I Narain pore. lagers' huts are generally raised five and 14. Manullahbazar, six feet, for security against inundation. 15. Akhra Ramsaha, The construction of these huts, which are hurriedly made up of bamboos, and a scanty 16. Asinpoorah, supply of cusheah grass, indicates that they | Azeemgunge. 17. Rajbaree, are intended for temporary places of abode, 3 Hahagunge, Dahpora and liable always to be swept away by the en- 18. Raneeshar, croachments of the river. 19. Burwah, The western division of the district, call- 2 Mankara and Plassey. ed the Rara, presents a level appearance 20. llarhurparah, 21. Nowada, all along the banks of the river; but in the 22. Jellinghee, interior, it is very uneven : in some places 23. Gowas, 21. Dowlatabad, the land is undulating, in others hilly. The 1 Ramdas pore. soil is hard, clayey, and mostly ferrugineous. 1 Shahmeer. nomguuge. 1 Rooslabad. 1 Aliar Khan. Ameenabad. VOL. 11.) 439 HOORSHEDABAD, 25. Raneetalab, Telia and Akregunge. The principal crop is paddy, which consists 26. Dewanserai, of numberless varieties. It is cultivated in 27. Rhamrah, 1 Jungypore. the vallies and declivities: the richest crops 28. Sooty: are produced in the vallies, where there is 29. Sumsheergunge. always an abundant lodgement of rain 30. Pulsa. 31. Mirzapore, water. The surface of the declivities is ar- 1 Rogoonathgunge. ranged into numerous little fields, hemmed 32. Bhadreehat, 33. Govindpore, all round in mud embankments of from 34. Kaliangunge, two to three feet, which serve to confine 25. Chindanga, the water as it rolls down. Mustard seed 36. Gokwru. is grown for domestic purposes, along the banks of nullahs, where the soil consists of clay and sand. The mulberry grows very well, but it is not cultivated very extensively in this division of the zillah. Sugar-cane, of a very inferior description is cultivated on a very limited scale. The villages stand on elevated spots, and are never subject to inundation. The huts are constructed of walls made of mud, mixed with broken pottery, the roof well thatched, with plenty of paddy straw, which, in some places, may be had for the mere gathering. There seems to be no improvement in the agriculture of the country, and any attempt at innovation is looked upon by this custom-following people as an invasion of their prescriptive rights; the grandest argument in the mouth of every native against improvement is, . Our forefathers never did such things, nor can we. The soil undergoes little preparation for the recep- tion of seed ; indeed the rich deposits of the river on alluvial lands, is, happily for the apathetic ryot, a spontaneous preparation : all he does is to give two or three ploughings, and scatter his seed. But the hard clayey paddy lands would be totally unproductive, without manuring : the Rara ryots are therefore obliged to exert themselves a little more. The manure generally used is cow-dung, decomposed vegetables, and the refuse of tanks ; great care is taken to weed the paddy fields, till the crops are about a foot and a half high. Irrigation is always resorted to, where it rains at very protracted intervals, and when there is an early cessation of the rains ; but if there be not rain sufficient to fill the tanks, which are wholly dependant on the clouds, the crops must inevitably perish. The Bhagrutty which receives the waters of the Ganges, at the northern extremity of the district, about eight miles above Sooty, is the principal channel, for the transit of the inland trade to the presidency, though for the greater part of the year, it is navigable only by boats of ordinary barthen. On the fall of the river after the rains, it is obstructed in several places by sand, the removal of which is superintended by an engineer officer. The steamers ply through this river" from the middle of June to middle of October. Hill streams are numerous in the western division of the district, and all the fire-wood cut on the hills during the dry season, is floated down these streams in rafts during the rains: the principal * Babla, Jumjunekolly, are as per margin.* Some of them run along an Mowrucky, Dwarka ,Bri: immense extent of country, meandering in the most manee, Pagla, Banslooee, capricious manner. Jheels and tanks abound through- out the district : the Motteejheel, or Pearl Lake, is near Cossimbazar. When the establishment of a village is contemplated in a place, very remote from the river or other stream, the construction of a tank is the first consideration : it is generally dug at the expense of the zemindar ; individuals also dig tanks for irrigation, but by far the greater number of tanks are eleemosynary endowments for the free use of the public: the presence of a tank is generally indicated by palm trees. There are however several very large tanks, the excavation of which must have required an immense amount of labor; they are of a serpentine shape, and 440 (PART 1. STATISTICS. are called after their Mahomedan founders ; it is affirmed that the labor of digging them was extorted by Mahomedan tyranny. The climate may be divided into three seasons; the cold from Novem- ber to March; the hot and stormy from March to May; and the rainy from May to October. The westerly winds, prevalent in the hot season, com- monly called the hot winds, are felt to the northward of the district ; but further south they are not so severe. In the more southern districts, there is usually some rain in April; but here the planter seldom gets a sowing shower till the beginning of May, and, in the districts higher up, rain is still later. The following is an account of the fall of rain in 1840, as taken by a rain guage. In April,... 3 39 inches. May,.. 5 70 8 49 July.. 9 13 August,... 15 80 September,.... 9 83 June, Total......... 52 34 The effect of the climate upon the population cannot be ascertained. The natives are considerably below the stature of their more southern neighbours, and are altogether a puny set. The cholera never fails to make its appearance in April and May: this year (1841) it raged with unexampled virulence, causing dreadful mortality. In the vicinity of fac- tories, the planter is the kind dispenser of medicines ; if timely applica- tion be made, half a drachm of laudanum, or in the event of its being voided, a repetition of the dose, seldom fails to cure. The rains bring in fevers and dysentery, but the quackery of the Coberajes (native doctor) makes more victims, than the diseases themselves. NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Animals.—The western hills contain elephants, tigers, buffaloes, deer, bears, and probably every species of ferocious animals. The deer is a great enemy to field crops, and the monkey and baboon to mangoe topes, the latter being held in veneration by the Hindoos, are, in some places per- mitted to carry on their depredations with impunity, and in such localities, it would be prudent not to provoke a warfare ; there is a thriving colony of monkeys near the village of Baooah, about two miles westward of Fur- rucka Tannah. The porcupine is also an inhabitant of the district. An animal called the beejee, or Indian ichneumon, is very common; it possesses the singular property of destroying the most venomous snakes. At the sight of a beejee, the cobra will put down its hood, and lie in a torpid state. The beejee eyes its victim with a piercing gaze, and, on the least indication of motion, seizes the snake by the head, and destroys it. This animal, when caught young, is easily domesticated, and becomes very much attached. Of the feathered tribe, partridges, peacocks, quails, wild- ducks, teal, plovers, are always to be seen at the proper seasons; plenty of ortalans in the hot weather : these little birds are so numerous, that a flight of them resembles a dark cloud. The large white paddy birds are very numerous; they are covered with a soft down, admirably adapted for feather hats, &c. VOL. II.] 441 MOORSHEDABAD. Plants.-It is probable that the western hills contain many unknown plants, which would afford a useful field of research to the botanist. These hills are covered with jungle, which is cut down during the dry season, and floated down the hill streams in rafts, during the rains. The district is chiefly dependent on them for fire-wood. The mineralogist would most probably find his labors richly repaid, for the hills are covered with various descriptions of stones, and, as Europeans have never explored these parts, it is probable that many useful discove- ries are yet in store. The writer of this ascended one of the highest of these hills, where he gathered some stones, very much resembling flint, It is affirmed that this hilly tract is without the pale of the permanent settlement. Commerce and Manufactures. The principal commercial mart is Jea- gunge, situated about 10 miles north of Berhampore. A great quantity of cotton, saltpetre, and sugar passes into second hands here. Bogwangola is also a mart for up-country produce, and indigo seed. Rogoonathgunge and Belgutta are the chief places from which rice, the produce of the district, is shipped for the Upper Provinces. In the neighbourhood of Sooree, in Beerbhoom, a considerable quantity of iron ore is procured, which is carried across the country on bullocks, to Jeagunge and Bogwan- gola. It may be remarked that the inland trade in general, has received a new impctus, from the abolition of the transit duties, in 1836. The tolls collected on boats at Jungypore, previous to that year, amounted to 50,000 Rs. : the year following, the amount was 130,000 Rs.: this branch of the re- venue has progressively increased. The year ending 30th April 18+1, 150,000 Rs. were collected, which is a certain indication of a healthy state of the inland trade. Of manufactures, raw silk and silk piece goods, may be mentioned as the foremost. The employment of making the silk is much sub-divided : one person rears the mulberry; another breeds the worm ; a third winds off the silk. The Basanyer, or person who breeds the worms, must subject himself to the most absurd privations; he must ab- stain from eating turmeric; from shaving his beard, and he must live in celibacy; the natives having a belief, that the worm would die, or generate, without these observances. The Company, when they were a mercantile body, had several silk factories; but Mr. Ramsay, the Com- mercial Resident, says, they carried on the manufacture with loss: nor does it appear that private individuals find it a very advantageous trade. Indeed there is no branch of production more precarious than this. The manu- facturer generally advances money to the pycar or broker, who in like manner advances to the Basanyer; who again purchases mulberry for ready money, from the cultivator, to feed his worms. Now the prospects of the finest harvest of cocoons may be blasted in one single night; for it frequently happens that the worms, after having consumed an immense quantity of valuable mulberry, and on the eve of forming the cocoons, die off, in the proportion of one-half or three-fourths: the consequence is, that the intermediate parties, being men of straw, the manufacturer is the sole loser. This system necessarily creates heavy balances against the pycars, who, to rid themselves of pressing demands, take advances from other parties, intending either never to fulfil their engagements, or leaving them to the chance of a good bund. The pycaree system is however be- ginning to be discontinued, and the manufacturers oblige the Basanyers to bring their cocoons to their factories, and buy them for ready money ; this system limits their operations, but prevents losses. After the Company had sold their factories, numerous filatures sprung up in all parts of the coun- try: Many persons who could raise money, commenced the silk manu- facture ; but most of these adventurers have been unsuccessful. The annual quantity of silk made in the district is 2000 maunds. The best PART VOL. II. 3 G 442 [PART 1. STATISTICS. silk corahs are made here: the village of Mirzapur is a good joar for them; the quantity is about 200,000 Rs. a year. Indigo.—There are several indigo concerns : the largest are the Jungy- pur and Colly Gunge, and each is capable of making from 1500 to 2000 maunds a year. It has been represented in England, that the condi- tion of the ryots engaged in the cultivation of indigo, has been much de- teriorated ; but it is not easy to perceive how such an effect can be the result of such a productive manufacture. The expense of cultivating the seed, and in most cases even the rent, is advanced by the planter; whereas other crops are invariably hypothecated to Mahajans or money-lenders, who have advanced to the cultivators, at an interest of one anna per rupee per mensem, which is more than 78 per cent. per annum. Sugar.—A very small quantity of coarse sugar, or goor, is produced here, the cane cultivation is perhaps the very worst in the world, though the lands are well adapted for this crop. Saltpetre.-The manufacture is very inconsiderable ; it is carried on by the lowest class of natives,--the zemindar engrossing the largest share of the profits, which, and various similar exactions, are made under the spe- cious title of legal cesses. Carved Ivory work.- This is carried to incredible perfection; some of the productions would vie with those of China : the village of Mohema- pore, near Jeagunge, is fainous for them. Sundries.-Coarse cloth, dosootee, baftas, blankets, brass-ware, iron- ware, (chiefly of Beerbhoom iron) bamboo mats and baskets, paper, make up the catalogue of manufactures. Division of Castes, Manners, Customs, fc. Mahomedans.-Two-thirds of the population are Mahomedans, who are chiefly agriculturists and they may be divided into the Dearah and Mateyall ryots, as there is a palpable distinction between the two. The former are such as inhabit alluvial lands; the latter the interior of the district. The character of the Dearah ryot may be summed up in these words • destitute of generosity, patriotism, and gratitude; false, litigious, cruel, void of compassion. The moral defection, so peculiar to this class, is perhaps attributable to the constant disputes, that the nature of their landed tenures gives rise to. Their lands are always inundated, and when the water subsides, a fresh stratum of sand or alluvium, obliterates the land marks, and each man's particular field is difficult of identification. This gives rise to serious and constant disputes, and consequent litigation, with its concomitants,---perjury and forgery. Frequently a part of the land is diluviated, and then the most abandoned perjury, and daring forgeries are resorted to, to appropriate the land of some weaker neighbour. Thus are these people constantly at enmity with each other : and perhaps this is what makes them perfidious to every body else. They are all subservient to the Mundol, or head of the village, who exercises very great influence over them. In the interior, disputes of the na- ture above described are never known; there, there is always a clear demarkation of each man's holding, so that there is no possibility of such disputes: the character of the people in the interior approaches very much to the description given of his countrymen, by Rammo- hun Roy, viz. the peasants and villagers, who reside away from large towns, and head stations, and courts of law, are as innocent, temperate, and moral in their conduct, as the people of any country whatsover. Hindoos.- These consist of Brahmins, Khaitrees, Boisas and Sudras. Brahmins.- Most of these have assignments of land rent-free, or at a low fixed rate. They seldom engage in any occupation, and may be said to be POL. 11.) 443 BOGOORAH. a most useless class. The Omlah of the courts are Natives of Burdwan and Calcutta. Khaitrees. This class is not numerous; they are occupied as peons, burkundazes, &c. Boisas. The original occupation of these was the study of medicine. They are chiefly employed as putwaries and gomashtas. Sudras.- These are chiefly agriculturists—the Chains and Goorus culti- vate vegetables. The Oswalls or Cayans are natives of the Upper Pro- vinces, settled at Jeagunge ; they carry on the business of bankers, mer- chants, and traders. This sect hold the doctrine that it is sinful to destroy any living creature ; and they are so rigid in the observance of this creed, that many serious affrays have occurred on the occa- sion of a European killing a fowl, while lying off the banks of the river at Jeagunge. These people farm a very valuable fishery from Government in that neighbourhood, and in it prevent a violation of their religious preju. dices. Some of the natives of the district profess the same doctrines, but with palpable inconsistency, destroy myriads of silk worms. BOGOORAH. Bogoorah, the capital, is a small town on the right bank of the river Kurateea, distant from Calcutta, by the road vià Moorshedabad and Beau- leah, 255 miles, and is situated in longitude 89° 29' and latitude 24° 50'. The capital is nearly in the centre of the district. Estimated extent from north to south, 50 miles ; from east to west, 80 miles. Boundaries.—On the north, and northeast by the district of Rungpore ; on the northwest by ditto Dinagepore ; on the southwest by ditto Raj- shye ; on the southeast by ditto Pubna : on the east by ditto Mymensing. This district was established in 1821, and now comprizes ten thannahs ; viz. Bogoorah, Sirpore, Nokeela, Roygungef and Adamdighee, formerly belonging to Rajshye; Gobindgunge and Dewangunge from Rungpore a and Khaitloll, Lollbazar, and Buddulgatchee from Dinagepore. Division of Thannas.—THANNAH BOGOORAH, situated at the town and civil station, on the right bank of the Kurateea river, is bounded by the following thannahs: N. Gobindgunge ; S. Sirpore; E. Nokeela; W. Ad- amdighee; N. W. Khaitloll; S. W. Chowgong; (in Rajshye). The prin- cipal bazars are at the towns of Bogoorah and Seebgunge. Hauts or Markets.-Sultangunge, Nusseepore, Sohobgong, Phaphur, Durgah, Noongolah, Chundmooa, Muckaintulla, Keechuk, &c. This than- nah is very large, and well populated: it has an outpost at Seebgunge, with separate mohurrirs and burkundazes, who have charge of 200 mouzahs, 109 chokydars. The thannah, has 845 mouzahs and 656 chokydars. Extent N. and S. 20 miles; east and west 16. The in- habitants are considered a good looking, healthy race of people : about 7-8ths Musselmen. • The name of this district is so often mis-spelt and mis-pronounced, occasioning frequent mistakes at the General Post Office, and consequent inconvenience to indivi- duals, that setting its orthography and orthoepy correct is of some importance : The word therefore in Bengalee according to the nearest sound in English, is Bogoo-rah. + Sirpore was transferred about six years ago, Roygunge properly belonging to Pubna, was made over to Bogoorah only last year 1810. 444 [PART 1. STATISTICS. THANNAH Sirpore--(the place of the head*)—is on the right bank of the Kuratcea, at the northern end of the rather large and pretty town of Sirpore, distant 12 miles S. S. E. from Bogoorah, and bounded as follows: N. Bogoorah; N. N. E. Nokeela; S. S. E. Roygunge; and on the S. W. by Chowgong (Rajshye). Extent from N. to S. 224 miles; from E. to W.183 miles. Its principal bazars are the town of Sirpore and Gunydowgunge. Hauts.-Barrodawarec, Bogeecha and Sundultolla, in the town. Mirza- pur, Urreca, Dawulsura, Paing, &c. This thannah comprizes 315 inhabited, and some few depopulated vil- lages, with 265 chokydars. Inhabitants 6-8ths Mussalmen. Thannah ROYGUNGE, situated on the left bank of the Kurateea (here called the Fooljore) in the centre of a populous Gunge, distant 26 miles S. E. from Bogoorah, and bounded by the following thannahs: On the N. W. by Sirpore; N. E. by Nokeela, in the district of Bogoorah; on the S. by Shazadpore, in the district of Pubna; on the S. W. by Hurrial, in the district of Rajshye; and on E. by Surajgunge in Mymunsing. Extent N. and S. 22 miles, E. and W. 14 miles. Principal bazars.-Roygunge and Chandye Konah. Hauts.-Roodhurbarreea, Pungassee, Sindoorreea, Koomrool, Ghoorka, Kantagarra, Bhoyeeagantee, Dhungurra, Simeleea, Allukondy, &c. Inhabitants.-Two-thirds Musselmen; dark complexion ; tall and well made ; 350 inhabited villages, 360 chokydars. THannah NOKEELA, distant E. from Bogoorah 21 miles. This thannah is situated in the village of Muttyam, on the left bank of the old Munnass, and the right bank of the great river, the Dowcopa,f where there is less. than a mile between the two rivers'. Nokeela is bounded on the N. N. W. by Gobindgunge; N. N. E. by Dewangunge; S. by Roygunge; S. W. by Sirpore; and W. by Bogoorah, all in the district of Bogoorah; also on the E. by Hajeepore, and on the S. S. E. by Surajgunge, in the district of Mymunsing. Hauts.—Goosainbarry, Kootubpore, Dhunooh, Surwamalla, Summust- pore, Shairpore, katma, Chilloabarree, &c. There are no bazars or gunges of any note in this thannah. Inhabitants.-7.8ths Musselmen ; dark, middling sized, and healthy ; 303 innabited villages, 64 washed away; 311 chokydars. Thannau DEWANGUNGE. This thannah is situated on the right bank of the Berhampore, at Dewangunge, in the pergunnah of Puttillahdaw, which pergunnah comprizes almost the whole of the thannah jurisdiction. It is distant from Bogoorah E. N. E. some miles; and is bounded as follows: On the N. by Chilmarry; N. W. Bhowanygunge in Rungpore; E. S. E. by Duskowneea Sharpore; S. S. E. Hajeepore in Mymunsing; and on the s. S. W. by Nokcela, in the district of Bogoorah. The only bazars are Dewangunge and Islampore. Hauts.--Mullungunge, Poolkendah, &c. “few and far between.' Extent. This is not ascertained, but a large tract of country, extending across the Berhampooter, to the lower range of Garrow hills, but very thinly populated, and entirely exposed to the annual innudations of the Berhampooter. A police establishment for this thannah alone seems un- necessary;perhaps it might be judiciously amalgamated with the neighbou ring thannah of Bhowanneegunge, which has also a great portion of the same • In contra-distinction to 'Dhur-makaun,' the place of the body, being spots where are supposed to repose the separate remains of a Mussulman Saint and Martyr-mosques are built at both places. + • Dow,' a Bill Ilook - Copa,' a blow as to dig: meaning that this mighty channel, now about 14 miles broad, was formed by the blow of a Dow, with which an idle boy cut through a ridge, to let in a stream in the inundation, that in one day became a river. vol. II.] 445 BOGOORAH. Zemindarry; or it might be transferred to the district of Mymunsing, and absorbed into Sherpore and Hajeepore thannahs. Inhabitants.---Principally Mussulmen; dark, tall and athletic. 65 in- habited villages, 20 washed away, 83 chokydars. Tuannau GOBINDGUNGE, situated on the left bank of the Kurateca, in the centre of the little town, from whence it takes its name, distant 24 miles N. from Bogoorah, and bounded as follows: On the N. W. by Gho- rahghaut Ranneegunge, in the district of Dinagepore; N. by Peergunge ; N. N. W. by Baugduwar ; N. N. E. Sadoollahpore; E. N. E. by Bhowanee- gunge in the district of Rungpore ; S. by Bogoorah Ghantee ; S. W. W. by Khaitloll; and S. S. E. by Nokeela, in the district of Bhgoorah. The only bazars are in the town and Jammeergunge; 10 miles, S. E. Hauts. --Bullooa, Chandparra, Sonahtulla, Korulgatchee, Pulasbarry, Zeemohannee, Khaingah, &c. Inhabitants.--3-5th Mussulmen ; light colour, short, pot-bellied, sickly, and in general ugly. Six hundred and eighty-three inhabited, and 148 uninhabited villages, 398 chokydars. The limits of the Ghorahghaut than- nah extended within a part of the town of Gobindgunge, and a considerable number of villages, on the opposite side of the river, also belong to Gho- rabghaut. Thanxa ADAMDICHFE, situated on a tank, in the village of the same name, 22 miles W. of Bogoorah, and bounded as follows: N. Khaitloll ; N. W. Buddulgatchee; E. Bogoorah, in the district of Bogoorah, and on the W. by Doobulhattee; S. W. Bhowanygunge; and S. by Chowgong in Rajshye. Hauts.-Champapore, Gobindpore, Koongong, Chatumgong. The principal bazar is the small town of Doobchicheea, on the right bank of the Nagore, where this thannah has an outpost. At Sultanpore, on the Jaboona, is also a large gunge, opposite Nowgong, on the right bank of that river, which latter place is in Rajshye (Doobulluttee thannah), and better known as Nowgong only. Inhabitants.—3-5th Musscimen; a palid, puny, and sickly race. 511 inhabited, and 252 uninhabited villages, 405 chokydars. THANNAS KHAITLOLL, situated on a tank, in a village of the same name, is distant 24 miles N. W. from Bogoorah, and is bonnded as follows: N. N. W. Lollbazar; S. Adamdighee; E. Bogoorahghantee. Extent from N. to S. 22 miles; from E, to W. 17} miles. Its principal bazar is at Sonahmokee, at the junction of the Toolingunga and Jaboona rivers. Hauts.—Goopeenauthpur (where there is an annual fair for cattle and other goods, very well attended), Hutsur, Noongolah. Inhabitants.—2-3rds Musselmen ; poor, faccid, sickly mortals. 311 villages, 263 chokydars. Tuannau LOLLBAZAR, situated on the left bank of the Jahoona, in the town of Belowla, and distant from Bogoorah 36 miles N. N. W. This thannah is bounded as follows: On the N. Chintamun; N. E. Nabob- gunge; E. N. E. Ghorahghaut; W. Putneetulla ; and W. N. W. by Putteeram, in district Dinagepore; on the S. E. by Khaittoll, and S. W. by Buddulgatchee, in the district of Bogoorah. Extent N. and S. 18 miles, E. and W. 22 miles. The principal bazars are at the towns of Jummaul- gunge and Halee, the former on the little Jaboona, and the latter 10 miles above the thannah, near the borders of Dinagepore. Hauts.-Paunchbibbee, Dumdumma, Seruttee, Hismee, Doorgadow, Mungulbarree, &c. Inhabitants.—3-4ths Mussulmen; short, and rather good looking. 564 inhabited, and 348 uninhabited villages, 238 chokydars. 446 (PART 1. STATISTICS THANNAH BUDDULGATCHEE, situated on the right bank of the Jaboona and is distant from Bogoorah W. N. W. 35 miles, and is bounded as follows: On the N. W. by Patnutulla, in the district of Dinagepore; on the s. by Doobulhutta ; S. W. by Manda, in Rajshye ; on the N. N. E. by Loll- bazar; E. N. E. by Khaitloll ; and on the S. E. by Adamdighee, in the dis- trict of Bogoorah. Extent, N. and S. 21} miles, E. and W. 35 miles: the limits of this thannah extend 25 miles, west of it , poking off into Rajshye. The principal bazar is the town of Porah-Seebgunge, on the Atrie and Mahdubpore. Hauts.-Sultee, Goburchura, Dholowree, Buddaul, &c. Inhabitants.--Mussulmen ; a mixed race of people, very unequal in size and appearance to the Ilindoos ; very slight and puny. 634 inhabited, 188 depopulated villages, 400 chokydars. CLIMATE. There is not, probably, a more unequal climate in all Bengal, than that of this district, owing to its very great difference of formation, and variety of soil. At the town of Bogoorah, the temparature may be quoted at an average of 66., which is higher than it is, across the Kurateea, imme- diately opposite the station; and the further east, the milder the tempera- ture. Northerly it is much the same : in the south it is much upon a par with the heat of the station. • In the far west,' about Lollbazar and Buddulgatchee'thannahs, the heat before the rains set in is almost intolerable, being 16 or 18 degrees higher than at Bogoorah. This is owing to the absence of large rivers and lakes, a high and scantily watered country, with heavy and extensive jungles, and villages, thickly wooded with bamboos, mangoe trees, and under-brush- wood. GENERAL APPEARANCE, SOIL, PRODUCTIONS, &c. The country immediately eastward from Bogoorah is of an alluvial nature, although the highest inundation now, does not appear to affect the lands within 5 or 6 miles distance from the station : but the land depresses from the banks of the Kurateea, and has an easterly dip, which shows that it was gradually formed by inundations. Near the banks of the great rivers (towards which it slopes off) the land rises again, and on the borders of Mymensing, it is also above the inundation mark : near the station on the non-inundated parts, the soil is rich, and produces a good deal of Paat from which are manufactured Gunnies, Chutters, Thart, and bags of various description, besides twine, and the raw material exported. Further to the eastward, near the large rivers, indigo is cultivated, and has the repute of having more colouring matter in its bulk, than that of many other districts. During the winter season, or from November to April, a crop of Cheena or Kranchee is produced, which, for several months, supports the population, but the staple crop of this part of the district is Ouse Dhaun, sown broad cast: very little, except the higher lands near the station, has the trans- planted, or Amaun sort. On the western side of the district, the change is very striking, compared with the country just described : the red clay, and abrupt high banks of the Kurateea, several feet above the level of inundation, gives a cliffy appear- ance to the river ; and the raised mulberry fields look like so many en. trenchments, together with the regular raised mounds that continue for miles, giving the country the character of ancient fortification, or rather the ruins of such. The rich and beautifully verdant appearance of the mulberry VOL. 11.) 447 BOGOORAH. cultivation in all its stages, and all the year round, impresses a stranger with an idea, that he has arrived in quite a different country and climate. The mulberry cultivation however is only carried on near the station, for several miles up and down the river's banks, and is supposed to produce the very best mulberry leaf in all Bengal. The silk manufacture is entirely in the hands of the natives, who make a coarse sort, that is purchased at good remunerating prices, by the mahajuns, for the markets in the Upper Provinces. The country at the back (westward of the mulberry cultivation) is high, but quite flat, and a slight difference in soil is perceptible, being not so red, but still a stiff clay : this kind of soil prevails, with some intermixture, here and there throughout the whole extent of the Bogoorah, Khatloll, and Adamdighee thannahs, and produces the finest Amaun crop of Moonghee in all Bengal. It is entirely Ropal i. e. transplanted, and the land yields but one crop: it is planted in June, and reaped in January; and the fields are not touched until the first rains of the ensuing season admits of ploughing them, preparatory to the same returns of crop that has been raised from them for ages past! without once being allowed to remain fal- low or a change of crop, and with scarcely a cottah of unoccupied land in a range of 30 miles; and yet as this soil is more exhausted, a little fresh surface clay and mud manure renovates it annually. The pergunnah of Silburous in which the station is situated) is particularly and justly celebrated for the superior quality and fecundity of its Rice. In the Lollbazar thannah the land is still higher, and sugarcane is the staple commodity of that part of the district; the soil is of a strong marsh nature, mixed with some alkaline properties; it is very retentive of mois. ture, producing a vigorous and healthy cane, and the sugar made is in point of grain and saccherine quality, very superior to that of the adjoining districts. Cotton is cultivated in the same soil, and some years yield the ryots a good return; but it is very uncertain. Flax (teasee) thrives well, but is not much sown. Hemp (sunn) is also grown, but chiefly on contract for fishermen, who use it to make their nets. Quse dhaun is cultivated on the old sugarcane fields for a change of crop, and yields a fair return. In the hollows and low grounds, a considerable quantity of amaun is produced, but it is frequently destroyed by wild animals, it being impossible to fence in the fields in the open space, or in low marshy grounds. A considerable portion of the lands in this and the Buddulgatchee thannah are uninhabited jungles, partly high grass, and partly heavy woody cover, on what was once the site of villages, and there are two strong reasons why there is no hope of seeing such part of the country brought under agricul- tural controul; the first is the heavy rates originally established by Mr. Hatch, by whom the assessment of the district of Dinagepore was first fixed. and the other is (an evil growing out of the former) the innumerable num- ber of wild hogs, which, notwithstanding that thousands are destroyed an- nually by the shikarriées paid by the ryots, do not seem to deciease. To these animals may be added a great number of deer and buffaloes, but the depredations of the latter are trifling, compared to the mischief done by the pigs. În 1817-18, fully &ths of the inhabitants of this part of the district fell victims to the pestilence-cholera morbus—this shock to the population has never been recovered; but were the above first cause removed, which acts as a check to emigrants, the chances are in favor of reclaiming the lands from jungle. In the thannah of Buddulgatchee, and slightly in the limits of the adjoin- ing thannahs of Adamdighee and Doobulhuttee, along the banks of the Jaboona, bhang or ganja is grown and manufactured; it generally proves a very profitable crop to the ryot, but in some years entirely fails. Numerous 448 (PART I. STATISTICS. small boats assemble at Nowgong in February and March, to purchase it; they come from very distant parts of India, from Chittagong to Allahabad, and even from Cuttack to Assam. To the north and south of these abovementioned thannahs, the soil and productions are much the same as that about Khaitloll; viz. a fat raised country. The Kurateea river may be considered the line of demarkation of soil, and resources throughout the district, except that sugarcane is grown extensively about Lollbazar, and in some parts of Gobindgunge only. RIVERS, LAKES, AND Tanks. The most considerable river, in point of magnitude being fully as large as the Ganges, is the Dowcopa, Chuttul, and Konye, all names of the same river in different localities, and containing probably ths of the Berham. pooter, from which the above, about 30 years ago, was a mere insignificant outlet, scarcely wide enough for two boats to pass each other: this was then the Konye : subsequently to its formation, another branch cut into it, and formed the Chuttul. These two joined with a little adventitious help from a boy cutting a small channel in a paddy field ridge, near the bank, to catcħ fish, with only his · Dow' (a Billhook), gave a Copa,' or blow, suf- ficient to admit a rush, and admitted the current of the stream: this, in one night, formed this mighty river; such is the tradition of the origin of the Dowcopa. This river is fully two miles broad, but is not very deep, and consequently much more rapid than the Ganges. Boats passing upwards, generally avoid the main stream by tracking up by creeks and nullahs in the rains; but, in other times of the year, it is the only water route to Assam. The nearest approach to Bogoorah from this river, across country, is 24" miles due east at the thannah of Nokeela. It branches off from the Berhampooter four miles above Dewangunge thannah: at about six miles below Nokeela, it joins the Jhinsye, another branch of the Berham- pooter, after which it assumes and retains the name of the Jaboona, until it falls into the Megna. The next river westward of the above is the Bangalla, formed by the junction of the Guggeroua (a branch of the Konre), the Allyekoree, and Nullooa, above Urreeaghaut, in the Gobindgunge thannah. At Surreeakendy it divides : the eastern branch, forming the Murra-Munnass: they again unite 10 miles lower down above Dhunool, and, after remaining as one stream for about a mile, sever at Dhunool, the eastern branch acquiring the very common name of Issamutty, the other branch attaining the name of Hulhulleed; and 6 or 7 miles below, receives the Kurateea at Cawnpore This river is scarcely navigable for small boats in the dry season, and the Issamutty entirely dries up in December. The Kuraleea. This in Hindoo law most classical and holy river comes into this district from the joint borders of Rungpore, and Dinagepore, and Ghorahghaut. The efficacy of the holy stream at certain probable con- junction of the planets, in washing away sins, is great, as one dip in the Kurateea then, is worth seven in the Ganges ; so say the shasters : indeed the legend has it, that it was intended by the gods in the golden age, to have established the holy city of Benares, or rather Kassee, on its banks; but they afterwards ordered it otherwise. A considerable portion of the waters of the Kurateca is drawn off by a modern outlet, called Kaltakho- ly, at Gobindgunge ; this, after running 8 miles, joins the Nullona, and has become navigable all the year. At Seebgunge, the Kurateea receives a tributary in the Gungnye, a small stream from the westward, navigable only in the rains to Keichuck, after VOL. 11.) 449 BOGOORAH. which it entirely dries up. Immediately after having this supply, the Kura- teea loses half its stream, which forms the Nagore : this latter river is crowded with boats all the rains; it falls into the Chelluchiki viâ Singurah. The Kurateea proceeds with a diminished stream (losing a further por- tion on the eastward to a nullah, called the Issamutty), past Bogoorah and Sirpore, till it joins the Hulhulleea at Cawnpore, and forms the Fooljore. The next river, or rather rivulet to the westward, is the Toolseegunge; its nearest approach to the Kuratcea; is about 15 miles: it is an insignificant stream, and frequented by very few boats; it runs through the thannah of Khaitloll, till it joins the Jaboona at Sonahmookee. The Jaboona enters the district at its north western extremity, above Halee, and runs through the Lollbazar thannah to Sultangunge, Now- gong, on the southwestern borders of the district. About 12 miles lower down joins the Atrie at Sooktugachce. Lakes.—There are no lakes of any magnitude in the district: the Narole, 5 miles N. N. E. of the station, is about 10 miles in circumference, and remarkable for its numerous sinuosities. In the cold season vast numbers of wild geese and other waterfowl frequent it. Another of the same description, but not so extensive is at Adamdighee, called Rucqtadow. In the thannah of Sirpore, in a jungle known as Mirzapore, are numerous tanks; and again 12 miles further south, at Neemgatchee, on the Roygunge thannah, in another heavy jungle, are numerous tanks, some said to be up- wards of a mile long, and proportionably broad. NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Edible Plants. Most of those common to the rest of Bengal. Mineral Productions. None kuown, but iron supposed to be on the red clay soil. Animals—are also similar to the rest of Bengal. About the station, the Cheeta, commonly called Nagasurra or hunting leopard, occasionally does mischief; tigers, and wild buifaloe are found in almost every thannah, except Bogoorah; but the wild hogs of the northern thannah are the most destructive pest to the country. Birds.- 'The same as the rest of Bengal. Reptiles.—To those the same remark applies. Alligators at the mouths and deep places of the small rivers annually destroy many lives. ANTIQUITIES. The singular circumstance of a considerable tract covering 8 or 10 miles of the road, between Bogoorah and Sirpore, and places adjacent, being thickly strewn with broken bricks, and the fact that brick walls in an excellent state of preservation have been found in certain mounds, built in a square form, and apparently so that the interior and exterior had been filled up with clay, as to form a large tumulus entirely burying the walls, is in itself remarkable: no less so also is the trace of the continuation of those mounds drawn out in regular lines, like the fortified walls of a town. This is a capi- tal field for an antiquary. The Hindoo tradition is, that it was the place of the retreat and concealment of the five Pundood's, Bheem, Urjoon, &c. Another reason assigned is, that the brahmins having prophesied a favorable conjunction of the planets to occur at a certain period, when every good orthodox Hindoo was to repair to the banks of the Kurateea ; all the Rajabs, from furthest Ind, did accordingly assemble there; but it proving a hoax, and that the brahmins had miscalculated by 12 years, it was agreed, in a meeting of all the noble persons assembled, that they should not re- turn to their respective countries, but remain and amuse themselves by PART I. VOL. II, нз 450 (PART 1 STATISTICS. doing good to the country they sojourned in, until the real period arrived : they accordingly commenced making bricks, digging tanks, and forming bricken enclosures round their encampments, and also temporary palaces, and did remain 12 years. Maha-Usthaun, or Mustangurh as it is commonly called, is on the right bank of the Kurateea, 5 miles north of Bogoorah : this is another place worthy the attention of antiquarian research, and also of the learned in Hindu literature. This place is said to have been the seat of the great Pursa-Ramna, the 8th Avotar of Bisthnoo; Sitta Davee, the name of his daughter, is also the name of the ghaut where the Hindoo worshippers bathe and perform their oblations, at the fair held in April, which continues a whole week, and is very much thronged on the particular day for the bathing. These Hindoo remains are now nearly obliterated, and have given way to a Mussulman shrine, and tomb of Sha Sooltan. On the top of the mound or hill, which rises from the low ground about 80 feet, and at the back (westward) of the shrine, is a table land of about a mile in extent, and beyond it a lake or tank; it is difficult to say whether it is natural or arti- ficial ; the table land appears to bear the marks of having been walled in, and fortified with towers at the corners. A long legend is attached to the manner in which the saint over-reached the Hindoo demi-god, not to the credit of the former's good faith, who with cow's blood defiled the Hindoo holy places, and at length succeeded in ousting the poor innocent Hindoo.' The Hindoo Rajah is said to have flourished in the latter end of the Duaper-Yug, and commencement of the Kalli-Yug, a few thousand years before the sect of the Faithful fol- lowers of Islam, were ever dreamt of !—but a trifling anachronism of this nature is of no consequence in a Hindoo legend. MONGHYR. 1.-EXTENT, GENERAL APPEARANCE, AND SOIL. Monghyr is a large district, situated in the province of Behar, from the 26th and 28th of north latitude. It is bounded on the north by Tirhoot ; on the west by Tirhoot and Patna; on the east by Bhaugulpore ; by Behar on the southwest ; and on the southeast, by the Southwest Frontier Agency, formerly called the district of Ramghur. Its extreme length from north to south is about 92 miles, and its greatest breadth 44 miles. The total area may be estimated at 4,048 square miles, and the number of towns and villages, with more than 4,000 inhabitants, at 26—those, with not more than 4,000 inhabitants, are 3,384-making, in all, 3,410 towns and villages. Sub-divisions. It is divided into 41 pergunnahs, as follows in the table. The divisions marked (*,) chiefly produce rice and sugarcane; the products of the rest are tobacco, indigo, hemp, cotton, wheat, barley, dholl of all kinds, Indian corn, carraway seed, peas, gram, &c. ; vegetable gardens and orchards, containing mangoe, jack, guava, date, palm, and other fruit trees. Transferred from Ramghur. 4. Sukerah Pali. 1st. Chuckye.* 5. Kujrah." Transferred from Bhaugulpore. 6. Singhoul.* 1. Gidhour.* 7. Selimabad (part of-or villages 2. Chandwn Bhoka.* situated on the right bank of 3. lavelly Monghyr. the Keol river). VOL. 11.) 451 MONGHYR. 8. Furkeah. * 7. Nyepur. 9. Soorujgurha.* 8. Musjidpore. 10. Abhipore, (rent-free.*) 9. Rubkhund. 11. Purbutpoorah. 10. Othurkhund. 12. Dhureoh. 11. Gourkhund. 13. Suhrooye. 14. Lukkurpore. Transferred from Behar. 15. Oseah. 1. Malda.* 16. Kharey. 2. Selimabad, (a village on the 17. Jabangerah. left bank of the Keol river.) 18. Havelly. 3. Part of Havelly Behar. 19. Sekorah. 4. Ditto of Junrye.* Transferred from Tirhoot. 5. Ditto of Nurhut.* 1. Ukberpore Rani.* 6. Ditto of Roh.* 2. Emudpur. 7. Umretho.* 3. Bhoradee. 8. Beesthazari. 4. Bade Bhoradee. 9. Gyaspore. 5. Mulkee. 10. Saunday. 6. Bulliah. 11. Bheempore. Of these pergunnahs, only Kujrah, Furkeah, and Umretho have been surveyed by European Surveyors appointed by Government. The number of mehals under the control of the Deputy Collector of Monghyr, as it stood on the 1st May 1841, is as follows: No. 1. Mehals on the Towjee, 1,940 No. 2. Ditto not on the Towjee, 746 Total... 2,686 The number of Invalid Jageers, included with the above, are : In No. 1,.. 549 In No. 2, 281 Total... 830 Soil.--About the neighbourhood of the town and fort of Monghyr, the inland soil is chiefly red ; but along the banks of the river, it is a mixture of sand and clay. There are various descriptions of soil however in the interior of the district, one kind being the Kerail or Kewal, a black earth, which becomes very hard in the dry season ; the Dhorus Bhetara, or land in the vicinity of villages, &c. The rice fields generally yield only one crop in the year; and, in some places, the cultivators sow with it the Khesari Dhol seed, which is not cut until after the rice crops are taken in. These lands are sown in May and June, after the rains have set in, and the barvests occur in the latter end of October and November General Appearance.-Monghyr is a hilly, fertile-looking district, and one of the best cultivated in the province of Behar, agriculture being car- ried on with exemplary activity, and persevering diligence; the fields are divided into squares, and irrigated with care, and the crops are generally very fine. Parts of the country, especialy in the neighbourhood of Chuc- kye, are covered with dense jungles, and many of the pergunnahs are interspersed with hills, on some of which grows a small species of bamboo, but the rest are rocky and barren. 452 (PART 1. STATISTICS. II.-RIVERS. 1 The principal rivers of Monghyr are the Ganges, the little Gunduck, the Byah, and the Bullam, which are navigable at all seasons of the year. There are also others, but it would be more proper to designate them hill torrents ; these are the Keol, Hulowar, Duckra, Moruch and Sukri. Besides these, there are smaller streams, which rise in the rains ; these are the Singhia and Goondri nullahs,—the latter becomes fordable after the rains have ceased, but the former dries up altogether. The Ganges enters the district at Derriapore having Selimabad on the right, and Mulkee on the left. After passing through these, and the per- gunnahs of Soorujgurrah, Musjidpore, Bulliah, Monghyr and Furkeah; it enters the Bhaugulpore district : this river has been so frequently describ- ed, and is so well known, that it is not necessary to make any further men- tion of it here. The little Gunduck flows from the district of Tirhoot in a serpentine course, and empties itself into the Ganges, 8 miles below Monghyr, having passed through the pergunnahs of Bhoradee, Mulkee, Bulliah, and Fur- keah ; it is navigable at all times in the year by boats of small burthen. The Bullam river, which for many months is not navigable even by the smallest boats, flows through this district from Tirhoot in the north, and joins the little Gunduck, at the village of Mozuffra, alias Kery Kuturmallah, in pergunnah Mulkee, at which place native boats of all sizes are annually built. The Keol torrent rises in a range of hills, south of Monghyr, and flows through the pergunnahs of Gidhour, Chandun, Bhoka, Beesthazari and Selimabad, and joins the Hulowar or Kehwah, at a village bearing the latter name. The current in this river is so strong, that no boats can navigate it ; and it has often been observed, even before the periodical rains have set in, that a shower in the distant hills will cause this river to rise suddenly, and render it impassable, for it being at all times unnavigable by boats, those people who wish to cross, are obliged to wait until the waters have subsided sufficiently, to enable them to wade through. The Hulowar or Kehwah is supposed to be a continuation of the bill torrent Sukri. It flows through the pergunnahs of Malda, Umretho, Se- limabad and Mulkee (on the south bank of the Ganges), passing in it's course, the waters of the Keol and the Goondri, it empties itself into the Ganges at Soorujgurrah, where, during the dry months, it's mouth is so choked up with sand, as to be impassable for boats. This is the river which intersects the country on the high road to Patna ; it is navigable almost as far as the town of Sheikpoora, to vessels of high burthen, even in the months of August and September. Lakes and Tanks.— There are none worth noticing ; but at the dis- tance of 4 or 5 miles from the station of Monghyr, is a hot spring called Seetakoond, which has gained some celebrity, and is held in sacred veneration by the Hindoos, who go there at stated times of the year, to keep festivals, which are accompanied by music and rejoicings of every kind. This spring is situated in a wide plain, surrounded by hills, and large masses of rock are scattered here and there on the plain ; the well has lately been enclosed by a puckah wall, built at the expence of a carpenter residing at Monghyr, and the tem- perature of the air, on first gaining the interior, is almost unbear- able. What renders this spring more remarkable is, that there are others within 20 paces of it, the waters of which are quite cold and stagnant, whereas these are almost at boiling heat, and constantly bubbling up: VOL. 11.] 453 MONGHYR. They are so pure and good, that not only the residents drink them, but families going home, frequently send to have some bottled off as a luxury for board ship. The natives bathe in the cold streams, and consider them only less sacred than the hot well. III.-CLIMATE. Monghyr, on account of its advantageous situation, is universally allow- ed to possess a mild and salubrious climate. The neighbourhood of the hills; the moderate range of the thermometer; the situation of the town on the banks of the Ganges; its being exempt from the sultry moisture of the lower provinces; and the raging hot winds in the weat; renders it a desirable residence for invalids, who have been in the habit of resorting to it for years. The thunder storms here are violent, and of frequent occurrence, and the most prevailing winds are from the east and west, which may be said to divide the year between them. Cholera rages amongst the natives, sometimes with great violence; but that is the only serious disorder against which they have to contend. The rains usually set in about the middle of June, and continue until the beginning of October. Besides the periodical rains, there are occasionally, in the months of March, April, and May, a few showers, which are sometimes heavy enough to cool the air for one or two days, but at others scarcely suffice to lay the dust. IV.- POPULATION. From a census taken in 1833, the inhabitants of Monghyr were calcu- lated to amount to 9,52,288 souls, nearly all of whom are of the Hindoo religion. V.-DIVISION OF CASTE. The people of Monghyr are divided into two classes; Hindoos and Mahomedans, which two classes are again divided into sects; viz. the Hindoos, into Brahmins, Bahmuns, Rajpoot, Caith, Koormi and Mehter ; the last is the lowest of all castes, and held in utter contempt by the others. The Mahomedan divisions of caste are the Sheik, Syud, and Puthans. The manners and customs of the people at Monghyr do not differ in any way from those of the other inhabitants of Behar; they are an industrious race, and many articles of ingenuity are made by them. They frequently get intoxicated from smoking a particular kind of herb, called ganja, and the labouring, and lower classes especially, intoxicate them- selves with a liquor made from the juice of the mowha fruit, which, in the months of May and July, is particularly common and cheap. Crowds get drunk upon it, and under its baneful influence many and fearful crimes are committed. The higher orders of Hindoos and Mussulmen never indulge in these potations, but, as a substitute, they smoke the mudduch, which is a composition of opium and pawn leaves, made into small pills. Sometimes, when a dispute occurs amongst the middling and lower classes, they have a custom of settling it without a reference to the Magistrate, by means of a punchuyt, who meet by appointment, at the house of the litigants, to settle the point at issue. The proceedings commence by the party seating themselves in a circle round a pot full of toddy, or some other liquor, and the universal chillum; these things are always supplied by the accused: the debate then is carried on with great gravity and decorum ; much eloquence is displayed, and the proceedings are only interrupted by occasional pulls at the toddy pot, or the chillum. The affair 454 (PART 1 STATISTICS. is always decided by the majority, both parties being bound to abide by their decision : and even if a fine is the penalty they demand is paid accordingly. Animals.-On the hills and in the plains at the south of Monghyr, tigers, bear, and wild hog, abound: there are also tribes of jackals, monkeys, foxes, and hares in the district. Snakes and other venomous reptiles have been seen, but they are not very numerous. The chameleon is also to be found on the hills, in the neighbourhood, where they are caught and carried about in cages, by the bird fanciers, who sell them to strangers coming to the ghat. Of birds there are every kind which is common in Behar; and the Sal, a beautiful little bird, about the size of a humming bird, is caught in large numbers in the jungles. The markets are always well stocked with fish; such as the rahoo, burari, shrimp, prawn, turtle, mullet, pun- gas, pubtah, hilsa, durha, tengra, cutla, moh, mirga, and chulwa; and the rivers swarm with crocodiles and alligators. Trees and Plants.—The hills south of Monghyr are covered with bam. boos, which are in great demand at the station and elsewhere. The sissoo, soondree, semul, peepul, buchun, babool, and other trees common to this part of India abound everywhere; also the palm, date, and mohwa trees. Minerals.--Iron is found in great abundance in the hills about pergun- nah Chamdun ; also stone and shell lime. Stone slabs for monuments are very neatly carved and polished at this station ; likewise stone dishes and plates, adapted only for native use, are made here. AGRICULTURE. Implements of Agriculture. These are very simple, consisting only of single ploughs drawn by two bullocks, and the spade. Domestic Animals. — Of these, there are in abundance, bullocks, cows, buffaloes, goats, pigs, dogs, cats, fowls, ducks, geese, and pigeons. But sheep, guinea fowls, and turkeys, are scarce, and are only kept by a few private individuals. COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURES. It chiefly exports grain ; rice, wheat, gram, linseed, &c.; hides and horns are also a profitable mode of traffic with Calcutta, and the principal manu- factures are various kinds of coarse cloth. Within the last three years, a flax factory has been established by an enterprising firm in Calcutta in con- junction with one or two European residents which is found to answer Very well. REVENUE. The following is a memo.of sums received into the Treasury, in the years 1840-41. 1st. Land Revenue. Hal,.... 4,37,380 0 101 Bukya, 1,65,404 11 23 Hal,.......... Bukya,...... Total,... 6,02,784 12 33 2nd Sayer Revenue. 69,575 14 0 3,729 13 6 3rd. Profit and loss, Total,... 73,305 11 6 2,65,897 12 15 Total, Co.'s Rs.... 9,41,988 38) VOL. 11.) 455 MONGHYR. In addition to this, there have been collected and paid into the Treasury, on account of stamps, Rs. 37,521, 2, so that the sum total now amounts to Rs. 9,79,509 5 8. MONGHYR DISTRICT. Chief town, Monghyr, in lat. 25° 23' north long; 86° 38" east. Mon- ghyr was a Native fortress; it is large and commodious, and must once have been of considerable strength, and capable of making a long defence, as the thickness of the walls, which are still standing, though now quite in ruins, and its deep ditch, amply testify. It is most picturesquely situated, in a bend of the Ganges, which noble river is everywhere overlooked by its ramparts; and in the rains, when the waters overflow their banks, they sur- round Monghyr with their expanse, stretching away as far as the eye can reach. In the fort, there are several houses, inhabited by the civil functionaries, and European residents; besides the cutcherries of the joint magistrate and deputy collector, an uncovenanted deputy collector, and sub-deputy opium agent. Two other uncovenanted deputy collectors, a sudder ameen, and a moonsiif hold their cutcherries in the town. Besides Monghyr, the only other town of any importance is Sheikpora, which is situated at the foot of a hill, about 44 miles from Monghyr. It is a filthy, ugly place, inhabited by a very bad set of Natives, who commit crimes and wickednesses of every kind. A moonsiff, and a thannah establishment are placed there. Administration. The civil administration of the district is carried on by a Revenue Commissioner, a Judge, a Special Deputy Collector, and a Superintendent of Khas mehals, who all reside at Bhaugulpore. An in- dependent Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector, a Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of the 2nd grade, 4 uncovenanted deputy collectors, a sub-deputy opium agent, a Sudder Ameen, and three Moonsiffs, are all engaged in the official duties of the district of Monghyr. Native Establishment and Police. Chow- kees. Thannahs. Daro- Burkun- gahs. Mohurirs. Jemadars. dauzes. 1 Monghyr, 1 1 Lall Der 1 1 18 4 waza. 2 Gogree, 3 Soorujgurha, 4 Mulhipur, 5 Tarrapur, 6 Begooserae, 7 Tegrah, 8 Sheikpoorah.... 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 18 14 16 10 10 10 15 4 Berbig- gah. 9 Durriapoora, 10 Chuckye, 11 Mehsee, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 15 10 5 Chowkee. 10 10 13 149 456 STATISTICS. (PART I. The prisoners in the jails in the month of July 1841, Were as follows:- 21 Criminal ditto, 727 Memorandum of the Civil business of the Judicial Courts of Monghyr, for 1841. Civil jail, .. Number of cases pending on the Ist January 1840. Number of cases instituted between 1st Jan. to 31st Number of cases decided in Number of cases decided in favour of Plaintiff's favour of the Defendants. Number of cases decided on Dec. 1840. their merits naccuISIN SƏS TO OUINN Courts. on default, or nonsuited. Number of cases adjusted by Razeenamas. Total number of cases decid- ed. Cases returned to the Judge, as being beyond the compe- iency of the Moonsift. Number of cases remaining undecided on the 1st Jan. 1841, 60 3 388 Mahomed Rafik, Sudder Ameen, 59 100 72 15 87 6! 6 99 Datta Ram, Moonsiff Mon- ghyr division, 247 519 199 98 297 25 53 375| Cazee Ully Buksh, Moon- siff, Teigrah division,... 165 363 214 106|320 36 5 361 Mr. Maxwell, late Moon- siff, Sheikpoorah divi- sion, ... 70 5 26 101! Ditto Miscellaneous busi- ness, 14 46 12 155 1168 ... ... 67 ... ... 41 Total,... 726 982 485 219806 72 104 982 692 Memorandum of the Criminal business of the Joint Magistrate of Monghyr for 1840, and for the first six months of 1841. Officers. Number of cases dis- Number of cases pend- posed of. Number of persons ac- i Number of persons | Capital punishment. punished. Otherwise punished. Prisoners in jail pend- ing trial in July 1841. Convicted prisoners in jail of every description. puquitted. By the Joint Magistrates,.. 1,379 34 738 1,695 1,6951 14 1,409 ... 1,695 Sudder Ameen,............ 289 43 102 102 ... 50 Moonsiff, 501 16 13 13 ... 131 ... 2 Total,... 1,718 93 782 1,810 ... 1,810 14 1,461 VOL 11.) 457 MONGHYR. Roads. Names of Stages Rivers that Number of Distance. intersect the Nullahs. road. Remarks. Miles. From Mon- ghyr to Bhaugnl- pore. 36 ... 2 Road good in the dry season only; during the rains, many parts of the road are under water, and in two or three places, broken up into ditches and ravines, which require bri- dges to cross them. Good encamping ground; sup. plies and water; nullahs dry in the cold, and hot season. From Mon- ghyr to Patna. Hulhowur and Keol. 5 100 . Monghyr to Mozuffer- pore, Ganges and Gunduck. 2. Road, water, ground and supplies as above. Nul- lahs fordable. Road good for country carriages, but rather diffi- cult for buggies, &c.; the Ganges is crossed at Mon- ghyr, and the Gunduck at Dulsing serae, in Tirhoot. The nullabs dry up in the hot weather. 80 There are also roads from Mongbyr to Behar, and other parts of the district; but these are only passable for wheeled carriages in the dry sea- son, when they are cut through rice and other fields. SCHOOLS. Government schools there are none, either at Monghyr or in the dis- trict; but in the station, there is a private school, superintended by Mr. J. K. Dwyer, who has about 25 scholars of either sex, and their number increases every month. PART I. VOL. II. I 3 458 (PART 1. STATISTICS. DISTRICTS SUBORDINATE TO THE AGRA GOVERNMENT. Statement shewing the Statistical Data of Revenue Settlement from which the average cultivated Acre rates, with the proportion of irrigation in every 100 Acres of cultivation, and of waste in every 100 Acres of culturable area were supplied to form the Map shewing the Compa- rative range of Assessment of Land Tax in the Agra district and part of the Central Doâb. Culturable Area. Zillahs. Pergunnahs. New Jumma. Old Bunjur New Cultivation and Fallow. Acre rate on cul- Total Acre Rate on tivation including Not Total Culti-Cultivation Culturalle Land. New Bunjur. Irrigated vation and Irrigated. Fallow. Bunjur. Aring Goverdhun Julesur 10 14 10 1 9 1 6 Kosee Mahabun Maat Nohjheel Mathura Rayah .. Suhpan Saidabad Sher Gurh Sonai Sonk Sousa Suhar Itawa Saknan Itawa Bharepura Dehlee Jakhan Alipore Pati Bewar Mainpuri... Bhoongaon Etah Gihror 48,375 7,088 22,469 1,850 2,42,446 4,267 1,63,003 4,885 1,67,896 11,311 1,19,890 6,703 1,31,742 7,664 26,751 722 57,214 1,250 2,29,935 5,715 43,175 5,352 52,198 640 68,7901 2,783 29,547 2,405 1,27,350l 10,801 1,60,541 2,198 2,93,373 4,306 72,825 3,619 1,88,568 1,979 19,798 1,442 19,634 96,073 4,346 68,486 1,911 96,177 2,431) 2,050 2,963 23,895 28,908 35,9961 1,286 2,132 8,531 11,949 13,799 1 2,824 59,517 28,782 91,123 95,390 2 1,730 13,968 63,281 78,979 83,864 1 28,033 28,472 56,505 67,816 2 2,469 22,735 23,462 48,666 35,4292 1,967 18,594 34,252 54,813 62,477 2 5,530 3,895 9,425 10,147 2 205 14,820 2,678 17,706 18,956 3 1,696 53,093 20,285 75,074 80,789 2 3,977 18,444 24,344 29,696 1 1,923 9,700 6,228 15,928 16,568 3 10,290 16,951 29,486 32,269 2 2,245 3,048 8,325 15,4481 17,853 1 4,075 8,137 63,300 71,751 82,552 1 1,314 41,036 17,449 75,938 78,136 2 17,453 67,295 32,746 1,27,474 1,31,780 2 27,433 1,973 35,287 48,969 52,588 1 11,709 53,058 17,458 85,638 87,617 2 15,122 4,866 4,568 13,134 14,576 1 3,700 15,343 1 13,393 25,817 18,651 57,861 62,2071 3,604 26,640 9,036 38,280 40,191 1 3,939 32,302 4,536 42,777) 45,208 2 6 7 8 1 7 7 8 2 3 6 3 4 1 6 8 10 7 1 5 NEONONOSCO Enconvoro o ar --- NNNNCO CONNONCOIN 7 6 13 3 1 12 4 5 14 12 1 4 7 3 8 4 10 12 3 EVVONO A COCOA ORA; 7 3 2 VOL. 11.] 459 LAND TAX OF AGRA AND THE DOAB. New Jumma. Pergunnahs. Old Bunjur Zillahs. Culturable Area Cultivation and Fallow. Acre rate on cul. Total Acre Rate on tivation including Total Culti-Cultivation Culturuble Land. New Bunjur. Not Iraigated. vation and Irrigated. Fallow, New Bunjur 2 2 5 4 9 1 912 2,618 4,002 1,576 7,908 3,761 3,684 4,379 14,912 4,567 7,984 9,141 4,047 7,671 7,429 6,709 6,383 11,457 18,354 17,6821 11,4741 3,348 8,738 27,294 77,735 96,966 9,617 3,135 26,056 26,968 8,557 34,223 36,841 6,329 26,944 30,946 7,916 15,311 16,8871 21,424 37,833 45,741 10,274 44,997 48,758 24,991 1,09,435 1,13,119 14,812 1,18,161 1,22,540 13,643 34,717, 49,629 1 1 2 2 ato alla cicoaroo 1 2 2 1 2,191 7,637 5,161 11,050 20,336 32,095 4,649 21,880 30,146 64,723 32,337 72,362 2 1 1 Karhal 64,285 Kishni Nubee Gunj 71,466 Kuraoli 48,467 Mainpuri... { Kursana 17,561 Suhawur 50,272 Sukeet 75,842 Shekoabad 1st Division 2,40,595 Shekoabad 2nd Division 2,84,148 Sirpoora 39,436 Sohar Soj 68,241 Talugal Munehana 1,14,861 Atrouli Chandos Hasan Gurh Klatrass 2,62,186 Husen 41,558 Alighur Khais Koel Mursan 1,52,053 Murthal Somna Azimnagur 1,09,752 Bama 18,331 81,171 Bhejpur Farokhabad Chibramow 93,828 Saurick 78,418 Taligram 1,19,956 O AAO aro vero Nomino 2 9 12 12 6 co arco e A CON CONSENTE CON Cő anton © co co con ovomoverno con NYNON ECHA COAG 2 3,573 1,432 3,693 71,036 90 10,635 3 3,123 1,738 47,935 2 22,068 96,797 1,00,370 2 6,583 17,218 18,650 2 2 2 10,686 58,621 61,744 2 1 2 70,498 14,484 41,000 42,628 33,080 2 41,928 2 1 2 3 6 9 1 14 14 10 14 1 4 2 : 0000 8 ... 8 2 [ 460 1 (PART 1. FERRY FUNDS. N. W. PROVINCES. Agra, Judicial Department, 10th February, 1841.—The Honourable the Lieutenant Governor directs, that on the appearance of this Notification in the Gazette, the several District committees proceed to form themselves in the manner herein prescribed. 1.-Comınittees shall be formed in each District, for the management of the Surplus Ferry Funds collected under Regulation VI. 1819, and applicable under Clause II, Section VII, of that enactment to the pro- motion of the convenience and safety of travellers, and the facility of Commercial intercourse. 2.- These committees shall consist of the Magistrate and Collector, the Joint-Magistrate and Deputy Collector, the Executive Engineer, the Civil Surgeon, and any other number of persons whom they may associate with themselves, subject to the confirmation of the Commissioner of the Division, whose approval is necessary-when once so appointed, they are only removeable by the Government. Three Members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. 3.—The Commissioner of the division shall be a Member of the Local Committees, and preside at the Meetings whenever he is present. He shall also have a casting vote, whether absent or present, when opinions are divided. 4.-—The whole country is divided into four Unions, each of which is supposed to contain within itself great lines of Commercial intercourse, crossing the country from east to west. The Surplus Ferry Funds in these are to be thrown together and divided between the several Districts which compose them. The first Union will consist of the Districts of Bijnore, Moradabad, Suharunpore, Moozuffernugger, and the Delhi Territory. The second Union will comprise the Districts of Bareilly, Pillibheet, Shajehanpore, Budaon, Furruckabad, Mynpoorie, Allyghur, Boolundshuhur, Muttra, and Agra. The third Union will comprise the Districts of Etawah, Cawnpore, Futtehpore, Allahabad, Hameerpore, and Banda. The fourth Union will consist of the Districts of Goruckpore, Azimgurb, Juanpore, Mirzapore, Benares, and Ghazeepore. 5.-At the close of each official year, the Accountant will ascertain what is the amount of the Surplus Ferry Funds in each Union during the preceding year, and distribute the total equally amongst the several Dis- tracts comprised in it. Though the Government reserves to itself the power of making a different allotinent of the Funds, should such alteration hereafter appear expedient. The Delhi Territory, for this purpose, should be considered as comprising four Districts, Rohtuck being united with Paneeput, and Hurreeanah with the Bhuttee Territory. The adjustment for the year, ending with April 30, 1840, including the amounts accrued in former years, will be made inmediately, and the result communicated by the Accountant to the several Magistrates. 6.- The Commissioner, on the recommendation of the Committee, is competent to sanction Establishments to the amount of 150 Rupees per mensem, and estimates for works to the extent of 500 Rupees on any one work. Larger undertakings, than the above, must be submitted to the Government for approval. VOL. 11.) 461 FERRY FUNDS IN N. W. P. 7.- The same Committee, constituted as above, will administer the one- per-cent. Road Fund, but, without the restrictions on the disbursements contained in Para. 8. 8.- The District Committees will understand, that the following roads are exempted from their control, and are entirely under the charge of the Military Board. The Grand Trunk Road from the banks of the Currumnassa to Delhi, with branches from Goorshaigunge to Furruckhabad and Gazeeooddeen- nuggur to Meerut. The road from Mirzapore to Saugor. Extract of a letter from the Secretary to the Sudder Board of Revenue, North Western Provinces, No. 412, datca 6th October, 1840. Para. 12th.-1st Union commencing from the north and west. The first Union should consist of the Districts of Bijnore, Moradabad, Suharun- pore, Moozuffervuggur, Meerut and the Delhi Territory. The sugar of Bijnore and Moradabad, the spices, metals, minerals, and drugs of the Hills pass through these districts by the following lines : From Nujeebabad and Nugeena, through Suharunpore and Umbehta to Jughadree and Umritser. From the same origin, through Deobund and Gungoh to Thunesur, Um- ballah, Putteeala, &c. From the same quarter through Bhukurkeree and Moozuffernuggur to Shamlee, and thence to the Delhi Territory and protected Sikh States. Through Meranpore, Neloha, Meerut, and Moradnuggur to Delhi, thence of course to all Rajpootana, and every other Southern, Western, and North Western country-to Lahore, Bahawulpore, Scinde, and Surat. From the marts of Chandpore and Sher Kote in Moradabad, through Meerut, Bagput and Shahdera to Delhi. From Umroha in Moradabad, via Meerut and Bagput, and also via Hapur and Dasnah to Delhi. Para. 13th- The trade on the two upper lines is of less importance, but the trade in all the remaining lines, is immense in quantity and value. By these, the rice and sugar of Rohilound, and the various articles of Hill produce are conveyed through the numerous marts in the Upper Doab, to Lahore, the protected Sikh States and Upper Rajpootaana, as far as the banks of the Indus, and an immense return trade in salt is maintained. The Funds of all the Ferries crossed by these lines of trade cannot, in the Board's opinion, be more equitably used for the benefit of those, from whom they are received, than by facilitating communication on these lines. Para, 14.- The second Union, the Board observes, should be formed from the Districts of Bareilly, Phillibheet, Shahjehanpore, Budaon, Furrucka- bad, Mynpoorie, Allyghur, Boolundshuhur, Muttra, and Agra.. 15th.-The lines trade from central and lower Rohilcund pass through these districts, in the following directions : From Chundowsee in Rohilound, by Anoopshuhur and Coel to Hatrass, and thence to Muttra ånd Agra. · From Beesulpore, Ounlah, and Suheswan in Rohilcund, by Ramghat, Atrowlee, and Coel to Hatrass, and thence as before. From Shahjehanpore and Budaon in Rohilcund, by Soran Khasgunj, Marherah, and Secundra Rao to Hatrass, and ence as before, From Shahjebanpore, Furreedpore, Beejibra, Imrutpore, and other marts in lower Rohilcund, by Furruckabad through Ulleegunj, Etah and Hatrass, to Muttra and Agra. From the same quarter through Etah and Julleysur to Agra. 462 (PART 1. STATISTICS. From Furruckabad through Mynpoorie and Shekoabad and Ferozabad to Agra. Para. 16th.—The third Union, the Board remark, should consist of the District of Etawah, and those of the fourth Division-namely, Cawnpore, Futtehpore, Allahabad, Humeerpore and Banda. Para. 17th.---The whole trade of the Oude country, with the Southward, and vice versa, is carried on through these districts. Para. 18.-The lines are from Cawnpore through Ukberpore and Bhogneepore, to Calpee. From ditto through Korah, Jahanabad to Humeerpore, and by Ghatun- pore to the same place. From Cawnpore through Kudgwa and Bindkee to Banda ; and From Futtehpore to Banda, and of course from all these points to the numerous marts in Bundelcund, and onward to the South. Para. 19th.-These tracts are, however, all of less consequence than those above described, and the most important in this Union, are from Allahabad via the Lohagee pass to Mongawah and Rewah, and from Allahabad via Mirzapore to Chunar and Moghul Suraie, on the high road from Calcutta to Benares. Para. 20th.-- The fourth Union, in the Board's opinion, should consist of the Districts of the fifth Division, which, being divided off from the rest of these Provinces by the Territory of Oude, form a distinct tract. Para. 21st. The principal lines of land Carriage in that Division, are as follows: From Goruckpore through Azimgurh, Jounpore, and Phoolpore to Alla- habad. On this line, a considerable trade is carried on of Cotton import- ed to the Northward, and Hill products sent Southward. From Goruckpore through Dohree, Ghosse, Kopa, and Mow, to Ghazeepore. From Goruckpore through Toorteepar, Secunderpore and Kasimabad to Ghazeepore and Russerah, a large inland and very wealthy mart, to Bulleah and other ports on the Ganges. Fro... Azimghur through Mahomedabad and Mhow to Ghazeepore. From the same place through Cheriakote. A Road is also much required from Azimgurh through Deogaon and Keerakut, or through Cheriakote and Syedpora Bhittree to Benares. J. THOMASON, Secy. to the Govt., N. W. P. MORADABAD. 1.--Situation, BOUNDARIES, GENERAL APPEARANCE, AND SOIL. Moradabad, a town in Rohilcund, is situated in lat. 28° 50' 58" N. and long. 78° 44' 43" E., and is built on an elevated ridge of land, running N. W. and S. E. The elevation of the surrounding country is about 740 feet above the level of the sea, and the ridge alluded to, varies from twenty to thirty feet higher. This elevation extends to a considerable distance N. W., and forms here and there, as at Moradabad, the right bank of the Ram Gunga river. Like most otber native towns, Moradabad has no beauty to boast of, and is particularly deficient in mosques, tanks, &c. for so large a place. The houses are irregularly built, and crowded together, with abundance of dirt, and every thing that is disgusting : there is one tolerably VOL. 11.] 463 MORADABAD. numerous. good street running through it, about a mile in length, full of shops. This street is paved with calcined bricks, placed edgeways, and used to be kept in pretty good repair, so long as the town duties, or other funds were at the disposal of the magistrate for the purpose ; but since Government has forbidden the expenditure of these monies for any purpose without previ- ous sanction, the street has fallen greatly out of repair. There is a spaci- ous serai for travellers, with good native accommodations, and a daily mar- ket for the produce of the neighbourhood. To the northwest of Moradabad is a tract of sand varying from one to two miles in breadth, forming the bed of the Ram Gunga and its streams : beyond this, in the same direction, for about thirty miles, exten- sive cultivation, which decreases as it approaches the belt of forest, running at the foot of the hills. These hills, a continuation of the Himalaya, form the extreme boundary in this direction : they are about forty miles in a straight line from Moradabad at their nearest point, and in the direction of Kasheepoor and Chilkeea, are approachable without passing through mi the forest. To the south and west of Moradabad, the country is low and flat gen- erally ;-in some parts it is undulating. Cultivation is pretty general ; mangoe topes, and clusters of bamboos scattered here and there, but not To the westward, only, is there any jungle, and that is dimi- nishing yearly, from the encroachments of the plough and annual fires. The nearest point, to the cantonments, of jungle, is about two miles : it con- sists of dak and other trees of stinted growth, and extends to the high ground in a northerly direction. The land to the westward is more inun- dated than any other about Moradabad, yet even there no water lodges for any length of time, even in the rains ; the Gongon river, which runs about three miles distant, and numerous other smaller streams, serving to afford a quick drainage. The cantonments are situated nearly west of the town, and are separated from it only by the jail, which intervenes : they are on the same high land, the parasie is in the centre, and consists of about forty acres. The gar- rison consists of a regiment of native infantry and a jemadar's party of golundauze for the post guns. When the Moradabad district first fell under the domination of the Eng. lish, there was a strong force quartered at Chandousee, about thirty miles south of the town of Moradabad ; but, on the country becoming settled, the present small cantonment was established, and the other abandoned. The wells of Moradabad, and the cantonments are numerous, and abun- dant in their supply. Few of them even dry up in the hot season, and the water is generally esteemed good : their average depth is fifteen feet from the surface of the water, total depth averaging twenty-two feet. The depth encreases on nearing the hills in one direction, and approaching the Ganges in the other. The soil at Moradabad and the surrounding country is sandy. In the low lands, a surface of alluvial deposit, varying from a few inches to a foot and a half in depth, forms a productive soil for rice. The district about the sudder station of Moradabad is particularly free from morasses and jheels, and swampy land. The range of the Himalaya mountains to the northeast forms an im- posing object in clear weather, and it is surprizing, where the distance (only fifty miles) and the easy access by the Chilkeda Ghaut are consider- ed, that no part of them has been resorted to by the Europeans of the station. The Gagur range is close to the plains, from six to seven thou- sand feet in height, and possesses every qualification requisite for building and residence. 464 (PART 1. STATISTICS. II.-RIVERS. The rivers of Moradabad are two. The Ram Gunga issues from the hills about fifty miles from it, a small but rapid stream ; soon after emerging into the plains, it receives a number of tributaries, and especially a large one called the Dalah, close to Moradabad. From this place it is navigable for eight or nine months in the year to the Ganges, which it en- ters at two principal points; the greater body of the stream sometimes empties itself at Canonge, at other times close to Futtyghur. The navi- gation of the Rain Gunga was virtually closed for many years in conse- quence of the irregular exactions of the Sayer duties by the ameens of the Nawab of Rampoor, through whose jageer it ran for about twenty miles. This had a bad effect upon the commerce of Moradabad. Land carriage was very expensive, and could only be had recourse to for a few months of the year: trade and exchange stood still during the rainy season, and for some time after it, in consequence. So little did the nearest mart benefit by the produce of Moradabad, that where wheat has been selling at eighteen seers the rupee at Bareilly, thirty-two were obtainable at Moradabad. It has been considered that the whole extent of the ridge upon which, as before noticed, Moradabad stands, has been washed by the water of the Ram Gunga at some former period ; the loose sandy nature of the soil having permitted, as it still permits, the river to change its line of direc- tion. The second river at Moradabad, the Gongon, runs nearly parallel with the Ram Gunga, on the opposite side of the town, and about three to six miles distant ; it intersects the Meerut, Chandousee, and Bareilly roads. It is not navigable, and flows into the Ramgunga, about ten miles from Mo- radabad. It has a considerable stream, for the most part confined by steep sandy banks ; variable in depth, fordable in many places, except during the rains. It seems an admirable drainage to a large track of low country. Like most rivers, running through sandy soils, these abound in quicksands, and the Ram Gunga is constantly changing its bed. The water of these rivers is considered good and wholesome, especially the Ram Gunga ; and several of the European residents have used it in preference to the well waters, for culinary purposes. III.-CLIMATE. The climate of Moradabad may be considered one of the most healthy and delightful to Europeans in India. A resident of eight years standing asserts that he saw, during that time, as little disease among the Euro- pean community, as could have been expected in any European climate. The prevailing winds are east and west,-the former are perhaps the more frequent here than on the western side of the Ganges. The atmosphere is remarkably dry and clear-fogs rare. The cold weather may be said to commence about the middle of October ; but from the 15th September the nights and mornings are cool and pleasant. The months of December and January sometimes produce a degree of cold that is almost incredible : for instance in January 1836, the thermometer fell two mornings to 22° at sunrise, and for the successive days; it did not exceed 28°; at that time many pieces of water were covered with ice. The cool weather continues to the end of March, and often to the middle of April : the hot winds blow very irregularly, sometimes commencing about the 16th of April, at others not until the end of that month, or the beginning of May ; they are also generally unsteady ; alternating with a less strong wind from the east. Se- vere northwesters occur, at short intervals, from April to the com- mencement of the rains. VOL. 11.] 465 MORADABAD. The rains set in irregularly, from the 10th of June, to the few first days of July. They are usually heavy, and the heat during the intervals very moderate ; they cease about the end of August to the 10th of September. Subjoined is an average state of the thermometer from the 1st October 1835, to the 30th September 1836, at sunrise and at noon. Years. Months. At Sunrise. At Noon. .... 67 84} 1835 October 680 770 November 47 70 December 44 635 1836 January 36 56 February 37 61 March 53 70 April 76 May. 77 June, 79 86 July .. 80 82 August 82 85 September 79 84 It must be remarked that the three latter months of July, August and September, present a state of the thermometer much above the usual average ; the year 1834 having been remarkable for excessive heat, in con- sequence of the scanty fall of rain ; not more than one-fourth, or perhaps a fifth of the usual quantity. In April 1836, the town of Moradabad was visited with an epidemic remittent fever, of a very fatal character, and the excess of heat, arising principally from the scantiness of rain, continued it until the setting in of the cold weather decreased and modified the disor- der. IV.-POPULATION. Moradabad is a populous town, and was originally a Rohilla colony. There are few natives of great respectability, although there are many of considerable wealth. A census of the population has not been taken for many years ; but it has been ascertained that the number of dwelling houses amounts to 6,520, and if we allow to each of these, five persons, (which may be assumed as the general average) it will give a population of 32,600. V.-RELIGION AND CASTES. The inhabitants of the town of Moradabad are both of the Mahomedan and Hindoo religions : a large portion are Puthans. VI.--NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Minerals.—There is a total absence of any thing resembling mineral productions throughout the district. Quadrupeds.—The district of Moradabad abounds with a variety of wild animals and game of almost every description. Elephants inhabit the fo- rest ; they roam about in considerable numbers, and commit great havoc in the neighbouring crops : they are, however, of a description that is not valued, consequently they are seldom caught. The tiger is found in the same neighbourhood, and other parts of the district ; also the bear (species PART 1. VOL. 11. K 3 466 (PART 1. STATISTICS. Tebitan); leopards are scarce. The following other animals, most of which, principally inhabit to the north and east of Moradabad, but are to be found in other parts, -as the kadur of the Ganges and all patches of heavy jungle. Native names. Specific names. Jackall Gheedur Canis Aureus. Lynx or Kurwaunk! Otis Aurita. Fox Loombree Canis Vulpis Dukanie. Wild Ilog Bunela Soor'h Sus Aper Hare Khurgosh A variety of Lepus ti- midus. Squirrel Gillaree Spotted Deer Cheetul Axis Spotted. Nilghau Roz Damalis risia. Hog Deer Para Cervus porcinus. Antelope Hurun Small, or 4 horned do. Chouka Antilope Quadricornus. Bara singha, or Maha Cervus Elephus, or Bah- raiya (Hodgson). The term Jhank seems to be used for all full grown deer with horns. Game Birds. Bittern Booz Ardsa Stillarus. Braminee Duck Chukwa Chukwa. Wild Duck Moorgabee Anus Crecca. Floriken Charuj Otis Bengalensis. Leek Bestard 2 Chulla Churaj, Floriken S Grey Partridge Kala Tetur Tetrao Orientalis. Quail Butair Tetrao Cortunix. Rock Pigeon (large and small) Bukt, or Buntchur Tetrao Arenarius. Solitary Snipe Burra Chahur Gallinago Namoricola, or Scolopacious Snipe. Common Snipe Chahur Gallinago. Jack Snipe Ditto Gallipula. Painted Snipe Ditto • Scolopax Capiensis. Jungle Fowl Bun Moorghee Gallus Soneratii. Wild Goose Kulauk Anus Anser ferus, Of ducks and teal there are many varieties. Pea fowl abound also in some parts. Reptiles.-- Four kinds only of venomous snakes are generally met with ; but more than that number may be found in the district. The four kinds alluded to are the Cobra Capella (Colubes Nigra of Russell) ; the Karait (Gedi Peragoodoo of Russell); the Chetul, and the Cobra tamarinda of Russell. This latter is a small snake, rarely exceeding a foot and a half in length, of a light grey colour, with a broad and black spectacle, marked upon it. One specimen of this kind was produced as a Cobra Vanilla : the existence of which here is very doubtful. The Boa Constrictor is found in and near the large forest, where it has been killed of considerable size. Harmless kinds, and water snakes are numerous. The Bis Cobra is very common; but as far as some naturalists have been able to ascertain, the bite of this reptile is not poisonous, although the natives pertinaciously assert it to be so. If it be poisonous, and so deadly as report says, it is singular that not a solitary case seems to be recorded ; and yet there are abundance of cases published, of bites from different kinds of poisonous snakes. Scorpions and centipedes are to be found in every building ; but * See also Gwalior, p. 394 to 399 of P. I, Y. II, VOL 11.) 467 MORADABAD. neither of them grow to any size, and their sting, or bite, is more painful than dangerous. Fish.–Of fish the Ramgunga produces three kinds that are good in their season :-the Rooee, the Marseeah, and the Alwaree or Mullet. The latter is a rich and most delicious fish when in season. The supply of fish is very irregular, depending less on the season, or the demand for it by Europeans, than the leisure and inclination of the fishermen, who are the Kuhars of the town, and seem to be under no kind of control. Most of the streams that issue from the hills abound with fish, and the Marseeah in the Kosi, near to Chilkeea, affords excellent sport to the fly fisherman. VII.-AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE. The produce of the district is considerable, consisting of grain through- out ; , Bansmuttee, and superior kinds of rice towards the hills, and on the lowlands adjoining water. Wheat also thrives ; Bajra, Jowahir, &c. are grown on the high sandy land ; Cotton thrives well; Sugarcane is partially cultivated throughout the district, but in the Northern division, in pergun- nahs Nujeebabad and Keruthpoor, the sugarcane is of a very superior qua- lity ; it is a large black cane, full of saccharine juice. The assessment on the land, for this latter product, is from ten to sixteen rupees per beegah ; in all other parts of the district, it varies from two to four rupees. At places at a distance from nullahs, kutcha wells are used for irrigation ; but they scarcely ever last beyond one dry season, falling in during the periodi- cal rains. The domestic animals used for labor in the district are buffaloes, cows (a small breed), asses and mules. Fruit and vegetable productions are numerous and good. In the gar- dens most of the trees, shrubs, and flowers common to such situations are raised. The Bombay mangoe is very productive, and the fruit remarkably large and good, if the trees are well protected from the extreme cold of this climate. A variety of peach trees, including the nectarine, which latter bears, but the fruit does not ripen ; some of the peaches are large, juicy, and high flavored ; the apricot is found in one garden only. Ap- ples and pears are produced, but without juice and taste ; grapes are pro- lific, large, and of fine favor, but ripen late in the season; lequots, custard apples, guavas, alloo-bokara, and damson, abundant ; strawberries thrive ; are of large size and excellent flavor ; two crops are produced yearly, one in March, the other in May,--the latter crop is inferior. Then there are the mulberry, figtree, and the Indian rubber tree : of this there are two beautiful specimens. The teak tree is flourishing in one compound, and a beautiful species of firtree has grown to an enormous height, and is very healthy. Flowers and shrubs in immense variety, brought chiefly from the Botanical garden at Seharunpore, flourish in the various gardens. Of European garden vegetables there are peas, beans, potatoes, cab- bages, cauliflowers (the last as fine as any in Europe), turnips, nolecoles, carrots, cucumber, celery, beet root, &c. &c. which wouid, in may instances, bear comparison with English productions. A variety of herbs also. In fact the climate and soil of this part of the country are perhaps as favorable to the rearing of European garden roduce, as any part of India. It is true that potatoes are generally small ; but this arises not so much from a defect in the soil, as a want of care in procuring sced from other districts, and this carelessness may be accounted for, from the moderate price, and abundance of the article procurable in the bazar, supplied from Futtyghur and the hills. 468 (PART 1 STATISTICS. VIII.-Forest TREES. The native gardens, and the surrounding district, furnish a great number of trees valuable for their produce. The common Mangoe is very abundant and productive; the fruit is of a superior kind. The Seesoo, Neem, Peepul, Byur, Tamarind, Semul, or cotton tree, Bombax, Kujoor, Mudar, Castor oil tree, (this tree grows luxuriantly,) Rokun, Kier, or Keer’h, (the extract from this tree is called kuth, and forms the part of the pawn as eaten by the na- tives, which tinges the mouth of a deep red colour,) Khoorma, a Chooarah, Umultas, (the pod is used by the natives as a cathartic,) Karonda, Beel , Koochilla, or Nux Vomica (the oil is used in friction for rheumatism, and, pounded, is given internally for palsy,) Bug’hrenda, Goonchee (the seeds are powdered and inserted in the eye for weak sight,) Khoosoom (the flowers are used as a red dye, the seeds and juice are cathartic and diu- retic,) Cherounjee, and many others are cultivated by the natives in their gardens, either for medicinal purposes, or for ornament. The forest under the hills produces abundance of the Toon, and Ebony. There is also a small shrub, called Toolsee, a species of spear mint, which the Hindoos reverence and poojah to. It is a perennial, and grows to its full size in the rainy season, Howering in July: The expressed juice of this shrub is used, in combination with other ingredients, for the cure of a species of herpetic eruption, called the dand, common to natives, around the loins, where the curr merbund is tightened. It has been used with ex- traordinary success, and is worthy of attention : the subjoined is the formula of preparation. Resin ... ziv. Quicksilver. 3j. Sulphur. ziv. Borax. 3j. Goat's milk Toolsee juice. IX.-COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURES. Moradabad formerly had a trade of considerable extent with Calcutta, in cotton fabrics, the manufacture of which was carried on at Rampore also, and at Chundowsee ; but of late years this trade has dwindled to sufficient only for the supply of the immediate district. Only the coarser kinds can be procured ready-made ; but table cloths, napkins, various qualities of jeans, dosootie, and the coarser cloths to any extent, may be had to order. European articles appear first to have driven these out of the Calcutta market, and the expense of a land exportation kept them out of other markets, when the navigation of the Ram Gunga was virtually closed, as has been previously noticed. X.-ROADS AND APPROACHES. The principal roads out of Moradabad are to Meerut and Bareilly; all the others, such as to Almorah, Suheswan, Bijnore, &c., may be considered cross country roads. The Meerut road, as far as Gurmooktesur, is very bad ; a considerable part of it is under water during the rains, and in the dry season, it is so intersected with wet and dry watercourses, as to impede travelling considerably. Nothing can amend this state of things, but rais- ing the road in many places eight and ten, and in all two or three feet; and then many small pucka bridges will be required for the drainage of the water. Ï'he same remarks apply to the road to Bareilly. These roads, however, are practicable for all kinds of carriage during the dry season. VOL. 11.) 469 MUTTRA. XI.-COVENANTED AND UNCOVENANTED SERVANTS. Covenanted.-Civil and Session Judge, Magistrate and Collector, Settle- ment Officer, Revenue Surveyor, Civil Assistant Surgeon. Uncovenanted.- Deputy Collector, Principal Sudder Ameens (two), Sud- der Ameen, Moonsiff. MUTTRA. rasses. I.-GENERAL APPEARANCE AND SOIL. The cantonment of Muttra is built on a sandy alluvial plain, on the west bank of the Jumna, and about three quarters of a mile below the city, which is situated in lat 27° 32' N., long 77° 37' E. 80 miles S. S. E. from Delhi ; 30 miles N. E. by N. from Agra ; 20 miles E. N. E. from Bhurtpoor; and 60 miles E. from Alwur. It has been occupied as a military post, since it fell into the hands of the British in 1803 : and before that time was the head-quarters camp of the Mahratta Commander-in-chief, General Perron. It once was a military post of importance, from its vicinity to the Bhurt poor and Alwur frontier ; and from its facility of communication with the west- ern states. At one time it is said to have had 10,000 men stationed at it, but of late the force has been greatly reduced. In 1835, the native infantry then quartered there were ordered to Agra, and the ordinary garrison now consists of only one regiment of native cavalry and one troop of European horse artillery The Jumna sweeps close to the city, and the side facing the river is in the form of a crescent, corresponding with a bend in the stream. The bank on which the city and cantonment are built, is rather higher than the surrounding country, undulating and intersected here and there with ravines, particularly in the immediate vicinity of the city. The opposite bank is low, sandy, and shelving ; but there are no standing jheels or mo- The city being built upon a succession of mounds, and raised con- siderably above the level of the river, has a fine appearance from the oppo- site bank. The whole length of the city is skirted with ghauts leading down to the edge of the water, which are generally crowded with people, who come from all parts of the country to bathe ; Muttra being a place of great sanctity amongst Hindoos, from being the birthplace of Khrishna. At one time the city was surrounded by a wall , but there are now only a few detached pieces of the ancient circumvallation to be met with, and two or three gateways. The old fort is in complete ruins, and stands on a very high mound, on the bank of the river, which commands a good prospect for several miles above and below the city. The interior of the city is extremely filthy, and, like most other native places, the streets are narrow, winding, and very dirty. The shops amount to about 2,350, and the houses forming the principal streets, are in general two or three stories in height. Many of the cross streets are so narrow, as scarcely to admit of two persons passing each other without touching, and during heavy falls of rain, they are scarcely passable. The buildings in the city are chiefly pucka, with tiled or flat-roofs : in the cantonment the dwellings in common use are mud huts, thatched with grass. It is related that Muttra was a flourishing town, on the invasion of Hindoostan by the Mahomedans, and that it was destroyed by them, as far back as A. D. 1018. Having been rebuilt, many temples were erect- ed: the principal one was that of the Rajah of Oorcha, and cost thirty- six lacs of rupees, which was razed by Aurungzebe, who erected a mosque with the materials, on the spot ; this building is still called Aurungzebe's mosque. 470 (PART 1. STATISTICS. The country about Muttra, is flat' and monotonous, but it is a good corn country; and the whole of it is under cultivation. There are no mountains or rising grounds in sight; the soil is dry, light, and sandy, with a small admixture of kunkur. There are no swamps or jheels of any ex- tent, within several miles of the cantonments, and the country is free from jungle; there being only a few scattered trees or small clumps to be met with here and there, in the vicinity of villages, and the soil yields but little of itself, without care and cultivation. There are numerous wells at the station, but the water from them, generally speaking, is rather hard or brackish; there are some in which it is perfectly good and soft. But all the water appears perfectly whole- some, both for men and cattle; no injurious effects on the health of the inhabitants appear, and there are no diseases endemical to the place from that or any other cause. During the hot season of the year, water is found at about eighteen feet, or more, from the surface. The soil of can- tonments is sandy, mixed with a large proportion of saline impregnations, and is besides, intested with white-ants. The cantonment is not liable to floodings or inundations, or the forma- tion of stagnant pools; the water during the rains being immediately car- ried off by two nullahs that run through the station, --one near the cavalry lines, the other near the old infantry, -besides, by numerous ravines, into the river. The river very partially overflows the bank in a few places in the neighbourhood, during the height of the rains; but the extent of ground flooded is very inconsiderable. II.--RIVERS. There is no river, with the exception of the Jumna, which, as already stated, runs close to the town: it is navigable at all seasons of the year, for boats of a large size. The river is very wide during the rains; but in the cold and dry seasons, it is divided into numerous channels by sand banks. It appears that the water during the dry months has been greatly decreased by the re-opening of the Kurnaul and Delhi canal. Precise information on this subject has not been procured, but the Native inhabitants of Muttra state the river to be about two feet lower in the dry season, than it used to be before the canal was opened ; and the traders state that boats are longer in coming from Allahabad than formerly. In March, the river is generally fordable near the cavalry lines, and other places, and is then about three fect deep. III.-CLIMATE. The salubrity of Muttra is equal to that of most stations in the Upper Provinces; perhaps more healthy. During the years 1832-3-4 and 5, the average mortality amongst the Native troops was one death in one hundred and forty-five men. The average mortality in the European horse artil- lery during 1833 was 43 per cent., of which one case was of cholera : du- ring 1834 it was 11} per cent., the cholera having raged during August, and eight men having fallen by that scourge. During 1835 no casualty occurred. The mortality among the prisoners in the jail averages two per cent. From several detached registers, it appears that the thermometer averages 52° in January (42° in the open air, and water in the wells 75 and 76°), and 64° in February, 86° in July, 68° in November, 62° in December. From registers kept in 1833,- ,-a year remarkable for the deficiency of rain throughout the country, the rain gauge exhibited a total fall of 11 inches. There was no rain during January, February, March, April, May and VOL. 11.] 471 MUTTRA. October : during July 51, during August 4}, during December 1 inch, with light falls in June, September, and November. The prevailing winds are westerly throughout the year, chiefly from the various points between S. W. and N. w. The hot winds blow from this direction, and are constantly veering between those points ; but for one day that it blows from the S. W., it blows two from the N. W. The easterly breezes are irregular in their periods of return, and seldom last for more than a few days at a time. On an average, the wind does not blow more than one day out of ten in this direction. The weather on these occasions is always disagreeable, whether it be in the hot or cold season of the year; when it occurs during hot winds, there is no evaporation from the tatties. The easterly breezes appear to come already loaded with as much moisture as they can take up, consequently many people lay the tatties aside, and trust to shutting up the house, and the use of punkahs, to keep themselves cool until the return of the westerly winds. Most people feel in low spirits during the easterly winds, the digestive functions are performed imper- fectly, and it is fortunate for the health of the inhabitants, that they are not visited more frequently than they are, by this disagreeable and insalu- brious wind. IV.--POPULATION. The city of Muttra is divided into fifty-eight partitions, or mohulahs, and there are said to be 7,000 pukka, and 5,000 kutcha houses ; 190 lin- doo mundurs, or other places of worship, and 19 mosques. The populas tion is estimated at about 60,000, of whom 6,000 are Mahomedans, and 54,000 Hindoos. Of these latter it is estimated that there are 15,000 who are Brahmins, or other holy mendicants, attached to the various ghauts and places of Hindoo worship : and there is not perhaps another city in the country where there are so many poor people to be met with. The diseased and the aged come from afar, in search of relief from their bodily ailments, or to end their days within the holy precincts of this sancti- The residents within the cantonments vary according to the strength of the garrison; the number of prisoners in charge of the civil power are, on an average, between two and three hundred. V.-NATURAL PRODUCTIONS. Muttra is a place of refuge and residence of some thousands of the tribe Simia; who are abundantly supplied with food by the religious Hindoos. fied spot. VI.-AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE The soil of cantonments is not favourable for gardening, consequently Muttra is one of the worst stations in the Upper Provinces for fruit, and is far inferior in this respect to Meerut, Agra, and Allyghur. The grapes, strawberries and peaches, which at Meerut and Kurnaul are perfectly delicious, are here scarce, and of bad quality. Water melons are grown in immense quantities on the sand bauks in the river, after the subsiding of the water in the autumn. Of vegetables ; celery, cauliflowers, peas, carrots, and turnips are good, and in abundance; potatoes are grown, but the best are those brought from Futtyghur. . A difference in the soil , water, and mode of cultivation, may cause this falling of. As already stated, the surrounding district is a good corn country: the land in the immediate vicinity of villages is irrigated from wells; but elsewhere the crops depend on the periodical rains. The principal descriptions of grain cultivated are, gram, wheat, and barley; but they are chiefly consumed in the district. Rice does not grow, there being no low marshy lands in 472 [PART 1. STATISTICS. the neighbourhood procurable for its production. Cotton also grows in abundance. The neighbourhood of the Mootee jheel, or lake, which is about ten miles from the station, opposite to Bindrabun, and which is supposed to have been the old bed of the Jumna, supplies the cavalry with grass, during the dry season. Grass is also procured from the vicinity of the Koela jheel, about five miles south of the cantonments. VII.-COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURES. Muttra is a place of no importance in a commercial point of view; with the exception of cotton, there are no exports of consequence. Salt brought from Bhurtpoor and Deig is loaded at Muttra ; but there is scarcely any manufactured within the zillah. Many of the natives have a great prejudice against the use of this salt, and say it gives them the itch. It is not so pure, but is very much cheaper than the Lahore or Sambur salt, and consequently is chiefly used by the poor classes of inhabitants, who are most subject to this disorder in all countries. The disease may therefore be more properly attributed to the want of cleanliness, than to any bad quality in the salt. VIII.-FUEL. Fuel is very scarce, and consequently dear ; wood selling at only three maunds for the rupee. The poor classes chiefly use opla, which is made of cow dung and straw; but they complain that this gives an unpleasant flavor-and no wonder-to the chepaties, or baked flour, which is the prin- cipal article of their diet. In one instance, a gentleman at the station burnt coals, from Calcutta, during one cold season ; these coals cost twelve annas a maund at Agra, and were, in his opinion, relatively cheaper than wood, at the price abovementioned. IX.-ROADS AND APPROACHES. There is great facility of communication both by land and by water: during the cold and dry seasons, the Jumna is crossed by a bridge of boats at the lower extremity of the city. The roads in the immediate vicinity of the station are good, and have been much improved of late years. The lower road to Agra is very heavy and sandy, and is only made use of during the cold and dry seasons, being partly under water, during the rains. The first stage of the upper road (to Furrah), is a mile further than by the other; from Furrah, there is a good made road to Agra. The road towards Delhi, is tolerably good. Part of the road to Bhurtpoor, which is two short marches distant, is gen- erally in a bad state. There is very great traffic on this road to Hat- trass via Muttra ; rice, sugar, &c. &c., being sent to Bhurtpoor, and salt received from it. The worst parts of the road are from Russoulpoor to Bhurtpoor, where, in many places, especially after rain, it is two feet deep in soft mud. In consequence the hackeries have to quit the road, and make a detour round the fields, besides requiring six or seven bullocks, according to the load, This bad part of the road is in the Bhurtpoor territory. The roads on the east side of the Jumna are extremely heavy, nearly up to a bullock's knees with sand, and making the addition of another pair or two of cattle a matter of absolute necessity. X-COVENANTED AND UNCOVENANTED SERVANTS. Covenanted.—Civil and Session Judge, Magistrate and Collector, Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector, Assistant with special powers. Uncovenanted.-Sudder Aumeen, Deputy Collector. LISTS OP HOME, AND BRITISH-INDIAN AND COLONIAL GOVERNMENTS, AND CIVIL, MILITARY, MEDICAL, ECCLECIASTICAL, AND MARINE SERVICES AND ESTABLISHMENTS OF BENGAL, AGRA, MADRAS, BOMBAY, AND CEYLON. Vive-vale-Si quid novisti rectius istis Candidus imperti; si non, his utere mecum. Hor. Ep. I. 6-67-8. PART II.-VOL. II. PART II. VOL. II. B LISTS ОР HOME AND BRITISH-INDIAN AND COLONIAL GOVERNMENTS, &C. PRESENT ROYAL FAMILY OF GREAT BRITAIN. (ALEXANDRINA) Victoria I. Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, born May 24th, 1819, succeeded her Uncle, William IV., June 20th, 1837, Proclaimed June 21st, Crowned June 28th, 1838, and Married Feb. 10th, 1840, to her cousin, H. R. H. Prince Albert of Sase Coburg Gotha. Issue : Victoria Adelaide Mary Louisa, Princess Royal, born Nov. 21, 1840. Prince of Wales, born Nov. 9th, 1841. PRINCE COXSORT. Francis Albert Augustus Charles Emanuel, Duke of Saxe, Prince of Saxe Coburg and Gotha, K. G., born 26th August, 1819. THE QUEEN DOWAGIR. Adelaide, sister of the Duke of Saxe Meiningen, born August 13th, 1792, married July 1th, 1818, to his late Majesty King William IV., who died in June 20th, 1837. MOTHER OF THE QUEEN. Victoria Maria Louisa, sister of the Duke of Saxe Coburg Gotha, born August 17, 1786, married May 29, 1818, to the late Edward, Duke of Kent, and had issue, Alexandrina Victoria, her present Majesty. The Duke died January 23, 1820. UNCLES AND AUNTS OF THE QUEEN. Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover (Duke of Cumberland,) born June 5, 1771, married May 2.), 1815, Frederica Louisa Carolina Sophia Alexandrina, sister of the Duke of Mecklenburgh Strelitz, and widow of Frederick William, Prince of Sloms-Braunfels, born March 20, 1778, died June 29, 1841, issue : George Frederick, born May 27, 1819. Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, born January 27, 1773. Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Cambridge, born February 24, 1774, mar- ried May 7, 1818, to Augusta Wilhelmina Louisa, viece of the Landgrave of Hesse, born July 25, 1797, issue : George William, born March 26, 1819 ; Augusta Caroline, July 19, 1822, Mary Adelaide, Nor. 27, 1833. Mary, born April 25, 1776, married July 22, 1816, to her cousin William Frederick, Duke of Gloucester, who died November 30, 1834. Sophia, born Noveniber 3, 1777. COUSIN OF THE QUEEN (Sister of the late Duke of Gloucester.) Sophia Matilda, born May 23, 1773. VOL. 11.] 3 The Queen and Her Ministers. LINE OF SUCCESSION TO THE BRITISH THRONE. 1. The Prince of Wales. 2. Victoria, Princess Royal. Descendants of King George III. 3. Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover 4. Gcorge, his son. 5. Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex. 6. Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Cambridge. 7. George, his son. 8. Augusta Caroline of Cam- bridge. 9. Mary Adelaide of Cambridge. 10. Mary, Duchess of Gloucester. 11. Princess Sophia. Descendant of Duke of Gloucester brother of King George III. 12. Princess Sophia of Glouces- ter. 22. Frederick Augustus, do. born January 24, 1813. 23. Charlotte, daughter of Prince Paul of Wirtemberg, (married Grand Duke Michael of Russia,) born Jan. 9, 1807. 24. Grand Duchess Maria, daugh- ter of Grand Duke Michael, born March 9, 1825. 25. Grand Duchess Elizabeth, born May 26, 1826. 26. Another daughter of Grand Duke Michael, born. 27. do. do. do. 28. Pauline, daughter of Prince Paul of Wirtemberg, born Feb. 25, 1810, 29. Catherine, married to Jerome Buonaparte, born Feb. 21, 1783. 30. Their son, born August 24, 1814. Descendants of Caroline, Queen of Denmark, Sister to King Gcorge III. 31. Caroline, Princess Royal of Denmark, born October 28, 1793. 32. Wilhelmina, her sister, born Jan, 17, 1808. 33. Louisa, Dowager Duchess of Holstein d'Augustenbourg, sister of the late King of Denmark, born July 19, 1798. 34. Christian, Duke of Holstein d'Augustenburg, born July 19,1798. 35. Frederica Maria, his daugh- ter, born August 27, 1824. 36. Caroline Amelia, do. born January 15, 1826. 37. Frederick, brother of the Duke of Holstein d'Augustenbourg, born Aug. 23, 1800. 38. Caroline Amelia, his sister (married to the King of Denmark) born June 28, 1796. Descendants of the Duchess of Brunswick, Sister of King George II1. 13. Charles, Ex-Duke of Bruns- wick, born Oct. 30, 1804. 14. William, Duke of Brunswick, born April 25, 1806. 15. Frederick William, King of Wirtemberg, born Sept. 27, 1781. 16. Charles, Prince Royal of Wirtemberg, born March 6, 1823. 17. Maria Charlotte, Princess of Wirtemberg, born (ct. 30, 1816. 18. Sophia, Princess of do. born June 17, 1818. 19. Catherine, Princess of do., born August 24, 1821. 20. Paul, brother of the King of do. born Jan. 19, 1785. 21. Frederick Charles, his son, born Feb. 21, 1808. THE QUEEN AND HER MINISTERS. The QUEEN. June 20, 1837, VICTORIA I. Queen of the United Kingdom of Great BRITAIN and IRELAND, Defender of the Faith, Sovereign of the Orders of the Garter, Thistle, Bath, and St. Patrick. 4 Foreign Ministers residing in England. [PART 11. The Queen's MINISTERS. First Lord of the Treasury (Prime Mi- } Right Flon. Sir Robert Peel, Bt. Leader of the House of Lords (without ? Duke of Wellington. office) Chancellor of the Exchequer... Right Hon. Henry Goulburn. Lord Chancellor. Lord Lyndhurst. President of the Council Lord Wharncliffe. Lord Privy Seal ... Duke of Buckingham. Home Department Secretaries Right Hon. Sir James Graham. Foreign Earl of Aberdeen. of State, Colonial Lord Stanley First Lord of the Admiralty Earl of Haddington. President of the Board of Control..... Lord Fitzgerald and Vesci. President of the Board of Trade ......... Earl of Ripon. Secretary at War Right Hon. Sir IIenry Hardinge. Treasurer of the Navy and Paymaster Right Hon. Sir Ed. Knatchbull, of the Forces .. Bt. Postmaster-General Lord Lowther. Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster... Lord Granville Somerset. First Commissioner of Land Revenue... Earl of Lincoln. Vice President of the Board of Trade) Right Hon. William Ewart Glad- and Master of the Mint.... stone. Lord Chamberlain, Earl Delawarr. Lord Steward.. Earl of Liverpool. Master of the Horse Earl of Jersey Master General of the Ordnance . Right Hon. Sir George Murray, Attorney-General Sir Frederick Pollock. Solicitor General .. Sir William Webb Follet. Lord Advocate ... Solicitor General.. SCOTLAND. Right Hon. Sir William Rae, Bt. Duncan M`Neill, Esq. Lord Lieutenant Chief Secretary Lord Chancellor.. Commander af thé Forces. Attorney General ....... Solicitor General .. IRELAND. Earl De Grey. Lord Elliot. S Rt. Hon. Sir Edw. Burtenshaw Sugden. Lieut. Gen. Sir Ed. Blakeney. Right Hon. F. Blackburne. E. Pennefather, Esq. FOREIGN MINISTERS RESIDING IN ENGLAND. America Austria Bavaria. Belgium Andrew Stevenson, Esq. Baron Koller. Baron de Cetto. M. Van de Weyer. VOL. II.) 5 The Queen's Ministers abroad. Brazils Denmark France Greece Hanover. Merico. Netherlands. Portugal... Prussia .. Russia Sardinia and Lucca . Saxony. Sicily Spain Sweden and Norway. Switzerland Turkey Wurtemburg United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata ... M. Montezuma. Count Bille Brahe. Baron de Bourquency. M. Tricoupi. Count Kielmansegge. Thomas Murphy, Esq. Chevalier Dedal. Baron da Torre de Moncorvo. Baron Bulow. Baron de Brunow. Count de Pollen. M. de Gersdorff. M. del Pozzo Count Bjornstjerna. John L. Prevost, Esq. Chekib Effendi Baron de Hugel Don Manuel Moreno. THE QUEEN'S MINISTERS ABROAD. America ... Henry S. Fox, Esq. Sir R. Gordon. Austria. Bavaria. Lord Erskine. Belgium. Sir G H. S. Seymour, G. C. H. Brazils.. H. C. J. Hamilton, Esq. Colombia William Turner, Esq. Denmark. Rt. Ilon. Sir H. W.W. Wynn, G. C. H. France.. Lord Cowley. Germanic Confederation . W.T. H. F. Strangways, Esq. Greece Sir E. Lyons, Bt. Hanover. Hon. John Duncan Bligh. Merico. Richard Pakenham, Esq. Naples Hon. W. Temple. Netherlands Sir Edward C. Disbrowe, G. c. H. Portugal.. Lord Howard de Walden. Prissia ... Lord Burgesh. Russin. Lord Stuart de Rothsay. Sardinia Hon. Ralph Abercromby. Sarony Hon. F. R. Forbes. Spain Sir Arthur Aston. Sweden. Sir Thomas Cartwright, G. C. H. Switzerland D R. Morier, Esq. Turkey. Viscount Ponsonby. Tuscany Lord Holland. United Provinces Rio de la Plata... John H. Mandeville, Esq. Venezuela Sir Robert Ker Porter, K. C. H. Wurtemburg ... Sir G. Shee, Bt. 6 (PART II. The Queen's Consuls abroad. THE QUEEN'S CONSULS ABROAD, FOR THE PROTECTION OF TRADE. AUSTRIA. BARBARY. FREE CITY OF FRANKFORT. BELGIUM. BRAZILS. V. C. GREECE. Calais-S. G. Marshall, Esq. Venice-Sir T. S. Sorell, K. H. Con. Boulogne-William Hamilton, Esq. Genl. Havre Gilbert Gordon, Esq. W. C. Tatam, Esq. v. c. Granville-John Turnbull, Esq. Trieste-H. Bynder, Esq. v. c. Brest-Ant. Perrier, Esq. Fiume-C. T. Hill, Esq. v. c. Nantes -- Henry Newman, Esq. Milun-Lt. Campbell, R. N. C. A. Charente-John F. Close, Esq. Bordeaux— Thos. B. G. Scott, Esq. Bayonne-James V. Harvey, Esq. Tunis--Sir Thomas Reade. Marseilles-Alex. Turnbull, Esq. W. Ancram, Esq. v. c. Cette—R. Ryan, Esq. v. c. Tripoll-Hanmer Warrington, Esq. Corsica-A. P. Palmedo, Esq. Algiers—Robert W. St. John, Esq. A. Tulin, Esq. v. c. Christian Koch, Esq. Tangier – E. W. D. Hay, Esq. GRANADA (NEW). R. A. Valzell, Esq. v. c. R. Steaurt, Esq. chargé d affuires and Cons. Gen. Antwerp-Godschall Johnson, Esq. Carthagena de Columbia-Patrick Ostend-E. Thompson Curry, Esq. W. Kelly, Esq. Panama-W. Perry, Esq. Rio Janeiro-Robert Hesketh, Esq. St. Marta— Thus. M'Causland, Esq. Bahia- Edward Porter, Esq. Pernambuco-H. A. Cowper, Esq. Maranham--John Moon, Esq. Patras–George W. Crowe, Esq. Para-Richard Ryan, Esq. SyruR. Wilkinson, Esq. Paraiba-B. Newcommer, Esq. c. Pyroæus - John Green, Esq. BUENOS AYRES. Charles Griffiths, Esq. Hamburgh-George Lloyd Hodges, Esq. c. G. San Salvador--Fred. Chatfield, Esq. C. Wesselhoeft, Esq. v. c. Guatamala-William Hall, Esq. v.c. Bremen-B. Pearkes, Esq. v. C. Realijo-John Foster, Esq. v. c. Lubeck-W. L. Behneke, Esq. v. c. Cuxhaven-H. H. Dutton, Esq. v.c. Hon. John Walpole, Con. Genl. Valparaiso-Henry Rouse, Esq. c. Port au Prince-Capt. Courtenay, Conception-R. Cunningham, Esq. R. N. Con. Thos. Usher, Esq. v. c. Coquimbo-C. Campbell, Esq. v. c. Cape Haytien-H. A. Thomson Esq. Elsineur-Fran. C. McGregor, Esq. Jacmel-R. E. Hodges, Esq. v. C. Copenhagen-Charles Wake, Esq. John l'arkinson, Esq. Chas. John Barnett, Esq. Con. Genl. Vera Cruz-F. Giffard, Esq. v. c. Alexandria–J. L. Stoddart, Esq. c. Tampico-J. T. Crawford, Esq. G. Chasseaud, Esq. v. C. San Blas-E. Barron, Esq, v. c. Cairo-A, S. Walne, Esq. c. Candia-H. S. Ongley, Esq. c. Thomas S. Hood, Esq. Con. Genl. Cyprus--James Lilburn, Esq. c. NETHERLANDS. EQUATOR--(State of) Amsterdam-James Annesley, Esq. Guayaquil-W. Cope, Esq. Rotterdam-Sir Alex. Ferrier, K. H. Paris-Thomas Pickford, Esq. Jerusalem-W. T. Young, Esq., C. HANSEATIC REPUBLIC. CENTRAL AMERICA. CHILI. HAYTI. V. C. DENMARK. V. c. MEXICO. EGYPT MONTE VIDEO. FRANCE. PALESTINE. TOL. 11.) 7 The Queen's Consuls abroad. PERU. POLAND. PORTUGAL. SWEDEN AND DENMARK. SYRIA. PRUSSIA. V. C. TEXAS. Bilboa--Jobn Clarke, Esq. Bolivian Confederation. Barcelona-J. S. Penleaze, Esq. Lima-Belford H. Wilson, Esq. v.c. Mahon--Lieut. Col. Fitzgerald. G. T. Sealy, Esq. v. c. Curthagena--Charles Walsingham Arica-Hugh Wilson, Esq. Turner, Esq. Islay- Thomas Crompton, Esq. v.c. Murcia- La Puz-Chas. Masterton, Esq. v.c. Cadiz--J. M. Brackenburry, Esq. Teneriffe--Richard Bartlett, Esq. Warsaw-Colonel Gustavus Charles Cuba-St. Jugo-John Hardy, jun. Du Plat, c. Havana-David Turnbull, Esq. Malaga--W. P. Mark, Esq. Lisbon-William Smith, Esq. Con. St. Luca-Chas. Phillips, Esq., v. c. J. Meagher, Esq. v. c. Oporto-Edwin, J. Johnston, Esq. Gottenburgh-H. T. Liddell, Esq. Azores-St. Michaels – Thomas, °C. Stockholm--Capt. Sir John Ross, Kt. Hunt, Esq. c. and c. B., R. N. W. Kendall, Esq. v. C. Bergen-John Greig, Esq. Fayal–J. Minchin, Esq. v. C. Christiana, George Mygind, Esq. Madeira--George Stoddart, Esq. Humnerfest--J. R. Crowe, Esq. Cape Verde Islands--J. Rendall Esq. Terceira-H. Alton, Esq. v. c. Col. Hugh Rose, Con. Genl. Damuscus -- Richard Wood, Esq. Dantzig-H. R. Plaw, Esq. Beirout-N. W. Werry, Esq. Memel — W.J. Hertslet, Esq. v. c. Bag lad - Robert Taylor, Esq. c. Konigsberg-J. D. Brockmann, Esq. Aleppo-Niven Moore, Esq. Tarsous Stettin--F. H. Peterson, Esq. v. c. Alexandretta-C.D. Hayes, Esq. v.c. Pillau-C. E. Elsasser, Esq. v. c. Capt. Chas. Elliot, R. n. Con. Genl. Ancona-George Moore, Esq. c. Rome-J. Freeborn, Esq. c. A. Constantinople--J. Cartwright, Esq. RUSSIA. C. G. A. C. Cumberbatch, Esq. v. Odlessa–James Yeames, Esq. c. G. C. and Cancelleire. Taganrog-W. Yeames, Esq. v. c. Servia- T. de G. de Fonblanque, St. Petersburyh--Sir Ed. S. Baynes. Esq. c. G. Riga-James Baker, Esq. Pervesu-S.S. Saunder, Esq. c. Livonia Dardanelles-Chas. A. Lander Esq. Libau - Francis Keinitz, Esq. Archangel -- John Whitehead, Esq. Adrianople-John Kerr, Esq. c. SANDWICH, SOCIETY, AND NEW ZEA Sulonica-C. Blunt, Esq. c. Smyrna--- Richard W. Grant, Esq.c. Woahoo-R. Chalton, Esq. C. J. Charnaud, Esq. v. C. Tahiti--George Pritchard, Esq, Enrs--Nicholas Rossy, Esq. C. New Zealand Captain Hobson, R n. Agent. Bucharest—R. G. Colquhoun, Esq.c. Cagliari - George Bomesteer, Esq. Ibrailo-St. Vincent Lloyd, v. c. Nice-P. Lacroix, Esq. Jassy-Samuel Gardner, Esq. c. Genoa–T. Y. Brown, Esq. Gal'utz-Chrs. Canningham, Esq. Leipsic-Jacob James Hart, Esq. Belgrade - Erzeroom—James Brant, Esq. c. Naples-Capt. Thos Gallway, R. N. Trebizon'l-, Palermo-- John Goodwin, Esq. Kaisseriah—Henry Suter, Esq. c. Messina-Williain W. Barker, Esq. TUSCANY. Leghorn-John Falconer, Esq. Alicant-Jasper Waring, Esq. c. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. L'orunna-John Crispin, Esq. Philadelphia-William Peter, Esq. ROMAN STATES. TURKFY. C. LIND ISLANDS. SARDINIA. SAXONY. V.C. SICILIES. SPAIN. 8 (PART II. British Colonial Governments. New York-James Buchanan, Esq. Charleston, William Ogilby, Esq. Savannah-Edmund Molyneux, Esq. Baltimore-John M'Tavish, Esq. Norfolk-W. Grey, Esq. New Orleans-John Crawford, Esq. Boston-T. C. Grattan, Esq. Purtland-Joseph Sherwood, Esq. Mobile-Chas. Lionel Fitzgerald, Esq. VENEZUELA. Caracas-Sir Robt. K. Porter, K.C.H. Puerto Cabello-D. F. O'Leary, Esq. c. Maracaibo-R. Mackay, Esq. v.c. BRITISH COLONIAL GOVERNMENTS. INDIA. EUROPEAN. CANADA. MALTA. Governor General and Captain Ge. Governor and Commander-in-Chief neral-Sir Bagot. --Lt. General Sir H. F. Bouverie, K. C. B. and G. C. M. G. Governor General-Lord Ellenbo. IONIAN ISLANDS. rough Lord High Commissioner-Right GIBRALTER. Hon. James Alexander Stewart Governor and Commander in Chief Mackenzie. -Lieut. General Sir Alex. Wood- HELIGOLAND. ford, K. C. B., and G. C. M. G. Lieutenant Governor--Captain John Hindinarsh, R.N.,K.H. CEYLON. K. C. B. ASIATIC. Chief Justice-Hon. Sir Js. Dow. Governor and Commander-in-Chief ling, Kt. - Lt. Genl. Sir Colin Campbell, Puisne Judges-Hon. W. W. Bur- ton, and lion. W. W.Willis, Esqrs. Chief Justice—The Hon. Sir An- | Attorney General-John H. Plun- thony Oliphant, Kt. kett, Esq. (Europe on leave).- 1st Puisne Judge— The Hon. W. O. Roger Therry, Esq. actg. Carr, Esq. VAN DIEMAN'S LAND. 2d do. The Hon. James Stark, Esq. Lieut. Governor-Captain Sir J. Colonial Treasurer-The Hon. Geo. Franklin, R.N., K.C.H. Turnour, Esq. (Europe.) Colonial Secy.-John Montagu, Acting do. F. J. Templer, Esq. Esq. Colonial Secretary--The Hon. P. | Archdeacon Anstruther, Esq. Chief Justice-Sir John L. Pedder, Queen's Advocate-Arthur Buller, Esq. Esq. Puisne Judge--Alex. Montagu, Esq. Deputy do.-Christopher Temple, | Attorney-General—Thomas Welch, -, Jun. Esq. Esq. Archdeacon of Colombo-Venerable Solicitor-General-H.C.Jones, Esq. J. M. Glennie. WESTERN AUSTRALIA (Swan Ricer.) NEW SOUTH WALES. Governor, Commander-in-Chief, and Governor- Major Sir George Gipps, Vice Admiral-John Hutt, Esq. Kt. Royal Engineers. Secretary-P. Browne, Esq. Bishop of Australia-Right Rev. Judge-W. H. Mackie, Esq. Wm. Grant Broughton, D. D. SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA. Commander of the Forces- Major Governor, Commander-in-Chief and Gen.Sir Maurice O'Connell,k.c.n. Resident Commissioner-George Colonial Secretary-Ed. D. Thom Grey, Esq. son, Esq. Judge-Charles Cooper, Esq. VOL. 11.] g British Colonial Governments. Colonial Secy.---Robt. Gouger, Esq. Chief Justice-Wm. Martin, Esq. Colonial Secretary-Willoughby Governor and Commissioner in Shortland, Esq. Chief-Captain John Hobson, R. N. NEW ZEALAND. AFRICAN. CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. MAURITIUS. Governor and Commander-in-Chief Governor and Commander-in-Chief -Major General Sir George T. -Lt. Genl. Sir Lionel Smith, Bt. Napier, K. C. B. G. C. B. and G. C. H. Lieutenant Governor, Eastern Divi- Chief Secretary-G. F. Dick, Esq. sion-Colonel John Hare, C. B., Chief Judge-James Wilson, Esq. and K. H. Procureur and Advocate General- Secretary-Colonel Bell (Europe). P. D'Epinay, Esq. Chief Justice—Sir Jonathan Wylde, SIERRA LEONE. Kt. D. C. L. Governor Judges-Wm. Menzies, Esq., Geo. Secretary-N. Macdoland, Esq. Kekewich, Esq. Chief Justice-John Carr, Esq. Attorney General—Wm. Porter, ST. HELENA. Esq. Governor-Lieut. Colonel Hamelin. Trelawney, Royal Artillery. Civil Commissioner- Sir Richard Plaskett, Kt. Lieutenant Governor- Chief Justice-Williain Wilde, Esq. GAMBIA. ANTIGUA. DOMINICA. GRENADA. AMERICAN. Lieut. Gent. Sir Richard Downes Governor and Commander-in-Chief Jackson, K.C.B., Commander of of Antigua, Montserrat, St. Chris the Forces. topher, Nevis, Virgin Islands, and Doininica. Lieut. Govern.-Maj. J. Macphail. Sir Chas. Augustus Fitzroy, Kt. PALKLAND ISLANDS. BAHAMA ISLANDS. Lieut. Governor-Lieut. Richard Governor and Commander-in-Chief Clement Moody, R.E. Col. Sir Francis Cockburn, Kt. BARBADOES. Lieut. Governor-Col. C. J. Doyle. Governor and Commander-in-Chief HONDIRAS. of Barbadoes, St. Vincent, Gre- Superintendent-Colonel Alexander nada, Tobago, Trinidad and St. Macdonald, c.B. Lucia— Right Hon. Sir Charles ISLAND OF PRINCE EDWARD. Edward Grey, Kt. Gulph of St. Lawrence. BERBICE. Lieutenant Governor-Henry Vere Assistant Secretary-Stephens, Esq. Huntley, Esq., R.N. BERMUDA. Governor-Lieut. Col. Wm. Reid, Governor—Sir Charles Theophilus C. B. Metcalfe, Bt. G. C. B. BRITISH GUIANA. MONTSERRAT. Consisting of the United Colonies of President of the Council, H. Hamil- Demerara, Essequibo, and Berbice. ton, Esq. Governor-Henry Light, Esq. President-James Daniel, Esq. Right Hon. Sir Charles Bagot, G.C.B. NEW BRUNSWICK. Governor General of British North Lieut. Governor-Lieut. Col. Sir W. America. M. G. Colebrooke, K.H, Part II. VOL. II. JAMAICA. NEVIS. CANADA. 10 Hon. Company's Depot & Recruiting Officers. (PART 11. NEWFOUNDLAND. ST. VINCENT. Governor & Commander-in-Chief-Lieutenant Governor-Lieut. Col. Maj. Genl. Sir John Harvey, K.C.B. Richard Doherty. Lieut. Govr. of Placentia-Colonel TOBAGO. Reeves. Lieutenant Governor-Major Genl. NOVA SCOTIA. H. C. Darling. Lieut. Governor-Lord Viscount TRINIDAD. Falkland. Lieutenant Governor-Colonel Sir ST. CHRISTOPÆER's. H. G. Macleod, K. H. Lieut. Governor-Charles Cunning- VIRGIN ISLANDS. ham, Esq. President of Council-Edward Hay ST. LUCIA. Drummond Hay, Esq. Lieutenant Governor THE RIGHT HONORABLE THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR THE AFFAIRS OF INDIA. President. The Lord President of the Council, | The Principal Secretaries of State. The Lord Privy Seal, The Chancellor of the Exchequer. The First Lord of the Treasury, The Hon. W. Baring, Secretaries Assistant Secretary Hugh Stark, Esq. Solicitor Richard Groom, Esq. Private Secretary to the President } I. Emmerson Peninant, Esq., M. P. HONORABLE EAST INDIA COMPANY'S DEPOT AND RE- CRUITING OFFICERS. DEPÔT. Commandant ..........Lieut. Colonel Edward Hay.. Chatham. Secondo in Comasred } Maj. H. Erskine Somerville Do. Adjutant..... Captain Henry Brown..... Do. Paymaster Captain Wm. Elsey... Do. Surgeon... ...A. R. Jackson, Esq. M. D..... Do. RECRUITING OFFICERS. Major Richard Axford Captain James Murray, 28, Soho Square.. Do. Richard George Grange. Do. Thomas Otho Travers, Do. Henry V. Glegg ....... Liverpool. London. Dublin. Cork. Edinburgh. The Corps of Royal East-India Volunteers, commanded by Colonel Astell, was disembodied on the 25th March 1834. His late Majesty was graciously pleased, as a mark of his royal approbation, to allow the officers to retain the rank and honours belonging to their respective commissions. VOL. II.] 11 E. I. House of Agency in London, COMPANY'S AGENTS. - Bristol Cork Dartmouth Deal Falmouth Glasgow Gravesend Leith Limerick Liverpool Margate Plymouth Portsmouth Torbay - Canada Cape Constantinople Corfu Egypt (Alexandria) do. (Cairo) (Jeddah) (Suez) Genoa Gibraltar Halifax Leghorn Lisbon Madeira Malta Mauritius Naples St. Helena Syria Trieste Venice Vienna AT HOME. Mr. Robert Bruce. Mr. Daniel Callaghan, junior. Mr. Thomas Newman. Messrs. John and Edward Iggulden. Messrs. John Carne, and Sons. Messrs. Eccles, and Co. Mr. Thomas Elkin. Messrs. James Wild and Co. Messrs. Thomas Westrop and Son. Messrs. Benson, and Rathbone. Mr. William Cobb. Messrs. Fox, Sons and Co. Mr. John Lindegren. Messrs. John and Samuel Calley. ABROAD. Messrs. Forsyth, Richardson and Co. Messrs. Dickson, Burnies and Co. John Cartwright, Esq. Charles Schomberg Thomas, Esq. Captain Lyons, R. N. [Agent.. Capt. H.Johnson, (H. M. S.) Deputy Mr. A. Walne. Mr. A. Ogilvie. Mr. Henry Lerick. Messrs. Grant, Balfour and Saunders. William Sherwill, Esq. Messrs. S. Cunard, and Co. Messrs. Routh and Garland. Messrs.Joseph Van Zeller and Sons. Henry Veitch, Esq. James Calvert, Esq. Messrs. Hay and Co. Messrs. Cotterill, Iggulden and Co. Messrs. Thomas Baker and Co. Nathaniel W. Werry, Esq. Messrs. Lang, Freeland and Co. Messrs. Holme and Co. Messrs. J. G. Schuller and Co. - - - EAST INDIA HOUSE OF AGENCY IN LONDON, &c. &c. Briggs, Thurborn, Acraman and Co., 5, Crosby Square. Burnie, William and Co., 124, Bishopsgate Street. Chalmers, Guthric, and Co., 9, Idol Lane, Tower Street. Cockburn, J. and Co., 11, New Broad Street. Cockerell, and Co., 8, Austin Friars. Crawford, Colvin and Co., 71, Broad Street. Dallas and Coles, 29, Austin Friars. Fletcher, Alexander, and Co., 10, King's Arms Yard, Colemar Street. Forbes, and Co., 9 and 10 King William Street. 12 (PART 11. Foreign Indian Governments. Gardner, Urquhart, and Co., 11, St. Helen's Place. Gregson, Melvill and Co., 14, austin Friars. Haviside, and Co., 69, Cornhill. Hunter and Co., 59, Old Broad Street. Lubbock, Sir J. W. and Co., 2, St. Mildred's Court, Poultry. Lyall, Brothers, and Co., 65, St. Helen's Passage. Mangles, Price and Co., 20, St. Helen's Place. Marjoribanks and Ferrers, 25, Bucklersbury. Masson, John, 5, Lime Street Square. Palmer, Mackillop, and Co., 11, King's Arms yard, Coleman Street. Rickards, Mackintosh, and Co., 15, Bishopsgate-street within. Rundall James, 22, Throgmorton Street. Saunders, Thomas, jun. 27, Austin Friars. Scott, Robert, Fairlie, and Co., 37, Great Winchester Street. Small, Colquhoun and Co., 8, Old Jewry. Weeding, Thomas, 6, Great Winchester Street. Wigram and Co., 3, Crosby Square. EAST-INDIA ARMY AGENTS AND AGENTS FOR PASSEN- GERS TO AND FROM INDIA, &c. Grindlay, Christian, and Mathews, 16, Cornhill, and East-India Roons, 8, St. Martin's Place, Charing Cross. Dodwell and Miles, 66, Cornhill, late of the Honorable Company's Home Service. AGENTS FOR PASSENGERS TO AND FROM INDIA. Barber, Captain J. 64, Cornhill. Maynard and Co. 27, Poultry. EAST-INDIA OUT-FITTING ESTABLISHMENTS. Maynard and Co., 27, Poultry. Thresher, Son and Glenny, 152, Strand. FOREIGN INDIAN GOVERNMENTS. FRENCH PONDICHERY. Population en 1840. Blancs 790_ Topas 822—Indiens 78,131 — Total 79,743 habitans. Gouvernement Colonial. M. De Nourquer Du Camser, (). L. H., Capitaine de Vaisseau de Ire classe, Gouverneur des Etablissemens Français dans l'Inde. Conseil d'Administration.-M. M. Le Gouverneur, Presid. Le Procureur Général. Le Commissaire de marine, vice prés, L'Inspecteur Colonial. Le Secrétaire archiviste. VOL. II.) 13 Foreign Indian Governments. Conseil Général.-M. M. De Rosiere, Presid. Pernon. Coüard, vice Presid. Frion. Decolons, père, Nayniapa appassamy. Mottet, Le Peltier, Secrét. Buirette, Faciolle, sec.-par int. Délégués près du Gouvernement Métropolitain.-M. M. Joyau pére, Avocat à la Cour Royale de Caen. de Milleville, grand référendaire au sceau de France, suppléant. ADMINISTRATION JUSTICE, Cour Royale.-M. M. Maurel, Présid. Orianne, conseiller. de Rosiére, conseiller. St. Paul, id Gallois Montbrun, id Patenotre, id auditeur. Joyau id Lenoir, id Gibelin, Procureur Général. Guerre père, Greffier en chef. Guerre, Maurice, Commis greffier. Tribunal de première Instance.-M. M. Hennequin, Juge royal. Chartran, Juge auditeur. Debout, Juge auditeur et Juge d'Instruction. Roland Latour, Procureur du Roi. Berchon Defontaine, Greffier. Tardivel, Emile, Commis greffier. Tribunal de Paix et de Police.-M. M. Faciolle, Juge de paix et Lieutenant de Police. Sicé, Théoph., Juge suppléant. Tardivel, Charles, Inspecteur de Police. Ricard, Adolphe, Greffier. Avocats et Conseils près la Cour Royale et les Tribunaux.--M. M. Guerre, Avocat, Prieur, Conseil Agréé. Hecquet, J. Conseil agréé,- Brun, id. Prud'homme id. Hecquet, E. Pithois, id. et douze Malabars, id. Divers.-M. M. Jame, Notaire Royal. Naini Appassamy, pilli, Tabellion. Rattinam, modely id. Hecquet, E. Curateur aux biens vacants. Gallois Montbrun, conservateur des hypothèques. Ramassamy, Sastriar, President du comité de Jurisprudence indienne. Culte.-M. M. Bonnaud, Evêque de Druisipare, supér. des Missions Etrang. Calmels, préfet apostolique. id. 14 [PART 11. Foreign Indian Governments. Instruction Publique. Collège Royal.-M. M. Perreaux, Proviseur. Sicé, A. Professeur. Prieur, Professeur, Hébert, id. Mahé, id. Gravier, id. Sicé, C. id. Cammiade, id. Fromint, id. Candussamy, modely, id. Soleillet, id. Sehid Mohamed, id. Ecole gratuite des Indiens.-M. M. Le Peltier, Commis de Marine, Directeur. Nida Annassamy Aya Rajapa, Inspecteur. Kichenannassamy pilly, id. Pensionnat de Demoiselles-Mesdames. Tariot, sæur Josephine, Directrice. Mevel, seur Aglaé, maitresse. Ommonin, sæur Edvige, maitresse, Sairon Messis, sæur Isabelle, id. Pelissier, sæur Lucie, id De Dieu, sæur Léontine, id. Dallan, seur Marie Thérese, id.' Marine.-M. M. Dalmas, L. H., commissaire, chef du service. Pognon, L. H., id. Inspecteur colonial. Delasselle,Commis principal, chef du bureau des revues. Law de Clapernon, id, attaché à l'inspection. Le Faucheur, J.Commis de 1st classe, chef du bureau des fonds. DeRosière, A. id. Secrétaire archiviste. LePeltier, F. id. Secrétaire du Chef du service. Lemesle, id. Secrétaire du gouvernement. Robert, id. Secrétaire particulier du gouverneur. Violette, Commis. de Ire classe, employé aux Magasins. Lebrun, id. 2e id. id. Urvoy, id id. Ficé id. id. Hostein, Capitaine de Port. Troupes.-M. M. Davoust, Prince d'Echmühl, duc d'Awerstadt, L. B., Paír de France, Lieut. de cavalerie, aide-de-camp du Gouverneur. Panon du Hazier, L. H., Chef de Bataillon, commandant. Blin, Capitaine. Lemercier, lieutenant. Couerbe, lieutenant. Dérode, id. Vasseur, id. Divers.-M. M. Trouette, Chirurgien de Marine Tre classe, chef du service de Sante. Veiss, Receveur du Domaine. Coüard, Trésorier et directeur du Mont de Piété. Duval Pirou, Ingenieur colonial. Guerre, L. .. id. Loullié, surveillant des travans. Liard, id. Pognon, L. H. Conservateur de la Bibliothèque. Toutin, imprimeur en chef du gouvernement. VOL. 11.) 15 Foreign Indian Governments. De Kerusce, directuer du Jardin de naturalisation. Hostein ; directuer des atteliers de tissage. Godefroy, gérant id. id. CHANDERNAGOR. Population en 1840. Blancs 218–Topas 435—Indiens 32,017—Total 32,670 habitans. M. M. De St. Hilaire, L. H., Chef de Bataillon d'Infanterie de la Marine, Chef de Service. Bourgoin, S. Commissaire de Marine, chargé de l' Inspection. De Montplanqua, Juge Royal. Tallouharn, Procureur du Roi. Bourrilhon, Greffier du Tribunal. Clerc, Juge de Paix, Lieutenant de Police. Tardivel, Farcy, Suppléant du Juge de Paix. Perin, Chirurgien de Marine, chargé du Service de Santé.' Moré, Curé. Conseil d'Arrondissement.-M. M. Le Chargé du service, Président. De Montplanqua, vice Présid. Dorronidor Pal, Membre. Perrot, Membre. Daviel, secrétaire. KARIKAL. Population en 1840. Blancs 43—Topas 71-Indiens 49,193—Total 49, 307 habitans. M. M. Buirette St. Hilaire, L. H., Commissaire de Marine, Chef de Service. St. Pourçain, Commis principal de Marine,chargé de l' Inspection. Jollivet, Capitaine d' Infanterie de Marine. Noël, Juge Royal. Jame, Procureur du Roi. Petit D'Hésincourt Greffier du Tribunal. Davia, Juge de Paix, Lieutenant de Police. Maze, Chirurgien de Marine, chargé du service de Santé. Curé. Thiers, Conducteur des Travaux de 2e classe. Conseil d'Arrondissement.-M. M. Noél, Président. St. Pourçain, Membre. Couché, Vice Pres. Coët Morven, Secrétaire. Rongevald, Membre. YANAON. Population en 1840. Blancs 20—Topas 32-Indiens 6,829—Total 6,881 habitans. M. Jourdain, L. H., Capitaine de frégate honoraire, Chef de Service. MAHE. Population en 1840. Blancs 9-Topas 109-Indiens 2,498—Total 2,616 habitans. M. Barret, Commissaire de Marine, Chef de Service. 16 (PART 11. Foreign Indian Governments. G. C. L. H. - G. 0. L. H. C. L. H. 0. L. H. L. H. Signes de C Ordre. Royal de la Légion d'Honneur. Grand Croix de la Légion d'honneur. Grand Officier idem. Commandeur idem. Officier idem. Chevalier idem. Signes d'Ordres étrangers. Chevalier de l'Ordre de Léopold de Belgique. L. B. THE EAST IN DIA CIVIL LIST. 4 NOTE 1.-F. signifies, having had Regular Furlough. P. S. ditto ditto ditto Sick ditto. NOTE 2.--The reader is referred to the Addenda at the end of this part of the Volume for such changes may have taken place during the publication of the work. PART II. VOL. II. 18 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra BENGAL AND AGRA CIVIL LIST Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. 1 W. Cowell, 2 J, Pattle, 3 J. French, 4 C. Trower, 5 R. Richardson, James Wemyss, 7 W. Blunt, F Yrs. M. D. 1789 Aug. 4, 1792 49 4 28 Aug. 1, 1801 Civil and Session Judge of Bareilly, from the 27th January, orders of 4th February 1835, 4,200 00 1791 Aug. 29, 92 49 4 3 June 24, 02 Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue, from 1st March 1829, orders of 30th Dec. 1828, Leave to Cape 4,789 9 4 1795 Jan. 22, 97 44 11 8 Sept. 26, 06 Additional Judge of Tirhoot, 28th April 1840, 2,166 10 8 1796 Feb. 1, 97 44 11 0 Oct. 1,07 Civil Auditor, 23rd January 1836,.. ... 3,382 10 6 July 23, 97 Ditto Proceeded to Europe, on the 3rd September 1838. Mar. 6, 97 44 9 26 Ditto Collector of Land Revenue, Cawnpore, 2nd Febru- ary 1821,.. 2,090 00 1797 Nov. 1, 98 42 2 1 Nov. 1, 03 Opium Agent at Patna and Superintendent Salt Cho- kies in Behar, 8th May 1840, 3,500 0 0 Officiating Junior Member of the Board of Customs Salt and Opium and Marine Board, 525 1799 Dec. 9, 1800 41 0 23|Aug. 29, 10 Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut at the Presidency, 28th December 1827, 4,7899 1800 Jan. 4, 01 40 11 28 Oct. 13, u Out of Employ, 340 3 7 1801 Feb. 5, 02 36 1 14 Aug. 21, 12 Special Commissioner, under Regulation III. of 1828, for the division of Patna, from Ist March 1829, or- ders of December 1828,.. 3,918 120 July 6, 02 35 7 251 Ditto Out of Employ. 1803 Sept. 6, 03 35 11 5 Sept. 6, 14 1st Ordinary Member of the Council of India, 15th October 1838,.. 8,360 00 1804 Sept. 6, 06 32 10 28 Sept. 27, 152nd Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut, at the Presidency, from 14th March, or- ders of 21st May 1839,... 4,350 00 8 0 0 8 R. A. Rattray, 4 9 J. W. Sage, 10 J. B. El iot, 11 C. W. Steer, 12 Hon, W. W. Bird, 13 C. Tucker, F ... VOL. 11.] 19 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. sidence on Service. Date of Pro- 1023 ho motion to pre-TOT How Employed. Month's Sala- sent grade. Te GO NECIE ry, Co.'s Rs. 0 99 07 .... 10. 1 Yrs. M. D. 30 14 E. L. Warner, 1804 May 13, 1806 33 1 4 Sept. 27, 1815 Fourth Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamat 100 ADD 20 D Adawlut, at the Presidency, from 21st May 1839.. 4,350 0 0 15 J. W. Grant, 1805 July 11, 06 33 7 24 July 92,16 Export Ware house Keeper, 14th November 1833,... 4,000 0 0 16 Hon. T. C. Robertson, Dec. 11, 06 310 281 Ditto Lieut. Governor of the N. W. Ps. ordinarily station- ed at Agra, from 4th, orders of Ilth Feb. 1840, ... 10,4500 17 A. C. Barwell, July 30, 07 34 5 2 Ditto Salt Agent at Hidgelee, 16th September 1841,7 ... 3,500 0 0 18 A. Smelt, Nov. 8, 34 0 23 Ditto Civil and Session Judge of Patna, 19th Sept. 1839, . 2,500 0 0 19 R. M. Bird, 1807 Nov. 9, 0833 1 22 July 21, 18 Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue N. W. Ps. Allahabad, 28th February 1834, 4,350 00 20 C. Morley, Oct. 24, 09 32 2 3 Ditto Accountant General from the 18th January orders of 6th February 1829, and Accountant, to the Mi- litary Department, 17th December 1834, 4,350 0 0 21 W. H. Belli, Aug. 14, 08 30 8 21 Ditto Collector of Hooghly, 12th June 1823, 1,567 80 Vouc OS (130 Commission, 412 0 Superintendent of Salt Chokies, 29th June, 20900 22 J. S. Boldero, Oct. 24, 32 2 8 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Agra, 19th Octoberl 833, 2,5000 0 23 J. Curtis, Aug. 21, 08 33 1 11 Ditto Special Commissioner under Regulation 3, of 1828, the Division of Calcutta, 1 2th February 1839 3,750 00 24 F. W. Russell, F Oct. 30, 08 29 5 9 Ditto Civil and Session Judge of Hooghly, from 19th Feb- Loire Beat 1208 14 vera ruary, orders of 2nd March 1841,004 .. 2,500 0 0 25 A. Ogilvie, F Oct. 1, 101 27 4 14 Ditto Collector of Nuddea, 1,916 10 8 26 S. MacSween, F July 29, 10 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 17th March 1839. 27 W. H. Oakes, Dec. 13, 10 31 0 9 Ditto Sub-Treasurer, 3rd May 1833, Leave to Cape, 3,600 00 28 C. W. Smith, 11 30 1 23 May 8, 10 Junior Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue, Pre- 2095 sidency, 24th March 1835, 4,350 0 0 29 H. Swetenham, F S.. Nov, 18, ill 27 1 14 Ditto Europe, (on Furlough). 0 09 99 1808 Nov. 8, 20 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number Seasons of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Service. 1 DALLO Date of Pro BUSCA U 1884 Names. Date of Month's Sala- HO Arrival. motion to pre-print How Employed. sent grade. A ry, Co.'s Rs. Foto 0691454 Yrs, M. D. 30 J. Trotter, F 1808 Oct. 24, 1808 31 43 May 8, 1819 2nd Member of the Board of Customs Salt and 520 Opium and of the Marine Board, 14th November 1838, .. 4,350 00 31 R. Lowther, July 30, 10) 31 5 21 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue and Police of the 4th DO Allahabad Division, 6th March 1838, 3,000 0 0 Travelling, 166 10 8 32 W. Monckton, 1810 Nov. 22, 14 24 04 April 30, 21 Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adaw- S.BE lut N. W. Ps. at Allahabad 29th January 1839, also Sudder Special Commissioner. 33 B. Tayler, Dec. 6, 131 28 1 25 Ditto Judge of the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut of the N. 0 W. Ps. at Allahabad, 29th January 1839, also Sud- der Special Commissioner, 4,350 00 34 W. A. Pringle, F., Oct. 14, 11 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 6th Feb- ruary 1840. 35 A. Dick, Nov. 6, 131 25 5 3 Ditto Temporary Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Ni-2000 zamut A dawlut at the Presidency, 21st May 1839. 3,500 00 36 R. W. Maxwell, F .. Aug. 25, 13 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 21st Janu- BORET ary 1837. 37 J. E. Wilkinson, 11 30 2 16 Ditto Collector and Deputy Opium Agent at Tirhoot, 31st 160 January 1828,* 1,567 0 0 88 H. Moore, F 1811 Nov. 6, 13 34 9 23 April 30, 22 Special Commissioner under Regulation 3 of 1828, for the division of Moorshedabad, 30th Decem- ber, 839, 3,750 8 0 39 T. H. Maddock, F Nov, 20, 14 23 11 4 Ditto Secretary to the Govt. of India in the Secret, Political Judicial and Revenue Departments, and to the Go- vernment of Bengal in the Secret and Political Departments, 12th December 1849, 4,350 00 N. B.- To this sum must be added Commission on Stamps, Abkaree, and Opium. Say from Rs. 1,500 to Rs. 2,000 per month. Part 1, Vol. 1, Page 289. ... Oct. 15, VOL. 11.] 21 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. SWEISE Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. po 56 40 C. D. Russell, 28 41 JR. H. Scott, F 99 1ere we 42 Hon. R. Cavendish, F 99 97 43 L. Magniac, F 44 R. Walker, 45 J. A. D'Oyly, BOT 46 J. W. Templer, powinou 47 R. J. Tayler, 48 T. T. Metcalfe, DO Yrs. M. D. 1811 Nov. 27, 1814 27 14 Apr. 30, 1822 Collector of Dinapore, 19th March 1831, 1,916 10 8 Officiating Collector of Burdwan, 15th De- DISO cember 1840, and 19th March 1841. Oct. 23, 14 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 10th March 1840. Nov. 6, 13 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough via Bombay on the 27th January 1839. Nov. 22, 13 25 10 Ditto Ditto Nov. 1841. 1812 Aug. 29, 12 29 4 3 Apr. 30, 23 Ditto ditto, Do. 19, 12 29 4 13 Ditto Civil and Session Judge of Beerbhoom, 26th Febru- ary 1836, 3,045 13 4 1813 Nov. 6, 13 28 1 25 Apr. 30, 24 Civil and Session Judge of Mymensing, 25th Aug. 1840 2,500 0 0 30 (On leave to the Cape of Good Hope for 18 months on Medical Cert., 7th July 1840.) Ditto 23 5 24 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Mirzapore, 20th Feb. 1840, 2,500 0 0 Feb. 16, 13 28 10 3 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue and Police, and Agent to the Lieutenant Governor Delhi, 16th April and 121 Test 2012 80'185m 17th June 1835, 3,500 00 Travelling, 166 10 8 1814 Dec. 29, 23 10 26 Apr. 30, 25 Collector of Rungpore, 1 lth July 1837, 1,916 10 8 Leave for one month preparatory to resigning the E. I Company's service, 12th Oct. 1841. Nov. 22, 14 23 2 18 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge and Agent to the Lieutenant Governor Benares, 20th bFeb: 1840, Offg. Judge of* 212 the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut Alla- habad, 22d Nov. 1841. 3,000 0 0 Aug. 2, 141.. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Fur. on the 9th May 1840. HER 49 N. Smith, F ... 14 50 H. H. Thomas, F 51 H. Nisbet, F 22 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. Names. 3 Seasons of Appointmt. sidence on Service. 52 Sir W. H. Macnaghten Bart. K.C.B., 53 H. M. Parker, 99 54 G. P. Thompson, 55 J. F. M. Reid, 56 W. Dent, F 13 July 8, 54 V Date of Date of Pro- NG Months Sala- Arrival. motion to pre- How Employed. sent grade. try, Co.'s Rs. CHATA RARIORS Arges 1943 y 93 254195 Yrs, M. D. ht 301 1814 Sept. 30, 1814 27 3 ] Apr. 30, 1825 Appointed Governor of the Presidency of Bombay July 30, 14 23 4 28 Ditto 1st Member of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opi- um, and of the Marine Board, 14th November 1838. 4,350 0 0 Leave for 2 months under Sec. XI. of the Rules of 29th Jan. 1840, 29th Feb. 1841. 1815 Oct. 30, 15 26 2 2 Apr. 30, 26 Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut 1813 of the N. W. Ps. at Allahabad, 13th March 1841... 4,350 0 Aug. 27, 16 25 4 5 Ditto Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut at the Presidency, 12th October 1841, 4,350 0 0 16 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Shahabad 27th January 1835, and 16th November 1836, 2,500 0 0 Acting Opium Agent at Patna, and Supt. of Salt Chowkee, in Behar, Ist April 1840, 525 0 0 1816 Aug. 7, 16 22 4 10 Apr. 27 Collector of Burdwan, 12th February 1839, ... 1,916 10 8 Officiating Government Agent and Secretary to the Saving's Bank, 3rd June 1840, 420 0 0 Sept. 1, 16 22 6 2 Ditto Member of the Indian Law Commission,26th April 1838 4,354 2 8 16 22 3 25 Ditto Chief Magistrate of the town of Calcutta, vested with concurrent authority, as Ist Magistrate of 24- Pergunnahs, Baraset, Hooghly, Nuddea, and Jes. sore, 30th Nov. 1830, President of the Lottery Committee 5th March 1839, and a Member of the Military Board, 3,500 00 Sept. 19, 16 25 3 12 Ditto Special Commissioner under Regulation 3 of 1828, 20 for the division of Calcutta, 19th September 1839, |(Leave for 2 months, 26th October, 1841). 3,000 0.0 22 6 3 ... 57 E. Sterling, F SPEC 58 F. Millett, 59 D. McFarlan, F Aug. 28, za 60 T. A. Shaw, L'II '704 Civil List. Nanes. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. an Date of Pro DE COGNE, Debate on motion to pre-op How Employed. Tegen string of Month's Sala- sent grade. 19 ry, Co.'s Rs. 2.1 Actual Re- sidence on Service. 61 J. Hunter, F 62 W, N, Garrett, F Aug. 28, 16.. 63 F. Macnaghten F SOU 64 I. C. Brown, 65 H. S. Oldfield, F 66 H.T Owen, F 67 C. Fraser, Yrs. M. D. 1291 1816 Aug. 30, 1816 23 11 28 April 30, 1827 Assistant to the Collector of Customs at Calcutta, 14th January 1835, 700 0 0 Do. 9, 16 21 5 231 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of West Burdwan, 13th July 1841, ......... ................ 2,500 0 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Fulough on the 22nd Feb-000 ruary 1840. Do. 27, 19 25 4 6 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Nuddea, from the 28th December 1839, orders of 16th January 1840,... 2,500 0 0 Mar. 11, 17 21 8 17) Ditto Out of Employ,...... 340 3 7 March 2, 17 22 0 15 Ditto Special Commissioner under Reg. 3 of 1828, within the Ist or Meerut Division & 320 or Bareilly Divi- sion, 20 November 1835,. 3,250 0 0 1817 Aug. 27, 17 24 4 5 Do. 30, 1828 Commissioner and Agent to the Lieut. Governor in the Sangor and Nurbudda Territories, 20th, 25th and 28th October 1837, 3,500 0 0 Travelling, 166 10 8 Do. 27, 17 24 4 5 Ditto Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue of the N. W. Ps. at Allahabad, 5th June 1839,.. 4,350 00 Do. 17 24 4 2 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue and Police of the 1st or De Meerut Division, 14th April 1840,.. ........... 2,916 10 8 Travelling,...... 250 0 0 Feb. 8, 1818 19 6 5 Ditto Special Commissioner under Reg. 3 of 1828, for the Division of Chittagong, 16th June 1840, 3,000 0 0 Do. 17, 18. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 25th March 1841. May 12, 18 19 5 9 Ditto Collector of Government Customs at Allahabad, 11th September, 1832, 2,000 0 0 68 T.J. Turner, ... 69 G. F. Franco, ... 70 G. J. Morris, F .. 71 H. S. Boulderson, F 72 C. C. Parks, 24 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. Names. De Sea sons of Appointmt. 19 | Actual Re- sidence on Service. 73 C. Cardew, F 74 J. Staniforth, F S 75 G. R. Clerk, 0 0 8 4 5 76 R. Macan, F 18 77 R. Williams, F 78 W. Dampier, Date of Pro-SLUTONGOZ F INTENT Date of Month's Sala- Arrival. motion to pre How Employed. Potpury, Co.'s Rs. sent grade. 11 Yrs. M. D. 1817 Feb. 22, 1818 21 6 23 April 30, 1828 Civil & Sessions Judge of Tipperah, 12th Feb. 1839, 2,500 0 0 Do. 17, 18 18 10 231 Ditto Sessions Judge for the trial of Thugs, 13th Mar. 1840, 2,5000 Travelling, ... 250 0 Do. 18, 181 20 11 101 Ditto Political Agent at Umballa, 28th June and 20 Sep- tember 1831, and G. G.'s A. for the affairs of Pun- jab, 9th March, 13th April, and 7th May 1840,.. 4,166 10 Table and Travelling,....... 833 Jan. 8, 18 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 8th De- cember 1837. Do. 8, 19 3 20 Ditto Out of Employ, 840 3 1818 May 8, 18 21 4 23 April 30, 1829 Superintendent of Police in the Lower Provinces, i3th March 1840, 3,500 0 0 Travelling.................. 500 Aug. 25, 18 23 4 7 Ditto Resident at Khatmandoo from 1st January, order of 14th February 1838,... 3,500 0 Sept. 14, 18 23 3 17 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Delhi, 5th June 1839,.. 2,500 0 0 Do. 15, 18 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 23rd Janua- Tỷ 1840. July 13, 18 23 5 19 Ditto Temporary Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Niza- mut Adawlut, at the Presidency, from the 19th ultimo, 22nd March 1841,.. 3,500 0 0 Aug. 14, 181 23 4 21 Ditto Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut of the North West Provinces, at Allahabad, 230 May 1840,.. 4,350 00 June 16, 19 19 6 16 Ditto Secretary to the Government of India, and Bengal, in the General Financial Department, from 5th March, orders of 12th February 1840, 4,350 0 0 79 B. H. Hodgson, 0 80 C. Lindsay, 81 W. R. Young, F 82 R. Barlow, F 83 (F. Currie, : wa 84 G. A. Bushby, F ... 0 0 l'II 304 25 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Dale of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre sent grude. How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. PART II. VOL. II. 85 4. S. Lane, f. 86 J. T. Rivaz, ... 87 W. P. Okeden, fs. 88 G. C. Cheap, f. 89 T. Wyatt, 90 1. F. G. Cooke, f. 91 H. P. Russell, f. ... Yrs. M.D. 1818 Aug. 21, 1819 18 6 2 Apr. 30, 1829 Opium Agent for the Benares Division, 6th June 1838,.. 3,500 0 0 (Leave to the Hills on Medical Certificate, to the 3d February 1842. June 2, 19 22 6 29 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Futtehpore, 18th Sep- tember 1832, 2,50000 July 9, 19 22 5 23 Ditto Europe on Furlough 1841-42. Sept. 4, 191 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 16th Janu- ary 1839. Do. 4, 19 22 3 27 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Rungpore, 16th Janu- ary 1840,... 2,500 0 0 Do. 4, 19 19 3 27 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Dacca from 11th March, orders of 2d April 1839,.. 2,500 0 0 Aug. 31, 19 19 4 5 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Moorshedabad, from 19th February orders of 2nd March 1841.. 2,500 0 0 19 22 2 9 Ditto Salt Agent of 24- Pergunnahs and Jessore, 20th Sep- tember 1837 3,000 0 0 1815 Aug. 18, 15 21 3 9 April 30, 1826 Deputy Secretary to the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and Superintendent of Stamps, 26th Febru. ary 1840... 2,000 0 0 1819 June 2, 20 19 7 5 April 30, 30 Temporary Judge of the Sudder Dewanny and Niza. mut Adawlut, Presidency, 12th October 1841, 3,500 0 0 Ditto 18 8 22 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Bijnour, 13th Mar. 1841 2,250 0 0 Officiating Additional Judge of Benares, 24th Octo- ber 1836, 14th April 1837, 28th June 1839, and 13th March 1841. 03 93 92 W. P. Palmer 99 Oct. 23, 93 H. J. Palmer 2001 94 J. Shaw, f. 95 G. Lindsay, f. 26 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Number, Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro. motion to pre- sent grude. How Employed. Month's Sala- Ty, Co.'s Rs. 96 T. R. Davidson, 1819 June 2, 1820 0 0 97 C. R. Cartwright, f.... Ditto Ditto 0 ... 99 Sept. 16, 201... 98 E. M. Gordon, f. 99 R. D. Mangles, fs. 100 A. W. Begbie, 101 G. W. Bacon, 102 J. Davidson, f. June 2, 2 May 23, 21 June 2, 24 99 7 91 Yrs. M.D. 21 6 29 Apr. 30, 1830 Comsr. of the 18th or Jessore Divn 13th Mar. 1840. 2,916 10 8 Officiating Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue at the Presidency, 4th February 1841,... 525 17 6 10 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge and Agent to the Lieut. Governor of Furruckabad, 18th June and 6th July 1810, (on leave) 2.500 0 0 1891 Ditto Commr. of the 15th or Dacca Divn., 22nd Nov. 1836, 2,916 10 8 Travelling, 1,250 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Private affairs, on the 14th March 1839. 21 620 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Meerut, 8th Jan. 1841, 2,500 0 0 20 Ditto Ditto ditto of Suharunpore, 8th Feb. 1836, 2,500 0 0 18 5 19 Commissioner of Revenue and Police of the Rohil. cund Division, 24th March 1810, (not joined) on leave to the Cape, ...... 2,500 0 0 21 38 Ditto Temporary Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue at the Presidency, 26th March 1839,. 3,500 0 0 18 3 4 Ditto Secretary to the Lieut. Governor of the N. W. Pro- vinces in all the Branches, 21st Oct 1841. 3,000 0 0 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 14t1 January 1840. 18 8 21 Ditto C mmissioner of the 16th or Chittagong Division with powers of Temporary Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue, exercising singly the full powers of the Sudder Board of Revenue from the 15th February, orders 30th March 1841, 3,500 0 0 Travelling, so 250 Ditto 103 J. Lowis, Sept. 23, 20 ... 104 R. N. C. Hamilton, f... Jan. 9, 21 Oct. 30, 20 Ditto 105 G. Udny, f. 106 H. Ricketts, May 23, 21 0 0 VOL. 11.) 27 Ciril List. Names. Date of Arrival. Seasons of Appointmt Month's Sala- Number. Actual Re. sidence on Service. Date of Pro motion to pre sent grade. How Employed. ry, Co.'s Rs. 107 C. F. Thompson, 108 J. A. Dorin, f. 211... 109 E. P. Smith, fs. 0 0 110 H, Lushington, f. 111 G. F. Brown, . 8 0 0 112 W. H. Benson, f. Yrs. M.D. 1819 Feb. 23, 1821 17 8 28 Apr. 30, 1830 Civil and Sessions Judge of Mynpoory, 8th Jan. 1841 2,500 0 0 1820 Oct. 2, Apr. 30, 31 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 20th January 1840. Ditto 16 10 18 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue and Police of the Benare: Division, 18th June 1839, on leave to the Hills.... 2,916 10 8 Travelling 250 Do. 14, 21 15 0 271 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Goruck pore, from Is March, orders of 13th March 1841, 2,500 00 Nov. 22, 21 20 1 9 Ditto Commissioner of the 12th or Bhaugulpore Division, from the 224 March, order of 29th May 1838, 2,916 10 Travelling.......... 250 1821 Oct. 30, 21 17 2 2 Apr. 30, 32 Civil and Sessions Judge of Azimghur, 30th Jan. 1839 2,500 0 0 Officiating ditto ditto, at Moradabad. Do. 2, 21 20 2 30 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Bundeleund, 8th Feb- ruary 1836, 2,500 0 Agent to the Lieutenant Governor of the N. W. Ps. 20th February 1836, 500 0 0 In charge of the Additional Judge's Office of ditto. May 24, 22 16 8 17 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Sarun, 26th May 1840, 2.500 0 0 June 23, 1822 19 68 Ditto Chief Magistrate of Calcutta, 3,000 0 Jan. 17, 22 19 11 15 Ditto Commissioner of the 14th or Moorshedabad Division, 13th February 1838,...... 2,916 10 8 Travelling, 250 0 0 1822 Oct. 30, 21 18 1 5 Apr. 30, 33 Magistrate & Collector of Saharunpore, 19th Mar 1836. Offg. Rohilcund Division, Ist December, 1810, Depr. 2,500.00 allowance, 416 10 8 Travelling 250 00 113 s. Fraser, 0 114 G. Gough, 115 J. H. Patton, 116 W. B. Jackson, 0 97 117 W. J. Conolly, 28 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. Oct. 30, 0 0 97 Yrs, M.D. 118 S. G. Palmer, 1822 Nov. 14, 21 20 1 17 Apr, 30, 1833 Commissioner for the Superintendence of abkaree Revenue, 26th February 1840. 3,000 0 0 Travelling........ 250 00 119 Hon'ble R.F. Moore, f. 21 0 0 0 Ditto On Furlough, 24th August 1833. 120 E. C. Ravenshaw, f.... Aug. 20, 22 16 6 111 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue of the 11th or Patna Division, 13th March 1840.......... 2,916 10 8 7 250 Travelling. 121 J. A, F, Hawkins, f.... June 23, 22 16 11 21 Ditto Register of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut A dawlut, at the Presidency, 16th January 1838.... 2,500 0 0 • 122 J. S. Clarke, Aug. 20, 22 19 4 12 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Moradabad, 26th Octo. ber 1836.. 2,25000 Offg. Additional Sessions Jndge of Allyghur, Meerut. and Bolundshuhur districts, ordinarily stationed at Bolundshuhur, 17th October and 9th November 1839.. 250 0 0 123 F. Gouldsbury, Dec. 26, 22 1906 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Bhaugulpore, 13th July 1841, 2,500 0 124 J. F. Cathcart, f. Sept. 30, 1822 15 4 11 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Purneah, 16th Jan. 1838, 2,5000 125 B. Golding, Aug. 20, 22 19 4 12 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of East Burdwan, 12th October 1841, 2,500 0 126 J. Thomason, fs. Dec. 19,22 16 5 10 Ditto Member of the Sudder Board of Revenue at Allaha- bad, 21st October 1841. 3,500 0 0 127 M. J. Tierney, Do. 17, 22 190 15 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Allyghur, 29th March, orders of 29th April 1839, on leave to the Cape... 2,5000 128 H, Fraser, f. Do, 20, 22 0 Ditto On Furlough, 25th March 1839. 129 E. Deedes, f. 1823 May 13, Apr. 30, 34 Proceed. to Europe on Furlough, on the 22d Feb.1840 130 A. Grant, 2,500 0 Dec. 2, 2 301 Ditto Civil & Sessions Judge of Tirhoot. 19th Nov, 1839, >> 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 23 0 23, 18 VOL. 11.) 29 Civil List. AN Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre sent grade. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. How Employed. ... 1823 Sept. 20, Oct. 2, 23 2: 131 J. J. Harvey, 132 H. V. Hathorn, fs. 133 E, Currie, f. 99 1824 May 17, 24 134 D. B, Morrieson, Ditto 135 J. Dunbar, Ditto 136 F. O. Wells, Do, 16, 24 Yrs. M.D. 18 3 11 apr. 30. 1834 Collector of Calcutta Customs, 3,000 0 0 Ditto Proceeded to Furope via Bombay, on the 1st Nov. 1841. 14 8 13 Apr. 30, 35 Secretary to the Sudder Board of Revenue at the Presidency, 28th May 1838, 2,500 00 17 7 15 Ditto Civil & Sessions Judge of Juanpore 16th Aug. 1837, 2,500 0 0 Officiating Commissioner of Benares Division, 17 7 15 Ditto Civil an Sessions Judge of Midnapore, 20th July 1841, 2,500 00 Officiating Commissioner of the 18th or Jessore Divn. 4th February and 20th July 1841, 416 10 8 Travelling, 250 0 0 7 7 16 Ditto Accountant of the N. W. Ps, at Agra, 11th February 1835, (on leave to Mussoorie), 3,000 0 0 14 6 5 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Azimghur from 1st March, orders of 13th March 1841, ...... 2,250 00 17 6 27 Ditto Europe on Furlough 1841-42. On Furlough, 9th April 1821, On Furlough, 22nd December 1834. 17 2 29 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Muttra, 1st Feb. 1834,... 2,333 5 4 Officiating Commissioner of the Agra Division, 21st October 1841, 525 0 0 Travelling, 250 0 0 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, the 24th Jan. 1839. 17 2 231 Ditto Civil and Session Judge of 24-Pergunnahs, 2,500 00 15 25 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Budaon from 13th Mar., order of 27th March 1841, (on leave), 2,25000 137 R. Neave, f, June 3, 1824 99 138 R. Walker, f. 139 F. H. Robinson, f. 140 T. B. Beale, f. 141 W. H. Tyler, Do, 4, Oct. 28, Do. 3, Do. 3, 24 24 24 24 Ditto 142 T. Taylor, f. 143 R. Torrens, 144 W. R. Kennaway, f.... Do. 6, Do. 9, Do. 11, 24 24 24 30 (PART II. Bengal and Agra Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro-130217175 motion to pre- PLAY 362 sent grade. How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. 145 H. Pidcock, f. 1824 Nov, 5, 24 Ditto 146 C. G. Udny, 147 D. Pringle, f. 148 J. Grant, 149 H. Stainforth, f. Aug. 3, 25 Jan. 9, 1826 Oct. 27, 24 150 G. Alexander, fs. 151 G. H. Smith, Nov. 5, Do. 29, Yrs. M.D. 14 15 Apr. 30, 1835 Additional Sessions Judge of Bundelcund, 14ti February 1840, 2,166 10 8 Officiating ditto at Rohilcund, 18th November from 18th December. 17 1 26 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Rajeshaye, 19th Sep- tember 1839,.. 2,500 0 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough,on the 19th Feb. 1839 15 11 23 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Dinage pore, 19th Sep- tember 1839, 2,500 0 0 17 2 5 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Sylhet, 26th May 1840, 2,500 0 0 On leave to Australia on Medical Certificate 2 years, 6th January 1841. 17 1 26 Ditto Europe on Furlough, 1841-42. 17 1 21 Ditto Collector of Government Customs, N. W. P., Delhi 15th July 1835, Deputy Opium Agent in the dis- tricts of Delhi and Meerut division under CI. 1. Sec. XIX. Reg. VIII. of 1824, 16th May 1838, 2,500 0 0 16 7 25 Apr. 30, 36 Europe on Furlough 1841-42. 13 9 20 Ditto Collector of 24- Pergunnahs, 17th August 1841, 1,916 10 8 13 4 9 Ditto Commissioner of Kumaon from 3rd November, orders of 8th October 1838, 2,000 0 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough,on the13thJan. 1840. 16 6 23 Ditto Secretary to the Government of Bengal, in the Judicial and Revenue Departments,28th May 1838. 3,000 0 0 Junior Secretary to the Government of India, Legis- lative, Judicial and Revenue Departments, 10th March 1840. 24 24 152 C. Bury, f. 153 J. G. B. Lawrell, f. 154 G. T. Lushington, fs... 1825 Do. 7, June 3, Oct. 2, 25 25 25 155 | A. Reid, f. 156 E. J. Halliday, Ditto June 8, 25 VOL. II.] 31 Civil List. Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre sent grade. How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. 2,250 0 0 250 0 0 2,500 0 0 2,500 0 0 > 26 93 3,000 0 0 Yrs. M.D. 157 H. Armstrong, 1825 Nov. 25, 25 16 1 6 Apr. 30, 1836 Mag. and Collector of Futtehpore, 13th Feb. 1839, Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Ghazee- pore from 12th Dec. 1839, orders of 7th Nov. 1839, 158 A. Spiers, s. Oct. 17, 1825 13 4 19 Ditto Civil and Sessions Jude of Cawnpore, 2nd May 1839, (on leave), 159 A. C. Heyland, fs. Sept. 2, 25 13 6 0 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Ghazeepore, 18th June . 1839, 160 W. H. Woodcock, f.!.. Oct. 17, 25 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 25th March 1840. 161 J. R. Colvin, f. Mar. 9, 15 95 Ditto Private Secretary to the Governor General, 4th March 1836, 162 J. H. Astell, f. Aug. 28, 25 Ditto On Furlough from the 4th February 1841. 163 1. B. Thornhill, Oct. 12, 25 11 10 10 Ditto Post Master General.... 164 J. P. Gubbins, f. 1836 May 27, 26 12 9 9 Apr. 30, 37 Magistrate and Collector of Paneeput, from 16th April, orders of 12th May 1840...... 165 A. J. M. Mills, Do. 16, 27 15 7 10 Ditto Commissioner of Revenue of the 19th or Cuttack Division, and Superintendant of Tributary Mehals, 12th February 1839,.. Travelling......... 166 C. Garstin, Oct. 2, 25 16 2 36 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Behar, 13th March 1840, 167 G. Blunt, fs. Nov. 18, 25 13 9 15 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Mynpory, 5th June 1839, Officiating ditto and ditto of Allyghur, 1st Dec. 1840. 168 C. E. Trevelyan, f. Oct. 21, 26 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 17th January 1838. 2,000 0 0 ...... 2,250 00 2,916 10 8 250 0 0 9 2,500 00 2,250 0 0 ... 32 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Dates of Number. Arrival, Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. proti 11.00 How En How Employed. Month's Sala- ry, Co.'s Rs. 169 C. G. Mansel, f. ... 1836 Oct. 21, 170 C. C. Jackson, 171 E, A. Reade, f. June 22, Ditto Ditto 172 H. B. Brownlow, f. 173 W. S. Alexander, f. ... Ditto Ditto Ditto 0 0 Yrs. M.D. 26 15 3 10 Apr. 30, 1837 Deputy Accountant General, and Accountant in the Judicial, Revenue, Commercial, Salt, Opium, and Marine, and also Junior Secretary to the Govern- ment of India and Bengal, in the Financial Depart- ment, and a Government Director of the Bank of Bengal and a Member of the Mint Committee, 17th March 1841. 3,100 00 26 10 9 17 Ditto Attached to the N. W. Ps. 15 6 9 Magistrate and Collector of Goruck pore, 18th Sept. 1835, Deputy Opium Agent at ditto, 24th Oct. 1835, 2,250 0 127 12 Civil and Sessions Judge of Cuttack, 12th Oct. 1841, 2,500 0 12 8 25 Ditto Collector of Patna from 13th February orders of 9th March 18+1, 1,854 2 8 Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Shahabad, 31st March 1840, and 9th March 1841. 15 6 25 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Benares, 22d Aug. 1837, 2,250 0 0 Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Furruckabad from 1st April, orders of 20th March and 13th June 1840... 250 0 0 Officiating Agent to the Lieutenant Governor, N. W. Ps. at ditto 6th July 1840. 26 15 4 1 Ditto Salt Agent at Tumlook, 19th August 1835, 3,000 0 0 Commission. Officiating Opium Agent at Benares, 26th Dec. 1839. 26 12 3 11 Ditto Out of Employ, 13th February 1841. 325 9 2 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Goorgaon, from 9to April, orders of 10th March 1841,..... 700 00 174 A. P. Currie, July 7, 26 175 T. P. Marten, Sept. 1, 176 S. G. Smith, f. ... " Do. 15, Civil List. 33 Dec. 14 , Numes. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. PART II. VOL. II. 177 C. M. Caldecott, f. 178 H. M. Clarke, f. 179 F. Cardew, f. 180 C. R. Tulloh, 26 Do. 4, 72 181 R. J. Loughnan, f. 182 R. Trotter, f. 79 183 J. B. Ogilvy, f. 8. 99 Yrs. M.D. 1826 Oct. 22, 1826 Apr. 30, 1837 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 16th Jan. 1837. June 20, 26 Ditto Ditto ditto ditto, on the 16th December 1840. 1827 Dec. Ditto 26 15 0 280 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Juanpore from 1st March, orders of 18th March 1837, 2,250 250 Offg. Civil and Sessions Judge of Azimghur, 2d May 1839, no Do. 7, 26 11 11 16 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Backergunge, 12th Oct. 1841. 2,500 May 19, 27 14 18 Ditto Employed in disposing of the settlements pending in the oflice of Sudder Board of Revenue at the Presidency, 26th February 1841, 1,500 Offg Salt Agent at Chittagong, 11th November 1841. Jan. 1, 27 10 0 4 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Jessore 27th December 1838,.. 2,000 Leave for one month on private affairs from 7th Dec, to 14th Dec. 1841, 420 27 14 8 12 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Shahabad, 19th September 1839 2,000 Offg. Superintendent of Khas and Settlements of Patna and Behar, 8th October 1839, 300 May 24, 27 Ditto Civil & Sessions Judge of Jessore 7th Nov. 1841, 2,500 26 12 2 2 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Allahabad, 18th July 1840, ... 2,500 Jan. 27 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 13th Feb. 1838, May 24, 27 Ditto On Furlough, 16th April 1840. Feb. 3, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 12th March 1839. Jan. 3, 27 11 10 18 Ditto 38 Collector of Backergunge, 2d June 1840, 1,854 June 14, 27 14 3 17 Ditto Deputy Collector of Government Customs at Calcutta, 30th November 1836. 1,700 Do. 4, 27 Ditto Magistrate of 24-Pergunnahs, 340 Do. 10, 27] 11 3 2 184 J. C. Dick, 2 Do. 20, 185 E. Bentall, f. 186 A. Lang, f. 187 F. E. Read, f. 188 A. Fraser, f. 189 Hon'ble R. Forbes, f. 190 R. R. Sturt, f. s. 191 W. Bracken, 93 27... 192 R. H. Mytton, f. 193 (W. H. Martin, f. O Ditto 1 34 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. Seasons of Appointmt. A Names. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Servive. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. Ditto Ditto 194 T. C. Scott, f. 195 T. P. Woodcock, f.. 196 C. Allen, f. 197 H. F. James, f. 198 Thomas Bruce, f. 199 W, St Q. Quintin, f.s. 200 Colin Mackenzie, f. 1827 May 19, 1827 June 11, 27 Sept. 22, 27 June 11, 27 Do. 11, 27 Do. 3, 27 Do. 11, 27 0 0 201 H. W. Deane, Do. 27 8, 4 , 2023 R. E. Cunliffe, f. 8.. Do. Yrs. M.D. Officiating Civil & Sessions Judge of Sylhet, 15th Dec. 1840, 700 11 4 21 Apr. 30, 1838 Additional Collector of Chittagong, 30th March 1841, 2,166 11 8 20 Out of employ, 26th December 1840, 325 11 0 22 Settlement Officer Bundelcund, 4th June 1841, 2,250 14 3 20 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Bhaugulpore, 12th Feb. 1839, 2,050 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 29th Jan. 1839. 11 3 21 Ditto Additional Judge of Behar, 12th Oct. from 15th Oct. 1841, 2,166 14 6 20 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Humeerpore. from 30th March, orders of 26th June 1841, (on leave). 1,000 14 6 23 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Mozuffurnuggur, 2nd July 1838, (on leave) 2,250 10 10 28 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Dacca, 19th September 1839, 2,000 Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Midnapore, 28th October 1839, 420 13 4 18 Ditto Political Agent at Sabathoo from Ist July, orders of 28th August 1841, 1,200 14 4 18 Ditto Civil and Sessions Judge of Chittagong, from thel2th inst., orders of 30th December 1839, 2,500 (On leave to the Cape of Good Hope or Australia for 2 years, on medical certificate, 29th December 1840.) 14 6 14 Ditto Collector of Government Customs at Agra, 24th Oct. 1837, 2,000 (On leave to the Hills till the 4th September 1842.) 14 2 4 Ditto Secretary to the Sudder Board of Revenue, N. W. Pro- vinces, at Allahabad, 10th December 1836, orders of 9th January 1837, 2,333 In charge of the Superintendent Revenue Survey Office, at Do., 250 27 Aug. 14, 27 203 Hon. J. C. Erskine, f.s. 204 H. T. Raikes, Do. 14, 27 205 A. U C. Plowden, June 17, 27 206 H. M. Elliott, Oct. 28, 27 95 ['ll "10A 35 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 207 G. W. Battye, f. 208 T. Sandys, 99 209 E. V. Irwin, f. 210 S. S. Brown, f.&. ... 211 W.J. H. Money, f. 212 J. P. Grant, f. 213 G. Todd, f. s. 214 J. Lean, f. 215 G. F Harvey, 28 Yrs. M.D. 1827 Oct. 28,1827 Apr. 30, 1838 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 4th January 1841. Do. 27, 27 14 2 4 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Baraset, 12th February 1839, 1,000 Officiating Collector of Shahabad, 24th November 1840,. 420 Do. 29, Proceeded to Furope on Furlough on the 4th March 1839. 27 Ditto Dec. 4, 27 14 0 28 Magistrate and Collector of Hissar, 25th January, orders of Ditto 11th January 1837, 2,250 (On leave preparatory to proceeding to Europe.) Oct. 27, Proceeded to Europe on Private Affairs on the 14th Janua- 27 ... Ditto ry 1829. 1828 July 31, 1828 ... Ditto Proceeded to Europe via Bombay, on the 13th March 1841. 1827 July 10, 13 11 22 2,000 Ditto Collector of Govt. Customs at Mirzapore, 12th Sept. 1835, Jan. 29, 325 28 11 0 20 Ditto Out of Employ, 14th December 1840, Offg. Sessions Judge of Bundelcund, 11th December 1841, 700 Do. 29, Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Allyghur from 9th February, 28 13 11 3 orders of 13th March 1838, (on leave,) 2,250 Do. 11, 281 13 11 21 Magistrate, Collector and Salt Agent of the Central division Ditto of Cuttack, 12th February 1839, (on leave at the Cape of Good Hope, or N. S. Wales from the 5th February 1843,) 2,333 Feb. 3, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on the 13th February 1841. Do. 340 4, 281 10 3 10 Out of employ from 23rd October 1841, Ditto Jan. 29, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on private affairs on the 22d Feb.1839. Do. 18, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough via Bombay on the 13th March 1841. Oct. 30, 27 14 2 2 On leave for 3 months 16th November 1841. Ditto Preparatory to proceeding to Europe. 216 A. F. Donnelly, 23... 28 " 217 C. T. Davidson, f 218 G. Adams, f 219 E. F. Tyler, f 220 W. R. Timins, f 221 W. Luke, f 28... 36 [PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 222 W. A. Law, 223 T. J. C. Plowden, . 224 J.J. W. Taunton, fs. 225 N. H. E. Prowett, 226 F. J. Morris, f 227 N. B. Edmonstone, f. 228 J. Muir, f 229 B. J. Colvin, f 230 J. Thornton, f 231 E. Wilmot, f s. ... Yrs. MD. 1827 Dec. 23, 1827 14 0 9 Apr. 30, 1838 Jt. Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Bograh, 30th Nov. 1,500 ember and 5th December 1837, Apr. 29, 28 14 5 2 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Meerut from 25th March, or- ders of 14th April 1810, 1828 May 11, 381 11 4 9 Apr. 30, 39 Magistrate and Collector of Humeerpore, from 29th Janu- ary, orders of 22d February 1838, (on leave.) 2,250 June 11, 28 14 6 2 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Boolendshehur from 9th April, orders of 22d May 1841, 2,250 Aug. 27, 28 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough via Bombay on the 220 October 1839. 2,250 June 6, 28 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Private affairs on the 17th Decem- ber 1838. Do. 8, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough on the 4th February 1841, July 31, 28. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Private affairs on the 17th De- cember 1838. June 10, 28 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough under medical certificate on the 2nd January 1838. May 24, 28 10 4 24 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Ghazeepore from 25th March, orders of 14th April 1840, June 18, 28 136 13 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Bareilly from 18th January, 2,250 orders of 30th January, 1839, July 31, 28 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Private affairs on the 20th De- 2,250 cember 1838. 28... 232 R. H. P. Clarke, 233 P. C. Trench, ſ 91 VOL. 11.) 37 Civil List. Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence o Service. Date of Pro motion to pre. sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. e 2,250 28 2,333 13 2,250 2,250 250 Yrs. M.D. 234 W. S. Donpithorne, . 1828 June 4, 1828 13 6 27 Apr. 30, 1839 Magistrate and Collector of Mirzapore from 25th March, orders of 4th April 1840, Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Futeb pore, 11th December 1841, 235 H. W. Torrens, Nov. 10, 13 1 2 Ditto Secretary to the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, 26th February 1840, 236 F. Stainforth, f Do. 12, 28 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough. on the 18th Feb. 1840. 237 F. P. Buller, Do. 21, 21 2 10 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Shajehanpore from 8th Janu- ary, orders of 29th January 1839, 238 H. B. Harington, Sept. 27, 28 13 3 4 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Azimghur, 11th Dec. 1841, Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Jounpore, 5th Octo- ber 1840, and 14th April 1841, from 16th December 1840, 239 E. E. H. Repton, Do. 21, 28 11 4 17 Ditto Magistrate, Collector and Salt Agent of the North Division Cuttack, 19th and 27th December 1837, 240 R. Montgomery, Ditto 11 9 23 Magistrate and Collector of Allahabad, 5th Jupe 1839, 241 H. B. Beresford, f Oct. 12, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 13th March 1241. 242 W. F. Thompson, f 8.. Feb. 4, 29 8 8 20 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Depnty Collector of Goruckpore from 14th January, orders of 30th January 1840, Offg. Jt. Magt. and Deputy Collector Allyghur, 29th Dec. 1841, 243 D. F. Macleod, Dec. 10, 28 11 0 22 Ditto Principal Assistant to the Commissioner and Agent to the Lieut. Governor in the Sangor and Nurbudda Territories at Jubulpore, 2nd May, orders of 27thJune 1832, and 29th August 1840, 744 H. Unwin, f & Oct. 26, 28 9 1 7 Ditto Out of Employ 1st November 1840, Officiating Collector of Government Customs at Agra, 27th April 1841, from 5th April 1841, Ditto 2,333 2,250 28... 1,000 3 2,000 325 700 38 [PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 1828 Oct. 22, 1828 1,500 420 99 245 W. Onslow, f's 246 R. K. Dick, f 247 F. Skipwith, fs 248 M. S. Gilmore, f 249 G. F. Houlton, Do. 20, Do. 20, 28 28 .. 1,854 Feb 2, Oct. 10, 8 29 28 Nov. 26, 28 9 250 C. Whitmore, f 8 251 W. P. Masson, 252 J. Cumine, f. 253 J. C. Wilson, 1,500 354 1,002 270 2,250 Yrs. M.D. 10 1 11 Apr. 30, 1839 Magistrate of Patna, 12th February 1839, Offg. Civil & Sessions Judge of Mymunsing, Ist Sept. 1840, Ditto Proceeded to Europe via Bombay, on the 1st March 1841. 10 3 3 Ditto Collector of Behar, 7th November 1841, and Offg. Civil & Sessions Judge of Chittagong, 14th Dec. 1841, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, 13th February 1841, 13 2 22 Ditto Exercising the full powers of Collector for the Superin- tendancy of Unassessed Mehals and Settlements Affairs in the district of Behar, 7th January 1837, Offg. Collector of Patna, 11th June, and 19th Sept. 1832,... 0 6 Ditto Magistrate of Beerbhoom, 22nd March 1841, Offg. Collector of ditto, 22nd March 1841, 12 8 21 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Banda, 18th June 1839, Apr. 30, 40 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 14th Jan. 1840. 12 7 281 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Furruckabad, from 9th April, orders of 22nd May 1841, Offg. Magistrate & Collector of Moradabad, 14th Oct, 1821. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 8th March 1841. 12 7 28 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Sylhet, 12th February 1839, Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, 9th April 1841. 12 7 28 Ditto Government Agent and Ex-officio Secretary to the Saving's Bank from 220 February, orders of 4th March 1840, 12 7 30 Ditto Civil Auditor and Deputy Accountant of the N. W. Ps. at Agra from 1st April, orders of 14th April 1841, Officiating Magistrate & Collector of Mirzapore, 6th March and 14th April 1841, from 20th March, Apr. 10, 1829 Nov, 21, May 4, 29 28 29 2,250 301 29 254 D. J. Money, f. 255 G. A. C. Plowden, 256 H. Rose, f. 257 G. F. McClintock, Do. 2, Do. 4, Ditto Ditto 2,000 ... 2,400 258 W. E. Money, Do. 2, 291 1,500 420 VOL. 11.) 39 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 259 C. Grant, ... 2,250 260 R. B. Morgan, 261 A. Sconce, f. s. 262 M. Smith, ... 263 C. W. Kinloch, 264 C. Gubbins, f. 265 G. T. Shakespear, Yrs. MD. 1829 May 4, 1829 12 7 28 Apr. 30, 1840 Magistrate and Collector of Delhi from 19th December, orders of 26th December 1839, Officiating Accountant of the N. W. Ps., 7th August 1841... 525 Ditto 12 7 28 Ditto Jt. Magt. and Deputy Collector of Meerut, 9th Dec. 1841, Offg. Magt, and Collector of Budaon, 9th Dec. 1841, 1,000 Do. 2, 29 97 29 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Chittagong from the 12th, or- ders of 30th December 1839, 2,333 * Ditto 127 12 Ditto Registrar of the Sudder Dewanny and Nizamut Adawlut, N. W. Provinces, at Allahabad from 17th March, orders of 31st March 1841, 2,000 Do. 21, 29 12 7 11 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Meerut, 15th February 1839,... 1,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Muttra, 16th April 1841, 420 Do. 28, 29 Ditto On Furlough, 1st April 1841, Do. 23, 29 22 7 9 Ditto Magistrate of Midnapore aud Hidglee, 19th September 1839, 1,125 (Leave for 3 months under Sec. XI. of the Rules of 29th January 1840, orders of 13th July 1841,) Do. 22, 29... Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 23d December 1839. 29 127 13 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Agra from 1st April, orders of 14th April 1841, 1,250 Oct. 21, 29 12 2 11 Ditto Magistrate of Behar, 28th August 1839, 1,500 (On leave to the Cape of Good Hope for 2 years, on medi- cal certificate, 22 December 1840.) Sept. 23, 29 12 38 Ditto Superintendent of Salt Golahs at Sulkea, 25th Sept, 1840. 2,000 Acting Salt Agent at Tumlook, 16th September 1811, 420 266 W. P. Goad, f. 267 E. H. Morland, 268 W. Tayler. 12. 7.13 Ditto TO Do. 24, ... 269 S. Bowring, ... » 40 Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Number, Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 1,854 270 R. M. Skinner, 271 P. G. E. Taylor, 272 C. Tottenham, 1829 Sept. 5, 1829 Oct. 21, 29 1,916 1,854 Aug. 26, 39 Ditto Sep. 24, 29 20 Nov. 7, 273 W. M. Dirom, 274 J. H. Crawford, f. 275 T. B. C. Bayley, f. S.... 276 H. C. Metcalfe, f. s. 255 99 Sep. 5, Oct. 6, 29 29 Yrs. M.D 12 3 26 Apr. 30, 1840 Collector of Mymensing, 27th April 1841, 12 2 11 Ditto Collector of Moorshedabad from 12th March, orders of 26th March 1839, 12 4 6 Collector of Rajeshahye, 19th October 1841, In charge of the Officer of deputy Collector of Tirhoot, 19th October 1841. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 14th March 1841. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 19th December 1839. 8 6 13 Ditto Out of employ, 19th December 1840, 10 1 22 Ditto Collector of Tipperah from the 8th instant, orders of 30th March 1841, (Leave to the Cape of Good Hope, for 2 years, under medi- cal certificate, orders of 1st September 1841.) 12 3 71 Ditto Out of employ from 10th January 1841, orders of 2d Janu- ary 1841, 7 10 15 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Myopoory, 10th December 1840, 12 021 Ditto Magistrate and Collector of Etawah from 14th January, orders of 30th January 1840. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 28th February 1840. Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 14th Jan. 1840. 940 Ditto Senior Assistant to the Commissioner of Kumaon, for the division of Kumaon, and in charge of the Revised Re- venue Settlement of the Province, 15th February and 9th March 1839, Bengal and Agra 1,854 Sep. 24, 29 325 Nov.24, 29 Ditto 39 1,000 Dec. 11, 29 277 R. Houstoun, 278 D. Robertson, f. s. 279 A. Shank, 280 J. L. M. Lawrence, f.... 281 C. W. Fagan, f. 282 J. H. Batten, f, s. 2,250 Feb. 9, 30 Nov. 7, Do. 22, 29 29 (PART 11. 1,000 E VOL: 11.) It Civil List. Number. Names. VG BIM Season of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Month's Salary, Co's. Rs PART II. VOL. II. 283 W. T. Trotter, f. 8. 99 29 284 F. Lowth, 3021MF (சாips 30 VISUS 285 R. B. Garrett, SIE BESTRON Date of Pro Doung gayportuguga ja tarjoaa or BAO Date of Arrivat. motion to pre- og gee How Employed. GDS 1 sent grade.Dohor Col6OL TG aceitar o jo por TOPOGOPEL 1838 Yrs. M.D. er et 1833 1829 Dec. 22, 1829 12 0 10 Apr. 30, 1840 Collector of Purnea from 13th February, orders of 9th 2011 March 1841, 10122 VORGESET.. 1,854 (Leave for 24 months, under Sec. XI. of the Rules of 29th January 1840, preparatory to Furlough, 230 November 1820 la 1841, Sapsopsimar का' 1010 Do. 12, 12 0 22 Ditto Deputy Collector for the investigation of Titles to hold 1'000 DIERO land free from the Payment of Revenue in Zillah Jessore and Backergunge, South and West of the River Pudda,... 20th November 1836, and 31st January 1837, 1,500 Do. 11, 29 11 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Bullooah, 12th February 1839, LTE 18+ 1,500 Officiating Collector of Rajshahye, 9th February 1841, ... 354 Do. 11, 7 6 26 Ditto Assistant under the Commissioner of the 12th, or Bhau- gulpore Division, stationed at Monghyr, 1st December 1835, 1810 1838 400 (On leave to the Cape of Good Hope, for 2 years, on medi- DITO cal certificate, 12th January 1841,) ceteriorat J!TIGE Mar. 27, 8 8 22 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Behar, 19th Sep 380 tember 1840, 700 the pote Officiating Magistrate of Behar, 5th October 1841, 22 OD 0 1950 30 11 10 20 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Furruckabad, from 20 January, orders of 2d February 1839, 1,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Furruckabad, 30th wege January 1840, 270 Dec. 11, 29 0 0 0 * Ditto. Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 28th February Dace o . Det of 1840, 286 F. R. Hodgson, f. 3. 29 Endeleon 287 J. Reid, f. s. 30 20 288 R. H. S. Campbell, ... .. Feb. 9, G ... 289 C. B. Quintin, f. ghbors ... 955 42 [PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. t's Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Service, Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. Tube 290 W. T. Taylor, f. s. ... 291 R. N. Farquharson, og for 292 W. Travers, Date of Date of Pro 1370 Arrival. motion to pre-LOGGOOGT ZO ETLOBE How Employede fjs 536 SPIATSIA sent grade. 99551922 taro u reuses GEDEG 300 Yrs. M.D. DA 900 Date satoi oil, ETFLлю кварга 1829 Dec. 22, 1829 8 7 9 Apr. 30, 1840 Magistrate of Purnea from 13th February, orders of 9th March 1841, 1,000 DO 270 Officiating Collector of Purnea, 230 November 1841, afh.. Oct. 21, 12 2 11 Ditto Special Deputy Collector for the investigation of Titles to hold land free from the Payment of Revenue in Zillah Patna, 7th March 1837, 1,834 Officiating Special Deputy Collector of Sarun and Shaba- TO bad. 7th May 1839, ASUOTEZIONGO ES ISE OS 3.3 Nov. 24, 29 12 17 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Purnea and Malda from 13th February, orders of 9th March 1841, 1,500 Dec. 22, 29 12 0 10 Ditto Magistrate of Backergunge, from the 10th August, orders of 16th June 1840, ang 1,000 Aug 31, 29 Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 5th March 1841. 29 12 Ditto First Assistant to the Collector of Government Customs at 0035 Calcutta, 11th January 1837, matou of UMG R pow. 1,000 1830 May 1, 11 8 0 Apr. 30, 1841 Magistrate of East Burdwan, 24th August 1841, 1,000 Officiating Collector of Jessore, 13th October 1840, and Magistrate 12th October 1841, or (76 Kan.. 420 Do. 13, 30 11 7 171 Ditto Magistrate, Collector, & Salt Agent at Pooree, 7th Nov. 1841 2,333 9 Eo. 28, 3011 74 Ditto Settlement officer at Saharunpore from 1st August, orders 2018 HD of 31st August 1837, 2,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Mozuffernuggur, 10th October 1839, 250 Do. 13, 301 11 7 17 Ditto Deputy Collector for the investigation of Tittles to hold land free from the Payment of Revenue in Zillah Tip- perah and Sylhet, including the mainland of Bulloab, 21st February 1837, 1,500 0 293 H. C. Halkett, 294 H. R. Alexander, f. 295 J. W. H. Campbell, 296 C. Steer, Ditto 99 0 3 0 0 Oct. 1, DUO 30 297 H. C. Hamilton, 298 E. Thornton, f. s. 299 A. C. Bidwell, 260 ['17 "TOA 43 Civil List. Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Con 1 Seasons of Actual Re. sidence or Service. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. | 30 ... 30 9 77 aje HOE DIAPERS WATPOL TO Date of et e Names. Date of Prologue Du Lou Sve your cos Arrival. motion to prepara sa isa How Employed. 1970 sent grade. 18 RH STT NO 3 DES Быворот за еве го сро у ссорилистру аерылу384 оагоре Yrs. M.D. 6-os TOO 300 A. T. Dick,PT ... 1830 Dec. 28, 1830 11 7 4 Apr. 30, 1841 Collector of Rungpore, 1st December 1841, thote 1,854 301 J. S. Torrens, f. s. Sept. 11, 7 6 10 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of 24-Pergunnahs, Nuddea and T000 CA JORION DIE 10 9 Dutro Moorshedabad, 21st December 1838, ow 1,500 302 W. De H. Routh, Oct. 23, 30 11 2 9 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Allahabad from 1'200 218 A LOU DUO DIE 27th February, orders of 13th March 1841, STUGA 1,000 3. Інспары Do DINO Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Mynpoory, 13th 700 and 12th December 1840, and 13th March 1841, ... 420 303 A. Forbes, Sept. 16, 30 11 3 15 Ditto Collector of Midnapore, 17th August 1841, COUSCOOL OE 1,854 304 M, R. Gubbins, Mar. 8, 31 10 9 24 Ditto Settlement Officer, Zillah Etawah, 11th March 1840, 124. 2,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Delhi, 31st August ROLE Durro 1841, (no Deputation allowance), bo 2004 305 Hon.H.B.Devereux, fs. 31 7 4 6 Ditto Superintendent of Nugger Division, 24th August 1840,leave for 9 months under Medl. Certif. 27th Sept. 1841, sac. 1,600 306 W. H. Elliot, Nov. 16, 11 1 15 Ditto Magistrate of Moorshedabad, 17th January 1837, 1,500 307 F. Williams, Jan. 14, 31 10 11 18 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Pilleebheet from 20 March, orders of 23d June 1838, bol. 1,000 Temporarily residing at Bareilly, 29th April 1841, 500 308 G. H. M. Alexander,... Nov. 20, 3011 1 il Ditto from 28th , leave) 1,500 309 A. S. Annand, f. 8. 1 Mar. 20, 131 17 3 10 Ditto Magt. of Tipperah from 12th Dec. orders of 13th Dec. 1839, 1,000 310 T. H. Sympson, Jan. 14, 31 10 11 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Bijnore, 4th June 1838, (on leave) 1,000 311 W. Bell, f. s. Do, 28, 31 9 1 3 Ditto Jt. Magt. & Deputy Collector of Tipperah, 19th Jan. 1841, Offg. Jt. Magt. & Dpy. Colltr. of Malda, 19th Jan. 1841, 700 312 J. G. Campbell, Do. 27, 31 10 11 5 Ditto Special Deputy Collector and Superintendant of Khas and Die o Resumed Mehals on Hooghly, Burdwan, East and West, aud Beerbhoom, 2d August 1839, 1,500 Mar. 16, 750 30 :: 99 ... 44 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. Seasons of Appointmt Actual Re- sidence on Service, Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. SMO Saprooms naar 1833 G Names. Date of Pro-Baroqr692 01 0252F439 MESE Date of Arrival. motion to pre-DGON PSA 0951605 How Employed. uro poema sent grade. OLED b. 091]Log Top 50' 1871" JABU Dose 98 DO yar Dina CIOCIOLObbotu 290' 1871 gambar Yrs. M.D. DIO LIG UD CONGGOL O RADIG? 313 R. Money, ty 1831 May 10, 1831 10 7 22 Apr. 30, 1839 Settlement Officer at Moradabad from 1st August, orders 1000 of 31st August 1827, IRIP TO 13:10 1,500 314 W.J. Allen, 1961 July 11, 31 10 5 21 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Malda, 27th April 1841, 1,500 Offg. Magistrate and Collector of Dacca, 27th April 1841, 420 815 J. A. Cragie, f. s. Do. 11, 31 17 5 2 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Bijnore and Moradabad from 800 HERO AGA' je 20 DITO 1st April, orders of 4th April 1840, 1,000 Officiating Magistrate and in Special charge of Revenue l'eno 200 HD426162 duties of Cawnpore, 11th March 1841, 420 316 M. P. Edgeworth, Sept. 14, 31 10 3 17 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Seharunpore 2014 OPIES! 31 TO from 25th March, orders 14th Aprih pote, 30th Apr. 1841, 1,500 39 In charge of the office of Magistrate and Collector of Se 1897 upbell, 12 harunpore, 15th July 1841. 317 H. C. Tucker, f. s. Ditto Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, on the 27th Feb. 1841. 318 H. Atherton, f. s. Ditto 7 11 27 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Pubna, 27th rood 803 рынкопир 301 3 a DIETO April 1841, Hoon 1,500 319 E. U. C. Monckton, Ditto 10 3 17 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Bareilly from 200 30 brie 30 10 DIO 1st March, orders of 13th March 1841, 1,000 320 J. S, Dumergue, .... Oct, 29, 31 10 2 12 bx Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Mirzapore from 1827 30th May, orders of 26th June 1841, 1,000 Officiating ditto and ditto at Goruck pore, 9th Dec. 1841. 321 R. H. Snell, May 21, 31 10 7 15 Ditto Principal Assistant to the Accountant General, 23d October 1840, 1,000 1,000 322 G. G. McIntosh, Aug. 28, 31 10 4 4 Ditto Magistrate of Rajeshahye, 12th February 1839, Officiating Magistrate and Collector, and Salt Agent, Col. lector, Division Cuttack, 30 November 1840, 420 192 DIERO Droo ON VOL. 11.) 45 Civil List. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 1'000 1,000 ... D 3 1,000 1,000 420 1 sto og FDF LETT.COM Date of Pro- Names. LIGE VE DamboLay yay 1893 Date of motion to pre papqa czaube How Employed. SLO P DE Arrival. Rower 00 sent grade. Dobra Coffe TOE The bacanestos 95 game to por COD FESTAS DE Yrs. M.D. 323 C, Raikes, 1831 Sept. 14, 1831 8 4 27 Apr. 30, 1839 Settlement Officer of the unsettled States, in the Province of Benares, 15th June 1839, mond (Doing duty at Mirzapore.) 324 C. J.H. Graham, f.s... Ditto 10 3 17 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of West Burdwan, O nam 200 DO 11:31 TO 13th April 1841, (on leave) 325 F. B. Kemp, Noy. 14, 31 10 1 18 Ditto Commissioner of Sunderbuns, and Deputy Collector of Jes- 320 0765}] 1835 1936 1 vbu sore, 19th September 1839, Officiating Collector of Dinagepore, 27th April 1841, 326 M. C. Ommaney, ... 1832 May 12, 32 9 7 20 Apr. 30,40 Political Assistant in the Saugor and Nurbadda territo- ries at Saugor, 23d Jan. and 19th Aug. 1840, 327 G. F. Edmonstone, Jr.. 1831 Dec. 28, 31 10 04 Apr. 30,39 Deputy Collector for the revision of Settlements under Re- gulation IX, of 1883, employed in the settlement du . ties at Myopoory, 28th September 1838, 33 L LLELOR 29163 ro Deputed for settlement duties at Paneeput, 25th Nov. 1840 328 F. R. Davidson, 1832 Apr. 8, 32 9 8 23 Apr. 30, 40 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Benares, 4th SERICOLE June 1838, BUT DELOCIDE DE Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Benares, 5th April 1839, 910 329 G. U. Yule, , May 10, 32 9 7 16 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Dacca and Mymensing, 6th 32 Troll 1831 cbt st 182 ya Tez February 1840, haben . 330 R. Hampton, 32 9 9 13 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Rajeshahye, Dinapore, Rung- pore, Bograh and Pubna, 6th February 1840, 331 O. W. Malet, 1831 Dec. 4, 31 8 6 28 Apr. 30, 39 Special Deputy Collector of Cuttack, 27th April 1841, Officiating Magistrate, Collector and Salt Agent Pooree, st 30 3rd and 4th August 1841, 332- J. H. Young, Do. 3, 31 10 O 29 Ditto Deputy Secretary to the Government of Bengal, Judicial and Revenue Department, 17th July 1839, 2,000 FOCO 1,500 420 DIETA 1,000 GEOT 270 1,000 Mar. 19, 1,000 1,500 bon 420 0 ... 1,500 46 (PART II. Bengal and Agra Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 9 June 23, 321 ... *** 700 SE35AGUOS DOSu esa Names. Date of Son Date of pro- png Conan Employed. 1. Bougust 2016!6.99 motion to pre-amplitse How Employed. Arrival. sent grade. bussines COSE SHE BOITE FOOLES DEGIS Door CGO DE CERRO BAT 330 bpos 3 | Yrs. M.D. 333 C. H. Lashington, 22 1831 Sept. 24, 1832 3 4 Apr. 30, 1839 Superintendent of Survey of Zillah ! Behar, 7th Sept. 1841,... 1,500 334 J. Wheler, 9 6 8 Ditto Magistrate of Mymensing, 19th September 1839,- 1,000 Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Noacolly, 30th April 1841, 320 335 W. Vansittart, May 10, 32 9 7 16 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Monghyr from 358 183 1835 x 8 13th February, orders of 9th March 1841, 1,500 336 C. B. Trevor, June 12, 32 9 6 19 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Jessore of the 2d grade, 7th March 1837, Offg. ditto ditto of Baraset of the 1st grade, 4th May1840, 300 337 J. Alexander, ons? 189) July 24, 32 9 5 871 Ditto Magistrate of Nuddea, 24th August 1841, 15952 1.000 Officiating Collector of Tipperah, 9th Nov. 1841, 420 338 T. E. Colebrooke, 19 June 19, 32 00051 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on urgent Private affairs, from 9th September 1836. ang en 339 E. A. Samuells, 1832 June 19, 32 6 12 Apr. 30, 40 Magistrate of Tirhoot, 19th May 1840, 1,000 340 G. P. Leycester, Do. 19, 32 9 6 12 Ditto Magistrate of Hooghly, 19th May 1840, GO 1,000 341 J. A. O. Farquharson, Oct. 17, 321 9 2 15, Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate snd Collector, and in charge of I'mo Chape D140 Khas Mehals of Bhaugulpore, 13th June 1837, :20 700 Officiating Magistrate of Patna, 19th September and 18th October 1839, 320 342 S. J. Becher, 18 Do. 17,1 32 9 2 157 or Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Juanpore, 8th April 1841, 1,000 343 R. Alexander, July 24, 32 9 5 8 Ditto Settlement Officer in Zillah Agra, 31st December 1940, 1,500 (On leave to the Hills.) 344 J. Brewster, Oct. 12, 32 9 2 20 Ditto Deputy Collector for the investigation of claims to hold lands exempt from Payment of Land Revenue in the Dis- trict of Bareilly and Shajehanpore, 12th April 1839, 1,000 In charge of the Kurnaul Treasury. :) . VOL. 11.) 47 Civil List. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 8 Do. 93 PITO Ag Date of Pro-LETRTI Names. Date of motion to pre-out Workse sag How Employed. DOLG Arrival. sent grade. LOCCESO e EG WON BUTO A 18 19 and carrots og DEL 1 be Yrs. M.D. Ons Plan U DebatCOUGGES OF LEGO box 345 G. D. Wilkins, 1832 Mar. 6, 1833 9 26 Apr. 30, 1840 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Chumparun from 830 the 28th February, orders of 28th April 1839, OL 03 1,000 346 Hon. E. Drummond,... 6, 33 8 9 261 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Monghyr, 12th TOO 1900 "11831 February 1839, za ceo Dion. 700 (Leave for 2 months under Sec. XI. of the Rules of 29th January 1840, 5th October 1841.) 347 F.A.E. Dalrymple, f. s. Do. 16, 33 5 1 13 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of the Central T000 Division of Cuttack, 24th January 1840, 400 (On leave to China on Medical Certificate for six months, 11th May 1841.) ODSEVENTEENUS IN 348 T. Young, Dec. 19, 29 7 9 16 Ditto Assistant under the Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Noacolly, 9th April 1838, ... 400 Exercising the powers of Joint Mgistrate and Deputy 822 DINO Collector at Balasore, 26th October 1841, kter, .. 260 349 E. Thomas, Nov. 22, 7 2 21 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Allyghur, Tom DATO 12th December 1840, qurbota Yuy Dig&Scho... 1,000 350 R. W. Hughes, f. 1824 July 14, 26 0 0 Apr. 30, 1841 Officiating at Saharunpere ditto. Proceeded to Europe on the 27th October 1840. GCTOS 0 351 E. E. Woodcock, 1833 June 22, 33 8 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Balasore, of the you S S 1833 2015 2nd grade, 12th February 1839, EGLUL O Roup. 700 (Leave for 3 months under Medical Certificate, 5th October 1841.) 352 J, J. Ward, Do. 21, 38 8 6 10 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of the 2nd grade Patna, 12th Oct. 1841, 700 Officiating Magistrate of Midnapore, 13th July and 12th be October 1841. 32 0 6 9 8 48 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Number. Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. DO Actual Re- sidence on Ser vice. Date of Pro OSCOPAL T&T motion to pre-orang yder. How Employed. 73157072 94 1577 sent grade. by DUO Praha y hande Coescozo G. Jag Eco Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. ATA 353 H. S. Ravenshaw, 21 OLOG 1833 June 21, 1833 1233ES .. 354 A. Grote, Do. 14, 33 53 DICTO 355 C. Chester, 33 May 22, ... 356 T. K. Lloyd, ... June 24, 33 857 E. Latour, 358 C, Chapman, Dec. 31, Oct. 19, Yrs. M.D. de LG Store 8 6 10 Apr. 30, 1841 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Boolandshabur from 1st March, orders of i3th March 1841, RONGO... 1,000 Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of br 20187 Meerut, 9th December 1841, 420 8 6 17 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Midnapore and Hidgelee from too the 28th December 1839, orders of 16th January 1841,... 1,000 8 7 10 Ditto Settlement officer at Goruckpore from 1st August, orders of 31st August 1837. Performing settlement duties at Juanpore, 20th November 1839, 1,000 8 6 7 Ditto Special Deputy Collector of Allyghur, 31st October 1839. 1,000 Officiating Civil Auditor and Deputy Accountant N. W. Ps. Agra from 12th March, orders of 6th March 1841, ... 320 8 0 1 Ditto Magistrate of Dinagepore, 30th March 1841, 1,000 8 2 13 Ditto Superintendent of Survey of Zillah Patna, 5th October 1841 1,000 FACTORS. OG 7 5 10 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Dinagepore, 29th March 1836, 400 Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Fur- reedpore, 9th November 1841,150 320 7 3 71 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Furreedpore, 27th April 1-41, 1,000 Officiating Magistrate of Nuddea, 9th November, 1841. Ditto Proceeded to Europe from Bombay, on the 1st March 1841. 7 6 15 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Midnapore, 19th January 1841, 700 Officiating Magistrate of Shahabad, 7th September 1841, 33 33 99 359 A. G. Macdonald, 1834 July 22, 3+ 360 G. Loch, .. Sept. 25, 34 : 361 H. G, Astell, 362 E. F. Radcliffe, Do. 10, June 17, 34 34 320 ('1 "J04 49 Civil List. Number. Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival, Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. Jaq Dios UFC How Employed. DO Smeshasa 2006 Month's Salary, Coi's Rs. PART IL VOL. II. T300 400 320 ... > 400 320 1,000 Yrs. M.D. 363 JG. L. Martin, ..: 1834 July 8, 1834 7 5 24 Apr. 30, 1839 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of the Central Division of Cuttack, 25th, February 1839, Officiating Magistrate of Purnea, 23 November 1841, ... 364 J. M. Hay, f. s. Sept. 25, 34 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, under Medical Certifi- cate, on the 25th March 1839. 365 M. A, G, Shawe, Apr. 19,135 68 1310 Ditto Assistant under the Joint Magistrate, and Deputy Collector of Burdwan, 27th December 1836, GEGUSTEGA Officiating Commissioner of Soonderbuns, 27th April 1841, 366 W.C. S. Cunninghame 1835 Oct. 26, 35 6 2 6 Apr. 30, 40 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Cawnpore, 18th August 1841, Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Futtehpore, 12th BIO October 1841, 17.0 367 H. V. Bayley, Sept. 25, 35 6 3 81 Ditto Assistant Secretary in the Secret, Political, Legislative,Judi- cial and Revenue Departments of the Government of In- O TOP dia, 30th March 1840, 368 R. P. Harrison, 35 3 12 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Chittagong, 10th May 1837, Do Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Ban- coorah, 18th May 1841, ... 369 A. Littledale, Oct. 26, 35 6 3 7 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Dacca, 8th Teba' 30 June 1837, 100 St.. De Officiating Magistrate of Mymensing, 27th April 1841, 370 F. A. Lushington, Sept. 26, 35 6 3 6 Ditto Second Assistant to the Accountant General and Sub- Treasurer, 6th January 1841, 371 L. J. H. Grey, July 21, 35 6 5 11 Ditto Magistrate of Rungpore, 1st December 1841, 372 R. T. Tucker, Nov. 25, 35 6 16 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Ghazeepore, 13th o March 1840, (on leave to the Cape) 420 > Do. 19, 1,000 6 400 320 .. re 400 320 93 700 1,000 1,000 50 (PART 11. Bengal and Agra Names. Number Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service, Date of Pro-lygel conjunt to TVG 0906 motion to preparemos um D How Employed. Currenbolo? BET sent grade. Po Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 373 A. Turnbull, 144 374 F. S. Head, 3320 30 375 T. C. Loch, 300 376 D. Cunliffe, Dec. 13, Yrs. M.D. 1835 Nov. 25, 1835 6 1 6 Apr. 30, 1840 Assistant to the Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector Die Pubna, 14th Dec. 1836, 400 Officiating Magistrate of East Burdwan, 5th Oct. 1841, Mar. 1, 36) 5 10 11 Ditto Settlement Deputy Collector,employed on settlement duties at Pillibheet, 15th January 1839, 1,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Bijnore, 420 Feb. 7, 36 7 5 24 Ditto Assistant under the Magistrate and Collector of Nuddea, 22nd May 1837, 400 Officiating Magistrate of Rajeshahye, 3rd Nov. 1840, 320 35) 6 2 19 Ditto Assistant under the Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector 150 of Monghyr, 17th July 1841, .. 400 Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- 2014 lector of Monghyr, 260 1836 Oct. 8, 36 5 2 14 Apr. 30, 41 Senior Assistant with Special powers to the Political Agent at Umballah, 14th July 1838, 1,000 June 11, 36 5 6 20 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Moradabad, 18th December 1840, 1,000 Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Mozuffernugger, 27th November and 18th 330 December 1840. Oct. 9, 36 5 2 23 Ditto Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Delhi, 18th December 1840, 1,000 July 22, 36 5 5 11 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Backergunge, 16th June 1840, 400 Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Sylhet, 1st June 1841, 320 00 377 H. H. Greathed, 378 J. B. Mill, 79 DIE bers can 379 E. T. Colvin, ... 380 C. T. Sealy, 9 ['II '704 51 Civil List. Names. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Number. Arrivul. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro motion to pre-ow How Employed. sent grade. LOT 182 Cou Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. KROS ... 381 C. T. Le Bas, TOOSHE 382 G. H. Clarke, 383 T. C. Trotter, ... 384 G. D. Raikes, seo Ditto 385 F. B. Gubbins, 36 Yrs. M.D. 1836 Oct. 6, 1836 5 2 26 Apr. 30, 1841 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Agra, 31st DO December 1840, 1,000 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Humeerpore, 12th October 1841, TIDE 420 July 22, 361 5 5 11 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Moradabad, Text 22d July 1841, 400 Aug. 6, 361 5 4 27 Ditto Ditto ditto of Midnapore, 14th October 1837, 400 Exercising the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Patna, 4th August 1838, 260 July 22, 36 5 5 11 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Muttra, 18th August 1841, 7020 1,000 Aug. 12, 5 4 21 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Hissar, 230 October 1837, 400 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Hissar, 12th July 1841, 420 Dec. 31, 361 5.0.3 Ditto Joint Magistrate of Bbaugulpore, for the purpose of inves- tigating a case of abstraction of money from the treasury, the 15th October 1841, 2014. Phoes Ditto 5 0 2 Ditto Assistant to the Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Monghyr, 30th September 1837, ... 400 Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Tirhoot, and Superintendent of khas and resum- ed Mehals of Tirhoot, 12th March 1839, 320 Jan. 17, 37 4 11 151 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Tirhoot, 9th November 1838, 400 (Leave for 3 months under Sec. XI. of the Rules of 29th 29th January 1841.) 386 C. Beadon, 387 A. R. Young, 388 G. F. Cockburn, 99 52 (PART. II. Bengal and Agra Settle Officer under Sec . II . and III . Reg . IX . of 1825 , Number. Names, Dics ) Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on service. motion to pre- Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 389 R. B. Thornhill, 1836 Dec. 24, 1836 B002 19 ... 390 H. M. Reid, Jan. 20, 37 Ditto 400 391 H. D. H. Fergusson, .. Date of Pro-G DOL 3 POUCET OG 13 How Employed. sent grade. to the OSTS LONG DE COLEGIOS, IL S' 100 101 1230 Yrs. M.D. E WE DO 5 0 9 Apr. 30, 1841 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Agra, 14th December 1838, 400 Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Furruckabad, 320 2 4 11 13 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Purnea, 16th January 1838, Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of ditto, 18th January 1839, 130 Acting Superintendent of khas and resumed Mehals at ditto, 10th October 1839. 4 10 20 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Dacca, 30th October 1838, 400 Executing the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Chittagong, 27th May 1841, 260 4 2 21 Apr. 30, 37 Assistant Secretary to the Government of N. W. Ps. from 18th March, orders of 8th April 1840, 1,000 4 2 25 Ditto Assistant under the Commissioner of Rohilound Division, 20th June, 1839, (on leave,) 400 4 2 26 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Benares, 25th ) 400 4 6 14 Ditto in the Province of Benares, 4th December 1840, 1,000 4 2 26 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Meerut, 26th March 1839, 400 Officiating Joint Magistrate & Deputy Collector of Meerut, 220 May and 4th June 1841, 320 Feb. 11, 37 Ditto 1837 Oct. 10, 30 37 392 W. Edwards, 393 A. Ross, 22 Do. 7, 37 Do. 6, 37 394 A. A. Roberts, 395 E. M. Wylly, 396 G. Edmonstone, ... June 19, 37 Oct. 6, 37 VOL. 9.] 53 Civil List. Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt, Actual Re- sidence on Service. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 397 H. Vansittart, 398 W. Wynyard, 499 R. C. Raikes, 23 Date of Prosper Date of pi Arrival. motion to pre- Vater sret How Emploged. sent grade. verberater GIO 13 DOBRO Yrs. M.D. 1837 Oct. 6, 1837 4 2 26 Apr. 30, 1837 Junior Assistant to the Political Agent at Umbullah, 4th January 1841, from 1st December 1840, 700 July 8, 37 4 5 25 Ditto Settlement Officer under Sec. II. and III. Reg. IX. of 1825 in the Province of Benares, 4th December 1840, doing duty at Mirzapore, 02... 1,000 Sept. 15, 37 4 3 17 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Jessore, 16th June 1840, 400 Exercising the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- WA lector of Pubna, 27th October 1840, D. 260 Dec. 10, 37 4 0 17 Ditto Settlement Officer in Bundlecund, 28th October and 25th November 1840, 1,000 Nov. 27, 37 4 4 Ditto Ditto ditto of Panerput, 15th May 1840, 1,000 1 Dec. 17, 37 4 0 16 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of the southern division of Cuttack, 17th March 1841, 400 DO Exercising the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector, Cuttack, 11th May 1841, 260 Nov. 29, 37 4 1 4 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Moorshedabad, 14th May 1839, TO 400 Acting Superintendent of khas and resumed Mehals at ditto, 130 Do. 27, 37 4 1 4 Ditto 1382 Settlement officer at Budaon, 7th January 1841, from 25th 1829 0 February, 700 1838 Oct. 15, 38 3 2 18 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Shajehanpore, 10th February 1841, 400 Exercising the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Shajehanpore, 300 Dec. 5,38 3 0 28 Ditto Assistant to the Agent Governor General for the states of Rajpootana, 16th January 1840, 500 400 W. Muir, 401 G. C. Barnes, 402 E.T. Trevor, COM 403 F. L. Beaufort, Ditto 22 " 404 A. H. Cock, 405 C. B. Thornhill, to the ebruary 1841, 406 W. Strachy, 54 (PART II. Bengal and Agra FORGE LOST CURIO Date of Pro- Names. Number. j Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. motion to pre- How Employed. 1!! TEGO asentono en bon Month's Salary, Co.'& Rs. sent grade. BO 407 A. Raikes, 31 1 Apr. 30, 18 400 320 408 J. R. Barnes, 19 700 409 W. Galloway, f. 8. 410 B. H. . Cooper, 400 411 C. A. Ravenshaw, : Yrs. M.D. 1838 Dec. 1, 1838 1837 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Meerut, 14th March 1840, Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Bij- nore from 1st January 1841, orders of 26th Dec. 1840, Jan. 12, 391 2 11 21 Ditto Settlement Officer under Sec. II. and III. Reg. IX. of 1825. in the Province of Benares, 4th December 1840,.... Feb. 7, 39 0 0 0 Ditto Proceeded to Europe on Furlough, under Medical Certifi- cate, on the 17th August 1840. 1839 July 30, 39 2 5 3 Apr. 30, 1839 Assistant to the Mag. and Coll. of Dacca, 27th May 1841, Vested with special powers described in Clause 3, Sec. 2, Reg. 3, of 1821, 27th May 1841, Sept. 4, 39 2 3 29 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Bhaugulpore, 2d November 1841, CON Exercising the powers described in Clause 3, Sec. 2, Reg. 3, of 1821, 20 November 1841, July 29, 391 2 5 31 Ditto to the 1840, (on leave to the Hills,) Sept. 21, 39 2 3 121 Ditto Asst, to the Magistrate and Collector of Mirzapore, 29th July 1841 Vested with special powers of Joint Magistrate & Deputy Collector 18th December 1841, 40 1 10 14) Ditto Assistant to the Agent to the Governor General for the states of Rajpootana, 25th September 1840, Jan. 19, 40 1 11 14 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Sarun, 11th August 1841, Invested with the special powers described in Clause 3, Sec, 2, Reg. 3, of 1821, 4th May 1841, 400 ... 412 G. D. Turnbull, 413 W. Roberts, Assistant to the Magistratehen un llector of Juanpore , 400 400 150 ... ... Feb. 16, 414 H. J. Bushby, 415 W. H. Broadhurst, 400 400 VOL. 11.) 55 Civil List. Names. Number, Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre-propis 1977 How Employed. sent grade. to a COLOR FOTOT Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 400 400 Mar. 26, 3 400 400 > 400 2 Yrs, M.D. 416 H. P. A. B. Riddell,... 1840 June 8, 1840 1 6 23 Apr. 30, 1840 Assistant under the Commissioner of the Agra division, 4th May 1841, 192 2 Eube DIO Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Agra, 12th October 1841. 417 G. M. B. Berford, 1839 Jan. 2, 40 2 0 0 Apr. 30, 1839 Assistant under the Magistrate and Collector of Azimghur, from 7th February 1841, Homes SE 418 P. Melvill, Feb. 7, 401 1 10 23 Ditto Assistant to the Governor General's Agent, N. W. F., 25th September 1840, 419 E. F. Lautour, 40 195 Ditto Assistant to the Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Malda, 27th May 1841, COBOARD FO 420 A. Ross, Jan. 19, 40 1 11 14 Ditto Assistant to the Commissioner of Allahabad division, 4th DIO June 1841, GBG TOGO Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Cawnpore. 421 G. C. Fletcher, Feb. 8, 40 1 10 22 Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Rajeshahye, 18th May 1841, pramogos, rebre Executing the special powers described in Sec. 21, Reg. 8 of 1831. 19th October 1841.*TIADA 422 C. J. Wingfield, Mar. 29, 1 9 3 Ditto Assistant under the Commissioner of the Delhi division, 19th March 1841, OURSES 3, of 1821, 12th October 1841.31 0.5 Invested with the special powers described in Sec. 2, Reg. 50 423 W. B. Buckle, f. s. 1840 Oct. 4, 40 1 2 29 Apr. 30, 1840 Proceeded to Europe on the 26th July 1841. 424 R. N. Shore, Ditto 1 2 29 Ditto Assistant under the Magistrate and Collector of Cuttack,.... Vested with the Special powers described in Clause 3, Sec. 2, Reg. III. of 1821, 16th Nov. 1841, 425 R. H. Russell, Sept. 11, 40 1 3 21 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Moorshedabad, 9th February 1841, Ditto 400 ... 40 400 ... 400 2 oorshedabad. 400 56 (PART II. Bengal and Agra 430 M , B , Thornhill , Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Date of Arrival. Actual Re. sidence on Service. Date of Pro- motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. 426 J. A. Loch, 400 427 Alexander Shakespear 400 428 R. Abercrombie, 429 W. S. Paterson, 400 313 Dec. 24, 0 9 ... 431 J .E.S. Lillie, Nov. 23, Yrs, M.D. 1840 Sept. 10, 1840| 1 3 22 Apr. 30, 1840 Assistant under the Magistrate and Collector of Benares, from 26th February 1841, Vested with powers described in Sec. 2, Reg. 3 of 1821, 11th June 1841. Officiating Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector, Benares. Nov. 27, 40 1 1 4 Ditto Assistant under the Commissioner of Meerut division, 13th May 1840, Sept. 10, 40 1 8 22 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Burdwan, 6th July 1841, 40 1 Ditto Attached to the College Prosecuting his Studies at Meerut, Jan. 27, 41 1 6 Ditto 401 1 8 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Tirboot, 28th i September 1841, Mar. 19, 41 0 9 14 Ditto Prosecuting his Studies at Lucknow, 1841 Jan. 8, 41 0 6 24 Apr. 30, 1841 Attached to the College, House rent, 1840 Do. 30, 40 0.11 3 Ditto 1840 Attached to the College, House rent, Apr. 11, 41 0 8 21 Ditto Attached to the College, House rent, Dec. 27, 40 1-06 Ditto Assistant under Commissioner of Revenue and Police of the Benares division, 1st July 1841, Feb. 19,; 411 0 10 11 Ditto Attached to the College, House rent, Mar, 17, 41 0.9 16 Ditto Assistant to the Magistrate and Collector of Behar, 19th October 1841, 1 400 313 313 80 313 80 313 432 P. V . Agnew, 433 H. D. Maconochie, .. 434 W. J. R. Carnac, 435 J. J. Fitzpatrick, 436 T. B. Pearson, 437 J. P. McWhirter, 438 C. A. Lushington, 80 400 313 80 400 ['HI "102 57 Civil List. Names. Seasons of Appoint mt. Number. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on Service. Date of Pro. motion to pre- sent grade. How Employed. Month's Salary, Co.'s Rs. PART II. VOL. II. 439 C. G. Hillersdon, 1841 June 9, 1841 Yrs. M.D. 0 6 28 Apr. 30, 1841 Attached to the College, 1 0 6 Ditto 1840 Attached to the College, House rent, 1840 Dec. 17, 40 ... 440 W. Grey, 441 M. H. Court, House rent, Jan. 30, 41 0 11 Ditto Attached to the College, ... House rent, 442 Hon. F. Drummond,.. 443 J. F. D. Ingles, Ditto Ditto 3 3 House rent, 313 80 313 80 313 80 313 313 80 313 80 313 80 313 80 313 80 444 E. H. Lushington, 1 0 Ditto Prosecuting his studies at Behar, 1 0 Ditto Attached to the College, 0 6 10 apr. 30, 1841 Attached to the College, 0 3 11 Ditto Attached to the College, 1841 June 22, 41 House rent, 445 R. J. Scott, Sept. 21, 41 House rent, 446 G. G. Balfour Ditto 0 3 11 Ditto ... Attached to the College, Attached to the College, House rent, 447 E. J. Boldero Oct. 21, 41 0 2 11 2 111 Ditto House rent, :: NOTE,- The dates of actual residence are computed as for 1st of January, 1842. 58 (PART 1. Political Department. POLITICAL DEPARTMENT. ... 2,000 00 ..6 1,000 0 0 ... 1,000 0 0 • 1,800 0 810 14 0 Rs. per Mensem. Aden.—Commander S. B. Haines, political agent, Lieut. G. Jenkins. I. N. assistant, Bombay. Ajmere.—Lieut. J. D. Macnaghten, superintendent, 1,000 0 Arracan.--Capt. A. Bogle, 2d N. I. commissioner, Captain J. R. Abbott, senior assistant, ... 1,000 0 0 Captain D. Williams, ditto, ... 1,000 0 0 Lieut. A. P. Phayre, assistant, 1,000 0 0 Lieut. J. Hopkinson, ditto, 500 00 Surgeon J. Morton, Balmere.—Lieut. G. G. Malet By. cavalry, offg. supdt. Bareilly.-F. H. Robinson, acting agent, Baroda.-Wm. Boyd, resident, 4,166 10 8 A. Remington, 1st assistant, Thomas Ogilvy, acting ditto, E. H. Briggs, 2d ditto, 750 00 Belgaum.-E. H. Townsend, political agent, Benares.-H. H. Thomas (on leave), agent, G. Lindsay, officiating ditto, Bhopaul.-Captain H. W. Trevelyan, political agent, and in , charge of Thuggie, Captain J. G. Landers, commanding contingent, J. Inglis, M. D., assistant surgeon, 500 0 0 Lieutenant J. D Fergusson, adjutant of the contingent, 457 8 0 Bhuttee Territory.--Major C. Thoresby, 68th N. I., (on dep.) su. perintendent. Lieutenant E. J. Robinson, 7th Light Cavalry, officiat- ing ditto, Bithoor.—Major J. Manson, 720 N. I., commissioner with Bajee Rao, Bagdad (Turkish Arabia).--Lieutenant Colonel R. Taylor, 5th By. N. L., political agent, J. Ross, assistant surgeon, Bushire.—Captain S. Hennell, 12th By. N. I., Resident in the Persian Gulf, Captain A. Hamerton, 15th B. N. I., on a mission to the Imam of Muscat, F. Mackenzie, assistant surgeon, Bundlekund.-S. Fraser, agent, Captain W. F. Beatson, commg. Bundlekund Legion, 1,000 0 0 Cachar and Jynteah.—Lieuteuant E. R. Lyons, superintendent,... 1,000 0 0 China.—Sir H. Pottinger, H. M. E. E. and Py., and Superin- tendent, Macao.--Mr. Johnstone, deputy superintendent, Brig. Burrell, governor of Hong Kong, Chepauk.-Lieut. Col. Walpole, M. N. I.-Agent, Cossyah Hills.—Major F. G. Lister, 52d N. I., political agent, H. Inglis, assistant, A. H. Landers, special assistant, Coorg.-Colonel M. Cubbon, M. N. I., commissioner, Mysore. Captain C. F. Le Hardy, 14th M. N. I., superintendent, 1,000 0 0 Major J. D. Carpenter, superintendent of the ex-raja of Coorg, Benares, Colaba.-J. H. Jackson, political agent, E. Montgomerie, acting ditto, Bo. 636 2 0 0 1,000 ... 2,500 0 0 400 0 0 400 0 0 300 00 1,000 0 0 1,000 0 0 VOL 11.] 59 :,: Civil List. Rs. per Mensem. Cutch.-Laughford A. Malet, acting ditto, 1,600 0 0 Captain W. Ward, 15th ditto ditto assistant, 700 0 0 Cabool.- Candahar. - Major H. C. Rawlinson, B. N. I.. political agent, 1,200 0 Lieutenant C. A. Jackson, 31st N. I., assistant, 700 0 Lieut. E. R. Elliot, 43d B. N. 1., assistant, 600 Jellalabad.—Lieutenant G. H. Macgregor, political agent, 1,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 ... Dorjeeling and Sikkim.- Alexander Campbell, M. D., superin- tendent, and in political charge, ,1,2000 Dr. S. M. Griffiths, surgeon, Deyrah Dhoon.---Lieutenant Colonel F. Young, 7th N. I. political agent 500 Captain J. Fisher 150 Delhi.-T. T. Metcalfe, agent in Bhuttee territory 500 Lieutenant E. J. Robinson, 7th L. C. (on dep.), assist- anti 300 120 Lieutenant J. H. Phillips, 420 N. I., ditto, Captain R. Angelo, 34th N. I, ditto, 0 0 Captain R. W. Wilson, commanding palace guards, 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 Furtuckabad.-C. R. Cartwright, (on leave) agent A. P. Currie, acting ditto, Gumsoor (Gangum.)-R. A, Bannerman, (M. E.) commissioner and agent, Madras. Major J. Campbell, 41st M. N. I., principal assistant, A. Sutherland, assistant, Captain R. Hall, ditto, James Adams, M.D. assistant surgeon in medical charge Gwalior.-Lieutenant Colonel A. Speirs, Resident, consolat. salary 4,166 10 Lieutenant R. R. W. Ellis, assistant, and Thuggy do.... 750 Lieut. Col. O. Stubbs, 44th N. I., commanding Scin- diah's contingent, 845 6 0 Captain W. Minto. 2d in do. coming cavalry, i Captain J. C. Lumsdain, 58th N. I., 845 6 Lieutenant J. H. Smyth, commandant of artillery, Scin- deah's contingent, 845 Captain G. B. Michell, commanding infantry regiment ditto, Robert H. Irvine, M. D., surgeon to the residency, J. Hope, assistant surgeon to the Gwalior contingent, 500 0 0 8 0.0 0 6 0 . 500 0 0 5,500 0 0 Hyderabad.- Major General J. S. Fraser, M. N. I, resident, constd salary, Captain Malcolm, 3d Bombay, N. I., Ist assistant ditto ditto, Captain Gresley, in charge of Sholapore, M. P. & A. Major E. Sutherland, 27th N. I., military secretary mi- litary department, W. Lowrie, M. D., surgeon, D. McCollum, sub-assistant surgeon, 750 500 0 0 0 0 500 3 0 Indore and Matwa.-Lieutenant Colonel Sir C. M. Wade, C. B., resident, ... 4,166 10 Lieutenant W. F. Eden, M. N.L., 1st assistant to ditto... 1;015 6 Cornet A. Harries, 2d ditto, 608 2 J. Bruce, assistant surgeon, 500 8 0 0 0 0 60 (PART 11. Political Department. Rs. per Mensem. Bt. Capt. G. Timmins, 34th N.I., commandant of Malwa contingent, 1,000 0 0 Bt. Capt. T. T. Wheler, 56th N. I., commandant of ca- valry, Malwa ditto, 700 0 0 Lieut. E. Andrews, 7th By. N. I., ditto of Inf. ditto, 600 0 0 Lieut. S. S. Becher, 4th B. N. 1., attached to the M. contingent, Cap. G. Č. Slockley, By. N. I., commandant of the Mal- wa Bheel corps, 500 0 0 Pertaubghur and Mahidpore.—Major T. H. Sandys, 36th N. I., political agent, Bhopawur.-Major E. Pettingall, 39th N. I., commanding local horse, and in charge of political duties, 200 0 0 Nemaur.-Capt. G. J. Fraser, assistant in charge Nemaur,... 1,000 0 0 Jyepore.—Major C. Thoresby, officiating political agent D. Gullan, assistant surgeon, 500 0 0 Joudpore—Captain J. Ludlow, political agent, 2,000 0 0 Major D. Downing, 3d N. I. commdt. of the Joudpore. Legion and in political charge of Secrora Military Mr. Doyle, in medical charge of the agency 200 Jhansi.--Captain D. Ross, Superintendent of the Jhansi territory ... 1,500 00 .. ... ... 3,500 0 0 500 0 0 500' 0 0 2,000 0 0 700 0 0 500 0 0 Katmandhoo.-B. H. Hodgson, Resident, Lieutenant G. W. Williams, 29th N. I. assistant, and commanding escort R. Christie, assistant surgeon Kattywar.-D. A. Blane, political agent, Captain G. L. Jacob, 3d Gr. Regt. M. N. I., first asst. Captain H. Ashton, 2d ditto, Captain H. Bury, superintendent in charge of the Guic- war's assistant of horse in Kattywar, Kumaon.-G. F. Lushington, commissioner, J. H. Batten, senior assistant, Kumaon, Captain H. Huddleston, ditto ditto, Gurhwal Lieutenant H. Ramsay, assistant, Kotah.—Captain C. Richards, political agent Captain J. G. Bruere, commanding Kotah contingent Lieut. P. G. Robertson, 71st N. I., adjt. of ditto Lieut. T. James, 22st N. I., 2d in commd. of ditto Asst. Surgeon G. T. C. Fogarty, in medl. charge of the agency and contingent 400 0 0 2,000 0 0 1,000 0 0 700 0 0 400 0 0 1,500 00 1,000 6 0 500 0 0 ... 5,000 0 0 Loodianah.—G. R. Clerk, Gov. Genl.'s agent for the Punjab Lieutenant J. D. Cunningham, Engineers, (on deputa- tion Bussakir) H. H. Greathead, assistant, (Ferozepore) H. Vansittart, ditto, (Loodianah) P. Melville, ditto, (third) Captain H. M. Lawrence, ditto, (Peshawur) W. Jameson, assistant surgeon Lucknow.—Lieutenant Colonel J. Low, M. N. I., resident, con- solidated salary Bt. Captain J. D. Shakespear, Artillery, Ist. assistant.. Bt. Captain D. Wilkie, 2d ditto J. S. Login, Presidency surgeon and king's physician .. 1,000 0 0 1,000 0 0 700 0 0 400 0 0 700 0 0 500 0 6 5,500 0 0 610 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 600 VOL. 11.) 61 Civil List. .. ... 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rs. per Mensem. Mhairwarrah.-Captain C. G. Dixon, Artillery, superintendent and commanding Mhairwarrab battalion, 770 0 0 Myhee Caunta.--Captain W. Lang, 21st By. N. I., political agent 1,500 0 Lieutenant R. Wallace, 18th ditto, assistant ditto 400 Moorshedabad.—Major-General F. V. Raper, agent, 3,000 0 Capt. St.Geo. D. Showers, Supt. of Nuwab's education... 1,000 0 Munneepore.-Captain G. Gordon, Political agent 878 Lieutenant W. McCulloch, assistant 438 2 J. R. Hamlyn, in medical charge 350 Mysore.-Colonel M. Cubbon, M. N. I., commissioner 4,033 Lieut. Col. J. D. Stokes, 4th M. N. I., resident, 2,500 Lieut. R. S. Dobbs, 9th M. N. I., Supt. of Chittledroog,.. 1,600 0 Major R. Budd, 32d M. N. I., ditto of Bangalore 1,600 Major A. Clarke, 37th M. N. l., 1st assist. to commis- sloper, 1,400 0 Honorable H. B. Devereux, superintendent of Nuggur, 1,600 0 0 Mr. J. Parrick, surgeon to ditto, 250 0 Captain J. Briggs, 13th M. N. I., assistant, 900 Captain W. C. Onslow, 44th M. N. I., ditto, 500 Lieutenant W. A. Halsted, Ilth ditto, 1,600 0 0 Lieutenant H. Montgomery, M. artillery, ditto, superin- tendent of Ashtagran, 500 0 Lieutenant Maitland, M. N. I., ditto, 500 0 Lieutenant G. Haines, 18th M. N. J., ditto, 500 0 0 Captain E. Clutterbuck, 38th M. N. I.. ditto, Lieutenant R. Cannan, 40th M. N. I., ditto, 500 0 Lieutenant H. F. Gustard, 6th M. N. I., ditto, 500 Captain A. Macleod, 5th M. Light Cavalry, military se- cretary to commissioner, 1,600 0 Lieutenant H. M. Donaldson, assistant in the office of military secretary, 500 A. N. Magrath, surgeon, C. J. Smith, assistant ditto, 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 ... ... 4,583 5 700 0 0 500 2,000 0 0 Nagpore.—Major T. Wilkinson, Resident, Captain W. Riddell, assistant, c. Garbett, assistant surgeon, Neemuch-Meywar.- Major T. Robinson, political agent, (on leave), Lieutenant Colonel R. Ross, officiating ditto, M. W, Rind, assistant surgeon, Captain W. Hunter, commandt. Meywar Bheel corps,.. Lieutenant J. G. Gaitskell, 2d in command of ditto, Lieutenant J. C. Brook, adjutant of ditto, Assistant Surgeon J. Bowhill, in medical charge of ditto, 100 0 0 ... Palumpore.—Major L. Brown, superintending the affairs of Pa- lumpoor, Bombay. Peshawar.- Captain F. Mackeson, political agent, 1,500 0 Captain J. Ferris, 20th N. I., assistant, Captain Colin Mackenzie, 48th M. N. I., acting ditto on deputy, 700 0 A. Reid, assistant, surgeon, 700 Persia.—Sir J. McNeil, G. C. B. H.M.'s E. E. and M. Py., Lieutenant Colonel Sheil, 35th B. N. I., H. M. charge de affaires at Erzeroom, ...Paid by H.M. Quetta.- ditto. Lieutenant W. F. Hammersley, B. N. I, assistant, P. Ogilvy, adjutant of Bolan Rangers, 0 0 0 62 (PART II Political Department. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rs. per Mensem Rajpootana.-Lieutenant Colonel J. Sutherland, 2d By. Light Cavalry, governor general's agent, Rajpootana, and. commissioner Ajmere, 5,000 0 0 Lieutenant J.D. Macnagḥten, superintendent of Ajmere, and 1st assistant to ditto, 1,000 0 0 Lieutenant R. Morrison, assistant, 500 W. Strachy, ditto, (on deputation Kerowlee), 5000 H. J. Bushby, assistant, 400 T. Russell, assistant surgeon, 500 Sawunt Warre.-A. Elphinstone, political agent, 1,900 0 Surat.-G. L. Elliott, agent, 500 0 Sattarah.—Lieutenant Colonel C. Ovans, (By. Estab.) resident, 600 0 Subuthoo.—Hon'ble J. C. Erskine, political agent, 1,200 0 Lieutenant A. C. Rainey, assistant, (on leave), C. B. Handyside, M. D., in medical charge, 50 0 0 Sinde and Beloochistan. - Major J. Outram, political agent, 3,250 0 0 Lieutenant E. B. Eastwick, assistant, (on leave), 700 0 Captain W. J. B. Koyvett, ditto, (Shikarpore), 700 00 Captain T. Postans, ditto ditto, 700 0 0 Lieutenant E. J. Brown, ditto, 700 0 0 Lieutenant Sinclair, ditto, 600 0 0 Lieutenant W. Brown, ditto, 700 0 0 Lieutenant W. Young, ditto, 600 0 0 Lieutenant R. Wallace, 18th By. N. I., (on leave). A. Gibbon, assistant surgeon, 500 0 Lieutenant J. D. Leckie, assistant in charge, (Hy- drabad), 700 0 Lieutenant C. R. Whitelock, (on dep.) ditto, 700 0 0 Capt. J. French, ditto in charge of duties at Cutchee,... 700 0 0 Lieutenant F. Cristall, 8th B. N. 1., ditto, Kurachee, 700 J. W. Winchester, surgeon, and in charge of Post Office, (Hydrabad), 565 0 0 Lieutenant W. F. Curtis, 1st By. L. C. commanding Sinde irregular horse, 1,000 00 Lieutenant č. R. W. Hervey, By., 2d European regi- ment, in command of Sinde irregular horse, 500 0 0 Lieutenant G. Malcolm, Ist Gren. By N. I. adjutant Sinde irregular borse, 426 10 0 Soonmeeanee.--Lieutenant M. F. Gordon, government agent at the Port of Soonmeeanee, 700 0 0 Saugor and Nerbudda Territories.-Jubbulpore, Charles Fraser agent and commissioner, 500 0 D. F. McLeod, B. C S. principal assistant, 2,000 0 Lieutenant R. W. C. Doolan, assistant, Lieutenant J. S. Banks, assistant, 600 0 0 Hushingabad--Lieutenant C. R. Browne, principal assistant, 1,000 0 0 Lieutenant J. Duncan, junior assistant, 600 0 0 Lieutenant Robertson, junior assistant, 600 0 0 Ensign F. F. C. Hayes, assistant, 600 0 0 J. Grant, in medical charge, 100 0 0 Saugor.-M. Ç. Ommaney, principal assistant, 2,000 0 0 Captain Wm. Hore, ditto, 600 0 0 Lieutenant R, A. Herbert, ditto, 600 0 0 F. S. Toke, Surgeon, 200 0 0 Seonee.-Captain C. Brown, assistant, 600 0 0 Captain A. Wheatley, ditto, 900 0 0 Baitool.- Captain W. H. R Boland, assistant, 1,000 0.0 C. J. Davidson, in medical charge, 100 0 0 t 0 .... VOL. 11.) 63 Civil List. Rs. per Mensem. ... 2,800 0 0 Travancore.-Colonel W. Cullen, resident, 0 0 0 0 Vizagapatam.-N. W. Arbuthnot, M. E. Agent, Madras. J. F. Bury, Do. assistant to do. Thuggee Department.—Major W. H. Sleeman, general super- intendent, 2,000 0 0 Captain P. A. Reynolds, superintendent in Deccan, 1,560 0 Lieutenant C. Brown, assistant in the Saugor and Ner- budda territories, 240 0 Captain W. M. Ramsay, assistant Jubbulpore, 142 0 Lieutenant C. Mills, ditto Sirhind division, 740 0 Lieutenant J. Sleeman, assistant Goruck pore, 740 0 Lieutenant W. Reynolds, assistant in Deccan, 740 0 0 Captain W. C. Birch, assistant in Rajpootana, 740 0 0 Captain G. Vallancy, assistant in Deccan, 740 0 0 Captain D. A. Malcolm, ditto ditto, 240 0 Captain J. Graham, assistant, 142 5 Lieutenant H. M. Nation, assistant Agra, 740 0 0 Lieutenant G. E. Hollings, assistant in Oude, 300 0 0 Lieutenant A. Clarke, officiating assistant in Deccan, 240 0 0 Lieutenant R. R. W. Ellis, assistant Gwalior, 300 0 0 Mr. Williams, overseer Jubbulpore, 150 0 0 Captain F. C. Elwall, assistant Berhampore, 760 0 Lieutenant W. C. Hollings, assistant Dacca, 740 Brevet Captain H. Marsh, 3d light cavalry, assistant, North East Frontier.-Captain F. Jenkins, 47th N. I., Agent governor-general and commissioner, 2,000 0 0 Captain J. Matthie, Ist European regiment, deputy commissioner, 1,500 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 ... 0 commr. 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 ... comr. 0 0 0 Zillah Kamroop.-Capt. James Wemyss, 44th N. I., principal assistant to commissioner, and agent governor-general, 1,0000 Bt. Capt. John Butler, 55th N. 1, offg. jun. asst. to 503 0 Mr. C. K. Hudson, uncovenanted officer deputy collector, 350 K. M. Scott, Esq., asst. surgeon Company's service civil surgeon, 350 Zillah Gawalpara.-Bt. Maj. A. Davidson, 2d Eur. Regt., prin- cipal assistant to the comr. and agent gov.-genl., 1,475 10 Mr. W. S. Hudson, uncovenanted officer, sub-asst. to 2500 Mr. J, Bedford, uncovenanted officer asst. dy. rev. sur.,. 250 0 Mr. C. J. Simons, uncovenanted officer apothecary, 200 0 Zillah Tezpore.—Lieutenant C. Scott, 27th N. I., junior assistant to the commr., and agent governor-geveral 800 0 Mr. John Strong, uncovenanted officer, sub-asst. to comr. 350 Mr. Henry Kellner, uncovenanted officer, sub-assistant to commissioner, 350 Mr. J. Davis, uncovenanted officer, gunner, and officiat- ing apothecary, 200 0 0 Zillah Nowgong-Lieutenant H. L. Bigge, 66th N. I., principal assistant to the commr, and agent governor general. 1,000 0 Captain J. T. Gordon, 15th N. 1., junior ditto, 500 Mr. E. R. Grange, uncovenanted officer, sub-assistant to the comr., and agent governor-general 250 Mr. R. V. Shuter, asst. surg. Co.'s service civil asst. surg., 350 ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 64 [PART 11. Political Department. comr. 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 of the agency ... 0 Rs. per Mensem. Zillah Seebpore.—Lieut. T. Brodie, 2d En, regt., prinl. asst. to the comr. and agent govr. genl. 1,000 0 0 F. Furnell, Esq. asst. surgeon co.'s service in medl. charge of the Assam light infy. and civil station at Seebpore. Mr. C. R. Strong, uncovenanted officer, sub-asst. to the 250 0 Mr. B. Wood, uncovenanted officer, sub-asst. to the comr. Mr. J. Thornton, uncovenanted officer, deputy collector, and assistant revenue surveyor 250 0 Mr. A. H. Landers, uncovenanted officer, special asst. to the comr. 350 Zillah Luckimpore. --Bt. Captain Hamilton Vetch, 54th N. I., principal assistant to the commissioner Bt. Captain Percy D. Eld, 9th N. I. junior assistant to the commissioner 500 00 Mr. H. Driver, unconvenanted officer, sub-assistant to commissioner 250 00 Political Agency, Upper Assam.—Bt. Capt. Hamilton Vetch, 54th N. I. political agent 1,500 0 0 John Arnott, Esq., Company's service, in medical charge 500 0 0 Mr. F. D. Morton, uncovenanted officer, offg. revenue surveyor 394 0 Mr. A. McDormond, uncovenanted officer, asst. revenue surveyor 100 0 0 Mr. J. F. Pengault, uncovenanted officer, apothecary 200 0 0 Mr. Thomas Watkins, uncovenanted officer, supdt. govt. Tea plantations, 300 0 0 Mr. James Ward, uncovenanted officer, junior assistant Tevenue surveyor 50 0 0 South West Frontier and Sumbulpore_Major J. R. Ouseley, poli- tical agent and commissioner, 2,500 00 Travelling allowance, 250 00 Lieutenant T. Simpson, 57th N. I., senior assistant, Haza. reebaugh, 1,000 00 J. Davidson, M. D., (on leave) ditto, ditto, Lohurdugga, 1,000 0 0 Captain J. C. Hannyngton, 24th N. I., ditto, ditto, Maunbhoom, 1,000 0 0 Lieat. B. W. R. Jenner, officiating junior assistant, 500 0 0 Lieut. R. Ouseley, 50th N. I. ditto, 500 0 0 Lieutenat S. R. Tickell, 31st N. I., Assistant, in Colhan 500 0 0 Coast of Tennasserim.- civil commissioner and governor-general's agent, 3,500 0 0 Captain W. C. McLeod, 30th M. N. I., principal and and political assistant to commissioner, 1,000 0 Major H. Macfarquhar, 40th N. I., senior asst. at Tavoy, 1,000 0 0 F. A. Corbin, junior ditto, at Mergui, 600 0 0 Major W. L. G. Williams, 3d M. N. I. in charge of the police, Moulmein, 200 James De La Condamine, senior assistant at Moulmein, 800 D. Richardson, assistant, 500 0 Turkistan Frontier.—Major E. Pottinger, C.B., Bombay artillery, political agent, 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 ... II. N.B.-Almost all Political Department Allowances are Consolidated. 1 INDEX TO THE Civil ist, Bengal Establishment. Ottie . 172 1 O •, A, T. O ., J. G. . . . 9 1 232 Nos. Nos, Nos. ABERCROMBIB, R. 423 Brown, S.S. 210 Davidson, T. R. 96 Adams, G. 218 Brownlow, H. B. C. T. • 217 Agnew, P. V. 432 Bruce, Thos. 198 F. R. • 328 Alexander, G. 150 Buckle, W. B. 423 Deane, H. W. 201 W. S. - 173 Buller, F. P. 237 Deedes, E. • 129 G. H. M. 308 Bury, C. 152 Dent, W. 56 R. 313 Bushby, G.A. 84 Devereux, Hon. H. B. 306 J. 337 H.J. 414 Dick, A. 35 H.R. 294 J. C. 184 Allen, C. 196 CALDECOTT, C. M. 177 R. K. 246 W.J. 314 Campbell, R, H. S. 288 • 300 Annand, A. S. sng J. W. H. - 295 Dirom, W. M. • 273 Armstrong, H. 157 312 Donnelly, A. F. 216 Astell, J. H. - 162 Cardew, C. 73 Donnithorne, W. S. • 234 H. G. 361 F. 179 Dorin, J. A. 108 Atherton, H. · 318 Carnac, W.J. R. 434 D'Oyly, J. A. 45 Cartwright, C. R. 97 Drummond, Hon. F.- 442 Bacon, G. W. - 101 Cathcari, J. F. 124 I on. E. - 346 Balfour, G. G. 446 Cavendish, Hon. R. 42 Dumergue, J. S. 320 Barlow, R. 82 Chapman, C. - 358 Durbar, J. 135 Barnes, J. R. • 408 Cheap, G. C. 88 G. C. • 401 Chester, C. - 355 EDGEWORTH, M. P. 316 Barwell, A.C. 17 Clarke, J. S. 122 Edmonstone, G. 396 Batten, J, H. 282 H. M. . 178 N. B 227 Battye, G. W. 207 R. H, P. G. F. Jr. 327 Bayley, T. B. C. 275 G. A. 382 Edwards, W. 392 H. V. · 367 Clerk, G. R. 75 Elliot, B. J. 10 Beadon, C. 386 Cock, A. H. · 404 H. M. 206 Beale, T. B. 140 Cockburn, G. F. 388 W. H. 306 Beaufort, F.L. - 403 Colebrooke, T. E, 338 Erskine, Hon. J.C. 203 Becher, S. J. - 342 Colvin, J.R. 161 Begbie, A. W. 100 229 FAGAN, C. W. 281 Bell, w. 311 E T. 379 Farquharson, R. N. . 291 Belli, W. H. 21 Conolly, W. J. 117 J.A.").- 341 Benson, W. El. 112 Cooke, J. F. G. 90 Fergusson, H. D, H.. 391 Bentall, E. 185 Cooper, B. H. 410 Fitzpatrick, J.J. 435 Beresford, H. B. 241 Court, M. A. 441 Forbes, Hon'ble R. · 189 Berford, G, M, B. 417 Cowell, w. 1 ., A. S03 Bidwell, A. C. · 299 Cragie, J. A. 315 Fletcher, G. C. 421 Bird, Hon. W. W. 12 Crawford, J. H. 274 Franco, G, F. 69 R. M. 19 Cumine, J. 252 Fraser, C. 67 Blunt, G. 167 Cuoliffe, R. E. -2021 H. 128 7 376 S. 113 Boldero, J.S. 22 Cunninghame, W.C.S. 366 A. 188 E. J. 447 Currie, F. 83 French, J. 3 Boulderson, H. S. E. 133 Bowring, s. 269 A. P. 174 GALLOWAY, W. 409 Bracken, W. 191 Curtis, J. 23 Garrett, W. N. 62 Brewster, J. 344 R. B. 285 Broadhurst, W. H. 415 DALRIMPLE, F, A. E. 347 Garstin, C. 166 Brown, C.I. 64 Dampier, W. 78 Gilmore, M S. 248 GF. · 111 Davidson, J. - 102 Goad, W. P. 266 · B. J. . D O --, D. . 9 ii Civil List, 27 • 245 Golding, B. Gordon, E. M. Gough, G. f.matait, F. Gin, J. H. Grani. A ---, J. W. J. J. P. C. Greatheil, H. H. Grry, L, J. H. W. Grote, A. Gubbins, J. P. c. M. R. F, B. , H. J. > . • 205 225 . . HALKETT, H, C. Halliday, F.J. Hamilton, R. N. C. H.C. Hampton, R. Harington, H. B. Harrison, R. P. Harvey, J J. G. F. Hathorn, H. V. Hawk'ns, J. A. F. Hay, J. M. Head, F. S. Heyland, A. C. Hillersdon, C. G. Hodgson, B. H. F. R. Hughes, R. W. Hunter, J. Houlton, G. F. Houstoun, R. - 407 - Nos Nos, Nos. 125 Lloyd, T. K. 356 CAKES, W. H. 98 Loch, J. A. - 421 Ogilvie, A. 25 114 T. C. 375 Ogilvy, J. B. 183 123, G 30 Okeden, W. P. 87 324 Loughnan, RJ. • 181 Oldfield, H. S 65 130 Lowis, J. 103 Oinmaney, M. C. 326 15 Lowth, F. - 254 Onslow, w. 149 Lowther, R. 31 Owen, H. T. 66 212 Luke, W. . 221 - 259 Lushington, E. H 444 PALMER, S. G. - 118 - 377 C. A. 4.38 -., W. P. 92 371 F. A, 370 93 440 H. 110 Parker, H. M. 53 354 G. T. · 154 Parks, C. C. 72 164 C. H. 333 Paterson, W. S. 429 264 Pattle, J, 304 MACAN, R. 76 Patton, J. H. 115 385 Macdonald, A G. · 359 Pearson, T. B. 436 Mackenzie, C. - 200 Pidcock, H. -, 145 293 Macleod, D. F. 245 Plowden, A. U. C. 156 Macnaghten, F. 63 T. J. C. 223 114 Sir G. A. C. 255 297 W. H. Bart, K C.B., 52 Pringle, W. A. S4 330 Maconochie, H. D. 433 -, D. 147 - 238 MacSween, C. 26 Proweit, N, H. E. 368 Maddock, T, H. 39 131 Magniae, L. 43 Quintin, C. B. . 289 215 Malet, 0. W. 331 W. St. Q 199 132 Mangles, R. D. 99 121 Mansel, C. G. 169 RADELIFFE, E. F. 362 364 Marten, T. P. 175 Raikes, G. D. 384 374 Martin, G. L. 363 A. 159 W. H. 193 R. C. 399 436 Masson, W, P. 251 H. T. 204 79 Maxwell, R. W. S6 C. 323 286 McClintock, G. F. 257 Rattray, R. A. 8 • 350 McFarlan, D. 59 Ravenshaw, C. A. 411 61 McIntosh, G. G. 322 E. C. 120 249 McWhirter, J. P. . 437 H.S. 353 277 Melvill, P. . 418 Read, F. E. Metcalfe, H. C. 276 Reade, E. A. 443 T. T. 48 Reid, J.P. M. 209 Mill, J. B. 378 Millett, f. 58 H. M. - 590 170 Mills, A. J. M. 165 J. 287 - 116 Monckton, E. H.C. 319 Replon, E. E. H. 239 197 W. 32 Richardson, R. 5 Money, W. J. H. - 211 Rickets, H. 106 325 D.J. - 254 Riddell, H. P. A. B.- 416 - 144 W. E. - 258 Rivaz, J. T. 86 263 R 313 Roberts, A. A. 394 Montgomery, R. .240 413 85 Moore, H. 38 Robertson, D. 186 Hon. R. F. 119 Hon. T.C.- 16 357 Morgan, R. B. - 260 Robinson, F, H. 139 419 Morland, E. H. 267 Rose, H. • 256 222 Morley, C. 20 Ross, A. 39S 153 Morrieson, D, B. 134 420 280 Morris, G. J. 70 Routh, W. De H. 309 214 F. J. 226 Russell, R. H. 425 381 Muir, J. 228 F. W. 24 340 • 400 431 Mytton, R. H. . 192 H. P. 91 80 95 NEAVE, R. 137 SAGE, J. W. 9 369 Nisbet, 11. 51 Samuels, E, A. 9 - , 187 . 171 55 - 155 INGLES. J. F. D. Irwin, E. V. 9 JACKSON, C.C. W. B. James, H. F. . KEMP, F. B. Kenvaway, W.R, Kiploch, C. W. O ---, W. . 278 - **, A. LANE, H. S. Lang, a. Latour, E. Lautour, E. F. Law, W. A. Lawrell, J. G B. Lawrence, J. L. M. Lean, J. Le Bas, C. T. Lercester, G. P. Lillie, J. E. S. Lindsay, C. G. Littledale, A. - - W. --, C.D. . 339 Bengal Establishment. iii - Sandys, T. Sconce, A, Scott, R. H. R. J. Nos. • 373 • 412 . 68 -141 • 219 ., W. T. --, T. c. . 105 146 · 244 C. F. > . 163 397 335 3 Sealy, C, T. Shakespear, A. G. T. Shank. A. Shaw, T. A. J. Shawe, M. A. G. Shore, R. N. Skinner, R. M. Skipwith, F. Smelt, A. Smith, C. W. N. E. P. G, H. S. G. 9 O Nos. 208 Tayler, R. J. - 261 Taylor, T, 41 P. G. E. 445 194 Templer, J. • 380 Thomas, H. H. 427 E. 265 Thomason, J. 279 Thompson, G. P. 60 94 W. F. 365 Thornhill, J. B. - 424 R. B. - 270 C. B. 247 M. B. 18 Thornton, E. 28 J. 49 Tierney, M. J. 109 Timins, IV. R. 151 Todd, G. . 176 Tornton, J. 262 Torrens, R. 321 J. S. - 158 HW. 236 Tottenham, C. 149 Travers, W. 74 Trench, P. C. 296 Trevelyan, C. E, 11 Trevor, E.T. 57 C. B. - 406 Trotter, T. C. - 190 J. 29 310 --, W. T. Trower, C. 13 Tucker, R. T. 224 C. • 268 H. C. 33 Tulloh, C. R. . Nos. 47 Turnbull, A. · 142 G.D. 27! Turner, T. J. 290 Tyler, W. H. 46 E, F. 50 349 UDNY, G. 126 C. G. 54 Unwin, H. 107 242 VAXSITTART, H. W. 389 WALKER, R. 405 430 R. Ward, J. J. Warner, E. L. Wells, F. O. Wemyss, J. Wheler, J. Whitmore, C. Wilkins, G. D. Wilkinson, J. E. Williams. R, 235 -., F. 292 Wilnot, E. Wilson, J. C. 168 Wingfield, C. J. Woodcock, W. H. 336 E, E. 383 T. P. 182 Willy, E. M. 283 Wynyard, w. 4 Young, J. H. 372 T. 13 W. R. • 317 R. A. - 180 Yule, G, U. 138 44 352 14 136 6 334 - 250 345 S7 298 230 127 220 213 230 143 301 . 272 - 233 402 Snell, R. H. Spiers, A. Siaipforth, F. H. Staniforth, J. Steer, C. C. W. Sterling, E. Strachy. W. Sturt, R. R. Swetenham, H. Sympson, T. H. TACRER, C. Taunton, J. J. W. Tayler, W. - 30, • 231 253 4.22 - 160 351 - 195 89 - 595 • S98 . **, 30 Wyatt, T. O *, R. 9 · 332 348 81 · 387 S29 , B, VOL. 11.] [ 65 ] POLITICAL CONTINGENTS. HIS HIGHNESS THE NIZAM'S ARMY. Total amount received from the Company and the Rank and Corps in the Rank and Names. Nizam includ. Hon. Company's Army. Remarks. ing all allow- ances. 9 0 99 ... 9 19 Per month Staff: Hydrabad Rs. Brigadier J. Blair,... 3,100 5 Lt. Col. 8th Ben.N.I. Comg. Cavalry Div. G. Tomkyns. 2,469 7 11 Major 10th Ben. N.I.Ditto at Hydrabad. Twemlow, 2,510 3 Capt. Ben, Arty. Ditto Ellichpoor. Bagnold, 2,955 3 8 Lt. Cl. 17th Bom.N.I. Ditto Aurungabad. Raynsford, 2,000 14 8 Local, Ditto Hingolie. Major E. Sutherland, (Co.'s Rs. 2,500) 3,025 0 0 Maj. 37th Ben. N. I. Military Secretary. Supg. Sur.G.A.Turn- bull, 1,747 4 0 Surgeon Madras, Supg Surgeon. Medel. Store Keeper T. Key, 1,149 13 8 Surgeon Madras, Med. Store-Keeper. Paymr. J. Ralph Esq. 911 0 0 Ditto, Paymr., Aurungabad. Capt. H. Robinson, . 1,419 0 10 Local, Paymaster and B. M., Elichpore. A. Mottel, 1,334 13 8 Local, Pay Mr., Hydrabad. F. Gresley, 1,660 12 1 Cap.. 14th Ben. N. I. Pay Mr., Cavy. Div. T. Lysaght, 1,566 4 0 Ben. E. Regt. . Pay Mr. and B. M., Hingolie. C. A. Stewart, 1,210 12 16th Bom. N.I. B.M., Aurungabad. T. A. Briggs, 1,064 9 2 Bt. Capt. 31st M.N.I. B.M.,Hydrabad. W. R. Strange, 1,293* 1 7 Lieut. 2d M. Cavy....B.M., Cavy. Division. To 5 Senior Surgs. at stations for at- tendances on the Staff, 100 Rs. each 500 0 0 Capts. Commandant. G. W. Onslow, 1,565 4 7 Cap. M. Arty. 1 Comp. Arty. & Com- missary. H. Inglis, 1,427 1 2d M. Cavy. 2d Cavalry. A. Adam, 1,170 2 6 44th M. N. 1. 6th Infantry. G. F. Hampton, 1,022 14 6 Local, 3d Infantry. John Doveton, 1,022 14 6 Local, 7th Infantry. J. Johnston, 1,022 14 6 Local, 1st Infantry. J. Roebuck, 1,022 14 6 Local, ... 8th Infantry. H, Stoddart, 1,022 14 6 Local, 2d Infantry. G. F. C. Fitzgerald, 1,238 9 5 1st Lieut. Ben. Arty.2d Comp. Arty. J. Peyton, 1,022 14 6 Local, 5th Infantry. J. S. Young, 1,210 0 o Local, 5th Cavalry. W. B. Jackson, 1,170 2 25th M. N. I. 4th Infantry. Captains. B. Johnston, 702 9 8 Local, Comg. Company Hill Rangers. H, P. Lawrence 762 98 Local, Ditto ditto Pioneers. P. M. Taylor, 611 7 11 Local, 6th Infantry. D. C. Ramsay, 611 7 11 Local, 5th Infantry. J. Clifton, 611 7 11 Local, 1st Infantry. J. R. Payne, 611 7 11 Local, 8th Infantry. C. Parker, 611 7 11 Local, 6th Infantry. PART II. VOL. II, K ... 4 O. ... 6 ... :: 66 [PART IL Political Contingents. Ranh and Names. Total amount received from the Company and the Rank and Corps in the Nizam inclul- Hon. Company's Army. ling all allow - ances. Rcmarks. ... Per month Hy- drabad Rs. C. Yates, 1,210 0 C Local, ... Comg. 3d Regt. Horse. T. H. Bullock, 659 14 4 Local, 2d luf. Interpreter. J. R. Stanley, 611 7 u Local, 6th Infantry. C. McLeod, 1,210 0 0 Local, Comg.Ist Regt. Horse. G. Jackson, 807 2 4 Capt. 11th M. N.1.7 th Infy Interpreter. W. Ward, 1,238 9 5 Ist Lieut. VI. Arty ... Comg 4th C.omp. Arty. W. B. McCally, 758 11 11 Capt. 41st M. N. I. 3d Infantry. N. Morrison, 611 7 11 Local, 1st Infantry. B. S, Suliman, 898 5 5 Capt, 4th M. Cavy. 2d Cavalry. H. King, 611 7 11 Local, 5th Infantry. W'. R. Loyd, 1,238 9 5 Bt. Capt. M. Art.... Comg. 31 Comp. Art. W. Caddell 941 10 3 Lt. 36th Bengal N. I. 2d Inf. & Acting Adjt. H. McCaskill, 807 2 4 Ct. H.M. 55th Foot 4th Inf. Interpreter. G. F. Flower, 611 7 11 Local, 5th Infantry. C. Swinton, 685 1 11 Lt. 35th Bengal N.I. 7th Infantry. W. O'Brien, 611 7 11 Local, 8th Infantry: W. B. Wrixaon, 916 6 8 Local, 1st Inf. Adjt. and Intr. C. M. Mande, 685 1:1 Lt. 18th Bom. N. I. 8th Infantry. C. Davidson, 754 14 1 66th Ben. N. I. Ist Cavalry. C. T. Trower, 754 14 1 33d do. N. I.... 4th Cavalry. J. Palmer, 611 7 11 Local, 4th Infantry. W. M. Wahab, 1,011 6 5 Lt. 44th M. N. I. ... 4th Cavalry Adjt. J. R. Wilson, 611 7 11 Local 2d Infantry. H. C. Jackson, 685 i 11 t. 45th Ben. N.I.. .3d Infantry. T. Davies, 611 7 11 Local 4th Infantry. Licutenants. H. Skinner, 698 7 7 Local, 1st Cavalry Adjutant. H. G. C. Plowden,... 757 8 5 Cornet 9th Ben.Cav. 5th Infantry ditto. H. Haworth, 713 1 Lieut. 39th do. N. I. 3d Infantry ditto. H. J. C. Shakespear, 772 1 7 25th do. N. I. 2d Cavalry ditto. F. Vardon, 713 4 1 25th M. N. I. 8th Infantry ditto. H. D. Abbott, 772 1 31st M. N. I. 3d Cavalry ditto. A. Wyndham, 1 2d M. N. I.... 7th Infantry ditto. W. T. Nicolls, 820 8 24th M. N. 1. 5th Cav. ditto & Inter. preter. W. J. Hare, 639 13 1 41st M. N. I. 1th Infantry Adjt. D. McKinnon, 383 1 2d M. N. I. .3th Infantry. R. Adamson, 383 1 35th M. N. I. 2d Infantry, S. P. Scott, 688 22d M. N. I. 6th Infantry Adjt. & Interpreter. J. Daniel, 421 16th M. N. 1..5th luf. Interpreter. H. P. Keighly, 383 1 49th M. N. I. 6th Infantry. Surgeons. R. F. Riddell, 865 9 8 Local, 4th Infantry C. McLachlan, 1,014 4 1 Ditto, 4th Cavalry. W. C. Laing, 1,117 14 1 Asst. Surg. Bengal, 3d ditto. J. Stokes, 865 9 & Local, ... 2d Infantry. W. Thompson, 1,117 14 1 Asst. Surg. Bengal .5th Cavalry. J. Stewart, 1,117 14 1 Ditto ditto, 2d ditto. S. A. G. Young, 939 3 8 Asst. Surg. M. ... 7th Infantry. Asst. Surgeon. A. Walker, 583 12 6 Asst. Surg. Bombay, 6th Infantry. W. McKenzie 583 12 6 Ditto ditto M. W. H. Bradley, 583 12 6 Ditto ditto bombay, 8th ditto. 9 7 713 0 9 0 9 8 2 :::::: ... 5th ditto. Vol 11.] 67 Nizam's Army. Each corps Explanation of the above Items of Pay. 1. The officers are paid in Hyderabad Rupees, at the fixed premium of 21 per cent. against the Company's Rupees. The market average of Bills of Ex- change on the presidencies being about 15 per cent. 2. In the above items of pay are included the net pay received by Compa- ny's officers, converted into Hydrabad Rupees, as well as all incidental allow- ances, such as native officer and hurkarrahs to Brigadiers. A writer under the designation of Staff Serjeant to Brigade Majors, also the command allowance of three companies to all Infantry Captains, and two to Infantry Lieutenants, which is about a fair average allowing for contingencies, absentees, &c. &c., though it is sometimes more or less. The Nizam's Contingent. The Caralry comprises five regiments of irregular horse. (with a trifling difference in one regiment consists of 1 resaldar, 8 jemadars, 24 duffadars, 24 naib duffadars, 1 trumpeter major, 6 trumpeters, 2 kettle drummers, 4 camel gunners, 1 camel drummer, 8 troop mootsuddies, 8 foot hurkarrabs, and 480 sowars, with a Persian school master, forge estab- lishment, and a regimental bazar attached. The Artiliery, besides the European commissioned officers, consists of 3 deputy assistant commissaries, 4 warrant quarter masters, 4 conductors, 6 store serjeants, 3 quarter master serjeants, 1 barrack serjeant, 4 subadar majors, 8 jemadars, 20 havildars, 20 paicks, 297 golandauze, and 8 buglers, with 80 gun lascars, 136 stone lascars, 212 ordnance drivers, 60 carriage drivers, and 110 train artificers attached. The Infantry comprises 8 regiments. Each corps consists of a serjeant major and quarter master serjeant, 1 subadar major, 7 subadars, 1 jemadar, i dative adjutant, 8 jemadars, 1 havildar major, 40 havildars, 40 naicks, 21 drummers and buglers, and 640 sepoys (two corps have only 600) with a forge establishment, but no regimental bazar. It is distributed thus : Ist Co. Artillery,..., 2nd Ditto,.... 3rd Ditto,.... 4th Ditto,.... Ist Cavalry, 2nd Ditto, 3rd Ditto, 4th Ditto, Hyderabad. Aurangabad. Hingolee. Ellichpora Ellichpore. Momivabad. Aurungabad. R. Wing Bolaram, L. Wing, Hingolee. Bolaram & Hingoolee. 5th Ditto, Ist Infantry, 2nd Ditto, 3rd Ditto, 4th Ditto, 5th Ditto, 6th Ditto, 7th Ditto, 8th Ditto, Pioneer Comp... Hill Rangers, Bolaram. Ditto. Aurungabad. Ellichpore. Hingolee. Muktul. Aurungabad. Ellichpore. Head Qrs. Dawulghaut. [68 1 [PART II. DISPOSITION LIST Of His Majesty Shah Shooja ool Moolk's Forces IN AFGHANISTAN. Date of join- Rank& Names. Received from ing the force Remarks. Season. Monthly Pay. Staff 1804 Brig. T. J. Anquetil ... 42d Bengal N.I. Mar. 28, 1841 2,500 Commanding. Captains. 19 C. Troap .. 48th N. I. Apr. 6, 39 1,000 Major of Brigade. 23 H. Johnson... 26th N. I. Sept. 11, 38 1,200 Pay and Commissa- riat Officer, Lieutenants. 31 J. D. D. Sturt Ben. Engineers Oct. —, 39 1,000 Executive Engr. Ca- bool. 28 H. Milne ... 21st Bengal N.I. Oct. 17, 38 600 Asst. Pay and Com- missariat Officer at Cabool, on duty Kelat-i-Ghilzye. 32 A Dallas ... 16th Bengal N.I. Feb. 20, 39 600 Do. do. at Candahar. J. Studdart ... Bombay Engrs. Sept. 14, 401 Executive Engineer, Kelat-i-Ghilzye. Surgeon. 19 J. Forsyth Bengal Estab.... Jan. 4, 38 1,000 Chief Medical officer & in charge 2d Ca- valry, Mountain Train, Sapper and Miner Regt. Asst. Surgeons. 29 C. McKinnon Bengal Estab.... Oct. 10, 700'In Medical charge 3d Regt. Kelat-i-Ghilzye 27 A. Colquhoun Ditto Nov. 26, 39 700 In Medical charge 5th Infantry, on Field Service. 37 G. Rae Ditto. June 17, 39 700 Do. Ist ditto ditto. D. Ritchie Bombay ditto... May 17, 39 700 Do. Jezailchee Regt., Peshawur. W. P. Gillan- ders Ditto May 17, 39 Do. 2nd Infantry, Candahar. T. C. Brown. Bengal ditto ... Apr. 30, 41 Do. Khyber Rangers Gundamuck. W. Brydon... Ditto Do. 30, 41 Do. 6th Light Infan- try, Cabool. 38 VOL. 11.) 69 Shah Shooja ool Moolk's Forces. Date of Season. Rank and Names. Received from. joining the Force. Monthly Pay Remarks Artillery, Horse (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters, Candahar. Caplain. 1820 W. Anderson Bengal H. Arty. Aug. 18, 1838 1,000 Commanding. Lieutenants. 27 G. L. Cooper ditto Sept. 23, 38 600 Comg.1stTroop on field | service Zamindawar 29 F. Turner ditto Do. 23, 38 500 Comg, 2d Troop on field | serv. Ghilzye Country 31 A. W. Hawkins ditto May 24, 39 600 Adjutant on tield ser. | vice, Zamindawer. Uniform, blue-lace, gold, -two troops, -guns, 12 six-pounders. Artillery, Foot, Mountain Train (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters. Captain. . 1820/T.B.Backhouse Bengal Artillery, Aug 26, 1839 1,coo Commanding. Lieutenant. IC. A. Green, ditto Sept. 10, 39 500 Uniform, blue-lace, gold-one company-guns, 6 three-pounders. First Caralry (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters, Candahar. Field Service. Captains. 1822 J. Christie Bengal 3d L. C. - Aug. 28, 38 1,000 Comdt. leave M. C. 18 J. Leeson, Ditto 420 N. J. Sept. 28, 40 In temporary charge. Lieutenants. A. Crawfurd, Bombay 3d N. I. Mar. 6, 39 600 Adjutant. R. S. Wilson, - Madras 520 N. I.July 14, 401 600 Quarter Master. Upiform, scarletz-lace, gold,-arms, matchlock and sabre. Second Cavalry (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters, Cabool. Captain. ' 1822 W. Anderson, - Bengal 59th N. I Sept. 1, 38 1,000 Commandant. Lieutenants. R. C. LeGeyt, - Bombay 1st L. C. May 28, S9 600 Adjutant. W. Mayne, - Bengal 37th N. I. Dec. 22, 40 600 Quarter Master. Uniform, scarlet, —lace, gold, -arms, matchlock and sabre. First Infantry (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters, Candahar, on Field Service. Captain. 1818 J. Griffin, Bengal 24th N. I. Oct. 29, 39 800 Commanding. Lieutenants. 1 Bt.Capt. T.Mac- donel, Bombay 19th N.I. May 23, 600 2nd in command. R. Travers, Ditto 23rd N. I. May 29, 39 500 R. O. Gardner,. Madras 50th N. I. Sept. 1, 40 500 Subaltern wanting. Second Infantry (Hindostanis) Head-Quarters, Candahar. Captain. 1819 J, Macan, 800 Commanding. Lieutenants, 26 J. Hoppe, Bengal 16th N. 1, Nov. 8, 38 600 2nd in command. R. Moorcroft, Madras 19th N. I. Sept. 1, 40 500 Adjutant. R. H. Bruere, Ditto 23rd N. I. Do. 1, 40 500 Quarter Master. Subaltern wanting. 39 Bengal 161h N. 1. Oct. 1, 38 70 [PART 1r. Political Contingents. Rank and Numes. Season. Date of Received from. joining the Force. Monthly Pay. Remarks. 1,27 410 Third Infantry (Hindostanis) Head-Quariers, Khelachee, Ghilzye. Captain. 1821 J. H. Cragie, 20th Bengal N. 1. Oct, 22, 1838 800 Commanding. Lieutenants, 27 R. Mckean, -171h Bengal N. I. Aug. 1, SS 600 2nd in command. 26 D. Gausseen, - 420 ditto N. I. Mar. 5, 39 500 Quarter Master. 38 C, M. Sneyd, - 27th ditto N. 1. Dec, 22, 40 500 Adjutant. Subaltern wanting Fourth Ligh Infantry (Ghoorkas) Head-Quarters, Kohistan. Captain. 25 C. Codrington, * 19th Bengal N. I. Oct. 1, 38 800 Commanding. Lieutenant. 25 Bt. Captain W. Broadfoot, 1st Bengal L. 1. Oct. 1, 39 600 2nd in command. Ensigns. 37J. C. Haughton, 31st Bengal N. I. Mar. 5, 39 500 Adjutant. 38 EW.Salusbury * 1st Bengal L. 1. Aug. 12, 40 500 Quarter Master. 41 A. Rose, -154th Bengal N. I. Apr. 19, subaltern. Fifth Infantry (Hindostanis) Head- Quarters, Cundahar on Fielt Service. Captain 20 J. Woodburn 44th Bengal N.I. Oet. 5, 38 800 Commanding. Lieutenants. 25 Bt. Capt. J. K Spence 30th Bengal N.I. Aug. 1, 38 600 2 int command; on leave. to India, me- dical certificate. 29 A. H. Ross 120 Bengal N.I. Mar. 5, 39 500 1 djulant. J. Clark 341h Madras N.I. July 14, 40 500 Qr. Master. Subaltern wanting. Sixth Lighi Infantry (Hindostanis) Head- Quarters, Cabool. Captains. 23 P Hopkins 27th Bengal N. I. Oct. 5, 39 800 Commanding. 24 1.1. Captain J. Marshall - 61st Bengal N. I. May 40 600 2d in command. Leutenan's. W. Bird -23d Madras N.1 Sept 1, 40 Adjutant. E. A. H. Webb 38th ditto July 24, 40 Qr. Master, . Clark Ensign. JH.C. Macartney 38th Madras N.USept. 7, 40] Subaltern. Sappers and Miners, 3 Comps. Hindostanis, 2 Comps. Ghoorkhas, 1 Comps. Hazarahs, Head- Quarters, Cabool. Caplain. 25 G. Broadfoot, 341h Madras N. I. June 15, 40 800 Commanding. 25 Bt. Capt. J. P. Walsh, 52d Ditto N. I. 600 2d in Command doing duty, Jellalabad. Lieutenants. G. G. Carr. 234 Ditto N. 1. Sept. 1, 401 500 Adjntant. F. Cunningham 23d Ditto N. I Ditto 1, 40 400 Quarter Master, Subaltern wanting. Afghan Irregulars - Cavalry five Regls. ; arms, sabre, matcklock and pistol. Captains. 24 R.S. Trevor, - 3d Bengal Lt. C. Lug. 27, 391,000 Supdt. Afghan Caval- Ty, Caboo). 254, W. Tayler, 1st Eur. Lt. Inf. ditto 800 Inspector 1st Jan Baz Regt, recruit- Service, Cawnpore. on Dead, VOL. 11.) Shah Shooja ool Moolk's Forces. Season. Rank and Names. Dute of Received from joining the Force. Monthly Pay. Remarks. 0 N.1. apri -Inspector 3d Jan 1825 L, W. Hart 220 Bombay N.I. July 15, 1840 800 Baz. Regt. on Fd. Service. Inspector 4th Jan R. Lee Burnett 5 1th Bengal N. 1. July 16, 41! Baz.raising at Can- dahar. Lieutenants. SInspector 1st 26 G.W. Golding - 20 BI, Eu. Regt. Oct. 25, 800 Jan 39 Baz. Regt, on do. Inspector 21 Jan 34 R. Dowson -j5th Bengal N.I. Oct. 1, 39 800 Baz. Regt., Head Qtrs. Guvdamuck, -Inspector 1st Regt. E, Hay 35th ditto ditto Mar. 10, 41 0 Kazil Bash, 00 Fd. Service Atchekzie Horse, Head-Quarters, Killah Abdallah, Lieutenant. 29 T. B. Bosan- 16th Bengal N.I. April S9 600 Commanding, 1 quet Infantry. 1st or Jezailchee Regiment, Head-Quarters, Peshbelay. Captain. 23 J. Ferries 2014 Bengal N.1. Oct. 1, 39 800 Commanding Lieutenants. J.G. Gerard - 1 st Bl. Eu. L. 1. July , 0 2nd in Command. 35 W.A. Lukin 14th Madras N.I. Sept. 1, 41 500 djutant. Qr. Master wanting. Subaltern ditto. 2nd or Khyber Rangers, Head-Quarters, Gundamuck. Arms, Jezails, Matchlocks and Swords, strength 800. Caplain. loct. 23 H. P. Burn List Bengal N,1. 39 800 Commanding Lieutenant. 55 W. R. Hil-}530 Bengul N. I. Oct. 1, 39 500 Adjutant. | lersdon 3rd or Kohistan Regiment. Arms, Muskets.. Lieulennnt. *28 R. Maule Bengal Arty. Sep. 10, S9 700 Commanding. Local-Lieut, P. Wheeler 300 Adjutant. 4th or Bholan Rangers, Head- Quarters, Quetta. Arms, Fusils,-strength 500. 2 Guns, six-pounders, attached. Caplain. (Ast. Political Agent 17 J. Hammersley Bengal N. 1. Shawl, Command. ing the Regiment. P. Ogilvy - 25th Madras N.I. Sep. 1, 40 500 Adjutant. King's own Artillery, Ghuzni, Jellalabad, Cabool, Kelal-i-Ghilzye. | 27 R. Warburton - Bengal Artillery, Aug. 23, 39 800 In charge. Oct. 1, . • Dead, 72 [PART 11. Political Contingents. GWALIOR CONTINGENT. SIPREE. Names. Pay. Regil. Rank. Remarks. Brigadier . 0. Stubbs 2,227 0 0 Lt. Col. Bl. 8th N. I. Capt. Commandant. W. Minto 1,010 0 0 Capt. Bl. 18th N. I. Comg. Cav. Regt. G.B. Michell 845 6 OL. 2d Eu. Regt. Comg. Infy. Regt. J.H. Swyth 845 6 0 Lt. Artillery Comg. Arty. Compy. Capt. 2d in Comd, J. C. Lumsdaine 863 0 4 Capt, BI. 58th N.I Comg. cav. detachment late in the Sathmalla district. M. T. Blake 500 0 0 Lieut. Bl. 56th N. I. Infy. Regt. late in tem- porary charge. Adjutants. (Staff. T.W. Oldfield 500 0 o'Lieut. BI 74th N. I. Adjt. Cav. Regt. & Stat. R. Raik 500 0 0 B. N. I. Adjt. Infantry Regt. Med. Oficers. J. E. Hope 1,000 0 0 Assistant Surgeon. Staff Surg. in med, charge. J. Pelkington Sub-Assist. Surgeon. Staff in medical charge infy. Rissaldar Muzzuffurbeg, detached in Sathmahalla. This contingent comprises Cavalry, Infantry and Artillery. The Cavalry comprises 6 troops of cavaly, consisting of i rissaldar, 1 jemadar, 4 duffadars, 4 naib duffadars, I nishanchee, 1 nukerchee, and 60 sowars each, - ,-a body of Mahratta horse is also attached, forming an aggregate of 560 so wars. The Infantry consists of a serjeant major and gr. master serjeant, 1 subadar major, subadars, 8 jemadars, 40 harildars, 40 naicks, 16 druinmers, and 600 sepoys. The Artillery is equipped with two 9 pounder guns, and two 24, ounder howitzers, and consists of | European serjeant, i subadar, 1 Jemadar, 4 Haril- dars, 5 naicks, 2 buglers, and 52 golunda uze. BUNDLECUND LEGION. JHANSI. Commandant. W. F. Beatson 1,000 0 0 Capt 54th Regt. N.I Capt. Commandi, J. E. Verner 700 0 0Lt. 60th Regt. N. I. Comg. the Cavalry. H, Barry 600 0 0 Lt. 71 st Regt. N. I. Comg. the Infantry. Lieutenants. J. D. Lauder 500 0 0 Lt. 47th Regt. N I. Adjutant to the Cavy. E. Hall 450 0 0 Lt, 52d Regt. N. 1. Adjutant to the Infy. D. C. Shnie 427 8 0 Interpreter, Qr. Mr. and Legion Staff. T. Ginders 700 o Assistant Surgeon, In medical charge. J. Sheetz 200 o 0, Assistant Steward, | Acting as Apothecary. This legion consists of Cavalry, Infantry, and Artillery, The Cavalry consists of I woordy major, 3 russaldars, 6 naib russaldars, 6 jeinadars, 6 kote duffadars, 54 duffadars, 6 nishanburdars, trumpeters or nugarchees, 480 Sowars. The Infantry consists of 1 serjeant major, 1 qr. master, 20 buglers, and 1000 sepoys, The Artillery is equipped with two 9-pounders, and consists of 1 gun serjeant and 1 gun corporal, 1 indal and 8 larcars. VOL. 11.) 73 Maiwa, Bhopawar, and Bhopaul. MALWA CONTINGENT. Mihidpore. Regimental Rank. Py. Remarks. Commandant. G. T'imios, Bt. Capt. 34th Regt. N. I. 1,000 0 0 Outposts at Commandant of Cavalry, Rajwas, Ram. T. T. Wheeler, Bt. Capt. 56th Regt. N. I. 700 0 O pooral, and Comm indant of Infuntry. Singpore E Andrews, Lieut. 7th By. N. I. 600 0 0 of Dewas. Adjutiint of Contingent. S. J. Becher, Ensign Ilth Rege. N. I. ... 500 0 0 This corps is composed of Caralıy, Infantry and Artillery. The Cavalry com- prises 8 rissallahs, of 80 men each, with the usual proportion of native commis. sioned and non-commissioned officers, The Inauiry comprises 8 companies, of 80 men each, and their proportion of officers. The Artillery is equipped with 6 guns and I artillery serjeant. 5th Regiment. IRREGULAR CAVALRY.-Bhopawar. (A Political Department Corps.) Regimental Rank. | Priy. Remurks, Commandant. E. Pottinger. Major 39th Regt. N.I.... Adjulani. T. T. Whele, Bt. Capt. 56th Regt. N. I. In Medical Charge. W. Dunbar, Assist. Surgeon. liessuldar. Roheim dinkell, This corps is composed of l native doctor, 9 rissaldars, 9 naib rissaldars, 7 jemadars, i jemadar adjutant,.? kote duffidars, 73 duff:ad:urs and havildars, 9 nishaunbu; dars, 5 nurkurchees, 4 trumpeters, 2 lascar's and 673 sowais. BIIOPAUL CONTINGENT. Sehore. I egimental Runk. Pay. Remarks. at Commandani. (avalry, Ar- J G. Landers, .. Capt. 9ih Regt. B. N. I. 1,015 6 0 tillery, and Adjutant, infantry, all J. D. Fergusson, Lieut. 36th Regt. B. N. I. 457 8 0 stationed Sebore. This corps is composed of Cavalry, Artillery and Infantry. The Cavalry consists of i native commandant, 3 rissaldars, 4 jemadars, 1 jemadar adjiitant, 3 kote dufladars, 15 duffadars and havildars, S nishaunburdars. 3 buglers, 3 farriers, 3 Lascars, and 219 horsemen. The artillery consists of 2 lascars, 2 guns, and 8 ariis cers. The Infantry consists of ! native doctor, 6 suba vars, jemadars, 30 duffudars and havildars, 30 naiks, 6 buglers, and 449 sapoys. PART IL. VOL. II. L 74 (PART 11. Political Contingents. JODHPORE LEGION. Erinpoorah. Regimentul Rank, Pay. Remarka Commandant. D. Downing, Major, 3d Regt. N. I.... 2nd in 1 ominand, J. Stubbs, . Lieut, 49th NI. In Medicul Charge. A. Paton, A ssist. Surgeon, 1,000 0 0 500 0 0 530 0 0 This legion consists of Cavalry, Infantry and Artillery. The Cavalry consists of 4 riscaldars and wardy majors, 3 vaib rissaldars, 3 kote duffudars, 18 duffadars, 3 nisha unburdais, 2 trumpeters, 1 nuggurchee, and 215 sowars The infantis con- 5.sts of 1 serjeant inajor, i quaiter master seriennt. 8 Subadar major and subadars, 8 jemadars. 32 havildars, 32 naiks, 4 drummers, 12 files and buglers, 613 sepoy's, 8 lascars, 8 blisties, 2 native doctors. The artillery is equipped with 1 gun ser. jeant, 1 gun corporal, i tindal, 8 lascars, 2 ordnance drivers, 18 guo-camel sowars, and two 6-pounders. KOTAH CONTINGENT. Communidunt. J. G. Bruere, - Capt. 13th Regt. N. 1. 2d Commandant. T. James, Lieut. 21st Regt. N.I. 1,000 0 olist Troon at Hrad Qrs. Khemuj. 700 0 0 ist Troop on command at Nusseerabad. 500 OO Adjulant. P. G. Robertson, In Medical (harge. G, T. C. Fogarty, Lieut, 71st Regt. N. I. A ssistant Surgeon, 500 0 0 This corp consists of Cavalry and Infantry. The Cavalry consists of 1 first dres. ser, 2 rissaldar's, 2 naib rissaldars, 14 kote duffadars and nishanburdurs. 8 nail dur. adars, and 160 sowars, I trumpeter, 1 mnggurchie. The Infantry branch comprises the following 2 staff and regimental serjeants, 8 subadars, 40 havildars, 8 jemadars, 40 naiks, 624 sepoys, diuminers and buglers 8. MEYWAR BHEEL CORPS. Kurwarrah. Conomandant. W. Hunter, Capt. 15th Regt N.I. 2d in Command. J. G. Guilskill, Lieut. 261h do. N.I. Adjulani. J. C. Brooke, Lieut. 63d do. N. I. In Medical Charge. J. Bowhill, lasst, Surgeon. This corps consists of 1 native doctor, 1 native dresser, 1 subadar, 4 jemadars, 15 ha vildars, 20 naiks and 475 sepoys. . VOL. 11.) 75 Mhairwarrah, Sinde, Assam, &c. MHAIRWARRAH LOCAL BATTALION, Beawur. Regimental Ranks. Puy. Remarks. O. Commandanı, C. G. Dixon, -- Capt. Artillery 2 din Command. J. Abbott, Capl. Artillery Adjutant. W. J. Cade, Bt. Capt. 13th Regt. N. I. In Medical Charge. N. Collyer, Asst. Surgeon Uniform red, facings dark green, and lace silver. SINDE IRREGULAR HORSE. Curachee. Commundunt. W. F. Curtis, ... Capt. 1st By, Lt. Cavy.-- 1,000 o Outposts at Shikarpore, Bhag, Ja. needeerah, Jagun, Suk. kur, Hydra. bad and Bul. liary. 2nd in Command. C. R. W. Hervey, .. Lieut. Bo. 2d Eur. Regt. of N.I. 500 0 Adjulant. G. Malcolm, .Lt. Gren. Ry. N.I. 426 10 0 This corps is composed of i rissaldar, 6 jemadars, 10 duffadars, 18 naib duffa dars 2 trumpeters, 2 native doctors, and 405 so wars. CUTTACK PAUK CORPS. Khoordah. A. R West, - 1 Lieut. 6th M. N. I. -:| | Commanding. This corps consists of 3 subadars, 3 jemadars, 15 havildars, 16 naiks, 3 buglers and 290 sepoys. -Two native doctors atached, ASSAM LOCAL ARTILLERY. Debroogurh. Commandant. D. Reid, 385120 The Artillery consists of I commandant, 1 serjeant major, 1 subadar, 1 jemadar, 6 havildars, 6 naiks, 1 bugler, and 87 gun lascars. .... | Lieut. 5th Batın. Artillery. ASSAM MILITIA. Seebpore. Consists of 4 subadars, 6 jernadars, 12 haviidars, 13 naiks, and 113 sepoys, u' der the command of Lieut, T, Biodie, 2. N. I., Assistant to the Governor General's Agent. 76 (PART 11. Political Contingents. SHAN MILITIA. Nowgong Consists of a subadar, 1 jemadar, 2 havildars, 3 naicks, and 51 sepoys, under the command of Capt. J. T. Gordon, i8th N. I., junior assistant to the Commissioner of Assam. CACHARY MILITIA. Tezpore. Consists of 64 sepoys under the command of Lieut. C. Scott, 27th N. I., junior assistant to the Commissioner in Assam. Note.-For other provincial and local Corps not under the Political, but under the Military Department, see end of Army List. MUNNIPORE LEVY. Corps. Native Com. mandants. Sepoys. 1 Artillery Battalion Infantry 1 st Regiment Ditto 2nd ditto Ditto 3rd ditto Ditto 4th ditto Ditto 5th ditto Ditto 6th ditto Ditto 7th ditto 1 1 1 452 452 451 451 451 451 451 441 1 9 3,610 MYSORE SILLADAR HORSE. Nurire Rank and Commans File. ants. Regiments. Station. Ist Regiment 2nd ditto 3rd ditto 4th ditto 51h ditto 6th ditto 7th ditto 364 366 363 357 362 368 363 Horssun Kander Abbass. Closepelt, Kristna Row. Coonghull, Trimul Row, Cadapah. Benkurpoor, Chunder Row, Rema noory. Bangalore, Gholam Hussain Khan, lose pett, Banboo Row Manay. Lulchmun, Teertakultah, Hanoomunth Row, Activg MALWA BHEEL CORPS. Bhopawar. Regimental Rank. Pay. Remarks. Commandant. G. C. Stockley, Capt. 7th Bombay N, I. 500 O Outposts Checulda and Tandla. This corps is composed of Infantry. It comprises ! native doctor, I jemadar, 2 duffadars, and haviidars, 8 paiks and 268 sepoys. NIMAR BHEEL CORPS. Commandant. Capt. Abboll, Capt. 1st Cavalry 1000 0 0 The Jufantry branch of this corps consists of 7 jemadars, 6 duft..dars and havildars, and 293 sepoys. The Cavalry of 3 ressaldar: 3 naib ressaldars, 4 jema- dars, and 100 rank and file. ...cape . VOL. 11.] [ 77 ] HIER MAJESTY'S REGIMENTS SERVING IN INDIA AND CHINA, (From Hart's Army List.) EXPLANATIONS. K.G. Knight of the Order of the Garter. K.T. Knight of the Order of the Thistle. K.P. Knight of the Order of St. Patrick. G.C.B. Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath. K.C.B. Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. C.B. Companion of the Order of the Bath. G.C.M.G. Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. K.C.M.G. Knight Commander of ditto ditto. C.M.G. Companion of ditto ditto. G.C.H. Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order. K.C.H. Knight Commander of ditto ditto. K.H. Knight of ditto ditto. K.C. Knight of the Crescent. P Before the Name, denotes that the Officer served in the Peninsula, or the South of France. Officers actually present in either of the actions of the 16th, 17th, or 18th, W Waterloo Medal. June, 1815. Such Officers are allow- ed two years' additional service. 78 (PART H. Her Majesty's Regiments. 44 The 3RD (King's Own) Light Dragoons. [Kurnaul. The White Horse, within the Garter on the 2nd and 3rd Standards, with the Motto, • Nec asperu terreni.'—'SALAMANCA'- VICTORIA' TOU. LOUSE- PENINSULA.' Years' Service. Colonel. P Lord Chas. Somerset Manners, K. C. B. (1) Cornet, 7 Feb. 98 ; Lieut. 1 June, 99; Capt. 21 Aug. 1800 ; Major, 13 Oct. 08; Full! Half Lieut.-Col . 1 Aug. 11 ; Col. 6 Nov. 17 ; Major. Gen. 27 May, 25 ; Pay. Pay. Lieut.-Gen. 28 June, 38 ; Col. 3rd Dragoons, 8 Nov. 39. Lieut.- Colonels-P W Sir Joseph Thackwell, (2) K. C. B. & K. 35 7 H. Cornet, p 23 Apr. 00; Lieut. 13 June, 01 ; Capt. p 9 April, 07 ; Major, 18 June, 15; Brevet-Lieut.-Col. 21 June, 17; Reytle- Lieut.- Col. 15 June, 20; Col. 10 Jan. 37. 37 5 Michæl White, (3) Cornet, p15 Aug. 04; Lieut. p 14 May, 05; Capl. 7 Nov. 15; Brevet-Major, 10 Jan. 37 ; Regil-Major, 4 Jan. 39; Lieut.-Col. p 13 Dec. 39. 17 Majors.--Geo. Henry Lockwood Cornet, p 10 Mar. 25; Lieut. P 10 Aug. 26 ; Capt. p 7 Sept. 32 ; Major, 6 March, 39. 15 11 Geo. Alex. Malcolm, Ensign, p 31 Dec. 25; Lieut. p 7 June 27 ; Capt. p 30 Dec. 31 ; Major, p 13 Dec. 39. CAPTAINS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. . 16 O Chas. W. Morley Bal- ders -p 10 Nov. 25p 25 Nov. 28 p 15 July 36 32 Henry Bond (4) - p 25 May 09 1 Mar. 11 P 6 May 24 29 John Tritton (5) 14 Jan. 13 14 Aug. 15 7 Oct. 36 28 i William White (6) 28 May 12 1 Aug. 14 30 June 37 15 John Wm. Yerbury •p 12 Dec. 26P 5 July 33 1 July 37 11 John Rich. Blagden Hale -p 7 June 31 p 16 May 34 p 10 July 37 21 John Bloomfield Gough, s 24 Feb 20 p 1 Oct. 25 p 1 Ang. 26 15 0 Meyrick Jones 1 Mar. 27 p 31 Dec. 30 6 Mar. 39 20 Charlss Fred. Have- lock (6)* . p 13 Dec. 21 7 May 27 12 Dec. 39 LIEUTENANTS. 17 0 John Edward Dyer, R. M. 26 May 25 21 Dec. 26 8 Walter Unett p 23 Aug. 33'p 31 Mar. 37 12 John Edward Codd p 21 July 25 P 27 Apr. 27 15 Samuel Fisher (7). 15 June 27 p 16 Aug. 31 14 Wm. Howe Hadfield 25 Oct. 27 p 20 Sept. 31 14 0 George Newton 1 May 28 p 17 Aug. 32 (1) Lord Chas. Manners served the campaign of 1808 in Spain, including the cavalry en gagement at Benevente. Served at Walcheren as Aide-de-Camp to Lord Chatham, and was engaged at the siege of Flushing. His Lords hip served subsequently in the Penin- sula, and has received a medal and two clasps for Salamanca, Vittoria, and Toulouse. (2) Sir J. Thackwell served the campaign in Galicia and Leon, under Sir John Moore, and was engaged in several skirmishes, and present at the battle of Corunnn; served in the campaigns of 1813 and 14 in the Peninsula, including the battles of Vittoria, the Py- renees in front of Pampeluna 27th, 28th, 29th, and 30th July ; blockade of Pampeluna, from 18th to the 31st Oct., when it' surrendered; battle of Orthes, affair at Tarbes, and bat- tile pour Toulouse i besides many de right shoulder at Vittoria severely wounded at Waterloo (left arm amputated close to the shoulder) in charging a square of infantry; had also two horses shot under him. (3) Col. White served at the capture of Hattrass in 1817, and during the Marhatta cam- paigus 1817 and 18; also at siege aud capture of Bhurtpore. (4) Maj. Bond served at the taking of Anjar in Cutch in 1816; the Mahratta campaigns of 1817 and 18 ; and at the siege of Bhurtpore in 1825. (5) Capt. Tritton served at the siege and capture of Hattrass ; the Mahratta campaigns of 1817 and 18; and the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. (6) Capt. White served at the siege and capture of Hattrass ; the Mahratta campaigu of 1817; and at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. (6.) Capt. Havelock served at Bhurtpore. (7) Lieut. lisher served at Bhurtpore as a volunteer. VOL. 1'.] 79 Serving in Indiu and China. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 10 11 12 0 0 0 0 0 7 ... 3 0 John Rose Holden Rose..... p 19 July 31p 11 Jan. 33 George Forbes 10 Dec. 30 15 Feb. 34 W. E. Edward Barnes. 19 Nov. 295p 21 July 35 James Martin р 6 Sept. 33 p 11 Mar. 36 0 Edward Geo. Swinton P 6 June 34 7 Oct. 36 0 James Cowell P 18 July 34 p 17 Mar. :7 Rich. Tho. Montgo. mery p 16 Jan. 35 1 July 37 Rich. A. Moore p 12 Feb. 36 р 10 July 37 Hon. Charles Powys... y 28 Feb. 34 P 1 July 36 John Wyld · P 15 July 36 6 Mar 39 0 James White · P 22 May 35 17 Apr. 39 0 John Sullivan 9 July 37 31 Dec. 39 0 Frederick Knowles(10) 23 Nov. 38 9 Jan. 40 CORNETS. 0 Henry Wood 1p 10 July 37 0 Edmund Roche p 11 July 37 0 George Cookes p 14 July 37 0 Charles Bowles p 16 Aug. 39 0 Hon. Alfred A. Har- boad 'p 20 Sept. 39 Alfred Fisher p 29 Nov. 39 0 Jonas Hamilton Tra. · P. 28 Feb 40 0 Roger Casement p. 16 Apr. 41 91mo. Paymaster P Edward Cormick, (8) 24 Jan. 28;' Cornet, p. 4 Dec. 06 ; p Lieut, 25 Sept. 07 ; Capt, p. 23 Sept. 13. Adjutant.-John Sulivan, (Lieut.) 9 July, 37. Quarter Master - Thomas Adams, 20 June, 34. Surgeon. -Jas. Henderson. (9) M. D. 20 April, 26; Assist.-Surgeon 22 March, 10; Hosp. - Assist. 5 Aug. 09. Assistant-Surgeons.- Nelson Dartnell, 4th Dec. 32. 0 Henry Franklin 29 Dec. 37. Veterinary-Surgeon.-George Edlin, 17 Dec. 29. Scarlet-Facings Blue.- Agents, Messrs. Cox & Co. 0 2 2 vers 1 26 4 8 32 0 0 0 9 4 12 (8) Capt. Cormick served the Campaign in Portugal in 1808 and 9, and on the eastern coast of Spain, from Sept. 1812 to Sept. 1813, including the battle of Castalla. (9) Dr. Henderson served at the capture of Guadaloupe in 1810; two years in the Ame- ricari war; and during the whole of the Burmese war. (10) Lieut. Knowles served at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. (2) Col. Townsend served in the Peninsula from Dec. 1808, until taken prisoner near the city of Pau in France, 8th March 18!4, including the different affairs of the 10th and I lih, and in crossing the Douro on the 12th May 1809; baltie of Talavera : aflair with the ene my's advanced posts 11th July 1810, in front of Ciudad Rodrigo under the command of Col. Talbot who was killed; passage of the Con; skirmishes of the rear guard from Almeida to the lines of Torres Vedras is 1810; affairs in the enemy's retreat from Santarem to the frontiers of Spain from 6th March to 4th April 1811; batile of Fuentes d'Oner (wounded); affair with the enemy's lancers 25th Sept. 1811; siege of Badajoz; affairs with the enemy's cavalry at Usagre, Llerena. in front of Salamanca, and near Castrillos; battle of Salaman, ca; affair with the enemy's rear guard near Panerandos ; several skirmishes from Madrid to near Ciudad Rodrigo, and from the 26th May near Salamanca to the lattle of Vittoria ; taking of a yun from the enemy near Pam peluna; and several engagements and skirmishes from the entrance of the British ariny into France, until the battle of Orthes. Embarked for America in Oct. 1814, and was present at the attack on New Orleans, 8th Jan. 1815. 80 Her Majesty's Regiments. [PART II. 4th (Queen's Own) Light Dragoons. [Kirkee. TALAVERA,' 'ALBUHERA,' 'SALAMANCA,'' VITTORIA,' Toulouse,' 'PENINSULA,' Years' Serv. AFFGHANISTAN,' . GuuzNEE.' Colonel. 48 P WLord Robt. Edw. Henry Somerset, a G.C.B. Cornet, 4 Feb. 1793; Lieut. Full Half 4 Dec. 93 ; Capt. 28 Aug. 91; Major 21 Nov. 99; Lieut. -Col. 25 Dec. 1800 ; Pay. Pay. Colonel 25 July, 10; Major-Gen. 4 June, 13; Lieut.-Gen, 27 May, 25; Col. 4th Dragoons, 31 Mareli, 36. 38 0 Lieul. - Colonels.-P William Fendall,b Cornet, 29 Sept. 08 ; Lieut. 3 Oct. 09; Capt.p 3 Feb. 20; Major, 2 June, 25; Lieut.-Col.p 24 Dec. 32. 22 John Scott, C. B. Cornet, p 4 May 15; Lieut. p 26 Oct. 15; Capt.p 28 June, 21 ; Major,p 9 Nov. 26; Lieut.-Col. 3. Aug. 30. 31 0 Majors.-PW William Havelock,c K. H., . Ens. 12 July, 10; Lieut. 12 May, 12; Capt.p 19 Feb. 18; Major,p 31 Dec. 30. 29 HP Pra. Dermot Daly, d Ens. 5 Dec. 11; Lieut. 26 Nov. 13 ; Capt. 26 June, 24; 12 Major,p 27 Oct. 35; Brev.-Lieut. -Col. 23 July 39. 4 CAPTAINS. CORNET. LIEUT CAPTAIN. BREY.-MAJ, 2 ecco cosa = 0.97-2000 0 22 12 Harcourt Master p 30 July 18 p 6 Mar. 23 p 17 Sept. 25 28 June 38 25 12 William Parlhy. p 3 Oct. 16 p 6 May 21 p 28 Sept. 26 15 2 3 IT Alex, Houstoun... p 4 Dec. 23 p 19 Nov. 25 p 12 Dec. 26 22 0 Sir Keith A. Jackson, Bt... p. 2 Dec. 19 p 19 Dec. 22 P 31 Dec. 30 0 Chas, Lush. Cumberlege p 12 Dec. 16 p 29 July 19 3 Oct. 34 17 0 John Harrison.. 25 June 94 13 Aug. 25 p 27 Oct. 35 11 0 Edward Scott.... p:8 Dec. 25 p 8 June 30 p 31 Aug. 38 0 George Gardine Shaw 5. 30 May 11 21 Dec. 13 31 May 39 21 0 Arch. Edm. Bromwich.. 17 Feb. 20 12 Aug. 25 30 Nov. 39 LIEUTENANTS. 14 I Richard Fra. Poore........ p 22 July 24 p 3 Dec. 25. b Col. Fendall served in 0 Thomson Lloyd. the Peninsula from 1809 p 15 Mar. 27 12 Oct. 30 р 13 0 to the end of the war, in- George Chas. Dalbiac, s... 31 July 28 10 May 31 0 J. H. T. Warde, R. M.. p 21 July 33 22 May 35 cluding the battles of Al- 0 buhera, Usagre, Vittoria 0 Rob. Dennistown Campbell. P 22 Oct. 33 p 27 Mar. 35 • Phillip Kemp..... p 22 Aug, 34 p aud Toulouse 2 Sept.36 p 38 Nov. 34 p 28 Apr. 37 Thomas Wm. Geils. c Major Havelock sery- 0 p 23 Jan. 35 ed in the Peninsula from J.T. Douglass Halkett. 6 July 37 0 July 1810 to the end of Arthur Scudamore. P 29 May 25 10 18 Feb. 38 the war, including the 18 T2 Edward Inge.... 11 Mar. 14 10 Mar. 10 battles of Bussaco, Sa- 0 Alexander Low p2 Oct. 35 p 6 July 38 bugal, Salamanca, & Vit- 5 0 William Drysdale. p 29 Dec. 35 p 31 Aug. 38 toria; crossing the Bi- 0 W. W. W. Humbley. 27 Mur. 35 !5 Dec. 38 dassoa; Lattle of Nivelle; 5 0 Jos. Rogers J. Coles. P2 Sept.36 | 22 Mar. 39 affairs near Bayonne; 0 John F. Fitz Gerald,s. p 24 Mar. 32 31 May 39 battles of Orthes &Tou- 0 John August, Todd, p 28 Apr. 37/p 14 June 39 louse; wounded at Qua- R. Buckley Prettejohn.. P 23 Feb 38 p 18 Oct. 39 tre Bras. 0 Wm. Aug. Hyder... P6 July 38 30 Nov. 39 d Col. Daly served the 0 Henry Fred. Hotison. p 14 Sept.38 7 Dec. 39 campaigns of 1813 & 14 CORNETS. in the Peninsula, & was wounded at 0 Martin Kirwan... p 23 Nov. 28 Bayone; served also in the Am. war, 0 Geo. Edward Campion. p 22 Mar. 39 & was engaged at the siege and battle Algernon G. Brinchly. p 29 Mar. 39 of Plattsburgh. Tho. John Francis, p 14 June 30 e Capt. Shaw served at the siege of o William Kingston Fraser... 18 Oct. 39 Hattrass,& in the Mahratta campaigns George John Brown... p 17 Apr. 40 of 1817 and 18. 0 Fenwick Beyce Barron.....P8 May 40 f Lt. (Qr. Mr.) Croad served in the American war. h Dr. Chamber served in the Am. war, and was present in the action before New Orleams. 33 142 Paymaster.—Henry Heyman, 30 Aug. 33 ; Cornet,p 20 Aug. 07; Lieut.p 1 July, 09; Capt.p 24 June, 23, 0 Adjutant. - Thomas Lloyd, (Lieut.) 6 Sept 36. 11 3 Quarter-Master.--Geo. H. Croad, f 8 Jan. 29; Ens. 30 Nov, 09; Lieut. 14 Nov. 20 12 11. 32 0 Surgeon.- John Chambers,: 24 July, 35; Assist. - Surg. 29 April, 24; Hosp.- Assist: 27 Nov. 09. 15 0 Assist. - Surgs.—John Stewart Grares, 28 Sept. 26; Hosp.-Assist. 22 Feb, 26. 1 Eucas Mackintosh Macpherson, 21 Aug. 40. Veterinary-Surgeon. -John Byrne, 14 Dec. 38. Scarlet- l'acings Green.-Agent, Messrs. Hopkinson, Barton and Knyvett. a Lord Edward Somerset served on the expedition to the Helder in 1799, as aide-de-camp to H. R. H. the Duke of York, and was present at the battles of the 19th Sept., 2nd and 6th Oct. Served in the campaigns in the Peninsula in command of the 4th Dragoons, (includ- ing the battle of Talavera, the cavalry action at Usagre, and the battles of Salamanca and Vittoria,) until he obtained the rank of Major-General in 1813 : from that period till the end of the war, he commanded the Hussar Brigade, with which he was present at Orthes and Toulouse. Served at the battle of Waterloo in command of the Household Brigade of Cavalry, and subsequently upon the Staff of the Army of Occuption in France until is return to England. His lordship has received a cross and one clasp for Talavera, Sala- manea. Vittorin. Orthes, and Toulouse. 0 0 4 0 1 1 1 VOL. II.] 81 Serving in India and China. 14TH (KING's Own) LIGHT DRAGOONS. [Kirkee. The 'PRUSSIAN EAGLE'— DOURO' _" TALAVERA'-'FUENTES D'ONOR'—'SALAMANCA'-VITTORIA'_'ORTHES'—'PENINSULA.' Years' Serv. Colonel. 46 PW Sir Edward Kerrison, Bart. (1) KCB. & GCH. Cornet 23 June, 1796 ; Lieut, 1 Feb. 98 ; Capt. 18 Oct. 98 ; Major, 12 May Fullj Half 1803; Lieut.-Col. 4 April, 05; Cól. 4. June, 13; Major-Gen, 12 Pay. Pay. Aug. 19; Lieut.-Gen. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 14th Dragoons, 18 June, 30. 37 0 Lieut.- Col.-P John Townsend. (2) Cornet, p 24 Jan. 05; Lieut. 8 Mar. 06 ; Capt. 6 June, 11 ; Brevet-Major, 21 Jan. 19; Regt.- Major, p 13 Sept. 21; Lieut.- Col. p 16 April, 29. 31 O P W Wm. Havelock, (3) K.H.s. Ens. 12 July, 10; Lieut. 12 May, 12 ; Capt. p 19 Feb. 18; Major, p 31 Dec. 30; Lieut. Col. 30 April, 41. 16 0 Majors.-Charles Barton, Cornet, p 10 Dec. 25; Lieut. p 14 Feb. 28 ; Capt. p 22 March 33 ; Major, p 1 June, 38. 16 8mo. Edward Harvey, (4) Cornet, p 24 Mar. 25; Lieut. P 4 May 26 ; Capt. p 12 Oct. 30; Major, 30 April, 41 CAPTAINS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 0 16 0 Fran. H. Stephens ..p 23 Feb 26 31 July 28p 17 July 35 9 0 Wm. Henry Archer p 28 Dec. 32 p 17 July 35p 1 July 35 8 0 Henry Edw. Doherty .p 31 Dec. 33 p 15 July 36p 17 May 39 20 5mo. George Weston . p 28 Dec. 21 P 19 May 25 P 16 Mar. 30 9 0 Geo. Main Fullerton... P 14 Dec. 32p 30 Oct. 35 P 5 Jan. 41 16 Charles Steuart 10 Dec. 25 p5 Feb. 29 P 9 Nov. 38 31 o Geo. Gardine Shaw(5) p 30 May 11 21 Dec. 13 31 May 39 22 Arch. Edward Brom. wich 17 Feb. 20 12 Aug. 29 30 Nov, 39 0 John Henry Tonge p 29 Apr. 36 P 1 June 38 p 30 Apr. 41 LIEUTENANTS. 6 0 Chas. T. Griffis, R. M. P 5 Feb. 36 p 27 July 38 5 0 Archibald Robert Mil- ler Р 6 Jan. 37 p 13 Dec. 39 5 0 Geo. K. Massy Dawsopp 30 July 36 P 6 Nov. 40 0 Wm. Clarke, Qr M. 15 Sep. 37, 24 Apr. 38 4 Jan. 41 2 0 John Kesketh Goddard p 26 July 39p 15 Jan. 41 19 104 James Boalth 6, p 24 Sep 12 P 6 May 13 15 James Chambre, p 27 July 26 P 12 Feb. 29 8 5mo. Charles Peterson, p 15 Mar. 31 p 26 June 35 10 0 Frederick Holder, p 27 Apr. 32 p 22 July 36 0 Hon. Geo. A. F. C. Graves, s .. lp 15 Mar 33'p 30 Dec. 36 (1) Sir Edward Kerrison served at the Helder in 1799 ; with Sir J. Moore's army in Spain in 1808, and at Coruuna. Served subsequently in the Peninsula, and commanded the 7th Hussars at Orthes and at Waterloo, for which he has received medals. Sir Edward was severely wounded (his arm having been broken in two places) in Spain, 25 Dec. 1808, and slightly wounded at Waterloo. (2) For this Note, see preceding page. (3) Lieut. -Colonel Havelock served in the Peninsula from July 1810 to the end of that war in 1811, including the battles of Busaco, Sabugal, Salamanca, and Vittoria ; passage of the Bidassoa, battle of the Nivelle, affairs near Bayonne, battles of Orthes and Toulouse. Served also the campaign of 1815, and was wounded at Quatre Bras. (4) Major Harvey served at the investment of Kolapore in the East Indies in Sept. 1827. (5) Capt. Shaw served at the siege of Hattrass, and in the Mahratta campaigns of 1817 and 18. (6) Lieutenant Boalth served in the Mahralta campaigns of 1817 and 18; present at the siege of Talnier, capture of Sindwah, battle of Maheidpore, and various skirmishes. PART II. VOL. II. M ... 11.02 9 ... 82 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 14TH (King's Own) LIGHT DRAGOONS.-Continued. Years' Service, LIEUTENANTS. CORNET. LIEUT. Full Half Pay. Pay. 7 6 5 3 6 0 ... 0 4 2 1 1 1 0 Arthur Scudamore .p 29 May 35 18 Feb. 38 Richard Herbert Gall.p 3 July 35 7 Dec. 38 Jn. Foster FitzGerald, s. p 24 Mar. 37 31 May 39 John Augustus Todd .P 28 Apr. 37 p 14 June 39 Rich. Buckley Prette- john p 23 Feb. 38 p 18 Oct. 39 Ó Henry Frederick Hod. son 14 Sept. 33 7 Dec. 39 Charles Wm. Thomp son (7) 12 26 Feb. 36p 17 Jan. 40 Thomas Wm. Smith...O 7 July 37 p 13 July 40 Wm. Warmer Allen... 29 Nov. 39 P 30 Apr. 41 CORNETS. Charles Morant 2. 20 Oct. 40 0 Joseph Cuff Barret p 14 Jan. 41 Wm. Nettleship 15 Jan. 41 Francis Delaval Gray p 11 Jan. 39 Charles Potts Rosser... p 8 Jan. 41 Wm. Edward Baller p 15 May 40 Rich. Pretyman Ap. thorp p 30 Apr. 41 James Coster lp i May 411 Paymaster.—P Sam. Rofe. (8) 3 Sept. 12. Adjutant.-Wm. Clarke. (Lt.) 24 Apr. 38. Quarter Master.-P W Samuel Brodribb, 915 Jan. 29. 0 Surgeon.—P W Patrick Henry Lavens, (10) Aug. 26; Assist.- Surg. 24 Oct. 11; Hosp.-Assist, 28 Jane, 10. Assistant Surgeons.—Jas W. Muffat. 8 Feb. 27; Hos.-Assist. 28. Sept. 26. Edward Wm. Stone, M. D. 5 Oct. 38. Veterinary Surgeon.-J. G. Phillips, 28 Aug. 38. Scarlet-Fucings Blue.-Agent, Messrs. Cox and Co. 1 1 29 12 31 15 3 3 0 0 (7) Lieut, Thompson served as a Captain in the Anglo-Spanish Legion, and was engaged at Hornani 30th Aug. 1835 ; the operations on the heights of Arlaban, 16th, 17th and 18th January 1836 ; and the action before San Sebastian, 6th May 1836, in which he was severely wounded in the hip and the hand. (8) Paymaster Rofe served in the Peninsula from Oct. 1812 to the end of the war. (9) Quarter-Master Brodripp served in the Peninsula from Sept. 1813 to the end of the war; present at Waterloo. (10) Dr. Lavens served the campaigns of 1812, 13 and 14 in the Peninsula, and was at- tached to the light troops which attacked the castle of Mirabete near Almarez, on the night of the 19th May 1812. Present at the battles of Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nivelle; storming the lleights of Garris; and battle of Orthes. Present at Waterlou on the 16th and 18th June. VOL. 11.) 83 Serving in India and China. 15TH (King's Owx) LIGHT DRAGOONS. [Bangalore. * EMSDORF-EGMONT-OP-ZEE'-'VILLIERS EN COUCHE-SA- HAGUN VITTORIA – PENINSULA'- WATERLOO.' Years' Service Colonel. 48 P Sir Robert Thomas Wilson, (1) Cornet, Apr. 1794 ; Lieut. 31 Oct. 24 ; Capt. 21 Sept. 96 ; Major, 28 June, 1800 ; Lieut. Col. Full | Half 27 Feb. 02 ; Col. 25 July, 10; Major-Gen. 4 June, 13; Lieut.- Pay. Pay. Gen. 27 May, 25 ; Col. 15th Hussars 29 Dee. 35. Lieut.-Colonel.-P Lovell Benjamin Lovell, (2) K. H. Cornet, P 31 51 18 Dec. 05 ; Lieut. p 19 May, 08 ; Capt. p 12 Dec. 11 ; Brevet- Major, 21 Jan. 19, Regtl. Major, p 28 Oct. 24 ; Lieut. Col. p 21 Nov. 28. 21 1} Sir Walter Scott, Bart. Cornet, p 10 June, 19 ; Lieut. p 24 Oct. 21 ; Capt.p 16 June, 25; Major, p 26 Feb. 28; Lieut.-Col. 31 ; May, 30. 23 À Majors.-Courtenay Phillips, Cornet 8. Sub-Lieut. p 26 Dec. 18 ; Lieut. 18 May, 22 ; Capt. p 14 Jan. 26 ; Major, p 5 Apr. 33. 24 43 James M'Queen, Ens. 31 Mar. 14; Lieut. p 11 Feb. 19; Cupt. P July, 25 ; Brevet Major, 28 June, 38 ; Major, 18 June, 41. CAPTAINS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 15 0 John P. Hickman...... p 19 Oct. 26 p 25 Feb. 31 p 1 Apr. 26 10 0 George Wm. Key...... P 5 July 31 35 Aug. 33p 16 Sept. 37 9 0 E. Tho. Harley Cham- bers..... p 14 Dec. 32p 2 Aug. 33 p 28 Nov. 37 11 0 Michael Wm. Smith... 19 Nov. 30 P 21 Feb. 34 p 23 Apr. 39 23 3 Robt. RolloGillespie(4) 31 Aug. 15 p 9 Apr. 18 6 July 37 15 0 Charles H. T. Hecker.. p 29 Aug. 26 P 3 Jan. 28 2 June 39 12 Oswald Sam. Blach- ford..... P 6 Dec. 27 p 13 Sept. 31 p 1 Aug. 34 8 0 Benj. O'N., Viscount Amiens..... p 24 Dec. 33 р 6 May 36 p 27 Sept. 39 11 0 Justinian Vernon... p 21 June 31 9 Feb. 34 18 June 41 LIEUTENANTS. 11 Richard Knox.. p 28 June 31 20 Apr. 34 12 7 Hugh B. Higgins... P 1 Aug. 22 15 Dec. 25 9 John Bunce Pilgrim... p 4 Dec. 32 p 16 Sept. 37 7 John Surman, R. M.... 12 June 35p 9 Mar. 38 9 Fra. Woodley Horne... p 31 Aug. 32 6 Sept. 33 7 0 John Brett... p 10 Oct. 34 p 14 Apr. 37 0 Chas. Hugh Key P 9 Mar. 38 p 23 Apr. 39 14 0 Geo. Aberc. Robert- son (6)...... 26 Apr. 28 13 May 31 15 0 Octavius Geo. Perrott.. 26 May 27 Oct. 22 13 0 P. D’Ormieux Von Streng....... p 11 Nov. 28 17 Apr. 34 10 0 Chas. Alex. Sinclair... 13 Oct 31 2 June 34 (1) Sir Robert Wilson served in Flanders and Holland in 1793,4, and 5; in the rebellion in Ireland in 1798 ; in Holland in 1799 ; the Egyptian campaign of 1801 ; capture of the Cape of Good Hope in 1806 ; raised and commanded the Lusitanian Legion in 1808 and 9 in Spain and Portugal. Served several campaigns with the Russian army in Russia, Po- land, Germany, and France. (2) Lieut.-Col. Lovell served at the taking of Monte Video under Sir Sam. Auchmuty in 1807, and subsequently in the Peninsula, including the battles of Talavera, the Coa, Busa- co, Fuentes d'Onor (wounded) Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nive, Orthes, and Toulous ; actions or skirmishes near Talavera, Sexmiro, Val de la Mula, Meares, Freixeda, Guarda, Coimbre, Valle, Venda de Sierra, Pombal, Redinha, Miranda de Corvo, Coa, Gal- ligos, Nave d'Aver, Espiga, near Fuentes d'Onor, Llerena, near Salamanca, St. Christoval. Rueda, Castrillos, Foncastin, Matylla, at Burgos, Osma, Huarte, Pampeluna, Vale de Bastan, Pass of Maya, Lines of Ainho, Cambo, Hasparren, Helite, Garris, Sauveterre, St. Glade, Buelho, Garlin, San Roman-total, ten general actions, forty minor actions or skir- mishes, besides attending seven sieges ; and was at the siege of Oporto, being one of the Military Reporters under Lord Wm. Russell. (4) Capt. Gillespie served in the Burmese war. (6) Lieut. Robertson was wounded in action at Coorg, Madras, April, 1834. 84 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 15TH (KING's Own) LIGHT DRAGOONS.—Continued. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 8 8 7 3 4 0 ... 3 3 0 3 0 0 1 3 John Macartney p 27 Sept. 23 p 19 Dec. 34 Tho. Brooke Jackson . p 10 Jan. 34 p 19 Feb. 36 George Horne .. p 19 June 35 p 28 Aug. 38 0 John Gore Townsend.. p 28 Dec. 38 p 29 Nov. 39 0 Henry Keown p 22 Aug. 37 p 29 Mar. 39 0 Joseph Clayton Jen- Dyos P 8 Feb. 39 18 June 41 0 Lewis Edward Nolan... p 15 Mar. 39 JP 19 June 41 CORNETS. John Cocks 14 June 39 Tho. R. Crawley 19 Dec. 34 Chas. Erskine Steuart.p 20 June 39 Henry Brett p 21 June 39 Blackwood Moutray Read p 22 June 29 Herbert Morgan p 23 June 39 Charles Bill p 29 Nov. 39 Adam Blandy p 19 June 41 0 Matthew Edward Hoare...... 20 June 411 0 Paymaster.—Henry Routh, 11 Oct. 39; Ens. p 26 Apr. 31 ; Lieut. p 27 Sept. 33. Adjutant.-John Cocks, (Cornet) 14 June 39. Quarter-Master.- William Betson, 1 Nov. 35. Surgeon. - Jas. Mouat. (7) MD. 15th Feb. 27 ; Assist.-Surg. 1 Oct. 12 ; Hosp.-Assist. 16 July 12. Assistant-Surgeons.--Thomas Bissett M. D. 10 Nov. 37. Edward Mockler, 25 Sept. 35. Veterinary Surgeon.—Thomas Herford, 25 Jan. 39. Facings Blue-Agent, Messrs. Cox and Co. [Returned from France, May, 1836.] 0 0 11 3 0 29 6 0 (7) Dr. Mouat served in the Burmese war. VOL. 11.) 85 Serving in India and China. 16TH (The Queen's) Light Dragoon's.-(Lancers.) [Meerat. · TALAVERA'_ FUENTES D'ONOR'SALAMANCA'-' VITTO- RIA'-NIVE'_ PENINSULA'- WATERLOO '-- BHURTPORE" - AFFGHANISTAN'-GHUZNEE.' Years' Service. Colonel. 60 PW Sir John Ormsby Vandeleur, (1) G. C. B. Ens. 29 Dec. 1781 ; Lieut. 21 July, 83 ; Capt. 7 Mar. 92 ; Mujor, 1 Mar. 94 ;: Full Half Lieut.-Col . 1 Jan. 98 ; Col. 25 Apr. 1808 ; Major-Gen. 4 June, Pay. Pay. 11; Lieut.-Gen. 19 July, 21 ; Gen. 28 June, 38 ; Col. 16th Lan-- cers, 18 June 30. 39 3 Imo. Lieut.- Colonels.-P Thos. Wm. Brotherton, (2) C. B. s. Ens. 24. Jan. 00 ; Lieut & Capt. p 27 July 01 ; Major, p 28 Nov. 11; Brevet-Lieut.-Col. 19 May, 14; Lieut.-Col. p 12 Oct. 20 ; Col.. 22 July 30. 36 OP William Persee, (3) C.B. Cornet, 10 Jan. 06 ; Lieut. p. 27 Nov.. 06 ; Capt. 23 Jan. 12; Major, 25 May, 22; Lieut.-Col. p 6 Dec. 33. 28 0 P Charles Robert Cureton, (4) Ens. 24 Feb. 14; Lieut. 27 June, 16 ; Capt. p 12 Nov. 25 ; Major, p 6 Dec. 33; Brevet Lt.-Col. 23 July, 39 ; Lieut.-Col. 21 Aug. 39. 26 0 Majors.- George James M'Dowell , (5) Cornet, p 4 Apr. 16; Lieut. p 4 Dec. 17 ; Capt. p 14 Nov. 27 ; Major, p 4 Aug. 37; Brevet Lieut.-Col. 23 July, 39. 21 54 Arthur Charles Lowe, (6) Cornet, 20 Apr. 15; Lieut. p. 10 Aug. 15 ; Capt. p 3 Apr. 27 ; Major, 21 Aug. 39. CAPTAINS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 0 ... 17 Thos.Hooke Pearson(7) p 14 Mar. 25p 1 Aug. 26p 16 Aug. 31 21 0 George Marsel 7 Sept. 20 p 1 Dec. 25 p 6 Aug 29 16 0 Edward Baker Bere ... p 13 Aug. 25 p 29 Aug. 26 p 6 Dec. 33 14 0 G. O'Halloran Gavin p 13 Nov. 27 p 14 Oct. 29 p 26 May 37 15 Lawrence Fyler P7 Sept. 26p 10 July 28 p 7 Feb. 34 14 0 Pinson Bonham p 10 Jan. 28 p 25 June 30 p 23 Mar. 38. 12 0 William Wilmer P 15 June 30 11 Apr. 33 p 31 Dec. 39 8 Robert Algernon Smith 5 July 33 p 22 Nov. 36p 13 Dec. 39 9 Charles Wm. Reynolds 29 June 32 27 Mar. 34 p 16 Apr. 41 LIEUTENANTS. 14 Edward James Pratt ... 14 Feb. 28'p 20 Jan. 32 12 Francis Thos. Meik... 9 July 29p 4 May 32 12 W Wm. Webster, R. M. (10) p 14 Oct. 29 25 Sept. 32 (1) Sir J. Vandeleur has received a cross for Ciudad Rodrigo (wounded when leading his division to the breach,) Salamanca, Vittoria, and Nive. Sir John has also performed most distinguished service in the East Indies in Lord Lake's campaigns. (2) Col. Brotherton was wounded at Salamanca. 13) Col. Persse served in the Peninsula from 1809 to the end of the war, and was se- verely wounded by a musket shot in the action of the 10th Dec. 1813, near Bayonne; served at New Orleans ; also at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. (4) Col. Cureton served in the Península from 1809 to the end of the war, including the battles of Talavera, Busaco, and Fuentes d'Onor ; siege of Badajoz, April 1812 ; battle of Salamanca ; capture of Madrid: battles of Vittoria, Orthes, Parbes, and Toulouse ; wounded in the right leg by a rifle ball in crossing the Mondego, near Coimbray, Ist Oct. 1810 ; received a severe sabre cut on the head (skull fractured,) and another on the left hand 'at Fuentes d'Onor, 5th May, 1811 ; served also at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore, and in the Army of the Indus. (5) Colonel M’Dowell served at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. (6) Major Lowe was wounded at Bhurtpore. 7) Capt. Pearson served at the siege of Bhurtpore, and was a volunteer for the dis- mounted cavalry storming party. (10) Lieut. Webster served at Waterloo on the 17th and 18th June ; also at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore ; received a sabre cut on the right hand in an affair with the enemy in front of Bhurtpore, 10th Dec. 1825. 86 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 16TH (The Queen's) Light DRAGOONS.--Continued. Years Service. LIEUTENANTS. CORNETS. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. ... ... ... 0 9 Richard Pattinson . p 16 Nov. 32 p 18 Apr. 34 15 Charles B. Codrington P7 Oct. 26 p 22 July 29 8 Wm. Petrie Waugh ... p 1 Nov. 33 p 29 May 35 8 Geo. Thos. W. Pipon. p 10 Jan. 34 p 3 July 35 8 George Harriott . p 11 Apr. 34 p 8 July 36 8 Thomas Pattle . p 13 June 34 p 23 Dec. 36 6 0 Rob. Abercromby Yule p 3 July 35 p 26 May 37 11 0 John Osborne Bur- ridge, r. P 9 Nov. 30 1 Sept. 36 5 D. H. MacKinnon р 1 July 36 p 23 Mar. 38 6 0 Charles John Foster... P 8 Apr. 36 21 Dec. 38 5 0 Wm. Simp. Mitchell Iones p 2 July 36 29 May 39 0 John Percy Smith P 8 July 36 21 Aug. 39 5 0 Henry Doni. Sweten- ham P 3 Feb. 37 p 13 Oct. 39 0 Marmaduke Gwypne.P 26 May 37 p 31 Dec. 39 0 Tho. Folliot Powell ... p 27 May 37 p 16 Apr. 41 CORNETS. Randolph Routh .P 8 July 36 0 F. Courtney Trower... P 20 June 37 J. Ross O'Conor . P 23 Mar. 38 Patrick Dynon 29 May 39 Henry Lee P 12 Oct. 39 0 Arthur Need p 13 Oct. 39 1 0 Dottin Maycock . p 31 Dec. 39 3 0 Edward B. Cureton 21 June 39 Wm. Knox Orme p 13 Mar. 40 37 Puymust.-W. Williams, (11) 2 Sept. 24; Cornet 8. Adjt. 16 Mar. 05; Lieut. 12 Feb. 06. 3 0 Adjutant.-Patrick Dynon. (Cornet) 12 Dec. 39. 5 Quarter-Master.—George Rosser, 23 Sept. 36 ; Ens. 20 Aug. 36. 36 Surgeon.-? W. Ramsay White. (12) 24 Feb. 14; Assist.-Surg. 21 Nov. 05; Hosp.- Assist. 4 Nov. 05. 15 O Asst.-Surgs.—M. J. Maclaine Ross, 15 Feb. 27 ; Hosp. Assist. 28 Sept. 26. 16 0 John Strange Chapman, 28 Sept. 26; Hosp. Assist, 15 Dec. 25. 6 0 Veterinary Surg. Richard J. G. Hurford, 17 July 35. Scarlet-Facings Blue.--Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. Il Paymaster Williams served the campaign of 1799 in llolland ; served also at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore in 1825 and 6. 12 Dr. White served with the Expedition to Naples in 1819, and was present at the capture of Ischia and Procida ; serverl' also the campaigns of 1813 and 14 in the Peninsula, and was present at the sortie from Bayonne. 0 ܗ ܟ ܩ ܩܘ ܟܬ ܟܨ ܝܕ ܒܘ ܟܨ ܝ 0 0 0 0 VOL. 11] Serving in India and China. 87 2ND (THE Queen's Royal) Regt. of Foot. [Deesa. * The Paschal Lamb,' with the mottos • Pristinæ virtutis memor,' and · Vel eruviæ triumphunt.' Tbe Queen's Cypher within the Garter, having the Crown over it. On the Grenadiers' Caps, the King's Crest and the Queen's Cypher and Crown; and on the Drums the Queen's Cypher. The Sphinx, with the words · EGYPT' VIMIERA'-* CORUNA'—'SALAMAN- CA'-VITTORIA'- PYRENEES '_ NIVELLE'- TOULOUSE'- • PENINSULA'— AFFGHANISTAN'-'GHUZNEE'— KHELAT.' 0 Years' Service. Colonel. 59 P W Rt. Hon. Sir James Kempt, (1) G. C. B. G. C. H., Ens. 31 Mar. 1783 ; Lieut. 18 Aug. 84; Capt. 30 May, 94 ; Major, 18 Full Half Sept. 94 ; Lieut.-Col. 28 Aug. 99; Col. 9 March, 09; Mujor- Pay. Pay. Gen. 1 Jan. 12; Lieut.-Gen. 27 May, 25; vol. of the Queen's Royals, 23 Dec. 34. 47 Lieul.- Colonels.-P Sir T. Willshire, (2) Bt. K. C. B. Ens. June, 95 ; Lieut, 5 Sept. 95 ; Capt. 28 Aug. 14; Brevet-Major, 21 Sept. 13; Brevet-Lieut.-Col . 4 Dec. 15; Regtl.-Major, 10 Sept. 23 ; Regti.- Lieut.. Col. 30 Aug. 27 ; Col. 10 Jan. 37. 43 7 mo. John Gregory Baumgardt, (3) C. B. Ens. 1 Aug. 98 ; Lieut. 20 March, 01 ; Capt. 10 Jan. 10; Major p 21 Oct. 24; Lieut.-Col. p 9 June, 25 ; Col. 28 June, 38. 33 2 Mujors.— Redmond Wm. Brough, Ens. 10 March, 07 ; Lieut. 15 July, 08 ; Capt. p 10 Jan, 22 ; Major, 29 May, 35. 28 0 Richard Carruthers, C. B. Ens. 19 May, 14; Lieut. 25 Jan. 25 ; Capt. p 16 April, 29; Major, p 19 Feb. 36 ; Brevet-Lieut.- Col. 23 July, 39 CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAINS. 1 3 영 ​... و بناهان 19 leo. Dalhousie J. Raitt* (4) 6 Feb. 23 12 May 25 p 7 June 31 28 7 mo. Jobn Goodday S. Cil- land* 31 Dec. 12 19 Feb. 17 20 Aug. 31 22 31 Wm. Martin Lyster 19 Feb 17 14 June 21 p 22 Mar. 33 25 John Carney 20 Feb. 17 p 3 Jan. 22 29 May 35 22 Mount S. 11. Lloyd (5) 16 Dec. 13 2 Mar. 15 13 Sept. 35 21 Oliver Robinson*(4)... 5 Oct. 20 24 Jan. 25 p 19 Feb. 36 13 Thomas Sealy p 27 Nov. 28 p 15 Mar. 21 p 16 June 37 27 John O'Grady 20 Sept. 10 22 Sept. 13 26 May 31 14 Peter Greban P8 Apr. 26 26 Nov. 30 p 18 Sept. 40 17 Wm. Nicol Ralph (6). 26 Jan. 25 29 Aug. 26 30 Oct. 40 • Brevet-Major 13 Nov. 39. (1) Sir James Kempt has received a Cross and 3 Claps for Maida, Badajos, Vittoria, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse, and was severely wounded at Waterloo. (2) Sir T. Willshire's services : Battles of Roleia, and Vimiera, retreat to and battle of Corunna ; expedition to Walcheren ; Peninsula from June, 1812 to May, 1814, including the battle of Salamanca, (twice wounded,) retreat from Burgos, and action at Villa Murilla ; battle of Vittoria, first assault of San Sebastian, also second assault and capture, Crossing the Bidassoa, Nivelle, & Nive, 9th, 10th, and alth Dec. 1813. Repulsed with 300 inen the attack of 10,000 Caffres upon the open village of Graham's Town, on the frontiers of the Cape of Good Hope, 22 Apr. 1819. Capture of Kittor, in the Dooah, E. Ind. Dec. 1824. The whole of the campaign in Afghanistan; was present at the capture of the for- tress of Ghuznee; and while in command of the Bombay column of the army of the lodus captured the fortress of Khelat. (3) Col. Baumgardt was present and served during the whole of Generals Lord Lake and Sir G. Hewitt's campaigns in India in 1803, 4, 5, 6, and 7, including the batttes of Laswar- ree, Futtighur, and several minor actions ; the siegen of Agra, Dheig, Bhurtpore, and liat- tras. Served during the whole of the Mahratta campaign in 1817 and 18.' Suppressed a very serious insurrection in bombay, when Commandant of that Garrison in 1838. Served also during the Affghanistan campaign in 1838 and 1839, and commanded the storming co- lumns against the fortress of Khelat. (4) Major Raitt, Lieuts. Stisted and Halley were slightly wounded ; Major Robinson, and Lieuts. Simmons and Yonge, severely, in the assault and capture of the fortress and citadel of Ghuzace, in alighanistau, 23rd July, 1839. (5) Capt. Lloyd was at Waterloo 18th June ; taking of Cambray, 24th June, 1815, and capture of Paris. Served one campaign latier part of 1826 against the Rajah of Kolapore. 16) Captain Ralph served with the expedition against Kolapore, in 1826. 88 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 2nd (The Queen's Royal) REGT. OF Foot.Continued. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 6 ... . NO COSSA W. 15 13 George V. Hamilton, 2 Feb. 14 29 Oct. 29 14 0 James Sterling P 10 Jan. 28 21 Aug. 31 15 1 Henry Reynolds P8 Oct. 25 i Mar. 33 16 0 Thomas Wingate .. p 13 May 26 17 May 30 11 Medwin R. Pilfold 1 Feb. 31 16 Mar. 34 10 Jas. Egbert Simmons (4)... 20 Jan. 32 29 May 35 11 o Stanhope Wm. Jeph- son... p 26 Nov. 30p 19 Feb. 36 0 G. N. K. A. Yonge (4) P 22 Aug. 34 29 June 37 0 Godfrey Piercy (8) p 24 July 35 16 Apr. 38 NI (J. Aug Macdonald p 10 May 31 11 May 38 0 Hen. Wm. Stisted (4) P 4 Dec. 35 p 29 Sept. 38 6 Thos. W. E. Holds- worth... p 15 Jan. 36 p 14 Dec. 38 Thomas Addisop... 15 Sept. 37 31 Jan. 39 6 Henry Cole Faulkner . p 13 Nov. 35p 18 May 39 4 Henry Piercy... P9 Mar. 38 14 Nov. 39 3 John Hardie Kippen... P 3 Aug. 38 30 Dec. 39 Frederick Connor p 29 Sept. 38 27 Jan. 40 Robert Stephenson p 23 Mar. 39p 10 July 40 John Henry Grant 2 Apr. 36 15 Dec. 40 Geo. Edw. Alex. Tobin p 30 Dec. 36 15 Dec. 40 Demetrius G. James... p 31 Jan. 40p 15 Dec. 40 2 0 Thos. Jaš. Drummond Reed... 27 Mar. 40 p 26 Jan. 41 3 0 Arthur J. Otway 21 June 39 p 26 Feb. 41 ENSIGNS. 0 Henry Cox 14 Dec. 38 2 Charles Darby 6 Sept. 39 2 George Grant Webb... 20 Mar. 40 Tho. Hanson Ratcliff 3 Apr. 40 2 Wm. Joseph Oldham.. 29 May 40 John King... p 10 July 40 Francis Gildea p 15 Dec. 40 1 Edward Selby Smyth..lp 26 Jan. 41 Poymaster. 10 Adjutant.-Jas. Egbert Simmons, (Lieut.) 11 June, 36. 17 Quarter-Master.-W. H.S. Hadley, (4) 12 Aug. 36; Ens. 10 Apr. 25; Lt. 24 Sept. 31. 27 3} Surg.-P W Wm. H. Young, (7) 4 Sept. 28 ; Assist.-S. 4 Feb. 13; H. A. 19 Dec. 11. 15 0 Assist. Surg.—Rob. Hope Alston Hunter, 15 June, 30; Hosp.- Assist. 10 Jan. 27. 3 James Jopp, M. D., 22 Feb. 39. Thomas Walter Barrow, 8 June, 41. Facings, Blue.- Agent, Mr. J. Lawrie. (7) Mr. Young served in the Peninsula, from March, 181 to Feb. 1813, including the siege of Badajoz, April, 1812, and battle of Salamanca. Served also the campaigns of 1813 and 14 in Germany and Holland, including the attack on Bergen-op-Zoom. Present on the 18th June at Waterloo. (8) Lieut. Godfrey Piercy served the campaign in Affghanistan in 1839, including the assault and capture of the fortress of Ghuznee and Khelat. Captains Lyster and Sealy, Lieutenants Simmons and Holdsworth, were severely wounded in the assault and capture of the Fort of Khelat, in Afghanistan, 13th Nov. 1839, 0 VOL. 11.) 89 Serving in India and China. 3D (East Kent) REGIMENT OF Foot (OR THE BUFFs) (Ferozepore. The Dragon DOURO'— TALAVERA'-'ALBUHERA'-. PYRENEES' -NIVELLE'-'NIVEPENINSULA.' 56 Years' Service. Colonel. p Kenneth Alexander, Eurl of Effingham, (1) G. C. B. Ens. 21 April, 1786 ; Capt. 25 April, 93; Lieut.-Col . 30 Dec. 97 ; Col. 1 Full | Half Jan. 1805 ; Mujor. Gen. 25 July, 10; Lieut.-Gen. 12 Aug. 19; Pay Pay. Gen. 10 Jan. 37; Col. of the Buffs, 30 Jan. 32. Lieut.- Colonels.-- James Dennis, (2) Ens. 2 Sept. 96; Lieut. 12 45 0 April, 97 ; Capt. 6 Aug. 03. ; Brevet-Major, 13 Oct. 12 ; Brevet. Lieut.-Col. 27 May, 25; Regil.-Major, 25 April, 28 ; Regtl.. Lieut.- Col. 4 June, 33; Col. 28 June, 38. 17 7+ Marcus Beresford, Second Lieut. p 4 Sept. 17; Lieut. 1 Feb. 21; Cupt. p 16 Sept. 24 ; Major, p 26 Sept. 26; Lieut.. Col. p 6 Nov. 27. 37 0 Majors.-Gerald Rochfort, (3) Ens. p 28 Feb. 05; Lieut. 25 Sept. 05 ; Capt. 1 July, 12 ; Major, p 1 May, 28. 25 34 Jas. O. Clunie, (4) Ens. 27 Aug. 13; Lieut. 1 Dec. 14; Capt. p 9 Feb. 26; Major, p 23 June, 38. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN, LIEUT. CAPTAIN ......... ... 22 65 Basil H. Burchel 25 Dec. 13 8 Apr. 25p 30 Dec. 26 20 Gustavus L. Christie... p 20 June 22, 25 Mar. 26 P 17 Jan. 28 26 Patrick M.Kie (5)...... 3 Nov 12 3 Nov. 14 p 3 Oct. 29 17 Marcus Barr...... ...... p 24 Feb. 25 p 8 Apr. 26p 11 June 30 15 0 George Isaac Austin... p 12 Dec. 26 p 2: Nov. 28 p 26 June 35 17 94 Donald Stewart 14 Dec. 15 26 Mar. 26 3 Apr. 38 16 0 Jas. Charles Rouse p 30 June 25 p 17 May 27 p 7 Apr. 38 27 2 Peter Luck Dore (6). 8 Apr. 13 21 Aug. 19 29 Aug. 38 18 9 Thomas Chatterton 29 Dec. 14 2 Jan. 17 21 Dec. 30 14 D. Meent Cameron 26 Apr. 28 p 17 Mar. 30 p 13 Mar. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 17 Lawrence Desborough 10 Apr. 25 3 Aug. 27 17 Henry Dacre Lacy 11 Apr. 25 4 Aug. 27 14 Harry Blair 9 Dec. 27 9 Nov. 31 14 James Speedy... 15 May 28 23 May 32 13 George Bridge 16 Apr. 29 21 Sept. 32 10 Samuel Daniel, r....... p 30 Dec. 31 p 26 July 33 12 0 Jas. Talbat Airey, S.... u Feb. 30 P 3 May 33 10 0 Wm. Jas. Hamilton 6 Apr. 32p 6 Sept. 33 10 0 Richard N. Magrath 1 June 32 p 24 Dec. 33 (1) Lord Effingham has received a medal and one clasp for Vittoria and Nive. ,(?) Colonel Dennis accompanied the expedition to Copenhagen in 1801, and was wound- ed in both hands and contused. Served in the last American war, including battle of Queenstown (wounded); storming of Port George ; action at Stoney Creek, (wounded in two places); and action of the Rapids at Hooples Creek, contused by having his horse shot, which fell on him. (3) Major Rochfort was at the capture of the Isle of France in 1810, and of Java in 1811, including capture of Cornelis, storming of Serondola and Fort Djocjocarta ; storming of redoubts at ihe island of Borneo ; Nepaul campaign in 1814 ; siege and storm of Hatrass ; Mahratta cumpaigns of 1817 and 18 ; siege and storm of Bhurtpore 1825 and 6. (4) Major Clunie served in the American war, and was at the siege and attack of Port Eri in 1814. (5) Capt. M.Kie served in the Nepaulese war of 1814 and 15. Present at the siege and capture of Hatrass. Served the Mahratta and Pindarree campaign of 1817 and 18, and in the Burmese war, from June 1824, until its conclusion in 1826. Wounded at the assault of Merguie 6th Oct. 1824. (6) Capt. Dore served in the Nepaulese war in 1815 and 16, and in the Deccan campaign in 1817 and 18. PART II. VOL. II. N 90 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 3D (East Kent) REGIMENT OF Foot (or The Burfs.)- Continued. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN LIEUT. CAPTAIN Full| Half Pay. Pay. 0 9 10 8 6 4 3 0 0 3 John C. Handfield... 21 Sept. 32 p 2 May 34 Allen Menzies 18 Oct. 31 16 Aug. 35 Charles Sawyer p 6 Sept. 33 P 8 Apr. 36 Hall P. Chamberlain... p 14 Feb. 34 P 3 June 36 Alex. John Cameron... p 24 Dec. 33 25 Sept. 36 Rob. Manners Sparks (7)... 16 Aug. 33 30 Apr. 37 Wm. John Dorehill .. p 16 Jan. 35 10 Mar. 38 Peter Browne..... p 20 Feb. 35 7 Dec. 38 Richard Herbert Gall P 3 July 35 7 Dec. 38 Oct. H. St. Geo, An- son, S...... 27 Nov. 35 8 Dec. 38 Kenneth M.Kenzie .p 3 June 36'p 31 May 39 Charles Wm. Green ... p 7 Apr. 38 p 13 Mar. 40 Alex. Hamilton Rob- son..... .p 25 Dec. 38 p 29 May 40 Henry Torrens Walker 28 Oct. 36 ,P 4 July 39 Chas. A. Thompson 4 Jan. 39p 30 Apr. 41 ENSIGKs. Wm. G. Meacham..... 7 Dec. 38 James Reid Hope 31 May 39 Nicholas Heury Flood 4 Oct. 39 Thomas Rains p 29 Nov. 09 Fred. Francis Maude p 13 Mar. 40 Geo. Thomas Downing p 29 May 40 Hugh Smith...... р 8 Jan. 41 Arth. Hill Hasted Mercer...... .p 30 Apr, 41 Payma ster.-J. Lukis, 24 Dec. 29; Ens. 22. Feb. 10; Lieut. 6 Aug. 12. Adjutant.---Lawrence Desborough, (Lieut.) 26 Sept. 38. Quarter-Ma ster.-Harry Williams, 14 Dec. 32 ; Ens. 12 Aug. 13. Surg. -A. MacQueen, (8) M. D. 24 Ap. 26 ; Assist.-S. 13 May, 13; Hosp.-A. 19 Jan. 13. Assistant-Surgeons.—Robert Stevenson, M. D., 14 March, 34, Samuel Currie, M. D., 14 Oct. 36. Charles Alexander Gordon, M. D., 8 June 41. Facings, Buff.- Agents, Messrs. Cox & Co. 3 3 0 0 0 0 32 0 17 10 0 18 0 29 0 0 1 (7) Lieut. Sparks was wounded in the Caffre war. (8) Dr. MacQueen served the Kandian campaign in Ceylon during the rebellion in 1817 and 18. VOL. 11.) 91 Serving in India and China. 4tu (The King's Own) REGIMENT OF Foot. Bellary. 'The Lion of England'—'CORUNNA' BADAJOZ - SALAMANCA' • VITTORIA'-'ST. SEBASTIAN' -'NIVE'-' PENINSULA - • BLADENSBURG'WATERLOO.' Years' Service. Colonel. 0 63 John Hodgson, (1) Ens.20 May, 1779 ; Lieut. 27 Nov. 80; Capt. 24 Sept. 87 ; Maj. 14 May, 94; Lieut.-Col. 1 Sept. 95; Col. 25 Full Half Sept. 03 ; Major-Gen. 25 July, 10; Lieut.-Gen. 4 June, 14; Gen. Pay Pay. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 4th Regt. 30 Sept. 35. Lieutenant Colonel. - Henry Wm. Breton, Ens. 16 March, 15; 27 Lieut. p 27 July, 20; Capt. p 21 July, 25 ; Major, p 31 Dec. 28; Lieut - Col. p 11 July, 34. 23 12John Leslie, (2) RH. Ens. 7 Aug. 1806; Lieut. 2 June, 08 ; Capt. 30 Nov. 09: Major, p 1 Jan, 19; Lieut.- Col. p 29 Aug. 26. 28 7 Majors.-PW Reginald Ranald Macdonald. (3) CB. KH. s Ens. 25 Mar, 07 ; Lt. 5 May, 08 ; Capt. p 3 Dec. 18; Maj. p 24 Jan. 28 Brevet-Lt-Col. 13 July, 38. 35 0 P William Sadlier, (4) Ens. 2 April, 07 ; Lieut. 4 May, 09 ; Capt. 25 Aug. 25 ; Major, 4 Feb. 38. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. O 22 0 Richard Chetwode 24 May 20p 15 Aug. 22 p 20 Mar. 27 19 0 Thomas Williams...... p 12 Sept. 22 P7 July 25 p 17 June 28 15 0 Thomas Faunce (5). 5 Apr. 27 p 12 Nov. 29 p 23 June 37 0 Farquhar M. Camp- 11 bell...... 3 Aug. 30 P 6 Dec. 33 p 6 Oct. 37 13 William Henry Moun- sey.... p 28 May 29 p 4 Jan. 33 p 14 Apr, 37 8 0 Fred. Leopold Arthur... p 6 Dec. 33 p 3 July 35p 8 June 38 17 5mo Charles J. Otter (6). 20 Dec. 24 12 Nov. 27 P 9 Mar. 39 8 0 George Kennedy p 24 Dec. 33 p 1 July 36 P 15 Mar. 39 14 14 13 Thomas Gibson... 17 May 13 2 Dec. 14 1 July 39 8 John Snodgrass.... 13 Dec. 33 1 Dec. 36 p 15 Dec. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 7 0 John Hen. Hay Rux- ton, r. 19 July 34'p 23 June 37 16 8mo Charles S. Teale.... 7 Apr. 25 10 Dec. 27 19 0 Abraham C. Anderson. 12 June 23 9 July 29 13 0 Wm. Charles Shep- pard... 11 June 29 10 Nov. 34 6 214 John Cameron.. 25 Dec, 13 7 July 37 10 0 Robert Hawkes........ p 2 Dec. 31 8 July 37 6 0 Robert O'Neil.. p 3 July 35 9 July 37 9 0 Jas. S. Shortt............ 3 May 33 10 July 37 (1) Gen. Hodgson was severely wounded at Egmont-op-Zee. (2) Colonel Leslie was at the taking of Travancore in 1808 ; also at the capture of the Island of Bourbon, and the Isle of France ; present in the engagements in Java, the 10th, 2200, and 26th Aug. 1811. Served in the Pindarree war in 1817. Army of occupation in France. (3] Lieut.-Col. Macdonald was severely wounded at Waterloo. (41 Major Sadlier served in Sicily from July 1808 to June 1812, and was present at the capture of the Islands of Ischia and Procida. Served subsequently in the Peninsula, in- cluding the battle of Castalla and siege of Tarragona, action at Villa Franca, besides vari. ous minor affairs ; served also in the American war, including the attack on Plattsburg, (51 Captain Fauuce, detached in command of the Light Company, served at the re-cap- ture of the Fort of Nepaunee, 21st Feb. 1841. (6) Capt. Otter served at Bhurtpore. 92 [PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 4TH (The King's Own) REGIMENT or Foot.-Continued. Years' Service. LIEUTENANT. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full | Half Pay Pay. 0 0 2 6 Chas. Staniforth Hext. p 9 Oct. 35 p 6 Oct. 37 6 William Wilby... •p 27 May 36 P 7 Oct. 37 0 Joseph Palmer.......... p 23 June 37p 8 June 38 5 Jas. Alex. Madigan.... 23 June 37 p 14 Dec. 38 5 Wadham Wyndham Bond..... p 4 Nov. 36 9 Mar. 39 0 John Potter...... 22 April 36 10 Mar. 39 0 John H.Glazbrook... p 6 Oct. 37 p 15 Mar. 39 Edw. Jas. Baldwyn..p 20 Oct. 47 1 July 39 James Keating..... 26 Apr. 39 9 Aug. 39 Wm. Mark Campbell. p 10 Nov. 37 2 Oct. 35 Thos. Charles Morgan p 18 June 38 7 Feb. 40 J. Lennox Mac Andreu p 14 Dec. 38p 8 May 41 John Cowell Bartley... p 26 Apr. 39 p 20 Oct. 40 3 0 Fred. Paul Haines..... 10 21 June 39p 15 Dec. 40 3 Geo. Latham Thomas p 27 July 38 9 Apr. 41 EXSIGNS. 2 0 Arthur Byrne....... 25 Oct. 39 0 Wm. Crawley.... 22 Nov. 39 David Fra. Chambers. p 31 Jan. 40 Townsend Gun Morris p 6 Mar. 40 2 0 Geo. Chetwode...... P 8 May 40 1 0 Edward James Gibson. p 10 July 40 1 O Henry Bat. Ramsbot- tom.. P 20 Oct. 40 1 0 Theobald Pepper Ro- berts...... 15 Dec. 40 30 Imo. Paymaster.-James Burn, (7) 6 Feb. 35 ; Ens. 1 Oct. 11; Lieut. 16 June, 13; Capt. 19 Dec. 34. 13 0 Adjutant.-Wm. Cha. Sheppard, (Lieut.) 1 May, 40. Quarter-Muster.—Samuel Sexton, 11 July, 37. 28 Surgeon. - William Parry, 17 April, 38 ; Assist.- Surg. 7 March, 2 2; Hosp-Assist. 20 Dec. 13. 7 Assistant-Surgeons.- Wm. Hutchinson Allman, M.D., 12 June, 35. James Mouat, 14 Dec. 38. 1 Richard Gamble, 8 Jine. 41. Farings, Blue-Agents, Messrs. Cox & Co. (7) Capt. Burn served the campaign in the Eastern Islands, and was at the taking of Maccassar in 1814, serred the Mahratta campaign of 1817 and 18, and was severely wound ou at Bhurtpore in 1826. VOL. 1.) Serving in India and China. 93 2 9TH (The East NORFOLK) REGIMENT or Foot. Ferozepore. The figure of Britannia,'- ROLEIA'- VIMIERA'-'CORUNNA' BUSACO'S SALAMANCA'-' VITTORIA'- ST. SEBASTIAN- • NIVE- PENINSULA. Years' Service. Colonel. 54 P Sir John Cameron, (1) K. C. B. Ens. 25 Sept. 1787; Lieut. 30 Sept. 90 ; Capt. 11 July, 94 ; Major, 9 Oct. 1800; Lieut.-Col. 28 Full Half May, 07 ; Col. 4 June, 14 ; Major Gen. 19 July 21; Lieut. Gen. Pay. Pay. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col 9th Regt. 31 May, 33. Lieut. Colonels -John M'Caskill. (2) K. H. Ens. 10 March, 97 ; 42 3 Lieut. 14 May, 1801; Capt. 6 March 06; Brevet Major, 12 Ang. 19; Regt. Major, p 11 March 24; Lieut.-Col. p 17 Feb. 25 ; Col. 28 June, 38. 35 7 P Sir Edm. Keynton Williams, (3) K.C.B. Ens. 30 Aug. 99; Lieut. p 18 April, 1800 ; Cupt. 25 Sept 07; Brevet Major, 8 Oct. 12; Brevel-Lieut. Col. 21 June, 13; Regtl.- Mujur, 25 Oct. 14; Regil.- Lieut. Col. 1 June, 26 ; Col. 22 July, 30. 29 Majors.— A bra. Beresford Taylor, (4) K. H. Ens. 14 Feb. 11; Licut. 24 Dec. 12 ; Capt. 22 April, 25 ; Major. p 19 April, 33. 33 3 P George Lenox Davis, (5) Ens. 15 Sept. 08 ; Lieut. 15 Oct. 11; Capt. 7 April, 25 ; Major, p 17 Oct. 37. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN, LIEUT. 1 CAPTAIN. 30 44 Charles Barnwell 6* 30 July 07 30 Mar. 09 19 May 14 18 Arthur Ogle р 1 Apr. 24 P 8 Sept. 25'p 16 July 29 29 Chas. Douglast never 19 May 14 p 16 June 25 21 17 P Wm Hen Hartman 9 July 03 28 Mar. 05 30 Oct. 12 25 8mo Mathew Smith 16 Sept. 16 31 Dec, 23 8 Feb. 34 12 0 Franklin Lushington .p 16 July 29 10 Oct. 33 p 30 Oct. 38 14 John Charles Campbellp 15 May 28 p 7 Jan 30 p 4 May 38 16 13 1m. Walter Foster Ker,s ... p 23 Jan. 12'p 14 Oct. 13 15 Oct. 39 • 10 Jan 37 + 28 June 38 | 22 July 30. (1) Sir John Cameron served in 1794, at the reduction of Martinique, (including the siege of Fort Bourbon and other minor affairs), St. Lucia, and Guadaloupe ; and at the delence of the latter in the same year, including the sortie from, and assault of Fort Fleur d'Epee, the action of the 30th Sept. at Berville, and other combats to the 7th Octo- ber, when he was severely wounded and taken prisoner. Served in the 9th Regt in Por- tugal, Spain, and France, from 1808 to the end of the war, and has received honorary distinctions (a cross aud three clasps) corresponding with those borne on the colours of the 9th Regt. with the exception of: Roleia,' where his predecessor, in command of the 1st Battalion, fell mortally wounded. Besides the above, he was present in other general actions, and some of a partial nature, viz. the assault of the fortified Convent of San Bartholomew, in front of San Sebastian, 17 July 1813, which was carried by the 9th Regt. ; repulse of the sortie 27th Aug. ; passage of the Bidassoa, and storming of the heights ; investment of Bayonne, and sortie from the left bank of the Adour. Served in Canada in 1814 and 15. During the above service, Sir John was once severely and twice slightly wounded, and twice severely contused; he has also had two horses shot under him, one at Busaco, the other at the Nive. (2) Col. M'Caskill was at the landing at Porto Rico, and siege of St. Jan. May. 1797. On passage to India when the fleet under convoy of Sir T. Trowbridge was attacked by the French Admiral Linois in the Marengo 81, a heavy frigate, and another ship, Ang. 1805; present at the sieges and captures of Forts Sattarah, Singhur, Woossotah, and a great many others. Also at the reduction of the strong fortress of Sholapore, and the at- tack and dispersion of 5,000 of the Peshwa's choicest troops strongly posted with their guns, 15 of which were captured under the walls of the fort, 11th May, 1818. (3) Sir Edm. Williams served the campaign of 1799 in Holland, including the actions of the 2nd and 6th Oct. (wounded); present at the battle of Maida in 1806, and the taking of Ischia in 1809. Served throughout the war in the Peninsula, including the following hattles, sieges, &c. viz. Busaco (wounded), Badajoz, 1811, Salamanca (twice wounded, Once severely), Burgos, Vittoria, Tolosa, St. Sebastian 1st, 2nd (wounded), and 3rd assaults, Bidassoa, Nivelle, Nive, Adour, and wounded at the investment of Bayonne. (4) Major Taylor served in the American war, including the battles of Chrystler's Farm, and Niagara (severely wounded through the right leg, siege of Fort Erie, Sept. 1814 ; present at the capture of Forts Loghur, Koarree, and Ryghur in the East Indies in 1813 ; also assault and capture of Roree in 1819. Served the cainpaigns in Ava, including, the action at Dalla (Wounded), attack on Panlang, Yangavehong, and Donebew. (5) Major Davis served in the Peninsula the latterpart of 1808, untiltaken prisoner atLugo 9 Jan. 1809, where he was left dangerously ill; prisoner of war in I'rance until April 1814. (6) Major Barn well served in the l'eniusula from July 1808 to the end of the war, includ- ing the battles of Roleia, Vimiera, Fuentes d'Onor, Ist siege of Badajoz, assault and cap- ture of Clydad Rodrigo, siege and storming of Badajor, battles of Salamanca, Vittoria Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse. 94 (PART IT. Her Majesty's Regiments. 9th (The East NorFOLK) REGIMENT of Foor.- Continued. Years' Service CAPTAINS. Full Half. Pay. Pay. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN, 9 8 man vooooo 0 0 0 0 5 3 12 0 John Watson Robin- son p 16 June 30 P 1 Aug. 34P 4 Sept. 40 24 4} Francis Standford (7) 21 Oct. 13 1 Sept. 20 1 Mar. 30 LIEUTENANTS. 9 Arthur Bortop р 13 July 32p 3 Apr. 35 15 0 Robt. Joseph Edmonds p 30 Dec. 26 10 Jan. 31 13 0 James Dunne p 27 Apr. 29 p 17 Nov. 32 15 0 John F. Field p 28 June 27 21 Feb. 34 8 Wm. W. Powell p 16 Nov. 32 9 May 35 0 Edmund F. A. Hart- 22 Nov. 33 p 29 Dec. 35' 8 0 Voland Vashon Ballard p 7 Mar. 34 p 16 Sept. 36 Charles Myers Creagh.p 14 Mar. 34 8 Nov. 36 10 George Alex. Tytler... p 28 Oct. 31 p 13 Mar. 35 6 Charles Elmhirst p 14 Aug. 35 p 17 Oct. 37, 0 Duncan Munro Be. thune 17 Apr. 35 21 Mar. 38 6 0 Rich. Gibbons Morgan p 29 Dec. 35 p 25 May 38 0 William Shelton 22 May 35 p 30 Oct. 38 5 James Slator Cumming p 22 July 36 21 Nov. 38 5 Fred. D. Lister 16 Sept. 36 p 22 Feb. 39 George Cubitt P 1 July 36 p 26 Apr. 39 7 0 Lionel Hook 5 Sept. 34 4 Dec. 38 3 0 Blayney Walshe p 28 Aug. 38 31 Dec. 39 Chas. Spencer Gaynor 9 Nov. 38 27 Mar. 40 0 Archibald Bluntish 7 Dec. 38 p 28 July 40 0 Don. Bannatyne Mac- lead - p 22 Feb. 39p 4 Sept. 40 7 John Urban Vigors p 27 Feb. 35 p 20 Nov. 38 Arthur Layard .P 1 Mar. 39 p 29 Dec. 40 ENSIGNS. 3 0 Samuel Jordan Palmer'p 26 Apr. 39 Alex. Taylor 21 June 39 Charles Henry McCas- kill 8 Nov. 39 Wm. Graham Cassidy 27 Mar, 401 2 Wm. Willis Williams... p 10 Apr. 34 Robert Daunt p 28 July 40 Samuel Raymond р 4 Sept. 40 Tho. Ed. Bowerbank Dent p 19 Feb. 411 14 17} Paymaster.-Robert Bluntish, 14th Dec. 09. Adjutant-Duncan Munro Bethune. (Lieut.) 2 Dec. 39. 34 Quarter-Master.-p James Scott, (8) 17 Dec. 07. 28 Sur.- Francis Sievwright, M. D. (9) 25 Sept. 35 ; A.-S. 13 Mar. 17 Hosp.- Asst. 7 June, 13. Assist.-Surgeons.-William Harvey, 28 Mar. 34. 0 Robert Harthill, 29 Dec. 37. Robert Beresford Gahan, 17 June, 36. Facings Yelloy.--Agent, S. Messrs. Cox & Co. (7) Captain Stanford served in the campaign of 1814, and was present at the battle of Toulouse. Served also in the Mahratta war in 1917, 18) Quarter- Master Scott was at the battle of Vimiera, capture of Oporto, battle of Vite tora siege of San Sebastiran, battles of the Nive 9th, 10th and 11th Dec. 1$13. (9; Dr. Sievwright ser ved at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. 0 0 3 3 2 0 0 ... II. VOL. II.] Serving in India and China. 95 13th The (1st SOMERSETSHIRE) Foot (Light InfanTRY). [Jellalabad. The Sphinx, with the words, 'EGYPT'-MARTINIQUÈ '--AVA'- • AFGHANISTAN'-GHUZNEE.' Yeaes' Service. Colonel. 65 Edw. Morrison, Ens. 20 Jan. 1777; Lieut. and Capt. 15 Sept. 80 ; Cupt. and Lient. Col. 13 Jan. 90; Col. 26 Feb 95; Major-Gen 1 Full | Half Jan. 98; Sieut. Gen. 1 Jan. 05 ; Gen. 4 June, 14 ; Col. 13th Light Pay. Pay. Infantry, 15 Feb. 13. Lieut-Colonels.-- Sir Robert Henry Sale, (1) K.C.B. Ens. 24 Sept. 43 3 5 95: Lirut. 12 April, 97; Capt. 23 March, 06 ; Mujor, 30 Dec. 13 ; Lieui.-Col. 2 June, 25 ; Col. 28 June, 38. 42 0 Wm. Henry Dennie, (2) C. B. Ens. 1 Jan. 00; Lieut.p 4 Aug. 04; Capt.p 4 Oct 10; Major.p 19 April, 21; Lieut. Col.p 6 July, 32. 35 0 Majors. -Edward Tho. Tronson, (3) Ens. 28 Nov. 06 ; Lieut. 26 Jan. 08; Capt p 2 Sept. 19; Major, p 27 March, 35; Brev.. Lieut.. Col. 23 July, 39. 32 2mo. p Tristram C. Squire, (4) Ens. 24 April, 09; Lieut.p 31 Jan. 10 ; Capt. p 18 Oct. 21 ; Major. 10 Jan. 37 ; Reytl. - Major, 21 Apr. 39. CAPTAINS. CAPTAIN. ENSIGN. LIRUT. 26 25 James Kershaw* (7).. 13 Feb. 17 2 Dec. 24 р 11 Aug. 29 34 0 Robert Pattisson (8)... 31 Mar. 08 4 Jan. 10 30 Oct. 31 16 0 J. G. Dalhousie Taylor 1 July 25 25 Oct. 27 p 6 July 32 15 0 Horatio Nelson Vigors 12 April 27'p 11 Aug. 29p 27 Mar. 35 7mo. Henry Havelock (9)... 20 July 15 p 24 Oct. 21 5 June 38 23 16 P Rich. M. Meredith (10) ........ 1 April 13 26 Jan. 15 2 Sept. 38 • Brevet-Major 23 July 39. (1) Sir Robert Sale served at the battle of Mallavelly, and siege and storm of Seringapa - tam, in 1799 ; throughout the campaign in the Wynaud country, in 1801 ; at the storm of the Travancore lines, in 1809; capture of the Isle of France in 1810; throughout the Bur- mese war in 1824, 25, and 26, and was present at the capture of Rangoon, and whilst in command of the Regt. drove the enemy from the vicinity of Rangoon, stormed the stock- ades near Kem'indine, also the seven stockades near Kumaroot and Pagoda Point; stormed the enemy's lines, on the 1st Dec. 1824, with the 13th and 200 Sepoys; on the 5th, com- manded a detail of 1600 men, and drove the enemy from all their positions ; on the 8th, commanded 800 men in an attack on the rear of the enemy's lines opposite the Great Pago- da at Rangoon; on the 15th, stormed the enemy's intrenchments at Kokien, and there re- ceived a very severe wound in the head; commanded a Brigade employed in the reduction of Bassein and subsequent operations, from 10 Feb). to 2nd May 1825; on the 1st Dec. com- manded the 1st Brigade and repulsed the Shaans and Burmese at Prome; the next day, stormed the lines and heights near Prome; stormed Melloon 18th January 1826, where he received a severe wound. In October 1836 was appointed to the command of the 1st Ben- gal Brigade of the army of the Indus, which formed the advance throughout the campaign in Afghanistan. Commanded a detachment of 2500 to Girishk in May 1839 ; on the 23rd Jnly, commanded the storming party at the fortress of Ghuznee, where he received a sabre cut on the chin, and contusions on ihe chest and shoulder from musket balls. Command. ed a force sent to subdue the Kohistan country in Sept. 1810 ; assaulter and captured the town and forts of Tootumdurrah ; took and destroyed the forts of Jhoolghur and Baboo Koosh Ghur, and the town and forts of Kardurrah; drove the enemy, under the command of Dost Mahomed Khan, from the forts and town of Perwan, when Dost Mahomed Khan fled, and surrendered himself to Sir Wm. Macuaghten, the Envoy and Minister, on which the force returned to Kabul. (2) Col. Dennie's services :-Campaign of 1805 and 6 in India under Lord Lake; capture of the Isle of France in 1810; capture of Rangoon, and various other engagements during the Burmese war,-wounded in the hand at Kokain. Campaign in Afghanistan and Beloo- chistan, including the capture of Ghuznee, on which occasion he led the advance. (3) Col. Tronson was at the capture of Martinique 1809 and Guadeloupe 1810; served the campaigns of 1813 and 14 in Canada ; served throughout the Burmese war, and was severely wounded at Pagaume 9th Feb. 1826. (4) Major Squire served the campaigns of 1810, 11, and 13, in the Peninsula ; served in the Burmese war in 1824. (7) Major Kershaw served throughout the Burmese war, and was wounded at the cap- ture of the island of Cheduba. (81) Capt. Pattisson was at cap. of Martinique 1809, and Gualaloupe 1810; served camp. of 1813 & 14 in Canada; served throughout the Burmese war, including capture of Rau- goon and storm of the following stockades ;-Kemaroot, Kokain sev. wounded, Pagoda Inill, Napadee, Melloon, & Pegam- Mew. 191 Capt, Havelock served throughout the Burmese war. 96 Her Majesty's Regiments. (PART 11. 13TH THE (1st SOMERSETSHIRE) Foot (LIGHT INFANTRY).-Contd. Years' Service. ENSIGNS. Full | Half Pay. Pay. CAPTAIN. LIRUT. CAPTAIN. 0 LOC 0 0 0 19 A A Aeropvuooooooo 23 6 7mo Fra. Wm. Stehelin (11) 8 Oct. 12 8 Feb. 16 21 Apr. 39 19 0 A. P. S. Wilkinson(12) 25 Dec. 22 16 Dec. 24 6 Sept. 89 15 Hamlet Wade........ p 22 Feb. 27 9 Aug. 30 22 Apr. 40 14 0 James Henry Fenwick 25 Oct. 27 30 Oct. 31p 15 Dec. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 0 P. R. Jennings р 5 Aug. 28 p 22 June 32 11 0 Robert George Hughes p 29 June 30 p 6 July 33 0 A. E, F. Holcombe р 3 Dec, 30 12 Sept. 35 11 George King......... 83 April 31 p 16 Jan. 35 10 R. G. Burselm 13 April 32p 27 Mar. 35 John Steward Wood... 12 April 31 p 21 Aug. 35 10 Wm. Alex, Sinclair ·p 23 June 32 2 Aug. 36 Hon. E. J. W. Forester p 28 Dec 32 9 April 38 F. G. Christie,r......... 8 April 34 20 July 38 7 Thomas Oxley 18 July 34 P 3 Ang. 38 J. Byron Hobhouse p 27 June 34 P 4 Aug. 38 David Rattray p 27 May 35 2 Sept. 38 7 Edward King.. p 22 May 35 29 Jan. 39 7 George Mein... 19 June 35 21 April 39 5 0 Richard Edward Frere p 22 July 36 14 June 39 Francis Lovett Bennett p 25 Jaly 37 P 5 July 39 6 0 George Wade............. 27 May 36 6 Sept. 39 0 Henry Penny. P 9 Mar. 38 7 Feb. 40 0 John Wm Cox......... 26 June 38 23 April 40 William Williams...... P 3 Aug. 38 p 15 Dec. 40 Fred. Van Straubenzee p 17 Aug. 38 30 April 4] ENSIGNS. 3 0 T. B. Speedy 15 Mar. 39 0 Jas. F. P. C. Scott · P 26 April 39 G. G. C. Stapylton 15 June 39 Rob. S. Parker P 5 July 39 2 Arthur Oakes 31 Dec. 39 George Talbot 7 Feb 40 Allen Montgomery p 17 April 40 G. F. G. King .... P 3 Nov. 40 1 John Head....... p 15 Dec. 40 0 Wm. Francis Stehelin.. 30 April 41 247} Paymaster.—Henry Carew, 1 Feb. 31 ; Ens. I Jan. 11; Lieut. 19 March, 14. 11 0 Adjutant.-J. S. Wood (Lieut.) 22 April 40. 29 0 Quarter-Muster.- Mark Sheridan, (13) 18 Feb. 12. 26 3 5mo. Surgeon.-PW Denis Murray, M. D. 23 Nov. 32; Assist.-Sur- geon, 22 June 15; Hosp - Assist. 9 Nov. 12. 16 Assistunt-Surgeons.-J. Robertson, M. D. 13 March, 26; Hosp.-As. sit, 29 Dec. 25. 6 0 George West Barnes, M. D. 8 April 36. 1 0 Alexander Adam Prout, 8 June, 41. Facings Yellow-Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. (10) Capt. Meredith served in the Peninsula from Nov. 1813 to June 1814, and was active- ly employed from the Pyrenees to the battle of Toulouse, at which he has preseut. Served in Canada in 1814 and 15; present at capture of Rangoon May 1824. (11) Captain Stehelin served the campaigns of 1813 and 11 in Canada. Served through. out the Burmese war, including capture of Cheduba and Kemaroot ; operations before Rangoon and attack of Pagoda Point. (12) Capt. Wilkinson served throughout the Burmese war. (13) Quart.-Master Sheridan served at the Ferool, and throughout the campaign of 1'01 in Loypl; present at the capture of Martinique 1809; served throughout the Burmese war. 3 3 2 ... 0 0 0 0 0 VOL. 11.) 97 Serving in India and China. 66 17TH (THE LEICESTERSHIRE) REgt. or Foot. The Royal Tiger, superscribed · HINDOOSTAN'- AFGHANISTAN'- • GHUZNEE_KHELAT.' [Bombay. Years' Service. Colonel. Sir Fred. Augustus Wetherall, (1) G. C. H. Ens. 23 Aug. 1775 ; Lieut. 27 Aug. 76 ; Capt. 17 May, 81; Major, 1 Mar. 94; Lieut.- Fall Half Col. 20 May, 95; Col. 20 Apr. 1802; Major-Gen. 25 Oct. 09 ; Pay Pay Lieut.-Gen. 4 June, 14; Gen. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 17th Regt. 17 Feb. 40. 39 Lieut.- Col.- Wm. Crocker (2) C. B. Ens. p. 27 Mar. 03 Lt. р June, 04 ; Capt. p 20 Nov. 06 ; Brev.- Maj. 12 Aug. 19; Regil.. Maj. p 16 June, 25 ; Lt.-Col, 1 April. 36. 30 4} John Peonycuick, (4) C.B.K.H. Ens. 31 Aug. 07; Lt. 15 Jan. 12 ; Capt. p 14 June, 21; Major, p 25 Apr. 34 ; B. Lt.-Col. 23 July, 39; Lt. Col. p 12 June, 40. 17 6 Majors.-Chas. John Desbon, Ens. p 18 Sep. 27; Lieut. p 6 Oct. 25; Capt. p 22 April, 26; Majur, 16 June, 37; Brevet.Lieut.- Col. 13 Nov. 39. 17 0 George Deedes, Ens. p 2 Sept. 24; Lieut. p 17 Sept. 25; Capt. P 13 Aug. 29; Major, p 12 Jupe, 40. CAPTAINS. 0 2 3 ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 20 12 P Phillip M'Pherson (5)........... 2 Nov. 09 13 June 11 13 Mar. 27 17 0 Archibald Lockhart... p 19 May 25 p 1 Aug. 26 p 11 Oct. 33 17 John Darley* p 16 June 25p 3 Oct. 26 p 19 Dec. 34 13 Crocker Miller........ p 29 Jan. 29 p 5 Apr. 33 p 19 Ang. 36 12 John Erskine p 11 Feb. 30 p 19 Dec. 34 p 10 Feb. 37 9 L. Ch. Bourchier (10) 5 Apr. 33 p 12 Feb. 36 P 20 July 38 24 Lawrence Fyfe, s....... p 16 Oct. 17 10 Apr. 25 p 14 Sept. 32 24 * John Thomas Negal 28 June 171 10 July 201 21 Oct. 39 • Breret-Major 13 Nov. 39. (1) Sir Frederick Augustus Wetherall commenced his military career in the 17th regi. ment,--served with it in the American war, and was present at the siege of Boston, the battles of Brooklyn, Whiteplains, Fort Washington, Prince Town, Brandywine, German- town, Monmouth, &c. &c. Served in II. M.'s ship 11 fred, in the battles off Cape linis. terre and St. Vincent's previous to the relief of Gibraltar. He received two wounds at the taking of Martinique in 1794 as Aide-de-camp to the Duke of Kent; and was again wound- ed in action with a French Frigate, and taken prisoner, on his passage from St. Domin- go to Barbadoes with dispatches from Admiral Sir Wm. Parker and General Forbes, to Sir Ralph Abercrombie in 1795; he remained a close prisoner at Guadaloupe upwards of nine months, closely confined in a dungeon, in irons, without any other clothing than a shirt and pair of trowsers, or any description of hedding; and on a daily allowance of three biscuits and a quart of water. Served in the East Indies, and was second in com- mand on the expedition to Java, for which he received the thanks of both Houses of Para liament, and a Medal. His service abroad amounts to forty-one years. (2) Colonel Croker served in the East Indies from 1801 to 1824, including the siege of Gurnowri, 1807; campaign against the Sieks, 1808 and 9 ; campaign against the Nepaul States, 1814 and 15; campaign against Mahrattas and Pindarrees, 1817 and 18. Commanded the 17th regiment during the whole of the campaign in Afighanistan and Beloochistan, in- cluding the storm and capture of the fortresses of Ghuznce and Khelat. Col. Croker arrived in Bombay itt command of the 17th regt. in May 1836, being a solitary instance in the Bria tish army of an officer landing in the East ludies twice in the sime corps.. (1) Lieut.-Col. Pennycuick's services :-Expedition to Java, including the actions at Weldevrieden, Fort Cornelis, Djocjocarta, Probolingo. Capture of Balli and Macassar in 1814. Burmese War in 1825 and 26. Campaign in Aylanistan and Belmochistan in 1839, in- cluding the storm and capture of the fortresses of Ghuznee and Khelat, at which last he led the advance at the assault. Wounded in the breast in an attack upon the enemy's field artillery within the lines of Cornelis, 26th Auy. 1811. (5) Capt. M.Pherson embarked for the Peninsula in May 1809, as a volunteer in the 52nd, and served as such in the advance up to Talavera and the retreat from thence, to 2nd Nov. 1809, wben he was promoted to an Ensiyncy in the 13r, fruin which time he served with the Light Division until the en'i of ihe war, in 1814, including the following batiles, sieges, &c., viz., Coa, Mortingoa, skirmish near and batile of B:saco, Coimbra, Alonguer, Pombal, Redinha, Miranda do Corvo, Fuz d'Aronce, Saligal, Fuentes d'Onor, Espejo, Soibn, Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajoz, Mar. and Apr. 1812, Curvcileja, Petiemua, Salamanca, San Munos, Nivelle, Bayonne, Nive, Tartus, Tournefeuilles und Toulouse. Contused on the head in the trenches at Badajoz. by the bursting of a shell. (10) Captain Bourchier was severely wounded (two rounds) in the right arm at Khelat. PART II. VOL. 11. 98 (Part 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 17th (The LeicesTERSHIRE) Regt. Of Foor.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. CORNET. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay Pay. 0 8 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 29 0 William Barnes,(11) s. P 4 Feb. 13, 23 July 14 14 Sept. 35 21 Thos. Prendergast (12) 17 Oct. 20 22 Apr. 25 13 June 40 LIEUTENANTS. 16 0 PW DavidCooper(6) 11 Aug. 25 · 1 May 28 16 Wm. Fred. Harvey, r. p 11 Apr. 26 p 13 Aug. 29 14 Edw. Barry Owen...... 26 Apr. 28 p 21 Sept. 32 20 111 PRob. Gudgeon John- stou (7)......... 25 Oct. 10 20 Jan. 14 14 0 Archibald Dickson..... 2 Apr. 28 8 Mar. 31 12 Fred. Augustus We- theral........ 10 Dec. 29 p 14 Dec. 32 11 0 Eric Mackay Clarke... 20 Oct. 30 6 June 36 0 Js. Fitz Herbert de Tessier.... p 13 Sept. 33 1 Apr. 36 12 Sep. Barty W. Wynyard 13 June 30 2 Apr. 36 8 0 Wm. Dunlop Baird..... p 29 Nov. 33 p 29 July 36 7 Henry Fane (13)........ P 1 Aug. 34 p 30 July 36 Jas. Thos. Mauleverer p 18 Apr. 34 | 10 Aug. 36 6 Oliver Paget Bourke... p 11 Dec. 35 p 27 Oct. 37 6 Ths. Ormsby Ruttledgep 29 Apr. 36 p 23 Apr. 38 Harv, Well. Pole Wel man. 2 Apr. 36 28 Dec. 38 0 Edw. Hen. Cormick....p 29 July 36 p 11 Jan. 39 John Pennefather Per. ceval......... 17 Feb. 37 16 May 39 5 John L. Crocker... 18 Mar. 37 5 June 39 Edward Crocker... P 27 Oct. 37 21 Oct. 39 Wm. Gordon........ p 20 July 38 р 3 Apr. 40 0 Edwin Colville Moore.. 1 June 38 21 May 40 12 Geo. Hughes Messiter. 15 June 30 29 Sept. 34 3 Alex. M'Kinstry.... p 22 Feb, 39 p 25 Sept. 40 ENSIGNS. 3 0 T. G. H. Fitz. Mayer 28 Dec. 38 3 Rich. J. Ross O'Conor p 12 Apr. 39, 2 Louis John M'Pherson 5 Sept. 39 2 Lethbridge Cha. Moore 3 Apr. 40 Boydell Jones Croxon p 10 Apr. 50 Nath. Waxwell Hunter p 12 June 40 William A. Armstrong p 1 Nov. 40 1 Rowland Ben. Codd... p 16 Feb. 41 8 23 Paymaster.-Wm. Sanford Hall, 10 July, 40 ; Ens. 19 Dec. 11 ; Lt. 22 April 13. 16 Adjutant.-P W David Cooper, (Lieut.) 21 May, 26. 18 Quarter-Master.-John Sarson, (9) 14 Aug. 23. 15 14 Surg.- Robert Dunkin Smyth, 6 Nov. 40; A.-S. 6 Oct. 25; H.- Assist. 19 May 25. Assistant Suryeons. — Arthur S. Thomson, M. D. 19 Oct. 38. 3 John Bathurst Thomson, M. D. 11. Jan. 39. 1 Nesbitt Hefferman, M. B. 11 June, 41. Facings White.- Agents, Mr. John Lawrie. (6) Lieut. Cooper served in the Peninsula from Sept. 1810 to July 1813, including battles of Fuentes d'Onor and Salamanca, sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Burgos. Present at Wa- terloo. For Note 7, 9, 11, 12 and 13, see the following page. COROA COA er ... 1 1 0 3 VOL. 11.) 99 Serving in India and China. 18th (ROYAL IRISH) REGIMENT or Foot. On the three corners of the second Color, the · Lion of Nassau,' Virtutis 'Na- murcensis Pramium.' The Sphinx, with the word, ' EGYPT.' [China. Years' Service. Colonel. 54 P Mathew, Lord Aylmer, (1) G. C. B. Ens. 19 Oct. 87; Lieut. 26 Oct. 91 ; Capt. 8 Aug. 94 ; Major, 9 Oct. 00 ; Lieut.. Col. 25 Full | Half March, 02 ; Col. 25 July, 10 ; Major Gen. 4 June, 13; Lieut.- Pay. Pay. Gen. 27 May, 25 ; Col. 18th Regt. 23 July 32. Lieut.-Colonel. ---George Burrell, (2) Ens. 4 Feb. 27; Lieut. p 3 45 May, 97; Copt. 15 Aug. 05 ; Major, p 30 April, 07 ; Brevet- Lieut.- Col. 4 June, 13; Regil.-Lieut.- Col. & Col. in the Army, 22 July, 30. # Henry William Adams, Ens. 31 July, 23; Lieut. p 31 Dec. 25 ; Capt. p 10 June 26 ; Major, p 18 Jan. 39; Lieut.-Col. p 13 Mar. 40. 21 0 Majors.—Nicholas Ralph Tomlinson, Ens. p 22 Mar. 21 ; Lieut. p 21 July 25 ; Capt. p 8 Feb. 33 ; Major, p 13 Mar. 40. 36 0 Jermiah Cowper, Ens. 21 Nov. 05; Lieut. 25 Dec. 06; Capt. 4 Sept. 23 ; Brev.-Major, 28 June 38 ; Major, 8 Feb. 41. CAPTAINS. 0 18 ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 36 0 Francis Wm. Dillon(4)* 5 Dec. 05 6 Mar, 07 7 Apr. 26 27 13 John Grattan.. P р 8 July 13 Sept. 23 4 Mar. 25 29 2 John J. Sargent........... 26 Oct. 09 13 Oct. 10 p 13 May 26 16 Francis Wigston p 16 Mar. 26 p 1 June 23 p 18 Jan. 30 16 Chas. J. Russell Col linson...... p 25 May 2FP 4 Jan. 33p 12 July 30 13 0 Wm. Aug. Towns. Payne....... p 23 May 252 7 June 33 p 20 Sept. 38 19 91 Thomas Moyle 8 July 13) 24 Nov. 14 22 Oct. 39 • Brevet-Major 28 June 31. (1) Lord Aylmer served in the expedition to St. Domingo in 1793 and 1794; was present in the 1st and second attacks upon Tiburon; at the storming of Port de l'Acul, near Leogane (wounded); at the affair of Bombard, near Cape Nicola Mole; and at the reduction of Port an Prince. Present at the descent near Ostend, in May 1798 ; remained as prisoner in France for six months. Present in 1799 at the battle of the Helder ; at the attack on the British lines on the 10th Sept., battles of 19th Sept., and 2nd Oct. 1799, in Holland. Serv- ed in the Coldstream Guards in the North Germany under Lord Cathcart in 1805. Present at the siege of Copenhagen. Served on the Staff of the Army throughout the Penivsular war, as Assistant, and Deputy Adjutant-General, and commanding a Brigade. Was present at the passage of the Douro, and has received a cross and one clasp of the following ac- tions. -Talavera, Busaco, Fuentes d'Onor, Vitoriaa, and the Nive. (2) Col. Burrell was at the capture of Guadaloupe in 1810. Served the campaign of 1814 (4) Major Dillon served in the expedition to St. Domingo in 1809. (7) Lieut. Johnston served in the Peninsula from Sept. 1810 to July 1813, including the battles of Vittoria, the Pyrenees (from 25th July to 1st Aug.,) Nivelle & Nive, storming the heights of Garis, battle of Orthes, action at Aire, and battle of Toulouse. (9) Quart.-Mast. Sarson served the Mahratta campaign of 1817 and 18. (11) Capt. Barnes served at the capture of Fort Anjui in Cutch 25th Dec. 1815, the Mah- ratta campaigns of 1817-18, escalade of the Fort of Booje inCutch, March 1819, siege of Ras- el-Kymah and Zyah in Arabia, Dec. 1819, escalade of Dwarka Ohamandel, Dec. 1820, action of Beni-Boo-Ally in Arabia, March 12. (12) Capt. Prendergast served throughout the Burmese war, including the taking of Prome, storming the enemy's works on the Ist and 2nd and 5th Dec. 1825, and 19th Jan. 26, battle of Pagam-Mew. (13) Lieut. Fane served with the Army during the campaign in Affghanistan, and was present at the storm and capture of Ghuznee. Following are the names of the officers of the 17th Foot who served with it during the campaign in Affghanistan and Beloochistan :-Lieut.-Cols. Croker, Pennycuick, Deshon ; Major Darley; Captains Miller, Erskine, Bourchier ; Lieuts. Owen, Johnston, Dickson, Wetherall, Clarke, de Tessier,Baird, Mauleverer, Bourke, Ruttledge, Welman, Cormick, J. L. Croker, E. Croker; Ens. L. C. Moore; Quarter-Master Sarson. All these officers were present at the storm and capture of Ghuznee, 23 July, and storm and capture of Khelat, 13 Nov. 1839, with the exception of Lieut. Baird, who was present at the latter place only. in upper Canada. 100 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 18th (Royal Irish) REGIMENT or Foor.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. CORNETS. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full |Half. Pay. Pay 13 13 10 9 9 7 7 ... 7755787 7 7 7 0 Clement Alex. Edwards 11 June 29 p 28 Nov. 34 p 13 Mar. 40 0 John Philip Mitford... P 4 June 29 p 16 May 34 8 Feb. 41 0 Sir Harry Darrell, Bart p 1 June 32 p 12 June 35 0 Arthur Wilson P 4 Jan. 33 26 June 35 0 Hon. Chas. Hen. Strat- ford 'p 8 Feb. 33 p 18 Mar. 36 Standish Haly p 28 Nov. 34 p 18 Jan. 39 Sir Wm. Macgregor, Bart. p 20 Mar. 35 p 29 Mar. 39 Edward Jodrell P 5 June 35 p 12 July 39 James Wm. Graves 24 Oct. 34 31 May 39 Geo. Fred. Call P7 Apr. 37 p 20 Sept. 39 Charles Dunbar р 3 Aug. 26 9 Nov. 32 William Tyrrell Bruce P 4 July 34 p 15 Apr. 36 Charles Bentley, s 30 May 34 11 Mar. 37 Christopher Vaughan Foss 29 Nov. 34 p 11 May 38 Wm. Augustus Gwynnep 11 July 34 23 Oct. 39 John Joseph Wood 19 Sept. 24 ditto George Hilliard p 13 Feb. 35 ditto Alexander Murray p 24 Apr. 35 ditto Francis Swinburne 20 July 38 24 Oct. 39 Thomas Martin 27 May 36 27 Oct. 39 David Edwards 23 Nov. 38 8 May 40 Scroope Bernard . p 18 Jan. 39 p 2 Oct. 401 John Cochrane p 12 Apr. 39 13 Oct. 40) Anth. W. S. P. Arm- strong . p 21 June 39 26 Jan. 411 Charles Rogers . p 16 Feb. 37 23 Apr. 41 ENSIGNS. Isaac Henry Hewitt p 12 July 39 Wm. Peter Cockburn p 21 June 39 Henry Duncan Burrell 24 Oct. 39 Charles Woodwright... p 13 Mar. 40 Samuel Walker Kirks,s 8 May 40 John Pole Mayo P 2 Oct. 40 0 Patrick Simmons 19 Feb. 41 0 Edmond Wm. Sargent 18 May 41 214 Paymaster.-George Isaac Call, 7 Dec. 36 ; Cornet, p 4 March, 02; Lieut, 1 July, 01; Capt. 26 Dec. 11. 0 Adjutant.- Arthur Wilson, (Lieut.) 16 May, 31. 0 Quarter-Master.---James Caroll, 4 June, 29. 7} Surgeon.--> Don. M'Kinlay, M. D. 14 Oct. 36; A. S. 5 Oct. 15; H. A. 20 Sept. 13 Assist.-Surgs.-Chas. Cowen, 27 March, 35. John Baker, 16 Feb. 39. James Stewart, 17 April, 38. Facings Blue.- Agent, Messrs. Cox and Co. OOOOOOOOOO ... 3 3 5 0 ... 2 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 18 0 9 13 21 VOL. 11.) Serving in India and China. 101 21st Regm. OF Foot, (ROYAL North British FUSILIERS.) [Dinapore. Years' Service. Colonel. 61 James, Lord Forbes, (1) Ens. 13 June, 1781; Lieut. & Capt. 21 April, 86; Capt. & Lieut.-Col . 23 Aug. 93 ; Col. 3 May, 96 ; Ma. Full Half jor-Gen. 39 April, 1802; Lieut.-Gen. 25 April, 08; Gen. 12 Aug. Pay. Pay. 19; Col. 21st Fusiliers, 1 June, 16. Lieut.-Colonels.-George Warren Walker, (2) cornet, 17 May, 99 ; 43 0 Lieut. p. 18 June, 01 ; Capt. 5 April, 09; Major, 15 April, 17; Brevet.Lieut.-Col. 5 Mar. 11; Regtl. Lieut.- Col. 14 Feb. 22; Col. 10 Jan. 37. 24 0 George Deare, Ens. 30 Oct. 17 ; Lieut. 8 July, 22 ; Capt. p 30 Dec. 24; Major, p 26 Oct. 32 ; Lieut.-Col. 28 Dec. 38. 21 0 Majors.—John Picton Beete, Second Lieut. 7 Sept. 20; Lieut. p 16 Sept. 24 ; Capt. p 6 Nov. 27 ; Major, p 26 June, 38. 27 57 P W John Luard, (3) s. Cornet, p 25 May, 09 ; Lieut. p 30 May, 11; Capt. p 13 Dec. 21 ; Major, p 17 Oct. 34; Brevet-Lieut.. Col. 28 June, 38. CAPTAINS. 2D LIEUT. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 26 1 Wm. Jas. Sutherland* 3 May 14 p 22 Sept. 14p 29 June 20 28 John Crofton Peddie.t 4 May 14 p 29 June 20 P 26 Nov. 25 17 Wm. Hen. Armstrong p 16 Sept. 24 p 26 Sept. 26 P 2 Mar. 32 33 6 A. Wm. Mackay (4) p 24 July 02 p 30 June 08 27 July 32 28 P Charles Lonsdale(5) 4 Feb. 14 27 Apr. 20 11 Dec. 35 14 Fred. Geo. Ainslie p 24 Apr. 28 p 5 Oct. 32'p 26 June 38 29 0 W William Thain(6)7 13 May 13 15 Aug. 15 17 Nov. 25 10 0 John Ramsay Stuart...p 20 Jan. 32 9 Aug. 35 p 10 Jan. 40 25 54 P Nicholas Wrixon(7) p 4 Apr. 11 13 May 13 1 May 40 25 William John King(8) 1 Mar. 17 29 Jan. 20 3 Oct. 40 First LIEUTENANTS. 10 0 Malcolm MacGre- gore, 1. p6 Sept. 31 p 12 Dec. 34 9 0 Thos. Bythesea Morti- mer... p 16 Nov. 32 2 July 37 9 0 Alexander Seton p 23 Nov. 32'P 2 Mar, 381 • Brevet-Major 10 Jan 37, t. Do 28 June 38. 111 Lord Forbes served in Flanders, and was present at the following battles and sieges, viz. Famars, Valenciennes, Dunkirk, Lincelles, Mouveaux, Tournay, Vaux, Cateau, Nime- kuen, Port St. Andre, &c. Lord Forbes afterwards accompanied the expedition to the Helder, and was present in every action but one, which took place in that campaign. 121 Col. Walker's services :-siege of Agra and battle of Laswarree 1803; siege of Bhurt- pore 1805, and campaigns of Lord Lake; siege of Hattrass ; Siege of Kaloonga under Major-Geu. Gillespie, who was killed. 131 Colonel Luard served in the Feninsula, from Jan. 1811, until the end of the war, in- cluding battles of Pombal, Redinha, Condeira, Campo Mayor, Los Santos, Usagne, siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, siege of Burgos, siege of forts ai, and battle of Salamanca, blockade of Pampeluna, and battle of Toulouse, Present at Waterloo 18th June, 1815, siege of Bhurt- pore 1825 and 6. (4) Capt. Mackay served the campaign of 1807 in Egypt. Made prisoner of war in an en- gagement with the enemy in Caiabria 16th June, 1809, and detained as such until 14th May, 1814. Present at New Orleans, 8 Jan. 1815. 151 Capt. Lonsdale's service :-campigns in Germany in 1805 and 6; attack on Copen- hagen and capture of the Danish fleet in 1807 ; campaign and battle of Corunna; expedi- tion to Walcheren; campaign of 1814 in Holland. 161 Major Thain served the campaign of 1813 and 14, in Germany and Holland, and was present at the bombardment of Antwerp and storming of Bergen-op Zoom. Shot through left arm at Waterloo. 171 Captain Wrixon served in Spain from April 1812 to the end of the campaign, including the 1st siege of Tarragona, retreat therefroin, actions before Alcoy, battle of Castalla, 28 siege of Tarragona, action at Ordal, investment of Barcelona, besides various other affairs. Served also at the siege and capture of Genoa, and with the expedision to Naples. 181 Capt. King served the campaigns of 1818 and 19 in Concan, in India. Served in the Burmese war in 1824 and 5, and received a severe contusion when leading the attack on the White Pagoda, an out-work of the stockade of Donabew. 102 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 21st REGT. OF Foot, (ROYAL North BRITISH FUSILIERS.—Contd. Years Service. CAPTAINS. 2ND LIEUT. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 7 13 11 10 0 0 0 Alfred Andrews..... p 12 Dec. 34 p 17 Aug. 38 0 William Domvile p 24 Apr. 35 p 18 Aug. 38 Wm. Alexander Dely 31 July 28 21 Apr. 33 And. Dav. A. Stewart . p 26 Apr. 31 p 9 Aug. 33 Wm. Francis Ring 28 Oct. 21 8 May 35 Walter Murray Jp 28 May 33 p 10 July 35 Samuel Burges Lamb.p 14 Dec. 32 P 5 Feb. 36 Henry Wm. Bace 15 Feb. 33 27 July 38 Arthur Lake Johnston p 22 July 36 30 Dec. 38 George Deare...... p 15 Dec. 37 p i Feb. 39 Arthur Geo. Shawe 1 Apr. 36 23 Aug. 39 John Lewis Mortimer. 9 Jan. 38 p 10 Jan. 40 Henry Wm. Martin P2 Mar. 38 8 May 40 Frederick Holland p 26 June 38 15 May 50 0 John Watson...... p 18 Aug. 38 21 May 40 Robert Nicholson P 7 Sept. 38 13 June 40 Carlo Arthur H. Rum- bold.... р 1 July 37'p 26 July 39 John Patrick Stuart 30 Dec. 38 3 Oct 40 0 Cha, Geo. Brabazon ... p 1 Feb. 39 13 Apr. 41 SECOND LIEUTS. Oliver Tho. Graham... 10 Jan. 40 Lachlan Macquarie p 14 Feb. 40 John Nicholas Wrixon 15 May 40 Wm. Savage 7 Aug. 40 Fra. E. Newport Tin- ley p 28 Aug. 40 Wm. Jennings Fire- brace.... 20 Oct. 40 Augustus Bolton 29 Dec. 40 Thomas Wm. Prevost, 18 June 41 164 Paymaster.— Philip Jean, 1 Oct. 12. 0 Adjutant.— Alex. Seton, (Lieut.) 15 May, 40. 0 Quarter-Master.-James Mahood, 25 Feb. 41. Imo Surgeon.-E. Pilkington, 30 Aug. 27 ; Assist. Surgeon, 16 May, 11 Assistant-Surgeon.—John Summers, M. D. 29 May, 40. Francis Laing, 6 Nov, 40. Frederick William Tupper, 8 June, 41. Facings Blue.— Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. 1 12 9 30 VOL. II.] 103 Serving in India and China. 23 22ND (THE CHESHIRE) REGIMENT OF Foot. [Bona. Years' Service. Colonel. 63 Hon. Edw. Finch,(1) Cornet, 27 Dec. 1778 ; Lieut. 7 Oct. 79 ; Capt. 5 Feb. 83; Lieut.-Col. 3 Oct. 92 ; Col. 3 May, 96 ; Mujor-Gen. 1 Full Half Jan. 1801 ; Lieut.-Gen. 25 Apr. 08; Gen. 12 Aug. 19 ; Col. 22d Pay Pay. Regt. 19 Sept. 09. Lieut.- Colonels. John Lysaght Pennefather, Cornet, p 14 Jan. 18 ; Lieut. p 20 Feb. 23 ; Capt p 5 Nov. 25 ; Major p 22 Mar. 31 ; Lieut. Col. p 18 Oct. 39. 18 2 Samuel Brandram Boileau. Ens. p 4 Oct. 21; Lieut. p 1 Aug. 26 ; Capt. p 25 Nov. 28; Mujor p 9 Dec. 36 ; Lieut.-Col. p 18 Dec. 40. Mujors. 28 0 John H. Poole, Ens. 24 Mar. 14; Lieut. 30 Sept. 19 ; Capt. 1 Nov. 30; Major, p 18 Oct. 39. 31 0 William Raban, Ens. 3 Jan. 11; Lieut. 3 June 13; Capt. 14 Feb. 28 ; Major, 18 Dec. 40. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 0 2 ner..... 25 0 Arthur Myers*... 12 June 17 p 3 Feb. 20 p 24 June 25 16 David Rea Smith p 3 Nov. 25 13 Feb. 28 p 26 Apr. 31 17 Fred. Darley George... p 24 Mar. 25 p 30 Apr. 27 p 30 Aug. 33 14 o Thos. Sydenham Con- way... 14 Feb. 28 p 26 Apr. 31'p 9 Dec. 36 28 1 Joseph M'Leod Tew(2) 10 Feb. 14 24 Mar. 261 6 Apr. 38 13 George Anderson....... p 5 Sept. 28 p 19 Sept. 34 p 11 Aug. 37 12 John Chalmers...... P 3 Dec. 20 p 20 June 34 p 18 Dec. 40 17 Edmund Wilson Las- celles (3) .. 23 Dec. 24 18 May 26 6 July 37 14 Nathan. Smith Gardi- p 23 June 25 18 July 34 p 26 Jan. 41 25 i George Mainwaring(4) 3 May 15 17 Sept. 17 5 June 40 LIEUTENANTS. . 14 And. Hamilton Russell p 18 Jan. 28 23 July 34 10 Thomas Chute......... P 24 Feb. 32 p 9 Dec. 36 7 Waldron Barrs Kelley p 29 Aug. 34 p 1 Apr. 36 6 Chas. Thos. Powell ..p 20 Nov. 35 p 10 Feb. 37 Mark W. Goldie..... P 29 Mar, 35 8 Sept. 38 Hen. J. Coote....... 23 Sept. 36 p 17 Sept. 39 Edward Dunbar.... p 27 Oct. 37 p 20 Oct. 40 3 Arthur Webber Smith. 25 Jan. 39 29 May 40 Fra. Pym. Harding 'p 16 Mar. 38 p 18 Dec. 40 4 0 Henry And. Grant Evans р 1 Dec. 37 p 9 Nov. 39 8 0 Joseph Edwin Thack. well p 6 June 34 23 Oct. 39 Thomas Dundas, s... 22 Sept. 37 p 21 Feb. 40 Alexander Macpherson 9 Oct. 35 5 Jan. 41 Wm. Duncan Hilton... p 19 Feb. 36 do. 5 Wm. Hervey Fitz Ge- rald....... P 5 May 37 do. • Brevet-Major, 28 June 38. (1) General Finch served in Flanders ; and, in 1799, commanded the first battalion of his regt. (the Coldstream Guards) in the expedition to the Helder; and a Brigade of Light Ca- valry, and afterwards of Infantry in the campaiyn to Egypt. He also accompanied the expedition to Copenhagen in 1807. (2) Captain Tew served in the American war in 1814 and 15. (3) Captain Lascelles served in the Burmese war in 1825. (4) Captain Mainwaring served in the Burmese war in 1825 and 26. 104 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 22ND (THE CHESHIRE) REGIMENT OF Foot --Contd. Years Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. A 4 0 3 . 2 2 2 ... 2 1 1 1 ... 2 1 0 Wm. M. G. M.Murdo. 1 July 37 5 Jan. 41 Edward Steadman Smith 1p 10 Nov. 37 do. 0 Frederick Geo. Tho. Deshon 29 Dec. 37 do. 0 C. H. Montresor Smith...... 15 Mar. 39 6 do. 41 0 William Somerville P 9 Aug. 39 p 24 Jan. 41 0 Cha. Pbilip Jos. Stop- ford...... p 17 Sept. 39 p 25 Jan. 41 0 Geo. Richard Coles Jp 1 Nov. 39p 26 Jan. 41 0 John Brennen 17 Sept. 39 30 Apr. 41 ENSIGNS. 0 Arthur Aug. Long. more P 8 May 40 0 Joseph Maycock... p 20 Oct. 40 0 Tho. Frederick Hill Alms......... p 18 Dec. 101 Colin Dakers.... 29 Mar. 39 0 Richard Everard Blake......... Ip 24 Jan. 41 0 James Parker Perce- val......... p 25 Jan. 41 0 Ricbard Pennefather... p 26 Jan. 41 Herbert Bowden 30 Apr. 411 0 Paymaster. - John M. Kennedy, 30 Oct. 28; Ens. 24 Feb. 14; Lieut. p 6 Feb. 23. 0 Adjutant.-W. Barrs, Kelly (Lieut.). 24 April, 38. 0 Quarter-Master.—Robert Harker, 6 Jan. 32. Surgeon.- James Alex. Ore, 6 Dec. 39 ; Assist - Surgeon 10 Nov. 25; H. A. 16 June 25. 0 Assist.- Surg.- Alexander Campbell, 29 July 30: Hosp-Assist. 27 Feb. 27. John Anderson, M. D. 8 May, 40. Thomas M'Grath, M. D. 8 June, 41. Facings Buff.-Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. 1 1 1 28 7 10 17 15 2 VOL. 11.] 105 Serving in India and China. 26tu (THE CAMERONIAN) Regiment of Foot. The Sphinz, with the words, “EGYPT'—'CORUNNA.' [China. Years' Service. Colonel. 47 PW John Lord Seaton, (1) G.C.B. G.C.H., Ens. 10 July, 1794 ; Lieut. 4 Sept. 95 ; Capt. 12 Jan. 00; Major, 21 Jan. 08; Full Half Lieut.-Col. 2 Feb. 09; Col. 4 June, 14; Major-Gen. 27 May, Pay Pay. 25 ; Lieut.-Gen. 28 June, 38; Col. of the Cameronians, 28 March, 38. Lieut.-Colonels. 26 1Wm. James, (3) Ens. 8 Dec. 03 ; Lieut, 23 Nov. 04 ; Cap. 5 Nov. 12 ; Major, 25 April, 18 ; Lieut.-Col. p 25 Dec. 35. 20 6 Armine Simcoe Henry Mountain, Ens. 20 July, 15; Lieut. p 3 Dec. 18; Capt. p 26 May, 25 ; Major, p 30 Dec. 26 ; Lieut. Col. 23 June, 40. Majors 28 I mo. Thos. Simson Pratt, (4) Ens. 2 Feb. 14; Lieut. p 20 April, 20, Capt. p 17 Sept. 25 ; Major, p 25 Dec. 35; Brevet - Lieut-Col. 6 May, 41. 34 OP William Johnstone, (5) Ens. 25 Feb. 08 ; Lieut. 30 Mar. 09 ; Cupt. p 20 April, 20; Brevet-Major, 10 Jan. 37 ; Regtl.- Major, 23 June, 40. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT CAPTAIN. ...... OOOOOOOOO ... 23 i George Hogarth* p 22 May 17 p 13 Sept. 21 p 12 Nov. 25 25 Hen. Fra. Strange. 23 May 15 7 Apr. 25 p 29 June 26 27 William Caine (7)...... 6 July 14 12 June 19 9 Dec. 27 21 James Paterson......... p 17 May 21'p 4 Dec. 23 p 5 Apr. 31 23 James Piggott. 6 Apr. 15 9 Apr. 25 14 Feb. 34 34 Dobson Young (8)...... 3 Dec. 071 1 Aug. 10 30 May 34 17 George F. Mylius... 17 Oct. 24 p 28 Jan. 26 p 30 Aug. 31 13 John Shum.. P 19 Aug. 28 .3 Oct. 32 p 22 Feb. 39 24 Thomas French.... 4 Dec. 17 26 Apr. 28 28 Oct. 40 9 Ferdin. Whitting ham, s...... 2 Nov. 32 p 19 Feb. 36p 30 Apr. 41 LIEUTENANTS. 23 0 Richard Thomson...... p 1 Jan. 19 8 Nov. 27 17 0 Wm. Brown Staff... 4 Dec. 24 10 Mar, 27 16 0 Edw. Regan Gregg 6 Apr. 26 28 Sept. 27 15 0 Thomas Seccombe р 6 July 26 31 Jan. 29 17 0 E. W. Sibley, (9) r 27 Nov. 24 16 Oct. 26 13 Alex, M.Donald......... 13 Mar. 29 12 Oct. 32 Henry Edgar........ p 27 Sept. 33 p 24 Nov. 35 9 0 John Wm. Johnstone. . p 31 May 33 25 Feb. 37 8 Charles Cameron... 16 May 34 1 July 37 6 0 Hon. Wm. Godol. Os. born, s........ p 11 Sept. 35 P 4 Aug. 37 5 John Rodgers... p 31 Mar. 37 p 18 May 3* 7 | 12} Alex. G. Moorhead 26 May 22 p 3 Dec. 25 4 7 H. J. W. Postlethwaite p 11 Aug. 37| P 5 Apr. 39 • Brevet-Major 28 June, 38. (1) Lord Seaton has received a cross and three clasps for Corunna, Albuhera, Ciudad Rodrigo, (where he was severely wounded, ) Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse. (3) Colonel James was at the capture of Martinique in 1809, and Guadaloupe in 1810. (4) Lt. Col. Pratt served the campaign of 1841, in Holland, including the attack on Merx- em, 2d Feb. and bombardment of Antwerp. (5) Major Johnstone was present at the battle of Corunna. (7) Captain Caine served in the East Indies from Nov. 1812 to Dec. 1827, including the Nepaul and Deccan campaigns; also the siege and assault of Bhurtpore. Wounded in the Jeft foot by a grape shot at the assault, 18th Jan. 18:6. (8) Capiain Young was at the storining and capture of Forts Comona (led the Forlorn ope,) Gunnowri, and Ownona, in India, in 1807. 'Served the campaigns against Nepaul Hathe Mahrattas. (9) Lieut. Sibley served in the Burmese war. PART II. VOL. II. P ... 106 (PART . Her Majesty's Regiments 26TH (THE CAMERONIAN) REGIMENT OF Foot.—Continued. CAPTAIN. د ت م كنت من ه ن و Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. Full Half Pay. Pay. 7 Walter Brisbane Park 26 Dec. 34 15 June 39 6 Wm. Thomas Betts... 24 Nov. 35 15 Nov. 39 John Cumming...... P 26 Sept, 40P 8 May 40 3 Henry B. Phipps... 17 Aug. 38 31 Oct. 40 Bartholomew O'Brien p 15 Apr. 36p 13 July 39 Alex. Miller...... 13 Mar. 39 28 Nov. 40 Albany French Wal- lace... p 5 Apr. 39p 20 Dec. 40 Robert Colville Jones P 9 Aug. 39 8 Feb. 41 John Piper....... p 10 Nov. 37 p 10 Apr. 40 4 ENSIGNS. Edw. G. Whitty... 29 Nov. 39 Charles Horton Rhys p 26 June 26 Robert Synge p 20 Oct. 401 R. EI. De Montmoren- cie..... p 17 Nov. 40 Charles Duperier... 29 Dec. 40 0 m. West Turner 19 Feb. 41 Horatio De Quincey...'p 9 Apr. 41 1 Robert Mordaunt Dick. 18 June 411 Paymaster.-R. H. Strong, 1 June, 37; Ens. p 7 Aug. 27; Licut 14 0 p 9 Dec. 31. Adjutant.- Alex. M'Donald, (Lieut.) 13 March, 29. 13 Quarter Master.-Joseph Goodfellow, (10) 21 Feb. 28. 14 Surgeon.-W. Bell, M. D. 15 March, 31; Assist. Surg. 4 March 29 13; Hosp.- Assist. 24 Aug. 12. Assistant Surgeons.-Chilley Pinę, 2 Aug. 33. W. Godfrey "Bace, M. D. 27 Dec. 33. John Ramsey Bush, M. D. 8 June, 41. 1 Facings, Yellow.- Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. (10) Quarter Master Goodfellow. was at the capture of Hattrass. Served the Mahratta campaigns of 1817-18. Present at the siege and capture of Bhurtpore. ...... 0 ens 8 VOL. 11.] Serving in India and China. 107 31st (The HuxtINGDONSHIRE) Regiment of Foot. [Kurnau. " TALAVERA' ALBUHERA'_" VITTORIA'- PYRENEES'— NI. VELLE'— NIVE-PENINSULA.' Years' Service. Colonel. PW Sir Colin Halkett, (1) K. C. B. & G. C. H. Lieut.-Col. 17 38 Nov. 1803 ; Col. 1 Jan. 12; Maj.-Gen. 4 June, 14 ; Lt.-Gen. 22 July, 30; Col. 31st Regt. 28 Mar. 38. Full | Half Lieutenant-Colonels.-PW C. Horace Churchill, (1)* C. B.. $. Pay. Pay. Ens. 19 June, 06 ; Lieut. & Capt. p 27 Aug. 12; Brevet Major, 22 Nov. 13; Brevet-Lt.-Col. 18 June. 15 ; Regtl.-Mujor, 27 July, 36 26; Lieut.-Col. 16 July, 30; Col. 10 Jan. 37. 35 o P Samuel Bolton, (2) Ens. 5 Feb 07; Lieut. 6. April, 09 ; Capt.; p 24 Oct. 22 ; Mujor, 14 June, 33 ; Lieut.-Col. p 24 Nov. 35. 35 Majors.-- Thomas Skinner, Ens. 25 Jan. 16 ; Lieut. p 6 Aug. 19; Capt. p 9 Oct. 23 ; Mujor, p 24 Nov. 35. 40 H. Collinton Van Cortlandt. (3) Cornet, 8 May, 01 ; Lieut. 1 Nov. 03 ; Capt. 5 July, 14; Brevet-Mujor, 10 Jan. 37; Reytl.-Major, 17 Sept. 39. CAPTAINS. 0 ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 0 ܝܕ ܟܟ ܗ ܕ ܘ ܟ ܚܨܝܗ ܘ never 36 1 Edward Wm. Bray (4)* 12 Jan. 05 20 Apr. 08 6 Apr. 19 31 2 John Byrne, s t......... 1 Oct 08 21 Dec. 09 p 19 Apr. 21 33 James Spence (3) I... 26 Nov, 08 p 20 Dec. 10 10 Feb. 25 31 P Charles Shaw (6) 13 May 11 13 Apr. 20 30 July 26 23 57 P Lambert B. Urms. ton (7)...... 1 Apr. 13 11 May 15 p 12 Feb. 28 16 Geo Cuthbert Marshall, 25 Aug. 25 11 June 29 p 24 Aug. 32 31 WGeorge Baldwin(8) 2 Jane 08 9 Nov. 14 14 June 33 20 73 Wm. Gibson Willes.. 9 Sept. 13 p 19 Dec. 16 26 Sept., 39 19 Thomas Bulkeley...... 5 May 14 22 Mar. 40 23 Geo. Dobson Young... 6 Apr. 19 25 Aug. 25 21 Jan. 41 LIEUTENANTS. 17 Geo. Francis White... 27 Jan. 2:5, 3 Apr. 28 16 John Cassidy Stock... 23 Mar. 26 1 Feb. 29 15 Robert Norman... P7 Sept. 26 2 Sept. 29 15 Thomas Pender... 13 Sept. 26 1 Aug. 30 14 Thos. Conyngham Kel- ly, r.. 3 Apr. 28 p 31 Aug. 30 13 0 Edward Lugard...... 31 July 28 p 31 Oct. 31 12 0 Frederick Spence..... 24 Dec. 29 p 1 Nov. 31 12 Robt. John Eagar..... 11 June 30 p 25 Jan. 33 (1) Sir Colin Halkett has received a cross for Albuhera, Salamanca, Vittoria, and the passage of the Nive, and was severely wounded at Waterloo. (1) Col. Churchill served in the Corunna campaign as Aide-de-camp to Major-General Brodrick; and subsequently in the Peninsula. France, and Flanders, from June 1809 to the close of the war, as Aide-de camp to Major General Catlin Craufurd, and afterward as Assist. Adjt. General and Aide-de-camp to Lord Hill:-was present at the battles of Corunna, Arroyo-del-Molinos, Almaraz, Vittoría, Pyrenees, Heights of Ainhoe, Nivelle, Nive, battle of 13th Dec. 1813 on the Adour, Orthes, Tarbes, Aire Toulouse, and Waterloo. (2) Col. Bolton served in the Peninsula, from 1808 to the end of the war, including the battles of Talavera, Busaco, Albuhera (wounded), Aroya de Molina, Vittoria, the Pyrences, Nive, Orthes, Aire, and Toulouse. .(3) Major Van Cortlandt was engaged at the following battle, sieges, &c. in the East In. dies, viz, Sassni. (4) Major Bray served the Mahratta campaigns of 3817,18, and 19, and was present at the siege and capture of Ryghur, Amulnair and Asseerghur. (5) Major Spepce was present in the action of Stuola, near Genoa, 13th April, 1814, and subsequent attacks upon the city of Genoa, until its surrender. (6) Captain Shaw was present at the battle of Albuhera. Also at the attack and surren- der of Genoa in 1814, and, subsequently, at the surrender of Corsica. (7) Capt. Urmston served the campaigns of 1813 and 14 iu the Peninsula, including the battles of the Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse. Served throughout the Burmese war, including the capture of Rangoon ; storm and capture of the stockades of Kemwandirie and Kum- merute; battles of Rangoon, Kokain, and Pagam-Mew; attack and capture of Donabew, Prime, and Maloom; actions of Simbike and Napadee. (8) Capt. Baldwin accompanied the expedition to Walcheren, and was at the siege of Flushing Present on the 18th Jane at Cam Waterloo, and the storming for a by. 0 108 [PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments 31st (HUNTINGDONSHIRE) REGIMENT OF Foot.- Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN, Full Half Pay. Pay. 10 oooooooo 10 James Croft Brooke... p 31 Oct. 31 2 Sept. 33 John Snowden Scott... p Nov. 31 P 6 Mar. 25 9 Arthur Du Bourdieu... p 25 Jan. 33 27 Mar. 36 11 4 Philip Le Conteur... P 8 Dec. 25 1 Apr. 36 George Frend....... p 24 Nov. 35 p 14 July 37 7 Hen. Knight Sayers... p 17 Oct. 34 7 July 37 6 Dalway Möllveen.... p 22 Jan. 36 12 July 39 7 Theoph. John Bourke. 10 May 35 26 Sept. 39 John Æneas Duncan...p 7 Aug. 35 26 Oct. 39 Joseph Greenwood...... 6 May 36 26 Oct. 39 0 George Bainbridge Shaw... p 14 July 37 28 Oct. 39 5 0 Thos. Henry Plasket... p 21 Oct. 36 29 Oct. 39 3 0 Edward Wm. Bray... 21 June 39 21 Jan. 41 2 Jas. D. Carmichael Smyth ......... p 12 July 89 11 May 41 4 Henry Halsey Lake... P 15 Dec. 37 18 June 41 ENSIGNS. 2 0 Duncan Stew. Robert- p 30 Aug. 39 son......... 2 0 George Fred. Moore... 25 Oct. 39 Wm. Fred. Willes Atty p 15 Nov 39 John Lucas R. Pollard. 17 Jan. 40 Henry Wm. Hart... 7 Feb. 40 0 Robert Law....... 8 Feb. 40 1 0 Robert Burnett Trit- ton.. 5 Feb. 41 1 Richard Sparrow..... 11 May 41 28 Puymaster.—John Henry Matthews, (9) 21 Oct. 12.' 13 Adjutant.- Edward Lugard Lieut.) 26 Sept. 39. 16 Quarter-Master.-Samuel Palmer, 8 May, 26. 24 7 Surgeon. - Henry Hart, M. D. 21 Sept. 30; Assist.- Surg. 31 Jan. 11; Hosp.-Assist. 4 Dec. 09. Assistant-Surgeons.-Charles Hugh James, 5 Oct. 32. George Wm. Macready, 23 Aug. 39. John Edward Jenkins, 8 June, 41. Facings, Buff.-Agents, Messrs. Price & Son. (9) Paymaster Mathews served in the Nepaul war in 1814 and .5: at the capture of Hat- trass ; in the Maharatta war in 1817 and 18; and at the capture of Bhurtpore. Majors Bray and Spence, Captains Shaw and Baldwin, are the only officers now serving in the 31st regt. who suffered in that lamentable catastrophe, the burning of the Kent, East Indiaman, on the 1st March, 1825, in the Bay of Biscay. VOL. 11.) Serving in India and China. 109 39TH (THE DORSETSHIRE) REGIMENT OF Foot. [Agra. * Primus in Indus.' – PLASSEY-GIBRALTAR'-with the Castle and Key, • Montis Insignia Calpe '- ALBUHERA '-' VITTORIA' • PYRENEES '- NIVELLE'-'NIVE'_ORTHES' - PENINSULA.' 1 mo. Years' Service Colonel. 63 P Sir Fred. Philipse Robioson, (1) G. C. B. Ens. 11 Sept. 1778 ; Lieut. 1 Sept. 79 ; Capt 3 July, 94; Major, 1 Sept. 94 ; Lieut.- Full, Half. Col. 1 Jan. 1800 ; Col. 25 July, 10; Major-Gen. 4 June, 13; Pay. Pay. Lieut.-Gen. 27 May, 25 ; Col. 39th Regt. 15 June, 40. Lieut.-Cols.- Thomas Wright, (7) Ens. 18 Dec. 12; Lieut. 22 29 April, 14; Capt. p 14 July, 25 ; Major, p 10 March, 37; Lieut,- Col. 24 April, 39. 23 14 Horatio Walpole, Ens, and Lieut. 8 May, 17 ; Capt. p 13 Jan. 25 ; Mujor, p 17 Nov. 37 ; Lieut.-Coi. 18 May. 40. 31 9} Majors.--P Donald Urquhart, (2) Ens. 25 Mar. 01 ; Lieut. 17. Sept. 03 ; Capt. 21 May, 08 ; Brevet - Major, 27 May, 25; Brev. Lieut.- Colonel, 28 June. 38 ; Regtl.-Major, 24 Apr. 39. 28 O P John Fitz Gerald. (3) Ens. 6 Oct. 13; Lieut. 7 April, 25; Capt. 27 May, 34 ; Major 18 May, 40. CAPTAINS. LIEUT. ENSIGN. CAPTAIN. O A ... 30 3} Wm. Boran Bernard(4) 12 Apr, 08 12 Oct. 08 30 Dec. 28 13 Chas. T. Van Strau- benzee.... p 28 Aug. 28 p 22 Feb. 33 p 10 Mar. 37 16 William Wood p 13 Apr. 26p 27 Apr. 27 P 8 May 35 28 John Blackall... 14 Oct. 12 4 May 14 1 June 38 11 Marmaduke Geo. Nix- OD... 5 Apr. 31 25 Mar. 33 p 28 Dec. 38 18 Henry Francis Stokes (5)... 24 July 23 1 Aug. 25 24 Apr. 39 15 Henry T. Griffiths 19 Apr. 27 p 2 Nov. 32 18 May 40 13 Giles Eyre.... p 30 July 18 18 Jan. 23 1 Dec. 40 10 Robert Newport Tin- ley...... 4 Apr. 32 p 19 July 33 p 15 Dec. 40 10 0 Robert Dean Werge 3 Apr. 32 P 7 Aug. 33 p 11 June 40 LIEUTENANTS. 12 0 Bernard Gra. Layard,r.p 13 Aug. 29 12 Jan. 33 14 0 Charles D. Campbell P 9 Aug. 27 May 33 9 0 Henry A. Strachan 21 Sept. 32 2 June 35 0 Arthur Herbert... p 18 Jan. 31 2 Sept. 34 0 Eneas Wm. Fraser p 6 June 34 p 4 Mar. 36 8 William Munro...... p 20 June 34 p 1 Apr, 36 7 H. Wayet Davenport... p 30 May 35 P 2 Dec. 36 11 James S. Atkinson 30 Sept. 30 3 Feb. 37 6 Wm. Clarges Wolfe P 30 Oct. 35 p 10 Mar. 37 0 Edward Croker ......... P 4 Mar. 36 p 17 Nov. 37 0 J. Fitz Roy Dalrymple P 2 Dec. 36 P 8 Dec. 37 0 Humphrey Gray.... 35 Mar 36 1 July 38 (1) Sir Fred. Robinson served in the first American war, and was subsequently at the taking of various Islands in the West Indies. Sir Freilerick has received a medal and two clasps for Vittoria, St. Sebastian (severely wounded,) and the passage of the Nive, where he was again severely wounded. (?) Col. Urquhart's services :- Expedition to. Walcheren, and siege of Flushing; cam- paigns of 1813 and 14 in the Peninsula, including the crossing of the Bidasoa ; battles of the Nivelle and Nive; severely wounded 9th Dec. 1813. (3) Capt. Fitz Gerald served in the Peninsula from May 1813 until the end of the war, including siege of San Sebastian (wounded at the assault, with the forlorn hope, 31 Aug. 1813),; storming the heights of Vera, as a volunteer ; battles of the Nivelle, Nive, Bayonne, Garries, Orthes, and Toulouse. (4) Captain Bernard served at the capture of the Isle of France in 1810; and at the sure render of Kurnool in the East Indies, in Jan. 1816. (5. Capt. Stokes served throughout the Burmese war. (7) Colonel Wright was severely wounded at the atrair of Kittore in the East Indies, 181h Oct, 1839. 110 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 39th (THE DORSETSHIRE) Regiment or Foot.-Continued. 0 0 Coen er en 0 3 2 Years' Service, LIEUTS. ENSIGNS. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 6 0 F. Hawtry Cox ..... p 26 Feb. 36 p 28 Dec. 38 5 Wordsworth Smith ... 21 Oct. 36 23 Mar. 39 William Hardinge p 10 Mar, 37 24 Apr. 39 Charles J. Walker 7 Apr. 37 13 Oct. 39 0 Tho. Sargent Little 9 Dec, 37 19 Oct. 39 Chas. Tho. Hamilton . p 17 Feb. 38 p 19 July 39 Robert Hamilton Cur- rie...... p 28 Dec. 38 p 14 Feb. 40 3 0 Owen Wynne Gray 9 Nov. 38 18 May 40 7 0 Theodore M. Haultain 27 June 341 20 Oct. 40 0 James C. Harvey 25 Jan. 39p 15 Dec. 40 0 Wm. Newport Tinley p 15 Nov. 39p 11 June 41 ENSIGNS. 2 0 Patrick Flynn... 9 Jan. 40 0 Hugh Geo. Colville 10 Jan. 40 0 Edward Hardinge...... p 11 Jan. 40 0 Robert Stacey Colls ... 14 Feb. 40 Edmund Robert Stu- 15 Feb. 40 1 Francis Gee... 18 Sept. 40 1 James Henry Archer . p 15 Dec. 40 1 0 William Smith... Ip 11 June 411 35 Paymaster.-G. Augustus Durnford.(6) 13 Feb. 27 ; Ens. 23 June, 06; Lieut. 10 March, 10; Capt. 13 Feb. 27. 8 0 Adjutant--- William Munro. (Lieut.) 28 Dec. 38. 6 0 Quarter Master.—John O'Brien, 19 Feb. 36. 25 54 Surgeon.--P. Rob. Stark, M. D. 19 Nov. 30; Assistant-Surgeon 21 Jan. 13; Hosp. - Assist. 8 June, 11. 7 0 Assistant Surgeons.-James M'Gregor, 24 July, 34. 7 John Sinclair, 24 April, 35. 1 0 Lodovick Charles Stewart, 8 June 41. Facings, Green.- Agent, Messrs. Cox and Co, (6) Captain Durn ford served at the capture of the Isle of France in 1810; in the expedie tion to Java in 1811 ; capture of Kandy in 1815 ; and in the Kandyan rebellion fin 1817 and 18. 0 art 0 0 ..... 0 VOL. 11.] Serving in India and China. 111 40TH (TAE 2D SOMERSETSHIRE) Regt. of Foot.-[Upper Sinde & Candahar. The Sphinx, with the word · EGYPT' on the caps of the Flank Companies. • MONTE VIDEO'- ROLEIA'--'VIMIERA'-_ TALAVERA · BADAJOZ'_SALAMANCA'-' VITTORIA'—* PYRENEES' - NIVELLE'ORTHES' - TOULOUSE'-' PENINSULA' -WATERLOO.' Years' Service. Colonel. 47 Sir Lionel Smith, Bart. (1) K. C. B. & G. C. H. Ens. March 1795 Lieut. 28 Oct. 95 ; Cupt. 22 May, 1801; Major, 21 April, 02 ; Full Half Lieut.-Col. 6 June, 05; Col. 4 June, 13; Major-Gen. 12 Aug. Pay. Pay. 19; Lieut -Gen. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 40th Regt. 9 'Feb. 37. Lieut.- Colonels. 37 Thomas Valiant, K. H. (2) Ens. p 31 March, 04 ; Licut. 21 June, 03 ; Capt. p.21 Aug. 17; Major p 24 Oct. 21; Lieut. Col. p 8 Oct. 25; Col. 28 June, 38. 47 0 Rob. Brice Fearon, (3) C. B. s. Ens. June, 95; Lieut. 4 Sept. 95; Capt. 21 April, 04 ; Major, p. 20 Dec. 10; Brevet-Lieut. Col. 12 Aug. 19; Regl.-Lieut.- Col. p 8 May, 23; Col. 10 Jan. 37. Mujors. 27 1 W George Hibbert, Ens. p. 25 Feb. 13 ; Lieut. 14 June, 15 ; Capt. p 6 March, 23 ; Mujors, p 13 Nov. 35. 22 $ Evelyn Spencer Boscawen, Ens. p 26 Aug. 19; Lieut. 2 Sept. 24 ; Cupt. p 1 Aug. 26 ; Major, p 7 Aug. 40. CAPTAINS. LIEUT. ENSIGN. CAPTAIN. 0 16 0 James Stopford..........'p 17 Sept. 25 p 2 Nov. 26 p 10 Sept. 30 16 FitzherbertCoddington p 22 Sept. 25p 17 Jan. 28 P 24 Dec. 32 14 0 Thos. James Valiant... 29 May 28 p 17 Dec. 29 p 1 May 35 17 John Gray...... 31 Aug. 24 4 May 26p 12 Sept. 34 16 Joseph Boyer Oliver... p 16 Dec. 25p 19 Sept. 26 7 Nov. 36 18 9. John Mac Duff 10 Feb. 14 26 June 27 p 13 April 39 16 Robert Morris Bebee... p 25 May 26p 20 Sept. 27 p 21 June 39 11 Henry Douglas Cowper p 20 July 30p 14 Dec. 32 p 4 Mar. 36 15 Ferdinand White . p 2 Nov. 261 10 Nov. 31 p 7 Aug. 40 11 0 Fred. Wm. Smith p 10 Sept. 30 p 24 Dec. 32 p 21 May 41 LIEUTENANTS. 22 21 Thomas Miller 9 Jan. 17 19 April 27 17 101 Boyce Mackenzie, r 31 Mar. 14 26 June 27 19 John Perry Elliott...... 28 Dec. 14 26 June 27 18 James Adamson... 22 Feb. 15 11 June 17 12 Hen, Furey Wakefield. p 17 5ec. 29 29 July 32 12 0 Geo. Matthias White. 13 June 30 19 April 33 11 0 James Todd p 22 Feb. 31 4 July 34 9 John Martin B. Neill..p 22 Mar. 33 p 9 Jan. 35 9 Hen. Crickitt Tyler ...'p 3 May 33 p 1 May 35 8 0 Hen. Fancourt Valiant'p 25 April 34 p 13 Nov. 35 (1) Sir Lionel Smith has served chiefly in the Enst Indies. In 1809 and 10 he commanded an expedition to the Persian Gulph against the Pirates. Brought down by a sabre cut across the back of his head in the cavalry action at Ashta, 21st Feb. 1818. (2) Colonel Valiant served the campaign of 1805 and 1806 in the Guzerats, East Indies; also the campaign against the Seik Chief in 1809. While in command of the reserve force to the army of the Indus, in Feb, 1839, in concert with Rear-Adiniral Sir F. Maitland the Naval Commander-in-Chief, took the strong Fort of Munora, on the high point of land at the mouth of the harbour of Kurrachee in Sinde, and on the following day the Town and Fortress of Kurrachee surendered to them. (3) Colonel Fearon's services :-Campaign of 1796 and 7, in the West Indies, including the storming of the Vigie (wounded in the knee by a bayonet ;) attack on Morn Furtunei; and surrender of St. Lucia. Campaign of 1799, in Holland, including the battles of the 19th Sept. 2nd and 6th Oct. Campaign of 1800 on the coast of France and Spain. Expedition to Quiberon Bay. Attack on Ferrol. Expedition to Vigo and Cadiz, Egyptian campaign of 1807, including the surrender of Alexandria ; attack and storming of Rosetta Campina of 1814 and 15, in Italy, including the surrender of Naples and Genoa. Colonel Fearon commanded the troops on board the unfortunate ship Kent, when she was burned in the Bay of Biscay, Ist March 182.3. 0 112 (PART II, Her Majesty's Regiments. 40TH (THE 2ND SOMERSETSHIRE) Regt. Of Foot.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGNS. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 0 0 10 7 7 7 7 7 7 0 0 0 0 5 11 5 3 3 0 Thomas L. K. Nelson 25 Nov. 31 29 Jan. 36 Wm. Augustus Fyers. p 17 Oct. 34 p 20 May 36 Henry Seymour......... P р 9 Jan. 35 7 Nov. 36 Richard Armstrong P 1 May 35 p 2 Mar. 38 Henry Halket p 29 May 35 p 23 Mar. 38 Alex. A. Nelson P 6 Mar. 35 p 15 Mar. 39 Edward Lee p 12 June 35 p 13 April 39 Fred. T. L. G. Russell P 20 May 36 25 May 39 Rich. Olpherts р 2 Dec. 36 p 21 June 39 John Dowman p 38 Sept. 30 p 21 Dec. 32 James Young Vance... p 21 April 37 p 5 June 40 James Johnston.... p 23 Mar. 38 p 7 Aug. 40 James Duncan Mac Andrew p 15 Mar. 39 p 21 May 41 ENSIGNS. Edw. Hungerford Ea- gar p 13 April 39 John W. Thomas 7 June 39 M. R. L. Meason p 21 June 39 Robert Carey 15 Nov. 39 John Anstruther Mac. gowan p 21 Feb. 40 Frederick Huey..., p 5 June 40 Philip Wm. Miller p 15 Dec. 40 Richard Dawson p 21 May 41 Paymuster.-Charles Scarlin Naylor, (4) 8 May, 35 ; Ens. 1 Sept. 12; Lieut. 25 Dec. 15 ; Capt. 9 May, 34. | Adjutant.-J. M. Bladen Neill, (Lieut.) 7 Aug. 40. | Quarter Master.-Chas. Phillips, 25 July, 37 ; Ens. 16 June, 37. Surgeon.-P John Mac Andrew. (5) M. D. 30 April, 29; As Surg. 15 Feb. 10; Hosp.-Assist. 27 June, 09. Assist.- Surgs.—Henry Hudley, M. D. 28 Nov. 34. Henry Mapleton, M. D. 12 July, 39. Eneas Macintosh Macpherson, 21 Aug. 40. Facings, Buff.- Agent Messrs. Cox and Co. 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 29 0 0 9 5 24 0 0 78 sist.- 0 7. 2 1 0 (4) Capt. Naylor served at the Capture of Loghur, Koaree Ryghur, and severl small Hill Forts in 1818. Served in the Serwent Warree State, and was severely wounded in both leys; (the right one badly fractured) at the assault of Roree, 13th Feb. 1819. Served also in the Burmese war in 1825 and 1826 ; and at the capture of Kurrachee in Lower Scinde in 1839. (3) Dr. MacAndrew served at the siege of Flushing in 1809, and the campaigns of 1811, 12, and 13, in the Peninsula. VOL. 11.) 113 Serving in India and China. 41st (The Welsh) Regt. of Foor. [Kurachee. On the Colours and Appointments, the Prince of Wales's Plume, with the mot. to, · Gwell Augau neu Chwilydd.' — DETROIT QUEENSTOWN- MAIMI' NIAGARA'-'AVA.' Years' Service. Colonel, 49 P Sir Ralph Darling, (1) G. C. H. Ens. 15 May, 1793 ; Lieut. 2 Sept. 95, Capt. 6 Sept. 95 ; Major, p. Feb. 1800 ; Licut.-Col. Full Half p 17 July. oi ; Col. 25 July, 10; Major-Gen. 4 June, 13; Lieut.. Pay. Pay. Gen. 27 May 25 ; Col. 41st Regiment. 26 Sept. 37. Lieut.-Colonels:-P Richard England. (2) K. H., Ens p 25 Feb. 33 08 ; Lieut. 1 June, 09; Capt. p !! June, 11; Mojor, p 4 Sept. 23 ; Lieut. Col. p 29 Oct. 25 ; Col. 28 June, 38. 36 Wm. Booth, (3) Ens. 8 May 06; Lieut. 25 March, 09 ; Capt. 3 May, 21 ; Major. p 28 June, 27; Lieut.-Col. 11 July, 37. 18 0 Majors.—Gore Brown, Ens 14 Jan. 24; Lieut. p 11 July, 26 ; Cupt. p 11 June, 29 ; Major, p 19 Dec. 34, 27 2 P Joseph Simmons, (4) 2d Lieut. 16 April, 12; Lieut. 23 Dec. 13 ; Capt. 18 Feb. 27 ; Mujor. 22 Aug. 37. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEOT. CAPTAIN. 2 22 25 4} James Cochran (5) p 17 Sept. 12 28 Dec. 15 26 Feb. 27 20 3 George Carpenter* 1 Oct. 18 1 Mar. 20 p 29 Oct. 25 31 13 William Dempster 9 Feb. 09 11 Apr. 11 26 Feb. 28 26 Perceval Brown (6) 25 Jan, 15 31 Mar. 23 18 Aug. 30 18 John Wetherall ..P 8 Nov. 21 p 27 Aug. 25 p 3 May 31 Richard Price (8) 15 Apr. 19 23 May 26p 9 Mar. 32 26 15 Archibald Hookt p 15 Feb. 00 p 28 Mar. 00 12 Oct. 09 21 John Geo. Bedding- field (8) 2 Nov. 20 39 June 24 5 June 37 * Brevet-Major, 28 June 38. + Do. 22 July 30. (1) Sir Ralph Darling's services :-In 1793, the slaves in the island of Granada, assisted by the French from Guadaloupe, having revolted and murdered the Governor and upwards of forty of the principal inhabitants, he was employed with his Regt: (the 45th) in quelling the insurrection. Ii Jan. 1797, volunteered on the expedition against Trinidad, and was present at the destruction of the Spanish ships of war, and at the surrender of the island, In July 1799, proceeded with the expedition against the Dutch settlement of Surinam, and was employed in the arrangements for the capitulation, and present at the surrender of that colony. In April 1801, proceeded with the expedition against the Danish and Swedish islands, St. Croix, St. Thomas, St. Martin, and St. Bartholomew, and was present at their reduction. In September 1808, his Rest. (the 51st) being ordered on active service, he resigned his staff employment (Principal Assistant. Adjt.-General) and took the command of it. Joined the army under Sir John Muore, in Spain, and was present during the ad. vance and retreat, the action at Lugo, and battle of Corunna, for which last he received a Medal. In July 1809, was appointed Dep. Adjt.-General to the Force sent to the Scheldt under the Earl of Chatham, and was present at the siege and surrender of Flushing. On the return of the expredition he resumed his staff appointment at the Horse Guards. (2) Colonel England served at the siege of Flushing and campaign to Antwerp; subge- quently at Tarrifa aud in Sicily in 1810. (3) Colonel Booth's services. -Siege of Callinger ( wounded at the assault.) Nepaul war in 1814, including the sieges of Kolunga, Nahu, and Jetuck. Mahratta war in 1817-18, in- cluding the sitges of Singhur, Lattarak, Pourunder, and Wursetta, Burmese war in 1824-5, wounded at the storming of Martaban. (4) Major Simmons served in the Peninsula, from Sept. 1811 to the end of the war, in- cluding the storming of the Port at Almarez; affair at San Munos ; checking the French on the retreat from Madrid; cut off their Rear-Guard from Burgos ; battle of Vittoria ; skirmishing with the Rear-Guard, and driving the French into Pampeluna, 220, 23d, and 21th June; storming the heights of Central Barbara ; storming of Eschelah; storming Vera Bridge and Heights; crossing the Bidassoa; storming Petets la Rhine; battles of Nivelle and Nive, 4th, 10th, 11th, and 12 Dec. Served throughout the Burmese war, including the storming of Rangoon and Syneham Pagoda; capture of Kimmadine; led the head of the left column in storining the trenches in front of the Dayon Pagoda; storming a strong stockade in front of the Dagon Pagoda. Commanded the left wing of the 41st Regt. in the field against the Kolampore Rajah. (5) Capt. Cochran served the campaigns of 1813-14 in Canada, including the action at Moravian Town; the campaign of 1821-5 in Ava, including the capture of Rangoon and Martaban ; siege and capture of Dameine; battles of Prome and Pagam-Mew. (6) Captain Brown served the campaigns of 1824-5 in Ava. (8) Captains Price and Bedingfield served in the Burmese war. PAKT II. VOL. 11. 114 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 41st (The Welsh) Regt. of Foot.-Contd. Years' Service. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full, Half Pay. Pay. ... ... ... ... 0 164 6 0 0 0 0 20 0 Laurence Tallan (9)... P i Nov. 21 27 Aug. 24 22 Aug. 37 16 0 Isaac Blackburpe p 25 May 26 p 19 July 27 p 12 Feb. 36 LIEUTENANTS. 21 0 W J.Eyles Decre(10) 3 Aug. 20 3 Dec. 25 16 0 Eugene Jas. Vaughan 4 Nov. 25 p 9 Nov. 26 14 William May p 30 Jan. 28 18 Aug. 30 13 Robert Donaldson P р 8 Apr. 26 18 Sept. 32 11 G. S. Monttizambert 11 A pr. 31 p 11 Jan. 3:3 11 Robert Butler 12 Apr. 31 p 25 Oct. 33 10 Chas. Finch M'Kenzie 27 Sept. 31 28 May 34 10 16 James Campbell 24 Feb. 15 24 Oct. 34 10 Henry Downes, a p 8 June 32 21 May 35 8 Wm. H. A. Anderson 20 Sept. 33 28 Aug. 36 10 John Diddep 27 July 15 18 Oct. 36 7 0 Thomas Burgh 8 May 35 5 June 37 0 Walter Lawrence Jp 18 Dec. 35 22 Aug. 37 0 James Eman 25 Mar. 36 16 Aug. 38 0 J. De Blaquiere p 30 Sept. 36 29 Jan. 39 0 Thomas Owen Evans... 30 Dec. 36 7 May 39 Robert Pratt....... -p 16 June 37 p 27 Jupe 39 Cha. A. Morshead 11 July 37 p 28 June 39 Anthony Sadlier p 17 Aug. 38 p 30 Aug. 39 Jobn Mannin 22 Aug. 37 15 Nov. 39 T. L. Parr Moore p 11 Aug. 37 p 18 Oct. 39 Tho. M.Leod Farmer.. 7 June 39 p 8 Jan. 41 M. G. Beck. Browne... p 23 Dec. 36 p 19 July 39 ENSIGNS. Hen. F. Marston 1 8 Mar. 39 Geo. Wm. Hessing p 27 June 39 Chas. Timothy Tuckey p 28 June 39 Geo. Davis Hutton 15 Nov. 39 Warper West. Johnson 16 Nov. 39 John Madden.......... p 24 Apr. 40 H.Hngh M.K. Fleming, 29 May 40 Alex. Jas. Sutherland.. 15 Jan. 41 28 2 Paymaster.-F. Dickson, (11) 26 July, 27; Ens. 12 Mar. 12; Lieut. 27 Jan. 14. 16 Adjutunt.–Eugene Jas. Vaughan (Lieut.) 18 Sept. 32. 0 Quarter-Muster.- Wm. Burns, 16 Aug. 38 ; Ens. 16 Feb. 38. 27 f Surg.-P Wm. Mortimer Wilkins, (12) 23 Dec. 36; Assist.-Surg. 22 June, 25; H. A. 10 Jan, 14 7 Assist.- Surgs.-Henry Fra. Minster, 29th May, 35. 0 Arthur Charles Webster, 6 April, 38. 1 0 William Home Fairbairn, M. D., 11 June, 41. Facings, White.-Agents, Messrs. Cox. & Co. (9) Captain Tallan served throughout the Burmese war, including the capture of Ran- goon, attack on Kimindine and Pagoda Point, capture of Fort Syriam, engagements in front of Rangoon, capture of Tautaban, siege and capture of Douabew, engagement near Prome, capture of Maloon and Pagam-Mew. (10) Lieut. Decre served the campaign of 1815 as a volunteer, with the 91st Regt., include iug the battle of Waterloo, storming of Cambray, and capture of Paris. Served also throughout the Burmese war, including the storm and capture of Rangoon, attack on the stockades of Kemmundine and Payoda Point, capture of the Fort of Syriam twice; nctions of Rangoon and Kokien, storming the trenches in front of the Dagon Pagoda (led the column,) siege and capture of Donabew and Prome, and the engagement near Prome. (11) Paymaster Dickson served in the Burmese war. (12) Dri Wilkins served the campaign of 1814 in the Peninsula. Y a VON ON AV 0 0 0 0 0 4 VOL. 11] 115 Serving in India and China. 44TH (THE East Essex) REGT, OF Foor. [Cabool. The Sphinx, with the words, ' EGYPT'—' BADAJOZ'-'SALAMANCA'-'PEN. INSULA'-'BLADENSBURGH'-'WATERLOO'-'AVA.' Years' Service. 61 Colonel. Full| Half Gore Browne, Ens. 5 July, 1780; Lieut. 3 March, 89 ; Capt. 8 Pay. Pay. June 93 ; Major, 15 June, 94; Lieut-Col. 30 Nov. 96; Col.1 Jan. 1805; Major.Gen. 25 July, 10; Lieut.-Gen. 12 Aug. 19 ; Gen. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 44th Regt. 29 Jan. 20. 34 1} Lieut. ·Colonels.—p John Shelton, (2) Ens. 21 Nov. 05; Lieut. 26 A ug. 07 ; Capt. 17 June, 13 ; Major, 6 Feb. 25; Lieut.-Col. 6 Sept. 27. 37 0 p Thomas Mackrell, Ens. 19 Sept. 04 ; Lieut. 25 May, 07 ; Capt. 11 June, 18; Major, 12 Nov. 25; Lieut.. Col. p 25 June, 30. 43 i Majors.- Alex. Campbell, Ens. 2 May, 06; Lieut. 16 June, 07 ; Capt. 13 June 22; Major, 6 June 32. 27 Wm. Boxell Scott, (6) Ens. 2 April, 12; Lieut. 15 April, 13; Capt. 12 April. 31 ; Major, p 16 April, 41. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. man.. 26 Charles O'Neill*.. 18 May 15 p 27 June 16 p 31 May 21 30 James Johnston (4) 7... 3 Dec. 03 5 Aug. 04 7 Mar. 11 42 Benjamin Halfhide, (5) I 28 Oct. 99 7 Apr. 04 25 Aug. 09 25 4 Thomas Swaine (7) 24 Dec. 12 9 Aug. 14 30 Jan. 36 18 Rob. Bradford M'Crea (8) 16 Jan. 24 6 Dec. 25p 11 June 36 29 Alured Wm. Gray (9). 2 Feb. 13 23 Mar. 19 14 June 39 Tho. Richard Leighton 29 May 28 P р I June 32 p 14 Feb. 40 21 Thomas Robinson (10) 2 Mar. 20 10 Feb, 25 28 Feb. 40 7 Aug. Halifax Ferry- p 47 June 34 30 June 37'p 16 Apr. 41 18 0 James Douglas De Wend 29 Apr. 24 17 Dec. 25 22 May 41 LIEUTENANTS. 16 John D. Young.......... 16 Aug. 25'p 7 Jan. 27 17 91 Edward Woolhouse.....'p 5 Oct. 15 p 26 June 17| • Brevet Major 10 Jan. 37. + Do. 92 July 30 Do. 22 July 30. (1) Gen. Browne served in Gollanıl, and was present in the battles of the ioth and 19th Sept, and 2nd Oct. 1793. He cominanded the brigade that carried the town and fortress of Monte Video by assault, and was afterwards wounded at Walcheren. (%) Co. Shelton lost an arm at St. Sebastian. (4) Major Johnston served at the taking of Madeira in 1807 ; capture of Guadaloupe and dependencies, St. Martins, and St. Eustatius in 1810; also l' campaign against the Bur- () Major Halfhide served the Nepaul campaigns of 1814, 15, and 16 , algo in Arracan ia 1894. (6) Major Scott served in the Burmese war. (7). Capt. Swayne served the campaigns of 1813 and 14 in Canada, including the action of Chippewa, and Fall of Niagara ; siege and storm of Fort Erie, Aug. and Sept. 1814 ; served in the Burmese war, including the capture of several stockades in the neighbour. hood of Rangoon, and on the advance of the army to Prome. (8) Capt. M'Crea served in the Burmese war, including the capture of Arracan, Ramree and Chaudier. (9) Captain Gray served in the action of Jeetghur 3rd Jan. 1815, and Jubbulpore 19th Dec. 1817 ; and the campaign of 1823 in Aracan. (10) Captain Robinson "served the campaign of 1825 in Aracan, including the action at Padona, Mahatee, and Aracan. 4!!! Licut. Turner served the campaign of 1814 in Holland, including attack on Merxem & Bergen-op-Zoom. mese. 116 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 44TH (The East Essex) REGT. OF Foot.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN, LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay 0 131 NO NO CO 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 Wm. Henry Dodgin.... 16 Jan. 23 29 May 28 22 Thomas Collins.... P 6 Jan. 2007 July 25 15 Cha.Ernest Turner(11) 17 May 13 12 Oct. 15 11 Wm. Evans 29 June 30 23 Oct. 32 il Wm. George White. 12 Apr. 31 29 Aug. 34 13 45 Tho. Alex. Souter.... 30 June 24 8 May 35 10 Fra. Montresor Wade. p 20 Sept. 31 p 26 Jude 35 10 Arthur Hogg...... P 1 June 32 30 Jan, 36 8 0 Duncan Trevor Grant.rp 5 July 33 1 Apr. 36 8 0 J. Chilton L. Carter... 28 May 34 p 23 Sept. 36 Edw. S. Cumberland... p 17 Apr. 35 p 18 May 38 6 Wm. MacMahon p 6 Nov. 35 28 Feb. 40 Henry Cadett......... 28 Nov. 37 p 29 Feb. 40 Samuel Swinton ........ р 9 Nov. 38 p 12 June 40 Frederick Shelton ... ... p 24 Jan. 40p 18 Dec. 40 Geo. Henry Skipton... p 11 June 36 10 Sept. 401 Robert Kipling 30 June 37 11 Sept. 40 Wm. Campbell Mollan p 28 June 39p 2 Apr. 41 2 John Harvey .P 5 Jan. 39p 16 Apr. 41 Fred. John Camp. For. tye 1 June 38 22 May 41 ENSIGNS. Alured Wm. Gray...... 22 Nov. 39 2 0 Frederick Hackett...... p 12 June 40 1 Richard Robert Fulton p 18 Dec. 40 0 Henry Jeffreys White.p 18 Dec. 40 1 Walter Swayne 29 Dec. 40 1 Arthur Cary.. 19 Feb. 41 1 0 Hugh Hanson John Massy P2 Apr. 41 1 John Olans Moller 18 June 411 37 Paymaster.---Thos. Bourke, 12 Oct. 04. Adjutant.-- R. Kipling, (Lieut.) 27 Dec. 37. 25 41 Quarter. Master -Robert Richard Halahan, (12) 14 Feb. 22; Ens. 23 July, 12 ; Lieut. 25 Aug. 15. 29 0 Surg.-P John Harcourt, (13) 7 May, 34; Assist.- Surg. 26 May 14; Hosp.- Assist. 10 March, 23. Assist.-Surgeons.--Wm. Balfour, 4 March, 36. 2 0 William Primrose, M. D. 9 Ang. 39. Thomas Joliffe Tufnell, 11 June, 41. Facings Yellow.–Agent.-Messrs. Cox & Co. . (12) Lieutenant (Quarter Master) Halahan served at the taking of Arracan in 1825. 113) Dr. Harcourt served in the Peninsula from June 1813 until the end of the war. 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 VOL. 11.) 117 Serving in India and China. 49TH (THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE of WALES, OR THE HERTFORDSHIRE) Regt. OF Foot. [China. * EGMONT-OP ZEE'— COPENHAGEN'-' QUEENSTOWN.' Year's Service. Colonel. 52 Full | Half Pay. Pay. 36 32 0 0 Sir Gordon Drummond, (1) G. C. B. Ens. 21 Sept. 1789; Lt. 31 Mar. 91 ; Capt. 31 Jan. 92 ; Maj. 28 Feb 65; Lt.-Col. 1 Mar. 94 ; Col. 1 Jan. 98; Maj. Gen. I Jan. 1805; Lt.-Gen. 4 June, 11; Gen. 27 May, 25 ; Col 49th Regt. 21 Sept. 29. Lieut.-Cols.- Robert Bartlev. (2) Ens 28 Feb. 06; Lieut. p 12 Feb. 07 ; Capt. 10 Aug. 15; Maj.-p 5 Feb. 24; Lieut.-Col. 25 April 28. Edmund Morris. (3) Ens. 21 June, 10; Lieut. 21 April 13 ; Capt. I Dec. 25 ; Major, p 13 Sept. 33 ; Lieut.-Col. p 22 Nov. 36. Majors.-P Thomas Stephens, (4) Ens. 28 Nov. 06: Lieut. 18 Aug. 08 ; Capt. 13 Dec. 13; Major, 4 June, 33. Samuel Blyth Ens. 21 Feb. 11; Lieut. 28 April, 13; Capt. 25 April, 28; Major, p 22 Nov. 36. CAPTAINS. 34 1 31 0 ENSIGN LIEUT. CAPTAIN. 11 28 o silbert Johh Pasley (6) 26 Jan. 14 10 June 20p 2 June 28 17 Chos. Scott Reignolds 23 June 25 25 Apr. 28 p 26 Apr. 31 27 14 ? William Wilkin- son (7) (*)... 12 Dec. 99 4 Mar. 01 1 Sept. 08 20 161 "harles Gregory (t)... 27 Feb. 05 2 Aug. 05 8 Dec. 13 19 Wm. Raikes Faber... p 10 Apr. 26 p 28 Aug. 28 p 22 May 3.5 21 Mitchell Geo. Sparkes 4 Nov. 19 26 Dec. 23 28 June 36 17 Lavid Mac An- drew (8).. 15 Mar, 13 29 Apr. 15 18 Nov. 36 16 0 William Johnston... n. 7 Jan. 26 p 6 Nov, 27 22 Nov. 36 17 9 Robert Campbell..... 21 Sept. 15 26 Apr. 28 22 Mar. 39 16 0 James Patrick Meik... p 26 June 26 P 10 Oct. 27 30 Sept. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 14 0 John Leslie Dennis... 25 Apr. 28 22 Sept. 30 14 Tohn Thornton Grani 28 Apr. 28 12 Nov. 30 13 Henry George Hart... 1 Apr. 29 19 July 32 12 0 John Myers Montgo- mery 24 Dec. 29 2 Jan. 33 12 0 Wm Painter K. Browne 31 Dec. 29 4 Jan. 33 11 0 'Henry Garner Rainey. 12 Apr. 311 8 June 33 • Brevet Major 27 May 25. + Do. 10 Jan. 37. (1) Sir Gordon Drummond served in Holland in 1791, 95, and was present in Nimguen during the siege, and at the sortie ; embarked from Minorca in 1800, on the expedition to Exypi, and was present in the engagements of the 13th and 21st March ; in the battle of Rhamania, and at the surrender of Grand Cairo and Alexandria. Sir Gordon commanded in the action near the Falls of Niagara, where he was severely wounded. (2) Col. Bartley served in the American war, including the actions at Fort Erie, Fort George 25th and 27th May, Stoney Creek, Port George, 25th August 13, and Crystler's Farm, where he was severely wounded. (3) Colonel Morris served in the American war including the action at Stoney Creek. (41 Major Stephens accompanied the expedition to Walcheren, and was present at the siege of Flushing. Served in the Peninsula from March 1810 to the end of the war, includ. ing the battle of Busaco, siege of Almeida, battle of Fuepies d'Onor, storming the Forts at and battle of Salamanca (severely wounded through the thigh), siege of Burgos, action of Cabecon, battle of Vittoria, blockade of Pampeluna, battles of the Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes and Toulouse, besides many other minor actions and skirmishes. (6) Capt. Pasley served at the siege of Hattras in 1817, and siege of Asseerghur in 1819. 17) Colonel Wilkinson served at the capture of the Cape of Good Hope in 1806, and in the Peninsula from Aug. 1812 to Dec. 1813, including the battle of the Nive, where he was severely wounded. Medal for the Nive, Brevet.-Lieutenant Col, 28 June 38. (8) Captain Mac Andrew served in the Peninsula and France, in the 27th regiment, including the battles of the Pyrenees, Nivelle, Orthes, and Toulouse, besides various affairs of outposts, &c. 118 [PART 1. Her Majesty's Regiments 49TH (THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE OF WALES, OR THE HERTFORDSHIRE) REGIMENT OF Foot.-Contd, Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 10 0 John Heatley.... 20 Sept. 31 28 Mar. 34 10 James Ramsay 18 May 32p 9 May 34 8 Geo. Francis Bartley... p 12 July 33 p 19 Dec. 34 8 Hugh Pearson p 13 July 33 p 22 May 35 12 Sam. Baxter D. An. derson 11 July 29 23 May 35 0 John Hinton Daniell... p 14 Mar 34 18 Nov. 36 7 0 Arthur Robt. Shakes- pear p 19 Dec. 34 p 17 Aug. 38 7 Lachlan H. G. Maclean 26 Dec. 34 31 Aug. 38 H. Seymour Michell...p 22 May 25 22 Mar. 39 0 Sydney Loyd Horton, p 13 Feb. 35 22 Mar. 39 Thos. Ponsonby Gib- bons..... ·P 8 July 36 15 June 39 5 David M'Adam ......... 28 Apr. 37 24 July 39 Robert Blackall.. p 19 Jan. 38 6 Mar. 40 Frederick William Lane .p 10 Jan. 38'p 6 Dec. 39 0 Walter Tyler Bartley. 20 July 38 30 Sept. 40 3 0 George Ränd..... 8 Mar. 39 25 June 41 ENSIGNS. 3 Chas. Alex. Halfhide. 20 June 39 3 0 John M'Culloch O' Toole...... 21 June 39 2 Clarereaulx Faunt... 17 Sept. 39 2 0 Wm. H. Clinton Bad deley...... p 11 Oct. 39 2 0 Geo. Deacon Prette john..... p 14 Feb. 401 0 George Weir p 17 Apr. 40 1 John Gray Bolton...... 26 Jan. 41 26 2 Paymaster.-Robert Ware, (10) 28 June, 31 ; Ens, 15 Oct. 12 ; Lieut. 25 Sept. 13. 11 Adjutant.-Wm. Painter Kennaway Browne. (Lieut.) 29 June 39. Quarter-Muster.--Henry Mayne, 23 June, 37. 31 $ Surgeon.-p James French, (11) M. D. 9 Dec. 24; Assist.-Surg. 8 Feb. 10. 6 0 Assist. Surgs.-Campbell Flyter, 28 Aug. 35. 0 Richard Humphrys Garrett, M. D, 23 Nov. 38. 1 0 Charles Murray Duff, M. D. 18 May, 41. Facings Green-Agent, Messrs Cox and Co. (10) Paymaster Ware served in the Burmese war. (11 Dr. French served in the Peninsula from May 1812, to the end of the war, includ- ing the battles of Salamanca and Vittoria, siege of San Sebastian, and battle of the Nive. Served at the American war at Bladensburg, Washington, Baltimore, and New Orleans, 0 ...... 2 3 VOL. II.) 119 Serving in India and China. 50tv (THE QUEEN's own) Regt. of Foor.-Moulmein. The Sphing with the worils EGYPT'_ VIMIERA'--'I ORUNNA'-ALMARAZ -''VITTORIA'--. PYRENEES'-'NITE'--' ORTHES'- PENINSULA.' Years' Service. Colonel. 60 P Sir Geo, Townshend Walker, (1) Bt G.C.B. ; 2d Lieut. 4 Mar. 1782; Lieut. 13 Mar. 83 ; Cupt. 13 Mar. 89 ; Major, 28 Aug. Full, Half 94 ; Lieut.-Col. 6 Sept. 98 ; Col. 25 Apr. 1808 ; Major-Gen. 4 Pay Pay, Jupe, 11 ; Lieut-Gen. 19 July, 21; Gen. 10 Jan. 37 ; Col. 50th Foot, 23 Dec. 39. 35 0 Lieut.-Colonels.-P Nicholas Wodehouse, (2) Ens. 3 Jan. 07 ; Lieut. 31 Aug. 07 ; Capt. p 26 Sept. 11; Major, p 18 Oct. 21 ; Lieut.- Col p 3 Sept. 24 ; Col. 28 June, 38. 21 P Joseph Anderson, (3) K. H. Ens. 27 June. 05; Lieut. 6 Oct. 08; Cupt. 20 Jan. 14; Major, p 10 Feb. 26; Lieut. . Col. 18 June, 41. 36 Major.-P Thomas Ryan, (4) K. H. Ens. 10 Oct. 05; Lieut. 28 A pril, 08 ; Cupt. 30 sept. 19; Major, 13 A ug. 30. 35 0 P William Turner, (5) Ens. 9 Apr. 07 ; Lieut. 26 Aug. 08 ; Capt. 4 Nov, 19; Brevet- Major, 10 Jan 37 ; Major, 18 June, 41. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. 34 CAPTAIN ... 0 CO A enero 0 0 0 0 26 James H. Serjeantson* p 16 May 11 2 Nov. 19 p 2 Sept. 24 18 1 William Fothergill p 15 Nov. 21 25 Aug. 25 p 20 Sept. 27 17 Peter John Petit p 19 May 2.5 12 Feb. 28 p 28 May 33 28 George M.Leod 'Iew 19 Aug. 13 30 Sept. 19 12 Jan. 34 15 0 Henry Gunton ......... 28 June 27 18 Jan. 33 p 27 Jan. 37 12 J. Brathwaite Bonham p 1 Oct. 29 p 28 May 33 p 20 July 38 15 34 p James Weir (6) 13 May 13 30 Dec. 19 27 Nov. 38 8 Henry Stapleton... P 2 Aug. 33 p 27 Jan. 37 p 12 Mar. 41 17 Wm. Langley Tudor. 9 Apr. 25 p 26 Nov. 29 18 June 41 8 William Knowles... P 9 Aug. 33 P 20 July 38 p 25 June 41 LIEUTENANTS. 17 Alex. C, D. Beotley... 9 Apr. 35 17 Aug. 32 0 Richard Waddy 17 Aug. 32 4 May 36 Geo. G. M. Cobban p 16 Aug. 33 p 27 July 38 10 Sam. Hood Murray p 22 June 32p 8 Dec. 37 Henry Needham 16 Sept. 36 27 Nov. 38 James John Enoch 16 Dec. 36p 9 Feb. 39 Cha, R. Grimes...... 'p 16 Mar. 31p 20 Dec, 39 Harry Wainwright Hough... p 20 July 38p 10 Jan. 40 0 James Griffith Smith .p June 38 16 Feb. 40 • Brevet-Major 28 June 38. (1) Sir George Walker served in Flanders in 1793, and was in the action of the 10th May, near Tournay served in the expedition to Copenhagen in 1807, and subsequently in the expedition to the Scheldt. Sir George has received a cross and two clasps for Vimiera, Badajoz (severely wounded,) and Orthes. (2) Colonel Wodehouse served in Portugal from May 1808, 10 December 1812, including the battle of Vimiera, campaign from Lisbon to Oporio, and battles of Busaco and Fuentes d'Onor; served the campaign of 1814 in the South of France, including the affair at Tarbes and battle of Toulouse. (3) Maj. Anderson's services :- Expedition to Calabria, including the battle of Maida and subsequent operations, and capture of the fortress of Catrone ; expedition to Egypt in 1807; Peninsula from April, 1809, to Jan. 1812, including the battles of Talavera (wound- ex!,) and Busaco; retreat to the lines of Torres Vedras, and various affairs there ; with the advance at Espenilli ; battle of Fuentes d'Onor; besides many other affairs and skirmishes; served at the capture of Guadaloupe in 1815. (4) Maj. Ryan accompanied the expedition to Walcheren in 1809; served in the Pe. ninsula, and received a severe sabre wound in the head, and several other wounds at Fuentes d'Onor. (5) Major Torner's services. --Battles of Roleia, Vimiera, and Corunna ; siege of Flushing battle of Fuentes d'Onor, Arroyo de Molino, Almarez, Albadtarmos, Baighar, and Vittoria, where he was severely wounded; right arın amputated. (6) Captain Weir served in the Peninsula from November 1812, to October 1814, includ- ing the battles of Nivelle and Orthes. 120 [PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments. 50TH (The Queen's own) Regt. of Foot.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 0 0 0 0 0 No es ces or er er 0 0 0 ...... 0 0 ton......... 5 Charles Green... p 23 June 37 p 12 Mar. 41 17 W. H. F. Clarke, (7) 25 Nov, 24 1 May 25 8 James Allen... ... p 13 June 34 p 20 Jan. 37 8 H. Anthony O'Molony p 24 Dec. 33 10 Mar. 37 6 Benjamin Grey Mack enzie...... 22 Apr. 35 p 17 Feb. 38 5 James Brockman... 1p 22 Nov. 39 23 July 39 0 Henry Williams Wily. 27 June 38 15 Nov. 39 Edward Cowell Mullenp 26 Aug. 36 17 July 40 Wm. Scott ('arter...... 1p 7 Apr. 37 23 Sept. 40 3 Arthur Bernard р 8 Feb. 89 19 June 41 Joseph John Grimes... P 9 Feb. 39 do. James Russell 31 May 39 do. 0 Jobn Fleming Parker. p 20 Dec. 39 p 25 June 41 ENSIGNS 3 (Simon Pepper Joyce... 8 Mar. 39 2 Charles Abney Mouatt 6 Mar. 40 1 leathfield Jas. Pramp- 4 Aug. 40 1 Robert Bridges Bellers p 12 Mar. 41 John Kelly....... 19 June 411 Frederick Torrens Lis. tes... 20 June 41 1 0 Charles Hen. Totten ham....... p 21 June 411 34 ☆ Puymaster.-p George Bartley, (8) 23 June 25; Ens. 25 Oct. 07 ; Lieut. 13 April, 09 ; Capt. 9 Dec. 21. Adjulunt.- 3 0 Quarter-Muster.-Joseph Moore, 28 Aug. 38. 25 1 Surgeon. - James Davidson, 28 July, 49 ; Assist.. Surg. 30 July, 35 ; Hosp.- Assist. 24 June, 15. 7 i Assistant. Surgeon.— Alexander Graydon, M. D., 15 May, 35. 0 Joseph Burke, 10 Jan. 40. 1 0 John M.Bean, 18 June, 41. (7) Lieut. Clarke served in the Burmese war. (8) Captain Bartley served the Coruuna campaign, and subsequently in the Peninsula from March 1811, to the end of the war, and was engaged at Almaraz, Alba de Tormes, Baighur, Vittoria, Pyrenees, 25th, 26th, and 27th July, Pampeluna 28th and 30th July. 0 0 1 1 0 2 VOL. 11.) 121 Serving in India and China. 55TH (The WestMORELAND) REGIMENT OF Foot. [China. Years' Service. Colonel. 57 P Sir William Henry Clinton, (1) G. C. B. Cornet, 22 Dec. 1784 ; Lieut, 7 Mar. 87 ; Cupt. 9 June, 90; Lieut.: Col. 29 Dec. 94 ; Full Half Col. 1 Jan. 1801; Major-Gen. 25, Apr. 0 ; Lieut.-Gen. 4 June, Pay Pay 13; Gen. 22 July, 30 ; Col. 55th Regt. 25th April, 14. Lieut-Cols. 41 14 P James Holmes Schoedde. (2) Ens. May, 00; Lieut. 8 Oct. 01 ; Capt. p 19 Sept. 05 ; Brevet-Maj. 21 June, 13; Regtl.- Maj. p 20 Jan. 25 ; Lt.-Col. p 20 Mar. 29. 27 2 Peter Edmonstone Craigie. (3) Ens. p 3 June, 13 ; Lt. p 29 Sept. 14; Cupt. p 24 Oct. 21; Major, P 10 Aug. 26; Lieut.-Col. 21 Nov. 31. 27 0 Majors.-Charles Warren, (4) Ens. 24 Nov. 14 ; Lieut. 13 Nov. 18; Cupt. p 1 Aug 22 ; Major, 21 Nov. 34. 16 0 David Lynar Fawcett, Ens. p 6 Apr. 26 ; Lieut. p 21 Nov. 28 ; Capt. 21 Nov. 34 ; Major, p 7 Feb. 40. CAPTAINS. ENSIGN. LIEUT CAPTAIN, 33 1 Norman Maclean (5) 17 Sept. 07 23 Feb. 09 29 Mar. 37 26 Colin Campbell... 3 Oct. 15 23 June 21 p 20 Jan. 32 14 John Horner.. 3 June 28 p 5 Apr. 31p 7 Aug. 35 25 54 2 Arthur O'Leary (7) 18 Apr. 11 25 Jan. 14 27 Nov. 35 13 Hen. Chas. B. Dau. beney.. 12 Mar. 29 9 Aug. 31 p 28 Oct. 36 14 Aug. H. S. Young 6 Dec. 27 p 18 Nov. 31 2 7 June 39 16 John Baille Rose,... p 8 Apr. 26 18 May 32 p 7 Feb. 40 11 John Coats............ P 2 Nov. 30) 3 June 32 p 10 Apr. 40 19 24 Henry Grimes (6). 19 Oct. 20 23 Oct. 23 27 Apr. 35 14 Hector M.Caskill 29 Nov. 27 4 June 32 p 15 Dec. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 15 0 Aug. Hen. Chaproniere p 14 Dec. 26 12 June 30 15 11+ Wm. Thos. Colman 7 Sept. 15 13 June 30 13 Thos. Ancrum Heriot (8) -p 21 Nov. 28 p 5 Apr. 31 11 0 Tnomas De Havillando 5 Apr. 31 p 15 Feb. 33 10 0 Edward Warren p 26 Apr. 32 11 July 34 10 Gus. Travers Brooke -p 22 June 32 20 Apr. 35 Hume Edwards p 26 July 33 p 7 Aug. 35 W. Holland L. D.Cud- dy 'p 31 May 27 Nov. 351 (1) Sir William Henry Clinton embarked with the Guards for Holland, and served the campaign of 1793 and 1794, and was present at the following battles, sieyes, &c. viz. :-Fa- mars, Valenciennes, Dunkirk, Lannoi, Prernon, Cateau Cambresis, Fleurus, and the ac. tions of the 10th, 17th, 18th, and 28 May, 1794. (2) Col. Schneride served the Egyptian campaign of isol. Served also in the Peninsula from 1808 to the end of the war, including the battles of Roleia, Vimiera, Talavera, Fuentes d'Onor, sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo, and Badajoz; battles of Salamanca, Vittoria, Pyrenees, Nirelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse, besides numerous minor actions and skirmishes. Medal for Nivelle. (3) Col. Craigie served the campaign of 1814 in Holland, including the attacks on Merxem, and bombardment of Antwerp. (1) Major Warren and Lieut. Brook were wounded in action at Coorg, Madras, April, 1834. (5) Captain Maclean served in the Burmese war, including the capture of Zembyke and Melloon. 6) Captain Grimes served throughout the Burmese war, 17). Captain O'Leary served campaims of IBN, 1, and 13, in the Peninsula, including the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, battle of Salamanca, siege of Burgos, and retreat therefrom. Served in the Nepaul war, and was severely wounded in an attack on the heights of Har. riapore, Ist March, 1816. Served also in the Mahratta war in 1817 and 18. (8) Lieut, Heriot was very severely wounded at Coorg. PART II. VOL. II, R 122 (PART II, Her Majesty's Regiments. Years? Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGNS. LIRUT. CAPTAIN, Full Half Pay. Pay. 0 0 0 0 0 8 Henry Thomas Butler p 1 Nov. 33 p 18 Mar. 36 12 0 George Hamilton -P 16 June 30 22 July 36 Joseph Rogers Mag- rah p 7 Aug. 351p 9 Dec. 46 Edward Gream Danielp 2 Oct. 35p 7 Sept. 38 Montague Barbauld P 23 May 34 28 Dec. 38 W. Haviland Fairt. lough...... 'p 12 Aug. 36 29 Dec. 38 o Henry H. Warren...... P 9 Dec. 36 4 Feb. 39 Edmund Pitman p 27 Jan. 37 p 28 Sept. 39 William Snowe... 5 Aug. 36 27 Aug. 38 Daniel M.Coy 25 May 38 p 15 Nov. 39 George King... p 19 Oct. 38 P 7 Feb. 40 Chas. Augustus Da- niel...... p 18 Jan. 39p 10 Apr. 40 5 o J. K. Wedderburn...... P 7 July 36 10 Apr. 40 John George Schaw...p 14 June 39 P 15 Dec. 40 0 John Frend... P7 Sept. 38 20 Feb. 41 ENSIGNS. John Robert Wilton... 29 Dec. 38 Timothy Crowe...... 1 June 38 2 0 Tho. Oldham G. Ro- gers........ p 28 Sept. 39 2 0 Henry John White Egan...... 29 Nov. 39 John Maguire... p 7 Feb. 40 Fred. Sikes Daubeney 20 Nov. 40 1 James Campbell 20 Nov. 40 James Richard Duelll 21 May 41 20 Puymaster.-P Cyrus Daniell, (9) 14 March, 22 ; 2nd Lieut. p 8 Nov, 21. Adjutant.-Joseph Rogers Magrath, (Lieut.) 12 Sept. 37. Quarter Master.-James Wm. Grigg, 22 June, 39. 27 Surgeon.-- Archibald Shanks. (10) M. D. 20 Mar. 25; Asst.-S. 17. Mar. 14; Hosp.-A. 9 Nov. 13. 16 Assist.-Surg.–J. Hartley Sinclair, M. D. 21 Dec. 26 ; Hosp.- Assisl. 14 Apr. 26. 2 John Stewart Smith, M, D. 22 Nov. 39. 1 Thomas Graham 'Traquair, M. D. 11 June, 41. Facings. Green.--Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. (9) Paymaster Daniell's services.- Part of the campaign in Spain under Sir John Moore Siege of Flushing. Peninsula, from July, 1813, to Peb. 1814, including the battle of the 31st Aug, in the Pyreners ; passage of the Birlassoa ; battle of Nivelle, anil operations in front of St. Jean de Luz; and battles of the Nive 9th, 10th, and the 131h Dec. 1813. (10) Dr. Shanks served the campaign of 1814 in Holland, including the attacks on Mer. xem, and bombardment of Antwerp. Major Warren, Captains Maclean and Daubeney, Lieutenants Heriot, De Havil- land, Edw. Warren, and Brooks (slightly wounded) were present at the attack and capture of Coorg, in the East Indies, in April 1834. ...... 0 0 il : VOL. 11.] 123 Serving in India and China. 57tu (The West MIDDLESEX) Regt. or Foor. [Madras. • ALBUHERA-VICTORIA'-PYRENEES'- NIVELLE'- NIVE- • PENINSULA,'. Years' Service. Colonel. 46 PW Right Hon. Sir Fred. Adam. (1) G. C. B. & G. C. M. G. Ens. 4 Nov. 1795 ; Lieut. 2 Feb. 96 ; Capt. 30 Aug. 99 ; Major, Fall Half 9 July, 1803 ; Lieut.-Col. 28 Aug. 01; Col. 20 Feb. 12 ; Major Pay. Pay. Gen. 4 June, 14 ; Lieut - Gen. 22 July, 30; Col. 54th Regt. 4 Dec. 35. 41 67 Lieut.- Colonels.—P James Allan, (2) C. B. Ens. p 1 Jan. 95 ; Lieut. p 18 Mar. 95; Capt. p 10 Sept. 99; Major, p.20 July 09; Bievel. Lieut.-Col. 4 June, 14; Regul.- Lieut. Col. 29 June 26 ; Col. 10 Jan. 37. 0 George E. Jones, (3) K. H. Ens. 16 June, 06; Lieut. 16 April, 07 ; Cupt. p 8 Oct. 12; Brevet- Major, 22 July, 30; Reytl.- Major, D 4 Dec, 32 ; Lieut.- Col. p 8 Nov. 33. 43 Mojors.-P Robert Hunt, (4) Ens. p 25 Jan. 98 ; Lieut. 6 Nov. 99 ; Capt. 11 May, 09; Brev.-Major, 22 July, 30; Regtl.-Ma- jor. 28 Sept. 30. 31 lmo. P Philip Aubin. (5) Ens. p 14 Feb. Lieut. 29 April, 13; Capt.. 22 June, 26 ; Major, p 12 April, 31. CAPTAINS. LIKUT. CAPTAIN. 36 ENSIGN. ... 33 64 P Harvey Welman(7)* p 5 Aug. 02 18 Feb, 04 2 Nov, 09 26 James Brown.... p 15 June 15 5. Oct. 20 28 Sept. 30 17 Thomas Shad forth.... 8 Apr. 25 p 10 Oct. 26p 12 Apr. 31 16 0 Clark Maries Caldwell 12 Jan. 26 p 27 Apr. 27 P 25 Jan. 3E 17 William John Saun- ders........ 9 Apr. 25p 12 Feb. 30 p 12 Apr. 33. 24 2} Thomas Bainbridge 24 May 15p 3 Apr. 23 1 Aug. 35 29 0 P Mars Morphett (8) 1 Oct. 12 29 June 15 29 Jan. 36 21 8 P John Ovens :9) 2 July 12 5 July 14 9 Sept. 37 • Brevel-Major 22 July 30. (1) Sir Frederick Adam served in Holland, and was present in the actions of the 27th Aug. 19th September, and 2nd October, 1799 ; took part in the actions of the 8th, 13th, and 21st March, 1807, in Egypt. Sir Frederick was severely wounded near Alicant, 12th April, 1813 ; at the pass of Ordall he received two wounds, one of which broke his left arm, and another which 'shattered his left hand ; and he was also severely wounded at Wao terloo. (2) Co!. Allen was present at the capture of the Cape of Good Hope in 1795, and subse- quently in 1806, including the battle of Bluebery. Served the whole of the Mysore cam- paign of 1799, including the baltle of Mallavelty; siege and storm of Seringapatam, for which he has received a medal. Engaged in the pursuit and dispersion of the Rebel Dundeah, and all his forces; the reduction and occupation of Tranquebar, and the whole of the southern Polygar war in 1810. Served in the Peninsula from 1810 to the end of the War. Medal for Toulouse. (3) Col. Jones served with the expedition to South America in 1807 ; at the capture of the Isle of France in 1810. Served also in Ava, and commanded the 89th regiment in the general action and attack of the enemy's intrenched lines before Rangoon, 7th Dec. 1824. (4) Major Hunt's services : Expedition to Hanover in 1805, and to Madeira in 1808, Campaign and battle of Corunna. Peninsula, from Feb. 1812 to the end of the war, and subsequently in the American war. (5) Major Aubin gerved in the Peningula, from Nov. 1811 to the end of the war, includ. ing the battles of Vittoria, the Pyrenees, 25th, 28th, 30th, and 4lst July; Nivelle, Nive, 61, lith and 13th Dee. 1813, besides many other actious and skirmishes. Severely wound- ed through the left side, in action at Couchez, 18 March, 1814. Served subsequently in the American war. (7) Major Welman served at the battles of Roleia, Vimiera, and Corunna. With the expedition to Walcheren in 1809; and subsequently in the Peninsula, including the siege of Tarragona in 181 , and San Sebastian in Sept. 1813. (8) Captain Morphett served the campaign of 1812 in the Peninsula, and received two slight and one severe wound at Salamanca. Present at the capture of Fort Jey tuch, East Indies, May 1815. (9) Captain Ovens served in the Peninsula, from November 1812 to the end of the war, including the battles of Vittoria, Pampeluna (wounded), Nivelle, Orthes and Toulouse. Served subsequently in the American war, iucluding the action at Plattsburgh, 124 (PART II. Her Majesty's Regiments 57TH (Tae West MIDDLESEX) REGT. OF Foot.-Cont. 20 0 ... . 0 ... Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN LIEUT. CAPTAIN Full, Half Pay. Pay. 12 0 Henry Gahan...... p 13 June 30p 15 June 32 p 6 Mar. 40 10 P Williain Bate (13) 2 Apr. 12 14 June 13 25 June 41 18 Henry Hill 31 July 23 3 Aug. 26 17 6 George Edwards P | Apr. 19 25 Oct. 27 15 0 Leonard Smith (10) 10 Aug. 26 22 Nov. 27 15 11 Wm. Justin MacCar- thy 15 June 15 30 Sept. 30 13 William Tranter p 11 Dec. 28 p 12 Apr. 31 18 5 Thos. Fred. Richardson 25 Dec. 17 26 Apr. 28 11 A. T. Allan 29 Sept. 30 p 28 Dec. 32 10 Fred. Hall Jackson p 10 Feb. 32 p 13 June 34 10 John Mockler 25 May 32p 12 Sept. 34 11 0 Henry Montagu Smyth 7 June 31 p 20 Mar. 35 11 0 William Jones . p 13 Aug. 30 27 Oct. 36 7 0 Langford Frost 12 Aug. 34 9 Sept. 37 7 0 Edward A. Thos. Lynch p 20 Mar. 35 6 May 38 7 0 Edward Stanley 8 May 35 10 June 38 Geo. Henry Hunt P8 Jan. 36 p 9 Nov. 38 John M'Namee 20 Jan. 37 25 Oct. 39 John Ahmuty 17 Nov. 37P 6 Mar. 40 0 Fred. C. W. Fitzpa- trick 20 Oct. 37 27 Apr. 40 4 0 Warren Ahmuty p 16 Feb. 38 25 Aug. 40 3 0 Henry Braddel Croker p 25 Jan. 39 p 15 Dec. 40 0 Loftus Cassidy 9 Nov. 38 18 June 41 7 0 Gilliam Macklain Ross 8 May 35 9 Aug. 39 ENSIONS. 3 0 David Edw.Armstrong 25 Dec. 38 2 0 Lacb. Nicoll McLach- lan 25 Oct. 39 William Inglis 7 Feb. 40 Robert Hunt 4 Sept. 40 Rob. Wm. S. Raper Hunton P 30 Oct. 40 o James Morphett 15 Dec. 40 1 0 Justin Edw. D. Mac- Carthy 16 Dec. 40 1 0 John Henry Chads 9 Jan. 41 31 0 Paymaster. -w Cuthbert Barlow, (11) 3 Jan. 28 ; Ens. 7 Jan. 10; Lt. 13 Jan. 14. 18 0 Adjutant.— Henry Hill. (Lieut.) 3 Aug. 26. 7 0 Quarter-Masler.-James E. Langford, 21 Nov. 34. 26 0 Sug:- Alex. Braithwaite Morgan, 22 Nov. 39 ; A. S. 27 Oct. 25 Hosp-Asst. 21 Dec. 15. 7 0 Assist. Surgeons.- Robert Henry Neville, 26 July 38. 3 0 George Robert Fraser, M, D., 27 July, 38. James Jackson, 11 June, 41. Facings, Yellow.--Agent, Mr. John Lawrie. (13) Lieut. Bate served in the Peninsula, and was present at the taking of Tarragona; in Aug. 1813. (10) Lieut, L. Smith served in the Burmese war, ii) Pay master Barlow served in the Peninsula from Aug. 1810 to April. 1812. Prosent at the battle of Jubblepore in the East Indies, 19th Dec. 1817. VOL. 11.) 125 Serving in India and China. 62ND (THE WILTSHIRE) REGT. OF Foot. ‘PENINSULA.' [Fort William. 24 Years' Service Colonel. 5+ P Sir Archibald Campbell, (1) Bart. G. C. B. Ens. 28 Dec. 1787 ; Lieut. 26 April, 91 ; Capt. 17 May 99 ; Major, 14 Sept 04 ; Fall Half. Lieut.-Col. 16 Feb. 09 ; Col. 4 June 14; Major-Gen. 27 May, Pay. Pay. 25; Lieut. Gen. 28 June, 38; Col. 62nd Regt. 17 Feb. 40. Lieut.. olonels. 4 W Thomas Reed, Cornet, 26 Aug. 13; Lieut. p 2 May, 15; Capt. p 19 Feb, 24 ; Major, p 15 June, 26; Lieut,- Col. p 11 Aug. 29. 18 Hon. George Upton, Ens. p. 24 April, 23 ; Lieut, p 29 Oct. 25; Capt. p 12 Dec. 26 ; Mujor, p 16 June, 37; Lieut.-Col. p 16 April, 41. Majors 36 0 John Kitson, Ens. 25 April, 06 ; Lieut 15 Jan. 07 ; Capt. 3 Oct. 11; Brevet-Major, 22 July, 30: Regimental-Mujor, 28 Feb. 40, Wm. T. Shortt, Ens. 25 March; Lieut. p 30 Dec. 86; Cupt. P 17 0 26 Feb. 29 ; Major, 16 April, 41. CAPTAINS. LIEUT. ENSIGN. CAPTAIN. ... 29 P Henry Astier (4).. 26 Nov. 12 24 Jan. 25 20 May 36 16 George Herbert Clarke'p 8 Apr. 26 p7 June 27 p 4 Sept. 35 13 William Ambrose Pen- der p 25 June 29 3 Mar. 33 p 12 Jan. 38 28 Colin Buchanan 12 Nov. 12 7 Apr. 14 15 Jan, 38 11 Wm. Matbias 'p 8 Feb. 31 p 29 Mar. 33 p 16 Mar. 38 23 10 Thos. Donaldson Price (5) P 8 Dec. 08 30 Apr. 12 28 Aug. 38 10 17} P John Geo. Raw- storne (6) p 22 July 13 18 Aug. 14 10 Oct. 38 25 24 James Sweeny, P 9 Sept. 13 9 Apr. 25 15 Feb. 39 12 0 Samuel Wood Gravesp 5 Nov. 29 3 Aug. 33 18 July 40 10 George Edward 01- pherts .P 20 Jan. 32 12 Oct. 33 p 16 Apr. 41 LIEUTENANTS. 11 Henry Jackson, s .P 5 Apr. 31'p 20 Sept. 33 10 George Evatt 30 Dec. 31 21 Sept. 30 15 John Hen. Tho. Hut- chins (7) 8 Nov. 26 8 Apr. 34 11 0 George Augustus Hat- ton p 2 Nov. 30 p 13 Nov. 32 0 Henry Wells р 8 Mar. 33 p 11 July 34 Alexander Macleod p 10 Mar. 33 p 13 Mar. 35 8 Robert Shearman p 20 Sept. 33 29 Aug. 35 8 Frederick Edw. Scobell p 20 June 34 p 11 Mar. 36 8 Griffin Nicholas 8 Apr. 34 26 May 36 7 Charles Henry Gason . p 10 Oct. 34 10 Mar. 37 7 Thomas Knox Scott p 13 Mar. 35 p 16 June 37 6 Augustus Harris P 4 Mar. 36 p 12 Jan. 38 6 0 George Mackay p 25 Mar. 36 p 23 Mar. 38 (1) Sir Archibald Campbell has performed great and distinguished service, both in the early and late wars in the East Indies, and Burmah. He has received a cross and one clasp for Albuhera, Vittoria, Pyrenees, Nivelle, and Nive. (4) Capt. Astier served in the Peninsula from 1812 to the end of the war, including the battles of Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse. (5) Captain Price served in the American war, including the actions of Fort George, Stoney Creek, Lundy's Lane, Niagara, Chippewa : storming of Snake Hill, and action of Fort Bris. Slightly wounded in the shoulder in a sortie made by the enemy in front of Fort Erie. (6) Captain Rawstorne served in the Peninsula, from August 1813 to the end of the war, and was present at the battle of Orthes. (7) Lieutenant Hutchins served in the Burmeec war as volunteer with the 47th regi. ment. ... 126 (PART 11 Her Majesty's Regiments. 62xD (THE WILTSHIRE) REGT. OF Foor.-- Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTS. ENSIGNS. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay, NN 5 0 John F. Egar p 16 June 37 p 14 Sept. 38 6 Arth. Maynard Her. bert p 13 Nov, 35 14 Dec. 38 0 William M'Nair 2 Dec. 36 15 Dec. 38 George Sims 10 Mar. 37 16 Dec. 38 Charles Young p 28 Nov. 37 p 22 Nov. 39 0 Lennard Barrett Tyler p 23 Mar. 38 18 July 401 John Dane p 11 May 38 28 July 40 0 Robert Gubbins (8) p 14 Sept. 38 2 Sept. 40 0 Fred. Thorntou Raikes. 1 Apr. 36 15 Dec. 40 0 George E. Hillier 14 Dec. 38 p 16 Apr. 41 EN SIGNS. 0 Wm. F. Dickson 25 Jan. 39 2 0 Henry Meade Hamil ton P2 Aug. 39 John Burton Froster... p 22 Nov. 39 Keating Fdm. Hillierp 8 May 40 Charles Lambert 20 Nov. 40 H. S. M. D. Fulon 8 Jan. 41 Robert Douglas 2 Apr. 41 1 Joseph George Wilkin- son 1 June 14 24 Paymaster.-C. H. J. Lane, 24 Jan. 29 ; Ens. 26 Mar. 18 ; Lieut. p 27 May, 24. Adjutant.-George Sims, (Lieut.) 31 Oct. 38. Quarter-Master.-P Wm. Tuy, (9) 16 Aug. 36 ; Ens. 2 May, 34; Lieut. 27 May, 36. 35 0 Surgeon.-Backshall Lana Sandham, M. D., 28 July, 20 ; Assist. Surgeon, 12 Nov. 07 ; Hosp.- Assist. 22 Sept. 06. 1 Assistant-Surgeons. - Richard Geo. Davys Banoo, 30 Oct. 40. 1 Stanford M'Vittie Lloyd, 5 Marcb, 41. 1 Frederick Henry Loinsworth, 11 June, 41. Facings, Buff. ----Agent, Mr. John Lawrie. (8) Lieutenant Gubbins served with considerable distinction during two years in the Anglo-Spanish Legion, and was engaged in the actions of the 5th May, 6th June, 11th July, and 1st October, 1836 ; 10th, 15th, and 16th March, and 17th May 1837. He has received two Medals. (9) Lieutenant Guy (Quarter-Master) served in the Peninsula from September 1813 to the conclusion of the war, and was present at the battle of the Nive, and action at the Mayor's House. 0 0 0 VOL. II.] Serving in India and China. 127 63RD (The West SUFFOLK) REGIMENT OF Foot. [Maulmain. • EGMONT-OF-ZEE'-MARTINIQUE'_ GUADALOUPE.' Years' Service Colonel. 61 Wm. Dyott, (1) Ens. 14 Mar. 1781 ; Lieut. 9 May, 82 ; Capt. 25 April, 93, Major, 19 May, 94; Lieut. Col. 18 Sept. 94 ; Coli Full Half Jan. 1800 ; Mojor-Gen. 25 April, 08; LieutGen. 4 June, 13 ; Pay | Pay Gen. 22 July, 30; Col 63rd, 7 April. 25. Lieut.- Colonels.-P w Joseph Logan, (2) Ens. 20 Dec. 19; 41 1 Lieut. 8 Aug. 01 ; Capti 2 Feb. 07 : Brevet-Major, 18 June, 15 ; Regtl.- Major, 27 July, 26 ; Lieut.-Col. p 17 Dec. 29. 39 o James W. Fairtlough, (3) Ens. p 20 Aug. 02 ; Lieut. p 24 May,04; Capt. p 14 Mar. 05 ; Brevet- Major, 12 Aug. 19; Regll.. Major. p 26 May, 25; Lieut.- Col. 17 Sept. 33 37 O Majors – Pery Baylee, (4) Ens. 25 April, 05: Lieut, p 8 Aug.05; Capt. 5 Nov, 12 ; Brevet-Major, 22 July, 30; Regtl.- Major, 17 Sept. 33. 15 0 Artbur Cunliffe Pole, Ens. p 7 Nov. 26; Lieut. 5 June, 30 ; Capt. p 18 Oct. 33 ; Major, p 1 Dec. 37. CAPTAINS. CAPTAIN. ENSIGN LIEUT. 31 ... 2 P Fre. Chid Irwin, (5) K. H.,s* .. 25 Mar. 08 17 Aug. 09 27 Mar. 27 32 O PW Park Per. Ne- ville (6) 29 Mar. 10 17 July 11 27 Nov, 35 21 9 PW Anth. G. Sed- ley (7) 1 Aug. 11 16 July 12 22 May 35 20 6 Wm. Marcus Carew ... 4 Oct. 15 16 Nov, 26 22 Aug. 37 25 P Henry Croly (8) 27 Apr. 09 10 June 13 21 Apr. 37 14 O John Hodson Fearon 10 Oct. 27 4 Feb. 32 p 3 Nov. 37 17 0 George Green (9) 7 Apr. 25 29 June 27 p 10 Nov. 37 12 0 Exham S. T. Swyny... P 1 Oct. 29 p 17 Oct. 33 P 8 Aug. 38 21 134 John Foulston Feb. 07 29 Sept. 08 31 Dec. 39 12 0 George Brookes Pratt 31 Dec. 29 p 19 July 331 2 Apr. 41 • Brevet-Major 28 June 36. (1) Gen, Dyott served in the West Indies in 1796 ; in Egypt 1801 ; and at Walcheren. i Col. Logan served with the expedition to Hanover in 1805; to Copenhagen in 1807; the Corunna campaign, and subsequently in the Peninsula, from 1812 to the end of the War. Wounded at Waterloo whilst in command of the 2d battalion Rifle Brigade. (3) Col. Fairlough servell at the bombardment of Ter Vere, and siege and capture of Flushing in 1809 Also at the capture of Guadaloupe in 1815. (1) Major Baylee served at the capture of Martinique in 1809 and Guadaloupe in 1810. (5) Major Irwin served in the Peninsula, from April 1809, to Feb. 1814, including the capture of Oorto; battles of Talavera and Fuentes d'Onor; siege of Badajoz; siege and sturm of Ciud. Rodr 20 ; sie ge of Ba lajoz, and capture of the castle by escalade, 7th April, 1812 ; battle of Salamanca; capture of Madrid and Retira ; battles of Vittoria and the Pyrenees; besides various affairs and retreat of the urmy. Served also the Kandyan campaigns of 1817 and 18 in Ceyion. (6) Cap: Neville served in the Peninsula, from July 1810, to May 1813, including the siege of Cadiz ; battle of Puentes d'Onor, 3rd and 5th May ; sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz (severely wounded in the head and leg :) battle of Salamanca, and siege of Burgos, where he was severely wounded through he left shoulder in the storm of the first line of the castle, 4th Oct 312. Served the campaign of 1811 in Holland, including the bombardment of Antwerp, and assault on Bergen-op-Zoom. Presentat Waterloo. Served also in the Derean war, including the captuie of Asseerghur. Attached to the Nizam's troops at the capture of a predatory force in the Deccan, 1 lth Dec. 1820. 71 Captain Sedley served in the Peninsula from March 1812 10 Dec. 1813, including the taking of the forts and the affair of the Guarena, battle of Salamanca, actions at Osma, Sabuganna de Morrilla (severely wounded through the lungs,) and Pyrenees 31st Aug. Wounded on the 18th June at Waterloo. Served also in the Burmese war, during the latter part of which he was detached with the command of two companies to keep open the communication on the Irawady between Rangoon, and the army under Sir Archibald Campbell (8) Captain Croly served at the siege of Plushing in 1809; battery firing in the Straits of Messina in 1811; in the Peninsula, from June, 1812, to the end of the war, including the battle of Castalla ; siege of Tarragona ; ditto, and investment; retreat froin Villa Franca, and investment of Barcelona. Served subsequently in the American war. (9) Captain Green served in the Burmese war. 128 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 63RD (The West SUFFOLK) Regt. OF Foot. -Contd. man... er ocvu O O O O OOO ... ...... 0 0 Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full Half Pay. Pay. 19 0 Chas. D. C. O'Brien...! 26 Mar. 23 24 Aug. 25 191 John Spier 15 Nov. 12 10 Feb. 14 13 Wm. Jas. Darling.. 5 Feb, 29 19 Sept. 33 10 16 Cha. Higginbotham...'p 29 June 15 20 Sept. 33 13 12 Humphrey W. Coult- 1 Nov. 16 20 Sept. 33 10 0 Hon. Jos. Swyny, r... p 2 Dec. 311p 18 Oct. 33 0 Aug. Fred. Codd... p 21 Dec. 32 p 21 Dec. 34 Thomas Harries p 19 July 3310 2 May 34 Hen. R. Seymour 20 Sept. 33 p 20 Feb. 35 John Thorp p 27 Sept. 33 p 5 June 35 Rob. Ladbroke Day p 18 Oct. 33 p 7 Aug. 35 Fra. Mostyn Owen р 1 Nov. 33 p 6 Nov. 35 8 Patrick Lindesay p 21 Feb. 34 p 5 Feb. 36 7 Vesey Berdmore 9 Jan. 35 22 Aug. 36 7 Gust. Nicolls Harrison р 5 June 35 p 1 Dec. 37 18 17 John Fowle 19 Dec. 05 p 2 Apr. 07 6 0 James B. Leathan......'p 5 Feb. 36 9 Jan. 39 1 Charles Edward Fairt. lough...... P 12 May 37 p 31 Dec. 39 15 Francis Rowland Nash p 1 Mar. 27 26 Nov. 29 4 0 James Considine 26 July 37 p 31 May 39| 5 0 Wm. James Hutchins 2 Dec. 36 1 Dec. 40 Wm. Fred. Carter P 1 Dec. 37 2 Apr. 41 O Simon Fitzherbert Jac- p 25 Jan. 39P 2 Apr. 41 ENSIGNS. 0 Henry Lees... p 27 Dec. 37 0 3. F. C. Annesley..... P 6 July 38 John Hardie p 29 Mar. 39 0 Robert Fulton Came- ron... 31 Dec. 39 1 0 W. G. Langrish Crow. ther 20 Oct. 40 0 Fra. Charles Annesley p 15 Dec. 40 1 1 m. Frederick Lowrie 2 Apr. 41 1 Tho. Brisbane Master- son...... 16 Apr. 41 17 0 Paymaster.-Richard Lane, 29 Sept. 37 ; Ens. p 33 June, 25; Lieut. 2.5 Oct. 27 ; Cupl. p 16 Mar. 32. 13 0 Adjutant.-W. J. Darling. (Leiul.) Aug. 38. 1 0 Quarter-Muster.- Edward Joyce, 9 Oct. 40; Ens. 4 Sept. 40. 25 3 Suryeon.—John W. Watson, M. D. 6 April, 26 ; Assist. Surgeon, 4 Mar. 13 ; Hosp - Assist. 10 Dec. 12. 6 Assistant-Surgeons.-Henry Pillean, 22 Jan. 36. John Samuel Charlton, Mar. 30. Egerton James Pratt, 11 June, 41. Facings, Green.- Agent, Mr. Collyer, Park-place, St. James. son het oo 0 VOL. 11.] 129 Serving in India and China. 9411 REGT. OF Foot. [Cananore. ENSIGN. CAPTAIN. Years' Colonel. Service. P Sir Thomas M'Mahon, Bt. K. C. B. Ens. 2 Feb. 97; Lieut. 24 45 Oct. 99 ; Capt. 8 Oct. 03 ; Major, 6 Nov. 06; Lieut.. Colonels ; May 09 ; Col. 4 June, 14 ; Major-Gen. 27 May, 25; Lieut.-Gen. Full Half 28 June, 38 ; Col. 94th Regt., 28 March, 38. Pay Pay. Lieut.- Cols.-P. George Wm. Paty, (1) C. B. & K. H. Ens. p 2a April, 04 ; Lieut. 7 May, 05 ; Capt. p 28 April 08 ; Major, 8 30 8 June, 14 ; Brevet-Lieut.-Col., 4 Sept. 17 ; Regtl.- Lieut.-Col., p 9 June, 25 ; Colonel, 10 Jan. 37. P Wm. Henry Sewell, C. B., s. Ens., 27 March, 06 ; Lieut. p 29 6} 26 Feb. 07; Capt. p_12 Mar. 12; Brevet-Major, 3 March, 14 Brevet Lieut.-Col., 21 June, 17 ; Regtl. Major, 11 Aug. 29 ; Col., 10 Jan, 37 ; Regtl.-Lt.-Col. 17 Sept. 39. Majors.--Menry Robert Milner, Ens : 27 Feb. 22 ; Lieut. p 3 Dec. 17 31 25 ; Capt, p 12 Dec. 26 ; Major, p 5 July, 33. Geo. Topp Lindsay, 2) Ens. 21 Dec. 08; Lieut. 21 Sept. 09; Capt. 31 2 P 27 Dec. 20; Brevel-Major, 10 Jan. 37 ; Regimental Major, 22 Oct. 39. CAPTAINS. LIEUT. 17 John W. Randolph 25 Jan. 25p 17 Nov. 25p 9 Dec. 28 18 Thomas Fred. Hart P 2 Jan. 23 P 8 Apr. 26 p 6 Sept. 31 17 Corbett Cotton... 9 Apr. 25 p 29 Mar, 27p 4 May 32 15 Wm. D. Davenport p 17 Oct. 26 P 8 Oct. 29 p 22 July 36 24 64 Henry Nichells.... 25 July 11 p 15 Sept. 14 9 Feb. 38 18 William Bell...... 27 Mar. 24 23 Mar. 26 p 1 Dec. 37 13 Robert Aldworth... p 15 Jan. 29 p 5 Apr. 33 P8 June 38 11 0 D. Fitz Gerald Long- worth...... P 3 May 31 p 27 Nov. 35 p 27 Sept. 30 10 0 William Carden Seton p 2 Mar. 32 P 22 July 36 P 22 May. 40 25 0 John Stoddard (3)...... 3 Jan. 17 7 Apr. 25 3 Nov. 40 LIEUTENANTS. 15 1 Richard Lewis .... p 28 July 25 30 Oct. 28 9 0 Francis Wm. Bowles... p 14 Sept. 32'p 10 June 36 7 0 George Maunsell p 11 July 34 p 8 Dec. 37 11 0 Edw. Hen. Moore Kel- ly..... p 10 Sept. 3018 31 July 35 7 Tho. Fownes Seals P 8 May 35 p 27 Apr. 38 7 Hen. Geo. Buller P 26 June 35 p 8 June 38 William Fisher......... 29 Jan. 36p 9 June 38 Thomas Jones... p 20 Feb. 35 23 May 37 Wm. H. Kirby 14 Oct. 36 p 28 Dec. 38 G. A. Kooli D'Arcy, s.p 21 Apr. 37 26 Sept. 39 Wm. Henry Dore...... P 8 Dec. 37 p 27 Sept. 39 19 Thomas Burke 8 Aug. 22 5 Oct. 26 9 Alexander Crie Meik..p 10 May 33 14 Sept. 35 Edward Smith Mercer.p 6 Mar. 35 p 11 June 36 Virginius Murray p 22 May, 35 p 4 Nov. 36 Albert Frend.... 31 Jan. 34 25 Aug. 37 Adam Campbell......... 19 Apr. 36 19 Feb. 38 0 Heury Clare Cardew... p 8 July 36 p 14 Dec, 381 11 Colonel Paty served with the expedition to Copenhagen in 1807, and in the Peninsula from June, 1811, to the end of the war, including the seige and capture of Badajos; buttle of Salamanca ; retreat from Madrid to "Burgos ; battles of Vittoria, tho Pyrenees, Nivelle, and Nive 9th to 13th December, besides various minor affairs. (2) Major Lindsay served at the capture of the Isle of France in 1810, (3) Captain Stoddard serred in the Maharatta campaign of 1818 ; also in the Burmese war, including the actions of Maharalce and Arracan. PART II. VOL 11. 0 0 0 escorvoeren voor 0 0 S 130 (PART 11. Her Majesty's Regiments. 94TH REGT. OF Foot.-Contd. Years' Service. LIEUTENANTS. ENSIGN. LIEUT. CAPTAIN. Full| Half Pay. Pas 4 16 3 3 3 3 2 James Stewart Men- zies.......... p 10 Feb. 38 24 Oct. 39 Robert Dillon p 8 June 38 р 29 Nov. 39 Jas. Twisleton Bayly.. 16 Aug. 25 29 July 28 George Dorebill... p 20 Nov. 38 p 25 Sept. 40 ENSIGNS. Gilbert Mahon P 9 Nov. 38 Septimus Lyster p 28 Dec. 38 Fred. Estwick... p 22 Feb. 39 Thomas Henry Ashton p 27 Sept. 39 Alexander Maclean 15 Mar. 39 Fred. XimenesGwynne p 15 Nov. 39 0 Henry John Wahib... p 22 May 40 Thomas Crawford Poole...... p 15 Dec. 40 0 Tho. Waite, Qr. M. 17 Aug. 31...... 5 Jan. 41 of Payrauster.-Wm. Bain M'Alpin, 22 Feb. 39; Ens. 6 Feb. 14; Lieut, 25 June, 24 ; Capt. 3 Aug. 38. Adjutant.--Tbomas Waite, (Ens.) 5 Jan. 41. Quarter-Master.-George Crozier, 5 Jan. 41. Surgeon.-P William Thompson, M. D. 19 Jan. 38; Assist. Surge- on, 18 Oct. 10, Assist. Surgeon.—Jas. Guy Piers Moore, 3 March, 37. William Turnbull, M. D., 14 Sept. 38. Edward Booth, 11 June, 41 Facings, Green, -Agent, Messrs. Cox & Co. 3 27 3 31 3 1 VOL. 11.) 131 Pay and Allowances of Staff Officers. # House Rent admissible only when in recenficers of Arliiki ry , Engineers and Infantry , when actually performing Regimental Duty Officers of inferi- TABLE of Regimental Pay and Allowances in Sonaut Rupees ; the same for any Month. TOTAL CF EACH FOR ANY MONTH IN ALL SITUATIONS. GRATUITY. HOLSE RENT. Hotsel ALLOWANCE provided 0 37 8 0 BATTA. TENTAGE. Pax. Half Batta, Hall Batta, Full Batta, Full. Half Tento af Tenig Hall Tent- In the field. Half. Fully Hall. House Rent. with Quarter age. SIR: AP SIR SERs AP SIRs AP SIR STR8 A SER SIR St, Rs. A.P. St. Rs. A. PS4. Rs. A. P. St. Rs. A. P. Colonel, 1304 60 0 760 15 0 000 2001 2000 0 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 116 5 o 1265 5 0 Lieutenant Colonel,........... 243 8 0 0 608 12 0 30 1 6 0 150 75 01 100 30 622 14 0 722 14 0 9:37 looy 4 0 Engineers, Major, 182 10 0 0 4.56 9 01:228 4 6 120 60) 0 82 30 417 14 6 550 14 699 3 6 759 3 0 Foot Artillery, Captain, Surgeon, 100036 189 10 0 91 50 75 37 8 50 0 304 13 0 331 130 396 2 433 lo o Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon, 70 0 0 24 121 12 0 60 14 0 50 25 0 30 0 179 14 0 209 14 C 240 12 265 12 Second Lieutenant,.......... 60 0 0 1 91 50 45 10 6 25 0 25 0 172 10 6 167 10 6 188 50 213 5 Colonel,... ........... 597 8 O 0 760 15 0 0 0 0 200 100 0 0 1200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 478 7 Lieutenant Colonel,.. 278 4 0 0 608 12 0304 6 0 150 75 100 120 0 0 0 812 14 0 0 O 0 1157 0 0 Horse Artillery, Major, 232 13 4 0 466 90 228 4 6 130 60 01 80 120 0 0 0 770 14 6 o 0 0 929 6 4 Native Cavalry, Captain, Surgeon. 179 6 4 36 182 10 0 91 5 0 751 50 90 0 0 0 444 13 0 525 8 563 0 Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon, .. 109 & 0 21 121 12 0 60 14 4 50 25 9 30 60 0 0 0 269 14 0 340 4 0 365 4 0 Second Lieutenant, Cornet,...... 97 5 4 12 91 5 0 15 10 6 508 25 0 25 60 0 0 0 227 J0 61 285 lo 310 do Colonel, ............. 304 600 760 15 0 0 0 0 200 100 0 30 0 0 C 0 0 0 11 65 5 0 1265 5 0 Lieutenant Colonel,.............. 213 80 0 608 12 0 304 60 150 75 0 30 622 14 0 722 14 0 9:27 90 loo2 4 0 European Regi- Major,.. 182 10 9 0 456 9 0 328 4 6 121 60 0 30 470 14 550 14 3 699 3° 0 759 30 ments, ..... Captain, Surgeon,.. 121 12 0 36 182 10 0 91 5 0 77 37 286 9 € 336 9 0 377 14 0 415 6 Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon... 60 14 0 21 121 12 0 60 14 0 50 170 12 € 200 12 00 231 lo 0 256 10 0 Ensign, ......... 49 7 5 12 91 5 0 45 10 6 132 157 1 177 12 5 202 12 5 Half Batta, Full Tentage House Kent. 0 760 15 01 Colonel, ................ 00020 0 31 0 0 C 0 0 0 1 265 5 Lieutenant Colonel............... 213 80 0 608 10 304 6 0 154 0 0 100 0 0 797 14 0 0 0 Joo24 0 Major,.. 182 100 0 156 9 0 298 4 6 1:1 0 000 30 0 0 0 6 lo 11 6 0 0 Native Infantry, 759 3 0 Captain, Surgeon, 12 12 0 36 182 10 091 50 00 0 0 0 374 1 0 0 0 0 415 6 0 Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon,.. 60 110 24 121 12 0 60 14 0 0 0 30 01 0 0 9 2:35 12 0 0 0 256 lo 0 Ensin. 49 7 5 2 5 01 45 10 6 5 0 0 182 0 0 202 12 5 • Oificers vi Arty, mu Europe Reits in the jurison of lori Wilant, and at all stations 200 mules uislaut from it in a wirect line, draw half balta, and below Hazarcebaug and Dinapore half tentake only. Colonels draw Full Baita in all Situations. + Oficers of Native Infantry draw Fuli Tenlage in all Situations. The Chief Engineer and Adjutant of Engineers are not allowed Tentage when in Garriyon. of Half Batta and unprovided with & florse Allowance is only granted to Field or rank when in actual cominand of corps of Artillery and Infantry also draw llorse Allowance at the rate of 30 St. Rs. p. m. N.B. lu drawing arrears for broken periods of any month, care inust be taken to calculate them with reference to the actual number of days therein, and the rates above laid down. ........ 301 60 0 0 | 132 ] (PART II. BENGAL ARMY. For a Table of Regimental Pay and Allowances, ride preceding page, and for a Table of Pay and Allowances to Staff Officers, vide page 414, Pari i vol. 1. GENERAL STAFF. 40 His Excellency the Honorable General Sir Jasper Nicolls, K.C.B., Colonel of Her Majesty's 38th regiment of foot, Commander-in-Chief of Her Majesty's and the Honorable Company's forces in India.-On a tour of inspection in the upper provinces. [Appointed 7th December 1839. Staff of the Right Hon'ble the Governor General of India. J. R. Colvin, Esq. civil service.. 4 Mar. 1836 | Private Secretary. Capt. the Hon'ble w.G. Osborne H. M. 26th foot, 4 Mar, 36 Mil. Sec. and Aide-de-Camp. Capt. O.H. St. G. Anson, H. M. 3d foot, 18 Mar. 40 Aide-de-Camp. Capt. W.L. Mackintosh, 430N.1 20 May Aide.de-Camp. Capt. G. N. Oakes, 46th N.I... 25 Jan. 41 Aide-de-Camp. Capt. G. E. Hillier, H. M. 62d foot, 3 Feb. 41 | Aide-de-Camp. Capt. J.A.D. Fergusson 6th L.C 24 Nov. 41 Aide-de-Camp. Surg. J.T. Pearson, med. dept... | 25 Feb. 41 | Surgeon, Staff of the Right Hon’lle the Lieut. Governor N. W. Provinces. Capt. H. Rutherford, artillery... 122 July 1840 i Private Secretary. Capt. F. C. Minchin, 67th N.I. 15 Sept. 41 | Aide-de-Camp. Asst. Sur J. Balfour, med. dept. | 22 July 40 | Surgeon. Ştaff of His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief. Lieut. Col. J. Luard, H.M. 21st fusiliers, 7 Dec. 1839 Military Secretary. Lieut. G.N. Harrison, H.M. 63d foot, 7 Dec. 39 Aide-de. Camp. Capt..w. Lydiard, 11th N.I. ... 20 Oct. 40 Aide-de-Camp. Capt. C. J. Oldfield, 4th N.I. 41 Aide-de-Camp. Lieut. T. R, Crawley, A.M. 15th hussars. 20 Oct, 41 Aide-de-Camp, Capt. C. Graham, 55th N. I. 7 Dec. 30 Persian Interpreter. Asst. Surgeon G. Turner, medi- cal dept. 26 Oct, 41 | Surgeon, 7 Sept. Head quarters. ... MILITARY DEPARTMENT, Lieut Coł. J. Stuart, 32d N. I. ... | 17 June 1839 Sec. to the Govt. of India. Major E. Sanders, engineers, 8 June 41 | Depy. Secy. to the Govt. of India--Rot joined. Major W. M. N. Sturt, 10th N.I. | 28 April 41 Asst.Sec.totheGovt. of India, 25 Sept. 41 | Offg. Depy. Sec. to the Govt, of India. VOL. 11.] 133 Departments and Establishments. ADJUTANT GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Maj. Genl.J.R. Lumley,* 9th N.I. | 28 Nov. 1833 Adjt. Genl. of the Army. Maj. P. Craigie, * 38th N.I. 18 Dec. 37 Depy, Adjt. Genll of the army. Capt. J. Welchman, 10th N.I.... 22 Feb. 38 Ist asst.adjt.genl. of the army 20 Dec. In charge of the Adjt. Genl.'s 41 office at the Presidency. Capt. P. Grant,* 59th N.I. 22 Feb. 38 | 2d asst.adjt.gen). of the army. * Head quarters. Assistant Adjutant General of Division. Capt. D. Thompson, 56th N.I... 3 April 1838 Dinapore-- Doing duty in the Meerut division, Capt. W. P. Milner, 31st N.I.... 13 Oct. 41 Officiating at Dinapore. Capt. G.C. Ponsonby,late 20L.C 14 April 41 Meerut Attached to the British troops serving in Afghanistan, Capt. W. G. Cooper, 71st N.I.... 1 Sept. 41 Benares, Capt. F. W. Anson, 18th N...... 1 Sept. 41 | Sirbind. Deputy Assistant Adjutant General of Divisions. Capt. C. Marshall, 68th N.I. 10 Feb. 1840 | Cawnpore. Capt. F. Rowcroft, Ist N.I. 2 June 41 | Presidency. Capt. J. Butler, 3d N.I. 16 June 41 | Saugor. BRIGADE MAJORS. Brevet Maj, H. Hay, late 2d L.C. 17 June 1825 Rohilcund. Capt. P. LaTouche, 7th N.I. 25 Aug. 26 Rajpootanah field force. Brevet Maj. W. Ramsay, 41stN.I. 18 Sept. 29 Delhi, Capt. C. Cheape, 51st N.I. 25 June 32 Mey war field force. Capt. C. Chester, 23d N.I. 30 Dec. 40 Eastern frontier. Brevet Major W. H. Earle, 39th N. I. 5 May 41 Kurnaul. Capt. J. Macdonald, 61st N.I. 1 Sept. 41 Agra. Capt. R. Hill, 70th N.I. 22 Sept. 41 Oude. Capt. H. J. Guyon, 31st N.I. 24 Nov. 41 Cawnpore. Capt. J. Powell, 28th N.I. 20 Nov. 41 Officiating at Barrackpore. Capt. J. B. D. Gahan, 26th N.I. 1 Dec. 41 Officiating at Ferozepore. Lieut. E. G. Austin, 2d brigade horse artillery, 13 Dec. 41 | Officiating at Meerut. ... TOWN AND FORT MAJOR. Col. E. Barton, 71st N.I. 6 Mar. 1837 | Fort William-Leave, S. C. till 16th June 1842. Lt. Col. G. Warren, 1st Eu. L.I. | 23 June 41 Officiating. FORT ADJUTANTS. Capt. C.H. Marley,invalid estbt. / 21 May 1830 | Buxar. Capt. W. Stes rt, 22d N.I. 6 Jan. Chunar. Capt. J.P. Hickman,invld. estbt. 6 Jan. 32 Allahabad. Lieut. F. S. Macmullen, 1st En. LI, 9 June 41 | Fort William. ..! 134 (PART 11. Bengal Army List. ! QUARTER MASTER GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Quarter Master General of the Army. Lieut. Col. W. Garden, 36th N.I. | 5 Nov. 1841 | Head Quarters. Deputy Quarter Master General of the Army. Major J. Paton, 58th N.I. ... | 5 Nov. 1841 | Afghanistan. Assistant Quarter Master General of the Army. Capt. H. W. Bellew, 56th N.I... | 18 Aug. 1841 | Afghanistan. Deputy Assistants Quarter Muster General of the Army. IsT CLASS. Capt. R. Codrington, 49th N.I. 1 Dec. 1838 On survey duty between Kurnaul and Ferozepore. Capt. R. P. Alcock, 46th N.I. : 18 Aug. 41 Segowlee. 2ND Class. Lieut. A. M, Becher, 61st N.I... 1 Dec. 1838 | Head Quarters. Lieut. A. Sanders, 44th N.I. 18 Aug In charge of the Qr. Mr. Go's office at the Presidency. Cornet W. F. Tytler, 9th L.C. (019.) 29 Nov. 39 Afghanistan. 1 41 ... JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Judge Advocate General. Major R. J. H. Birch, 71th N.I. | 10 Mar. 1841 | Head Quarters. Deputy Judge Advocates General, Captain C. G. Ross, 19th N. I., | 16 Sept. 1830 | Neemuch. Captain W. Macgeorge, 7 1st N.I. 11 Jan. 36 Meerut division. Brev. Maj. W. Mactier, 4th L.C. 6 Mar. 39 Presidency division. 25 Sept. 41 In charge of the Judge Ad- vocate General's office at the Presidency Brev. Maj. H. Moore, 34th N... 25 June 39 Saugor division-With the force on service to the eastward. Capt. H. Cotton, 67th N.I. 24 Oct. 40 Officiating Saugor division. Capt.G.E. Westmacott, 37th N... 16 Dec. 40 Afghanistan. Capt. J. Dyson, 21st N.I. 23 Dec. 40 Dinapore and Bepares divi- sions. Brev. Capt. K. Young, 50th N.I. 2 June 41 Sirhind division. Lieut. R. D. Kay, 2d N.I. 10 Nov. 41 Cawnpore divo.-With his regiment. Capt. J. Macadam, 32d N.I. 29 Oct. 41 Oficiating Cawapore divn. AUDIT DEPARTMENT. Maj. Genl. J. A. P. Macgregor, 28th N. I. 26 Mar. 1830 Military Auditor General. Depy: Mily. Auditor Genl. Capt. J. Roxburgh, 39th N.I... 13 May 40 Ist Asst. Military Auditor General. 18 Feb. 41 Acting Depy. Mily. Auditor 2d Asst. Depy. Mily. Auditor Capt. E. T. Milner, 30th N.I... | 13 May 40 Gpl.-- Leave to N.S. Wales. General. Capt. A. Tucker, 9th L.C. 18 Feb. 41 Acting 1st Asst. Mily. Audi- tor General. Capt. W. Beckett, 9th N.I. 18 Feb. 41 Acting 2d Asst. Mily. Audi- tor General. ... VOL. 11.) 135 Departments and Establishments. PAY DEPARTMENT. Agra. C. Morley, Esq. civil service, ... | 17 Dec. 1834 Accountant General. Capt. B. Bygrave, 5th N.I. 15 Oct. 41 Pay Master-On detached duty. Lieut. Col. R. Home, 20th N.I. 15 Oct. 41 In charge of the daties of Pay Master to the Queen's troops, and the Presidency Pay office. Deputy Pay Masters. Capt. T. F. Blois, 11th N. I. 7 Jan. 1835 Capt. C. Campbell, 420 N.I. 4 Jan. 36 Cawnpore division. Lieut. E. G. J. Champneys, 33d N.I. 9 Oct. 37 Meerut division. Lieut. C. G. Fagan, 8th L.C. ... 7 Sept. 38 Benares divn.-Leare, S. C. Capt. W. S. Menteath, 69th N.I. 24 Nov. 37 Officiating Benares division. Capt. J. Bartleman, 44th N.I. 15 Sept. 41 | Nusseerabad. Puy Masters and Superintendents of Native Pensioners. Capa J. Jervis, 5th N.I. 25 Jan. 1837 | Barrackpore-not joined. Capt. G. H. Edwards, 13th N.I. 29 Dec. 41 Officiating at Barrackpore. Capt. H. Boyd, 15th N.I. 13 Feb. 37 Meerut and Hauper. Capt. H. C. Boileau, 28th N.I. . 27 Mar. 40 Benares, Dinapore and Mon- ghyr. Capt. G. M. Hill, 17th N.I. 24 Nov. 41 Oude and Cawnpore. Capt. D. Simpson, 29th N.I. 13 Sept. 38 Oficiating at Allahabad. SURVEYOR GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. : | 1 Lieut.-Col. G. Everest, arty. 6 Oct. 1830 | Surveyor General of India - upper provinces. Maj. J. Bedford, 20 Eup. Regt. 11 June 32 Deputy Surveyor General of Bengal, and Superinten. dent of revenue surveys. Brev. Capt. J. Bontein, 51st N.I. 9 Oct. 38 Asst. Surveyor Genl.'s office. Grand Trigonometrical Survey. 2 Apr. 1832 | Astronomical assistant. Lieut. T. Renny, engineers, 23 July 32 | First Assistant. Revenue Surveyors. Capt. W. Brown, 69th N.I. 28 Nov, 1822 Capt. R. Wroughton, 69th N.I. | 29 Jan. 24 Assistant Revenue Surveyors. Lieut. S. A. Abbott, 51st N.I.... | 26 Dec. 1836 Lieut. Sir R. C. Shakespare, Kt, artillery, 9 Jan. 37 On detached duty. Lieut. H. V. Stephen, 19th N.I. | 25 Nov. 37 Lieut. W. S. Sherwill, 66th N.I. 27 July 38 Leave to Cape. Lieut. W. Maxwell, artillery 20 Oct. 38 Revenue Surveyors and Deputy Collectors. Lieut. H. E. L. Thuillier, Arty. 2 Jan. 1837 | Cachar. Capt. G. Ellis, artillery 13 Jan. 37 Debroogurh, Assam-Leave, S. C., till 1st March 1843. Lieut. R. Smyth, artillery 21 Nov. 37 Central division, Cuttack. Lieut. R. Mathison, 6th N. J.... 38 | Midnapore and Hidgellee. I.. 16 Apr. 136 (PART IL Bengal Army ARMY COMMISSARIAT DEPARTMENT. ... ... 14 Aug. A gra. Commissary General. Major W. Burlton, 4th L. C. | 12 April 1837 | Presidency. Deputy Commissary General. Lt. Ch. J. D. Parsons, 50th N.I. | 12 Apr. 37 | Ferozepore. Assistunt Commissaries General. 1st CLASS. Brevet Major W. J. Thompson, 12th N. I. 12 April 1837 | Meerut. Capt. C. J. Lewes, 50th N. I. 14 Aug. 37 Nusseerabad. Capt. F. T. Boyd, 65th N. I. 9 Oct. 38 Cabool. 2D CLASS. Capt. H. R. Osborn, 54th N.I.... 14 Aug. 1837 Leave to Cape & V.D. land. Capt. H. Doveton, 4th N.I. 9 Oct. 38 Presidency Capt. A. Watt, 27th N.I. 9 Mar. 40 Meerut. Deputy Assistant Commissaries General. Ist Class. Capt. J. Ramsay, 35th N.I. 12 April 1837 | Eastern expedition. Capt. J. C. Tudor, 46th N.I. 37 Benares. Capt. C. Haldane, 32d N.I. 9 Oct. 38 Capt. R. Woodward, 2d N.I. 9 Mar. 40 Ferozpore. 2ND CLASS. Capt. W. Swatman, 65th N.I. 12 April 1837 | Dacca. Capt. J. Skinner, 61st N.I. 37 Cabool. Capt. T. J. Nutball, 46th N.I. 9 Oct. 38 Cawapore. Lieut. G. Newbolt, 31st N.I. 9 Mar. 40 | Leave to Cape & V.D. land. Sub-Assistant Commissaries General. Capt. G. Thomson, 40th N.I. ... 10 Dec. 1834 Ferozepore. Capt. W. B. Thomson, 67th N.I 13 Mar. 35 Kurnaul. Capt. F. Lloyd, 19th N.I. 29 June 35 | Dinapore. Capt. R. S. Tickell, 720 N.I. 4 Jan. 36 Allahabad. Capt. J. C. Scott, 20th N.1. | Mar. 37 leave to Cape & N.SWales. Capt. G. B. Reddie, 29th N.J.... 17 April 37 Leave to Cape & V.D. land. Lieut. R. S, Simpson, 27th N.I. 6 Sept. 37 | Leave to Cape. Capt. G. Johnston, 46th N.I.... 6 Sept. 37 Proceeding to Cawnpore. Capt. J. D. Kennedy, 25th N.I. 20 Sept. 38 Saugor. Lieut. D. T. Pollock, 74th N.I. 14 Dec. 38 Neemuch. Capt T. H. Besant, 21st N.I.... 9 Mar. 40 Candahar. Officiating Sub-Assistant Commissaries General. Lieut. J. G. W. Curtis, 37th N.I. | 17 Feb. 1841 | Attached to the C. in Ci's camp Capt. G. Nugent, 66th N.I. 17 Feb. 41 Proceeding to Ferozepore. Lieut. C. I. Harrison, 65th N.I. 17 Feb. 41 Dinapore. Capt. J. A. Kirby, 54th N.I. 15 Nov. 41 | Cabool. Temporarily Employed in the Department. Capt. E. R. Mainwariag, 16th N.I. 20 Feb. 1839 Cabool. Capt. A. G. Moorhead, H. M. 26th foot. 1 Nov. 40 | Eastern expedition. 14 Aug. VOL. 11.) 137 Departments and Establishments. WARRANT OFFICERS OF THE ARMY COMMISSARIAT. 23 Feb. 1827 Landour. 16 Sept. 30 Allahabad. 22 May 37 | Europe, S.C., 25th Jan. 1841. Conductors-3. Henry H. Healey, Isham Baggs, Thomas Milner, Sub-Conductors-4. John H. Dwyer (acting as Con. ductor from the 25th Jan.1841) William May, William Parsons, James Foster, Acting Sub-Conductor. Sergeant Thomas Wear, ... 8 Sept. 16 Sept. 31 May 1 July 30 Ordered to Ghazeepore. 30 | Presidency. 30 | Ordered to Cawnpore. 41 Kurnaul. 1 July 41 Arracan. MILITARY BOARD. ... Brigr. W. S. Whish, C. B., comdt. of arty. 21 Dec. 1838 Member-Has Furlough. Lieut. Col. J. Cheape, C. B., Chief Engr. 17 Feb. 41 Member. Major A. Irvine, C.B., engs.... 5 Mar. 35 Member. Lieut. Col. T. M. Taylor, late 2d L. C. 6 Mar. 37 | Member. Major H. DeBude, engineers,... | 23 June 41 | Secretary. Lient. A. Broome, artillery, 24 Feb. 40 | Assistant Secretary. SUPERINTENDENTS OF CANALS. 19 Capt. A. H. E. Boileau, engi- Agent for suspension bridges neers, 24 Dec. 1838 and Supdt. circular and eastern canals, Capt. W. E. Baker, engineers,... 24 July 1837 | Superintendent,Delhi capals. Lieut. R. Strachey, engineers,... 3 June 40 | Assistant. Lieut. F. Pollock, engineers, 21 Oct. 40 | Asst.-Leave, S. C. till 15th May 1842. Capt. P. T. Cautley, artillery,... 8 Apr. 31 | Supdt., Dooab canal. Lieut. J. Spens, engineers, 12 Feb. 39 Asst.–Ou duty at Kurnaul. 2d Lieut. Ř. B. Smith, engrs.... 12 Aug. 40 Assistant. 2d Lieut. A. D. Turnbull, engrs | 18 Mar. 40 | Officiating assistant. Lieut. W. Jones, engineers, 13 Jan. 41 Surveyor and Supdt., Rohil- cund canals. SUPERINTENDENTS OF ROADS. Lieut. W. Abercrombie, engrs. 16 June 1841 | Supdt. of the road from Agra to Bombay. Lieut. S. Pott, engineers, 29 July 40 | Supg. the grand trunk road in the N. W. provinces. Capt. C. B. P. Alcock, edgrs.... 9 Oct. 37 Supdt. Burdwan, and Be. pares road-Leave, P. A., till 20th Jan. 1842. Lient. J. Gilmore, engineers, 6 Oct. 41 | Officiating. Capt. N. Vicary, 2d Eu, regt. 18 Dec. 41 In ex. charge of the Allaha. bad and Goosahaigunge dirn, of the trunk road. PART II. VOL. II. T 138 (PART 11. Bengal Army. STUD DEPARTMENT, ... !!! Central Provinces --Buxar. Major J. Mackenzie, 3d L. C.... | 29 Jan. 1834 Superintendent. Capt. G. M. Sherer, 57th N.I.... 4 Aug. 41 Ist assistant. Capt. C. Wollaston, 8th L. C. ... 4 Aug. 41 | 2d assistant. Lieut. A. Hall, 5th L. C. 24 April 37 Sub-assistant Capt. W. W. Apperley, 4th L. C. 8 Nov. 38 Sub-assistant. Mr. R. B. Parry, 28 Sept 35 | Veterinary-Leave, S. C. Mr. J. Philips, 3d L. C. 24 Dec. 41 Offg. Veterinary Surgeon. North Western provinces—Hauper. Major E. Gwatkin, 13th N.I. ... | 29 Jan. 1834 | Superintendent. Capt. A. C. Spottiswoode, 37th N. I. 24 June 35 Sub-assistant. Lieut. the Hon'ble R.B.P. Byng, 620 N. I. 3 June 40 Officiating sub-assistant. Mr. W. Spencer, medical de- partment, 28 July 41 Assistant Surgeon, 22 Sept. 41 Assistant, Hauper stud. Mr. I. Bicknell, 25 Oct. 39 | Veterinary Surgeon. Hurrianah Establishment-Hissar. Major C. T. Thomas, 15th N.I. 7 April 1841 | Supervisor. 35 Capt. E. J. Dickey, 14th N.I. ... | 29 June Assistant. Mr A. A. McAnally, med. dept. 2 July 32 | Assistant Surgeon. 15 Jan. 35 Assistant. Hissar stud. Mr. F. Rogers.* 19 Aug. 31 | Verterinary Surgeon. Mr. W.McDermott, late 2d L.C. 23 June 41 | Veterinary Surgeon (offici- 1 ating.) • Has permission to go to Europe on P. A. via Bombay. .. 22 Apr. ORDNANCE COMMISSARIAT DEPARTMENT. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. Principal Commissary. Lieut. Col. R. Powney, 27 Nov. 1837 Fort William. Deputy Principal Commissary. Capt. G. H. Dyke, 4 Mar. 40 Fort William. Commissaries-6. Capt. the Hon'ble H. B. Dalzell, 18 Mar. 35 Agra. Capt. F. R. bazely, 26 Oct. 38 Delhi. Capt. W. 0. Young, 4 Mar. 40 | Ajmere. Capt. W. S. Pillans, 40 Cawnpore. Lieut. G. G. Chauner, 17 June 40 Allahabad. Capt. E. K. Ludlow, 5 Aug. 40 | Expense magazine, Dam- Deputy Commissaries-2. Dum. Lieut. J. H. Campbell, 17 June 40 Chunar. Capt. C. S. Reid, 5 Aug. 40 Saugor. WARRANT OFFICERS. Deputy Commissaries-2. Mr. Samuel Chill, 19 May 1818 Permanent, arsenal. Mr. J. Cross, 27 May 24 Penang. Assistant Commissaries-5. Mr. Archibald Cameron, 1 Mar. 24 Arsenal. Mr. Arthur Walker, 27 May 24 Cawnpore. Mr. Peter Carey, 34 Allahabad. Mr. Christopher McDonald 39 | Delhi, 10 Sept. 12 Aug. VOL. II.] 139 Departments and Establishments. 11 Feb. 18 June 39 Chunar. 41 Ajmere. ... Deputy Asst. Commissaries—2. Mr. George McDowell, Mr. Thomas O'Brien, Conductors-10. William Gibson, Edward Evans, Barnaby Murphy, Joseph Hamilton, William Raynor, Charles Phillips, John Smith, 1 Oct. 7 May 9 Aug 9 Jan. 14 Jan. 15 Oct. 27 May ... 19 Cawnpore. 20 Malacca. 22 Arsenal. 23 Permanent, Arsenal. 23 Permanent, Cawnpore, 23 Ajmere. 24 Permanent, expense maga- zine, Dum Dum, 24 Permanent, Agra. 24 Permanent, Delhi. 25 Permanent, Allahabad. 25 Permanent, Arsenal. 30 Arsenal. Edward Treston, Daniel Ross, John Fairweather, John Thompson, Thomas Spencer, William Hayward, William Cox, Luke Keelan, 27 May 27 May 30 Sept. 25 Nov. 21 May 27 June 25 Sept. 1 Jan, 33 Agra. 28 May 26 Sept. 24 Oct. 3 Apr. 29 Nov. George Forrest, Thomas B. Ryley, Joseph Green, Alexander Bethune, Joseph Vyall, Henry Michell, Joseph Wilson, Daniel Kelly, James Hind, John Ives, George Patton, William Deare, Mark Connor, Robert Hunter, William Jones, 30 Nov. 4 Jan. 1 June 10 June 13 June 17 June 5 Nov. 1 Jan, 15 Apr. 30 May 33 Permanent, Arsenal. 34 Arsenal--On duty with the eastern expedition. 34 Ajmere. 36 Delhi.-On duty in Afghan- istan. 36 Chunar. 37 Saugor. 37 Delhi.—In charge of Hansi depôt. 37 Permanent, Arsenal. 38 Saugor. 38 Ajmere. 38 Saugor. 38 Allahabad. 38 Chunar. 38 Singapore. 39 Arsenal. 39 39 Laboratory school, Dam- Dum. 39 Cawnpore.-Doing duty at Ferozepore. 39 Delbi. 39 Delhi. 39 Allahabad. 40 Cawnpore. 40 Cawnpore. 40 Ajmere. 41 | Ajmere. 41 Expense Magazine, Dam- Dum. 41 | Allahabad. Agra. William Cowan, 12 Aug. Alexander McGregor, John Harrison, Robert Tilbury, Patrick Bentley, Mathew Fairlie, William Charde, William Staerck, Sylvester Fox, :::::::: 30 Sept. 27 Nov. 14 Dec. 10 Apr. 8 July 18 Oct. 18 June 4 Sept. ... 18 Nov, 38 Delhi. :: 38 | Agra. James Frizzle, Sub-Conductors-20. Robert Smith, Samuel Tydd, Francis Volkers, David Richmond, George Prince, William Dodd, James Leskie, Jobn Campbell, Famuel Tyler, Martin Labey, John Taylor, 9 Sept. 15 Sept. 5 Nov. I Jan, 15 Apr. 30 May 13 Sept. 30 Sept. 27 Nov. 14 Dec. 30 Dec. 38 Delbi. 39 Saugor. 39 Chunar, 39 Permanent, Arsenal, 39 Arsenal. 39 Arsenal. 39 Cawopore. 39 Arsenal. 39 | Arsenal, ::: 140 (PART II. Bengal Army. Mathew Keane, William Parry, Terrence Shiel, Thomas Whelan, William Clarke, Christopher Antisell, Nicholas Reilly, Thomas Lisbey, James Greene, Acting Sub-Conductor. Sergeant Richard Dwyer, at- tached to the Agra magazine, 10 Apr. 3 July 8 July 18 Oct. 25 Oct. 18 June 4 Sept. 25 Oct. 18 Nov. 40 | Arsenal. 40 | Agra. 40 | Arsenal. 40 Arsenal. 40 Arsenal 41 41 In Afghanistan. 41 41 29 Dec. 41 DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS. ... ... Lower Provinces. Divisions Suptg. engr...Maj. E. Garstin, Engineers 6 Dec. 1837 Ist or Dum- Dum. Lieut. G.H. Fagan, engrs. . 19 Nov. 38 In charge. 2d or Berham- pore ... Lieut. B. W. Goldie, engrs. 27 Feb. 37 Leave to Cape. Lt. W.P. Bignell, 69th N.1.10 Oct. 40 la charge. 4th or Bauleah Mr. J. H. Warner, pension establishment 5 Sept. 17 3d or Dina- Offg. Gar. Engr. and pore Capt. G. T. Greene, engrs. . 10 Mar. 41 Barrack Master, Fort William, & Civil ar. chitect at the Presi. dency. Lieut. H. H. Duncan, engrs. 15 Sept. 41 Officiating 18th or Dacca Lieut. J. N. Sharp, engrs.... 26 Aug. 39 On duty at Allahabad. Lieut. T. S. Horsburgh. [division. 32d N. I. 9 Nov. 40 In charge of the Dacca Ramgarh ... Lt. N. C. MacLeod, engrs. . 3 June 40 On duty, Raepore mail Ct. A. J. Fraser, 56th N. 1. 32 May 41 In charge. [road. Darjeeling Capt. R. Napier, engineers 3 June 39 In charge. Upper Assam Lieut. C. L. Spitta, engrs.... 3 Aug. 40! Lower Assam Mr. J. N. Martin, 3 Aug. 401 Central Provinces. Suptg. engr... Major E. J. Smith, engrs... 6 Dec. 371 5th or Benares Lieut. R. Martin, engrs. 10 Mar. 41 On duty in Arracan. Capt. H. O. Frederick, 67th N. I. 2 Sept. 40 In charge. 6th or Alla [ipore road. habad Capt. C. S. Guthrie, engrs. 26 Aug. 39 Employed on the Mun- Lieut. J. N. Sharp, eogrs.... 26 Aug. 39 In charge. 7th or Cawn- pore Capt. H. Fraser, engineers 10 Apr. 38 13th or Raj - [division. pootanah... Capt. T. S. Burt, engineers 21 Oct. 39 'Offg. Ex. Engr., Agra Capt. C. Douglas, 141h N.I. 23 Oct. 41 In charge. 14th or Saugor Capt. A. Koyvett, 64th N.1. 16 Oct. 37 With his regiment. In charge. Neemuch Lieut. H.H. Duncan, engrs. 25 Sept. 37 Offg. Ex. Eng., Dina- Lieut. H.P. de Teissier, 4th [pore division. troop Ist brig. horse art. . 25 Oct. 411o charge. Jubbulpore ... Lieut. J. Gilmore, engrs. 31 Oct. 39 Offg. Supdt. of the Burdwan and Benares Ct. W.A. Ludlow, 12th N.I. 13 Dec. 39 la charge. [road, VOL. 11.] 141 Departments and Establishments. North Western Provinces. Suptg. engr... Capt. J.A. Crommelin, J10 Mar. 41 Leave, S. C. Capt. F. Abbott, engineers 17 Mar. 41 Officiating. 8th or Bareil- ly Lieut. J. Glasfurd, engrs.... 20 Jan. 41 10th or Agra Maj. W.H. Terraneau, 24th [Nov. 1842. N. 1. 12 Oct. 35 Leave, s. c., till Ist Capt. T. S. Burt, engineers 15 Sept. 41 Officiating. 11thor Meerut Capt. W.H. Graham, engrs. 14 Oct, 40 12th or Kur. naul Capt. R. Napier, engineers 21 Oct. 39 On duty at Darjeeling: Lieut. J. Spens, engineers In charge. Western Sir- hind divn. Conduct. T. Steele, 29 Dec. 41 Asst. executive officer. Loodianah & Ferozepore. Delhi, Capt. B. Y. Reilly, engrs. ... 20 Sept. 391n charge-Leare, S. C., till 10th Novem. ber 1842. Lieut. C. B. Young, engrs. 13 Sept. 41 In charge. Kemaoon, Lieut. J. A. Weller, engrs. 2 Sept. 40 South Eastern Provinces. Suptg. engr... Maj. W.R. Fitzgerald, engrs 23 June 1841) Garrison า engr. and ges, and Barrack Mr., Fort William, Capt. F. Abbott, engrs. 23 June 41 Officiating Suptg. engr. and Civil North Western Proe Architect vinces. at the Pre- sidency. J Capt. G. T. Greene, engrs. 15 Sept. 41 Officiating Mr. Geo. Barnes, 2 Dec. 24) Assistant. Agent for suspensi- on brid. supdt.cir. 38 Capt. A.H.E. Boileau,engrs. 24 Dec. cular and eastern canals....) 17th or Burd- wan, Lieut. J. Anderson, engrs... 14 Oct. 40 Cuttack. Lieut. H. Rigby, engrs. 18 Dec. 39 Supdt. of embark- ments, 24- Lieut. G. H. Fagan, engrs. 19 Nov. 38 Pergun- nahs, ... Midnapore,... Lieut. J. Langhton, engrs... 6 May 40 Hidgeelee, Capt. J. Finnis, 51st N. I .. 24 March 41 Officiating. Culmijole, Mr. G. Denton, Burrisaul, Lieut. J. Trail, engrs. 3 June 40 Arracan, Lieut. R. Martin, engrs. 10 March 41 In charge. Tenasserim division, ... Capt. G. B. Tremenbeere, engrs. 20 Jan. 41 Surveyor, Raepore Lieut.N.C. MacLeod, engrs. mail road 2d Lieut. E. Haines, engrs. 27 Oct. 41 Assistant. ... ... ... 142 [PART 11. Bengal Army. WARRANT OFFICERS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS. ... Conductors-10 Date of Rank. Allen Duncan, 20 May 1825 | 7th or Cawnpore division. Philip Valentine Mines. 20 May 25 West of the Jumpa capals. Thomas Steele, 22 June 27 Assistant executive officer-in charge of public works at Loo- dianah and Ferozepore. William Dawe, 28 March 30 West of the Jumpa canals. James Bourke, 15 July 30 10th or Agra division. John McGowan, 18 Sept. 30 ith or Meerut division. Henry Taafe, 12 Dec. 36 Employed on the trunk road, Walter Synnott, 16 June 40 10th or Agra division- Leare, S. C., till Ist November 1842. Thomas Johnson, 8 Nov. 40 West of the Jumna canals. A. H. Butters, 20 Jan. 41 11th or Meerut division. Sub-Conductors-10 John Symms, 28 March 30 Delhi division. James Aspinall, 22 Dec. 31 8th or Bareilly division. Thomas Ablett, 3 Sept. 32 2nd or Berhampore division. John Todd, 1 Oct. 32 Delhi division. John Wallace. 15 Oct. 33 13th or Rajpootanah division. Christopher Woods, 2 Nov. 35 Employed on the trunk road. Martin Hendry, 12 Dec. 36 Burdwan and Benares road dept. John Piggott, 16 June 40 Dooab canals. Hugh Brady Brew, 10 Jan. 41 Dooab canals. Edward Rooke, 23 July 41 President. Major General J. A. P. Macgregor. 28th N. I., Military Auditor General. Members. Brigadier W. S. Whish, C. B., commandant of artillery-Has Furlough. Colonel W. Vincent, 8th N. I. Lieutenant Colonel Commandant J. Peckett, engineers. Lieutenant Colonel Commandant S. Shaw, artillery. Captain H. A. Boscawen, 5th N. I. 8 April 1841 | Secretary. N. B.-All Colonels of regiments, who may be at the Presidency, are enti- tled to sit at this board. Army Clothing Agents. Major J. H. Simmonds, 55th N. I. 31 Mar. 1841 Ist division, Futtehgurh. Captain T. Sewell, 11th N. I. 14 Mar. 28 | 2d division, Fort William, WARRANT OFFICERS. Attached to Different Departments. Date of Rank and Names. Rank. Remarks. Conductors. Lewis Cordon Alexander Grant Moses Sheels Sub-Conductors. James Hudson William Donahoo 7 Apr, 1826 Gunpowder agency, Ishapore. 1 Oct. 27 Town Major's office, Fort Wm. 17 Dec. 38 Gun carriage agen., Futtebgurb. 25 Nov. 25 Barrackpore park. 6 June Eur., S. C. 13th Nov. 1834--Ex- 33 ceeded 5 year absence from In. VOL. 11.) 143 Staff. GENERAL OFFICERS ON THE STAFF. Major Generals Commanding Divisions. Sir R. Arbuthnot, K.C.B., H.M. Ser.... | 22 July 1830 12 July 1841 Meerut division. W.K.Elphinstone, C.B. H.M. service, 10 Jan. 37 20 Nov, 39 Afghanistan. G, R. Penny, 11th N.1. 28 June 38 24 Dec. 38 | Dipapore division. J. Cock, 51st N. I. 28 June 38 38 Benares division. M. Boyd, 530 N. I. 23 June 38 3 May 39 | Saugor division. J. W. Fast, 25th N. I. 28 June 38 40 Sirhind division. Presidency division. Major Generals Commanding Districts or Stations. 25 Apr. 16 Apr. Sir E. K. Williams, i K.C. B., H. M. 9th foot, 10 Jan. 1837 22 Jan. 1810 | Cawnpore division. Sir J. Thackwell, K. C. B. and K. H. H. M. 3d L. D. 10 Jan. 37 22 Jan. 40 | Cawnpore station. G. W. Walker, H. M. 21st foot, 10 Jan. 37 | 22 Jan. 40 Meerut-tempy. G. Pollock, C.B. Art... | 28 June 38 3i Agra. 10 May Brigadiers. J. Kennedy, C.B. 5th L. C. 18 June 1831 4 Dec. 1838 field Rajpootanah force. 18 June 31 22 Apr. C. W. Hamilton, 27th N. I. E. F. Waters, C. B., 68th N. I. 40 | Maywar field force. 18 June 31 22 Apr. 3 June 40 | | Rohilcuud and Ku- 40 maoon. 31 21 Dec. 38 Dum-Dum-Has fur. W. S. Whish, C. B., artillery, 18 June G. Hunter, C.B., 19th N. I. 18 June J. H. Littler, 36th N. I. 22 Jan. 31 34 9 June 15 Dec. 15 July } Eastern frontier. T. H. Paul, 20th N. I. | 22 Jan. 34 29 July 27 Nov. 41 Delhi. 37 40 Ferozepore—Leave, 40 on P.A., till 30th 40 April 1842. 41 Oude. 41 Barrackpore. F. Walker, 3d N. I. ... | 22 Jan. 34 | 14 July 17 Sept. Commandants of Gurrisons. Maj. Gen. A. Watson, 1st L. C. Lieut. Col. J. Gibbs, invalid estabt. Lieut. Col. C. Poole, invalid estabt. 28 June 1838 | 22 July 1340 | Allahabad. Buxar-Leave, P. A 25 May 21 15 Feb. 36 till 15th March 1812 11 July 23 18 Oct. 39 Cbunar. 144 (PART 1) Bengal Army. ARTILLERY. (3 brigades of horse artillery, each brigade consisting of 1 native and 3 European troops : 5 battalions of European foot artillery of 4 companies each ; and 2 battalions of native foot artillery of 8 companies each.) Commandant, Brigadier W. S. Whish, C. B., appointed 21st Dec. 1838– Has Furlough. Assist. Adjt. General, Brevet Captain E. Buckle, appointed 10th June 1840. Rank and Names. Regu. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... ... ... Colonels--10 Wm. Hopper, 3 bat. 30 May 1824 ng 10 Jan. 37 Furlough. J. A'hmuty, I do. 29 Ang. 21 ng 28 J'ne 38 Furlough. Geo. Swiney, 3 brig. I Dec. 34 ng 28 J'ne 38 Furlough. Geo. Pollock, C.B. i brig. 3 Mar. 3 ng 28 J'ne 38 Commandant of Agras A. Lindsay, C.B. 5 bat. 2 July 3? "28 J'ne 38 Furlough. J. F. Dundas, 2 bat. 18 Jan. 37 ng 28 J'ne 38 Furlough. J. A. Biggs, 6 bat. 27 Apr. 3: ng 28 J'ne 38 Furlough. W.S. Whish, C.B. 2 bat... 25 Apr. 38 18 June 31 Brigr. Comdt. of arty. – Has Furlough. Lieut.-Cols. Comdt. W.H. I. Frith, 4 bat. 6 Dec. 3: 20 Aug 31 Leave, 8. C., to Singa. pore aud China, 21st Nov. 184k. S. Shaw, 7 bat. 25 Mar. 41:1 May 33 Lieutenant Colonels-10 W. Battine, C.B. I bat. 1 Dec. 3: ): 18 June 311 R. Powney, 7 bat. 3 Mar. 3. ... Principal comy. of ord. Dance. G. E. Gowan, 2 brig. 2 July 3 J. Tennant, 6 bat. 18 Jan. 3 I. Pereira, 3 bat. 27 Jan. : C. Graham, C.B. I brig.... 27 Apr. 3 Comg.Sirh. div. of arty G. Everest, 4 bat. 7 Mar. 3: Surveyor Gnl. of India, and supdt., great tri. gonometrical survey. E. Biddulph, 3 brig. 6 Dec. 3! P. L. Pew, 5 bat. 31 Dec. 3:23 July 39 C. H. Bell, 2 bat. 25 Mar. 40 Leave, P. A., Ist Mar. 1842. Majors-10 J. J. Farrington, 2 brig.... 18 Jan. 3:10 Jan. 37 G. Brooke, i brig. 27 Jan. 3; 10 Jan. 37 T. Lumsden, C. B. 5 bat. 5 April 37 10 Jan. 37 Gun carriage agent, Futtygurh. T. Timbrell, C.B. 2 bat.... 7 Mar. 38 10 Jan. 37 Gun powder agent, Ishapore. G. Blake, 1 bat. 25 Apr. 38 R. Roberts, 3 brig. 20 Oct. 39 28 June 38 G. G. Denniss, 6 bat. 6 Dec. 39 28 June 38 Furlough. J. Rawlins, 3 bat. 31 Dec. 39 28 June 38 G. H. Woodrooffe, 7 bat. . 25 Mar. 40 28 June 38 Furlough. H. J. Wood, 4 bat. ... I Mar. 4128 June 38 ... ... ... VOL. 11.) 145 Artillery. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army rank. ... ... 32 34 34 Captuins-50. Frederick Samuel Sotheby 3 C 2 F 14 Jan. 1826 m28June 1838 Edward Huthwaite 5 C 61130 Aug. 26 m28 June 38 Gavin Ralston Crawfurd 1 T 2 128 Sept. 27 W23 June 38 Henry Delafosse 3 T I 28 Sept. 27m21 June 38 William Geddes 2 C 7 }|28 Sept. 27 21 Nov, 26 Thomas Sanders 2 C 230 June 29| 4 Aug 27 George Twemlow 3 C 1 B 16 Sept. 29 6 Aug. 27 Charles George Dixon 3 C 7 1 3 Feb. 30 14 Aug. 28 Onslow Baker 4 TI 24 May 3131 July 29 George Hutton Rawlinson IC 4 B 25 July 31 30 Nov, 29 Thomas Nicholl IT I F 20 Aug. 31 23 July 31 Edward Raphael Watts 2 C 3 1 19 May Birnie Browne 2 C 4 B 25 July 32 William James Symons, 7 C 7 B 29 July 33 William John Macvite, 2 C 5 B 21 Oct. 33 Henry Rutherford, 1C 7 B 25 Sept. 34. 9 Apr. 34 Archdale Wilson, 4 C5 B15 Oct. 34 10 Apr. 34 David Ewart, 4 T 2 | 3 Mar. 3513 Apr. 34 Augustus Abbott, 4 C 6 B 10 May 35 16 Apr. 34 Peter Arnold Torckler, IC 5 B 2 July 35 17 Apr. 34 George Simson Lawrenson, 2 T I B 9 July 3518 Apr. 34 Proby Thomas Cautley, 4 CI B 13 Oct. 35 19 Apr. Charles McMorine, 2 T 3 B 23 Nov. 35 20 Apr. Charles Grant, 2 T 2 B 17 Jan. 36 22 Apr. 34 Hubert Garbett, 4 T 3 B17 Jan. 36.23 Apr. 34 Richard Horsford, 6 C 6 B 7 Oet. 3629 Apr. 34 James Alexander, 3 T 2 B21 Dec. 36 16 June 35 Edward Fitzgerald Day, 3 C 5 B 5 Apr. 37 16 June 35 (P) William Anderson, 4 C 2 BII Oct. 37116 June 35 Joseph Turton, 3 C 6 B 16 Oct. 37 16 June 35 Frederick Brind, 1 T 3B 7 Mar. 38 16 June (P) Job Lealand Mowatt, 1 C 2 1 20 Apr. 38 16 June The Hon'ble Harry Burrard Dalzel, 3 C 4 B 25 Apr. 38 9 June 36 John Theophilus Lane, I C 2 B 22 Aug. 38 9 June 36 George Hart Dyke, 1 C 5 31 Dec.. 38 9 June 36 Julius Brockman Backhouse, 2 CIB31 Dec. 38 9 June 36 Edward Madden, 3 C 3 B12 Sept. 39 9 June 36 Edward Henry Ludlow, 2 ( 3 B20 Oct. 39 9 June 36 Hampden Nicholson Pepper, IC 6 B 6 Dec. 39 9 June 36 (PC) Henry Montgomery Lawrence,... 4 T 3 B 19. Feb. 40 10 May 37 James Horsburgh McDonald, IC 3 B118 Mar. 40 10 May 37 Samuel Watson Fenning, 2 C 7 B 25 Mar. 4010 May John Fordyce, 4 C 3 B 29 Apr. 4010 May 37 Francis Dashwood, ... 4 T 3 B 9 June 40 6 June 38 George Campbell, 3 T 3 B10 July 401 6 June 38 William Soltan Pillans, 1 TIB i Sept. 40 6 June 38 George Henry Swinley, ICI B.23 Dec. 40 6 June 38 George Ellis, ... 4 C 4 B 22 Feb. 41 6 June 38 (P) Francis Ruddle Bazely, 1C1B i Mar. 411 6 June 38 James Abbott, 2 C 4 B 12 Aug. 41 6 June 38 First Lieutenants- 100. Francis Burton Boileau, 2 C 1 B 28 Sept. 27c 6 June 38 (P) Frederick Gaitskell, 4 C 5 B 28 Sept. 27c 18 Dec. 38 (P) John Dowdeswell Shakespear, 1 C 3 B 28 Sept. 27 c 18 Dec. 38 George Templer Graham, 1 C 4 B 28 Sept. 27 c 18 Dec. 38 Francis Kyan Duncan, 3 Brig. 28 Sept. 27'c 18 Dec. 38 PART II. Vol. II. 35 35 ... ... 37 146 (PART 11. Bengal Army. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army rank. ... ... U.. 35 Elliott D'Arcy Todd, 1C 1 B 28 Sept. 1827 c 18 Dec.1838 James Henry Daniell, 2 Brig. 28 Sept. 27 c 18 Dec. 38 (P) Edmund Buckle, 3 C 5 B 28 Sept. 27 c 17 June 29 (PC) Frederick Alexander Miles, 4 C 3 B 28 Sept. 27 c 13 Oct. 39 Jasper Trower, 1 B 2 B 1 Jan. 28 c 13 Oct. 39 (P) John Anderson, 1 Brig. 26 Apr. 28 c 16 Dec. 39 Charles Samuel Reid, 3 C 3 B 4 Apr. 29 c 16 Dec. 39 Edward Sunderland, 4 Battn. 18 Apr. 29 c 16 Dec. 39 Edward Pelham Master, 4 C 7 B 24 May 29 c 16 Dec. 39 Alexander Humfrays, 1C 5 B128 May 29 c 16 June 40 Augustine Fitzgerald, 4 T 3 B 25 July 32 c 28 Sept. 40 George Fleetwood Charles Fitzgerald,... 7 C 7 B 19 Aug. 32c 28 Sept. 40 George Larkins, 3 T 2 B 2 Sept. 32C 25 Oct. 40 William Oliver Young, 3 C 4 B 28 Jan, 33 c 16 Dec. 40 Charles Earnest Mills, 2 T 3 B 17 May 32 c 21 May 41 John Francis Egerton, 4 C 4 R31 May 33 c 16 June 41 George Hall Macgregor, IC 5 B 24 June 33 c 16 June 41 James Whitefoord, 6 Battn. 25 July 33 c 16 June 41 Robert Waller, 1 T 1 B 29 July 33 James Brind 3 Battn. 15 Oct. 33 33 Zachary Mudge Mallock, 3 CIB 21 Oct. Edward Christie, 2 T 1 B 30 Nov. 33 Thomas Henry Sissmore, 4 T 1 B 7 June 34 Robert Raikes Kinleside, 2 T 3 B 25 Sept. 34 Francis Claude Burnett, 2 C 3 B 15 Oct. 34 George Girdwood Channer, IC 4 B i Dec. 34 (PC) James Hunter Campbell, 2 C 5 B 10 May Frederick William Cornish, 3 C 2 B 2 July 35 Arthur Broome, 3 T 2 B 9 July 35 Alfred Huish, 3 T 3 B 23 Sept. Llewellyn Smith, 2 C 2 B13 Oct. 35 George Lewis Cooper, 3 CI 1|23 Nov. 35 36 Reginald Edward Knatchbull, 1 T 2 B17 Jan. Richard Horsmonden Baldwin, 4 B5 BIO Mar. 36 John Iones, 3 C 7 Bil May 36 Sir Richmond Campbell Shakespear, Kt 2 C 4 B 14 May 36 Robert Walker, 4 C 2 BL 7 Oct. 36 Edward Griffith Austin, 2 T 2 B 21 Dec. 36 Edward William Smyth Scott, 7 Battn. 18 Jan. 37 (PC) Richard Moule, 2 C 5 B 27 Jan. 37 Ralph Smith, 2 C3 B5 Apr. 37 Vincent Eyre, 3 C IP/27 Apr. 37 John Larkin Cheese Richardson, 3 T I B19 Aug. 37 Murray Mackenzie, 4 T 3 BU Oct. 37 William Timbrell, 4 T 1 B 16 Oct. William Kerby Warner, 2 T U B 17 Nov. 37 Charles Stewart, I TI B/20 Feb. 38 Alfred Cooper Hutchinson, 3 C 2 B 20 Apr. 38 2 T 1 B 25 Apr. 38 Henry Apperley, (P) Michael Dawes, 2 C 6 6 12 June 38 William Barr, 4 T 2 B i Aug. 38 38 George Paris Salmon, 5 Battn. 22 Aug. William Paley, 4C 1 B 31 Dec. 38 (PC) Charles Hogge, 7 Battn. 31 Dec. 38 Frank Turner, 2 C 7 BU1 Mar. 39 Henry Alexander Carleton, 1 C 7 B12 Sept. 391 William Henry Delamain, I Battn. 20 Oct. 39 35 ... 37 VOL. 11.) 147 Artillery. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. (P) Gravenor Kirby, 2 Battn. 6 Dec. 1839 David Reid, 3 C 5 B 13 Dec. 39 Townsend James William Hungerford, 4 CI B 31 Dec. 39 John Abercrombie, 3 T 1 B 31 Dec. 39 (P) Robert Warburton, 6 C 6 B 10 Feb, 40 Joseph Scott Phillips, 2 CI B 25 Mar. 40 John Hall Smyth, IC 3 B11 Apr. 40 Ernle Kyrle Money, 4 T 2 B 29 Apr. 40 William Maxwell, 2 C 2 B 9 June 40 Henry Marcell Conran, 3 C 4 B 10 July 40 Alexander William Hawkins, IT I B 29 July 40 Henry Edward Landour Thullier, IC 2 B 1 Sept. 40 George Penrice, 3 Battn. 23 Dec. 40 Charles Douglas, 2 C 3 B 12 Jan. 41 D'Oyly Richard Bristow, 1 C 4 B 22 Feb. 41 (PC) Nathaniel Alexander Staples, 4 Battn. 1 Mar. 41 Edward Kaye, 4 T 3 B 1 Apr. 41 Charles Alexander Green, 2 T 2 B 12 Aug. 41 Thomas Brougham, 3 C 2 B 17 Aug. 41 William Hay, 1 T 2 B ditto. George Hughes Clifford, 2 T 2 B ditto. John Mill, 4 T 2 B ditto. John Eliot, 6 C 7 B ditto. (P) Henry Lewis, 7 C 6 B ditto. (P) Henry Price de Teissier, 4 T 1 B ditto. Robert Robertson Bruce, 5 C 7 B ditto. Alexander Christie, 4 C 6 B ditto. Charles Vyvyan Cox, 1 T3 B ditto. Craven Hildesley Dickens, 4 C5 B ditto. (P) Henry Hammond, 5 C6 B ditto. Alexander Robertson, 4 C 6 B ditto. George Bourchier, 1 T 3 B ditto. George Moir, 2 T 3 B ditto. Peter Colnett Lambert, 1 T 2 B ditto. Peter Christie, 5 C 6 B ditto. Thomas Walter Pulman, 2 C 7 B ditto. James Young, 2 C 4 B ditto. William Olpherts, 1 CIB ditto. Second Lieutenants--50. Robert Scott Gilmore, 2 C 5 BU1 June 39 Henry Alan Olpherts, 4 C 3 B11 June 39 Robert Henry Pollock, 2 C 2 B 10 Dec. Donald Campbell Vanrenen, 2 C 4 B 10 Dec. 39 Edward Allen, 3 C 5 B110 May 40 Frederick William Swinhoe, 1 C 5 BIT June 40 Meredith James Vibart, 4 C 4 B11 June 40 Robert Charles Henry Baines Fagan,... 5 C 7 Bu June 40 Charles Apthorp Wheelwright, 1 C 2 B II June 40 George Elliot Voyle, ICI BI Dec. 40 William Poole Waddy, 4 CI B11 Dec. 40 Douglas Metcalfe, 3 C 3 B11 Dec. 40 James Money (not arrived), 11 June 41 Altred Wintle, 11 June 41 Henry Stanger Leathes, 11 June 41 Hastings D'Oyle Baillie (not arrived),... 11 June Alfred Parmenter Simons, (notar- rived) 11 June 41 ... 39 148 (PART 11. Bengal Army. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. | Army Rank. William Caldwell Hutchinson, (ditto) 11 June Henry Tombs, ... ICI B11 June Albert George Austen, (not arrived) 11 June Henry Thomas Tylden Pattenson, Fredric Freeman Remmington, 41 41 41 Uniform, Blue.-Facings, Scarlet.-Lace, Gold. LIGHT FIELD BATTERIES. No. 1-B No. 2-G No, 3-L No. 4-M No, 5-A No. 6-E No. 7-H ...Kurna ul. ..Mhow, ...Dum-pum. ..Dum-l um. ... Ferozej ore. ... Afghanistan. ...Kurnaul. No. 8-D ... Sagur. No. 9-K Lucknow. No. 10-F ... Agra. No. 11-1 ... Secrole, Bepares. No. 12-C ...Dinapore. No. 13—(temporary)Delhi. VOL 11.] 149 Artillery 1st BRIGADE OF HORSE ARTILLERY. Head-Quarters, Kurnaul, 13th Dec. 1837. 1st troop, Afghanistan. 3d troop Loodianah. 2d troop. Procg. Kurnaul, Date of appt. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. to the horse Remarks. artillery. | achterop, (native) Neemuch, Dec. 18, 1836. Troop. Colonel. G. Pollock, CB. a Lieutenant Colonel. C. Graham, CB. 3 Mar. 35 11 Mar. 40 Commandant of Agra. [arty. 32 Comg. Sirhind divn. of 27 Apr. 07 3 Aug. Major. 37/14 June 37 35 40 27) 6 Nov. 311 7 Apr. 3128 May 35 18 Sept. 40 10 Nov. 32 G. Brooke, ... 27 Jan. Captains 3 H. Delafosse, (BM.)... 28 Sept. 40, Baker, 24 May 1 T. Nicholl, 23 Aug. 2 G. Simson Lawrenson, 9 July 1 W. S. Pillans, 1 Sept. First Lieutenants. (P) J. Anderson,(B.C) 26 Apr. IR. Waller, 29 July 2 E. Christie, 30 Nov. 4 T. H. Sissmore, 7 June 3 J. L. C. Richardson,...' 19 Aug. 4 W, Timbrell, 16 Oct. 2 W. K. Warner, 17 Nov. 1 C. Stewart, 20 Feb. 2 H. Apperley, 25 Apr. 3 J. Abercrombie, 10 Feb. 1A. W. Hawkins, 29 July 4(P) H. P. de Teissier, 17 Aug. Second Lieutenant. 281 1 Aug. 33 26 Sept. 33 7 Aug. 34 14 Mar. 37 10 May 37 17 Mar. 37 5 Feb. 38 4 Sept. 38 7 Sept. 4016 Feb. 4016 Feb. 4110 July 37 (nance. 40 Commissary of ord- [arty. 27 Adjt., Sirhind divn. of 32 27 33 39 38 ŞEur. S. C., from Bom- 40 ? bay, 26th Mar. 1839. 32 38 36 36 With Shah Şhonja's force In charge of the Nee- 40 much divo.of pub.wk. J.. ... BRIGADE STAFF. 'Army rank. Date of Appt. Adjt. 8. Quart, Master. J. Anderson, ...c 16 Dec. 39 19 Feb. 39 Surgeon. In medical charge of T. E. Dempster, 2 Mar. 3219 Sept. 40 the convalescent de- Assistant Surgeons. pôt, Landour. A. Bryce, M. D. 13 Feb. 27 26 Mar, 35 2 J. Murray, M. D. 6 Aug. 32 8 May 39 With the 1st troop. 3 W. L. McGregor, M.D. ŞIn medical charge of 15 Mar. 27] 8 Dec. 37 2d brig. horse arty... the brig. at Kurnaul. 3D. McRae 24 Jan. 39 18 Dec. 41 And 4th troop 2d brig. 4F. Anderson, M, D. 15 Jan. 3728 May 39 Veterinary Surgeons. 4J. R. Hoey, 4th L. C.. unadjusted 20 July 40 1 J. Willis, 5th L. C. unadjusted (15 Oct. 41 W. McDermott, late 4 Nov. 2d L. C. 41 Doing daty, Hissar Stud. Bahadoor. Sabadar Tummun Sing 1 May 37 Riding Master, P. Ashton, 27 Dec. 33 27 Jan. 34 a Major General from the 28th June 1838. } unadjusted 150 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 2ND BRIGADE OF HORSE ARTILLERY. The 2nd troop-AFGHANISTAN'-' GAUZNEE.' Head-Quarters, Meerut, 5th December, 1837. 1st troop, Kurnaul, and thence to 33rd troop, Ferozepore. Loodiana. 4th troop, (native) Loodianah, 23rd 2nd troop, Meerut, 14th Feb. 1840. Feb. 1840. Troop Rank and Names, Regtl. Rank. Date of appt. to the horse artillery. Remarks, ... .. ... 39 With Colonel. W. S. Whish, C. B. ... 25 Apr. 1838 5 Dec. 1817 Brigadier, Comdt. of Lieutenant Colonel. arty.--Europe, S. C. G. E. Gowan, 2 July 35 21 Oct. 38 Major. J.J. Farrington, 18 Jan. 37 7 Sept. 21 Leave, P. A., till both Captains. May 1842. 1 G. R. Crawfurd, B.M. 28 Sept. 27 15 Jan. 38 4 D. Ewart, 3 Mar. 35 21 Mar. 37 2 C. Grant, 17 Jan. 35 25 July 38 3J. Alexander, 21 Dec. 36 7 Sept. 38 First Lieutenants. J. H. Daniell, B.C. 28 Sept. 27 4 Jan. 28 3,G. Larkins, B.C. 2 Sept. 32' 3 Mar. 31 3 A. Broome, 9 July 35 10 Nov. 40 Asst. Secy., mily. board. 1 R. E. Knatchbull, 17 Jan. 36 14 Mar. 33 2 E. G. Austin, 21 Dec. 36 16 Feb. 36 Actg. Brigade Major, Meerut. 4 W. Barr, 1 Aug. 38 / 6 Nov. 38 4 E. K. Money, 29 Apr. 40 29 Sept. 38 2 C. A. Green, 12 Aug. 41 29 Oct. Shah Shooja's force. 1 W. Hay, 41 22 Dec. 41 2 G. H. Clifford, 41 22 July 40 4 J. Mill, 17 Aug. 4111 Jan. 41 1 P. C. Lambert, 17 Aug. 41 1 Dec. 40 Second Lieutenants. BRIGADE STAFF. Army rank Date of arpt. Adjt. and Quar.Mr. J. H. Daniell, c 18 Dec. 3821 July 35 Leave, S. C., till 10th Nov. 1842. E. G. Austin, 21 Dec. 36 2 Jan. 41 Acting-On detached duty. G, H, Clifford, 117 Aug. 4122 Dec. 41 Acting Surgeon. M. Nisbet, M. D. 14 June 31 5 Dec. 40 Assistant Surgeons. W.L. McGregor, M.D. 15 Mar, 26 30 Dec. 28 With Ist brigade. 3 R. W. Faithfull, 10 Feb. 38 24 Dec. 40 E. Edlin, M. D. 24 Jan. 39 5 Feb. 41 4 D. McRae, 3d troop 1st brigade, 24 Jan. 39 31 Dec. 41 Veterinary Surgeons P. B. F. Green, unadjusted 19 Oct. 33 3 W. P. Barret, unadjusted 5 Dec. 38 Riding Master. R. McAulife, 1 Feb. 12 1 Oct. 32 17 Aug. 17 Aug. ... VOL. 11.] 151 Artillery. - 3RD BRIGADE OF HORSE ARTILLERY. The 4th troop- AFGHANISTAN.' Head-Quarters, Cawnpore, 17th November 1837. 1st troop,... Dum-Dum, 20th Jan. 1838. | 3d troop,...Cawnpore, 2d Nov. 1837. 2d troop,...Cawnpore, 1st Jan. 1838. | 4th troop, (native) Meerut, 19th March 1841. Troop.1 Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Date of appt. to the horse artiller?. Remarks. 25 39 38 7 Apr. 40 ... Colonel. [1835. G. Swiney, * i Dec. 1834 14 June 1837 Europe, S. C., 10th Mar. Lieutenant Colonel. E. Biddulph, 6 Dec. 39 13 July Major. R. Roberts, 20 Oct. 39 8 Feb. 41 Captains. 2 C. McMorine, 23 Nov. 35 26 Jan. 38 4 H. Garbett, 17 Jan. 36 22 Oct. IF. Brind. 7 Mar. 4(P.C.) H. M. Lawrence, 10 Feb. 40 11 Mar. 40 Asst. to the Gov. Gl.'s agent, Punjab and the N. W. frontier, 4 F. Dashwood, 9 June 4021 Jan. 25 Europe, Furlo' 22d Feb. 1840. 3 G. Campbell, 10 July 4027 Ang 41 First Lieutenants. F. K. Duncan, B. C.... 28 Sept. 27 4 Jan. 28 4 A. Fitzgerald, B. C. 25 July 32 13 Apr. 41 2 C. E. Mills, B. C. 17 May 33 8 Dec. 28 Asst. to the genl. supdt. for the suppression of thuggee. 2R, R. Kinleside, 25 Sept. 34 18 Nov. 35 3 A. Huish, 28 Sept. 35 13 Jan. 30 Actg. Adjt. and Qr. Mr. to the 4th battn. foot. arty. 4 M, Mackenzie, 11 Oct. 37 6 Sept. 33 Eur. Furlo' from Bom- bay, 1st April 1840. 4 E. Kaye, 1 Apr. 41! 6 Nov. 38 1C, V. Cox, 17 Aug. 41 12 Aug. 40 1 G. Bourchier, 17 Aug. 41 21 Oct. 41 2 G. Moir, 17 Aug 41 2 July 41 Second Lieutenants BRIGADE STAFF. Army rank Date of appt. Adjl, and Quar. Mr. F. K. Duncan, B. C....J18 Dec. 38 8 Jan. 41 Surgeon. J. Graham, M. D. 11 Sept. 30,22 May 35 Assistant Surgeons. 3 J. McRae, 10 May 28\ i Sept. 32 1G.C. Rankin, 65th N.I. 1 June 311 3 Dec. 41 In medical cbarge. 1 J. Macpherson, 4 Dec. 3014 July 40 With 47th N. I. Veterinary Surgeons. D, Cullimore, 13 Sept. 28 12 Sept. 37 I J. B. Lowth, unadjusted 12 Sept. 37 Furlough. Riding Masters. J. C. Bolton, 11 July 3313 Aug. 41 With 8th L. C. ic, Connoli, 13 Aug. 4113 Aug. 41 Acting. • Major General from the 28th June 1838, 152 (PART 11, Bengal Army. 1st BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(European.) Head-Quarters, Dum-dum, 7th March 1836. 1st compy., Dum-dum, 10th Mar. 1835 | 3rd compy.,* Dum-dum, 7th Mar. 1836 2d compy., Dum-dum, 16th Feb. 1835 | 4th compy.st Dum-dum, 8th Feb. 1836 Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. A’hmuty, .. 29 Aug. 1824 mg 28 June 38 Europe, Furlo' 5th Feb. Lieutenant Colonel. 1825. W. Battine, C. B. I Dec. 35 c 18 June 31 Major. G. Blake, 25 Apr. 38 ... 4 Captains. 3G. Twemlow, P. T. Cautley, 2 J. B. Backhouse, iG. H. Swinley, 1(P) F. R. Bazeley, First Lieutenants. F. B. Boileau, 1 E.D'Arcy Todd, 3 Zach. M. Mallock, 3 Geo. L. Cooper, 16 Sept. 13 Oct. 31 Dec. 23 Dec. 1 Mar. 29 Aug. 35119 Apr. 40 9 June 40 6 June 41 6 June 27 In the Nizam's service. 34 Supdt., Dooab canal. 36 WithShahShooja's force. 38 38 Commy. of ordnance. 2 28 Sept. 28 Sept. 21 Oct. 23 Nov. 35. 3 V. Eyre, . 27 Apr. 4 Wm. Paley, 27c 6 June 38 27 c 18 Dec. 38 33 With Shah Shooja's force. 37) Depy. commy. of Ord- nance at Cabool. Europe. S. C., viâ Bom. bay, 2d March 1839. 39, 39 Post Master at Dacca. 40 Eur., S. C., 18th Feb., 1841. 41 31 Dec. 38... Wm. H. Delamain, 20 Oct. T. J. W. Hungerford, 31 Dec. 2J. S Philips, 25 Mar. 1 Wm. Olpherts, 17 Aug. Second Lieutenants. 1 Geo. E. Voyle, 4 Wm. P. Waddy, iH. Tombs, 11 Dec. 11 Dec. 11 June 40 40 41 BATTALION STAFF. Adjt. and Qr. Mr. Date of ap- pointment. 13 Apr. 40 Wm. H. Delamaio, Surgeon. R. M. M. Thomson, Assistant Surgeon 4 Feb. 41 23 Apr. 32 Bahadoor. Jemadar Mungloo, May 37... ... Guo lascars. • Detachment at Moulmein. + Detachment in Arracan, VOL. 17.] 153 Artillery. 2D BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(European.) The 2d Company-SERINGAPATAM.' The 4th Company, AFGHANISTAN.' Head-Quarters, proceeding to Kurnaul. 1st Company, Proceeding to Kurnaul, 3d Company, Proceeding to Canda- 2d Company, Ferozepore, 20th Nov. har. 1841. 4th Company, Afghanistan.* Coy. Rank and Names. Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. F. Dundas, 18 Jan. 1837.mg 28 June 38 Eu., Fur, 8th Mar. 1838. Lieutenant Colonel. C. H. Bell, 25 Mar. 40... Leave, P. A., till ist March 1842. Major (T. Timbrell, C. B. 7 Mar. 38 10 Jan. 37 Agent for gun powder, Ishapore. Captains. 3 F. S. Sotheby, 2 T. Sanders, 4(P) W. Anderson, I(P) J. L. Mowatt, IJ. T. Lane, 14 Jan. 30 June 11 Oct. 20 Apr. 22 Aug. 26 m 28 June 38 26 4 Aug. 27 37 16 June 35 With Shah Shonja's force 38 16 June 35 En., Fur. 14th Jan. 1840 38 9 June 36 With 2d Co.3d battalion ... First Lieutenants. IJ. Trower, 1 Jan, 3 F. W. Cornish, 2 L. Smith, 4 R. Walker, 3 A. C. Hutchinson, 2 Jnly 13 Oct. 7 Oct. 20 April 38 28. c 13 Oct. 39 Comg. a compy. of Oude local artillery. 35 35 36 Eur., S. C., from Bom- bay, 28th Oct. 1839. 39 40 Asst. revenue surveyor. Revenue Surveyor and Dpty. Col., Cachar, 41 (P) G. Kirby, 2 W. Maxwell, 1 H, E. L. Thuillier 6 Dec. 9 June i Sept. 40 ... 3 T. Brougham, ... 17 Aug. Second Lieutenants. 2 R, H. Pollock, 1 C. A. Wheelwright 10 Dec. 11 June 33 40 BATTALION STAFF. Adj. and Qr. Mr. G. Kirby, Date of ap- pointment. 12 Nov. 39 Surgeon. J. McGaveston. 16 July 39 19 Eeb. 38 Farlough, Assistant Surgeons. 3 H. Koe, 25 Aug. 2 J. G. D'Cruz Denham. M, D., 1st L. I. bat. 9 Dec. 4115 Feb. 40 4114 April • Ordered to Mcerut wheu relieved by the 3d company. PART II. VOL. II. V 154 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 3d BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(European.) The 1st company - SerisGAPATAM.' Head-Quarters, Agra, 18th November 1841. 1st company, Agra....I8th Nov. 1841. | 3d company, Dum-Dum, 9th Mar. 1841. 2d company, Procg. to Agra. | ach company, Dum Dum, and Me: 1841. Rank and Names. Remarks. Ho Regimental Army rank. runk. Colonel. W. Hopper, . 30 May 24 mg 10 Jan. 37 Eur. Fur. 29th Jan. 1838. Lieutenant Colonel. I. Pereira, 27 Jan. 37 Major. J. Rawlins, 31 Dec. 39 28 June 38 Comg. the left wing. 32 ... Captains. 2 E. R. Watts, SE. Madden, 21. H. Ludlow. IV. H. McDonald, 4 J. Fordyce, 19 May 12 Sept. 20 Oct. 18 Mar. 29 Apr. 39 9 June 39 9 June 4010 May 40 10 May ŞEur., S.C., from Bom- y hay, 1st April 1840. 36 Eur.Fur. 27th Feb. 41. 36 Commissary of orduance 37 37 Eur., S.C. 4th Dec. 1840. First Lieutenants. 1(P) J. D. Shakespear, 28 Sept. 4(PC) F. A. Miles, 28 Sept. 3 C. S. Reid, 4 Apr. J. Brind, 15 Oct. 3 F. C. Burnett, 15 Oct. S First asst. to the re- 27c 18 Dec. 38 ? sident at Lncknow. 27'c 13 Oct. 39 Eur., Fur. 8 Mar, 1841. 29 c 16 Dec. 39 Depy.comy. of ordoance 33 S Actg. Adjt. left wing, 34 ... ? 16th March 1811. ( Rev. sırvt. in Cut- 37 ... tack, and depy, colr. ? Condt, of arts., Sein- 40'... diah's reformed contg 40 41 2 R. Smyth, 5 Apr. 11. H. Smyth, G. Penrice, 2 C. Douglas, u Apr. 23 Dec. ... 12 Jan. 39... Leave to Singapore, S.C. Second Lieutenants. 4H. A. Olpherts, 11 June 30. Metcalfe, 1 Dec. 40 BATTALION STAFF. Date of ap: Adj. and Qr. Mr. pointment. J. Briod, 7 Dec. 41 Surgeon. A. Chalmers, M. D. 20 Oct. 41 19 Nov. Assistant Surgeons. R. W. Wrightson, 8 Feb. 41 22 Aug. 2 T. S. Lacy, 11 Dec. 41 1 July Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Curreeme, ... 27 Jan. 41... 38 35 Left wing 40 ...Gan lascars. VOL. 11.] 155 Artillery. 4th BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(European.) Head-Quarters, Cawnpore, 8th January 1841. Ist company.Procg, to Ferozepsteadh company :} Cawnpore, 8 Jan. 41. 24 Oct. 1840. 4th , Rank and Names. Reyimentul rank. Army rank, Remarks. Coy. Lieutenant Col. Comdt 3S... 12 Aug. W. H, L. Frith, 6 Dec. 183920 Aug. 1839 Leare, S. C., to Singa- pore and China, 21st Lieutenant Colonel. Nov, 1841. G. Everest, 7 Mar. ... Survr. Gent. of India, & supdt. of the great tri. Major. gonometrical survey. H. J. Wond. 1 Mar. 4128 June 38 Captains. G. H. Rawlinson, 25 July 31 30 Nov. 29 Eur.,S.C., 4th Feb. 1839. 2 B. Browne, 25 July 32 3 The Hon. H. B. Dalzell 25 Apr. 38 9 June 36 Comy. of ordnance and post master, Agra. 4G, Ellis, 22 Feb. 41 6 June 38 Revenue surveyor and deputy collector, De. broogurh, Assam. 2 J. Abbott, 41 6 June 38 2d in comd., Mhairwar- rah local battn, and Asst. to the supdt. of First Licutenants. Mhairwarrah. 1G. T. Graham, 28 Sept. 27'c 18 Dec. 38 Eur.,S.C., 20 Dec. 1838. E. Sunderland, 18 April 29c 16 Dec. 39 3 W. 0. Young, 28 Jan. 33 c 16 Dec. 40 Comy, of ordnance. 4J. F. Egerton, 31 May 33 c 16 June 41 Eur., S.C., 8th Aug. 39. 116, G. Chagner, 1 Dec. Comy, of ordnance. 2 Sir R. C. Shakespear, Kt. 14 May 36... Assistant revenue suvr. -Pol. asst., Heerat. 3H. M. Conran, 10 July 40 1 D'O. R. Bristow, 22 Feb. 41' 2 J. Young, 17 Aug. 41 Second Lieutenants. 2 D. C. Vaprenen, 10 Dec. 39 4 M. J. Vibart, 11 June Eur., S.C., 8th Apr.1841. ... 34... ... 40... BATTALION STAFF. Date of ap- Adjt. and Qr. Mr. pointment. E. Sunderland, . 22 July 40... ... Leave, S. C., till 20th March 1842. A. Huish, 3d troop 3d brigade horse arty,... 5 May 41... ... Acting. Surgeon. 40 29 Jan. 39 G. G. Brown, M.D. 7 June Assistant Surgeon. 1C. McCurdy, 14 Dec. Bahadoor. Subadar Derriow Khaol 1 May 4116 May 33 37... Gun lascars. 156 [PART 11 Bengal Army. 5TH BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(European.) The 2d Company— SEEINGAPATAN.' Head Quarters, Nusseerabad, 11th December 1841. Ist Company, Benares, 3d Jan. 1841. | 3d Company. Saugor, Ist Dec. 1841. 2d ditto, Dipapore,* 12th Jan. 1841. | 4th ditto, Nusseerabad, 11th Dec. 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. | Army rank. Remarks. | Coy. ... 31 Dec. .. Colonel. 1838 A. Lindsay, C. B. 2 July 1835 mg. 28 June Eu., Pur. 5th Dec. 1839. Lieutenant Colonel. P. L. Pew, 31 Dec. 39 23 July 39 Major. T. Lumsden, C. B. ... 5 Apr. 37 10 Jan. 37 Gun carriage agent, Futtehgurh. Captains. 2 W. J. Macvitie, 21 Oct. 33 4 A. Wilson, 15 Oct. 34 10 April 34 Supdt. of the foundery, Cossipore. 1 P. A. Torckler, 2 July 3517 April 34 E. F. Day, 5 April 37 16 June 35 ] G. H. Dyke, 38 9 June 36 Deputy principal com- missary of ordnarce. First Lieutenants. 4P) F. Gaitskell, 28 Sept. 27 c 18 Dec. 38 Comg. the experimental camel field battery. a P) E. Buckle, 28 Sept. 27 c 17 June 39 Asst. Adjt. Gepl. of ar- tillery, & Post Nas- ter, Dum.dum. 1 A. Humfrays, 28 May 29'c 16 June 40 1 G. H. Macgregor, 24 June 33 c 16 June 41 Political agent, Jellaba- 1 bad. (FC.) J. H. Campbell. 10 May Depy. com. of ordnance. 4 R. H. Baldwin, 10 Mar. 36 2. FC.) R. Maule, 27 Jan. 37 With Shah Shooja's force G. P. Salmon, 22 Aug. 38 3 D. Reid, 13 Dec. 39 ... Comg. the Assam local artillery. 4 C. H. Dickens, 17 Aug. 41 Second Lieutenants. 2 R. S. Gilmore, 11 June 39 3 E. Aller, 10 May 40 IF. W. Swinhoe, 11 June 40 BATTALION STAFF. Date of apo Anjt. and Qr. Mr. pointment. 1842. G. P. Salmon, 7 Dec. Leave, S.C., till 1st Nov. C. H. Dickens, 26 Dec. 41 Acting Assistant Surgeons. 3 K. W. Kirk, M.D. .. 10 Sept. 41 2 Oct. 38 And in medl. charge of the magazine establish- ment and native ar- tillery detail atSaugor G. Grant. .. 30 Nov. 41 4 June 40 33... ... ... ... 41 ... • Detachment at Segowlee. VOL. 11.] 157 Artillery. 6th BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY-(Native.) The 2d Company— AFGHANISTAN'-'GHUZNEE.' Head-quarters, field Companies, Cawnpore. Ist Com., Cawnpore, 17th Feb. 1839. 5th Coni., Mhow, 2d ditto. Afghanistan,* 6th ditto, Almorah. I...... Ist Dec. 1838. 3d ditto. Delhi,f ...... 8h Mar. 1839. 7th ditto, Cawnpore. ....19th Feb. 1836. 4th ditto, proceeding to Afghanistan. | 8th ditto. Cawnpore, ....24th Oct. 1840. | Com. I Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. Army rank. Remarks. Colonel. John Andrew Briggs.. 27 April 1837mg28 June 38 Europe Furlo' 220 Feb. 1810. Lieutenant Colonel. James Tennant......... 18 Jan. 37 Major. Geo. Gladwin Denniss 6 Dec. 39 28 June 38 Europe, S. C., 8th Feb. 1832. Captains. 5 Edward Huthwaite .... 30 Aug. 26 m 28 June 38 4 Augustus Abbott.... 10 May 35 16. April 6 Richard Horsford 7 Oct. 36 29 April 34 3 Joseph Turton 16 Oct. 37 16 June 35 1 H. Nicholson Pepper 6 Dec. 39 9 June 36 With 1st company 4th battalion. First Lieutenants. James Whitefoord..... 15 July 33 c 16 June 41 2 (P) Michael Dawes .. 2 June 38 6 (P) Robert Warburton 8 March 401 With Shah Shooja's (PC) N. Alex Staple: 1 March 41 force. 7(P) Henry Lewis....... 11. Aug. 4 Ales Christe... 17 Aug. 41 5 (P) Henry Hammond. 17 Aug. 41 4 Alexander Robertson 17 Aug. 41 5 Peter Christie 17 Aug 41 BATTALION STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment James Whiteford...... 13 April 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. Natbl. Alex. Staples...12 March 41 ... Henry Lewis.......... 7 April 41'... Assistant Surgeons. John Ransford....... 1 Aug. 32 16 July Leave, S. C., till 31st Oct. 1842. Acting. 26 Leave, S. C., till 15th Feb. 1842. 39 With 35th N. I. 39 40 24 Feh. 41 23 July 2 Edward Hare......... 27 June 4 Geo. Harper, 64th N.l. 7 Oct. Sirdar Buhadoor. Subadar Major Maho- med Yasseen 1 May 371 • Ordered to Delhi when relieved by the 4th company 6th battalion. Ordered to Cawnpore when relieved by the 2nd company 6th battalion. : Ordered to Cawnpore when relieved by the 2nd company 7th battalion. 158 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 7th BATTALION OF FOOT ARTILLERY--(Native.) Head quarters, volunteer companies, Dum-dum. Ist comy., Dum-dum,... 11th Apr. 1836 5th compy..... Dum-dum, 2d compy., Lucknow,* ...231 Dec. 1840 6th compx., Dum-dum, 18th July 1829 3d compy., Allahabad......3d Oct. 1840 7th compy., Dim-dum, 2d Dec. 1830 4th compy., proceeding to Lucknow. 8th compy., Dum-dum,... Rank and Names. Regil. rank. Army rank. Remarks. Lieut.- Colonel Comdt. S. Shaw 25 Mar. 1810 31 May 1833 Lieutenant-Colonel. R. Powney 3 Mar. 35... Principal comy. of ord. Major. G. H. Woodrooffe 25 Mar. 40 28 June 38 Europe. Furlough 27th Feb. 1841. Captains. 2 W. Geddes 3C. G. Dixon 28 Sept. 3 Feb. 27 21 Nov, 30 14 Aug. 20 2 supdt. in Mhairwarrah, and comy. Mhairwar- rah battalion, 33 7 W. J. Symons 1 H. Rutherford 29 July 25 Sept. 34 9 Apr. 2 S. W. Fenning 25 Mar. 40 10 May 3Private Secy, to the Lt.. Governor, N. W. P. 37 Leave to Cape and N. S. Wales, S. C. 24th Feb. 1841. First Lieutenants. 29 c 16 Dec. 39 22 c 28 Sept. 4 In the Nizam's service. 36 4 E. P. Master 7 G. F. C. Fitzgerald 3 J. Inges E. W. S. Scott (IC) C. Hogge 2 F. Turner 1H. A. Carleton 6 J. Eliot 5 R, R. Bruce 2, T. W. Pulunan 24 May 19 Aug. 11 May 18 Jan. 31 Dec. 11 Mar. 12 Sept. 17 Aug. 17 Aug. 17 Aug. 37 38 39 39 41 41 41 With ShahShooja's force. Eur., Furlo' 5th July 41. Cur., S. C., 6th Oct. 40. Eur., S. C., 23d Aug. 41. Second Lieutenant. 5 R. C. H. B. Fagan 11 June 40 BATTALION STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment E, W', S. Scott 12 Aug. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C. Hogge 10 July 40 Surgeon. J. Row 13 Aug. 40 23 June 26' • To march to Almorah when relicved by the 4th company 7th battalion. VOL. 11.) 159 Engineers. ENGINEERS. Fort William. Rank and Names Regti. rank. Army rank. Remarks, 30. .. 31. 35.. Colonels-3 D. McLeod,.. 18 June 18311.. Europe, Furlough, 27th Feb. 1841. R. Tickell, C. B.. 29 Jan. 311 .. Europe, Furlough, 16th Dec. 1837. Larut. Colonel Comdt. J. Peckett, 31 Mar. 4010 July 1832 Lieutenant Colonels--3 J. Cheape, C. B...... 22 Jan. Chief Engineer. J. Calvin, C. B.... 20 Apr. 35 . Europe, Furlough, 4th March 1837. G. Hutchinson, 31 Mar. 40 . Europe, S. C., 28th Feb, 1839. Majors_6 E. Garstin, 20 Apr. 35 Supg. engineer, lower provinces. W. N. Forbes, 20 liay 39 Mint master, and suppt., miut ma- chinary Presidency. A, Irvine, C. B.... 20 May 3928 June 31 Member, military buard, E. J. Smith, 31 Mar. 401.. Sups, engineer, central provinces. H. DeBude, 30 Sept. 40 Secretary, military board. W. R. Fitzgerald, 22 Oct. 41 Supo. engineer, S. E. provinces, ('aplains-18 E. Sanders, 23 Jan. Depy. Secy. to the Govt. of India, military dept., with the otticial rank or Major-not joined. J, A. Crommelin, 25 June 30 supy engr., north western provinces -- Leave, J. T. Boileau, 18 June 31 Supt., Simla magnatic observatory 1. Abbott, 10 July 321.. Carrison engineer and Barrack Masa ter, Fort Williain, and civil archi- tect, Presidency-O114. SU!'s. engi- neer, north western provinces. T. S. Burt, 22 Jan. Executive engineer, Rajpootanah di- vision-00g. executive engr., Agra division. B. Y. Reilly, 20 Apr. Oflg. executive engineer, Delhi di- vision, and Commandant of the sappers and miners-Leave-S. C., till 10th Nov. 1812. G. T, Greene. 3 Feb. 39'18 Dec. 38 Executive engineer, Dinapore divi- sion-Oily. garrison en:r. and barrack master, Fort William, and civil architect, Presidency. H. Goodwyn, 20 May 39 18 Dec. 38 Europe, S. C., 5ih Feb. 1810. A. H. E. Boileau, 20 Niay Agent for suspension bridyes, and suput, and collector of toils, &c. circular and eastern canals. P. W. Willis, 20 May 39 Appl. to command the sappers and uners--not joined. G. B. Tremenheere, 20 May 39 :. Executive engineer, Tenasserim division. W. H. Graham, 20 May 39 Executive engineer, Meerut divn. W. M. Smyth, 20 May 39 Supt. and collector of tolls, Nuddeah rivers. C. B. P. Alcock, .......... 31 Mar. 401 . Superintendent of the Burdwan and Binares Toad-Leave, P. A., till 20th January 1x12. W. E. Baker, 12 Aug. 40 Superintendent, Dethi canals. H. Fraser, 30 Sept. 40 Executive Engineer, Cawnporedivn. C, S. Guthrie,.. 23 Jan. 41 Ex. Engineer, Allahabad iin.-Em- ployed on the Mummipore rond. R. Napier, 22 Oct. 41 Ex. engineer, Kurnaul division-On duty at Darjeeling. First Lieutenants-36. J. Glasfurd,...... 28 Sept. 27 Executive engincer, Bareilly division J. W. Fraser,........ 28 Sept. 27 Europe, S. (., 230 March 1810 J. W. Rolxortson,........ 28 Sept. 27 In charge of the sappers and miners J. R. Oldfeild, 28 Sept. 27 Europe, Furlo’ from Bombay, 29th February 1810 J. Anderson,.... 28 Sept. 27 Executive engineer, Burdwan divi- sion. J. Gilmore,.. 28 Sept. 27.. Executive engineer, Jubbulpore di- vision-Offs. supdt. of the Burd- wah and Benares road. 39. :: ::: 160 (PART II. Bengal Army Rank and Names. Regtl. rank Army rank. Remarks 13 Dec. 2.: 9 May 25 24 Dec. 33 22 Jan. 20. Apr. 7 June 3 31 ::: First Lieutenants,--Cond. Å. S. Waugh,.. R. Martin,...... B. W. Goldie,...... E. L. Ommaney,.. H. M. Durand, H. H. Duncan, .J. Laughton... W. Abercrombie,..... J. A. Weller,....... J. N. Sharp,.......... J. R. Western,.. H. Righy,... T. Renny, G. H. Fagan, L. Hill, H. Siddons. E. J. Brown, 3 Feb. 35 20 May 39 :: ditto ditto ditto ditto ditto ditto ::: :::: :: ditto dittu ditto J. Trail,..... J. D. Cunningham,... ditto ditto ditto ditto ditto dillo T. H, Sale, A. Cunningham, J. L. D. Sturt, N, C. MacLeod,.. J. Spens,....... W. Jones,..... C. I. Spitta, S. Putt, Astronomical assistant to the great trigonometrial survey. Executive engineer, Banares division -Om detached duty. Ex. engt., Berhampore division- Leave to Cape, s.c. 4th Dec. 1810. Europe, Furlough, 220 February 1840 Europe, r'urlough, 230 Feb, 1841. Executive engineer, Neemuch divn, -013. ex. engr., Dinapore divn, Executive engineer, Midnapore divn, supelt. of the road from Agra to Bombay. Executive engineer, Kemaoon divn, Executive engineer, Darca uivision -On duly at Allahabail, Europe, Furlough, 13th Feb. 1811. Executive engineer, Cultack divn. Ist assl., great trigonometrical survey Onr. ex. engineer, Dum Dum divu. &c. Europe, Furlough, 13th Feb. 1811. Europe, Furlough, 8th Feb. 1841. Alljulant, suppers and miners-Un- der the political agent in Scinte. Executive engineer, Burrisaul divn. Asst. to the Gurer. Gent,'s agent, for the Punjav and the N. W. Iruntier. Europe, 8. B., 27th October 1839. 111 the service of the king uſ Oude. With Shah Shooja's force. Executive engineer, Rainburgh divi- sion-Onetached duty Asst. tu the suput. of the Dooab canal-On duts al Kurnaul. Surveyor and suput., Rohilound ca- nals. Executive engineer, upper Assam. Superintending the grand truuk road, N. W. provinces Isst. suput. of the Delhi canals- Leave,'s. C., till 15th May 1814. Acting Adjutant of the sappers and miners, and in charge of the Delhi uivision of public works, and ac- ting garrison engineer, Delhi. Assistant, Delhi canals. Asst. to the supdt. of Dooab canal. Only assist. tu supdt. of Dooab canla Sappers and miners. Sappers and miners. Sappers and miners. . Sappers and miners. Sappers and miners, Sappers and miners. Employed on the Raepore road. ditto ditto 31 Mar. 401 12 Aug. 401 F. Pollock,... 30 Sept. 40 C. B. Young, 21 Feb. 411.. 22 Oct, .. R. Strachey, Second Lieutenants.--21 R, B, Smith, A. D. Turnbull, A. G. Goodwyn, J. R. Becher... J, S. Alexander. H. Yule, T. S. Irwin,.. W. E, Morton, R. Maclagan, E. Haines,...... :::: . 9 Dec. 12 June 12 June 6 Mar. 11 Mar. 11 Dec. 11 June 11 June 10 Dec. 10 Dec. 36 37 37 38 38 38 39 39 39 39 GOVERNOR-GENERAL'S BODY GUARD. Java,'-'Ava'-BALLYGUNGE.' Rank and Names. When apo Army rank. Remarks. pointed, Commandant. Captain C. D. Dawkins, laie 2d L. C.... 4 July 36 3 Apr, Adjutant. Licut. J. A. D. Tergusson 6th L.C. 28 Sept. 40 17 June Assistant Surgeon. II. Wulkar........, 5 May 39 20 Jan. 40 41 VOL. 11.) 161 Staff Officers. - ( Apr. His Excellency the Honorable General Sir Jasper Nicolls, K.C.B., Colonel of H. M. 38th regt. of foot, Commander-in-Chief of Her Majesty's and the Honorable Company's forces in India.-On a tour of inspectiou in the upper provinces. (Appointed 7th December, 1839. Officers on the Staff belonging to H. M. service. His Excellency Lieut. Genl. Sir H. Gough, G. C. B., 87th foot . - 18 Nov. 1840 Comg. the eastern expedition. Lieut. Genl. Sir R. Arbuthnot, K.C.B. HM. service 12 July 41 Comg. the Meerut division. Major Genl. W. K. Elphinstone, C. B. [Affghanistan. H. M. service 20 Nov, 39 Comg. the British troops in Major Genl. G. Burrell, C. B., 18th foot 30 Nov. 41 Brigr.-Comg. at Hong- Kong (China.) Major General Sir E. K. Williams, K. C. B., 9th foot 41 Comg. the Cawnpore divn. Maj. Gl. C.H. Churchill, C. B. 31st foot 11 Aug. 37 Qr. Mr. Gl. - Leave toEngland. Major Genl. H. G. Smith, C. B.f half- pay, unattached 23 May 40 Adjutant General, Major Genl. Sir J. Thackwell, K.C.B. (station. and K. H., 3d dragoons 22 June 40 Brig.-Comg. the Cawnpore. Maj. Genl. G. W. Walker, 21st fusiliers 22 Jan. 40 Brig.- Comg. the Meerui sta. tion-Pro tempore. Maj. Gl. Sir R.H. Sale, K.C.B., 13th ft. 1 Nov. 38 Brig.-Comg. the 1st brigade of British troops serving in Afghanistan. Brigadier J. Shelton, 44th foot 9 Dec. 40 Comg. the 3d brig. of British troops serving in Afghanistan Lieut. Col. J. Luard, † 21st fusiliers 7 Dec. 39 Mily. Secy. to the Comr.-in. Chief in India. Lt. Col. A.S.H. Mountain, C.B., 28th ft. 11 Mar. 40 Depy. Adju. Genl. to the force on service to the eastward. Major T. Skinner, 31st foot 7 Jan. 41 Comg. the Landour depôt. Major J, Byrne, 31st foot (at the Presy.) O Aug. 37' Assistant Adjutant General. 23 July 40 Offg. Quarter Master Genl. Major C, Douglas, 9th foot 23 Aug. 39 Brig. Major, Fort William, Major W. Thain, 21st fusiliers 20 Nov. 39 A.D.C. to Major Genl. W. K. Elphinstone, C. B. Major J. B. Gough, 3d dragoons A.D.C. to Lieut. Genl. Sir H. Gough, G.C.B. 19 Aug. 41 Acting Depy. Quarter Mr. Genl. eastern expedition. Captain W. Caine, 26th foot - 16 Aug 41 Magistrate of Hong-Kong (China). Captain M. Bark,+ 3d foot 26 Jan. 41 Offg. Asst. Adjutant Genl. Captain H. C. Wade, 13th foot -11 Oct. 39 Major of brigade to the 1st brigade of British troops serving in Afghanistan. Captain J. P. Mitford, 18th foot 30 Nov. 41 Acting Brigade Major, Hong. Kong (China). Captain A. C. Moorhead, 26th foot . -16 Aug. 41 Acting Sub-Asst. Comy.Genl. eastern expedition. Capt, the Hon'ble W.G. Osborne, 26th ft. 4 Mar. 36 Mily. Secy. to the Govr.Genl. Capt. 0. H. St. G. Anson, 3d foot 18 Mar. 40 A.D.C. to the Govr. Genl. Capt. G. E. Hillier, 62d foot 3 Feb. 41 A.D.C, to the Govr. Genl. Capt. T. Robinson, 44th foot 22 Oct. 41 Offg. Major of Brigade to the 3d brigade of British troops serring in Afghanistan, Lieut. G. N. Harrison, † 63d foot 7 Dec. 39 A.D.C, to the Comr.-in-Chief, Lieut. T. R. Crawley, t 15th hussars 20 Oct. 41 A.D.C. to the Comr.-in-Chief. Lieut. J, K, Wedderburn, 55th foot 29 July 30 A.D.C. to the Comr.-in-Chief at Bombay. [Penny. Lieut, H. Penny, 13th foot 26 Apr. 41 A. D.C, to Major Genl. G. R. F. A. Loinsworth, Esq. 21 Oct. 41 Acting Inspector General of Hospitals (at Bombay). Surg. W. R. While, 31st foot .- 27 Oct. 41 Acting Deputy Inspector Genl. of Hospitals, Bengal. Surg. J. French, M.D., 49th foot, . 28 Apr. 41 Supg. Surgeon to the force serving in China, • Lieut. Gen, Brevet, 23 Nov, 1811, + Head Quarters. PART II VOL. II W . - 162 (PART II. Bengal Army. LIGHT CAVALRY. IST REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 7th December 1787. LASWARRIE.' Proceeding to FEROZEPORE. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. A. Watson, Lieutenant Colonel. R. Hawkes, [1838 13 May 1825 mg 28 June Commandant of Allahabad. 23 Dec. 39... Leave, S. C., till Ist Mar. 1842. 12 Nov. 38 Major. G. R. Crommelin, Captains. J. A. Scott, (P) J. F. Bradford, P. O'Hanlon, 24 Oct. 27 Apr. 28m 26 Nov. 41 33 32 19 Sept. A. L. Campbell, 12 Jan, 34... Placed at the disposal of the Govt. of Fort St. George. 37 Asst., in charge of Nimaur. 38 13 July ... G. J. Fraser, 12 Nov. Lieutenants. W. L. L, Scott, 13 May G. P. Ricketts, 13 Mar. S. B. Goad, 26 June (P) G. Reid, 7 Dec. J. Moore, ... 24 Oct. A. Campbell, 27 Apr. (P) G. R. Siddons, 12 Jan. V. F. T. Turner, 12 Nov. Cornets, J. Irving, 8 Oct. C. G. Becher, 9 June (P) A. Harris, 9 June 25c 17 Jan. 39 26 c 18 Apr. 40 26.0 6 Sept. 40 27 C 28 Sept. 40 [1840. 28 C 13 Feb 41 Europe, S. C., 27th Sept. 33 C 15 Mar. 41 34 38 32 8 Jan. 36 28 Mar. 36,19 Sept. 29 29 Adjt., 6th irregular cav. 33 2d assistant to the resident, Indore. 39 C. V. Jenkins, 27 Aug. 39 24 Jan. ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. G. R. Siddons, 17 Feb. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. Reid, 30 July 39 Surgeon. W. Darby, 15 Nov. 37/25 Mar. 26 Veterinary Surgeon, J. Ford, 28 Aug. 28/12 Jan. 28 Riding Master. D. Nunn, .. 30 Aug. 39130 Aug. Facings, Orange. Cornet F. B. Griville, late 2d L. C.... .. | 6 May 1841 | Doing duty. ..so 391 VOL. II.] 163 Cavalry. 3D REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 3d October 1796. • DELHI'— LASWARRIE'— DEIG'- BauRTPOOR'- AFGHANISTAN-GAUZNEE.' KURNAUL-arrived 29th January 1840. Maj. & Bt. Lieut. Col. Henry Fisher Salter, late 2d L. C., 6 May 1841, comdg. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. (1841 T. Shubrick, 19 Apr. 1836 mg 26 Nov. Eu., Furlo' 21st Jan. 1838. Lieutenant Colonel. C. C. Smyth, C. B., I Nov. 38... Europe, S. C., from Bom- bay, 1st Dec. 1840. Major. J. Mackenzie, 1 Nov. 38 10 Jan. 37 Supdt. of the stud, central Captain. provinces. J. Angelo, 1 May 24 m 28 June 38 Sir Ë. A. Campbell, Kt, and C. B., 4 Feb. 25 lc 26 Nov, 41 G, C. Smyth, 24 July 28 m 26 Nov, 41 J. L. Tottenham, 30 Dec. 33 R. P. Pennefather, 1 Nov. 38 4 Feb. 36 Lieutenants. H. Drummond, 1 May 24c 5 May 36 J, Christie, 28 May 24 C 4 Jan. 38 With Shah Shooja's force. (P) R. S. Trevor 13 May 25c 11 Dec. 39 With Shah Shooja's force. (P) H. Marsh, 13 Mar. 26 c 22 June 40 Asst. to the general supdt. for the suppression thug. gee G. A. Brownlow, 4 June 26 c 9 Sept. 40Eu. Furlo' 8th Feb. 1841. J. Gordon, 30 June 38c 21 may 41 G. R. Budd, 1 Nov. 38 c 13 June 41 Eu., S. C., 8th Feb. 1841. H. Lindesay, 8 Sept. 39 Cornets. A. W.C. Plowden, A. S. Galloway, R. Richardson, J. Fairlie, 9 June 1 Jan. 23 Jan. 7 Jan. 36 19 June 39 21 Sept. 40 26 Mar. 41 14 Apr. 334 37 39 40 41... ... 26 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. H. Lindesay, 9 Apr. 36 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. G. Bowring, 59th N. I. 8 Dec. Acting. Surgeon. B. W. Macleod, M. D. 24 Sept. 32 5 May Veterinary Surgeon. J. Philips, 28 Oct. 35 unadjusted. Offg. at the central stad. Bahadoors. Subadar Shaick Emam Bux, 1 May 37 Subadar Major Nadjor Khan, 1 May 37 Riding Master. J. Perry, .../19 Aug. 38'19 Aug 38 Facings, Orange. Capt. and Brev. Maj. J. Fitzgerald, late 2d L.C. | 6 May 1841 | Doing daty. 164 (PART II. Bengal Army. 4TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 20th February 1837. • LASWARRIE'-' BEORTPOOR.' NEEMUCH-arrived 19th February 1840. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Amy Rank. Remarks. Colonel. H. Thomson,.... [1838 1 Dec. 1829 mg 28 June Euro., S.C., 22d Dec. 1834. ......... 38 12 Nov. Licutenant Colonel. H. L. Worrall, Major. W. Burlton,.... Captains, W. Mactier,..... 26 Mar. 38 ... Commissary General. ... 1 May 24 m28 June 38 Depy. Judge Advocate Ge- neral, Presidency division, 33 35 37 16 Jan. 38119 June 361 36 Comg. 2d irregular cavalry. S. Nash,......... 9 Apr. H. Clayton,.. 18 June W. Benson, 15 Nov. C. O'Hara,.... 126 Mar. Lieutenants. (P) C. Lowth,..... 13 May W. W. Apperley, 23 July G. W. Master, 13 Mar. (P) T. Queen..... 21 Nov. C. E. White, 18 June M. R. Onslow,........... 15 Nov. G. Jackson, 26 Mar. 25 0 7 Jan. 39 25 c 14 Apr. 33 Sub-assistant, stud dept. 26 c 12 May 40 28c 5 Nov. 40 35 c 13 Feb. 41 37c 19 Nov. 41 Eur., S. C., 12th Jan. 1840. Adjutant-Offg. 2d in com. mand, 2d irregular caval. 39 38... W. Wyld, 24 Oct. Cornets. M. Ward... 27 Feb. (P) F. N. Edmonstone. 7 May R. B. Macleod, 5 Dec. The Hon'ble S. M. St. John,....... 19 June 28 28 Feb. 38 2 June 4015 Feb. 37 37 40 41 31 July 40 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant pointment. W. Wyld,...... 7 Feb. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. F. N. Edmonstone....... 20 Jan. 41 Surgeon. A. Pringle, M.D. 4 Nov. 39 14 June 32 Veterinary Surgeons. J. Purves,..... 28 Aug. 2812 Jan, 28 Furlough. J. R. Hoey,. 11 Apr. 40 unadjusted And 4th troop ist brigade horse artillery Bahadoor. Sub. Maj. Joodah Sing. 27 Jan. 41 Riding Master. Ed. Aldridge,...... 11 Oct. 38 11 Oct. 38! Facings, Orange. VOL. II.) 165 Cavalry. 5TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 29th May 1800. AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regul. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks, Colonel. J. Kennedy, C.B. (1841 26 Dec. 1822 mg 26 Nov. Commanding the Rajpoo- tana field force. ... 10 Oct. 36 Lieutenant Colonel. R. E. Chambers, Major. W. Alexander, Captains. E. M. Blair, C. E. T. Oldfield, A. Wheatley, 7 July 41 23 July 39 Comg. 4th irregular caval. 1 Sept. 14 Dec. 3 Dec. 34 35 38 (P) J. Bott, P.S. Hamilton, 5 Aug. 7 July 301 1 May 4116 Sept. First jn. assit. to the com- missioner, Saugor divn. 39 40 Lieutenants. F. Collver, 2 Dec. (P) C M. Gascoyne.... 1 Sept. (P) J.D. Macnaughten 14 Dec. A. Hall, 1 Mar. (P) T. L. Harington... 3 Dec. H. Y. Bazett, 5 Aug. E. W. C. Plowden, 8 July L. H. Hardyman, 1 July 31c 18 Jan. 41 34c 21 June 41 Europe, S.C., 2d Jan. 1841. 35c 31 June 41 Superintendent of Ajmere. 36 Sub-assistant, stud dept. 38 .. 39 41 41 37 Eur., S.C., 17th Aug. 1840. 32 40 40 Cornets. (P) R. Christie, 26 Dec. 31 27 Aug. A. Wrench, 23 Jan. 40'26 Mar. F. E. Vibart, 3 July 41 4 Sept. H. J. Stannus, 16 July 41 31 Dec. Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment Adjutant. T. L. Harington, 17 Sept. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. J. Mackay, 32d N.I. 3 June 40... Acting. 4128 Jan. 34 Surgeon. E. T. Harpur, 26 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. F. R. Metcalfe, M.D... 7 Oct. 408 Oct. 39 With 5th N.I. Veterinary Surgeons. W. Barrett, 11 Sept. 34 10 Apr. 27 Leave to Bombay, S.C., till Ist Mar. 1842. J. Willis, 9 Dec. 36 upadjusted ... And 1st troop Ist brigade Riding Master, horse artillery. R. Quantrill, ... 30 Aug. 27 3 Aug. 27' Facings, Black 166 (PART II. Bengal Army. 6TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 29th May 1800. · LASWARRIE'— SEETABULDEE, 27th Nov. 1817'—' BAURTPOOR.' SULTANPORE, BENARES-arrived 10th Feb. 1839. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. ... ... D.. ... Colonel. (1838 J. Tombs, 26 Mar. 1829 mg 28 Jude Residing at Bareilly. Lieutenant Colonel. J. B. Hearsey, 28 Dec. 38 Europe, S. C., 22d Dec., Major. 1840. R. L. Anstruther, 28 Dec. 38 28 June 38 Captains. L. H. Smith, 1 May 24 m 28 June 38 T. Wilkinson, 18 May 25 m 28 June 38 Resident, Nagpore. (P) F. Coventry, 19 Nov. 35 (P) N. D. Barton, 30 Oct. 37 1 May 37 E. Watt, 28 Dec. 38 3 Jan. 38 Lieutenants. A. Conolly, 13 May 25 c 30 July 38 Envoy to Kihva and Kokan. E S. S. Warring, 31C 5 Nov. 40 (P) W. J. E. Boys, 18 Aug. 34 c 18 Jan. 41 Ġ, Scott, 16 Nov. 35c 13 June 41 Europe, S. C., 18th Nov., J. R. Burt, 19 Nov. 35 1840. C. R. H. Christie, 28 Dec. 38 J. A. D. Furgusson,... 28 Sept. 40... Adjt. Govr. Genl.'s body guard, and A. D. C. to the Governor General. S. F. Macmullen, 20 Nov. Cornets. H. R. Grindlay, 11 Dec. 37|24 Feb. 37 A. Mactier, 27 Aug. 32 24 Jan. 39 L. J. Farquharson, .. 30 Oct. 401 3 Jan. 40 R. Anderson, 13 Dec. 4125 Jan. 10 Apr. 41) of apo REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date Aajutant. pointment. S. F. Macmullen, 9 July 43 Intr, and Qr. Mr. W. J. E. Boys, 23 June 41 Surgeon. J. B. Clapperton, 24 Dec. 25 6 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. 25 Veterinary Surgeon. J. Harris, 16 Sept. 28/ 3 Jan. 28 Bahadoor. S. M. S. Sing. 1 May 37 Riding Master. M. Furrow, 2 Sept. 2522 Sept. 25 Facings, Orange. Cornet Ewd. Chas. Warner, late 2d L.C......... | 28 Dec. 1841 | Doing duty. Unposted Cornet Wm. A. A. Thomson,....... Doing duty. Unposted Cornet H. Ewd. Young,......... i Dec. 1841 | Doing duty. VOL. 11.] 167 Cavalry. 7TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 5th April 1805. DELHI-arrived Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... 28 Sept. ... ... 13 Apr. 3 Sept. Colonel. (1841 H, T. Roberts, C. B... 19 May 1838 mg 26 Nov. Europe, Furlo' from Bom. bay, 8th May 1839. Lieutenant Colonel. R. A. Stedman, 10 Mar. 41 Major B. T. Phillips, 41 Incharge of the 1st irregu- lar cavalry. Captain. T. D. Colyear, 23 Apr. 39 8 May 38 T. Fraser, 15 May 40 7 Mar. 401 R. A. Master, 10 Mar. 41|12 May 40 C. Ekins, 26 July 41 5 Nov. 40 W. Master, 28 Sept. 3127 June 41 Lieutenant. S. J. Tabor, 26 Dec. 32 c 19 Nov. 41 R. J. Hawthorne 37 E. I. Robinson, 38 Assistant to the agent to the Lieut. Gov., Delhi, and Asst. to the agents to the Gov, Gen). in Rajpootana and N. W. frontier, in matters con- nected with the Bhuttee territory. J. Staples, 23 Apr. 39 (P) R. Boulton, 15 May 40 M. J. Turnbull, 10 Mar. 41 W. Young, 26 July 41 0. Hamilton, 26 Sept 41 Cornets. C. W. Radcliffe, 127 May 40 24 Jan. 39 D. Bayley 19 June 41 9 Mar. 31 F. R. Tottenham, 20 Sept. 4111 Aug. 39 Date of ap. REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. M. J. Turnbull, 22 Apr. 401 Intr. and Qr. Mr. R. Boulton, 6 Dec. 39 Surgeon. H. Guthrie, M. D. 19 July 39 15 Aug. 30 Assistant Surgeon. ... ::: 32 22 Apr, 28 Veterinary Surgeon. J. Hough, 20 Sept. Riding Master. U. Jordan, ... '26 May 2725 May 271 Facings, Orange. 168 [PART 1 Bengal Army. 8TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 5th April 1805. • BRURTPOOR.' CAWNPORE-arrived 4th March 1839. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. Army rank. Remarks. ... ... 5 Oct. I. ... Colonel. [1841 S. Smith, 15 Nov. 1837 mg 26 Nov. Ed., Fur. 230 Mar. 1841. Lieutenant Colonel. D. Harriott, 1 Sept. 34 Mujor. R. D. H. Macdonald... 21 Jan. 39 Captains. F. Tweedale 21 July 35 21 Feb. 35 J. Mackenzie, 5 Oct. 36 13 Jan. 36 Comg. 6th irregular cavy. G. A. Barbor, 20 Feb. 38 5 May 36 T. Moore, 21 Jan. 39 T. B. Studdy 8 Nov. 409 Aug. 40 Lieutenants. G. Cautley, . 17 May 29 c 22 Sept. 40 Offg. station staff and post master, Landour, G. Murray, 21 July 35 c 25 Oct. 40 C. Wollaston, 1 Feb. 36 C 15 March 41 2d assistant, H. C. Stud.. W. H. Tweedale, 36 c5 Feb. 41 (P) C. G. Fagan, 20 Feb. 38 Deputy Pay Mr., Benares division, (P.)W.G. Prendergast. 24 July 38 1. T. Tucker, 21 Jan. 39 E, Pattison, 8 Nov. 40 Cornets. F. W. Drummond, 5 April 38 2 June 37! F.J. Alexander, 25 Aug. 38|26 July 37 A. W. M. Wylly, 7 May 39 2 June 38 S, C. A. Swinton, 20 Nov. 401 4 Jan. 40 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment, Adjutant. F. W. Drummond, 18 Nov. 42 Intr. and Qr. Mr. W. G. Prendergast. 16 Jan, 39 Surgeon. W. Jackson, 20 Feb. 3014 July 25 Assistant Surgeon. T. Smith, M.D. 19 April 33 22 Oct. 31 With the 34th N. I. Veterinary Surgeon. R. Willis, 6 Nov. 35 unadjusted Sirdar Bahadoor. Sub. Major Meer Shere 1 May 37 Ally, Bahadoor, Subadar Ameer Sing... 1 May 37 Riding Masters. F. W. Porter, 9 Dec. 31 9 Dec. 31 Leave, S. C., till 31st Oct. J. C. Bolton, 3d brigade 1842. horse artillery, . 13 Aug 41|11 July 33/Doing duty. Facings, Orange. Unposted Cornet Thomas Theophilus Boileau... ! | Doing daty. ... VOL. 11.] 169 Cavalry. 9TH REGIMENT LIGIIT CAVALRY. Raised 13th May 1825. BHURTPOOR.' KURNAUL- arrived 6 November 1840. 6 Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks, Colonel. Sir R. Houseton, K.C.B. 1 May 1824 ng 10 Jan. 3; Cur. Furlo' 20th Oct. 1821. Lieutenant Colonel, ... 27 Apr. 33 23 Dec. ... 39 Leave, S.C., till 15th Mar. 1842, 28 Apr. 23 July 4 Dec. 10 Oct. 23 Dec. 32 32 32 36 39 Eur.,S,C., 15th July 1839. W. Pattle, Major. C. Newbery, Captain. P. F. Story, C. Garrett, J. Hamilton, W. B. Wemyss, (P) A. Tucker, Lieutenants. G. E. Herbert, F. Baker, C. Y. Bazett, S. Smith, W. V. Mitford, (P) W. Baker, W. Cookson, (P) F. J. Harriott, Actg. 1st Asst. Mily Audr. Genl. ... 29!... ... 16 June 9 Sept. 29 Nov. 28 Apr. 23 July 4 Dec. 10 Oct. 23 Dec. Europe, S. C., 27th Feb. 29 c 14 Nov. 41 [1841. 31 32 32 Eur., Furlo' 13th June 40. 36 32 32 ... ... Cornets. H. G. C. Plowden, W. F. Tytler, 9 Jane 11 Nov. 36 10 Mar. 36 9 July 32 In the Nizam's service. 35 Offg. as Depy. Asst.Qr. Mr. Genl.of the army, 2d class. 39 T. R. Snow, A. F. Wylly, 5 Mar. 20 Sept. 40 18 June 41 1 Jan, REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. W. Cookson, 10 June 33 Intr. and Qr. Mr. F. J. Harriott, 6 Jan. 37 35 30 July 33 Surgeon. J. Dalrymple, ... 11 Aug. Veterinary Surgeon. C. Turner, 31 Aug. 27 10 Mar. 27 Riding Master. T. Ray, 8 Jan. 4112 Dec. 40' Facings, Orange. Unposted Cornet A. P. C. Elliot... 11 Nov. 1811 Doing duty, PART II, VOL. II, 170 (PART 11 Bengal Army. 10TH REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Raised 13th May 1825. · BEURTPOOR.' FEROZEPORE-arrived 1st December. Ordered to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 35... Colonel. [1841 J. Caulfeild, C. B. ... 10 Mar. 1841 mg 26 Nov. Eur. S.C., 27th Feb. 1841. Lieutenant Colonel. A. Pope, 4 Nov. Leave, S.C., till 1st Nov. 1842. Major. (P) C. D. Blair, 4 Nov. 39 ... Eur. Furlough, via N. S. Wales, 22d March 1840. Captains. J. Woore, 29 Aug. 32 D. G, A. F. H. Mellish 17 Feb. 36 Eur. Furlo' 220 Feb. 1840. J. Free, 19 Apr. 36 (P) R. Cautley, 9 June 38 M. H. Hailes, 4 Nov. 39 O. ... ... Lieutenants. R. Macdonell, T. F. B. Beatson, G. Buist, W.B. Mosley, C. A. Kitson, E. Harvey, W. C. Alexander, (P) J. Munro, 3 May 29 Aug. 17 Feb. 9 June 19 Jan. 4 Nov. 16 June 2 June 29c 2 Mar. 41 32 C 27 June 41 Leave to New S. W. on 36 S.C., 27th Nov. 1840. 38 39 39 Eur. S.C., 23d Feb. 1841. 40 41 I.. ... Coronets. W. Fisher, W. Alexander, R. G. Simeon, C. Dumbleton, 37 39 13 Feb. 23 Jan. 14 Aug 7 June 39 5 Oct. 40 26 Mar. 4016 Oct. 41 9 July 39 40 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. C. A. Kitson, 30 Dec. 40 8 Dec. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. John Munro, Surgeon, A. Davidson, M.D. 15 Nov, 37 13 July 31 And 26th N.I. ... 28 Veterinary Surgeon. H. C. Hulse, 9 Oct. 29 23 Aug. Bahadoor. Sdr. Mj. Buxee Singh, 1 May 36 Riding Master. T. Peake, 110 Sept. 25 10 Sept. Facings, Orange. 25 VOL. 11.] 171 Cavalry. OFFICERS OF THE LATE 2ND REGT. LIGHT CAVALRY. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. (1838 F. J. T. Johnson, C.B. 10 July 1825 mg. 28 June Leave. P. A., till 21st April 1842, Lieutenant Colonel. T. M. Taylor, 5 Aug. 39... Member, military board. Major. H. F. Salter, . 19 May 38 lc 28 July 39 With the 3d L. C. Captains. J. Fitzgerald, H. Hay, J. Fraser, 31 Jan. 15 Sept. ... 26 Oct. (P) F. Wheler, G. C. Ponsonby, 25 m 28 June 38 With the 3d L. C. 25 m 28 June 38 Brigade Major, Rohilcund, & post master, Bareilly. 27 m 26 Nov. 41 Leave, S. C., till 15th June 1842. 33 Comg. 7th irregular cav. 38 19 May 35 Asst. Adjt. Genl., Meerut, divo.-attached to the British troops serving in Afghanistan. 7 July 19 May Lieutenants. G. St. P. Lawrence, 1 May C. D. Dawkins, 1 May J. Inglis, 7 Oct. E. Vibart, ... 13 May 24 c 5 May 36 Pol. Asst. & Mily. Secy. envoy&minister, Cabool. 24c 4 July 36 Comg. Gov. Genl.'s body guard. 24c 19 Jan. 37 Leare, P. A., till 20th Jan. 1842. 25 c 1 May 39 In charge of a detachment of horses of the late 2d light cav, at Kurnaul. 26c 6 Sept. 40 Europe, S. C., 3d Decem- ber 1841. 35 c 16 Feb. 41 Leave, S. C., till 10th No- vember 1842. Europe Furlough, from Bombay, 1st Apr. 1841. Adjutant, 7th irregular cavalry. J. G. Lawson, 25 May J. S. G. Ryley 4 Sept. J. D. Moffat, 2 Nov. 40... J. H. L. M. Toone, 16 Nov. 41... Cornets. W. M. G. Maconochie, 27 May 40 8 Sept. 39 With the resallahs of the 3d irregular cavalry, Afghanistan, R. G. Taylor, 5 Dec. 40 26 Feb. 40 With the 7th irregular cavalry. F. B. Greville, 21 Apr. 41 8 July 40 With the 1st L, C. E. C. Warner, 28 Dec. 41 25 Jan. 41 With the 6th L. C. Facings, Orange. 172 (PART 11. Bengal Army. EUROPEAN REGIMENTS. Ist EUROPEAN LIGHT INFANTRY-[Clark-ka-Gora. Right wing. • Plassey'_'Buxar'-' GuzerAT'—DeG'_BITORTPOOR'—' AFCHANISTAN'-'GĦUZNEE.' KURNAUL-arrived 9th March 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. [1811 27 June 1835 mg 26 Nov. Europe, Furlo'7th Feb. 1835. 27 July 36 25 Feb. 37 lc 23 July 39 Ong. Town & Fort Major, Fort Wm. 2 July 33 8 Sept. 35 Deputy Commissioner of Assam, 16 Dec. 35 27 July 36 25 Feb, 37 .. With Shah Shooja's force. 16 Jan. 15 Dec. 2 July 8 Sept. 16 Dec. 27 July 18 Dec. Colonel. Sir J. Bryant, K. & C.B. Licutenant Colonel. J. Orchard, C.B..... Major. G. Warren,.. Captains. F. Beaty,... J. Matthie,............. C. Jorden,......... T. Box, A. W. Tayler,........ Lieutenants. C. Clark,... (P) J. G. Gerrard,... W. Broadfoot,....... W, J, Parker,........ J. W. Bennett,..... (P) H. T. Combe, F. S. Macmullen,.... F. Shuttleworth,i... R. W. H. Fanshawe,..... J. Pattullo,... Ensigns. R. H. Hicks, E. W. Salusbury,.. G. O. Jacob,......... J. Lambert, G, G, Denniss,...... E. D. Byng,............. S. Greville,..... H, B. Edwardes, ..... A, Hume, R. Dunlop,........ REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjulant. J. R. Pond,... Inter. and Qr. Mr. H, T. Combe,...... Surgeon, W, Mitchelson, Assistant Surgeons. G. C. Wallich, MD. W, E. Pollard,... 29 c 13 Feb. 41 30 C 21 July 41 With Shah Shooja's force. 33 .. With Shah Shooja's force. 35 35 Europe, Furlo' 13th Feb. 1841. 361 37 Fort Adjt. of Fort William, & Supdt, of Gentlemen Cadets. 38 40 40 | 20 July 3 Oct. 3 Oct. 12 Jan. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. I Sept. 9 Oct. 9 Nov. 9 Jan. 5 Mar. 1 Apr. 5 May 38 26 July 37 3 11 Dec. 37 With Shah Shooja's force. 38 11 Dec, 37 38 11 Dec. 37 40 8 Feb. 40 40 31 July 39 4131 July 40 41 26 Sept. 40 4122 Dec. 40 4112 Dec. 401 Dale of ar- pointinent. 7 June 39 18 Apr. 40 9 Feb. 41 27 Dec. 32 24 Nov. 41 27 May 38 17 Dec. 41 43 Dec. 40. Doing duty. Left wing. (1841 18 Dec. 1831 mg 26 Nov. Eur., Furlo' 3d Jan. 1837. 17 Jan. 41 Pol. agent, Meywar_Leave, S.C. to Bombay, till 15th June 1842. 27 Sept. 57 Leave to v. D, land, on S. C., 28th July 1810. 26 April 27 m26 Nov. 41 19 June 31 Fort Adjt. and Post Mr., Candahar. 15 Nov. 3618 Feb. 35 27 Sept. 37 3 June 35 In the Nizam's service. 5 March 38 Colonel. P. LeFevre,.. Lieutenant Colonel. T. Robinson, Major. J. A. Thompson, Captains. D. Birrell, (P) J. P. Ripley, W. Shortreed, T. Lysaght,......... A. Stewart, Lieutenants, W. E. Hay, J. R. Pond, F. Harris, ,, B. Kendall, D. Seaton .. E. Magnay J. Fayan. W, L, Haslewood, I. 11 May 4 Sept. 20° 19 July 37 34 2 May 33 13 Mar. 35 29 July 30 15 Nov. 36 5 Mar. 38 10 Aug 38.. . Eur., S, C., 25th Jan, 1841. Facings, Sky-blue. VOI. 11.] 173 Light Infantry. 2D EUROPEAN REGIMENT, Raised 8th October 1839. GHAZEEPORE-arrived 24th November 1840. Rank and Names. Regll. Kankirmy Rank. Remarks. 6 Aug Colonel. Sir Thos. Whitehead, K.C.B. 1 May 182ng10Jan. 37 Eur., Furlo' 18 Jan. 1827. Lieutenant Colonels. J. Harris, 5 April 3 .. Leave, to Cape, S.C., 25th Jan. 1841, J. Frushard, 9 Aug. 31 Mujors. C. Andrews,.. 8 Oct. 3:10 Jan, 37 Comg. the 2d light infy. battn. J. Cowslade, ditto 10 Jan. 37 Captains. J. Steel, ditto m 10 Jan. 37 Eur. Furlo' 10th March 1840. J. Wilson, ditto m28 June 35 Eur., S, C., 230 Feb. 1811. A. Davidson, ditto 028 June 38 Principal asst. to the Govr. Genl.'s agent, N. E. frontier, J. Bedford, ditto m28 June 38 Dpy. Sury. General of Bengal, and supdt. of revenue surveys, and in charge of the office of the Surveyor Genl. at the Presidency. A. T. A. Wilson, ditto 12 May 30 Eur., S. C., 1th Dec. 1811, J. Buncombe, ditto 13 April 31 J. A. Fairhead, ditto 26 June J. L. Revell, ditto 33 G. R. Talbot, ditto -0 Sept. 31 (P) C. H. Naylor, ditto 113 July 331 Lieutenants. C. J. F. Burnett, ditto c 23 Feb, 37 Leave to N. S. Wales, on S. C.. 18th Aug. 1810, Lord H. Gordon, ditto c 10 Mar. 37 W. L. Hall, ditto c 11 July 38 (P) G. B. Michell, ditto c11 July 38 Comg. infy, regt. of Scindiah's re- formed contingent. (P) A. Grant,.. ditto c 7 Jan. 39 Adjt. and quarter master of the Eu- ropean invalids at Chunar. W. Gibb, ditto c 19 Feb. 39 Eur., s. C., 17th May 1839. N. Vicary, ditto c 20 Mar. 4uin executive charge of the Allahabad and Goorsahai-gunge divn. of the trunk road. T, F. Tait, ditto c 28 Sept. 40 Comdt., 3d irregular cavalry. H. Mackenzie.. ditto c 15 Mar. 41 J. H. W. Mayow, ditto C 21 June 41 (P) G. W. Golding,, ditto 7 May 32 With Shah Shooja's force. J. Liptrott, ditto 25 Feb. 312d in comd., 31 irregular cavy. A. H. Corfield, ditto 18 June 31 Eur., S.C., 28th Feb. 1810. W. B. Lumley, ditto 4 Aug. 362d in comd, 2d irregular cavy. J. Barrett, diito c 30 Sept. 41 (P) T. Brodie, ditto Principal assistant to the agent to the Govr. Genl. and Comnr. in Assam, (PC) M. E. Sherwill, 3 Oct. 40 (PC) F. D. Atkinson,... ditto Ensigns. A. Boyd,..... 8 Oct. 31 21 Jan. 33 H, J. Houstoun,.. ditto 13 June 35 F. J. Thompson,......... 18 Nov. 39 6 Feb, 36 R. N. Tronson,.... 23 Jan, 40 21 July 39 S. R, Jenkins,.. 23 Jan. 4028 July 39 G. Gaynor,........ ...... 15 Dec. 40 29 Jan. J. Bleaymire,.. 1 Apr. 41 11 Dec. 46 W, D. Harris 1 Apr. 41.25 Jan. The Hon'ble H. H. Perry, 1 Apr. 41 25 Jan. G, W. G. Green,.... 6 Nov. 4112 June 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. F. D. Atkinson, 13 Dec. 39 Intr, and Qr. Mr. M. E. Sherwill,... 13 Dec. . Leave, S. C. till 15th Dec. 1812. E. Thomas, 70th N. I. ..... 18 Dec. 41.. Acting. Surgeon. G, Craigie, M.D.. 24 Mar. 40 4 Sept. 38 Assistant Surgeons. G. Turner,.... 40 24 Feb. 39 ofrg. Garrison Assist. Surg., Buxar. W. H. B. Ross,.... 15 Feb. 4013 July 39 In medical charge of the public establishments, Hazareebaugh. H. Diaper,..... 25 Dec. 40) Doing duty. Facings, White. Uoposted Ensign George Rice Brown,.............. | 14 Dec, 1811 | Doing duty. . 39. 29 Apr. 174 (PART II. Bengal Army. 6 SAPPERS AND MINERS. DELHI. BAURTPOOR.' The 2nd and 3rd companies—' AFGHANISTAN'-GHUZNEE.' Detachment at Cabool, in Afghanistan. When ap- Rank and Names. Army Rank. Remarks. pointed. Captain B. Y. Reilly, engrs., 20 Apr. 1835 2 June 1841 Comdt.—Leave, S. C., till Captain 'P. W. Willis, 10th Nov. 1842. engrs., 20 May 39 22 Dec. 41 Appd. to comd---not joined. Lt. J. W. Robertson, engrs. 28 Sept. 27 12 Nov. 40 In charge of the corps. Lt. E. J. Brown, engrs. 20 May 39 28 June 32 Adjt., 31st Dec. 1836–Un- der the political agent in Scinde. Lt. C.B. Young, engrs. 24 Feb. 41 9 July 38 Acting Adjutant. 2d-Lt. A.G. Goodwyn, engrs., 12 June 37 19 Aug. 39 2d-Lt. J. R. Becher. engrs., 6 Mar. 36 30 Oct. 39 5th company. 2d-Lt. J. S. Alexander, engrs. 11 Mar. 38/30 Oct. 39 5th company. 2d-Lt. H. Yule, engrs. 11 Dec. 38 30 Nov. 40 20 Lt.T.S.Irwin, engrs. 11 June 39 2 June 41 1st company. 2d-Lt. W. E. Morton, engrs. 11 June 39 2 June 412d company. Asst. Surg. S. Winbolt 24 July 30 25 Feb. 40 In medical charge. Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Major Heera- mun Sing, 2 June 41) 1 May 37! Uniform, Scarlet.-Facings, Dark Blue.-Lace, Gold. ... ... ... ... ... : 1st company, 2nd company, 3rd company, 4th company, 5th company, 6th company, ... ... ... Delhi. Delhi. Delhi, Delhi. Procg. to Afghanistan. Delhi. ... ... LOCAL SEBUNDY CORPS OF SAPPERS AND MINERS. Raised 2nd July 1838. DARGEELING, When ap- Rank and Name. Army Rank. pointed. Remark. Captain G. W. Bishop, 7 1st N. I. 26 Apr. 1841. 29 July 1840. Commanding, Uniform, Green.--Facings, Black.- Lace, Black, ... VOL. 11.) 175 Native Infantry. NATIVE INFANTRY. Ist REGT. NATIVE INFANTRY-[Gillis-ka-Pulton]-Raised in 1757. Late 2nd battalion 12th N. I. • PLASSEY '-'KORAH '-DEHLEE'S LASWARRIE.' The right wing proceeding to BARRACKPORE. The left wing at BARRACKPORE. Rank and Names, Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. W. P. Price, Lieutenant Colonel. J. Holbrow, [1838 30 Dec. 1827 mg 28 June Eur., Fur, 21st Jan. 1828. 23 Aug 31 ... ... ... с ... Major. W. H. Sleeman, 1 Feb. 371... Comr. for the suppression of thuggee and dacoity, Captains. N. W. Provinces. F. Rowcroft, 7 Aug. 29 Deputy Asst. Adjt. Genl., Presidency division. J. Corfield, 14 Nov. 32 R. H. Miles, 20 June 33 J. S. Gifford, 1 Feb. 371 H. P. Burn, 6 July 371 With Shah Shooja's force. Lieutenants. T. Walker, . 24 Nov. 27 c 11 Apr. 40 2d in comd., 4th irregular cavalry. (P) C. Wright, 18 June 32 6 Sept. 40 F. Raleigh, 20 June 33 c 15 Mar. 41 (P) C. J. Mainwaring, 30 Aug. 33 c 15 Apr. 41 Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 31st N. I. H. G. Mainwaring, 3 Jan. 35 Eur., S.C., 27th Oct. 1839. G. A. Fisher, 1 Feb. 37 With 3d light infy. battn. A. Turner, 28 June 37 Acting Adjutant, left wing. E. W. Bristow, 6 July 37 (PC) G. P. Goad, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. C. E. Hickey, 9 Dec. 3731 Jan. 37 A. Turner, 12 Jan, 38 12 June 37 J. Clarke, 12 Jan. 37 J. Ward, 9 Jan. E. J. Elms, 1 Apr. 41 12 Dec. 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF, Date of ap- Adjutant, pointment. C. Wright, 8 Feb. 38 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G, P. Goad, 22 Sept. 88 Surgeon. J. S. Toke, 33 27 Nov. Facings, Wite. 38 26 July 41126 July 40 ...!21 Feb. 311 1 176 (PART II. Bengal Army. 2ND REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Burdwan-ka-Pulion]-Raised in 1758. Late lst battalion 1st N. I. 17 “ BUXAR"-" GUZERAT." AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. [1838 13 Dec. 1830 mg. 28 June Eur., Farlo' 4th Oct. 1831. T. Wilson, C. B. Lieutenant Colonel. N. Wallace, 8 Oct. 36 ... Eur., S. C., from Bombay, Ist March 1841. Major. C. R. W. Lane, .. 30 Apr. 35 Captains. H. W. Farrington, 7 Apr. B. Boswell, 28 June A. Bogle, 14 Aug. (PC) R. Woodward,... 11 Feb. T. W. Bolton, . 30 Apr. 31 31 32 45 ... Commissioner of Arracan, Deputy Asst. Commissary Genl. of the Ist class. 35 II. 371... Lieutenants. R. N. Ma 28 May 29c 12 July 41 T. Young, 19 May 30 R. D. Kay, ... 28 June 31... Depy. Judge Adv. Genl., Cawnpore division-with the regiment. J. Gifford, 14 Aug. 32 W. A. Cooke, 30 Apr. 35 (P) T. F. Pattenson,... 7 Mar. Placed, temporarily, at the disposal of the political agent at Candahar. W. H. Larkins, 4 Oct. 401 J. Travers, 7 June 41 J. Rattray, 18 Aug. 41 Ensigns. H. Mainwaring, 9 Oct. 40 8 Mar. 40 N. C. Boswell, 9 Jan. 41/12 June 40 H. Mills, 5 Mar. 41 20 Oct. 40 A. G. Lister, 25 June 4117 Mar. 41 F, M'D. Gilbert, 22 Sept. 34 12 June 41 Date of ap. REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. R. D. Kay, 19 Nov. ... Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. T. F. Pattenson, 9 Feb. 37 ... On detached duty. Suryeon. C. Renny, 4 Nov, 39 25 Nov. 24 Furlough. Assistant Surgeon. M. A. B. Gerrard, 6 Nov, 39 19 July 38 Doing duty. Facings, Yellow. ... 41.... VOL. 11.] 177 Native Infantry. 3D REGT. NATIVE INFANTRY.- [ Soolteen-ka-Pultun.]-Raised in 1758. Late 1st battalion 6th N. I. • BUXAR'— GUZERAT.' MIRZAPORE-arrived 5th January 1841. Ordered to SAUGOR. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. F. Walker, Lieutenant Colonel. H. Hall, C.B. 5 Nov. 1841 mg 26 Nov. Comg. in Oude. [1841 9 Jan. ... Leave, S. C., till 20th Mar. 1842. 33... Major. D. Downing, .. 15 Sept. 39... In the political charge of Serohee and Commandt., Joudpore legion. Captains. J. Butler, 1 Jan. 37 12 Jan. ... (P) W. C. Hicks, 1. Wallace, (P) C. O'Brien, C. Ralfe, ... 19 Apr. 15 Sept. 18 Apr. 18 Nov. 36 Deputy Asst. Adjt. Gener- al, Saugor division. Eur., S. C., 23d Jan. 1840. Eur., S. C., 23d Jan. 1840. 40 2d in comd., Nusser. battn. 41 39 39 41 25 Oct. 4117 July ... Lieutenants. J. Turton, (PC) Geo. Pott, (PC) J. H. Fulton, 25 Aug. 1 Jan. 25 Jan. 36 37 37 Ramgurh Lt. Inf. battalion -Offg. junr. Asst. to the Comr. of Chota Nagpore. (PC) G. A. F. Hervey 19 Apr. J. Metcafe, 8 July J. M. Lockett, 15 Sept. J. P. Caulfield, 3 Oct. C. B. Stuart, 18 Apr. H. C. Griffiths, 18 Nov. 39! 39 39 40 41 41 Adjt. 2d Asm sebundy corps With Ist Lt. Inf. battaliop. Ensigns. ... ... (P) A. H. Ternan, P. A. Young, J. Marquis, C.B. G. Bacon, A: L. Newman, 8 Oct. 9 Jan. 29 May 2 Sept. 13 Dec. 39 24 Jan. 4121 Aug 4117 Feb. 4124 May 41 27 June 39 40 41 41 41 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. Metcalfe, 1 Nov. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. Pott, 13 Oct. 32 Surgeon. C. Mottley, 38/ 3 Oct. 35 Assist. Surgeon, Facings, Bright Yellow. PART II. VOL. II. 2 Apr. Y 178 (PART II, Bengal Army. 4th REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-[Bailun-ka-Pultun.] --Raised in 1759. Late 2d battalion 1st N. I. CARNATIC'_MYSORE.' BAREILLY-arrived 3d April 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. Sir R. H. Cunliffe, Batr. and C.B. .. 30 May 1828 mg 28 June Eur., Furlo’10th Jan. 1833. [1838 Lieutenant Colonel. S. Speck, • 21 Jan. 38 21 Jan. 38/10 Jan. 37 Major. H. F. Clay, Captains. G. R. Wilton, A. R. Macdonald, H. Doveton, C. J. Oldfield, 31... 25 June 23 Aug. 9 Apr. ... 21 Jan. 26m 26 Nov, 41 Comdt., 2d Oude Loc. Inf. 32 Asst. Comy. Gnl., 2d class. 38|10 Jan. 35 A. D. C. to the Comdr, in Chief and Post Master at head quarters. 41/11 June 36 (PC) P. Goldney, 31 Mar. ... 40... ... Lieutenants. G. Salter, 13 May 25lc 20 June 38 H. Wilson, 13 May 25 € 14 Jan. 36 J. Wilcox, 2 June 26c 21 Feb. 39 (P) D. Wilkie, 22 Aug. 27 23 Sept. 40 Acting assistant to the re- sident, Lucknow. G. R. P. Becher, 9 Apr. 32c 15 Mar. 41 (P) F. Maitland, 21 Jan. 38c 17 Aug. 41 C. Pattenson, 8 Oct. 3910 4 Dec. 40 (PC) R. Hill, 3 Oct. 2d in comd., 6th irre, cavy. (P) R. W. Bird, 31 Mar. 41 Junr. asst. under the comr. Ensigns. of the Saugor division. G. R. Cookson, ... 20 Sept. 38 1 May 38 J. Young, 11 Feb. 40 10 Aug. 39 With 3d light infy. battn. 0. J. McL. Farrington. 14 Nov. 40 15 Feb. 40 J. E. Fraser, 1 Apr. 4111 Dec. 40 G. D'Aguilar, 1 Apr. 41 22 Dec. 40 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. G. Salter, 3 Feb. 29 Intr. and Qr. Mr. F. Maitland, 25 Oct. 39 Assistant Surgeon. J. M. Brander, M.D... 27 Aug. 4121 May 26 Sirdar Bahadoor. S. M. Koossial Sing, ...) 1 May Facings, Yellow 371 VOL. 11.) 179 Native Infantry. 5TH REGT. NATIVE INFANTRY.-[Grand-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1759. Late 1st battalion 2d N.I. • BUXAR'- GUZERAT'-DEHLEE'-DEIG.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. [1840. 1 May 1824|my10Jan. 1840 Europe, Furlo' 5th Jan. Colonel. A. Duncan, Lieutenant Colonel. T. S. Oliver, 11 June 34 15 Dec. 37 Major. S. Swayne, Captains. J. Jervis, 25 Apr. W. Mackintosh, B. Bygrave, 25 Dec. 4 May 26m 26 Nov. 41 Supdt. of family money and pay master of native pensioners, Barrackpore. 34 37 16 Jan. 36 Pay master, Presidency,and to the Queen's troops Pay master to the British troops serving in Af- ghanistan. 37 40 28 June 39 Asst. to the genl. sapdt. for the suppression of thug. gee. C. W. Haig, (P) W. C. Birch, .. 15 Dec. ...31 Dec. Lieutenants. (P) R. M. Miles, 25 Apr. J. B. Lock, 13 Mar. (P) J. C. Salkeld, 21 Dec. È. W. Burkinyoung,... 25 Dec. A. F. C. Deas, 13 Nov. W. H, Tombs, 4 May. R. Dowson, 15 Dec. C. B. Horsbrugh, 3 Oct. R. H. Alexander, 31 Dec. 26c 9 Jan. 40 34 c 13 Feb. 41 34'c 14 Aug. 41 Eupr. S. C., from Bombay, 34 1st Feb. 1841. 35 37 37 With Shah Shooja's force. 40 40 ... ... 39 ... Ensigns. F. H. Warren, 1 Sept. 38 14 Feb. 38 A. D. Potenger, 23 Jan. 40 6 July E. S. Garstin, 9 Jan. 4111 June 40 M. J. Slater, 1 Apr. 4122 Dec. 40 C. C. Crigan, 22 May 41 5 Feb. 41 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. 5 Apr. 41 F. W. Burkinyoung,... Intr. and Qr. Mr. 18 Feb. 41 R. M. Miles, Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon, F. R. Metcalfe, M.D., 5th L.C. -- 15 July 41 Oct. 39 In medical charge. Facings, White,e 180 (PART II. Bengal Army. 6TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Gowen-ka-Pultun,]Raised in 1759. Late 1st battalion 3d N. 1. * MysorE'-' BEURTPORE.' Proceeding to KURNAUL. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks, ... ... .. Colonel. B. Marley, 21 Sept. 1804g 28 June 38 in India. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Eckford, 11 Nov. 37 Major. J. G. Drummond, 11 Nov. 37) ... Europe, Furlo' 28th May Captains. 1841. J. Ludlow, 1 Apr. 29 Political agent, Joudpoor. J. Stevens, 18 July 31 (P) J. H. Clarkson, 5 Oct. 32 9. K. Agnew, 15 Feb. 36 16 Dec. 35 D. C. Keiller, 11 Nov. 37/19 Jan. 37 Lieutenants. (PC) H. W. Jas. Wil- kinson, 13 May 25c 11 Feb. 38 R. Wyllie, 3 May 25/c 13 Apr. 39 Eur., S. C., 4th Feb. 1941. M. Kittoe, 12 Sept. 27 c 13 May 40 Europe, S. C. J. G. A. Rice, 9 July 28 VOL. II.] 181 Native Infantry. 7TH REGT. N. I.-[Burra Crawfurd-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1759. Late 1st battalion 4th N. I. GUZERAT_ALLYGHUR'— Deig.' NEEMUCU-arrived 1st February 1841. Rank and Names. Regimental rank. Army Rank. Remarks, Colonel. R. C. Andree, 20 June 1136 mg 26 Nov. Europe, Furlo' 11th Feb- (1841 ruary 1838. 11 July 41... Lieutenant Colonel. J. Graham, Major. S. Moody Europe, S. c. 9 July 35 Captains. G. Holmes, H. Templer P. La Touche, 13 May 2 Jan. 12 Dec. 25 m 28 June 38 31 16 Dec. 29 31 Brigade Maj., Rajpootanah field force. 25 Senior asst. to the commis- sioner of Kemaoon, sta- tioned in Gurhwal. 4118 Jan. 38 (PC) H. Huddleston,... 8 Oct. 39 4 Mar. S. R. Bagshawe, 15 Jan. Lieutenants. W. H. R. Boland, 13 May (PC) H. J. McGeorge,. 27 Jan. F. C. Brooke, 8 Oct. (PC) S. C. Starkey,.... 1 Sept. A. P. Phayre, 9 July 25 c 29 Aug. 37 1st junior assistant under the commissioner of the 26 C 21 Feb. 39 Saugor division. 32c 17 Aug. 41 33 35 Senior assistant to the com- missioner of Arracan. 39 O. C. Crossman, (P) J. S. Hawks, (P)W. Birch, 8 Oct. 3 Oct. 15 Jan. 40 41... With 1st light infantry battalion. .. 27 Oct. 41 R. R. Mainwaring Ensigns. J. Fowlis, C. Need, H. G. Sim, R. T. Leigh J, Robertson, 23 Jan. 9 Oct. 5 Mar. 1 Apr. 24 Nov. 4012 June 40 14 Apr. 41 26 Sept. 4112 Dec, 4112 June 39 43 40 30 41 38 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. F. C. Brooke, 16 May Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. J. McGeorge, 8 Mar, 39 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. W. Dollard, ...15 Oct. 33 21 May 26 Facings, Dark-Green. 1 182 (PART II. Bengal Army. 8TH REGT. N. I.-[Chota or Nye Burdwan-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1760. Late 1st battalion 9th N. I. BUXAR.' BARRACKPORE-arrived 2d March 1841. The left wing at MIDNAPORE. Ordered to CUTTACK. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank, Army Rank. Remarks. 8 Oct. 1839 mg 26 Nov. (1841 2 Dec. ... In the Nizam's service. 38... 8 Jan. 38 Colonel. W. Vincent, Lieutenant Colonel. J. Blair, Major. G. Hicks, Captains. J. Hall, G. F. F. Vincent, G. Farquharson, G. Gordon, S. Williams, 13 May 18 June - 20 July 32 25 m 28 June 38 Europe, S. C. 30/15 June 28 In charge of the Bhaugul- pore hill rangers. 38 24 July 34 Pol. agent, Munneepore. 41| 5 May 36 8 Jan. 18 Feb. 39 ... 40... Lieutenants. J. P. Farquharson, 13 May 250 14 Jan. 39 (P) T. S. Price, 2 Nov. 25 c 13 Apr. 39 À. T. Tucker, 20 July 32c 10 Sept. 39 Eur., S. C. 17th May 1839. C. G. Landon, 8 Jan. 38c 10 Sept. 40 W. A. J. Mayhew, 8 Oct. 39 c 16 Feb. 41 H. M. Travers, 8 Oct. ... With 1st light infantry battalion. (PC) G. W. S. Hicks, 8 Oct. 39 Acting. Intr. & Qr. Mr. to the 25th N. 1. F. T. Wroughton, 3 Oct. Acting Adjutant, left wing 220 October 1841. (PC) J. G. Stephen,... 18 Feb. 41 Ensigns. H. M. Wilson, 3 Jan. 40' 6 July 39 W. R. Eliott, 8 Oct. 40 10 Dec. 89 R. F. Grindall, 12 Jan. 41|18 July 40 H. R. Drew, 1 Apr. 4122 Dec. 40 E. Oakes, 2 Sept. 41| 2 Feb. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. W. A. J. Mayhew, 20 Nov. 30 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. G. Stephen, 2 Oct. 401 Surgeon. J, Worrall, M.D. 25 Feb. 4021 Dec. 39 Assistant Surgeon. E. B. Thring, 21 Oct. 42 24 Apr. 41 With the left wing. Facings, Yellow, VOL. 11.) 183 Native Infantry 9TH REGT. NATIVE INFTY.-[Jellasur-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1761. Late Ist battalion 8th N. BUXAR'DEIG.' Proceeding to AGRA. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 1 May 1824 mg 10 Jau. 37 Adjt. General of the Army. Colonel J. R. Lumley, Lieutenant Colonels. M. C. Paul, J. L. Earle, 15 Sept. 26 Dec. 33 41 ... Leave, S. C., till 31st Mar. 1842. .. 26 Dec. 41) ... Major. C. Field, Captains. G. A. Smith, J. Woodburn, (P) W. Beckett, 6 Aug. 15 Sept. 25 Sept. 32 16 Dec. 33 14 Mar. 33 29 33 Acting 2d Aset. Military Auditor General. 35 Comdt.,Bhopaul contingent 35 3510 Jan. 4123 Aug. J. E. Landers, 31 Mar. F. C. Reeves, 26 Dec. Lieutenants. E. DuPre Townsend... 3 June W. J. Martin, 13 May J. R. Lumley, (PC) L. P. D. Eld, 2 Dec. 15 Sept. 24c 10 Mar 37 Adjutant, 3d light infantry battalion. 25c 20 June 39 With 3d light infantry battalion. 2924 Apr. 29 33 c 5 Nov. 40 Junior asst. to the Comr. of Assam. 35 Adjt., Sylhet light infy. battalion. 39 40 Adjt., Assam light infy. 31 Mar. R. Thatcher, G. Verner, 20 Apr. 35... 41... R. H. Sale, 8 Oct. (PC) J. Murray, 3 Oct. E. T. Dalton, 26 Dec. Ensigns. (P) W. W. D. Voyle... 12 Jan. A, H. T. McMahon,... 9 Jan. J. Murray, 16 Feb. D. M. Stewart, 5 Mar. 38 12 June 41 20 Sept. 41 31 July 4112 Oct. 37 Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 3d light infantry battn. 40 40 40 Date of ap- pointment. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant. Intr, and Qr. Mr. J, Murray, 16 Aug. 1838 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. J. Morice, M.D. 5 Feb. 40/15 Mar. 281 Facings, White. Unposted Ensign Joseph Peel................ | 1 Dec. 1841 Doing duty. 184 (PART 11: Bengal Army. 1 10TH REGT. NATIVE INFANTRY.—[Duffel-ka. Pultun]-Raised in 1762 Late 2d battalion 7th N. I. 6 • BUXAR'— KORAH" DELHI-arrived 28th December 1839. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... Colonels. B. Roope, Lieutenant Colonel. J. Oliver, G. Tomkyns, Major. (P) W. M. N. Sturt 29 Nov. 1834 mg 26 Nov. Eur., Furlo' 3d Feb. 1833. (1841 9 July 40 24 Dec. ... In the Nizam's service. 41... 24 Dec. 411... Captains. Asst. Secy. to the Govt. of India in the mily. dept.- Offg. as depy Secy. to the Govt. of India in the mily. dept. 351... ... ... ... ... J. Welchman, 5 Mar, 1st Asst. Adjt. Gl. of the Army. F. W. Hardwick, 1 Jan. 37 Eur., S.C., 6th April 1841. (IC) R. Ramsay, 17 Mar. 41 8 Jan. 40 Eur., S.C.. 4th Feb. 1841. J. D. Wilson, 21 May 4118 Apr. 40 W. Lindsay, 24 Dec. 4126 Apr. 41 Lieulenauts. (PC) R. G. Grange, 5 Nov. 28c 19 Nov. 41 Eur., S. C., 8th Mar. 1838. F. Samler, 10 Jan. 33 R. Munro, 5 Mar. 35 (PC) J. Coke, 29 Aug. 35 J. Phillott, 1 Jan, 37 P. G. Cornish, 3 Oct. 40 C. Reid, 17 Mar, 41 With 2d light infantry bat- F. D'Oyly Bignell, 21 May 41 talion. (P) A. N. Cole, 24 Dec. 41 Ensigns. W. T. Phillimore, 9 Oct. 401 8 Mar. 40 R. L. Thompson, 9 Jan. 4118 Sept. 40 W. B. Irwin, 1 Apr. 4112 Dec. 40' W. G. Law, 5 June 41 25 Jan. 41 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. Coke, 9 Sept. 35 Intr. and Qr. Mr. A. N. Cole, 4 Dec. 41 Surgeon. C. J. Macdonald, 7 Aug. 41 1 Aug. 41 Furlough. Assistant Surgeon. J. S. Sutherland, 11 Nov. 39 16 Nov. 34 Sirdar Bahadoor. Sub. Major Indurjeet Sing, ... 1 May 37 Facings, Dark-Green. PART 11.] 185 Native Infantry. lith REGT. NATIVE INFTY.-[Runseet-ka-Pultun.]--Raised in 1763. Late 1st battalion 5th N. I. GUZERAT' _'BHURTPOOR.' ETAWAH-arrived 15th March 1841. The left wing at MYNPOORIE. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... 40 Colonel. G. R. Penny, 2 May 1824 mg 28 Jane Comg. the Dinapore divn. Lieutenant Colonel. [1838 D. G. Scott, .. 22 Oct. 32 Mujor. D. Hepburn, ... 30 July 39 28 June 38 Captains. J. Croudace, 8 Sept. 27 m 26 Nov, 41 T, Sewell, 7 Dec. 27 m 26 Nov. 41 Army clothing Agent, 2nd division. J. R. Birrell, 29 Oct. 32 With 3d light infanty. batt. C. H. Thomas, 16 Dec. 3918 Aug. 38 T. F. Blois, ... 20 Jan, 4117 Jan. 39 Deputy pay-master, Agra. Lieutenants. A. Mackenzie, 9 Nov. 26 C 25 Jan. 40 W. Cumberland, 8 Sept. 27c 11 Feb. 41 Acting Adjutant, left wing. P. Gordon, 7 Aug. 33 c 26 April 41 W. Lydiard, 1 Dec. 36 C 15 Mar. 41 A.D.C.to the Comdr.in Chief R. C. Pennington, 24 June 39 S. J. Becher, 30 July 39 With the Malwah contingt. (P) C. C. Robertson...16 Dec. 40 J. W. L. Bird, 3 Oct. E. L. Dennys, ... 20 Jan. 41 With 3d light infantry batt. Ensigns. C. P. St. John Law,... 23 Jan. 4011 July 39 B. P. Lloyd, 29 Aug. 40 3 Jan. 40 A. W. Owen, 9 Jan. 4121 Aug. 40 A. B. Beatson, 5 March 41 27 Sept. 40 R. W. Chambers, 28 Oct. 41 12 June 411 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. P. Gordon, 18 Nov. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C. C. Robertson, 25 June Surgeon. A. Wood, 4 Feb. 41 14 April 27 Furlough, Assistant Surgeons. W. K. McLeay Rose 10 Oct 2813 Aug. 26 And in medical charge of the civil estbs. at Etawah. Js. Alex. Guide, civil Mynpoorie, 10 Nov. 41 30 May 38 And left wing. Sirdar Bahadoor. Sub. Major Shaick Ead Allie, 127 Jan. 41 Facings, White. PART II. VOL. II. ... ... N 186 Bengal Army. (PART 11. 12TA REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Hote-ku-Pultun.]—Raised in 1763, Late 1st battalion 12th N. I. • CARNATIC'-LASWARRIE,' SEGOWLEE-arrived in November 1840. Rank and Names. Remarks. Regimental Army Rank. Runk. Colonel. H. Hodgson, Lieutenant Colonel. T. Oliver, 23 May 1828 mg 28 June Eur., S. C. 17th Feb. 1829. [1838 3 July 32... Brigadier-Cmg. the troops at Segowlee-temporarily. 21 Jan. 371... Comg. the 1st It. infy. batt. Major. L. Bruce, Captains. W. J. Thompson, F. Mullins, W. A. Ludlow, . 12 Sept. 3 June 19 Oct. 25 m 28 June 38 Asst. Comy. Genl. Ist class. 29 39 Comdt. of the Nerbuddah sebundy corps, and offg. Post Mr., Jubbulpore. Eur., S. C., 9th April 1838. 37 34... (P) J. S. Hodgson, 21 June A. Barclay, 21 Jan. Lieutenants. H. Kirke, 13 May (P) The Hon. Robt. V. Powys, 13 June (P)J. Remington, 4 Sept. 25c 11 July 38 Adjt. Sirmoor battalion, W. B. Holmes, G. Cecil, J. R. Abbott, 12 Sept. 3 June 19 Oct. 25 c 18 Feb. 39 25 C 25 Aug. 39 Actg. Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 40th N. I. 25c 8 Jan. 40 29 c 13 Feb. 41 33 ... Senior assist.to the Comr. of Arracan (Khyouk Phyoo.) 34 Offg. Bridg. Major, Segowlee 37 Asst. to the Commissioner and to the G. G.'s agent, Saugor and Nerbuddah territories-Offg. as first junior asst. at Dumoh. With 3d light infy. battn. (P)J. H. Ferris, .21 June (P) R. W.C. Doolan... 21 Jan. 3 Oct. 401... ... T. Cole, Ensigns. W. Hooper, 12 Jan. 38 13 June 23 Nov, W. S. Ferris, R. C. Wroughton, 3911 Dec. 39 13 Jan. ... 16 Dec. 37 Europe, S. C., G. G.O. 15th July 1839. 37 39 Offg. Asst. to the Resident and Comdt. of the Resi. dent's escort, Katman- dhoo. 40 40 R. R. Adams, J. T. S. Hall, 5 March 41 26 Sept. 1 April 4112 Dec. ... ... Offg. Bridg. Major, Segowlee Acting REGIMENTAL STAFF. ¡Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. J. H. Ferris, 14 Oct. 33 W. B. Holmes, 30 Dec. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. The Hon'ble Robt. V. Powys, 30 Nov. 39 Surgeon. E. J. Yeatman, M.D... 9 Feb. 41 12 Mar. Bahadoor. Sub. Maj. Poorun Sing. 27 Jan. 40 Facings, White. 30 PART 11.] 187 Native Infantry. 13TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Gaurud-ka-Pultun]- Raised in 1764. Late 1st battalion 7th N. I. GUZERAT'- MYSORE.' BANDAH—arrived 16th April 1840. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank Remarks. Colonel. T. Garner, 7 Nov. 1824 mg 28 June Eur., S.C., 21st Nov. 1825. [1838 Lieutenant Colonel. G, B. Bell, 30 May 36 Major. E. Gwatkin, 13 Aug. 35 .. ... Supdt. Hauper Stud. ... Captains. R. Gardner, 1 May 24 m 10 Jan. 37 $. L. Thornton, 13 May 25 m 28 June 38 (P) J. E. Bruere, 13 Aug. 35 26 Jan. 33 Comdt. Kotah contingent. G. H. Edwardes, 18 Feb. 3911 July 34 In charge of the office of supdt. of family money and pay master of native pensioners, Barrackpore. (P) J. P. Wade, 8 Oct. 39 10 Jan. 35 With 1st light infy. battn. Lieutenants. [battalion. C. Commeline, 1 Sept. 23 c 20 May 36 Adj., Mhairwarrah local W. J. Cade, 13 May 25c 17 Jan. 39 W. St. Leger Mitchell. 6 May 29 c 5 Feb. 31 (PC)G.F. Whitelocke. 13 Aug. 35c 15 May 41 Eur., S.C., 23d Dec. 1839. T. E. Colebrooke, 2 Aug. 36 Adjutant, Hurrianah light infantry battalion. C. F. Bruere, 9 June 38 (P) W. McCulloch, 18 Feb. 39 Asst.to the Political A gent, Munneepore. (P)J. E. Gastrell, 8 Oct. 39 R. Ferrie, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. T. F. Wilson, 10 Dec. 38 24 April 38 T. P. Waterman, 12 April 39 11 June 38 With 1st light infy. battn. R. C, Germop, 23 Jan. 40 12 June 39 C. M. Martin, 9 Oct. 40 1 May 40 R. B. Francis, 1 April 4112 Dec. 40 ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. C. Commeline, 24 Dec. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. E. Gastrell, 5 Feb. 41 Assistant Surgeon. A. C. Morison, 3 Oct. 40 7 Mar, 37 And in medical charge of the civil esths. at Bandah. Facing Dark Green. 188 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 14TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Escotten-ka-Pultun.]—Raised in 1764: Late 1st battalion 10th N. I. • SERINGAPATAM.' NUSSEERABAD-arrived 23d January 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rink. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. A. Hodgson, Lieutenant Colonel. R. Ross, 28 Nov. 1839 mg 26 Nov. Ear., Fur. 4th Jan, 1841, (1841 3 Sept. 39. Political Agent,Jey pore, - Offg. pol. agent, Meywar. ... Major. W. J. Gardner, 16 June 35 23 May 27 May Captains. R. Thorpe, C. Douglas, W. Struthers, E. J. Dickey, F. Gresley, 28 m 26 Nov. 41 28m 26 Nov. 41 In charge of the Rajpoota- nah divo. of public works. With 2d ligñt infy. batta. 29 25 Assistant, Hissar stud. 39 11 July 38 In the Nizam's service. 30 May 16 June 8 Oct. Lieutenants. P. Innes, 28 Aug. A. H. Shepherd, 5 Oct. (P) W. H. Richards... 23 May (P) F. Mackeson, 22 July T. W. Morgan, 27 Sept. J. French, 30 May (PC) C. G. Walsh 8 Oct. C. L. Showers, 8 Oct. J. S. Paton, 3 Oct. 21 1 Jan. 39 25 8 Jan. 40 28 13 May 40 2812 4 Dec. 40 Political Agent, Peshawar. 28123 May 41 292 21 Dec. 41 With the Sylhet light infy. 39 [battalion 40 39 Ensigns. W. Hampton, W. Fullerton, D. C. T. Beatson, A. 0. Wood, J. H. H. Lukin, 5 Dec. 23 Jan. 23 Jan. 9 Oct. 5 Mar. 39/16 Feb. 40 26 Mar. 4012 June 40 14 Apr. 40 20 Oct. 39! :9 39 40 40 ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. 31 Oct. 28 P. Innes, Intr. and Qr. Mr. W. H. Richards, . 17 Aug. 28 Surgeon. 25 Nov. 39 28 Aug. I. Jackson, Assistant Surgeon. T. B. Hart, 22 Furlough. 12 Dec. 40 15 May 26) Facings, Buff. PART 11.] 189 Native Infantry. 15TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Doo-ka-Pulton.]-Raised in 1765. Late lst battalion 11th N. I. BUURTPOOR.' Proceeding to DELHI. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. H. Huthwaite, 8 Mar. 1839 mg 28 June Europe, S. C., 13th Feb., [1838 1827. Lieutenant Colonel. A. Carnegy, 5 Nov. 41 Major. 5 Nov. 41 Supervisor, Hissar Stud. C. T. Thomas, Captains. W. A. Troup, (P) W. Hunter, 20 Dec. 26 Feb. 26m 26 Nov. 41 35 Comdt. Meywar Bheel corps, and asst. pol. agent in Mey war and supdt. of the Meywar Bheel tract. 38 W. Iones, (PC) J. T. Gordon, 1 Apr. 10 Mar, 411 Dec. H. Boyd, 5 Nov. 4117 Jan. 39 Junior assistant to the commissioner in Assam. 39 Adjt. of native invalids and paymaster of na- tive pensioners, Mee- rut and Rauper. 34 Lieutenants. W. P. Robbins, 31 May G. J. Montgomery, 26 Feb. T. Smith, 29 Sept. (PC) J. W. Carnegie, 1 Apr. C. T. Cartwright, 3 Oct, (PC) B. M. Loveday, . 10 Mar. T. E. Ogilvie, 24 May G, G, Anderson, ... 5 Nov. 35 35 38 40 41 41 41 With 1st light infantry batta, 41 401 H. J. Edwards, 17 Dec. Ensigns. A. Bagot, 9 Jan. H, R. Shawe, 19 Mar. C. St. Geo. Brownlow, 2 May R. D. Macpherson, 24 Nov. 41 18 Sept. 41 5 July 41 26 Sept. 41 12 June 39 40 41 Date of ap- pointment 7 Jan. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant. G. J. Montgomery, Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. W. Carnegie, Surgeon. R. Foley, D.D. 15 Jan. 36 5 Mar. 41'3 Oct. 39 Leave to Cape. Assistant Surgeon. Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Major Mootee Missur, 27 Jan, 41 Facings, French-Grey, 190 (PART II. Bengal Army. 16TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Hosainee-ka-Pulton]-Raised in 1765. Late 2nd battalion 10th N. I. *MYSORE'-'SERING APATAM'-AFGHANISTAN _GHUZNEE.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. D. McPherson, ... 1 May. 1824 mg 10 Jan. Europe, S. C., 26th Jan. [1837 1821. Lieutenant Colonel. J. McLaren, 28 Nov. 39 23 July 39 ... : .. ... Major. L. N. Hull, 28 Nov. 39 Europe, S.C., from Bom- bay, 1st December. Captains. F. E. Manning, 31 Jan. 29 C. G. Macan, 13 Sept. 29 With Shooja's force. H. M. Graves, 3 May 33 (P) E. R. Mainwaring, 20 Feb. 38 ... Offg. in the comst. dept. D. F. Evans, 28 Nov. 39 Lieutenants. A. Balderston, 2 Nov. 27 € 15 Mar. 41 Æneas J. Mackay, 31 Jan. 29 C 21 June 41 J. Hoppe, 18 Sept. With Shah 33 Shooja's force. (P) J. H. Burnett, 13 Jan. 34 R. Steward. 4 June 34 20 Feb. 38 With (P) F. B. Bosanquet, Shah Shooja's force. T. J. Gardiner, 30 June 38 A. Dallas, Shah With 39 ... 128 Nov. Shooja's force. J. W. Carter, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. N. B. Chamberlain, ... 28 Aug. 38 24 Feb. 37 C. Newton, 1 Sept. 38 11 Dec. 37 Graydon, 4 Feb. 40 12 June 39 R. Unwin, 9 July 41 9 Sept. 40 R. T. Stannus, 1 Apr. 41 25 Jan. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ar- Adjutant. pointment. A. Balderston, 14 July 38 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. H. Burnet, 13 Sept. 38 ... W. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. R. Pbillipson, (Asst.) Garrison Surgeon, Buxar) 6 Mar. 35 | 7 May 31 In medical charge. Facings, Buff. PART 11.] 191 Native Infantry. 17TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Barkur-ka-Pultun]- Raised in 1765. Late 2d battalion 11th N. I. DINAPORE-arrived 26th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. T. P. Smith, 15 Oct. 1832 ing 28 June Residing in the Meerut [1838 circle. 4 Jan. 41 ... Lieutenant Colonel. W. H. Marshall, Major. J. R. Colnett, Captuins. T. Cooke, 40 10 Jan. ... 37 Eur., S. C., 23d Dec. 1839. 9 July 28 Aug. 33 ... R. J. H. Birch, 20 Mar, 36 7 Jan. ... Europe, Furlo' 10th Mar. 18+0. 36 Judge Advocate General, with the official rank of Major. 36 With Ist light infantry battn. 38 40 J. C. Plowden, 8 Oct. 39 4 July 4011 July 41 8 Jan. (PC) J. H. Wakefield, 9 July F. W. Burroughs, 1 Oct. Lieutenants. P. Shortreed, 15 Feb. R. McKean, 15 Oct. (P) G. M. Hill, 28 Aug. ... ... ... T. G. St. George, (P) H, P. Budd, (P)J. S. D. Tulloch, R. Patton, 1 Nov, 8 Oct. 9 July 3 Oct. 30 c 2 Mar. 32 With Shah Shooja's force. 33 c 13 June 41 Supt. of family money and pay master of native pensioner, Oude and Cawdpore. 38 39 40 40 Europe, S. C., 8th April 1841. Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 230 N. I. (P) J. C. Fitzmaurice, 18 July 41... 1 Oct. ... 41 H. Watson, Ensigns. J. Hunter, J. T. Harris, F. D. Boulton, 9 Oct. 9 Jan. 40 8 Feb. 4111 Sept. 41 8 July 28 Apr. 40 40 40 With Ist light infantry battn. 41 Not arrived. 41 -) D. Briggs, Sept. 41 11 June H. A. Dorin, 6 Oct. 41, 2 Jan. Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. S. D. Tulloch, 9 Nov. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. P. Budd, 22 Feb. 40 Surgeon. D. McQueen Gray, M.D. 28 Oct. 39 5 Jan, Assistunt Surgeon. 39 Bahadoor, Sub. Major Shaick Adjmut, 27 Jan. 411 Facings, French-Grey. 192 (PART II Bengal Army. 18TH REGT. NATIVE INFY -[Raja-ka-Pulton]-Raised in 1776. Late 2nd battalion 6th N. I. • BHURTPOOR.' Proceeding to ALLAHABAD. Rank and Names. Regtl . Rank. Arny Rank. Remarks. Colonel. W. H. Perkins, Lieutenant Colonel. W. R. C. Costley, Mujor. R. Kent, Captains. W. Minto, 1 May 1834 mg 10 Jan. Eur., Fur., 8th Mar. 1825. [1837 2 Jan. 31 15 Apr. 40 28 June 38 15 Nov. F. W. Anson, 12 Sept. 33 ... ... J. C. C. Gray, C. Norgate, 26 June 3 Sept. (P) C. Brown, 15 Apr. Lieutenants. W. Edwards, (P) W. Hore, 30 Dec. | Dec. 28 m 26 Nov. 412d in comd. Gwalior con- ! tingent. Asst. Adjt. Genl., Sirhind dn., and Postmaster at Kurnaul. 37 39 Europe, Furlo' 25th Feb. 1840. 40'c 15 Mar. 41 Assistant to the agent to the Govr. Genl. in the Saugor and Nerbudda territories. 27 32 Tunior asst. under the com- missioner of the Saugor division-(Hoshuogabad). ub-Asst. Comy. Genl. with the force on service to the Eastward. 34 3: 39 Eur., S.C., 22d Feb. 1841. 40 40 With the Arracan local 41 [batın. :: (P) W. W. Davidson, . 12 Sept. 33 ... ... 16 Jan. ... 26 June .. ...! 3 Oct. G. P. Austen, H. E. Pearson, T. C. Richardson, ... 3 Sept. R. F. Fanshawe, ... 15 Apr. W. F. Nuthall, (PC) F. C. Tombs, 12 Apr. Ensigns. J. C. Remmington, 23 Jan. H. V. Hathorn, 9 Aug. C. Herbert, 29 May A. F. Baird, 29 May H. S. Belli, 2 Sept. 39 40 Eur., S.C., 13th Sept. 1841. 40|16 July 40 3 Jan. 40 30 Jan. 41/17 Feb. 31 11 June 4. 41 ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. | Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. H. E. Pearson, 23 Jan. 401 Intr, and Qr. Mr. W, W. Davidson 11 July 35 On detached duty. F. C. Tombs 12 Mar. 40 Icting Surgeon. C. Maxwell 9 Feb. 4023 Nov. 40 Assistant Surgeon. Bahadoor. Subadar Major Gunga- persaud, 1 May 37 Facings, Bright-Yellow. VOL. 11.) 193 Native Infantry 1996 REGT. NATIVE INFY.- Ung-ka-Pultun.] --Raised in 1776. Late 2nd battalion 3rd N. I. FEROZEPORE-arrived 20th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 30... 35.. Colonel [1841 G. Hunter, C.B. ... 17 Jan. 1841 mg 26 Nov. Comg. the garrison and Station of Delhi. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Anderson, 3 June Leave, S. C., till 7th June 1812. Major. J. D. Syers, 28 May 37 Captains. T. H. Newhouse, 24 Sept. 34 C. G. Ross, 21 Sept. ... Dpy. Judge Advocate Gen. and Post Mr. Neemuch. J. Drummond, .. 22 Sept. 361... ... 2d in comd., Kemaoon bat- talion. W. Smith, Aug. 38 (PC) F. Lloyd, 29 July 40... ... Sub-asst. Comy. General. Lieutenants. H. V. Stephen, 18 June Assist. revenue surveyor.) J. Thompson, 23 July 36 W. K. Wollen, 22 Sept. 36 A. C. Boswell, 14 Apr. 37 W. L. Mackeson, 28 May 37 R. A. Smith, 18 June 37 F. Tombs, 8 Aug. 38 D. C. Shute, 29 July 40... With the Bundelcund le. gion. A. Robinson, 3 Oct. 401 35... ... ... Ensigns. (P) F. P. Layard, 3 Dec. 38 11 Mar. E. Forbes, 25 May 39 10 June J. W. Bristow, 29 Aug. 40'11 Dec. J. MacDougall, 9 Jan. 41 31 July L. R. Newhouse, 2 Feb. 41 12 June Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. W. L. Mackeson, 28 Mar. 38 38 36 39 40 401 Intr. and Qr. Mr. F. P. Layard, 2 Dec. 41 7 Jan. 41 6 Aug. 401 Surgeon. A. Christie, Assist. Surgeon. Bahadoor. Sabadar Major Sec- tull Sing, 1 May 37 Facings, Dark-Green. A A PART II. VOL. II. VOL. 11.) 195 Native Infantry. 21ST REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Neelwar-ka-Pultun.]--Raised in 1776. Late 2nd battalion 9th N. I. · LASWARRIE'-BHURTPOOR.' Proceeding to BERHAMPORE. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 1 May 1824 mgloJan.1837 Eur., Furlo' 8th Jan. 1829. 15 Mar. 41 Colonel. W. Croxton, Lieutenant Colonel. W. W. Foord, Major. J. C. C Gray, Captains. C. Farmer, 0. Lomer, (P)J. Dyson, 1 Sept. 41... Comdt. Ist Oude local infy. 33... With Ist light infy. battn. ... 12 June 18 June 15 Mar. 34 4110 Mar. 37 Depy. Judge Advocate Ge neral, Dinapore and Be- nares divisions. 39 Sub-Assist. Comy. Genl. 40 4121 Feb. 41 9 Aug. (P) T. H. G, Besant,... 1 July H. Spottiswoode, 1 Sept. Lieutenants. G. Carr. 7 June W. H. Lomer, 19 Mar. T. James, 12 June 33... R. Lowry, H. Milne, 27 Feb. 8 Oct. 39 32'c 12 Jan, 41 Eur., S. C., 22d Feb. 1840. 33 c 27 June 41 2nd in comd., Kotah con- tingent 34 Eur., S. C., 28th Feb. 1840. With Shah Shooja's force -on deputation to Kelat- i-Ghilzie. 40 ... Eur., S.C., 22nd Apr. 1841. 417 41 41 3 Oct. 15 Mar. 1 July i Sept. J. C. Robertson, (P) J. Chambers, E. A. Rowlatt, J. Marquis, Ensign. T. T. King, J. L. Vaughan, P. H. Sanders, H. T. Bartlett, G. E. Kent, ... 9 Oct. 5 Mar. 29 May 6 Aug. 2 Sept. 40/15 Feb. 4112 Oct. 41 8 Mar. 4121 April 41 25 Dec. 40 40 41 41 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. W. H. Lomer, 7 Oct. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. Chambers, 22 May 40 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon, H. J. Tncker, M.D. 15 April 39/20 June Bahadoor. Sub. Major Meerwaund Sing, 1 May 371 86 Facings, Yellow. 196 (PART 11, Bengal Army. 22ND REGT. NATIVE INFY.–[Boel-ka•Pultun.]-Raised in 1778. Late 2nd battalion 2nd N. I. • CARNATIC'--Deulee.' DELHI-arrived 24th November 1840. Rank and Numes. Regil. Rank. Arny Rank. Rcmarks. ... 30 ... Colonel. M. White, 1 May 1824 mg10Jan. 1837 Eur., Furlo' 29th Jan. 1838. Major. C. Hamilton, 26 Nov, 36 Captains. (PC) T. Ė. Sampson, . 4 June 29 Europe, S.C., via Bombay, 25th Feb. 1839. G. Templer, 3 May Eur. S.C., 25th Jan. 1841. W. Murray, 12 Nov. 30 First junior assistant to the commissioner of the San- gor divn.-Offg. princi- pal asst., Hussingabad- Leave, P. A., till 15th March 1842. W. Stewart, 26 Nov. 36 5 May 36 Fort Adjt. Chunar, and supdt, of the family do- mains of the rajah of Benares. (P) N. S. Nesbitt, 21 Sept. 37 23 Feb, 37 Eur., S.C., 22nd April 1841. Lieutenants, J. Hunt, 25 Nov. 25 c 18 Feb. 39 With 2d light infy. battn. J. Baldock, 4 June 29 C 23 Jan. 41 W. P. Jones, 12 Nov. 30c 2 Mar. 41 Eur., S. C., from Bombay, 12th March 1840. J. Grant, 20 June 36 ... Eur., S. C., 22nd Feb. 1839. (P) J. D. McPherson, 26 Nov. 36 S. W. R. Tulloch, 21 Sept. 37 G. S. Mackenzie, 9 Dec. 38 J. F. D'E. W. Hall, 20 July ... Adjt., Joudpore legion, and Post master, Erinpoorah. (P) P. Drummond, 1 Nov. Ensigns. W. J. Hicks, 12 Apr. 39 1 Sept. 38 J. W. Smith, 1 Apr. 4111 Dec. 401 W. D. Morgan, 1 Apr. 4112 Dec. 40 S. J. Hire, 8 Nov. 4112 June 41 F. W. Ripley, 29 Nov. 4112 June 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant pointment. G, S. Mackenzie, ... 18 Jan, 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. D. McPherson, 20 Sept. 33 Surgeon. G. G. Spilsbury, 18 Nov. 41 27 Sept. 23 Not joined Assistant Surgeons. (1812. A. Mackean, ... 16 Oct. 4015 Jan. 34 Leave, S. C., till 10th Nov. J.H. Rothney, 2nd lighi infantry battalion ... 21 Oct. 41| 4 Sept. 39 In medical charge. Bahadoor. Subadar Major Sung. sar Sing, 41 Facings, White. 39... 411... ... 27 Jan. VOL. II.] 197 Native Infantry. 23RD REGT. N. 1.-[Chota Crawfurd-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1788. Late 2nd battalion 4th N. I. "ALLYGUUR'-DEHLEE'-' BHURTPOOR.' JUMAULPORE-arrived 12th March 1841. Detachments at Gowahatty and Bishnauth, Assam. Rank and Names. Regti. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 31.. Colonel. Sir W. Casement, KCB 1 May 1824 mg 10Jan.1837 Member of the Council of India, Lieutenant Colonel. H. Cock, C.B., 4 June Eu., S, C., 21st Jan. 1833. Major. J. Moule, 30 June 40 Captains. J. D. D. Bean, 20 Jan. 31.. Eur., S. C., from Bombay, 1st Dec. 1841. J. Fisher, 4 June 31.. 2nd in comd. Sirmoor battn., and assist, to the supát., Deyrah Dhoon. (P) J. Platt, 28 July 33 C. Chester, 23 Mar. 36 13 Jan. 36 Brig. Maj., eastern frontier. C. Cooper, 30 June 40, 4 May 39 Lieutenants. J. V. Snook, 29 Apr. 26'c 11 Apr. 40 J. Sissmore, 6 July 29'c 28 Sept. 40 [lior. (P)R. R. W. Ellis, 17 Dec. 32 c 5 Nov. 40 Asst. to the resident, Gwa. E. F, Smith, 28 July 33 c 16 Feb. 41 W. E. Warden 23 Mar, 36 H. M. Nation, 8 Oct. Asst. to the genl. supdt, for the suppression of thuggee. (P) R. Shaw, 27 Mar. 40 T. B. Hamilton, 30 June Eu., S. C., 29th Dec. 1841. C. P. Trower, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. E. Bradford, 23 Jan. 4011 June 391 J. S. Davies, 18 Aug. 40 13 Sept. 39 C. W. Russell, 29 Aug 40 3 Jan. 40 J. Fagan, 9 Jan. 4111 Sept. 40 A, L. McMullin, 29 May 4117 Feb. 41 39.. .. 40. 40 411.. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. J. V. Snook, 27 Oct. Intr. and Qr. Mr. J, C. Fitzmaurice, 17th N, I. 11 Dec. Acting. Surgeon. M. Powell, 28 Nov. 40|31 Mar. 35 Parlough. Assistant Surgeon, A. Murray, M.D. 7 Apr. 41 5 May 26! Facings, Dark-Green. 198 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 24TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Dabie-ka-Pultun)-Raised in 1779. Late 2nd battalion 8th N. I. • LASWARRIE.' SAUGOR-arrived 2nd March 1840. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. E. H. Simpson, [1838 29 Aug. 1833 mg 28 June Residing in the Meerut circle. 8 Oct. 39 Scindiah's contingent. Lieutenant Colonel. O. Stubbs, Major. L. S. Bird, Captains. W. H. Terraneau, 18 July .40.29 June 38 1 Aug. (P) J. Griffin, A. S. Singer, 26 Mar. 19 Sept. G E Van Herthuysen, 8 Oct. T. Mackintosh, 18 July Lieutenants. (PC)J.C, Hannyngton. 20 July 25 m 28 June 38 Executive officer, Agra di. vision. 31 Wish Shah Shooja's force. 33 Acting A. D. C. to Maj. Genl. J. W. Fast. 3917 Oct. 37 With 3d light infy. battn. 409 May 39 25 € 8 Jan. 40 Principal assistant to the Governor Genl.'s agent, Maunbhoom. 33 33 Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. 10 the 7186 N. I. 37 Adjt., 4th irregular cavalry. 38 39 40 Acting Adjt., 24 irregular Cavalry. 411 Eur., S.C., 29th Dec, 1841. J. T. Bush, 16 July (PC) A. Q. Hopper,.. 19 Sept. A. J. W. Haig, 8 May J. Grise. Jan. (PC G. T. Hamilton,.. 8 Oct. J. Wardlaw, 18 July A. Carrington, 3 Oct. 40.. 19 Aug. E. N. Dirkenson, Ensiyns. C. F. Davis, J. T Shakespear, R. Scott. G. M. Waddilove, J. G. Lawrence 39 40 23 Jan. 9 Oct. 9 Jan. 29 May 8 Dec. 4111 Inne 408 Feb. 41 Il Sent, 41 17 Feb. 41121 June I. 401.. .. acting. REGIMENTAL STAFF. I Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. J. Wardlaw, 18 Nov. Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. T. Hamilton, 14 Mar, 39 Surgeon J. Ronald, ..' 8 Apr. 36/15 (ct. 35 Facings, White. VOL. 11.) 199 Native Infantry. 25TH REGT. N. I. (VOLUNTEERS)-[Murriam-ka-Pultun 1-Raised in 1795. Late Ist battalion 20th N. I. Java.' Proceeding to SEGOWLEE. 6 Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Culonel. J. W. Fast, [1838. 25 Dec. 1827 mg 28 June Comg. the Sirhind divo. Lieulenant Colonel. H. D. Coxe, 19 Sept. 401 Mujor. S. Corbett, 19 Sept. 40 28 June 38 Commanding battalion. Kemaoon 31 ... Captains. G. Miller, (P)J. D. Kennedy, (PC) A. C. Rainey, 23 Aug. 5 July 24 Nov. 37 39 [ral. Sub-assistant Comy. Gene- Assistant to the political agent, Suhathoo - Leare, S. C., till 8th April 1843. A.D C. to Major General J. Cock. (P) G. Ramsay, 5 May ... 41... W. Hore, 16 Nov. 411 371... Eur., S.C., 4th Jan. 1811. 37 Lieutenants. (PC) J. (larke, 5 Jan. A. H. Dyke. 25 Feb. C. J. Richards, 15 May H. J. C. Shakespear,... 5 July F. B. Wardroper, 24 Nov. 37 37... 39 2d in comd., Arracan local battalion. lu the Nizam's service. ditached to the Bundel. cind legion- Leave, P. A, till 1st Feb. 1842. C. A. Nicolson, A. G. C. Sutherland, A. Hunter, J, R. Moore, 19 Sept. 3 (ct. 8 Nov. 16 Nov. 40 40 41 41 Eur., S C., 26th July 1841. .., Eur., S.C., 4th Dec. 1841. Ensigns. E. J. D’O. T. Money, 9 Jan, M, N Strover, 29 May A Monev, 6 Ang. C. R. G, Douglas, 29 Nov. M. A. Garsiin, 29 Nov. 41 17 Sept. 41 27 Feb 411 8 May 4112 June 4112 June 40 41 41 41 41 Actiog. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dale of ap- Adljutunl. pointment. C. A. Nicolson, 17 Nov. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. W. S. Hicks, 8th N. I. 29 Dec. 40... Surgeon. H. Bousfield, ... 27 Feb. 41) 3 Aug Facings, Blue, .. Acting. 381 200 [PART II. Bengal Army. 26TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Poel-ka-Pultun]Raised in 1797. Late 1 st battalion 13th N. I. FEROZEPORE-arrived 30th November 1840. Order to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. | Army rank. Remarks, Colonel. [1837 Sir W. Richards, KCB. 1 May 1824 mg 10 Jan. In India. Lieutenant Colonel. W. B. Salmon, 29 July 34 ... Eur., Fur., 8th Feb. ... Major. G. Huish, 12 Jan. 37 ... Offg. Brigade Major, Fe- rozepore. Caplains. J. B. D. Gahan, W. M. Tritton, I, H. Handscomb, (P) H. Johnson, J. L. Taylor, 14 Feb. 30 Jan. 23 Apr. 1 Jan. 12 Jan. 29 30 34 37 37 With Shah Shooja's force. Lieutenants. F. R. Evans, J. Millar, (P) R. Spencer, (P) J. Duncan, 14 Feb. 23 Apr. 19 Sept. 31 Oct. ... 39 C 21 May 41 34 Eur., S.C., 17th May 1839. 34 36 Assistant to the agent to the Governor Gepl. in the Saugor and Nerbud. da territories. 37 2d in comd., Meywar Bheel corps. 37 40 Eur., S.C., 29th July 1839. 40 41 1 Jan. J. G. Gaitskell, (P) C. W. Duffin, T. C, Blagrave, A. J. Vanrenen, F. W. Baugh, 12 Jan. 8 Oct. 25 Nov. 3 Nov. ..C ... 30 40 40 41 41 Ensigns. J. M. Cripps, 29 Aug. 4011 Dec. A. C. Eatwell, 9 Jan. 41 11 June F. Mackenzie, 9 Jan. ,41 8 July G. W. M. Hall, 30 (ct. 41 12 June G. A. Croly, 29 Dec. 41 12 June REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutunt. pointment. R. Spencer, 24 Feb. . 37 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C. W. Duffin, 18 Oct. 38 Suryeons. A. Davidson, M. D., 10th L. C. 17 Mar. 4113 July N. Morgan, 9 Feb. 41 2 Sept. Assistant Surgeon. R. Whittall, . 31 Dec. 41125 Dec. Facings, Red. ... ... 31 In medical charge. 35 Leave to Bombay & Egypt. 40 Doing duty. VOL. 11.] 201* Native Infantry. 27TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Martdeel-ku · Pullun]-Raised in 1797. Late 2nd battalion 13th N. I. AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names, Regil . Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. C. W, Hamilton, (1841 6 Aug. 1835 mg 26 Nov. Comg. the Meywar field force, 1 Oct. 32 Lieutenant Colonel. T. Palmer, Major. E. Sutherland, Caplains. W. Grant, 8 Oct. 311... 28 Sept. 311... Military Secretary to the resident, Hydrabad. Major of Brigade to the 3rd brigade of British troops serving in Afgtn.-Offg. Asst. Adjt Genl. Afgn. Asst Comy. Genl ,2d class. With Shah Shooja's force. A. Watt, (P) P. Hopkins, L. W. Gibson, (P) T. Plumbe, 7 Feb. 8 Mar. 15 Feb. 8 Oct. 33 34 36 39 Eur. Furlo' 25th Mar.1821. ... ... :: Lieutenants. J. S, Alston, 15 Feb. 29c 21 June 41 J.J. Poett, 10 Dec. 31 (P) R. S. Simpson, 7 Feb. 33 . Sub-asst. Comy. General- Leave to the Cape on S. C., 25th March 1840. W. R. Barnes, 8 Mar. 34 D. Lumsden, 22 May 34 H. Laing, 15 Feb. 36 C. Scott, .'15 June 39 Junior asst. to the Com- missioner of Assam. (P) C. Harris, 8 Oct. 39 C. M. Sneyd, 3 Oct. 401 With Shab Shooja's force. Ensigns. H. M. Williams, 22 Aug. 3912 Dec. 38 J. Nicholson, 5 Dec. 3924 Feb. 39 T. Davis, 29 Aug. 40 3 Jan. 40 G. T. Gowan, 9 Jan. 4121 Aug. 40 W, Forbes, 1 Apr. 4125 Jan. 41 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment Adjutant. J. S. Alston, 13 Dec. 31... And snpg. the repairs of Intr. and Qr. Mr. the fortress of Ghuznee. C. Harris, 13 Feb. 401 Assistant Surgeons. E. R. Cardew, M.D. 8 Sept. 40/23 Nov. 39 Proceeding with the in- valids to the provinces. T. Thomson, M.D. 22 Sept. 4121 Dec. 39 In medical charge. Sirdar Baha door. Subadar Major Rutten Tewarry, 1 May 37 Facings, Red. PART II. VOL. 11. BB 202* (PART 11. Bengal Army. 28TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Stupper-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1797. Late 1st battalion 14th N. I. · DEHLEE. BARRACKPORE-arrived 1st February, 1841. Rank and Numes. Regtl. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. 1 ... ... 30 Nov. 41 Colonel. J. A. P. Macgregor.... 1 May 1824 mg 10 Jan. 37 Military Auditor General. Lieutenant Colonel. G, W. A. Lloyd, 7 Jan. 36 Major. J. W. J. Ouseley, 30 Nov. 41... ... Supdt. of the affairs of the Mysore princes,and Secy. to the Madrissa of Cal- cutta, and to the law ex- Captains. amination committee. W. Rutherford, 23 Oct. 31 H. C. Boileau, 6 Nov. 32 Supdt. & pay master of in- valids at Benares, Dina- pore, and Monghyr: (P) R.Smith, 8 Oct. 39 11 July 38 (P) E. T. Tierney, 26 Mar. 4013 April 39 J. Powell, 4016 Jan. 39 Actg. Brig. Maj. Barrack- Licu tenants. pore. J. De W. C. J. Moir,.. 28 Aug. 26 C 21 June 39 W. H. Nicholetts, 20 Sept. 26c 9 Feb. 40 2d in comd., 1st Oude Loc. I. T. D. Martin, 24 Mar. 33c 13 Feb. Pv Nicolson, 26 June 33.c 15 Mar. 41 Pol. Asst, to the envoy and Minr.,Cabool--In charge of Dost Mahommed Khan. G. A. Nicholetts, 8 Oct. 39 Eur, S C., 13th Sept. 1841. J. Murray, 8 Oct. 39 Eur., S.C., 15th Feb. 1841. C. T. Chamberlain, 26 Mar. 40 Placed at the disposal of the en voy and minister of the court of Shah Shoojab- ool-Moolk. Cv R. Maling, 3 Oct. 40 H J. Guise, 30 Nov. 40 Ensigns. M. James, 23 Jan. 4011 June 39 H. W. L. Speyd, 29 Aug. 40 3 Jan. 40 C. Lysaght, 11 Dec. 4015 Feb. 40 J. Kendall, 9 Jan. 35 17 Sept. 40 A. T. Costley. 5 Mar. 41 do Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. T. D. Martin, 17 Feb. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. W. H. Williams, 67th N. I. 25 Aug. Acting. Surgeons. G. Turnbull, 7 Feb. 38 24 April 34 Assistant Surgeon. Bahadoor. Sub.Maj.JewlollDoobey 1 May 37 Facings, Dark-Green, Unposted Ensign John Aostruther Angus, 4 Nov. 1841, Doing duty. ... VOL. 11] 203 Native Infantry. 29TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.—[Cullenjun-ka. Pultun]-Raised in 1797. Late 2d battalion 14th N. I. • DEULEE.' BARRACKPORE-arrived 15th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. | Army rank. Remarks, Colonel. J. Dun, 1841 16 Mar. 1838 mg 26 Nov. Eur., S. C., 19th Feb. 1839. 27 Sept. 37 ... Lieutenant Colonel. W. Burroughs, Majur. P. Brown, Captains D. Simpson, 12 Aug 38 24 Apr. ... W. Wise, H. F. Simons, J. Braeken, A. Park, 4 July 6 Apr. 12 Aug. ... 5 Sept. Officiating pay master and Supdt. of native pen. sioners, Allahabad. 36/14 Feb. 1836 38,18 Jan. 1837 With :st light infy. battn. 38 2 Jan, 1838 41 9 Jan. 1839 ... 36... ... Lieutenants. (P) F. C. Marsden ... 4 Sept. 26c 18 Mar. 40 (P) G. W. Williams,... 21 Aug. 32c 15 May 41 Assistant to the Redt, and Comdt. of the Resident's escort, Katmandhoom Leave, P. A., till 20th Jan. 1842. (P) G. B. Reddie, 24 Apr. 1833 c 15 Apr. 41 Sub-Asst. Comy, Genl. Leave to Cape and V. D. land, S.C., 24th Feb. 1841 e. A. Morris, 4 July Adjt. Ist light infy. bittn (P) H.S. Stewart, 6 Apr. 38 I. C. Johnston, 3 Feb 39 M. B. Whish, 14 Feb. (P) C. S. J. Terrot, 3 Oct. 40 L. P. Faddy, 5 Sept. 41! Ensigns. W. Agnew, 22 Aug. 39 14 Jan. 39 H. M. Davidson, 11 Mar. 40121 Aug. 39 P. F. Gardiner, 5 Mar. 41 27 Sept. H. C. Bowen, 41 25 Dec. 40 F. G. Thellusson, 22 Sept. 31 12 June 41 ... 40 1 Apr. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. F. C. Marsden, 23 Oct. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. S. Stewart, 30 Dec. 37 Surgeon. W. Stevenson (senior) 27 Feb. 411 i Feb. Sirdar Bahadoor. Sub. Maj. Meer Heyat Allie, 1 May 37 Facings, Buff 37 204 [PART 11. Bengal Army. 30TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Macdoon-ka-Pultun]—Raised in 1798. Late Ist battalion 15th N. I. • DEULEE'-LASWARIE'— Deng.' Proceediug to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. | Army rank. Remarks. 33... ... Colonel. Sir J. O'Halloran, G. C.B. 2 May 1824 mg 10 Jan. 37 Ear., S. C., 6th Jan. 1834. Lieutenant Colonel. C. F. Wild, 19 Sept. Temporary Brigadier- commanding the corps & Major. detachments procg. to Afghanistan. T. McSherry, 1 Dec. 39 Leave, S.C., till 1st Nov. 1842. Captains. W. Payne, 30 Dec. 281m 26 Nov. 41 (P) E. T. Milner, 4 Oct. 321 ... 2d asst. Military Auditor General—Leave, to N. S. Wales, S. C., 28th July 1840. A. Jack, 38 W. C. Campbell, 13 Oct. 39 (P) M. E. Loftie, 1 Dec. 3921 Oct. 1839 Acting Brigade Maj. to the force procg. to Afghanis- Lieutenants. tan. 2 Dec. ... D. Downes, R. S. Ewart, W. H Ross, J. S. Harris, (P) J. Morrieson, W. M. Roberts, C. F. Fenwick, G. E. Nicolson, D. S. Dodgson, Ensigns. F. Aubert, Henderson, T. W. Seager, W. D. Bishop, A. J. Nicholson, 30 Dec. 24 Apr. 28 Jan. 21 June 2 Dec. 8 Oct. 13 Oct. 1 Dec. 3 Oct. 28 c 25 Oct. 40 Eur., S. C., 17th Sept. 1$39. 32 c 14 Nov. 41 33 33 33 39 Eur., Furlo' 22d Dec. 1840 39 39 ... Eur., S. C., 17th Sept. 1839. 40 . 5 Dec. 23 Jan. 23 Jan. 9 Jan. 1 Apr. 39 24 Jan. 1839 4011 June 1839 40 28 July 1839 41 31 Aug. 1840 41 25 Jan. 1841 .. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. R. S. Ewart, 27 Sept. 39 10 Jan. 40 Intr and Qr. Mr. J. Morrieson, Assistant Surgeon. H. Irwin, 6 Mar. 1840 13 Jan. 1839 Facings, Buff. VOL. 11.) 205 Native Infantry. 31st REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Broon-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1798. Late 2d battalion 15th N. I. • DEALI'-' LASWARRIE'—'DeiG'—' BHURTPOOR'— KILAT- AFGHANISTAN. CAWNPORE-arrived 6th November 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl rank. Army rank. Remarks 301... Colonel. A. Richards, CB. Lieutenant Colonel. F. Young, Major. J. S. H. Weston, Captains. W. R. Corfield, W. Saurin, H. J. Guyon, (PC) W. P. Milner, ... 20 Dec. 1838 21 June 1826 mg 28 June Eur. Furlo' 1st Feb. 1826. 1 Nov. Pol. Agent, Deyrah Dhoon -Comg. the Sirmoor ba- 38|1c 13 Nov. 39 talion at Bareily. 30 July 32 With 1st ligbt infy. battn. I Junie 34 15 Feb. 36 Brigade Maj. Cawnpore. 27 Mar. 37 Offg. Assist. Adjt. General Dinapore division. 117 Aug. 39 ... R. Beavan, Lieutenants. W. R. Dunmore, W. P. Hampton, W. B. Legard, (PC) G. New bolt, 42 c 15 April 41 30 July 8 May 1 May 15 Feb. 34 34 36 ... (PC) S. R. Tickell, 4 Aug. 36... Depy. Assist. Comy. Genl. of the 2d class- Leave to Cape and eventually to V. D. land, S. C. Junior Asst. to the Govr. Gen.'s Agent, S. W. fron: tier, stationed in the Coleban district. Pol. Assist., Candabar. T.C. Birch, W, S. Dodgson, C. A. Jackson, H. C. Roberts, Ensigns. J. C. Haughton, H. B. Hopper, 27 Mar. 20 Dec. 117 Aug. 3 Oct. 37 38 39 40 ... 9 Dec. 21 June 37 15 Feb. 39 3 Jan. 37 With Shah Shooja's force. 36 Leave to Cape, S. C., from Bom., 9th March 1841. 39 40 40 T. H. Smalpage, H. Finch, F. Paynter, ... 8 Oct. 39, 24 Jan. 9 Jan. 1 April 41 25 Dec. 4119 Aug. 411 Acting REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. T. C. Birch, 14 April 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C.J. Mainwaring, Ist N. I. 5 Feb. Surgeon. J. Jobastone, MD, 3621 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. E. J. Agnew. 7 Feb. 38 25 May Bahadoor. Subadar Major Foor- maun Sing, 27 Jan. 41 Facings, Buff 10 Sept. 31 27 Furlough, 206* (PART II. Bengal Army 32D REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Gultrie-ka-Pultun]- Raised in 1798. Late 1st battalion 16th N. I. • BHURTPOOR.' DINAPORE-arrived 2d May 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. rank. Army rank. Remarks. Colonel. L. Loveday, Lieutenant Colonel. J. Stuart, 15 Nov. 1817 ly 10 Jan. 1837 Eur., S. C., 24th Dec. 1824. 6 Aug. 33... ... Secy, to the Govt. of India in the military dept. Major. C. Coventry, 19 Sept. 361 ... 35... 40'... Captains. C. Haldane, 23 Feb. 35 6 Feb. 34 Depy. Asst. Comy. Genl. Ist class. A. Lewis, 3 Apr. 35... Eur., S. C., 16th Jan. 1839, W. Mitchell, 19 Sept. 36 J. S. Davies, 18 July 37 A. R. J. Swinton, 28 Oct. 39 16 Jan. 32 Lieutenants. J. F. Middleton, 30 Jan. 23c 13 May 40 (P) C. C. J. Scott, 30 May 29 C 12 Jan. 41 Eur., S. C., 9th Feb. 1841. (P)E. C. F. Beaumont, 16 Oct. 3+ 13 Feb. 41 Leave to Cape on S. C., 21st Dec. 1840. J. R. Keane, 23 Feb. Eur., S. C., 10th Feb. 1840. W. W. Davidson, 3 Apr. 35 T. S. Horsburgh, 119 Sept. 36.. In charge of the Dacca div. of public works. (PC) H. C. James, 18 July 37 W. O, Harris, 28 Oct. 39 (PC) J. J. Mackay,... 3 Oct. ... Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr, to Ensign. the 5th L. C. (PC) 0. Cavenagh, 12 Jan. 38'12 June 37 Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to E. Close, 12 Jan. 38 13 June 37 the 41st N. I. The Hon. E. P. R. H. Hastings, 23 Jan. 40'15 June 39 W. A. G. Hickey, 9 Jan. 41 4 July 40 N. Burton, 1 Apr. 41 12 Dec. 40 Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant. pointment. W. W. Davidson, 29 Dec. 32 Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. C. James, 13 Mar. 41 Surgeon. C. Mackinnon, 26 Feb. 39 9 June 33 With 52d N. I. Assistant Surgeon. W. Martin, 22 Oct. 41 9 Mar. 39 In medical charge. Bahadvor. Sub.Maj. Kullyon Sing' i May 37 Facings, black Unposted Ensign Ernest Dundas Elderton | 1 Dec. 1841 | Doing duty. ... ... ... VOL. 11.) 207 Native Infantry. 33RD REGT, NATIVE INFY.—[Halliard-ka-Pultun.] — Raised in 1798. Late 2nd battalion 16th N. I. • LASWARRIE' BHURTPOOR.' FEROZEPORE-arrived 30th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regti. Rank. Army lank Remarks, Colonel, P. Byres, [1838 3 June 1825 mg 28 June Eur., S.C., 2nd Jan. 1827. 40 40 .. Lieutenant Colonel. A, F. Richmond, 24 Jan. Major. F. Hewitt, 23 Mar. Captains. J. Mathias, 5 Oct. (PC) P. Mainwaring.. 11 Dec. (P) R. T. Sandeman,.. 12 Feb. G. Tebbs, 24 Jan. J. Macadam, 23 Mar, 35 37 Comdt., 2nd Assam Sebundy corps. 38 40 40 . Offg. Deputy Judge Advo. cate General, Cawopore division. Lieutenants, C. F. Trower, 13 May E. G J. Champneys,.. 30 May (PC) J. S. Banks, 5 Oct. 33 31 35 In the Nizam's service. Depy. Pay Master, Meerut, Assist, under the comr, of the Saugor diva.-(Jube bulpore). A. Martin, J. H. Fergusson, G. D. Elliot, T. Watson, H. Ward, T. Tulloh, 14 Nov. 11 Dec. 12 Feb. 24 Jan. 23 Mar, 3 Oct. 37 37 38 40] .. Eur., S.C., 8th Feb. 1841. 40 Ensign. T. H. Shum, J. A. Mackeson, W. D. Playfair, H.D. Tøysden, W. Graham, 29 Mar. 11 Feb. 9 Jan. 9 Jan. 38 4 Apr. 44119 Aug. 41|11 June 411 9 Sept. 4112 Dec. 37 39 40 40 26 ápr. 40 REGINENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. A. Martin, 30 Apr. Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. B. Lumsden, 59th N. I. 8 Dec. Surgeon. H. Taylor, 5 Oct. 38' 1 May Facings, Black. Acting. 38 208* (PART IT. Bengal Army. 3411 REGT. N. I.-[Bradshaw-ka-Pultun.]—Raised in 1798. Late 1st battalion 17th N. I. MORADABAD-arrived 3rd November 1841. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. G. Cooper, M. C. Webber, Lieutenant Colonel. 2 Apr. 1834 mg 26 Dec. 41 [1838. 28 June Residing at Futtebghur. Major. R. Low, 6 Aug. 35.. .. Eur., Furlo, from Bombay, 1st January 1840. 7 pr. Captains. S. G. Wheler, H. H. Arnaud, R. Angelo. H. Moore, 17 Dec. 6 Aug. 14 Aug. 28 32 35 5 June 35 Comg Palace guards, Delhi. 39 m 26 May 41 Depy. Judge Advocare GI., Saugor divo.-on duty with the force on service to the eastward, 41 17 May 38 S. A, Lyons. 1 Aug. Lieutenants. W. C. Carter, 19 May (PC) G. W. Hamilton. 22 Aug. G. Timins, 7 Apr. P. J. Chiene, 6 Aug. (P, C, H. Wake, 14 Aug. C. F. M. Mundy, I July P. 8. K. Dewaal, 3 Oct. R. Ouseley, | Aug. W. W. Aubert, 12 Oct. Ensigns. G. W. Boileau, 29 Aug. C. C. Drury, 9 Oct. H. P. Wildig, | Apr. F. H, Smith, 6 Aug. B. T. Reid. 30 Oct. 25 c 1 May 39 26 C 20 June 39 280 25 Jan. 40 Comdt. Malwah contingent. 35lc 13 Feb. 41 Eur., S.C., 811 April 1841. 39 .. Eur., Furlo' 223 Feb. 1840. 40 40 41 40110 Dec. 40|14 Apr. 4012 Dec. 41|2 Apr. 4112 June 39 40 43 41 41 Not arrired, REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. C. F. M. Mundy, 30 Oct, 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. W. Hamilton, 21 Aug. 29) W. Y. Siddons, 63rd N. I. 8 Dec. 41].. Surgeon W. S. Stiven, 27 Feb, 4111 July (1842. Leare, P. .1., till 30th April Icting. .. 23 Supg. Surgeon to the Bri. tish troops serving in Af. ghanistan-not joined. 31 In medical charge. Assis!ant Surgeon. T. Smith, M. D., 8th L. C. 30 Oct. 39 22 Oct. Bahadoor, S. M. R. Khan, 1 May 371 Facings, Scarlet. VOL. 11.) 209* Native Infantry. 35TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Noke--ka-Pultun)-Raised in 1798. Late 2d battalion 17th N. I. • ALLYGHUR'DEALEE'-'BAUEPOOR' AFGHANISTAN GAUZNEE.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names, Regimental rank. Army Rank Remarks. 41.. Colonel. [1838 W. R. Gilbert, 25 June 1832 mg 28 June Eur., Fur. 14th Mar. 1828. Lieutenant Colonel. T. Monteath, CB. 2 Ppril 34 Major. J. Sheil, 17 Feb. Her Maj.'s Secty. of lega. tioa and charge d'Affai- res in Persia. Captains. (PC) G. T. Marshall .21 Aug. 31... Examiner and Secty., col. lege of Fort William. T. Seaton, 2 April 34 A. G. F. J. Younghus. band, 13 Oct. 39 16 Jan. 39 (PC) A. Fisher, 4 Jan, 4116 Jan. 39 (P)T.M.E. Moorhouse. 29 Oct. 41|18 April 40 Lieutenants. J. Ramsay, 16 July 29/c 13 May 40 Depy. Asst. Comy. Genl., Ist class. (P) E. Hay, 21 Aug. 310 8 Aug. 41 With Shah Shooja's force. ). Towgood, 17 Feb. 37 C. Swinton, 13 Oct. 39 In the Nizam's service. (P) R. A. Ramsay, 3 Oct. 40 Adjt. Kemaoon local battn. M.' N, Coombs, 4 Jan. 41 E. J. Boileau, 17 Feb. R. B. Norton, 20 Oct. 41 P. A. P. Bouverie, 29 Oct. 41 00 :::: Ensigns. H. Le Poer Trench, J. N. Young, E. R. Wiggios, W. Metcalf, W. Darell, 9 Jan. 19 Feb. 29 May 8 Dec. 8 Dec. 41 17 Sept. 41 21 Aug. 41! 8 Mar. 411 7 Aug. 4121 Aug. 40 40 41 40 40 Date of apo REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. Towgood, ... 16 June Intr. and Qr. Mr. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. E. Hare, 2d com. 6th batto. arty. ...120 Feb. 4124 Feb. 39)(a medical charge. Facings, White. ссе PART II. VOL. II. 210* Bengal Army. (PART II. 36TH REGT. N. I.-(VOLUNTEERS)-[Bolunteer, Markum-ka-Pultun.] Raised in 1800. Late 1st battalion 18th N. I. • SERINGAPATAM'-' BUURTPORE.' SYLHET-arrived 29th December 1840. On duty at SILCHAR. Rank and Names. Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. [1841. 30 July 1839 mg 26 Nov. Brigadier-comg. the eas- tern frontier. 1 Feb. 40 Colonel. J. H. Littler, Lieutenant Colonel. C. Godby, Major. F. H, Sandys, Captains. G. Chapman, W. Garden, 1 Feb. 40 10 Jan. 37 Political agent, Mehidpore. 13 May 25 Mar, 25 m 28 June 38 28 m 23 July 39Qr. M. Genl., of the Army, with the official rank of Lieut. Col. 33 19 June 82 Leave to V. D. land, S. C., 4th Nov. 1840. 40'18 Jan. 37 41 14 Jan, 39 H. Lloyd, 14 June F. C. Milner, 1 Feb. T. F. Flemyng, 12 Jan. Lieutenants. (PC) J. Lang, 9 July (P) J. J. Hamilton, 25 Mar. F. A. Carleton, 27 May W. Caddell, 8 Oct, (PC)J. D. Fergusson. 8 Oct. Š. B. Faddy, 1 Feb. P. C. Murray, 6 July 25 c 16 Jan. 39 28 C 23 May 39 39c 12 Jao. 39 In the Nizam's service. 39 1 djt., Bhopaul contingent. 40 With Sylhet light infy. bat. 40 Eur. Für., S, C., from the Cape of Good Hope, 3d Oct. 1840. 40 41 3 Oct. 12 Jan. L. A. Cook, C. Holroyd, Ensigns. A. N. Thompson, C. S. Weston, W. J. F. Stafford, H. Raban, W. McNeile, 29 Aug. 29 Aug. 9 Jan. 5 Mar. 1 April 40 10 Dec. 40 3 Jan. 4117 Sept. 41 17 Sept. 41 25 Jan. 39 40 40 40 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. ... J. J. Hamilton, 3 Feb. 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. Lang 28 Sept. 29 Surgeon. J. S. Sullivan, 18 Sept. 37 1 May 37 Assistant Surgeon. Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Maj. Roshun Khan, 27 Jan. Facings, lemon yellow. VOL. 11.] 211 Native Infantry. 37TH REGT. (VOLUNTEERS)-[Ba,en Balunteer, Burral-ka-Pultun.] Raised in 1800, Late 2d battalion 18th N. I. SERING APATAM'_BHORTPOOR'_' AFGHANISTAN.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 33... 33.. Colonels. [1838 C. S. Fagan, C.B. 13 May 1825 mg. 28 June Eur., S. C., 19th Feb. 1839. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Home 7 Jan. 36... Leave, S. C., to Bombay, till 15th March 1842, and thence to Europe. Major. C. Griffiths ... 27 Oct. 381 Captains. J. A. Barstow 31 March 31 13 Aug. 29 Eur., S. C., 8th Feb. 1841. W. S. Prole 4 April 32 (P) G. E. Westmacott 18 Sept. Deputy Judge Adv. Genl. to the troops in Afghan. istan and to the Force of Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk. A. C. Spottiswoode 14 Nov. ... Sub-assist. in the stud dept. J. N. Rind ... 24 Dec. 41 30 Jan. 41 Lieutenants. (P) E. R. Lyons . 22 Nov. 33 C 15 April 41 Sapdt., upper and lower Cachar. (PC)J. W. Curtis ... 27 Feb. 33... Offg. Sub.-assist. Comy. Genl. at head quarters, and Supdt. of the Police in the camp of H. E. the Comdr. in Chief. C. Carlson 18 Sept. 33 W. W. Steer 27 Oct. 38 F. H. Hawtrey 26 March 39 E. D. Vanrenen 3 Oct. 40 W. Mayne 2 Nov. 40 With Shah Shooja's force. J. St. George ... 20 April 41 T. W. Gordon ... 24 Dec. Ensigns. G. Robertson 9 Jan. 41 11 June 40 B. Parrott 9 Jan. 41 19 Aug 40 H. K. MacMullen 2 March 41 7 Aug. 40 J. M. B. F. Tytler 29 May 4117 Feb. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. C. Carlyon 18 March 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. G. W. Curtis 14 Dec. On detached duty. Surgeon. J. Magrath 12 Dec. 39 12 Aug. 39 Assistant Surgeon. 33 Sirdar Bahadoor. Subd. Maj. Shaick He- dait Ali 37 1 May Facings, Lemon Yellow. 212* (PART 11. Bengal Army 38TH REGR. N. I. (VOLUNTEERS)-[Balunteer, Titteelee-ka-Pultur.] Raised in 1800. Late Ist battalion 19th N. I. * SERINGAPATAM.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... ... Colonel. (1837 Sir D. MacLeod. K.C.B. 1 May 1824 mg. 10 Jan. Eur., S. C., 24th Jan. 1826. Lieutenant Colonel. G. P. Wymer 126 Sept. 33 Major. F. S. Hawkins 18 Feb. 40|lc 26 May 41 Depy. Comy. Genl. to the force on service to the eastward. Captains. P. Craigie 31 Dec. 30 m 23 July 39 Deputy Adjutant General of the Army. (PC) G. Burney 11 Nov. 33 W. J. B. Knyvett 30 March 37 28 March 37 Asst. to the Pol. Agent, Upper Scinde. T. H. Scott 25 Sept. 37 G. Turner 18 Feb. 4016 April 39 Lieutenants. W. Young 21 Dec. 31 c 12 Sept. 41 Eur., S. C., 6th Jan. 1841. W. T. Pocklington 1 June 32 32 (PC) G. E. Hollings... 1 June . 2d in comd., 2d Oude local infantry, A. C. Dewar 11 Nov. 33 c 11 April 40 (P) W. Kennedy 17 Sept. 36 c 18 Dec. 40 J. Waterfield 30 March 37 R. C. Tytler 25 Sept. 18 Feb. (P) W. H. Jeremie 401 A. O. Farquharson 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. E. P. T. Nepean 38 14 Jan. 38 H. R. Shelton 122 Aug. 3913 Jan. 39 J. B. Dennys 29 Aug. 40 3 Jan. 40 H. C. Gardner 9 Jan. 40 A. Gibbings 1 April 41 25 Jan. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. A. C. Dewar 8 May 39 Leave, to rejoin, till 15th March 1842, J. Waterfield 24 April 41... ... Acting. Intr. and Qr. Mr. W. Kennedy 16 Feb. 38 Surgeon. W. Jacob 25 Feb. 401 Jan. 40 Assist. Surgeon, Facings, Dark Green. 37 1 Sept. 41 9 Sept. ... ... ... VOL. 11.) 213 Native Infantry. 39th REGT. N. 1.(VOLUNTEERS)-(Balunteer, Burral-ka-Pultun.]-Raised in 1800. Late 2d battalion 19th N. I. • SERING APATAM.' KURNAUL.-arrived 19th January 1840. Rank and Names. Regel Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. c. Fagan, [1837 1 May 1824 mg 10 Jan. Eur., Fur. 28th Jan. 183. Lieutenant Colonel. F. Grant, 25 July 39 ... Major. E. Pettingal, 25 July Captains. W. H. Earle, (P) J, Roxburgh, 13 May 12 June 39 10 Jan. 37 1o charge of the political duties, Bhopawar, and comg. the 5th irregular cavalry. 25 m 28 June 38 Brigade Major, Kurnaul. ... Ist Asst. Mily. Auditor Genl — Acting Depy. Mily. Auditor General. 37 Eur., S.C., 17th Mar 1839. 406 Nov. 37 32 J. H. Low, S R. Wallace, M. W. Gilmore, ...27 Sept. 17 Oct. 22 Apr. 38 ... Lieutenants. A. G. Miller, S, M, Fullarton, J. C. Haslock, H. Howorth, (P) F. E. Voyle, T. Pownall, J. N. Thomas, W. Campbell, R. H. D. Tulloh, 30 Sept. 13 June 9 Sept. 13 Nov. 17 Oct. 1 July 25 July 22 Apr. 22 Apr. 27 c 11 Apr. 40 32 c 12 Oct. 40 32c 15 Mar. 41 27 In the Nizam's service. 38 39 39 40 40 38 39 39 40 40 Ensigns. C. Jackson, 22 Aug 39 11 Dec. J. L, Sherwill, 8 Oct. 39 24 Jan. (P) J, H. Firth, 29 Aug. 40/18 Dec. C. F. Smith, 5 Mar. 4127 Sept. J. D. MacDonald, 1 Apr. 4131 Dec. Date of ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. C. Haslock, .17 Dec. 37 Intr. und Qr. Mr. F. E. Voyle, ... 29 May 41 Surgeon. J. Greig. 29 Aug. 37 21 Mar. 37 Facings, Dark green. 214 (PART IT. Bengal Army. 40TH REGT. N. I (VOLUNTEERS)-[Hamilleen-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1802. Late 2d battalion 20th N. J. "JAVA'- Ava'-'ARRACAN.' On duty at SEGOWLEE. To march to CAWNPORE on being relieved by the 25th N. I. Rank and Names. Regul . Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel [1838 T. Newton, 19 Oct. 1833 mg 28 June Residing in the Meerut circle. Lieutenant Colonels. W. H. Hewitt, 11 Nov. 35 Major. H. Macfarquhar, 1 Sept. 41 28 June 38 Senior asst. to the comri, Tavoy. Captains. G. W. Bonham, (P) G. Thomson, S. F. Hannay, 13 May 13 Apr. 1 Apr. 35... 25 m 28 June 38 Eur., S, C., 31st Oct. 1841. 30 Sub-asst. Comy. General. Comdt., Assam light infan. try. 35 4118 Oct. 37 S. Long, (P) R. Chitty, 11 Nov. 1 Sept. Lieutenants. H. A. Shuckburgh, H. C. Reynolds, A. De Fountain, 18 Aug. 24 May 21 Aug. J. Erskine, A. MacDonald, (PC) C. E. Burton, 20 Oct. 1 Apr. 5 July 25 c 9 Eeb. 40 29 C 28 Dec. 40 32c 30 Jan. 41 With Ramgurh light infan- try battalion. 32 35 Asst. to the Agent and Commissioner, Delhi, 39 Eur., S. C., from Bombay, 21st Feb. 1840. 40 41 36... L. T. Forrest, 18 May R. M. Franklin, C. D'O. Atkinson, 3 Oct, 1 Sept. Ensigns. E. C. Gardner, A. A. Becher, H. W. Frost, A. A. MacDonell, J. S. D. White, 12 Apr. 22 Aug. 9 Oct. 1 Apr. 13 Sept. 39 12 June 3912 Dec. 401 1 May 4112 Dec. 41 11 June 38 Eur., S.C., 13th Sept. 1841. 3€ 40 40 41 Not arrived. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dute of ap- Adjutant. pointment. J, Erskine, 7 Apr. 37 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J.Remington, 12th N.I. 8 Dec. 41 Acting. Assistant Surgeon. J. Barber. ... 24 Sept. 39 3 Feb, 27 Facings, Blue. YOL. 11.) 215* Native Infantry. 418T REGT. N. I.- [Doobye-kee-daheena-Pultun]—Raised in 1803. Late 1st battalion 21st N. I. • BAURTPOOR.' GORUCK PORE-arrived 28th Nov aber, 184 Detachment at AZIMGURH. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. S. H. Tod, 5 Apr. 1834 mg 28 (1838 June Eu., S. C., 19th Sept. 1832. Lieutenant Colonel. D. Williamson, Major. H. Sibbald, ... 28 Feb. 40 28 Feb. . 4010 Jan. 37 Comg. the 3d L. I. battn. Captains. W. Ramsay, 2 Aug. 6 Apr. .. W, H. Halford, J. Cumberlege, (PC) F. W. Birch, 17 Oct. 8 Oct. 28 m28 June 38 Brigade Major and Post | Master, Delhi. 33 11 Apr. 34 38 10 Jan. 35 39 7 Jan. 36 Supdt. of police, Calcutta, and supdt. of the Cal- cutta salt chokies. 4011 July 38 (PC) J. W. V. Stephen 28 Feb. Lieutenants. H. Alpe, 13. May C. Apthorp, 20 May J. K. Phibbs, 2 Aug. F. R. Ellis, S. J. Saunders, 22 Apr. (PC)W. F. Hamersley. 17 Oct. G. A. Brett, 8 Oct. A. W. Onslow, 28 Feb. W. Lowther, 3 Oct. 6 Apr. 21c 11 July 38 271c 9 Jan. 40 Eu., S. C., 18th Nov. 1840. 2c 13 May 40 35 38 38 Political Assistant, Shawl, 39 41 40 Ensigns. (P) F. J. Elsegood, 11 Jan. 40124 Jan. 20 May G. E. Phillpotts, R. C. Hatch, M. F. Kemble, H. B. Stevens, 39 With 2d Assam sebundy corps. 39 Eu., S. C., 16th July, 1840. 40 41 41 ... 9 Jan. 40/12 June 41 9 Sept. 4117 Feb. 4111 June 29 May 2 Sept. 40... ... Acting REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. F. R. Ellis, 14 Feb. 39 Intr, and Qr. Mr. 0. Cavenaugh, 32dN.I. 23 July Surgeon. D. Campbell, 17 Mar. 41 28 May Sirdar Bahadoor. Subador Major Saick Bukshee, 1 May 37 Facings, yellow. 35 216* (PART II. Bengal Army. 42ND REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-[Jansin-kee-Pultun]—Raised in 1803. Late 2d battalion 21st N. I. ARRACAN - AFGHANISTAN.' AFGHANISTAN Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 37 10 Jan, ... 371 2 Feb. Colonel. [1838 W. Nott, ... 13 Jan. 1834 mg 28 June Comg. the 2d brigade of British troops serving in Afghanistan. Lieutenant Colonel. T. J. Anquetil, 14 Mar. 33 Brigadier--Comg. His Maj. Shah Shooja's force. Major. J. O. Clarkson, ... 24 July 37 Captains. T. Polwhele, ... 26 July 39 ... Maj. of Brigade to the 2d brigade of British troops serving in Afghanistan. J. Liptrap, 19 June 311 Eu., Furlo' 13th Feb. 1841. J. Leeson, ..(18 June 33... Temporarily doing duty with Shah Shooja's force. A. McKean, 24 July 35 E., S. C., 22d June, 1839. (P) T. Dalyeli, 6 July 38 15 June 37 Lieutenants. C. Campbell, 14 July c 23 May 39 Depy. pay Mr. Cawnpore. W. Jervis, 23 Nov. c 14 Nov. 39 P. Ilay, 4 Mar, 280 26 Mar. 40 W. P. Meares, 18 June 33c 28 Sept. 40 Eu., S. C., 21st Feb. 1837. D. Gaussen, 24 July 37 With Shah Shooja's force. (P) J. S. Knox, 6 July 38 A. H. Ross, 6 Sept. With Shah Shooja's force. J. I. Mainwaring, J. G. Wollen, 3 Oct. 40... Placed at the disposal of the political agent, Quettah. Ensigns. H. C. Adlam, 22 Aug. 39 C. W. Ford, 8 Oct. 39 A. Macqueen, 23 Jan. 18 June 39 R. Harcourt, 9 Jan. 40 J. Spence, 29 May 41 4 Feb. 41 REGIMENAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. P. Hay, 5 Oct. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. S. Knox, 22 Sept. 38 Assistant Surgeon. J. H. Serrell, 16 May 40 10 Oct. 29 Bahadoor. Subador Major Shaick Supun, ... 27 Jan. Facings, yellow. 39 39 ... 11 Dec. 39 13 Jan. 39 24 Jan. 40 4131 July 1 VOL. 11.) 217 Native Infantry. 43BD REGT. N. I.-Kyne-kee-duheena-Pullun)-Raised in 1803. Late 1st battalion 22nd N. I. • AFGHANISTAN.' AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regil. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Nesbitt, (1811 30 May 1836 mg 26 Nov. Eur., Furlo' 4th Dec. 1834. 23 Feb. 35 Lieutenant Colonel. L. R. Stacy, Major. J. Nash, Captains. W. G, Lennox, (P) R. Campbell, 26 Sept. 41 23 Apr. 30 Apr. 30 34 Comdt. Hurrianah light infantry battalion. 34 A. Webster, H. J.yell, T. Dixon, 10 Dec. 10 Oct. 26 Sept. 39 25 Apr. 38 13 Apr. 37 38 2710 26c 3 Mar. 39 9 Aug. 401 28 c 28 Sept. 40 34 34 Adjutant, hill rangers. 39 Pol. Assist. Caudabar. 39 Lieutenants. H. W. Matthews, 9 Nov, A. F. Macpherson, 23 Feb. A. H. Duncan, 11 Apr. J. G:dfrey, 30 Apr. W. G. Don, 10 Dec. (P) E. K. Elliot, 2 June R. A. 'Trotter, 10 Oct. (PC) W. L. Mackin- tosh, 3 Oct. G. Holroyd, 26 Sept. Ensigns. (P) W. Q. Pogson, 22 Aug. C. J. Robarts, 23 Jan. B. H. Murray, 9 Oct. T. E. B. Lees, 9 Jan, G. Beadnell, 30 Oct. 40 .. A.D.C. to the Govr. Genl. ... 39 12 Dec. 4012 June 40 8 Mar. 4118 Sept. 4112 Dec. 38 Eur., S.C., 26th July 1841. 39 40 40 Europe, S. C. 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. Intr. and Qr. Mr. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. W. J. Loch, 16 May ... 40 8 Jan, 37 Bahadoor. Sub. Bhoondoo Sing,... 1 May 37 Facings, Pea Green. PART II. VOL II. DD* 218* (PART II. Bengal Army. 44TH REGT. N. I.-[Kyne-ka-baean-Pultun.]-Raised in 1803. Late 2nd battalion 22nd N. I. • DEIG.' ALMORAH-arrived 15th January 1841. Detachment at HAWAULBAUGH. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. ... 29 35 Deputy Pay master, Nus- seerabad. 36 With Shah Shoojah's force. Princpl. asst, to the Comr. of Assam (Kamroop.) Lieutenant Colonel. R. B. Jenkins, 27 Apr. 1831 Major. W. H. Wake, 8 Oct. 39 Captains. M. Hughes, 21 Jan. 35 16 Dec. J. Bartleman, 25 Jan. 37 14 Feb. J. Woodburn, 2 June 38 7 Jan. J. Wemyss, 8 Oct. 39 J. Anderson, 26 June 40 Lieutenants. R. H. Mockler, 21 Jan, 35 T. Goddard, 21 July 35 (P) R. Grange, 25 Jan. 37 A. Sanders, 12 Mar. 37 W. I.. Hasell, 2 June 38 C. Wright, 1 Aug. 39 G. M. Prendergast, 8 Oct. 39 E. D. Watson, 26 June 40 3 Oct. 401 (P) J. D. Willan, Ensigns. (P) R. H. Gennys, 23 Jan. 40 28 July J. P. Clarkson, 29 Aug. 40 10 Dec. B. S. Cooper, 29 Aug. 40 3 Jan. H. R. James, 9 Jan. 4121 Aug J. G. Batten, 29 Jan. 41 12 June REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. W, L. Hasell, 3 Aug. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. D. Willan, 13 May 41 Europe, Furlough 24th Feb- ruary 1841. Deputy Assistant Qr. Mr. Genl., 2nd class. .. ... Europe, S. C., 17th May 1839. Adjutant,3rd irregular care alry. .. 39 39 40 40 40 ... ... 28 Sept. 38 5 Apr. 38 And offg. citil, Almorah. Surgeon. J. H. Palsgrave, Assistant Surgeon. W. Shillito, 27 Mar. 41 7 July 38 With det. at Hawulbaugh. Facings, Pea Green, VOL. 11.) 219* Native Infantry. 45TH REGT. N. 1.-[Murreeroo-ka-daheena-Pultun.]—Raised in 1803. Late 1st battalion 23rd N. I. DACCA-arrived 3rd March 1841. Ordered to BENARES when relieved by the light wing of the 49th N. I. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... 29 Oct. 301... Colonel. [1838 J. Truscott, 4 Mar. 1830 mg 28 June Eur., Furlo' 24th Jan. 1831. Lieutenant Colonel. C. R, Skardon, 13 April 30 Major. Sir C. M. Wade, Kl. and C.B. 10 Nov, 40'lc 23 July 39 Resident, Indore. Captains. D. Williams, Senior assist. to the local superindt. of Arracan. (P) K, Campbell, 8 June 32 R. W. Fraser, 12 Jan. 38 4 Oct. 37 W. Biddulph, 27 Jan. 3925 Dec. 37 R. Haldane, 10 Nov. 4017 June 392nd in comd., 1st irregular cavalry. Lieutenants. G. Short, 29 c 12 Feb. 40 .(PC) H. H. Stay, 6 May 29 c 13 Feb. 41 Europe, S. C. G. Biddulph, 2 Oct. 31 A. Fraser, 11 Nov. 31 H. C. Jackson. 38 In the Nizam's service. (P) W.J. H. Charteris. 20 Dec. 38 Adjt. 2nd Oude local infy. (PC) W. H. Oakes, 27 Jan. 39 With the Ramgurh light infantry battalion. F. G. Crossman, 3 Oct. 40 T. C. H. D'Oyly, 10 Nov. 40 Ensigns. C. V. Hamilton, 22 Aug. 39 11 Dec. 38 A. S. 0. Donaldson, 22 Aug. 39 24 Jan. 39 W. Alcock, 9 Jan 4112 June 40 C. R. Oakes, 12 Jan. 41 4 Aug. 40 O. E. Rotbney, 8 Dec, 41 27 June 41 ... 29 Jan. ... 12 Jan, ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. G. Biddulph, 15 Mar. 38 Intr, and Qr. Mr. C. Hagart, 520 N, I.... 18 Dec. 41 Acting. Surgeon. C. S. Curling, 10 July 4012 July 27 Furlough. Assist. Surgeon. H. Maclean, 7 April 4115 Mar. 26 Bahadoor. Sab. Maj. Draub Khan' i May 37 Facings, Dark Green. 220* (PART II. Bengal Army. 46TH REGT. N. I.-[Murreeroo-ka-ba,e,an-Pultun.]-Raised in 1803. Late 2nd battalion 23rd N. I. • Assam.' BENARES-arrived 15th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 12 July 1814 lg 22 July 30 Eur., Furlo' 11th Jan. 1821 Colonel. St. Geo. Ashe, Lieutenant Colonel. T. Fiddes, Mujor. W. B. Girdlestone, Cupluins. J. C. Tudor, 19 June 31 1 Mar. 38 W. T. Savary, (P) T. J. Nuthall, 1 April 28 m 26 Nov. 41 Depy. Asst. Comy.Gen. Ist class. 14 Jan. 33 1 Mar. 35 Depy. Asst. Com. Gen. 2nd ... CAUSS. H. W. Burt, J. Grissell, Lieutenants. R. P. Alcock, 1 Mar. 20 July 38 38 ... 8 Nov. ... (P) J. M. Drake, (P) G. Johnson, H. S. Grimes, J F. Erskine, J E. Grounds, (P) R. A. Herbert, 1 April 14 Jan. 29 Aug. ... 1 Mar. 26 May 1 Mar, 27 C 23 Apr. 60 Depy. Asst. Cr. Mr. Geo. 1st class. 28c 14 Aug. 40 33 c 5 Nov. 40 Sub-asst. Comy. General. 33 c 27 June 41 35 35 38 Junior asst. under the com. missioner of the Saugor dn. 38 40 (P) S. Pond, G. Caulfield, Ensigns. G. N. Oakes, 10 July 3 Oct. ... 12 Sept. 36 3 Jan. 36 A.D.C. to the Gorr. Genl. and acting Adjt. of the Calcutta native militia. 38 39 39 40 W. L. M. Bishop, i Sept. 3821 Feb. J. O. Armit, 22 Aug. 39 13 Jan, H, F. Crossman, 9 Oct. 41 11 Dec. S. J. Browne, 1 Apr. 41 22 Dec. Date of apo REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Ailjutant. S. Pond, 12 Dec. 38 Intr. and Qr. M. J. M. Drake, 13 Feb. 40 Surgeon. T. Forrest, 7 Aug. 4019 Sept. ... 34 Assistant Surgeon. Bahadoor, Sub. Maj. Taccoor Sing 27 Jan. 411 Fucings, Dark Green. VOL. II.] 221 Native Infantry. 47TA REGT. N. I. (VOLUNTEERS)-[Craum-ka-Pultun.]-Raised in 1824. KHYOUK PHYOO, ARRACAN-arrived 6th November 1841. Rank and Names, Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. 12 Nov. 1820 mg 22 July 30 Eu., Furlo' 31st Jan. 1829. Colonel. J. Price, Liputenant Colonel. R. W. Pogson, Mujor. A. Goldie, 8 Oct. 39 8 Oct. 39 28 June 38 Leave to Cape and N. S. Wales, S. C., 24th Feb. 1841. Caplains. F. Jenkins, 29 Apr. 30 2 Dec. 26 Commissioner and agent to the Govr. Genl. Assam and N. E. of Rungpore. 37 2nd in command, Ramgurh light infantry battalion. In China. (PC) G. C. Armstrong 12 Mar. 38 30 Sept. C. Boulton, C. Corfield, D. Pott, 15 Apr. 15 Dec. 8 Oct. 38 38 39 Leave to Cape, S. C., 18th November 1840. Lieutenants, (P). J. T. Daniell, 10 Feb. (PC) W. C. Hollings. 16 Feb. 35... W, D. Gondyar, 2 Mar. (PC) A. G. Reid, 12 Mar. R. Renny, 15 Apr. (PC) A. H. C. Sewell. 18 Apr. j. D. Lander, 15 Dec. Eu., S. C., 22nd Dec. 1838. 35c 23 May 41 Asst. to the genl. supdt. for the suppression of thuggee. 3? Cu., s. C., 22nd Dec. 1838. 38 38 38 Eu., S. C., 26th July 1841. 38 Adjt. of cavalry, Bundel- cund legion. Eur., S. C., 7th Jan. 1841. 40 Adjt., Ist Assam sebundy corps. ... 39... W. Baillie, R. Campbell, 8 Oct. 3 Oct. Ensigns. W. C. Watson, J. F. Pogson, J. R. Prghe, H. F. Rideout, G. McAndrew, 5 Dec. 30 Jan. 29 Aug. 9 Jan. 7 June 39 24 Feh. 40 6 July 40 3 Jan. 41 21 Aug. 41 8 Mar. 39 39 40 40 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. R. Renny, 6 Feb. 39 Intr. ind. Qr. Mr. A. G. Reid, . 21 Feb. 39 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeons. A. McDonall Stuart,... 4 Nov. 4029 Aug. J. Macpherson, Ist troop 3rd brig. horse arty. ...25 Oct. 41 4 Dec. Facings, Yellow. 29 Leave to Cape & Australia. 39 In medical charge. 222* (PART IT Bengal Army. 48TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Mutees-ka-Pultun.]—Raised in 1804. Late 2nd battalion 24th N. I. AFGHANISTAN 'LGHUZNEE.' ALLYGURH-arrived 26th March 1841. The left wing at AGRA. 6 Rank and Numes. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Cuninghame, . 18 Feb. 1820 lg 28 June 38 Eu., S. C., 5th Feb. 1820. Lieutenunt colonel. H. M. Wheeler, C.B... 27 June 35 Major. W. Sage, 1 Oct. 40 28 June 38 Eur., S. C., 16 Sept. 1841. Captains. T. Fisher, 27 June, 35 13 Mar. 33 Comdt., 1st Assam sebundy corps. C. Troup, 8 Oct. 3916 July 35 With Shah Shooja's force. (P) J. Bunce, | Oct. 40 9 Sept. 40 (PC) H. Palmer, 16 Oct. 40 H. D. Van Homrigh,... 28 Apr. 41 Lieutenants. C. Hasell, 22 June 38 H. L. Bird, 30 June 38 F. H. Thomas, ... Acting Adjutant, left wing. (P) T. Spankie, B.A. . 8 Oct. 39 F. T. Paterson, I Mar, 40 H. G. Burmester, 1 Oct. 40 W. Champion, 3 Oct. 40 D. L. Wake, 16 Oct. 40 T. Green, 41 Ensigns. F. Wale, 9 Jan, 410 June 40 With 3rd light infy. battn. E. B. Litchford, 9 Jan, 4111 June 40 R. C Taylor, 9 Jan. 410 Sept. B. Henderson, 29 May 411 4 Feb. 41 P. R. Hockin, 41 8 Mar. 41 1 Aus 38... .. ... 28 Apr. 40 29 May REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment C. Hasell, 16 Feb. 38 ... Intr, and Qr. Mr. T. Spankie, B.A. 6 Jan. 41 Surgeon. R. McIntosh, 16 Jap. 41 16 Dec. 39 Assistant Surgeons. H. R. Bond, 14 Dec. J. Macintire, 61st N. 1.13 Nov. 26 24 Feb. 41 20 July 35 Furlough. 38 Left wing. Bahadoor. Subadar Maj. Chope Tewary, 1 May 37 Facings, Yellow. VOL. 11.) 223* Native Infantry. 49TH REG. NATIVE INFY.-[Royle-ka-Pultun.]-Raised in 1804. Late 1st battalion 25th N. I. • ARRACAN.' BARRACKPORE-arrived 12th December 1841. The right wing ordered to DACCA, and the left wing to MIDNAPORE. Rank and Names. liegtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 4 Aug. 29. 35... Colonel. G. Carpenter, ... 29 Apr. 1823 mg 10 Jan. 37 Eu., Furlo' 8th Jan. 1834. Lieutenant Colonel. R. Ferine, 8 Oct. 39... Eu., S. C., 13th Jan. 1839. Major. J. F, Douglas, ... 11 Apr. Cuptuins. R. Codrington, Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army of the 1st class. (P) J. W. Michell, 27 May 30 Ř. F. Macvitie, 26 Apr. 33 (P) F. C. Elvall, 16 Nov. Asst. to the Genl. Supdt. for the suppression of thuggee-Leave, P. A., till 1819 Jan. 1842. E. S. Lloyd, ... 11 Apr. 4116 Jan. 39 Lieutenant, J. Stubbs, 26 c 10 Feb. 39 2nd in comd., Joudpore le- gion. C. Codrington, 27 May 30c 5 Nov. 40 With Shah Shooja's force. (P) J. C. Cooper, 24 Nov. 22 c 5 Feb. 31 (P) J. Smith, 8 Jan. 35 H. J. Piercy 17 July Actg. Adjt., 2nd L. I. batta. (P) G. Q. Nesbitt, 16 Jan. 40 C. S. Reynolds, 3 Oct. With Assam light infantry. R. Larkins, 30 Aug. 41 R. Stein, 26 Apr. 33 Ensigns. J. Hood, 9 Oct. 40 29 Jan. 40 W. W. Reade, 9 Oct. 4010 May 40 J. W. Sykes. | Apr. 4112 Dec. 40 J. F. Richardson, 6 Aug. 41 21 Apr. 41 W. Gordon, 2 Sept. 4111 June 41 ... 27 Mar. 37 ... 40 ... REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dute of ap- Adjutunt. pointment. J. Smith, I Nov. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. C. Cooper, 24 Jan. 35 Surgeon. Assistant Suryeon. E. V. Davies, ... 27 Feb. Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Major Hun- noomaun Oppudiah, | I May 41 27 Aug. 37 37) Facings, Buff. 224 (PART II. Bengal Army 5011 REGT. N. I.-[Gristeen ka Pultun]-Raised in 1804. Late 2nd battalion 25th N. I. SAUGOR-arrived itth February 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. T. Murray, 11 Nov. 1835 18 June 1831 Eu., S. C., 20th Feb. 1834. Licutenant Colonel. R. Blackall, 22 Apr. 36 Mojor. J. D. Parsons, 22 Apr. 36 lc 23 July 39 Depy. Commissary Genl. Captains. H. J. White, J. Graham, 21 June 12 Dec. 30 33 ... C. J. Lewis, (P) J. Saunders, F. Trimmer, 14 July 22 Apr. 29 Oct. 35 20 Sept. 36 4 Mar, 39 24 Oct. Asst. to the Genl. Supt for the Suppression of thug. gee. 34 Asst. Comy. Gepl., 1st class. 35 36 Eu., Furlo' 26th July 1841. Licutenants. J. H. Hampton. (PºC) K. Young, 18 Nov. 13 May J. Macdonald, R. Ouseley, 27 June 10 Jan. 24c 11 July 38 25c 16 Jan. 39 Depy. Judg Adv. Geol., Sirhind division. 28c: 26 Mar. 40 29c 28 Sept. 40'Junior asst. to the Comr. Ī of Chota Nagpore. 29 c 15 Mar. 41 36 38 Adjutant, Nusseree batta. 38 With 3rd light infy. battd. G. Gordon, H. 1. Becher, R. Hany; (P) H. Nicoll, A. C. Plowden, 12 Mar. 19 Nov. 29 Oct. 4 Nov, 3 Oct. 40 ... 26 Nov, Ensigns. J. R. McMullin, (P) B. E. Bacon, H. E Read, G. A. S. P. Fooks, J. J. Huline, 12 Apr. 9 Oct. 3 Feb. 29 May 38 i Mar. 39 22 June 40 10 July 41.21 Aug 41 4 Feb. 38 38 39 40 u.. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dale of ap. pointment. Adjulant. J. H. Hampton, 1 July 36 ... Intr and Qr. Mr. H. Nicoll, 5 Jan. 39 Surgeon. J. Barker, ... 15 Apr. 35 9 Feb. 34 Facings, Buff. VOL. 11.) 225* Native Infantry. 51st REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Duberne-ka.Pultun]--Raised in 1804. Late 1st battalion, 26th N. I. BENARES-arrived 11th December, 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Cock, Lieutenant Colonel. W. A. Yates, 30 May 1824 mg 28 June Comg. the Bens. division. [1838 29 Nov. 34 3810 Jan. 37 Leave to Cape, S. C., 4th January 1841. Major. H. C. Barnard, 18 Feb. Caplains. G, S. Blundell, 23 Nov. (P)J. T. Somerville,... 3 Nov. J. Finnis, 25 Apr. 26 m 26 Nov. 41 31 7 May 31 36 4 Mar. 35 Offg. ex. officer of the Hidgellee division of public works. 37 17 May 361 38 10 Mar. 37 Supdt. of the Jhansi ter- ritory. (P) C. Griffin, D. Ross, 7 Feb. 18 Feb. Lieutenants. C. Baseley, C. Cheape, ... 19 June 13 May C. Dickson, (P) Y. Lamb, 13 May 28 Nov. P. S. Chinn, (P) W. Lamb, J. Bontein, 28 May 25 Apr. 7 Feb. 24c 10 July 38 25c 11 July 38 Brig. Major, Meywar field force. 25 c 23 Feb. 39 26 c 11 Dec. 39 Eur., S. C., 16th April 1840. 29 C 28 Sep. 40 360 4 Feb. 41 37 c 17 Aug. 41 Asst.. Surveyor General's office. 38 Asst. revenue surveyor. 401 (P) S. A. Abbott, J. Turner, 18 Feb. 3 Oct. Ensigns. S. H. J. Davis, T. M. Travers, J. H. Reid, W. R. Wallace, E. T. Smalley, 14 Mar. 9 Oct. 9 Jan. 5 Mar. 20 Mar. 3728 June 40 8 Feb. 41 4 Aug. 41 27 Sept. 41 3 Oct. 36 40 40 40 40 Date of apol REGIMENTAL' STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. 7 Jan. 32 C. Dickson, Intr. and Qr. Mr. W. Lamb. 6 Aug. 41 39 Surgeon. H. M.Tweddell, 11 Feb. 4016 Apr. Assistant Surgeon. Facings dark-Green. Uuposted Ensign F G Stainforth Uuposted Ensigo D. A. Chase PART II. VOL. 11. 18 Nov. 1841 | Doing duty. | Ditto E E 226 (PART 11. Bengal Army. 52T8 REGT. NATIVE INFTY.-[Hindree-ka-Pultun.]Raised in 1804. Late 2d battalion, 26th N. I. BARRACKPORE-arrivel 230 December, 1841. Rank and Numes, Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. L. Richardson, Lieutenant Colonel. G. Kingston, 11 July 1823 mg. 10 Jan Europe, Furlo' 11th Jan. (1837 1824. 4 Sept. 39 Major. F. G. Lister, 4 Sept. 3910 Jan. 37 Pol. agent in the Cossya hills, &c. and comg. the Syl. light infy. battn. Captains. J. Hewett. 6 May (P) T. H. Shuldham,... 1 Jan. J. W. H. Jamieson, 4 Sept. 29 37 39/16 Jan. Bundelçund 39 With the legion 40 W. Martin, J. R. B. Andrews 16 Sept. 1 Jan. 4018 Apr. 41 Lieutenants. (P) A. Mackintosh (P) R. Morrieson 14 June 6 May 28 29 (P) C. Hagart, 1 Jan. Asst. to the Gov, Geni's agent, Rajpootanah. Icting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 45th A. I. 37 ... 8 Aug. (P) E. Wiggens, (P) E. Hall, 20 Nov. 37 38... Adj. of infy. Bundelcund legion. 39 40 40 41 (P)J. W. H. Powoall.] 4 Sept. F. M. H. Burlton, 16 Sept. J. C Lamb, 3 Oct. G. M. Brodie. 1 Jan, Ensigns. G. G. Moxon, 29 Aug. J. B. Y. Matheson, 24 Sept. W. R. Y. Haig, 9 Jan, W. H. Lowther, 9 Jan. I. O'Callaghan, 1 Apr. ... 401 3 Jan. 40126 Jan. 4111 June 4121 Aug. 4124 Jan. 40 40 40 40 4) REGIMENTAL Staff. Dute of ap Adjutant. pointment. E. Wiggens, 19 Oct. 40 Inir, and Qr. Mr. A. Mackintosh, 18 Feb. 32 Surgeon. C. Mackinnon,320 N.I. 9 June Assistant Surgeon. C. M. Henderson, A.D. 12 June 401 1 Nov. 33 In medical charge. 38/With 68th N. I. Facings, dark green. PART 11.] 227* Native Infantry. 53D REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Custor-ka-Pultun)-Raised in 1804. Late 1st battalion, 27th N. I. Proceeding to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel M. Boyd, 13 May 1825 mg 28 June Comg. the Saugor division... [1838 Lieutenant Colonel. R. Benson, 30 July 39.. Eur., S. C., 14th Jan, 1840.- Major. J. Hoggan, 8 Oct. 36 Captains. W. E. B. Leadbeater 2 Sept. W. C. Gordon. 12 Feb. 24 m 29 June 38 30 Europe, S. C., from Madras, 8th July 1837. 36 4 Mar. 351 39 18 Feb. 39 41 8 Jan, 40 C. Campbell, G. Tylee, G. Hamilton, 8 Oct. 4 Mar. 25 Feb. Lieutenants. (PC) D. Nisbett, E. Talbot, C. Windsor, (P) J. Hunter, È. S. Capel, 20 Mar. 31 May 13 Sept. 13 Nov. 8 Oct. 36 ... 29 c 13 May 40 31 c 5 Nov. 40 34 34 Adjt., Calcutta native mili. tia— With the regiment. Eur., S. C., 31st Aug. 1837. 39 With Sbah Shooja's force. 40 Junior asst. to the Comr, of Kemaoon-with the Regt. 41 371.. W. C. Lloyd, W. R. Hillersdon (P) H. Ramsay, 121 Apr. 20 May 3 Oct. J. H. Reynolds, 25 Feb. 37 38 40 40 40 ... ... Ensigns. J. M. Swinton, .21 June 39| 4 Apr. D. T. Reid, 22 Aug 39 12 Dec. Br. F.A. V. Meyern,... 9 Jan. 41 8 July R. J. Edgell, 1 Apr. 41 11 Dec. A. H. Gerrard, 1 Apr. 4112 Dec. Dale of up. REGIMENTALSTAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. Hunter, 9 Nov, 37 Inir, and Qr. Mr. D. Nisbett, 13 Nor. 32 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. J. Campbell, .. 30 Nov. 41 22 Dec. 40 Facings, yellow. 228* (PART II. Bengal Army. 54TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Mapert-ka-Pultun]-Raised in 1804. Late 2d battalion, 27th N. I. AFGHANISTAN. Runk and Names. Regll. Rank. Army Runk. Remarks. Colonel. R. Pitman, CB 12 Jan. 1825 mg 28 June Eur., S. C., 1st Jan. 1825. [1838 Lieutenant Colonel. C. D. Wilkinson, .. 26 Mar. 40... Leave to Cape, S. C., 8th Feb. 1841. Major. W. Ewart 23 July 38 Captains. A. J. Anstruther, H. R. Osborn, 6 Jan. 18 May 32 33 A. A. L. Corri, W. F. Beatson, Asst. Comy. Genl., 2d class -Leave to Cape and Van Dieman's land, s. C., 9th Feb. 1841. 34 35 Comg. the Bundelcund le. gion. 36 24 Feb. 26 June 35 26 Oct. 37 13 July R. L. Burnet, 23 July 38 4 Apr. Lieutenants. H. A. Boscawen, H. Vetch, D. Shaw, (P) J. A. Kirby, N. Palmer, (P) W. Morrieson, H. Weaver, F. S. Paterson, (P) H. B. Melville, 1 May 13 May 3 Sept. 18 May 24 Feb. 14 May 23 July 10 Sept. 3 Oct. 24'c 27 Nov. 36 Secretary, clothing board. 25 c 15 June 38 Principal asst. upper Assam. 27 CI1 Apr. 40 23 c 12 Oct. 40 Offg. Sub asst. Comy. Gepl. 35 c 15 Mar. 41 37 38 38 40 38 38 39 40 40 Ensign. (P) T. Pottinger, i Sept. 38 i Mar. G. W. Cuninghame, 12 Apr. 3911 June A. Rose, 22 Aug. 39 13 Jan. J. Sibley, 9 Jan. 41 7 Aug. C. N. Halhed, 1 Apr. 4125 Dec, Date of ap REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. W. Morrieson, 9 Feb. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. A. Kirby, Surgeon. 27 May 36... Offg. Sub-asst. Comy. Genl. Assistant Surgeon. E. Campbell, 39 In medical charge. |29 Apr. 41/14 Nov. Facings, yellow. VOL. 11.) 229* Native Infantry. 55TH REGT. N. I.-[Ockterlony-ka-dinal-Pultun]-Raised in 1815. Late Ist battalion 28th N. I. Proceeding to KURN AUL, Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. H. Bowen, C. B. [1838 28 Nov. 1826 mg 28 June Eur., S. C., 5th Sept. 1839. ... Lieutenant Colonel. 10 Apr. 36 · F. Buckley, Major, T. Dickinson, 11 July 36... Eur., Fur. 5th Feb. 1840. ... Captains. J. H. Simmonds, 13 May ... ... F. J. Simpson, J. Scott, A. H. Jellicoe, W. Freeth, 23 May 13 Dec. 11 July I Dec. 25 m 28 June 38 Agent for army elothing, Ist division. 28 m 26 Nov. 41 30 3610 June 34 With 2nd light inf. battn. 36 12 Sept. 36 Lieutenants. (PC) C. Graham, J. Fulton. (PC) J. Ewart, J. Grabam, S. D. Agar, (P) J. Butler, 29 June 13 May 14 Jan, 23 May 31 May 11 July 24c 11 July 38 Persian Intr. to the C.in C. 25 C 19 Feb. 29 26.c 13 Oct. 39 28 c 19 Jan. 40 35c 16 Sept. 40 Eur., S. C., 5th Jan. 1838. 36 c 2 Mar, 412d in comd., Assam light infy.--Offg. junr, asst. to the Comr. of Assam. 4 Aug. 1 Dec. 3 Oct. 36 36.... With 2nd light infy. batte, 40 W.G. Horne, P. W. Luard, H. C. Hastings, Ensigns. S. Richards, F. J. Smalpage, T. M. Cameron, J. D'Oyly Baring, G. G. McBarret, ... 28 Oct. 1 Sept. 12 Apr. 9 Jan. 1 Apr. 36 8 Mar. 38 11 Jan. 39 15 July 41 1 July 41 12 Dec. 36 38 38 40 401 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of Ap- Adjutant. pointment. W. G. Horne, 2 Jan. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. Ewart, 11 Sept. 41 Surgeon. J. Menzies, ... 11 Nov. 391 1 Aug. 37 Assistant Surgeon. Facings, White. 230* [PART IL Bengal Army. 56TH REGT. N. I.--[Ockterlony-ka-ba,en-Pultun]-Raised in 1815. Late 2nd battalion, 28th N. I. MULLYF-arrived 11th April, 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. W. Innes, C. B. [1838 i May 1824 mg 28 June Eur., Fur., 2d Jan. 1827. 14 June 33... ... Eur., S.C., 17th Aug. 1840. Lieutenant Colonel. H. L. White, Mujor. H. Dick, Captains. 0. Phillips, 13 Feb. 39 28 June ... 38 29 June 24 in 28 June 38 D. Thomson, 7 May (P) H. W. Bellew, ... 28 June 27\m 26 Nov. 41 Asst. Adjt. Genl Dinapore division-Doing duty in the Meerut division. 27 m 26 Nov. 41 Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army, 33 Offg ex. officer, Ramgarh divn. of public works. 39 26 Feb. 32 A. J. Fraser, 19 Feb. ... 13 Feb. 13 May 11 Feb. (P) D. Bamfield, Lieutenants. B W. D. Cooke, H. Foquett, J Sutherland, (P)J. R. Younger, J. De Fountain, T. T. Wheler, 19 Oct. 2 Nor, 7 May 19 Feb. 25 c 23 May 29 26c 17 Jan. 39 2d in command, ist Assam Sebundy corps. 26c 9 July 39 26 c 12 Oct. 401 27 c 30 Jan. 41 33 c 21 May 41 Comdt. of cavalry, Malwah contingent. 39 2d in comd., infy, regiment 39 Scindia's contingent. I.. ... 4 Sept. 8 Oct. 3 Oct, 40 M. T. Blake, F. Beaven, S. H. Steer, Ensigns. U. Moore, D. M. C. D. Law, W. R. Prout, J, F. Nembard, W. W. Repton, 22 Aug. ... 23 Jan. 23 Jan. 9 Jan. ... 1 Apr. 39 24 Jan. 40 11 June 40 10 July 41 19 Aug. 41.25 Dec. 39 39 39 40 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of Ap- Adjutant. poiniment. U. Moore, 20 Oct. 41 Inir, and Qr. Mr. J. R. Younger, 17 Dec. 32 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. W. Pringie, M.D. 17 Sept. Bahadoor. Sub. Maj. Myee Sing! 1 May 41 26 Mar. 39 In medical charge. 37 Facings, White. VOL. 11.) 231 Native Infantry. 57TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Moira-ka-Pultun] –Raised in 1815. Late 1st battalion, 29th N. I. • Assam,' CAWNPORE-arrived ulth December 1841. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 36... 4 Aug. 32 ... Colonel, E. Cartwright, 16 June 1836 mg 28 June38 Eur., S. C., 14th Feb. 1830 Lieutenant Colonel. M. Ramsay, 18 July 1840 Major. N. Jones 21 July 41 Captains. G. M. Sherer, 8 July st assistant, H. C. stud. (P) E. Darvall, 36 W. Moultrie, 11 Nov. 409 Jan. 40 Fr. S. C., 5th July 1841. (P) C. J. Richardson, 7 Jan. 4113 May 40 E. Marriott, ... 21 July 41 26 Dec. 40 Lieutenants. T. Simpson, .117 July Princl. asst, to the Comnr. on the S. W. frontier- Hazareebaugh.) (PC) H. Henchman,... 13 Jan. Leave to Australia, 18th August 1841). J. Masson, 8 July Eur., furlo' 20th Jan, 1840 C. S. Salmon, 8 Oct. 39 J. A. H. Gorges, 40 With the Arracan local bin. (P) G. C. Hatch, U Nov. 40 N. R. Snerd, 7 Jan. 41 E. J. Hughes, 21 July 41 A. Forsyth, 28 Nov. 41 Ensigns. J. S. R. Barclay, 9 Jan. 41 17 Sept. 40 A. Ramsay, 22 May 4115 Dec. 40 J. Lambard, 29 May 4117 Feb. 41 J. L. Nation, 411 8 Mar. 41 T. H. Wilson, 18 Dec. 41 28 June 41 3+ ... 36'... 11 Aug. 6 Aug. Acting REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjulant. pointment. C. S. Salmon, 21 May 41 Intr and Qr. Mr. H. Henchman, 22 June 36 G. C. Hatch, 23 Dec. 41 Surgeon. C. Finch, MD. 41 i Feb. Assistant Surgeon. Leave to Australia. Acting, ... |15 Feb. 41 Bahadoor. Suhadar Major Hoolas Ousthee, 1 May 37 Facings, Buff. 232* [PART 11. Bengal Army. 58TH REGT. NATIVE INFY.-[Bisheswur-ka- Pultun)-Raised in 1815. Late 2d battalion, 29th N. I. • BHURTPOOR,' SECROLE BENARES-arrived 8th November, 1840. Ordered to MIRZAPFORE. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 22 Sept. 1836 mg 26 Nov. Eur. Furlo' 18 Mar. 1835. [18411 33 Resident, Gwalior. 29 Aug. .. Colonel. A. Galloway, CB. Lientenant Colonel. A. Speirs, Major. H. C. M. Cox, Captuins. C. E. Davis, J. Paton, 9 Aug. 36 Europe, S. C., 1 May 16 July (PC) G. A. Mee, 9 Aug. 24 m 10 Jan. 37 28 Depy. Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army, with the official rank of Major. 36m 26 May 41 On duty with the force on service to the eastward. 27 m 26 Nov. 41 Scindiah's reformed congt. 4011 July 38 With 3d light infy. batta. 26.c 21 Feb. 39 Eur., Furlo' 17th Feb.1838. J. C. Lumsdaine, H. Hunter, Lieutenants. (P) J. Higginson, 1 Jan. 15 April 21 Jan, (PC) N. A. Parker,... 8 June C. J. H. Perreau, W. Carnegy, I. Jones, G. Dalston, (P) A. Campbell, W. T. Wilson, A.S. Mills, Ensigns. A. H. Trevor, A. Meyer, J. W. C. Lockett, T. Blayds. H. Reid. 16 July 9 Aug. 1 Jan. 23 Oct. 16 April 15 April 3 Oct. 27 c 18 Jan, 41 Offg. 2d in comd., Assam light infantry 28 36 37 Eur., S. C., 23d Aug. 1839. 37 38 401 Eur. S. C., 23d Aug. 1841. 40 .. 29 Apr. 18 Sept. 9 Jan. 23 Mar. 1 Apr. 4012 Dec. 40/18 Jan. 41 1 July 41| 8 July 4112 Dec. 38 Europe, S. C., 40 40 40 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dute of ap- Adjulunt, pointment. C. J. H. Perreau, 3 Mar. 38 Intr. and Qr. Mr. N. A. Parker. 28 Nov. 40... 8 Dec. 41... A. Campbell, Surgeon. G. Angus, ... Offg. 2d in comd., Assam light infantry. Acting. 26 Offg.Sec. to the med board and offg. Presy. Surgeon 13 Aug. 40,16 June 40 21 May 26 Assistant Surgeon. D. A. Macleod, 13 Aug. Bahadoor. Subadar Major Pulwan Sing, .27 Jan. 41 Fucings, Buff Vol. 11.) 233* Native Infantry. 59TH REGIMENTT NATIVE INFANTRY.-Raised in 1815. Late Ist battalion 30th N. I. LOODIANAH-arrived 3rd January 1840. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. | Army Rank. Remarks. Golonel. J, N. Smith, . 11 Jan. 1823mg 10 July 37 Europe, Furlo' 27th Janu. ary 1837. 18 June Lieutenant Colonel. G. Moore, Major. R. Wilcox, 31 3 Oct. 38'... In the King of Oude's ser- vice. Captains. (PC) J. R. Talbot, P. Grant, 32 3 Mar. 14 May 32'... 2nd Assist. Adjt. Genl. of the Army. 4 Feb: 1 Dec. 3 Oct. E. J. Watson, (PC) F. Winter, W. Anderson, Lieutenants. (PC) M. Hyslop, H. C. Gilmore, 33 37 19 Jan. 38 21 Apr. 137 38 With Shah Shooja's force. 2 Sept. 3 Apr. G. W, Stokes, W. Black wood, 2 July 14 May 25 c 26 July 39 26 C 9 Jan. 40 Europe, S.C., 13th Feb. 1840. 28 c 4 Feb. 41 32c 2 June 41 2nd in comd., Sylhet light infty. battalion. 37... Europe, Furlo' 22nd Jana- R. W. Elton, 1 Dec. ary 1841. (P) H. F. Dupsford... 3 Oct. J. Gordon, 25 June (P) G. G. Bowring, 3 Oct. 38 39 401 ... (P) J. G. Holmes, 9 Nov, 40... Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 3rd L. C. Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 2nd light infuntry battalion. Ensigns. (P) H. B. Lumsden,... 3 Dec. 38! 1. Mar. A. Blackwood, R. G, Mayne, H. A. Dwyer, D. M. Shand, 28 Dec. 9 Jan. 1 Apr. 29 May 40/15 Feb. 4110 Aug. 4125 Dec. 41 17 Feb. 38 Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 33rd N. I. 40 40 40 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ar- Adjutant. pointment H. F. Duosford, 27 Feb. 41 Intr, and Qr. Mr. M. Hyslop, 25 Jan. 34 Surgeon. H. Clark, 18 Nov. 41 1 Sept. Assistant Surgeon. R. O. Davidson, 8 Dec. 41118 Dec. 35 Furlough via Bombay. 39 Facings, Saxon-Green. PART II. VOL. II, F F 234* (PART 11. Bengal Army. 60T8 REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY.-Raised in 1815. Late 2nd battalion 30th N. I. • BHURTPOOR.' Proceeding to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regtl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. 36 ... 36... Colonel. J. Greenstreet, I May 12 mg 10 Jan. 37 Eur., Furl' 15th Jan. 1825. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Tulloch, 30 Apr. 34 Major. J. R. Ouseley, 2 Dec. Agent to the Govr. Genl., S. W. frontier. Captains. (P) T. E. A. Napleton. 30 Apr. 33... Comdt. of the Bbaugulpore hill rangers_With the regiment. C. H. Cobbe, 12 July 331 G. Cox, 7 Jan. Europe. S. C., from Bom. bay, 31st January 1810. W. Riddell, 1 Dec. 36 ... Assistant to the Resident, Nagpore- With the regt. (P) R. Drought, 2 Dec. 36 Lieutenants. J. T. Geils, 30 Jan. 30C 9 Feb. 40 (P) C. R. Gwatkin, 31 May 300 30 Jan. 41 T. Riddell, 30 Apr. 33 (P) C. R. Browne, 12 July 33. Principal asst. to the Comt. of the Saugor division. J. E. Verner, 7 Jan. 36 ... Capt. of cavly, Bundeleund legion- With the regt. G. P. Whish, 1 Dec. 36 J. C. Phillips, 2 Dec. 36 D. Stansbury, 13 Mar. C. Alexander, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. J. Montgomery, 14 Mar, 37 10 June 36 A. B. Fenwick, 9 Dec. 37 10 Jan. 37 G. Coare, 23 Jan. 40 15 Jui 39 J. C. Hay, 1 Apr. 41 12 Dec. 401 W. C. Green, 29 May 41 4 Feb. 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. G. P. Whish, 15 Apr. 37 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C. R. Gwatkin, 1 Apr. 37 Surgeon. 37 ... Assistant Surgeon. A. C. Gordon, 23 July 41/13 June 26 Bahadoor. Suhadar Major Mirza Hussein Ullee, 1 May 37) Fucings, Saxon-Green. VOL. 11.) 235* Native Infantry. 61st REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY-Raised in 1823. Late 1st battalion 31st N. I. AGRA-arrived 9th February 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. ... Colonel. 1838 R. Hampton, 18 Jan. 1828 mg 28 June Residing at Neemuch. Lieutenant Colonel. C. A. G. Wallington... 4 Apr. 32 ... Proceeded to Europe, from Bombay, on med. cert., on the 1st April 1841. Majur. R. Stewart, ..11 Oct. 38 10 Jan. 37 Captains. W. Forbes, u Juls 28 m 26 Nov. 41 J. Macdonald, 26 Sept. 33 Brigade Major, Agra. (P) P. P. Turner, 13 Oct. 34 2nd in comd., Hurrianah Lt. infy. battn. H. C. Talbot, 11 Oct. 38 (P) J. Skinner, 16 July 39 Depy. Asst. Comy. Genl., 2nd class. Lieutenants. J. Marsball, 23 Nov. 27c 13 May 40 With Shah Shooja's force. C. Grissell, 2 Mar. 29 c 18 Dec. 40 H. LeMesurier, 5 June 29 Eur., S. C., 29th Dec. 1841. (P) J. C. Innes, 26 Sept. 33 C. E, Steel, 13 Oct. 34 (P) W. H. Ryves, 11 Oct. 38 2nd in comd , 7th irregular. cavy. A. M. Becher, .16 July 39 Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Cepl. of the Army of the 2nd class. S, H. Becher, 3 Oct. 40 F. Drake, 24 Oct. 41 ... ... 1 Ensigns. C. J. Bean, W. H. Smith, E. N. T. R. O'Conor C. B. Basden, M. R. Somerville, 22 Aug. 22 Aug. 9 Jan. 1 April 13 Nov. 3911 Dec. 39 19 Jan. 41 18 Aug. 4125 Dec. 4112 June 39 3: 40 4C 41 Date of ap- pointment. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant, S. H. Becher, 6 Sept. 411... Acting. Intr, and Qr. Mr. .J C. Iones, ... 16 July 33 ... 28 Oct. 33 Leave, S. C., till 15th Jan. 1842. Surgeon. W. E. Carter, A.B. 39 7 Oct. Assistant Surgeon. J. Macintire, ...117 May 38 20 July Fucings, Yellow, 381 And left wing 48th N. I, 236 (PART 1L Bergal Army. 62 REGIMENT NATIVE INFẢNTRY.-Raised in 1823. Late 2nd battalion 31st N. J. • ARRACAN.' NEEMUCH, -arrived 18th January 1840. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. [1841 11 Nov. 1837 mg 26 Nov. Eur., S. C., 8th Sept. 1836. 19 April 39 Colonel. W. H. Kemm, Lieutenant Colonel. S. D. Riler, Major. B. Ashe, Captains. R. R. Hughes (P) W. M. Ramsay, 30 May 41 10 Jan. 37 4 May 31 36... 4 Jan, Asst. to the genl. supdt. for the suppression of thug. gee and dacoittee, Jub- bulpore. 30 Comdt., Arracan local batt. 37 9 Dec. 4116 Dec. 37 ... 4121 May 41 Eur., Furlo'3rd Sept. 1838. 35 F. V. McGrath, 9 Mar. H. Beaty. 20 Mar. R. E. T. Richardson,... 30 May Lieutenants. J. C. Alderson, 2 Nov. The Hon'ble R. B. P. Byng. 4 Jan. (P) D. E. Brewster, 9 Mar. A. D. Caulfeild. 4 Oct. (P) F. F. C. Hayes, 30 Mar. 361... 37 40 31 Offg. sub-asst., stud dept. Eur., s. C., 5th Jan. 1810. Jun, asst, under the Comr., Saugor division. F. Trollope, 30 May 41 F. A. Jackson, 22 June 41 R. Stewart, 8 Aug, 4) F. Johnston, 12 Aug. 41 Ensigns. J. C. Hardisty 29 May 411 4 Feb. E. S. Denniss, 6 Aug. 412 Apr. E. O. Wollaston, 13 Aug. 4121 Apr. E. J. Dod, 2 Sept. 4] 25 Jan. H. D. Maunsell, 2 Sept. 411 June Date of ap. REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. F. Trollope, 27 Aug. 41 Intr. and Dr. Mr. D. E. Brewster, 115 Dec. 40! Surgeon. 41 41 41 41 41 ... Assistant Surgeons. A. C. Duncan, M. D., medical store-keeper, Neemuch, 6 Sept. T. R. Strover, 17 May 4115 Mar. 39 27 May 26 In medical charge. 38 Intemporary medical charge of the political agency at Mehidpore. Facings, Yellow VOL. 11.] 237* Native Infantry. 63RD REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY.-Raised in 1823. Late 1st battalion 32nd N. I. i BHURTPOOR.' FUTTEHGURH-arrived 22nd January 1841. Rank and Names. Reytl. Runk. Army Rank. Remarks. ... Colonel. [1837. Sir J. Rose, K.C.B. ... 1 May 1824 mg 10 Jan. Eur., Fur. 29th Dec. 1823. Lieutenant Colonel. J. B. Smith, 14 Oct. 41 Major. J. H. Mackinlay, ... 14 Oct. 41 28 June 38 Eur., Fur. 14th Jan. 1840. Captains. W. Hoggan, 5 Apr. 34 R. Houghton, 25 Sept. 34 With 2nd light infty bat ta W. C. Ormsby, 20 June 35 Eur., Fur. 20th Feb. 1840. W. F. Grant, 10 Sept. 38 J. H. Blanshard, 14 Oct. 39 Lieutenants. E. T. Erskine, 12 Dec. 25 c 23 May 39 (PC) F.A. Williamson 21 Jan. 29 c 13 May 40 R. Troup, 5 Apr. 341 (P) H. A. Morrieson... 25 Sept. 3-4 ... Eur., S.C., 18th Nov. 1840. S. Taulmin. 20 Jan. 35 (P) W, Y. Siddons, 10 Sept. 38 Acting Irtr, and Qr. Mr. to the 34th N, I. (P) J. C. Brooke, 3 Oct. 40 'Adjt. Meywar Bheel corps. C. R. Woodhouse, 29 Sept. 41 J. S. Rawson, 14 Oct. 41 38 11 July 41 11 May 29 Aug. Ensigns. F. Scrivenor, H. L. Pester, T. B. Logan, W. J. Smith, F. R. Croly, 9 Oct. 9 Jan. 16 Oct. 29 Dec. 40 10 Dec. 40 8 Mar. 4118 Sept. 41 4 Jan. 41/12 June 39 With 2nd light infy. batta. 40 40 41 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Dute of ap- Adjutant. pointment R. Troup, 8 Nov. 37 ... Intr, and Qr. Mr. F. A. Williamson, 9 Aug. 31... *** Leave, S. C., till 12th Feb. 1842. Surgeon. J. Smith, M.D. ... 30 Oct. 39 i Mar. 38 Assistant Surgeon. Bahadoor. Subadar Major Emam- buksh Khan, 27 Jan. 41 Facings, Yellow 238* (PART II. Bengal Army. 64TA REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY-Raised in 1823. Late 2nd battalion 32nd N. I. Proceeding to AFGHANISTAN. Rank and Names. Regil. Rank Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. [1831 H. T. Tapp, 9 Mar. 1837 mg 26 Nov. Leave, S. C., till 9th Nov. 1842. Lieutenant Colonel. G. W. Moseley, ... 17 Sept. 36 Major. P. C. Anderson, 17 Jan. 41 Leave, S. C., till 10th Nor. 1842. Captuins. A. Wilson, K. F. McKenzie, A. Koyvett, 3 Mar. 10 May 13 Mar. 38 34 35... Offg. executive officer, Sav. gor division-With the regiment. 39 19 Jan, 37 4113 April 39 F. Knyvett, C. Prior, 8 Oct. 17 Jan. 34... 29 Aug. .. Lieutenants. (P) C. H. Burt, 8 Oct. 27c 21 July 41 (C) G. P. Thomas... 2 Dec. 29 c 6 Sept. 40 B. W. R. Jenner, 10 May Eur., S. C., 7th July 1:41, J. Flyter, 28 July 35 C. Corsar, 8 Oct. 39 G. Baillie, 20 May 40 W, E. Mulcaster, 40 M. Raper, 3 Oct. 40 H. E. Young, 17 Jan. 41 Ensiins. T. Rattray, 29 Aug. 40 10 Dec. 39 R. Nicholas, 18 Sept. 40 3 Jar. 40 E. S. Kennedy, 9 Jan. 4012 June 40 A. .. Nicholson, 5 Mar. 4112 Oct. 40 R. M. Nott, 29 May 41 8 Mar. 41 Date of Ap- REGIMENTAL STAFF. pointment. Adjutant. J. Flyter, 14 Sept. 40 Intr. and Qr. Mr. G. P. Thomas, 14 Sept. 40 ... Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. G. Harper, 27 Feb. 41123 July 39 And 4th co. 6th battn. arty. ressallah of the 3rd irre. gular cavy., and a co. of the sappers and miners. Fucings, Yellow. vol. i1.) 239* Native Infantry. 65TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-(VOLUNTEERS)--Raised in 1823, Late Ist battalion 33rd N. I. DINAPORE-arrived 5th May 1841. Detachment at TYTALYAH. Rank and Names. Regil, Rank drmy Rank Remarks. Colonel. J. Alexander, Lieutenant Colonel. A. Hervey, 4 May 1831 mg 28June 38 Eur. Furlo' 14th Jun. 1833 [1842. 16 Mar. Leave, S. C., till 15th Sept. 38.. Major. R. W. Wilson, 1 Aug. 39j!c 26 May 41 Pay Master to the force on service to the eastward. Asst. Comy. Genl., 1st class. 29 32 39 13 June 40 39 Depy. Arst, Comy. Gen), 2nd class. 41 Captains. F. T. Boyd, 26 Feb. R. Taylor, 31 Jan. R. H. De Montmorency 1 Aug. (P) W. Swalman, 17 Mar. R, Y. B. Bush, 1 Feb. Lieutenants. F. A. Close, 15 Oct. (PC, C. I. Harrison,.. 19 Feb. F. Shirreff, 16 Mar. C. M. Ress, 15 Sept. F. M. Baker, 14 Apr. J. McCance, laug. 34 36.. .. Org. sub-asst, Comy. Genl. 3 Adjt., Ist Oude local infy. .. 39 39 With 1st Assam sebundy corps. 17 Mar. 3 Oct. | Feb. 40 44 41 (PC) R. J. Meade, H, L. Robertson, T. Gordon, Ensigns. G. R. Weston, C. T. E Hinde, F. J. Nelson, J. G. Robinson, C. L. Montgomery, 29 Aug. 29 Aug. 9 Jan. 5 Mar. 28 Oct. 4010 Dec. 40 3 Jan, 41 21 Aug. 41:7 Sept. 41/12 June 39 40 With the Arracan local bat. 40 40 41 21 Apr. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointments. F. M. Baker, 41 Intr. and Qr. Mr. C. I. Harrison, 39 R. J. Meade, 29 Oct. 41 29 May On detached duty. Acting. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeons. G. C. Rankin, 29 May 41 I June 31 In medical charge of the 1st troop 3rd brig. horse art. 40'la medical charge. J. H. Freeman, 14 Aug. 41 3 Jan. Facings, Yellon. 240* [PART II. Bengal Army. 66TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-(VOLUNTEERS)-Raised in 1823. Late 2nd battalion 33rd N. I. BARACKPORE-arrived 2nd December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. R. J. Latter, .. I May 1824 mg 10 Jan. 37 Eur, S.C., 23rd Jan. 1823. Lieutenant Colonel. R. Delamain, 7 Nov. 40 Major. M. G. White, 7 Nov. 30 32 Captains. H. Troup, J. Knyvett, G. Farmer, S. Browne, (PC) G. Nugent, 27 June 4 Jan. 5 May 15 Nov. 7 Nov. 34 Eur., S, C., 8th Feb 1839. With 2nd light infy. batin. 37 401.. Offg. sub-asst. Comy. Genl. In the Nizam's service. Lieutenants. (P) C. Davidson, J. H. Chowne, (P) H. Hollings, H. L. Bigge, 4 Jan. 8 May 23 July 13 Mar 32 321 32 34... Principal asst, to the agent to the Gov. Genl., N. E. frontier. J MacDonald, A. N. M. MacGregor, S. W'. Buller, W. S. Sherwill, 5 May 2 Apr. 15 Nov, 3 Oct. 34 35 S7 40 Assist, revenue surveyor Leave to Cape, S.C., 10th March' 1840. H. Strachey, 7 Nor. 40 Ensigns. J. F. Garstin, H. J. W. Carter, J. S. Phillpotts, T. Robinson, C. C. G. Ross, 9 Dec. 12 Jan. 9 Oct. 9 Jan. 37 10 Dec. 3812 June 4015 Feb. 41|17 Sept. 41 4 Apr. 36 37 40 40 41 6 Aug. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant. J. H. Chowne, Date of ap- pointment. 115 Nov. 34 Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. Hollings, 2 Mar. 41 Surgeon. T. B. Barker, Assistant Surgeon. 7 Oct. 30 4 June 29 Fucings, White, VOL. 11.] 241* Native Infantry. 67TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-(VOLUNTEER)-Raised in 1823. Late Ist battalion 34th N. I. ALLAHABAD-arrived 24th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. [1841 8 Oct. 1836 mg 26 Nov. Eur., S. C., 20th Jan. 1837. 13 Feb. 39 ... Colonel. E. Wyatt, Lieutenant Colonel. G. R. Pemberton, Major. H. Lawrence, Captains. H. 0. Frederick, 3 Aug. 37 .. Comg. the Ramgurh light infantry battalion. ... 18 Dec. 34 ... J. W. Hicks, H, Cotton, 115 Feb. 30 Mar. 36 37 ... In charge of the Benares division of public works. With 3rd light infy. battn. Offg. Depy. Judge Advocate General, Saugor divn. Sub-asst. Comy. Genl. A.D.C. to the Lieut.'Gover- nor, N. W. provinces. 37 (P) W. B. Thomson... 3 Aug. F. C. Minchin, 9 Nov. 40 ... 25 Feb. Lieutenants. F. Rainsford, F. P. Fulcher, G. I. Hudson, (P) R. Price, R. N. Raikes, 22 Sept. 10 Apr. 15 Feb. 28 June 33 33 34 36 36 Ear., Farlo' 238 Feb. 1841. Adjt. of infy., Scindiah's reformed contingent C. E. Goad, 30 Mar. (P) E. W. Hicks, 5 Aug. T. Latter, 3 Oct. (P) W. H. Williams,.. 9 Nov. 37 37 401 40 Adjt. Arracan local battn. Acting Intr, and Qr. Mr. to the 28th N. 1. Ensigns. L. A. McLean, W. C. Clifton, R. Vincent, H. C. Johnstone, J. Evans, 28 Aug. 23 Jan. 9 Jan. 9 Jan. 33 22 Feb. 4018 June 4111 June 4113 July 4115 Dec. 37 39 40 40 40 1 Apr. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. F. Rainsford, 30 June 37 Intr, und Qr. Mr. E. W. Hicks, 17 Mar. 41 Surgeon. C. B. Francis, 24 Feb. 40'12 July ... 27 Furlough. Assist. Surgeon. S. Lightfoot, 62 Jan. 41 4 Dec. 28 Sirdar Bahadoor. Subadar Major Meer Jamaul Allee, i May 37 Facings, Yellow. Part II. VOL. II. G G* 242* (PART 11. Bengal Army. 68TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFY.-(VOLUNTEERS)-Raised in 1828. Late 2nd battalion 34th N. I. KHYOUK PHYOO, ARRACAN-arrived 25th February 1841. Detachments at Chittagong, Sandoway and Ramree. Rank and Names. Regth Rank. Arny Rank. Remarks. 34... Colonel. [1841 E. F. Waters, C.B. 16 Nov. 1835 mg 26 Nov. Comg. in Rohilcund and Lieutenant Colonel. Kemaoon. H. Burney, 17 Jan. Eur. S. C., 8th Mar. 1838. Major. G. Young, 30 May 36 Captains. C. Thoresby, 2 Jan. 26 m 28 June 38 Supt. of the Bhuttee terri- tory, &c.-offg. political agent, Jeypore. C. Marshall, 7 Apr. 26m 26 Nov. 41 Depy. Asst." Adjt. Genl., Cawopore division. (PC) A. G. Ward, 1 Nov. 30 C. S. Maling, 23 May 34 S. J. Grove, 30 May 36 With 1st light infy. batto. Lieutenants. (P) W. Alston, 2 Jan, 26 C 20 May 39 Eur., Furlo' 13th Feb. 1840. È. P. Bryant, 4 May 32 c 25 Sept. 401 G. P. Brooke, 27 Aug. 32 c 14 Aug. 41 (P) R. M. Gurnell, 25 Apr. 33 Eur., Furlo' 10th May 1840. Š. Nation, 13 May 34 B. Boyd, ... 13 Nov. 36 A. D. C. to Major Genl. H. Stein, 3 Oct. 37 M. Boyd. J. G. Caulfeild, 19 Oct. 38 Pol. assist., Peshawur- Leave to Cape, S. C., 8th M. Staples, 3 Oct. 40 March, 1841. Ensigns. (P) A. Skene, 12 Jan. 38/13 June 37 P.J. Comya, 15 Sept. 38 i Mar. 38 P. A. Roberton, 12 Apr. 39 7 July 38 R. C. Barclay, 5 Mar. 4126 Sept. 40 G. Faithfull, 1 Apr. 4112 Dec. 40 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap. Adjutant. pointment. G. P. Brooke, 25 July 38 Intr, and Qr. Mr. A. Skene, 9 Dec. Surgeon. B. Burt, M.D. 21 Jan. 39 23 July 33 Furlough. Assistant Surgeons. C. Griffiths, 16 Mar. 39 18 June 28 Ordered to report bimself to the Secy. to the Govt, J. Duncan, M.D., Civil, N. W. provinces. Chittagong, 27 Mar. 41 9 May 29 Detachment at Chittagong. C. M. Henderson, M. D., 52nd N. I. 1 Nov. 38 In medical charge. Bahadoor. Subadar Maj. Bhowan- Dy Sing, • 27 Jan. 41 Facings, Yellow. 40 VOL. II.) 243* Natide Infantry. 69TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY.-Raised in 1804. BERHAMPORE-arrived 7th January 1839. To march to BENARES on being relieved by the 21st N. I. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks, Colonel. J. Durant, Lieutenant Colonel. T. Wardlaw, (1838 13 Jan. 1828 mg 28 June Eur., S.C., 7th Dec. 1826. 27 Jan. 39... Leave, P.A., till 12th Feb. 1842. 29 June 35 ... Major. H. Norton, Captains. N. Penny, W. Brown, R. Wroughton, R. D. White, (P) R. Garrett, Lieutenants. W. S. Menteath, 13 May 115 Oct. 26 Aug. 29 June 1 Dee. 25 lc 26 Nov. 41 Comg. the Nusseree bat tn. 28m 26 Nov. 41 Revenue surveyor. 29 Revenue surveyor. 35/18 July 33 36 24 July 34 Eur., S.C., 6th Feb. 1840. ... ... ... 13 May F. E. Smith, J. H. Hatchell, J. A. James, E. Garrett, W. P. Bignell, 13 May 3 July 25 Oct. 15 Oct. 1 Dec. 25 c 18 Dec. 37 Offg. Depy. Pay Master, Benares division. 25c 14 Jan. 39 Eur., S. C., 24th Feb. 1838. 27 c 9 Feb. 40 27 c 12 Jan. 41 28 c 15 Apr. 41 Adjt. Ramgarh It. infy.bo. 36 Io tempy. charge of the 2d divn, of public works. 37... Europe, s. c. 40 40 3 Mar. 22 Apr. 3 Oct. G. Ranken, E. Sissmore, E. J. Simpson, Ensigns. J. Nisbett, E. Tulloch, W. Shand, W. F. Ogilvie, J. Wedderburn, 39 39 23 Jan. 29 Aug. (21 Sept. 9 Oct. 1 Apr. 40/12 June 40 10 Dec. 40 26 Jan. 40 14 Apr. 41/12 Dec. 40 401 401 Date of ap- pointment REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjutant. J. H. Hatchell, 28 Mar. 38 41 ... Intr, and Qr. Mr. G. O'Bryen Ottley, 6th N. I. 17 Sept. Surgeon. J. O'Dwyer, 28 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. Acting. ... 39] 1 Jan. 39 Sirdar Bahadoor. Sub. Maj. Shaick Ma- homed Ally, 1 May 37 Facings, White. 244* (PART u. Bengal Army. 70TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY.-Raised in 1825. LUCKNOW-arrived 16th May 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. F. V. Raper, Lieutenant Colonel. P. M. Hay, (1838 2 Jan. 1831 mg 28 June Agent to the Governor Ge- neral, Moorshedabad, 26 June 30 Major. (P) A. Mercer, 6 Mar. 41 Captains. J. K. McCausland, 1 July A. C. Scott, ...25 Sept. R. Hill, 1 July P. Harris, 8 Oct. (PC) D, T. Caddy, 6 Mar. 36 20 Sept. 37 14 Feb. 39 14 Jan. 39|18 Feb. 41 24 35 39 Brigade Major, Oude. 39 Eur., Fur. 13th June 1840. I. Lieutenants. J. Hennessy, G. N. Greene, C. L. Edwards, (PC) R. Robertson, A. W. Baillie, H. Hopkinson, 10 April 1 July 25 Sept. 15 Mar. 1 July 19 Jan. 36 36 37 39 39 ... Eur., S. C., 3rd Oct. 1840. 40... Junior Asst. to the Com- missioner of Arracan (Akyab.) With the Arracan local bu. 17 Aug. A. Fytche, (P) H. B. Impey, (P) E. Thomas, 3 Oct. 6 Mar. 401... 40 41 ... Acting Intr. and Qr. Mr. to the 2nd European regi- ment. Ensigns. W. T. Garstin, J. W. Drummond, J. A. Wright, F. C. Wiggins, H. W. H. Coxe, 29 Aug. 9 Jan. 12 Jan. 29 May 8 Dec. 4011 Dec. 4112 June 41/12 June 41 8 Mar. 41 21 June 39 40 With 2nd light infy, batta. 401 41 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. J. Hennessy, 28 Dec. 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. H. B. Impey, 2 Dec. 41 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. J. S. Cardew, 24 Dec. 35] 8 Aug. 37 Facings, Yellow. VOL. 11.) 245* Native Infantry. 71st REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY-Raised in 1825. SHAJEHANPORE-arrived 29th March 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. E. Barton, [1841 15 Mar. 1841 mg 26 Nov. Town and Fort Major, Fort William. Lieutenant Colonel. A. Dick, 4 May 31 Major. J. S. Marshall, 6 Aug. 39 28 June 38 Captains. G. D. Roebuck, E. Wintle, W. G. Cooper, 3 June 5 Feb. 7 Jan. 30 35 20 Sept. 36 16 July W. Macgeorge, 34 35 Assist. Adjutant General, Benares divn. 36 Depy. Judge Advocate Gl., , Meerut divn. 39 1 Jan. 38 23 June W. J. Rind, 6 Aug. 39 17 Jan. Lieutenants. (P) G. W. Bishop, .. 20 June H. Barry, 3 June T. S. Jervis H. A. Reid, G. W. G. Bristow, J, L. Walker, P. G. Robertson, J. S. Bristow, G. Strangways, .. 28 c 26 Apr. 41 Comg. the Sebundy corps. of sappers, Darjeeling. 30... Capt. of infy. to the Bun- delcund legion. 35 Eur., S.C., 19th June 1840. 35 36 39 39... Adjt., Kotah contingent. Eur., S.C., 28th May, 1841. 40 31 Jan. 5 Feb. 7 Jan. 22 Mar, 19 June 18 Aug. . 3 Oct. 40 ... Ensigns. H. Dinning, J. L. Llewellyn, W.G. M. Maclean, L. R. Christopher, W. W. Warde, 23 Jan. 11 Mar. 4 Sept. 40 10 July 40 21 Sept. 40 3 Jan, 41! 4 Jan. 41 13 June 39 39 40 41 41 1 Apr. 8 Dec. REGIMENTAL STAFF. Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. G. W. G. Bristow, 13 July 32 Intr. and Qr. Mr. A. Q. Hopper, 24th N. I. 21 Apr. ... 40... Acting. Surgeon. E. Tritton, Assistant Surgeon. 7 Jan. 41 16 Dec. 40 Facings, Black 246 (PART II. Bengal Army 72RD REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY-Raised in 1825. MEERUT-arrived 29th December 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. G. Dick, [1837. 30 June 18191g 10 Jan. Eur., Furlo' 15th Jan. 1828. Lieutenant Colonel. A. Roberts, (CB) Major. J. Manson, 28 Sept. 31 11 July 41 28 June Commissioner with Bajee 38 Rao, Bithoor. Captains. St. Geo. D. Showers,... 22 Feb. 36 : Supdt. of the education of H. H. Nuwab Nazim of Bengal. With 2d light infantry bat- talion. P. Abbott, 1 Dec. 36 ... H. H. Lloyd, 7 Feb. (PC) H. Þ. Maitland, . 29 Oct. (PC) R. S. Tickell, ... 11 July 38 38 41 21 May 41 Sub-assist. Comy. General. 5 Feb. Lieutenants. (PC) J. S. Davidson, G. H. Davidson, R. J. Grabam, 19 Aug. 35 35 36. ... 22 Feb. With the Ramgarh light infantry battalion. ... Eur., Furlo' 15th Jan. 1840. H. J. Michell, G, H. Whistler, C. H. D. Spread, G. B. Hobson, (P) T. F. Hobday, 1 Dec. 19 Nov. 7 Feb. 29 Oct. 3 Oct. 36 37 38 38 40 ... Acting Intr. to H, M. 21st fusiliers. R. J. Farre, 11 July 41 Ensigns. G. E. Ford, R. C. Stevenson, G. E. Holmes, J. C. Curtis, R. K. Gordon, 1 Sept. 26 Nov. 9 Jan. 1 July 22 Sept. 38 21 Dec. 38 8 Mar. 41/12 June 41 17 Mar. 41 12 June 37 38 40 41 4) REGIMENTAL STAFF. |Date of ap- Adjutant. pointment. G. H. Davidson, 9 Jan, 39 Intr. and Qr. Mr. J. S. Davidson, 6 Nov. 35 Surgeon. A. W. Steart, ... 29 Aug. 38 30 July 37 Assistant Surgeon. F. Fleming, 18 Nov. 4110 July 27 Leave to Cape or Austra. lia. Fucings, Yellow. VOL. 11.) 247* Native Infantry. 73RD REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY--Raised in 1825. Proceeding to MEERUT. Rank and Names. Regimental Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Maclones, [1838 [1826. 13 May 1825 mg 28 June Eur., S. C., 18th Aug. Lieutenant-Colonel. S. Swinboe, 9 May 30 Major. H. Carter, ... 17 Sept. 41 28 June 1838 Leave to Cape and N. S. Wales, s. C. Captains. J. Oliver, H. Patch, E. A. Camberlege (P)R. McNair, F. Thomas, 32 21 May 6 Aug. 29 Nov. 2 Aug. 17 Sept. 29 34 11 June 34 39 13 Jan. 41| 4 July 36 36 Lieutenants. R. M. Hunter, W. E. Andrews, E. K. Hopper, A. Macdougall, (P) J. Sleeman, 13 May 29 Aug. 22 Sept. 13 Nov. 21 May 25 c 11 Jaly 38 26 c 23 Jan. 40 26 c 13 May 40 Eur., S. C.. 4th Jan. 1841. 27 248* (PART II. Bengal Army. 74TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY-Raised in 1825. LOODIANA-arrived 4th March 1841. Rank and Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. [1838 W.C. Baddeley, CB.... 14 June 1833 mg 28 June Leave to Cape, S, C., 24th February 1841. Lieutenant-Colonel. R. Rich, 21 Jan. 41 Major. A. Spens, 1 Mar. 38 Captains. N. J. Cumberlege, 23 June 35 7 Jan. 35 Comg. Calcutta native mi- litia. A. Charlton, H. N. Worsley, H. W. Leacock, H. Cheere, 15 Dec. 23 May 8 July 1 Mar. 35 36 37 38 Lieutenants. (P) J. Chilcott, (PC) D. T. Pollock,... 23 June T. W. Oldfield, 15 Dec. 27 Apr. 33 35 35 Sub-asst. Comy. General. Adjt. of cavalry, Scindiah's reformed contingent. (P) H. E. S. Abbott,... 23 May G. Parker, 30 Jan. C. Gordon, 8 July 36 37 37 Eur., S. C., from Bombay, 29th March 18+0. 38 38 40 I.. G. Ryley. 1 Mar. J. P. P. T. Hawkey,... 30 Apr. (P) D. Macleod, 3 Oct. Ensigns. W. F. N. Wallace | Sept. J. J. Macdonald 1 Sept. E. C. Scott 3 Dec. J. W. B. Blagrave 2 Sept. A. G. Nedham 8 Dec. 38 38'11 Dec. 37 38 26 Feb. 38 24 April 38 41 24 April 41 41 12 June 41 REGIMENTAL STAFF. Adjuant. Date of ap- pointment. H. E. S. Abbott 9 April 40 Ints, and Qr. Mr. J. Chilcott ... 16 Jan. 39 Surgeon. A. McK. Clark 3 Oct. 40'11 Nov. 39 And left wing, 4th irregu. lar cavalry, and post mas- ter, Loodianah. Assistant Surgeon. Facings, Yellow, VOL. 11.) [ 249* ] LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALIONS. 1st LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION, Ferozepore, nrrived 15th Nov. 1841. Raised at Meerut, 12th October, 1840, Consisting of the rifle Company of the 68th, and the light Companies of the 7th, 8th, 13th, 17th, 21st, 29th, and 31 st regiments native infantry. Rank, Names and Corps. When ap- Army Rank. pointed Remarks. 14 Apr. Maj. L. Bruce, 12th N. I. 21 Jan. 1837 12 Oct. 1840 Commanding. Capt. W. R. Corfield, 31st N. 1.- 30 July 32 Capt. C. Farmer, 21st N. I. -12 June 33 Capt. J. P. Wade, 13th N. I. 10 Jan. 35 Capt. S. J. Grove, 68th N. I. 30 May 36 Capi. J. C. Plowden, 17th N. I. 4 July 36 Capt. H. FitzSimons, 29th N. I 18 Jan. 37 Lieut. H. M. Travers, 81h N. I. 8 Oct. 39 Lieut. J. P. Caulfeild, 3d N. l. 3 Oct. 401 4 Aug. 41 Lieut. W. Birch, 71h N. I. .-15 Jan. Lieut. G. G Anderson, 15th N. I 5 Nor. 41 4 Aug. Ens. T. P. Waterman, 13th N.I.11 June 43 4 Aug. 4) Eus. F. D. Boulton, 17th N. I. 8 July 40 4 Aug. 41 Lieut. C. A. Morris, 29th N. I. 4 July 3627 Mar. 41 Adjutant. Ens. W.R. Cunningham, 6th N.1. 31 Jan. 371 1 Dec. 40 Inir, and Qr. Mr. Asst. Surg. J. G. DaC. Denham, (arty. M.D. 401 4 Aug. 41 And 2d compy 2d bat. 2D LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION. Proceeding to LOODLANAH. - Raised at Meerut, 12th October 1840. Consisting of the rifle company of the 72d, and the light companies of the 10th, i4th, 22d, 49th, 55th, 63d, and 66th regiments of native infantry. Maj. C. Andrews, 2d Eurn. Regt. 10 Jan, 3712 Nov. 40 Commanding, Capt. W. Struthers, 14th N. I. -30 May 29 Capt. G. Farmer, 66th N. I. 5 May 341 Capt. A. H. Jellicoe, 551h N. I. - 10 June 34 Capt. R. Houghton, 630 N. I. 25 Sept. 34 Capt. P. Abbott, 720 N. I. | Dec. 36 Capt. J. Hunt, 220 N. 1. (BC) - 18 Feb. 38 Lieut. P. W Luard, 55th N. 1. 1 Dec. 36 4 Aug. (1811. Lieut. H. J. Piercy, 49th N. I. - 17 July 37 Acig. Adjt., 181 Dec. Lieut, C, Reid, loch N. I. . 17 Mar, Eus. F. Scrivenor, 63d N. I. -110 Dec, 39 14 Sept. Ens. J. W. Drummond, 70th N. 1.'12 Juwe 4014 Sept. Lieut. J. G. Holmes, 591h N. I.- 9 Nov, 40 29 Dec. 40 Intr, and Qr. Mr. Asst. Surg. J. Naismith, M.D. -12 Mar. 40 28 Jan, 41 3D LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION, Meerut arrired 13th April 1841. Raised at Cawnpore, 16th October 1840. Consisting of the rifle company of the 9th, and the light companies of the 1st, 11th, 12th, 24th 50th, 68th and 67th regiments of native infantry. Maj. H. Sibbald, 41st N. I. -10 Jan. 37|16 Oct. 40 Commanding Capt J. R. Birrell, 11th N. I. 29 Oct. 32 Capt. J. W. Hicks, 67th N, I. - 15 Feb. 36 Capt. G. E. Van Heythuysen, 24th N. I. 17 Oct. 37 Capt. H. Hunter, 58th N. ). 11 July Capt. W.J. Martin, 9th N. 1. (BC) 20 June 39 Lieut. G. A. Fisher, Ist N. I. i Feb. 47 Lieut. T. Cole, 12ih N. I. 3 Oct. 10 Lieut A. C. Plowden, 50th N.I.. 3 Oct. 40 Lieut. E. L Dennys, 11th N. I. 20 Jan, 41| 4 Aug. 41 Ensign J. Young, 4th N. I. 10 Aug. 39 4 Aug. 41 Ensign F. A. Hook, 738 N. I. 24 Feb. 40 4 Aug 41 (Nor: 18.12 Ensign F. Wale, 48th N. I. 0 June 401 4 Aug. 41 Leare, S. C., till is Bt. Capt. E. DUP. Townshend, 9th N I. 10 Mar, 37 21 Nov, 40 Adjutant. Ens. W.W.D. Voyle, 9th N. I. 12 June 37 1 Dec. 40 Inër, and Qr, Mr. Assist Surg. J. H. Rothney. 4 Sept. 39 28 Nov. 40 With 22d N. I, Assist. Surg. W. Keates, 125 Dec, 40121 Dec. 411 PART II, VOL. II. H H 38 250* (PART 11. Bengal Army. LOCAL INFANTRY. IST CALCUTTA NATIVE MILITIA.-Allipore. (Civil.) Raised 29th June 1705. When apo Rank and Names. Army Rank, Remarks. pointed Capt.N. J. Cumberlege, 37th Ni 7 Jan. 1835 i June 1835 Commandant. Lieut. E. S. Capel, :3rd N. 1. 8 Oct. 3613 May 40 Adje.- With his regi. Ens. G. N. Oakes, 46th N. I. 3 Jan, 36 15 Dec. 41 Acting Adjutant. Asst. Surg. J. Jackson, 22 June 30 26 Aug. 3917 medical charge. Uniform, Red. Facings, Black. Lace, Silver, 2ND.-RAMGHUR LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION. Dorundah.—(Chota Nagpore.) Raised 29th June 1795. Detachment at Chyebassa. Major H. Lawrence, 67th N. 1, 3 Aug. 37119 Dec. 33 Commanding. 37 13 Dec. 362nd in command, Capt. G.C.Armstrong, 47th N.1.30 Sept. Pt. Capt. A. DeFounluin, 40th N. 1. 30 Jan. 41|14 Dec. 39 Doing duty. Bt. Capt. E. Garrett, 69th N. 1. 15 Apr. 4115 Sept. 38 Adjutant, 7th July 1841. Lieat. R. J. Graham, 720 N, 1|22 Feb. 36 19 Aug. 40 Doing duty. Lieut. J. H. Fulton, 30 N. I. - 25 Jan. 37 22 Feb. 41 Offg. junior assist, to the Commissioner of Chota Nagpore. Lieut. W. H. Oakes, 45th N. I 27 Jan. 3928 July 41Doing duty. Asst. Surg. A. C. Macrae, M.D. 24 Jan. 29 28 Jan. 41 in medical charge, Do- rundah, Assist. Surg. C. B. Chalmers, civil, Chyebassa, 4 Dec. 40123 June 41 In medical charge, Chye. bassa. Uniform, Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black. N. B.-Four 6-pounder brass guns and two ressallahs of irregular cavalry attached to this corps. SRD.-HILL RANGERS.-Bhaugulpore. Raised 24th April 1792. Capt. T.E. A.Napleton, 60th N1.30 Apr. 33 22 Sept. 41 Comdt.-With his regt. 32 13 Dec. Capt. G. Farquharson, 8th N.I. 20 July 41 In charge. Lieut. W. G. Don, 4301 N. . 10 Dec. 3+ 1 Sept. 31 Adjutant. Asst. Surg. W. B. Webster, - 19 July 28 24 July 32 In medical charge. Uniform, Red. Facings, Dark Green. Lace, Silver, 414.-NUSSEEREE BATTALION.-Subathoo. Raised 24th April 1815. 119 Jan. Maj. N. Penny*, 69th N. I. 26 2 June 41 Commanding Cape. C, O'Brien, 3d N. I. 25 Oct. 4013 July 41 2nd in command. Lieut' R. Hay, 501h N.I. . 29 Oct. 41 Adjutant. Asst. Surg, J. Steel, 11.D. 11 Apr. 28 25 Feb. 40 in medical charge. Uniform, Dark Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black, • Lieut. Col. Breret, 26 Nov. 1811, 38 30 Apr. VOL II.] 251* Local Infantry. 6TH.-SIRMOOR BATTALION.-Deyrah. Ordered to BAREILLY, Raised 24th April 1815. When apo Rank and Names. Army Rank. Remarks. pointed. Lieut. Col. F. Young, 31st N.I. i Nov. Capt. J. Fisher, 23dºN. I. 4 June Bt. Capt H. Kirke, 12th N. 1.10 June Asst. Surg. H. A. Bruce, M D. 17 Aug. Asst. Surg. G. E. Christopher, - 10 Feb. 3026 Aug. 1815 Commandant. 3114 June 27 2nd in command. 38 16 April 28 Adjutant. 30 7 Jan, 41 In medical charge. 31|25 Nov. 29 Furlough. Uniform, Dark Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black, 771.-KEMAQON BATTALION.- Lokooghaut. 3 companies at Petoragurh. Raised 24th April 1813, Maj. S. Corbett, 25th N. I. - 28 June 38) 8 Dec. 28, Commandant. Capt. J. Drummond, 19th N. I. 22 Sept. 36 13 March 392nd in command. Lielt, R.A. Ramsay, 35th N. I. 3 Oci. 401 8 Aug. 40 Adjutant. Asst. Surg. A. Walker, - 23 Feb. 28 28 Feb. 37|in medical charge. Asst. Surg. W. Veal, | Mar.: 38 4 April 39 In medical charge of the detachment at Petora- gurh. Uniform, Dark Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black. 1 Apr. 8TH.-ASSAM LIGHT INFANTRY.- Seebsagur (Assam). Detachments at Jeypore, Debroogurh, Shaikwah, 8c. Capt. S. F. Hannay, 40th N. 1. 35/14 May 38|Comdt., 25th March 1833 Capt. N. A. Parker, 58th N. 1.18 Jan. 41 30 June 41|Offy, 2nd in command. Capt. J. Butler, 55th N. 1. 3 Mar. 41 30 June 41 2nd in command-On detached duty. Lieut. S. Reynolds, 49thNI. 3 Oct. 40 19 May 41 Doing duty. Lieut. E T. Dallon, 9th N, 1. - 26 Dec. 401 Mar. 39 Adjutant, 8th April 1840. Surg. F. Furnell, 21 Oct, 41|27 May 37 In medical charge. Uniform, Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black. 8th.-MHAIRWARRAH LOCAL BATTALION.-Beawr. (Civil.) Raised 28th June 1822. Capt. C. G. Dixon, Arty. 114 Aug. 28111 Jan 381Commandant. Capt. J. J. Abbott, Arty. 6 June 3.29 Sept. 41 2nd in command. Bt. Capt. W.J. Cade, i3th NI. 17 Jan. 39 25 Nov. 39 Idjutant. Asst. Sug. N. Collyer, 1 Nov. 35|19 Aug. sol in medical charge. Uniform, Red. Facings, Dark Green, Lace, Silver. 252* [PART IL Bengal Army. JITH.-SYLHET LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION.-Cherra-Poonjce. Raised 19th February 1824. Detachments at Cachar, Myrong, Jynteeah, &c. Rank and Names. Army Rank When ap- pointed. Remarks, Maj. F. G. Lister, 52d N. I. - 10 Jan. 1837-14 Mar, 1828 Commandant. Capt. W. Blackwood, 59th N.1. 2 Feb. 41 2 June 412d in command. Lieut. G. Verner, 141h N.I. -20 Apr. 35 15 Oct, 38 Adj., 18th June 1839. Lieut. C. G. Walsh, 9ch N.I. 8 Oct. 39 19 Nov. 41 Doing duty. Lieut. S. B. Faddy, 36th N.I. | Feb. 40 8 Nov. 41 Doing duty, Asst. Surg. J. Davenport, MD. 1 2 Sept. 28 28 Oct. 37 In medical charge. Asst. Surg. W. A. Rolfe, 22 Dec. 4010 Sept. 41 In medl, charge of the det. at Cachar. Uniform, green. Facings, Black Lace, Black, N. B.-Two 6-pounders are attached to this corps. ARRACAN LOCAL BATTALION,-Akyab (Arracan). Detachments at Sundoway, 8c. &c. Capt. F. V. McGrath, 620 N... 9 Dec. 36,11 Feb. 35 Comdt. 10th July 1838. Lieut. CJ. Richards, 25th N. 1. 15 Nov. 37 14 May 40 2d in command. Lieut. J.A.H. Gorges, 57th N.1, 11 Aug. 40 25 Nov. 40 Comg. the detail of arty. attached to the corps, 6th Oct. 1841, Lieut. A. Fytche, 70th N.I. -17 Aug. 40 7 Aug. 41 Doing duty. Lieut. T. Låller, 67th N.I, 3 Oct. 40 4 Sept. 38 Adj., 14th Nov. 1840. Lieut. W.F. Nuthall, 18th N.I. 3 Oct. 4012 Mar, 40 Doing duty. Ens. C.T.E. Hinde, 65th NI. 3 Jan. 40 22 Oct. 41 Doing duty. Asst. Surg. W.R. Gerrard, 26 Jan. 40 7 Oct. 40 Furlough. Asst. Surg. G.B. Seely, 25 Dec. 40 20 July 41 Doing duty. Uniform, Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black. N. B.-Four 6-pounders are attached to this corps. HURRIANAH LIGHT INFANTRY BATTALION. Detachments at Hissar and Sirsa. Raised lith January 1836. Capt. R. Campbell, 43d N.I. - 30 Apr. 34 22. Feb. 38 Commandant. Capt. P.P. Turner, 61st N.I. 13 Oct. 34 22 July 39 2d in command. Lieut. T.E.Colebrooke, 131hNI: 2 Aug. 36 5 Aug. 36 Adjutant. Asst Surg. S. Holmes, 4 Nov. 27 26 Jan. 38 In medical charge. Uniform, Green. Facing, Black. Lace, Black. IST REGIMENT OF OUDE LOCAL INFANTRY.-SOLTANPORE, OUDB. Maj. J.C.C. Gray, 21st N.I, 1 Sept. 41 18 Dec. 37 Commandant. Bt. Capt, W.H. Nicholetis, 65th (1840. N. I. 9 Feb. 4017 May 392d in comd. 17th Jan, Lieut. C.M. Rees, 65th N.I. - 13 Sept. 38 27 April 38 Adj. 17th Jan. 1840. Ist subaltern, 2d subaltern. Asst. Surg. R.B. Kinsey, - 17 Feb. 39|17 Feb. 41 In medical charge. 2D REGIMENT OF OUDE LOCAL INFANTRY.-Lucknow. Capt. A.R. Macdonald, 4th N, 1123 Aug. 31|15 May 41 Commandant. Lieut. G.E. Hollings 38th N.I. - I June 3:18 Dec. 37 2d in comd., 17th Jan. 1840-On det, duty. Lt. W.J.H.Charteris, 45th N.1. 20 Dec. 38 4 June 39 Adj. 6th Feb. 1841. Ist subaltern. 2d subaltern. Asst. Surg. A. Greig, M.D, 10 Nar. 38' 8 Oct. 3slo medical charge. VOL. 11.] 253* Local Infantry. 1st ASSAM SEBUNDY CORPS.-Gowahally (Assam.) (Civil) Raised 13th April 1835. Detachment at Gowalparah, Tezpore, Nowgong and Cossecah hills. Rank and Names. Army Rank. When ap- pointed. Remarks. Capt. T. Fisher, 48th N. I. - 13 Mar. 1853 22 Sept. 1811 Commandant. Capt. H. Foquett, 56th N.I. 17 Jan. 39 8 Mar. 4112d in command. Lieut J. McCance, 65th N.I. - 39 22 Sept. 41 Doing duty. Lieut. R. Campbell, 47th N.1., 3 Oct. 40, 1 April 40 adj. 21st April 1841. | Aug. 1 Uniform, Green. Facings, Black. Lace, black. 2ND ASSAM SEBUNDY CORPS.-Rangagwn (Assam). (Civil.) Raised 12th August 1839. Detachments at Debroogurh, &c. &c. Capt. P. Mainwaring, 33 N.1,|11 Dec. 37] 9 Sept. 39 Commandant. Lieut. J. M. Lockett, 3d N.I. - 15 Sept. 3921 Feb. 40 Aljutant. Ens. F. J. Elsegood, 41st N.I.- 24 Jan. 39 15 Oct. 41 Doing duty. Uniform, Green. Facings, Black. Lace, Black, NERBUDDAH SEBUNDY CORPS.-Jabbulpore. Capt. W.A. Ludlow, 12th N.l. I 19 Oct. 33 | 13 Dec. 39 | Commandant. NIMAUR BHEEL CORPS.- Mundlaisir. Commandant. 1 1 MALWAH BHEEL CORPS.- Bhopawar. Ordered to be raised 24th February 1840. andant. 1 | Adjutant. MEYWAR BHEEL CORPS.-Khairwarrah. Raised 15th July 1840. Capt. W. Hunter, 15th N.I. .26 Feb. 36/15 July 401 Commandant. (1841 Lieut. J.G.Gaitskell, 26th N.I. 1 Jan. 37 15 July 402d in command, 4th Aug. Lieut. J.C. Brooke, 63d N.I. 3 Oct. 40114 Aug. 41 1djutant. Asst. Surg. J. Bowhill, 4 June 40118 Aug. 411n medical charge. RESIDENT'S ESCORT. KATMANDH00.-Nipaul. Raised 5th April 1816. Capt. G.W. Williams, 29th N.1.115 May 41(27 Jan. 41 Comdt. -- Leave, P A., till 20th Jan. 1842. Ens. R.C. Wroughton, 12th N.1.13 Jan. 39 4 Dec. 41 Acting Commandant. · 254* (PART II. Bengal Army. IRREGULAR CAVALRY. 1st REGIMENT OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY.-llansi. Detachment at Ghuzree, Candahar, and H8: ar. • BHURTPOOR." Rank and Numes, Army Rank. When ap- poinled. Reinarks. Commandant. Maj. B. T. Phillips, 7th L. C. 28 Sept. 1841 21 Dec. 1841 In charge. Capt. R. Haldne, 45th N:1. lune S911 NO 40 2d in command. Local Lieut. J. Skipnei Junior, 18 Feb. 25 Adjutant. Asst. Surg J. A, Staig, 10 Jan. 37 8 Feb. 39 1. medical charge. Ressalilar Mirza Azeem Bes S7 Sirdar Bahadoor. 1 May 2ND REGIMENT OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY. The right wing and head quarters at Saugor-arrived 2nd February, 1841. The left wing at Neemuch-arrived at 11th February, 1841. • ARRACAN.' 36,29 Feb. Capt. C. O'Hara, 4th L. C.....119 June Lieut. W.B.Lumley 21 Eu.regt. 4 Aug. 36 25 Aug. 28 Comdt., Si Sept. 1839 38|2d in comd., 9th Sept. 1839-Leave to rejoin till 25th Feb. 1842. 39 Adjutant. 40 Offg. 2d in command, 41 Acting Adjutaut. Lieut. G. Jackson, 4th L. C 26 Mar. 38 9 Sept. 14 Aug. 49 7 Apr. 325 Nov, 89 In medical charge. Lieut. A. Carrington, 24th N. I 3 Oct. Asst, Surg. M. Richardson, M. D. 3 Jan. Asst. Surg. A.D. Duncan, M.D.. medical store-keeper, Nee- much, 15 Mar. 26 6 Sept. 1 May 2 May 41 In medical charge of the left wing. 37 Sirdar i ahadoor, 37 Ba adoor. Ressaldar Mirza Ruhim Beg Ressaldar Mirza Fazil Beg, ... 3RD REGT. OF IRREGULAR CAV.-Umballa, arrived 17th May 1841. Detachment at Afghanistan, gc. Capt. T. F Tait, 20 Eu, regt. 28 Sept. 40127 Sept. 38 Comdt., 28 Aug. 1839. Lieut. J. Liptrott, 20 Eu. regt. 25 Feb. 34 13 Aug. 39 2d in command. Lieut. G.M. Prendergast, 44th 8 Oct. 39 I June 41 Adjutant. Cornet W. M. G. Maconochie, lale 2d L. C. 8 Sept. 59 i Nor. 41 Doing duty. Asst. Surg. M. Lorell, 25 May 27 15 Feb. 36 In medical charge. Ressuldar Gholam Mahomed Khan, 1 Way 37 Bahadloor, Ressuldar Noorulhuck Khan, 7 Sept. 38, Bahadoor. N. I. VOL. 11.) 255 Irregular Cavalry. 4TH REGIMENT OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY. • AFGHANISTAN'_ GAUZNEE'-2 rissalahs KILAT.' The head quarters and right wing at Ferozepoor-arrived The left wing at Loodianah-arrived Detachment in Afghanistan. Rank and Names. Urmy Rank. When ap pointed. Remarks, Maj. W. Alexander, 5ih L, C. 23 July 18:59 17 Oct. 1835 Commandant Bt. Capt. T. Walker, 1st N. I. 11 Apr. 40 8 Dec. 29 2d in command. Lieut. A.J. W. Haig, 24th N. I. 8 May 37 2 Dec. 41 Adjutant. Surg. A. McK. Clerk, 71th N 1.'11 Nov. 36 5. Apr. 41 Left wing Asst. Surg. F. C. Henderson, M. D. 10 Feb. 31 25 Feb. do And in medical charge of the prisoners in the juil at Ferozepore. Ressaldar Shaick Noorbux, 1 May 37 Bahadoor. .... 5tu REGIMENT OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY.-Bhopawar, arrived (Civil.) 8 Oct. Maj. E. Pettingal, 39th N. I. - 10 Jan. 32, Comdt. from the 1st Nov 18SI. Adjutant. 41 Furlough. 41 In medical charge. 37 Buhadoor. 30 20 Feb. 34,28 Jan, | May Asst. Surg. J. B. Maclonald, - 27 Feb. Asst. Surg W. Dunbar, M.D. 14 Jan. Ressaldar Roheen Alli Khan, 6TH REGT. OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY.-Bareilly, arrived 6th May 1841. Capt. J. Mackenzie, 8th L. C. 13 Jan. Lieut R. Bill, 4th N. I. - 8 Oct. 3C 2 Sept, 40 18 Dec. 40 Commandant. 37 2d in comd., 17th Jan, 18-10. S7 Adjt., 6th Jan. 1838. 38. In medical charge. Cornet C. G. Becher, 1st L. C. 28 Mar. Asst. Surg. J. V. Leese, 27 June 29 18 Dec, 26 13 Dec. 7TH REGIMENT OF IRREGULAR CAVALRY.-Bareilly. Raised at Bareilly, 28th April 1841. 33 6 May 38 i June 41 Commandant. 412d in command. Capt. F. Wheler, late ad L. C17 July Lieut. W H. Ryves 61st X. I. 1 Oct. Lieut. J.U.L. 11. Toone, late 21 L. C. 16 Noy. Cor. R G. Taylor, late 21 L.C. 26 Feb. Asst. Surg. H.C. Eddy, M.D., late 20 L. C. .13 Feb. 41 6 May 40 6 May 41 Adjutant. 41 Doing duty. 38! 6 May 4: In medical charge. 256* (PART II Bengal Army. INVALID ESTABLISHMENT. HEAD QUARTERS, CHUNAR. Two companies of artillery and two companies of infantry-Europeans. Rank and Names. When Inva- Date of Rank lided. Rernarks. Lieutenint Colonels. J. Gibbs, C, Poole, C. W.R Povoleri, C. A Lloyd, T'. Chadwick, Majors, F, Rutledge, W. Gregory, W. Hough, J. Bare ay, CF. Urquhart, W. Simonds, E. Herring, E. Swetenham, C. W. Hodges, 5 Aug. J. Aitchison, C. W. Cowley, W. Veysie, F. Angelo, Captains. . H. Tanner, C. H. Marley, 25 May 1821 14 July 1821 Comdt. of the fortress of Buxar-Leave, P. A., till 151h March 1842. - 11 July 23 30 May 28 Comdt. of the European in- valids, Chunar. - 11 July 23 3 June 2 i Presidency. -13 Apr. 27 21 Deo. 27 Bareily. - 25 Apr. 3831 Dec. 39 Simla. 1 Dec. 30 31 Dec. 30 Chinsurah. 26 Sept. 33U1 Oct. 38 Leave to New Holland, &c. S C., 10th June 1841. 10 Jan, 37 i fot. 4. Presidency. 10 Jan. 37 26 var. 38 Hills norih of Deyrah. 26 Jan, 3: 25 Jaly 38 Meerut. 28 June 38 i Sept. 41 Leave, P. A., till 15th Feb. 1842 28 June 38 21 July 41 Lucknow. 20 May 3930 Sept. 40 Huis north of Deyrah. 39 7 July 41 Has permission to retire from the service from the date of his embarkation at Bombay. 26 Mar. 40130 Nov. 40 4 Jan. 41117 Feb. 41 Delhi. - 10 Mar. 41126 July 4 Europe, Furlough, 26 July 4128 Sept. 22 Feb. 06/18 Feb. 15 Monghyr. 13 May 25 15 Jan, 30 Fort Adjt. Buxar-In comd. of the Garrison. 7 Apr. 26 5 Feb. 36 Eur. S. C., 27th Feb. 1841. 10 Jane 36 4 Feb. 33 North western bills, 3 July 27 15 Oct. 28 Fort Adj. Allahabad. - 19 Aug 27 6 Aug 32 North west ern hills. 3 Nov. 27 14 Jan. 33 Supg officer of burkendanze guards, Patna division. 15 April 28 17 Dec. 39 Serampore. 13 June 29 5 Mar, 38 Europe Far lough. 2 Dec. 2816 Apr. 35 Almorah. 25 June 3219 Feb. 38 Presidency. 1 Dec. S2 26 June S7 Eur., s. 6., 10th Mar. 1840. 6 May 33 25 Apr. 36 Hills north of Deyrah. 3411 Dec. 37 Post master at Barrackpore. 29 July 34 29 Oct. 38 Europe, Furlough. U Nov. 34 20 Feb. 38 Eur. S. C. 9th April 1841. 3 20 Jan. 41 Doing duly at Chunar. 35 1 Feb. 41 Doing duty at Chunar. 16 June 35 22 Feb. 4 Eur. S. C, 28th May 1841. S5 10 Mar. 41 Leave to the Mauritius, S.C. 11th April 1841. 6. Jan. 3616 Dec. 3.Hills north of Deyrah. 16 Jan. 36 1 July 39 Presidency. 1 Mar. 36 3 Dec. 58 Eur., s. Č., 201h Jan. 1840. E Marshall, J. W. H. Turner, J. P. Hickman, P. Gerard, C. Gutbrie, 30 May C. J. Crane, C. Wilson, H. C. McKenly, D, L. Richardson, C. Gale, T. Roberts, J. D. Nash, R. W. Beatson, C.H, White, F B. Todd, C. Fowle, H. Humfrey. (P) J. V. Forbes, J. Maclean, E. J. Belis, G. Kenyaway, 5 Apr. 1 May -129 Sept. VOL. II.] 257* Medical Department. Rank und Names, Dute of Runk When Inva- lided. Remarks, J. R. Revell, F. Moore, R G. McCiregor, T. Hution, E. A. Monro, 9 June 36:23 Dec. 40 North Western hills. 9 Sept. 36 6 Sept. 40 Doing duty at Chunar. 10 May 3729 April 40 Agra :7 Oor. 35124 Dec. 41 25 July 59 22 April 40 Appointed to the duty at (hunar-Leve, S.C., till Ist November 1842. 19 Sept. 405 May 41 Mussoorie. C. McE. Collins. Lieutenants. S. Earle, W.C. J. Lewin, A. W. W. Fraser, A. B Nesbiti, 8 June 11 May 3 May 1 May 20111 April 25 30 Nov. 25 14 Oct. 27 27 Feb, F. Wallace, 0. (ainpbell, 15 Nov. 24 Jan. 2016 Jan, 2910 Sept. 28 Presidencr. SS' herra Poonjee. 31 North western hills. 32 Eur., S.C., 28th May 1832- Exceeded 5 years'absence liom India. Si Benares. 34 Mynpoorie-Leave, S. C., ill 1st January 1843, 37 Appointed to do iluty at Chu. na! - Leave, P. A., iillist January 1542. 35 Doing durr at Chunar. 41 ppointed to do dury. 1 Chu. nar-- Leave, S.C., till 2180 June '842. 41 ur., Furlo' viâ N. S. Wales 11th June 1841. G. Pengree, 1 Oct. 3213 Nov. E. W. Ravenscroft, T. H Hunter, 29 July 7 May 34 5 Feb. 35 3 Nov, J. M. Loughnan, 6 June 35 2 June Surge ns. W. Woolley, R. Laughton, 24 Aug. 10 1 June 40,16 Dec. 13 Serampore. 40 North western hills, 1 Jan, STAFF. Bi. Capt. A. Grani, 2d en regt. Alljt. and Qr. Mr.,11th Nov. Facings, Blue-Lace, Gold, EUROPEAN INVALID VETERAN COMPANY--CHUNAR. Brevet Captain A. Grant, 2d en regt. In charge. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. MEDICAL BOARD, Runk and Names. Date of appoint- ment to the Board. Remarks. Surgeon T. Smith... ... 13 December 1837 1st member. Surgeon C. Campbell... 23 July 38 2nd member. Surgeon T. Tweedie... 1 January 413rd member-Leave to Cape. Surgeon J. Hutchinson 30 July 30 Ş Şecy.-Leave to Cape and N. S. Wales. Surg.G.Angus,55 th N.I. 12 August 40 Officiating Secretary. PART II. Vol. II. I 1* 258° (PART II. Bengal Army. SUPERINTENDING SURGEONS.-10. Rank and Names. Date of appt. Date when 28 Superintend- posted to the ing Surgeon. division. Where Posted. .. Surgeon G. Playfair 20 Feb. 1831 5 Mar. 1842 Meerut division. Surgeon J. Marshall 22 Aug. 3310 Nov. 34 Dinapore division. Surgeon H. F. Hough. 25 Feb. 3410 Nov. 34 Saugor division. Surgeon W. Panton... | Feb. 40 7 Oct. 40 Sirhind division. Surgeon W. Findon... 23 Oct. 34 U Nov. 36 Presidency circle. Surgeon J. Mellis, M. D. 15 July 37 2 Sep. 37 Western circle, Nee. much. Surg. A. Halliday, m. D 31 Dec. 37 26 Jan. 38 Benares division. Surgeon G. King..... 3 Oct. 4011 Mar. 40 Agra division. Surgeon J. Atkinson... 9 Dec. 40/25 Jan. 41 Cawnpore division. Surgeon G. Lamb, civil Dacca 3 Oct. 401 8 Dec. 40 Furlough, S C. Surgeon W. S. Stiven. 34th N. I............ 9 Dec. 401 7 Oct. 40 Supg. Surg. Affghan- istan. GENERAL LIST OF Surgeons and Assistant Surgeons. SURGEONS-120. For rules for drawing head money, see Vol. I. Part II. Page 5.33 Season. Names. Dule of Commis- sion. Salary per Mensem. Remarks. ... 22 Feb. 17 1802 T. Smith, 4 Jan. 1815 2809 13 O ist member, medical board. 03 C. Campbell, 15 Jan. 16 2809 13 02d member, medical board. 04 T. Tweedie, 22 Feb. 17 unknown 3d member, medical board, Leare to ('ape G. Playfair, Offg. member. medical board, and Offg. Presy. Surgeon. J. Marshall, .122 Mar. 181712 0 8 Supg. surgeon, Dinapore divo. 1. F. Hough, -5 May 18 2045 6 o Supg. surgeon, Saugor divn. W. Panton, 23 June 1812045 6 O Surg. surgeon, 'irlind divo. 05 W. Findon, 12 Aug. 181712 0 8 Supg. surgeon, Presy, circle. J. Mellis, M.D. 25 Nov, 18/2015 6 0 Supg. surgeon, western circle, Neemuch. A. Halliday, m.v. 14 Mar. 191682 0 8 Cupg. surgeon, Benares divo. G. King, 18 Sept. 192015 6 O Snpg. surgeon, Agra. s. Nicolson, 8 Jan. 201 600 0 O Surgeon to the gen. hospital. 490 0 o Presidency surgeon. J. Atkinson, ... 14 July 20 2015 6 o Supg. surgn., Cawopore divn, VOL. 11.) 259 Medical Department. Names. Dateof comSalary per mission. Remarks. Season. mensem. 0 0 0 1806 I. Jackson, ... 28 August a 14th N. 1.-Europe, Furlough [1822 15th April 1838. 07 G. Lamb, 1 July 23 2015 6 8 Supg. surgeon, Dacca circle. Europe S. C. W. S. Stiven, 11 July 23 34th N. I. 1215 6 0 upg. surgeon, Affghanistan, J. Ranken, M.D... 11 July 23 2015 6 0 Supdt of the post office dept. for the N W. provinces. 09 J. Thomson* 27 Sept. 23 ... On special duty. Pres. 10 R. Brown, 27 Sept. 23 739 10 0 Garrison surgeon, Chunar. G. G. Spilsbury ... 27 Sept. 23 Placed at disposal of Comman- der-in-Chief. 11 C. Renny, ... 25 Nov. 24 a 20 N. 1.-Europe, S. C., 20th January 1810. J.B. Clapperton... 6 Jan. 25 863 0 4 6th L C. 12 W. Watson, 17 Apr. 25 739 10 0 Garrison surgeon, Allahabad. W. Jackson, 14 July 25 863 0 4 8th L. C. W. Darby, 25 Mar. 26 863 0 4 Ist L. (', and medical charge Paneeput Jail 100 Rs. 13 F. Corbyn, 5 May 26 839 10 o Garrison surgeon, Fort Wm. N. Wallich, M.D... 5 May 26 1500 0 0 Supdt. of the H.C. Botanic Gar- den, Calcutta. 50 0 Professor of Bottany to the medical college. 14 A. Garden, M.D.... 5 May 26 490 o Presidency surgeon. 14 H.S Mercer, 5 May 20 600 o Marine Surgeon. 15 D. Woodburn, ditto 1015 6 0Garrison Surgeon, and medical store-keeper, Agra. B.W. Macleod, M.D. ditto 863 0 43rd L.C. G. Angus, 16 June 26... 58th N.I. 890 0 0 Offg. Secy. to the medi, board. Offg. Presidency Surgeon. J. Row, 23 June 26 692 5 of th battalion artillery. 16 A. Wood, 14 April 27 a 11th N.I.- Eur. Furlo' 8th Feb. 1841. C.S. Curling, 12 July 27') a 15th N.J.-Eur., Furlo' 23d March 1840. C.B. Francis ditto 67th N. I.--Eur., Furlo' 26th May 1840. J. Grant, 17 Aug. 27 1599 I o Apothecary to the East-India Company. unknown On deputation Offg. Mint Mr. A. Ross, 12 Aug. 28 1066 0 oCivil, Delhi. J. R. Martin, . 22 Sept. 28 a Europe, S. C. 23d Jan. 1840. T. B. Barker, 4 June 29 6925 0166th N. I. W. Cameron 16 Sept. 29 490 0 0 Pesidency Sargeon. 18 J. Hutchinson, 18 Nov. 29 815 6 0Seey. to the medical board Pre- sidency Surgeon.—Leave to Cape and N. S. Wales, on S. C., 17th August, 1840. W. Montgomerie, 9 Dec. 29 8000 O Senior Surgeon. Prince of Wales island, Singapore and Ma. lacca. G. G. McPherson. 124 July 301 a Eur., S.C., 17th March 1840. a Surgeons on furlough draw 108.-6ch. per diem. 260* (PART 11. Bengal Army. Season. Names. Date of Commis- sion. Salary per Mensem. Remarks. a [1830 19 H. Guthrie, M.D... 15 Ang. 863 0 4 7th L.C. J. Graham, M.D.... 11 Sept. 30 863 0 430 brigade horse artillery. J. Forsyth, 18 Nov. 30/1000 0 o With Shah-Shoojah's force. J. Johustone, M.D 21 Jan. 31 715 6 31st L. C. 100 0 o And offy. civil, Mynpoorie. J. Morton, 7 May 31 2000 0 o Senior assist. to the Commis- sioner of Arracan. M. Nisbet, M.D.... 14 June 31 863 04/2d brigade horse artillery. A. Davidson, M.D 13 July 31 863 0 4 101h L.C. J. S. Toke, 7 Nov. 311 715 6 olst N.I. T. E. Dempster,... 2 Mar, 32 863 0 4 1st brigade horse artillery. R.M.M. Thomson 22 Apr. 32 692 5 o Ist battalion artillery. 20 A. Pringle, M.D... 14 June 32 863 4'4th L.C. W. Mitchelson,... 27 Dec. 32 715 6 olst European regiment. C. Mackinnon, 9 June 33 a 32. N.I.-Europe, S. C., 13th June 1840. 1820 B, Burt, M.D., 23 July 68th N.I.-Eur., S. C., 4th Feb. 1839. J. Dalrymple, 30 July 33 863 4 9th L. C. D. Butter, M.D.,... 28 Aug. 33 900 0 0 (ivil, Benares. 200 0 o Post Master, Benares. J. Duncan, 20 Sept. 33 800 0 o Civil, Bareilly leave to Presy. W. E. Carte, A.B 7 Oct. 33 415 6 061st N.I. - Leave. E, T. Harpur, 28 Jan. 34 863 0 4 5th L.C. J. Barker, 9 Feb. 34 715 6 0 50th N.I. G. Turnbull, 24 Apr. 34 674 1 028th N.I. T. Forrest, 19 Sept. 34 715 0 0 46th N.I. 21 M. Powell, 31 Mar, 35 a 230 N.I.-Europe, S. C. 1. Campbell, 28 May 35 715 0 0 15th Regt. N.I. H. Clark, | Sept 35 a 22nd N.I.--Eu., S. C. via Bom- bay, 20th Jan. 1839. N. Morgan, 2 Sept. 35) a 26th N.I. Eu. S. C. viâ Egypt. J. Davidson, 5 Sept. 35 1000 6 0 Principal asst. under the Govr. Genl.'s agent. S. W. frontier- Leave to the Cape, S. C., 13th Feb. 1840. C. Mottley, 3 Oct. 35 715 6 03 N.1. J. Ronald, 15 Oct. 351 715 6 0 24th N.T. E.J Yeatman, M.D12 Mar. 301 715 6 0 12th N.J. [Dec. 1838. J. Iones, MD. 19 Mar. 36 a 2011 N.I.- Europe, 5. C., 17th 1. J. F. Steuart, m.). 8 July 36 6 59th N.I. Eu. S. C. 14 Mar. 1841 A.McKenzieClark 11 Nov. 36 815 6 074th N.I. Jail Loodianah. 22 W Stevenson, Soni i Feb. 37 715 0 029th N.I. J. Greig. 21 Mar, 37 715 6 0 39th N.I. J. S. Sullivan, 1 May 37 715 6 0 36th N.I. J. W. Grant 3 May 37 656 10 o Medical depôt, Cawnpore. R. Shaw, 13 July 37 800 0 o Civil, Agra. A. W. Staart, 30 July 37 715 6 052nd N.I. C. C, Egerton, 1 Aug. 37| a Eur. S. C., 23d Feb. 1841. 23 J. Menzies, I Aug. 37 715 6 055th N.I. unknown. Ofi. Residency Surg. Lucknow. B. Wilson. 131 Dec. 371 715 6 06th N.I. a Surgeons op furlough draw 10s, 6d. per diem. VOL. II.] 261 Medical Department. Dute of Seas on Names. Sulary per Commis- sion. Remarks. mensem. ... M.D, Junioon:} 17 Mar. 38 unknown. ... .. } [1838 | sidency J. McGaveston,... 19 Feb. 415 0 2nd Bat. Arty, on leave to Pre. J. Smith, M.D. 1 Mar. 38 715 6 0630 N.I. R. Rankine, 1 Mar. 38 715 6 0 11h NI. WmStevenson, in the King of Oude's service. Leave S. C. W. Thomson, 2 Apr. 38 1044 4 1 In the Nizam's service. J. H. Palsgrave,... 5 Apr. 38 715 6 014th N.I. H. Taylor, 1 May 38 715 6 0:30 N.I. And 1st L.I. Battalion, J. Taylor, 23 July 38 700 0 (Civil Dacca. H. Housfield, 3 Aug 38 674 1 025th N.I. G. Craigie, M. D... 4 Sept. 38 715 6 02nd European Regiment. 24 A. Chalmers, m.p.19 Nov. 38 733 10 050 h batialion artillery. J. O'Dwyer, 1 Jan. 39 715 6 0 69th N.I. D. McQueen, 5 Jan. 39 715 6 0 17th N.I. Gray, MD. G. G. Brown, M.D. 29 Jan. 39 733 10 04th battalion artillery. D. Stewart, M.D.... 9 Mar. 39 3000 0-uperintendent general of Vac- cine inoculation. 100 0 o Park St. Dispensary. 490 0 0 And Presideucy surgeon. H. M. Tweddell... 16 Apr. 39 715 6 05 Ist N.I. J. Magrath 12 Aug. 39 715 6 037th N.I. R. Foley, M.D. 3 Oct. 39 415 6 0 151h NI.-Leave to Cape $.C. R. Mcintosh 16 Dec. 39 715 6 0 48th N.I. 2: J. Worrall, M.D.... 21 Dec. 39 674 1 0 8th N.I. W. Jacob, 1 Jan, 40 715 6 9 38th N.I. W. Bogie, MD. 13 June 40 415 6 0 651h N.I.-Leave. A. Christie, 6 Aug. 40 715 6 0191h NI. A. Smith, M D., .. 3 Oct. 401 unknown Civil Hidgellee and accountant to Salt Company. F, H. Brett, 16 Nov. 40 774 0 o Supdı, of Eye Infirmary. C. Maxwell, 23 Nov, 40 674 1 0 18th V.I. E. Tritton, 16 Dec, 40 715 6 0.71st N.I. J. Bowron, 1 Jan. 41 Unattached. E. T. Downės, 1 Jan. 41 715 6 0 26th N.I. C. Finch, 1 Feb, 41 715 6 0 57th N.I. J. T. Pearson, 10 Feb. 411200 0 0 Surg. to the Govr. Genl. C.J. Macdonald,... 1 Aug. 41a 10th Bridg. Eur. S. C. 1st July 1840. C. Llewellyn, 11 Feb. 26 415 6 o Civil, Mymensing, on leave. W. C. Laing, 13 Feb. 26 1044 4 1 In the Nizan's service. F. Furnell, 11 Mar. 26 715 6 0 Assam light infantry. (H. Chapman, ...11 Mar. 26, Unattached. ASSISTANT SURGEONS-230. OS|J. Lamb; * 126 July 09 350 0 0 Civil, Maldah. 14 F. P. Strong. ...23 Sept. 15 1100 0 0 Civil, 24-Pergunnahs, &c. 16G.N. Cheek,* 30 Sept. 16 570 0 0 Civil, west Burdwan. J. Morice, M.D..... 15 Mar. 26 421 10 09th N. I. And Ist Co. 5th batt, arty. • Given up promotion. a Surgeons on furlough draw 108, 6d. per diem. 262* (PART 11. Bengal Army. Date of Sulury per Season. Names. Remarks. Commis- sion. mensem, ... ... E. W. W. Raleigh, 15 Mar 1826 100 0 0 Asst. to the supdt. of the eye infirmary. Native hospital. 400 00 Professor of surgery and clini- cal surgery, medical college. A.C. Duncan, M D. 15 Mar. 26 456 10 0 Med. store-keeper, Neemuch. W. L. McGregor, M.D., 15 Mar. 261 395 4 0 With head quarters, 1st brigade horse artillery, and Canal es- tablishment, Kurnaul. H. Maclean, 15 Mar. 26 421 10 0 45th Regt. N. I. 1825 A. Murray, M.D.... 5 May 26 421 10 0 23rd Regiment. T. B. Hart, 15 May 26 421 10 0 14th N. I. R. B. Duncan, 15 May 26 6 Eur., Furlough 16th Apr. 1840. W. Dollard, 21 May 26 421 10 07th N. I. D. A. Macleod, 21 May 26 421 10 058th N. I. J. M. Brander,m.D 21 May 26 421 10 0 #th Regt. N. I. A. C. Gordon, 13 June 26 421 10 060: Regt. N. I. J. Goss, 29 June 26 6 Eur., S. C., 220 January 1839. J. V. Leese, 27 June 26 441 10 06th Regt. of Irr. Cavy. J. Ransfor], 16 July 26 256 10 06th batt. arty.-Leave to Presy. W. K. M. Rose, 13 Aug 26 421 10 01112 N. I. A. Betrie, 23 Aug. 26 300 0 oCivil, Allahabad and Pilgrim Hosp. 100 0 0 Offg. garrison asst. Surgeon, Allahabad. 100 0 0 Post master, Allahabad. IT. C. Elliot, 1 Sept. 26 500 0 0 Pol. agency, Mahidpore S. C., to the Hills. W. Spencer, 12 Sept. 26 In Medical Charge to the Hau. per Establishment, and Asst. to ditto Stud. T. W. Burt, 12 Sept. 26 6 Eur, S. C. 9th Feb. 1841. K. Mackinnon,Md. 19 Nov. 26 350 o Civil, Tirhoot. 26 W. M. Buchanan, 50 Post master, Tirhoot. M.D. 15 Dec. 26 6 19th N. I.--Eur., S. C., 20th Jan. 1837. J. Stokes, M.D. 7 Jan. 27 400 0 Ciril Goruckpore, and Post master. J. Barber, 3 Feb. 27| 421 10 0 40th N. I. A. Bryce, M.D. 13 Feb. 27 395 4 o ist brig. horse arty.-with the D. Gullan, 10 Mar. 27 500 0 o Political agency, Jeypore. A, Wilson 10 Mar. 27 350 0 o Civil, Bauleath. 300 0 0 And Asst. Salt Agent. 50 0 o Post master Bauleah. J. Baker, ... 23 Mar. 27 380 0 o Civil, Bullonah (Noacolly). 300 0 0 Supdt. of the Bullooah and Megna salt chokeys. D. Woodburn,M.D 6 Apr. 27 b Eur., S. C., 29th Jan. 1839. H. H. Spry, M.D 10 Apr. 27 100 0 o in medical charge of the lower orphan school. 356 10 02d asst. garrison surg. of Fort William. 0 0 0 1st troop. b Assistant Surgeons on furlough draw 68. 6d. per diem. VOL. 11.] 263" Medical Department. Date of Sulary per Season. Names. Remaks. Commis. sion. mense m. 0 .. 0 [1827 J. Corbet, ... 10 April 600 0 Ist asst. to the opium agent, Behar, A. Campbell, M.D. 8 May 27 1200 0 0 Supdt. of Darjeeling, and in charge of political relations with Sikhim. S. M. Lorel, 25 May 271 441 10 0 3d regt of irregular cavy. 1825 E. J. Agnew, ... 25 May 256 31st N. 1.-Eur. Furlo' 220 Nov. 1837. F. Fleming, 10 July 27'256 10 0520 N. I.-Leare to the Cape or Australia, s. C., 9th May 1840. A. Vans Dunlop, M. D. 11 July 27 b Eur. Furlo' 27th Feb. 1841. T. A. Wise,m.D.... 13 Aug. 27 1000 0 Secretary to the general com- mittee of public instruction. W. Gordon, m.D.... 13 Oct. 27 350 0 o Civil, Mirzapore. 100 0 o Post master, Mirzapore. 27 S. Holmes, 4 Nov. 27 421 10 0Hurrianah L. I. battalion. J. loglis, M. D. 5 Jan. 28 500 0 o bhopaul political agency: And post master, Bhopaul division. M. Grierson, 22 Feb. 28 356 10 0 Medical duties at Mussoorie. A. Walker, 23 Feb. 28 421 10 o Kemaoon battalion, G.J. Berwick, M.D. 23 Feb. 28 700 0 Surg. to the envoy and minister at the court of Shab Shooja. ool-Moolk. A. Colquhoun, 26 Mar. 28 700 0 0 With Shah Shooja's force. J. B. Dickson, 25 Mar. 28 +50 0 o Civil, Gyah. 50 o Post master, Gyab. J. Steel, M. D. ... 11 Apr. 28 521 10 Nusseree battalion. R.B. Cumberland, 16 Apr. 28 480 o Civil, southern division of Cut- tack and Government dispen- sary Puoree. J. McRae, ... 10 May 28 395 03d troop 3d brig. horse artillery Government Staff and dis- pensary hospital and Govt. dispensary, Cawnpore. C. Garbett, 23 May 28 50 0 0 Nagpore Residency. H. Still, 10 June 28 350 O o Civil, Humeerpore. 50 0 o Post master, Humeerpore. C. Griffith, 18 June 28/121 10 0 18th N. I. J. Macrae, 27 June 28 350 0 o Civil, Monghyr. W. B. Webster,... 19 July 28 421 10 OlBhaugulpore hill rangers. S. Davis, 8 Aug. 28 700 o Civil, Patna. 50 o Post naster, Patna. C. W. Fuller, 12 Sept. 28 350 o Civil, Kishenagur. 50 o Post master, Nuddeah. J. Davenport, M.D. 12 Sept. 28 421 10 0 Sylhet light infantry battalion. 28 S. Lightfoot, 4 Dec. 28 +21 10 0 67th N. 1. R. N. Irvine, M.D. 15 Jan. 29 500 0 o Gwalior residency and post master 50. A.A. McAnally... 20 Jan. 29456 10 o Hissar establishment. Unkno n. And asst. Hissar stud. 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 0 b Assistant Surgeons on furlough draw 6s, 6d. per diem. 264* (PART II. Bengal Army. 1 Season. Names. Dute of Commis- sion. Salary per Mensem. Remarks. J. F. Bacon, 28 Mar. 29 350 0 .. P.F. H. Baddeley, 28 Mar. 296 J. Duncan, M..D... 9 May 29 350 50 W.S. Dicken, 17 June 29 350 J. Bruce, 9 July 29 500 A. McD, Stuart,... 29 Aug. 29 860 29 M. McN. Rind, 10 Oct. 29 500 J.H. Serrell, 10 Oct. 29 121 M. Richardson,m.D 3 Jan. 30 +41 200 o Civil, Mooradabad and Govt. dispensary. Eur.. S. C.. from Bombay. Ist March, 1841 0 0 Civil, Chittagong. 0 0 Post master, Chittagong. 0 0(ivil Balasore. 0 o Indore residency 12 0 47th N. I. 0 0 Pol. a ency Mundlaisir. 10 0 120 N. I. 10 02d Irregular cavalry. 0 0 And medical charge of Civil station of Saugor & Dumov. 0 0 Civil, Furreedpore. 0 0 (ivil, Ghazeepore. o Opium examiner and 1st assis- tant to the opium agent at Benares. 0 0 Post master, Ghazeepore. 0 0 Gwalior reformed contingent. 0 o Civil, Pubna, 10 05th regt of Irr. cavalry. o With Shah Soojah's farce. o Civil, Seharunpore. ... C. Macintyre, D. MacNab, M. D. 5 Feb. 30 350 5 Feb. 30 150 200 0 50 J. Hope, 5 Feb. 30 700 H. J. Thornton.... 5 Feb. 30 150 J. B. Macdonald, . 27 Feb. 301141 C. McKinnon, M.D. 30 Mar. 3000 530 H, Falconer, A. M. & M. D. 7 Apr. 301530 29 J. McClelland, 7 Apr. 36-65 0 0 0 J. C, Boswell, 30 Apr. 31100 T. Oxley, 30. Apr. 31/100 C.B.Handyside, MD 12 May 30316 W. A. Green, 6 June 30350 J. Jackson, 22 June 356 0 0 0 0 160 0 0 And sudpt. of the botanical garden. On sick leave. 12 o Deputy A pothecary to the East India Company In charge of the H. C'.s dis- pensary. 0 Serving at P. W. island. o Serving at Singapore. o Medical duties at Simla- o Civil, Howrah. 10 0 Ist assistant Presidency gene- ral hospital 0 And Medical charge of the Caleutta Jail. Professor of medicine and cli- nical medicine, medical col. lege. o Civil Cuttack. o Post-master, Cuttack. 12 0 Sappers and miners. 10 o Sirmoor battalion. Furlo' Europe, 1st April 1841. 0 0 Bundelcuod legion. 10 0 20th N. I, and 55th Regt. N.I. .. Eur,, S. C. 25th Jan. 1839. 10 0'4th Regt. of Irregular cavy. 0 0 And Post Mr. Ferozepore. .. 0 0 A. M. McK Minto 20 July 31:50 50 s. Winbolt, 24 July 31 30 H. A. Bruce, MD 17 Aug. 2:21 A. Keir, M.D. 30 Aug. 51 T. Ginders, 30 Sept. 30.00 30 T. Stott, 22 Jan. 31:21 J. MeCosh, 2 Feb. 3 ... F. C, Henderson M. D. ... 10 Feb. 3 11 00 ... ... Assistant Surgeons on furlough draw 6s 6d per diem, VOL. 11.] 265* Medical Department. Names. Date of Salary per Commission. Remarks. Season. mensem. 1835 1830 J. Esdaile, M.D. 10February 1600 G. E. Christopher. 10 Feb. 3116 H.H.Goodeve,M.D. 16 Apr. 31 696 R. Phillipson, 7 May 31 421 15 May 31 350 C. Madden G. C. Rankin I June 31 295 165 A. Reid, 10 June 31 700 A. Kean, M. D. ... 20 Oct. 31 630 50 T. Smith, M, D. 22 Oct. 31 421 31 E. Mitchell, 8 Feb. 32 ... S. M. Griffith, 12 Feb. 32350 J. S. Login, M. D.. 5 Mar. 32 Civil, Hooghly. 0 0 Principal Hooghly College. Eur., S. C., 6th Jan. 1841. 10 0 Professor of midwifery, Medi- cal College. Asst. Garrison Surg., Buxar. 10 0 With the 16th N. I. 0 o Civil, Meerut and Post Master 50 Rs. 0 0/2d Asst. Sur., General Hospital. 0 Medical charge of the Calcutta Militia. Pol. agency, Loodianah. 0 Sur. to the Political agent Pesh- awur. 0 o Civil, Moorshedabad. 0 0 Post master, Berhampore. 8th L. C. 10 0 With the 34th N. I. Civil, Goalparah, leave. 0 0 Darjeeling. Proceeding to the provinces. On duty in Afghanistan. 0 0 Postmaster, Midnapore. 0 o Civil, Ajmere. 10 0220 N. I. 0 o Civil, Chuprah (Saran). 0 0 Post master Chuprah. 4 02d troop ist brig. horse art. 0 o Asst. marine surgeon. 0 o Civil, Dinagepore, and 0 0 Post-master. 0 o Civil, Jessore. 0 o Civil, Juanpore. 0 0 Civil, Purneah. ... O. 50 T. Russell, 22 Apr. 32 500 A. Mackean, 27 Apr. 32 421 R. J. Brassey, 9 June 32 350 50 J. Murray, M. D.... 6 Aug. 32 395 32 J. G. Vos, M. D. 18 Sept. 32 500 J. Wilkie, M. D. ... 26 Feb. 33 350 50 J. Anderson, M. D. 8 Apr. 33 350 F. Thompson, 18 Apr. 33 350 J. C. Smith, 18 Apr, 33 350 C. McCurdy, 16 May 33286 R. Christie, ... 27 June 33 500 10 01st Co. 4th batn. art. proceed- ing to Ferozepore. o In medical charge of the resi- dency at Katmandhoo. 0 0 Furlough to Europe. W. B. O'Shaugh- nessy, M. D. 8 Aug. 33 400 33|C. J. Davidson, ... 23 Nov, 33 386 W. Dunbar, M. D. 14 Jan, 34 441 A. Mackean 15 Jan. 34 421 34 K. M. Scott, 25 Apr. 34 500 T. Leckie, 15 Apr. 350 50 10 0 In medical charge of the civil and military establishments at Baitool. And a det. of N I. at Baitool. 10 05th regt. of irregular cavy. 10 0 22d Regt. N. I. 0 o Civil, Gowabatty, Assam. o Civil, Bhaugulpore. 0 0 Post master, Bhaugulpore. ... 0 b Assistant Surgeons on furlough draw 6s. 6d. per diem. PART II. VOL. II. K K* 266 (PART 11. Bengal Army. Season. Names. Date of Salary per Commission. mensem. Remarks. 0 0 0 1834 1834 T.C. Hunter, 24 July 250 o Civil, Futtehgarh. 50 0 o Post master, Futtehgurh. Unknown. Gun carriage agency. R.C.McConnochie 3 Sept. 34 350 0 o Officiating civil, Sylhet. J.S. Sutherland,... 16 Nov. 34 421 10 0 10th N. I. 35 G. Paton, M.D. 31 Jan. 35 350 0 0 Ciril, Allygurh. 50 0 o Post master, Allygurh And left wing 31st N. I. H. R. Bond, 24 Feb. 35 286 10 o Arrived at the Presidency in 1 | charge of Invalids. A. Webb, 20 Mar. 35 356 10 0 1st assistant garrison surgeon, Fort William. Curator and Lecturer on Prac- tical Surgery to the Medical College. W. Brydon, 9 July 35... Shah Soojah's force. 421 10 Oln medical charge left wing 5th N. I. and det. procg. to Afghanistan. R. W. Wrightson. 22 Aug 35 430 12 o Left wing 3d battn. of arty. 36 R. Marshall, M.D.. 6 Feb. 36 350 0 OlCivil Station Futtehpore and 50 0 Post master. J. Wond, 8 Mar. 36421 10 0 15th N. I. S. H. Batson,... 22 Apr. 36 350 0 o Civil, Shahabad (Arrah), And 50 0 Post master. A. Gibbon, 16 June 36 500 o O'Pol, agency, upper Sinde. H.J. Tucker, M.D.120 June 36 421 0 0/21st N. I. J. C. Brown, 5 July 36 Shah Soojah's Force. 37|W. F. Sealy, 27 Nov. 36 350 0 0 Offg. civil, Backergunge. J. Drummond, 18 Dec. 36 0 0 Eur. Furlo'. for 1 year, 23d Feb. 41. J. Baliour, ... 18 Dec. 36 Unknown. Surg. to the Lieut. Govr. N. W. Provinces. W. J. Loch, 8 Jan. 37 421 10 043d N. I. And 4th com. 2d hattn. arty. J. A. Staig, 10 Jan. 37441 10 o Ist regiment of irregular cavy. F. Anderson, M. D. 15 Jan. 37 395 4 0 +1h troop 1st brig. h. arty., and in temporary charge of May- war Bheel corps. J. Macansh, ... 24 Feb. 37 350 o Civil east Burdwan. 100 0 o And Post master. E. Foaker, 24 Feb. 37 350 0 o Civil Tipperah. A. C. Morison, 7 Mar. 37 421 10 o|i3th N. I. 100 0 0 And the civil establishments at Bandah. T.W.Wilson, M.D 14 Mar, 37 350 0 Off Civil Station Mymensing. G. Rae, 14 Mar. 37 700 0 o With Shah Shoojah's Force. R. C. Guise, 14 Mar. 37 421 10 c73d N. I, M. Nightingale,... 15 May 37 350 o Olivil, Boolundshahur. 37 A, Donaldson,m.D 2 June 37 1 0 C Europe, S. C. 16th September 1841. G. S. Cardew, 8 Aug. 37 421 10 C70th N. I. J. Arlott, M.D. 22 Aug. 37 450 0 o Upper Assam. E. V Davies, 27 Aug. 37 421 10 cli9th N. I. 38 J. A Dunbar, M.D. 12 Dec. 37 350 0 of Civil Azimgarh. R. W. Faithfull,... 10 Feb. 38'395 4 old brig. horse arty.-with the 3d troop. ... 0 ... 0 .. VOL. 11.) 267 Medical Department. Names. Date of Salary per Commission Remarks. mensem. Season 1838 E. Boult, .. 11 Feb. 38350 50 H.C. Eddy, m.D.... 18 Feb. 38 441 W. Veal, 1 Mar. 38/286 H.H. Bowling, 1 Mar. 3816 ... A. Paton, 1 Mar. 38 A. Greig, M.D., 10 Mar. 38/121 T. Murray, M.D.... 6 May 38|350 G.C. Wallich, m.D. 27 May 38 121 G.M. Cheyne 27 May 38 406 0 0 Offg. civil, and in medl. charge of the native troops, at Ha- zareebaugh-on S. C. from Ist Nov. 1841. 0 0 Postmaster, Hazareebaugh. 10 07th Irregular Cavalry. 10 In medical charge of the troops at Petoragurb, in Kemaoon. Europe, S. C., from Madras, 28th March 1840. With Shah Shoojah's force. 10 02d regt. of Oude local infy. o Civil, Beerbhoom. 10 0 530 N. I. 0 Offg. assistant Garrison Surg. at Chunar. Eur. S. C. Ist medical charge of Mehidpore pol. agency. 10 062d N. I. 10 o Civil, Mynporie. 0 o Civil Rangpore. 10 o Dcth. 44th Regt. 1840. 0 0 Civil, Nowgong, in Assam. T.A. Wethered 27 May 38... ... T.R. Strover, J.A. Guise, J. Edge, W. Shillito, R.V. Shuter, 27 May 38 421 30 May 38 421 16 June 38 350 7 July 38 286 18 July 38 350 M.A.B. Gerrard, 19 July 38 421 J. Macintire, ... 20 July 38 421 W. Jameson ... 30 Aug. 38 500 10 0 20 N. 1. 10 0 With the 61st N. I. Oolo medical charge of the Pol. agency, Umballah. 0 o Civil, Ramree, in Arracan. 0 03d Comy. 5th Arty. 10 0 Mhairwarrah local battn. ... ... 39 C.G. Andrews, 15 Sept. 38 350 K.W. Kirk, M.D... 2 Oct. 38 395 N. Collyer, I Nov. 38 121 C. M. Henderson, M. D. 1 Nov. 38 421 W.S. Comberbach, 22 Dec. 38 256 H. Irwin, 13 Jan. 39421 39 H. B. Hinton, 14 Jan. 39 350 A. C. Macrae, 24 Jan. 33 431 50 D. Mc. Rae, 24 Jan, 39 295 ... W. Pitt, E. Edlin, M. D. R. B. Kinsey, G. Turper, 24 Jan. 30 350 24 Jan. 39295 17 Feb. 39421 24 Feb. 39 10 0 520 N. I. (west. circle. 10 o Joined the Supg. Surg. of the 10 0 30th N. I. 0 ol('ivil, Akyab. 10 0 Ramgurh L. I. battalion, 0 o Post master, Burkaghur. 12 0 Medical charge of 3d troop 1st brig. and 4th troop 2d brig. 0 o Civil, Backer gunge. 12 02d Brigade horse artillery. 10 o Ist Regt. of Oude local I. Offg. assistant Garrison Surg. Buxar. 10 0 35th Regt. N. I. 12 o With 23d N. I. 10 056th Regt. N. I. O Gov. Genl.'s body guard. 10 o Medical store keeper to the force on service to the eastward. 0 0 Medical charge of the duties of the station of Hazareebagh. 10 064th N, I. E. Hare, 24 Feb. 39121 W. Martin, 9 Mar, 39 360 W. Pringle, MD 26 Mar. 39 421 H. Walker, 5 May 39-40 W. Grahame, 5 May 39 456 4 W. H. B. Ross, 13 July 39 350 G. Harper, 23 July 39 421 b Assistant Surgeons ou furlough draw 6s, 6d. per diem. 268* (PART II. Bengal Army. Names. Date of Salary per Commission mensem. Remarks. Season. ... ... ... [1839 1839 G. S. Mann, 22 August 286 10 0 Volunteer regiment. J. H. Rothney, 4 Sept. 39 421 10 03d light infantry battalion. T. Cantor, M.D. 12 Sept. 39 Offg. Depy. Apothecary. F. R. Metcalf, M.D. 8 Oct. 39 500 0 05th N. J. Affghanistan. 40 T. C. Hutchinson, 16 Oct. 39286 10 0 With H. M. 55th foot. W. Shurlock, 16 Oct. 39286 10 0 With H. M. 26th foot. E. Campbell, 14 Nov. 39 421 10 054th Regt. N. I. Affghanistan. E.R. Cardew, M.D. 23 Nov. 39 421 10 027th N. I. proceeding with in. valids to the presidency. J. Macpherson, 4 Dec. 39 395 4 0 1st troop 3d brig. horse art. {G. Turner, 18 Dec. 39 Surgeon to the Commander-in- Chief. R. O, Davidson,... 18 Dec. 39 422 10 0 59th N. I. A. W. Crozier, 19 Dec. 39,286 10 014. M. 55th foot. T. Thomson, M.D. 21 Dec. 39 286 10 0 Doing Duty H. M.'s 44th Foot Affghanistan. J. H. Jones, 3 Jan. 40/286 10 0 Doing duty, Landour depot. J. H. Butler, 3 Jan. 40 350 0 Offg. Civil Seharunpore. 40 F.J. Mouat, m. D. 3 Jan. 40... Professor of Chemistry, and Secy. to Medl. College. J. H. Freeman, 3 Jan. 40 350 0 065th Regt. N. I. A. H. Cheek, 3 Jan. 40 350 0 0 Offg. civil station, Cawnpore. W. R. Gerrard, 26 Jan. 401471 10 Europe, S. C. G. T. C. Fogarty, 8 Feb. 40 500 0 0 Political Agency, Khotah. A. Beale, 8 Feb. 40 350 0 0 Officiating C, s. Futtehpore. H. Koe, 15 Feb. 40/286 10 0 . C. A. Elderton, 24 Feb. 40/286 11 Doing duty, H. M. 3rd Regt J. P. Brougham, M.D. 8 Mar. 40 286 10 O With H. M. 62d foot. J. Naismith, M.D. 12 Mar. 40 421 10 02d light infantry battalion. J. R. Comon, M.D. 21 Mar. 40 286 10 0 Eastern expedition, J. C. DaCruz Denham, M.D.... 14 Apr. 40286 10 02d com. 2d batn. Foot arty. W. W. Wells, 10 May 40 286 10 0 Infy. depot, Cawnpore. G. Grant, 4 June 40286 10 01st com. artillery, Nusseera- bad. J. Bowhill, 4 June 40/256 10 Apdt. to Meywar Bheel corps. T. S. Lacy, 1 July 40/286 10 0 Doing duty H. M.'s 31st Fort. C. Douglas, M.D., . 4 July 40/280 10 Procg. to the upper prov. in medl. charge of Capt. John. ston's det. of recruits. R.H.L. Bird, 31 July 40286 10 0 Doing duty H. M.'s 31st Fort. G.F.Thomson, MD. 19 Aug. 40/421 10 06th Battalion Arty. J. Jowett, 20 Oct. 40 286 10 0 Eastern expedition. A. Grant, 11 Nov. 40286 10 0 Her Majesty's 55th Regt. C.B. Chalmers, 4 Dec. 40 350 Chysbassia, and detachment Ramghur battn. J. Campbell, 22 Dec. 286 10 053d Regt. N. I., doing duty. W. A. Rolfe, 22 Dec. 40 286 10 o With Detachment of Sylhet Light Infantry at Silchar. W. Keates, 25 Dec. 40 256 10 Doing duty at Cawopore. R. Whittall, 25 Dec. 40 286 10 02nd Compy. 2nd Bp. Artillery, appointed to 26th Regt. N. I. ... ... 0 VOL. 11.) 269* Medical Department. Names. Date of Salary per Commission mensem. Remarks. Seasons. .. ... 1840 W. E. Pollard, ... 25 Dec. 40 286 10 O Doing duty with the 1st Eu. ropean Regiment. H. Diaper, 25 Dec. 40 256 10 0 Doing duty at Benares. H. W. Rumley, 25 Dec. 40 225 12 0 Doing duty at Dinapore. G. B. Sealy, 25 Dec. 40 421 10 0 Arracan Local Battalion. J. Hilliard, 8 Jan. 41 225 12 0 Doing duty with Artillery, Dum-Dum. A. White, M.D. 30 Jan. 41 256 10 0 Doing Duty with Engr Johnston's Detachment, J. Sutherland, 4 Feb. 41 225 12 0 Ditto of Artillery. G, E, Morton, 27 Feb. 41 256 10 Doing duty at Benares. E. Goodeve, M.B., 8 Mar. 41| 185 12 0 Doing duty with Her Majesty's 50th Foot. H. T. Eales, 8 Mar. 41 256 10 0 Proceeding to Cawnpore. C. Forbes, 8 Mar. 41] 185 12 o Doing duty with Her Majesty's 50th Foot. H. N. Nugent, 21 Apr. 41 145 12 0 Doing duty, General Hospital. E. B. Tbring, 24 Apr. 41 390 12 0 Left Wing, 8th Regt. N. I. W. C. B. Eatwell, M.D., 11 June 41 350 0 0 Officiating Civil Surgeon, Furreedpore. J. Macrae, M.D.,... 13 June 41 145 12 0 Doing duty, General Hospital. C. L. Cox, 145 12 o Ditto ditto. H. Bedborough, 145 12 o Ditto ditto. W. R. Boyes, M.D. 145 12 o Ditto ditto. J. T. Boileau, B.A.... 145 12 0 Ditto ditto. H. B. Crommelin, 145 12 0 Ditto ditto. W. G. Goodridge,.... Not arrived. 270* (PART 11. Bengal Army. VETERINARY SURGEONS to Date of no- Names. Date of Rank mination Remarks. corps or staff appointment. C. I urner, 10 Mar. 1827 31 Aug. 1827 9th light cavalry. R. B. Parry, . 10 April 27 28 Sept. 35 Central stud. W. Barret, 10 April 2711 Sept. 34 5th light cavalry-Leave to Bombay, J. Harries, 3 Jan. 28'16 Sept. 28 6th light cavalry. J. Purves, 12 Jan. 28 28 Aug. 28 4th light cavalry-Eur., Furlo' 6th Feb. 1840. J Ford, 12 Jan. 28 28 Aug. 28 1st light cavalry. F. Rogers,* 3 Mar. 28 19 Aug. 31 Hissar stud. 1. Bicknell, 10 May 28 25 Oct. 39 Hauper stud. J. Hough, 23 Aug. 28 20 Sept. 32 7th light cavalry. H. C. Hulse, 23 Aug. 28 9 Oct. 29 10th light cavalry. D. Cullimore, 13 Sept. 28 12 Sept. 37 3d brigade horse artillery. J. Philips, unadjusted 28 Oct. 35 3d light cavalry. 24 Dec. 41 Offg. in the central stud. P. B. F. Green, unadjusted 12 Sept. 37 2d brigade horse artillery. R. Willis, unadjusted 6 Nov. 35 8th light cavalry. J. Willis, ... unadjusted 9 Dec. 36 With 5th light cavalry 15 Oct. 41 And 1st troop Ist brigade horse artillery. J. B. Lowth, ... unadjusted 12 Sept. 37 1st troop 3d brigade borse arty.-Eur,, S.C., 25th Feb. 1840. W. P. Barrett, ... unadjusted | 5 Dec. 38 3d troop 2d brigade borse artillery. W. McDermott, unadjusted 4 Nov. 41 Head quarters of the 1st brigade horse artillery --not joined. 28 June 41 Offg. in the Hissar stud. J. R. Hoey, unadjusted 11 Apr. 40|4th light cavalry. 20 July 40 And 4th troop ist brigade | horse artillery. • Has permission to go to Europe on P. A. via Bombay. RIDING MASTERS. Names. Date of Kank. Where posted. R. McAuliffe, | Feb. 1812 2d brigade horse artillery. T. Peake, 10 Sept. 25 10th light cavalry. M. Furrow, 22 Sept. 25 6th light cavalry. U. Jordan, . 25 May 27 7th light cavalry. R. Quantrill, 3 Aug. 27 5th light cavalry. F. W. Porter, 31 8th light cavalry.-Leave, S. C., till 31st Oct. 1842. J. C. Bolton, ... 11 July 33 3rd brig. horse arty.—Doing duty with the 8th light cavy. P. Ashton, 27 Dec. 33 1st brigade horse artillery. J. Perry, 19 Aug. 38 3rd light cavalry. E. Aldridge, 11 Oct. 38 4th light cavalry. D. Nunn, 30 Aug. 39|1st light cavalry. T. Ray, 12 Dec. 409th light cavalry. Officiating. C. Connolly, Sergeant Maj. 1st brigade horse arty.... 13 Aug. 41\3rd brigade borse artillery. ... 9 Dec. 271 • ECCLESIASTICAL ESTABLISHMENT. UNITED CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND IRELAND. SEE OF CALCUTTA. The Right Reverend Daniel Wilson, D.D., Bishop of Cal. cutta and Metropolitan of India, installed on the 5th November 1832, and receives per annum ..........Co.'s Rs. 45,977 0 0 The Venerable Thomas Dealtry. B.C.L., Archdeacon of Calcutta, appointed on the 31st August 1835, and receives ip addition to his Chaplain's pay...... 3,200 0 0 The Reverend John Henry Pratt, A.M., Domestie Chaplain to the Bishop, receives the pay of an Assistant Chaplain... 6,000 0 0 William Henry Abbott, Esquire, Registrar and Secretary to the Lord Bishop, receives, exclusive of fees, &c. 4,800 OO CONSISTORY COURT. Within and for the Archdeaconry of Calcutta, in the Diocese of Calcutta, established October 15 1819. The Venerable Thomas Dealtry, B C.L.... .Commissary. The Honorable Company's Standing Counsel... Assessor. William Henry Abbott, Esq....... Registrar. Mr. John Wood Apparitor and Keeper. COURT OF APPEAL. Commissioners Delegate to hear appeals ........ ........ The Judges of the Supreme Court of Judi. cature, at Calcutta, for the time being, and the Members of Council at Culcutta for the time being Registrar ............................ The Registrar of the Archdeaconry of Calcutta. 272* (PART II. Bengal Army. Season of Appt. ECCLESIASTICAL ESTABLISHMENT. CHAPLAINS. Date of Arri- Names, Academical Degrees, Colleges & Universities. val or com- Pay per Annum. Stations, Appointments. Remarks, fc. &c. &c. mencement of Service. 16 » 23 24 » 99 1814 Rev. H. Fisher...... 22 July 1814 Co.Rs. 18,014 7 0 Senior Presidency Chaplain, Chaplain to the Gaol, and Surrogate. 1816 W. Palmer, A.B. 26 Sept. 13,513 8 0 Junior Presidency Chaplain, and Surrogate. 1822 H. R. Shepherd, A.B., Cambridge 5 Apr. 10,200 0 0 Chaplain at. Dacca, and performs the clerical duties at Chitagong. 1823 H. S. Fisher, A.M., Catharine Hall, Cam- bridge ...... 9 Aug. 10,800 0 0 Chaplain at Fort William, and of the General Hospital, and Surrogate. 1824 ► J. C. Proby, A.M., Trinity College, Cam- bridge 7 Oct. 24 9,600 0 oChaplain at Allahabad. E. White, A.M., Corpus Christi College, Cambridge 20 May 8,400 0 0 On leave at New South Wales. 1825 C. Wimberly, A.B., Cambridge 5 Jan. 11.400 0 0 Chaplain at Barrackpore and to the Govr. Genl. 1826 R. Ewing, A.B., Trinity College, Dublin... 4 July £ 292 0 0 Received perniission to visit Europe on Furlough viâ Bombay on the 13th October 1841. J.J. Tucker, A.B. 25 Oct. 26 Ditto Furlough. 1827 A. Hammond, A.B., Cambridge 31 May 27 Ditto Furlough. Left on the 4th January 1841, on board the Bucephalus. 1828 W. O. Ruspini, A.M., Cambridge..... 8 Apr. 29 Ditto Furlough. Leave on the 3rd October 1840, on board the Larkins. , J. Bell, A.M., St. John's College, Cambridge. 20 May 29 Co.Rs. 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Saugor. T. Dealtry, B.C.L., Catharine Hall, Cam- bridge 22 June 29 9,600 O o Senior Chaplain of the Old Church, Calcutta, and Commissary. 1829 R. Everest, A.M., Cambridge 12 Jan, 30 9,900 0 0 Furlough. Left on the 25th Jan. 1841, on board the Earl of Hardwick, with the option of re- tiring. 25 26 26 97 27 miro VOL. 11.) 273* Ecclesiastical Establishment. PART II. VOL. II. > 32 1829 Rev. J. T. Jones, A.B., Magdalene College, Cam- bridge 28 Oct. 1829 Co.Rs. 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Penang and Surrogate. 1830 H. Pratt, A.M., Corpus Christi College, Cambridge 17 Nov. 30 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Nusseerabad and Surrogate. 1831 H. Hutton, A.B., Queen's College, Cam- bridge 9 Oct. 31 8,400 0 0 Obtained leave of absence for two years, to proceed to the Cape of Good Hope, on 13th Oct. 1841. R. B. Boswell, A.B., Trinity College, Cam- bridge 15 June 32 9,600 0 0 Chaplain of St. James's Church, Calcutta, Draws Rs. 125 6 5 for House rent. 1832 M. J. Jennings, A.B., Christ's College, Cam. bridge 26 Oct. 292 0 Furlough, left on the 4th Feb. 1841, on board the Lord Hunger ford. W. Sturrock, A.B., Trinity College, Cam- bridge 23 May 33 Co.Rs. 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Patna. 1833 A. Hamilton, B.C.L., Trinity College, Cam bridge. 30 Sept. 33 9,690 0 0 Chaplain at Moulmein and Surrogate. 1834 J. H. A. Rudd, A.B., Pembroke College, Cambridge. 4 July 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Futtyghur and Surrogate. J. Vaughan, A.B., Worcester College, Ox- 25 Oct. 34 9,600 0 0 Chaplain at Benares. 1835 F. A. Dawson, A.M., Brasen-nose College. Oxford ....... 25 July 10,810 0 0 Chaplain at Lucknow. 1836 R. P. Brooke, A.B., Cambridge................. 6 June 10,800 0 0 Chaplain at Kurnaul and Surrogate. ASSISTANT CHAPLAINS. 1837 R. Eteson ....... 19 Oct. 37 Co.Rs. 6,000 0 0 Chaplain at Dinapore and Surrogate. 1838 A. B. Spry, A.B., Trinity College, Oxford. . 20 Oct. Ditto Chaplain at Bareilly. J. H. Pratt, A.M., Caius College, Cambridge, 19 Jan. 39 Ditto Domestic Chaplain to the Lord Bishop of Cal- cutta. 1839 C. Garbett. A.B., Brasen-nose College, Ox- ford... 1 Oct. 39 Ditto Chaplain at Cawnpore. F. Fisher, A.B., Catharine Hall, Cambridge 1 Oct. 39 Ditto Chaplain at Dumn-Dum. 34 ford..... 35 37 38 15 ......... 9 274* [PART 15. Bengal. Season of Appt. |Date of Arri- Names, Academical Degrees, Colleges & Universities. val or com- Pay per Annum. mencement of Service. Stations, Appointments, Remarks, gc. &c. &c. 1840 41 Ditto 40 Ditto 99 40 41 Ditto Ditto T. E. Dunkin, A.B., Trinity College, Cam- bridge........ 28 Jan. J. Y. Becher, A.B., Worcester College, Ox- ford. 13 Nov. H. A. Loveday, A.B., St. Peter's College, Cambridge.. 15 Nov. J. Scott, A.B., St. Edmund Hall, Oxford..... 16 Feb. J.J. Carshore, A.B., Trinity College, Dub- lin... 9 Sept. W. Winchester, A.M., Oxford...... 12 Feb. R. Panting, A.M., Oxford......... 8 June R. M. Price, A.B., Queen's College, Cam- bridge.. 18 July J. Spencer, A.M., Jesus College, Cambridge 20 Sept. A. Garstin.. W. J. Whiting, A.M., Magdalene College, Cambridge... Chaplain at Kurnaul and Surrogate. Chaplain at Meerut. Chaplain at Delhi and Surrogate. Chaplain at Ghazeepore. Chaplain at Cawnpore and Surrogate. Chaplain at Berhampore and Surrogate. Acting Chaplain at Singapore and Surrogate. Chaplain at Agra and Surrogate. Chaplain at Kurnaul. 40 41 41 Ditto Ditto Ditto 1841 41 41 Ditto Ditto 99 99 VOL. 11.) 275 Ecclesiastical Establishment. Ministers and Missionarias (not Chaplains) of different Denominations af Christians within the Bengal and Agra Presidencies. Names. Denomination. Station. .. .. Adeodatry, Roman Catholic, Lucknow. Alexander, A. Church of England Kishnaghur. Adania, Greek Church, Calcutta. Arratoon, C. C. Baptist, Calcutta, Aviet, J. Armenian Church, Ditto. Agustinho, F. de St. Roman Catholic, Dacca, Barreiro, s. Roman Catholic, Burrisaul. Baulogne, P. Ditto, St. Xavier's College. Baumann, J. Church of England, Benares. Beddy, H. Baptist, Patna. Bigoadet, - Roman Catholic, favoy. Bionde, J. M. Da .. Roman Catholic, Sirdhanah, Blumbardt, C. H. .. Church of England, Kishnaghur. Boaz, T. London Miss. Society, . Pastor, Union Chapel, Dhurrum - tollah, Calcutta. Boghi, Rt. Rev. J.A. Roman Catholic Bishop Agra. Bowley, W. Church of Eogland, Chunar. Bowyer, J. Church of England, Howrah, Brandao, J. M. Roman Catholic, Calcutta. Brooks, J. .. General Baptist, Midnapore. Brown, N. American Baptist, Jyepore, Assam. Buden, J. London Miss. Society, . Benares. Calisti, J. Roman Catholic, Dinapore. Campbell, J. London Miss. Society. , Bbowanipore. Carapiet, M. Armenian Church, Calcutta. Carlo, Roman Catholic, Pottidam. Chadwick, F. Ditto. Rector of St. Xavier's College. Comstook, G. Am. Baptist, Ramree. Conceiçao, S. de, Roman Catholic, Prior at Bandel, Coreija. I. Da, Ditto, Juanpore. Correia, J. Ditto, Calcutta. Cutter, O. American Baptist, Jyepore, Assam. David, M. Armenian Cburch, Agra. Deerr, W. J. Church Miss. Society,.. Kishnaghur. De Mello, J. D. Chusch of England, Tumlook, DeMellom, Roman Catholic, Serampore. DeMonti, Baptist, Calcutta. D' Rozario, F. Burdwan. Duff, A. Dr. Church of Scotland, Calcutta, Simlah. Ellis, J, D. Baptist Europe. Evans, W. W. Ditto, Calcutta, Bow Bazar. Eart, D. Church of Scotland, Calcutta, Wellington Square. Fincke, J. Baptist, Chittagong. Firenze, L. Da, Roman Catholic. Betiah. Florian, Ditto, Purneah. Francis, F, Ditto, 'gra. Garstin, A. Church of England, Chaplain St. Thomas's Church, Calcutta (on leave). Glen, W. London Miss. Society. . Mirzapore, Upper India. Goiran, A. Roman Catholic, Chittagong. Gradoli, P. Da Ditto, Howrah. . .. .. . . 276* (PART 11. Minister's Missionaries, &c. Names. Denomination, Station. . .. Gregory, L. Armenian Church, Calcutta. Gregory, c. Armenian Church, Chipsurah. Guerin, Roman Catholic, Dacca, Gujelmo, Ditto, Calcutta. Hoeberlin, J. Dr. Cburch of England, Calcutta Bible House, Hancock, R. Am, Baptist, Moulmein. Hill, M. London Society, Berhampore (on leave). Innes, J. Church of England, Calcutta. Johannes, J. Baptist, Chittagong. Jones, W. H. Ditto, Rungpore. Jones, D. Church of England, Pollygudje. Joseph, .. Roman Catholic, Calcutta, Judson, A. Dr. Am. Baptist, Moulmein Krausss, C. T. Church of England, Kisbnaghur. Krishna Mohun Ba. purjee, Church of England, Simlab. Kruckerberg, H.C.L. Church of England, Calcutta, Lacroix, A. F. London Miss. Society, - Bhowanipore (Europe on leave). Laterza, V. de Roman Catholic, Ghazeepore. Lawrence, I.; Baptist, Monghyr. Ledell, S. .. London Miss. Society, Berhampore. Leonard, n. Baptist, Dacca, Leslie, A. London Miss. Society, Monghyr (Europe op leave). Linke, J. G. Ditto, Kishnaghur. Linstead, J. W. Church of England, Pollygunge. Lipp, C. W. Church of England, Kishnaghur. Long, James, Church of England. Mirzapore, Calcutta. Lucas, Roman Catholic. Calcutta. Macdonald, F. Roman Catholic, Meerut. Macdonald, J. Church of Scotland, Calcutta. Mack, J. Baptist, Serampore. Mackay, W.s. Church of Scotland, Calcutta, Mackay, Church of England, Goruckpore. Mackertoom, D. Armenian Church, Dacca, Macqueen, J. Church of England, Kidderpore. Mackintosh, L. Baptist, Allahabad. Maria, 1 De Virgem . Roman Catholic, Calcutta, Maria, A, de St. Ditto, Ditto. Mascarbenas, I. X... Ditto, Ditto. Mason, F. Am. Baptist. Tavoy. Matber, R. C. London Miss. Society. . Mirzapore. Mathew8, S. Armenian Church, Moorshedabad Menge, J. P. Church of England, Gorruckpore. Michael, G. Greek Church. Dacca. Milagre, L. de Roman Catholic, Dacca. Moore, w. Baptist, Mongbyr. Moore, J. J. Church of England, Moore, A. H. D. S... Church of England, Barripore. More, H. Roman Catholic, St. Xavier's College. Morgan, T. Baptist, Howrah. Mundy, G. London Miss. Society, Chinsurab. Musseech. A. Church of England, Agra. Natolia, G. Da Sta. Roman Catholic, Patna. Newton, J. Au. Presbyterian, Loodianah. Norgate, J. N. Church of England, Malacca. .. Agra. .. 278* (PART 11. H. M.'s Ships. LIST OF H. M.'S SHIPS ON THE E. I. STATION. His ExceLLENCY REAR-ADMIRAL, SIR WM. PARKER, K.C.B. Naval Commander-in-Chief. Sir W. Parker was Midshipman of the Orion in Howe's action; com- manding the Stork in company with the Constance in 1801 ; assisted at the capture of El Cantara of 22 guns, and a lugger of 10 guns near Cape Or- tegal; commanded the Amazon, and bore a principal part at the capture of the Marengo and Belle Poule in 1806 ; and was actively employed in co-operation with the patriots on the coast of Galicia, particularly at Fer- rol, where he landed in command of a party of seamen. Names. Guns. Commander. Station. ... ::: Cornwallis, Wellesley, Blenheim, Endymion, Druid, Blonde, Conway, Herald, Calliope, Nimrod, Larne, Hyacinth, Favorite, Cruizer, Childers, Columbine, Pylades, Modeste, Pelican, Clio, Algerine, Swan, Harlequin, Cameleon, Bentinck, 72 Capt. P. Richards, 72 Capt. T. Maitland, 72 Capt.Sir T.Herbert, K.cb. China. 44 Capt. Hon. F. Grey, Persian Gulf. 44 Capt. H. Smith, China. 42 Capt. T. Bourchier, China. 26 Capt. Bethune, C.B. China. 26 Capt. Nias, China. 26 Capt. A. S. Kuper, Moulmein. 20 Comdr. Glasse, China. 18 Capt. Blake, Bombay. 18 Capt. W. Warren, China. 18 16 Comdr. H. W. Gifford, ... China. 16 Comdr. Halsted, Moulmein. 16 Comdr. T. J. Clarke, China. 18 Capt. T. V. Anson, China. 18 Capt. H. Eyre, China. Comdr. C. G. Napier, 18 Moulmein. 10 Lieut. Mason, China. 16 Coindr. Smith, China. 16 Comdr. Hon. J. Hastings, China. Lieut. Hunter, .. China. 10 Lieut. R. Collinson, JChina. 16 10 Surveying Vessels of War. Sulphur, Starling, :: 2 Capt. Belcher, 1 Lieut. Kellett, .. England. .. China. Jupiter, Rattlesnaek, Troop Ships. Master Comg. R. Fulton, China. Ditto Jno. Sprent, :: VOL. 11.] | 279* ] LIST OF THE ROYAL NAVY IN COMMISSION, ON THE INDIAN STATION, &c. &c. Mates in all rates, 651. per annum. Medical Officers are paid according to length of service PURSERS' allowances are according to rate of ship and number of men. Clerks in charge of Gun-brigs receive the same allowance as Pursers. Naval INSTRUCTORS AND SchoolMASTERS are paid according to length of service and receive 51. per annum from each pupil. Names. Rank, Date of Ap. pointment. Pay. Remarks. tham, ALGERINE, 10. (China.) T.H. Mason (Act.) Lieut. Comdg... 26 Mar. J.w. Higgs (Act.) 20 Master 18 Jan, J. Vaughan, Asst. Surg. 6 April J.R. Bluett, .. Clerk in Charge 29 Nov. ALLIGATOR, 26. (China.) Sir J.J.G. Bremer, Kt. C.B. K.C.H. Captain Built at Cha- £ d. 1829, 39 182 10 0 231 tons ; 42 38 71 5 2 officers and 40 men, 10 boys, 8 marines, 38) 46 5 6 MATE. S. B. Dolling. Built, 1821, 500 tons ; 102 of - ficers and men, 37 350 0 2] 33 boys, 25 marines. 37 182 100 MATES. 40 do. B. Drury. 38 191 12 6 B. Woolcombe. 118 12 6 B. C. Cator. 37 do. G. C. Fowler, 12 July .. P.B. Stewart, Lieutenant 12 July A.J. Paul, do. 30 Jan. J. M'Arthur, Capt. Marines .. 119 Feb. P. Priest, Ist Lieut, do... do. H. Marriott, do. do... 4 Aug. Geo. R. Franklin, (Act.) Master 29 Jan. J. Wallace, M.D Surgeon 13 July W. Edwards, Purser 12 July Asst. Surgeon .. F.J. Whipple, Additional do... I Jan. 40'182 10 0 37 37 91 5 01 38 BLENHEIM, 27 (China.) .. 210 .. 11 Apr. Sir H.F. Senhouse, H.C.H. Captain 9 Apr. S.P. Pritchard, Commander 6 Jan. J. Pearse, Senior Lieut. do. CC. Dawkins, Lieutenant 19 Apr. H.M. Tylden, do. 29 Jan. H.C. Hawkins, do. T. Wilson, do. 3 Jan. J. Whitcomb, Capt. Marines.. 117 Apr. G.W. Whiting, 2d Lieut. do. do. R. Farmer, do. do. J.R. Fittock, Master 11 Jan. G. Cooper, Chap. Inst.&Sch. 29 May J. Mein, Surgeon 8 May R. Whichelo, Purser 10 Apr. F. Mansell, M. D. Asst. Surg. 13 Apr. W.Price Cumming, M. D. do. 1 May Built, 1813, 1747 tons ; 362 of. 8. d. ficers and men, 53 boys, 125 39 600 16 marines. 40 300 09 MATES. 4 OR. C. Kevern. 39 182 10 OJ. M. Cooke. 40 do. Wm. Bligh. 39 do. E. E. Turnour. 40 do. H. W. Toole, 39191 12 6 H. A. Norman. 95 16 3 A. McNaghton. do. A. C. C. Denny. 40212 6 8 J. Pode. 29 189 18 IWB.G. Jobnson. 39 W. H. Symons. 39 91 5 0 39 O. .. U. 391 280 (PART II. Royal Navy. Names. Rank. Date of Ap- pointment. Pay. BLONDE, 42. (China.) T. Bouchier, Built 1819, 1103 £ 8. d. tons ; 201 offi- cers and men, 39|399197 39 boys, 50 marines. Captain 6 Nov. 39|200 4 0 33|182 10 0 MATES. 35 do. IT. B. Christo- pher. 39 do. G. Walker. 39 13 17 6 W.R. Rolland. 95 16 3G.C. Kerr. 39(182 10 0 401 159 18 1 39 39 91 5 0 39 39 ... & S. 39 300 39182 39 182 39 152 Sloop, built at d. Chatham, 1827, 385 tons; 71 0 9 officers & men, 10 0 24 boys, 20 120marines. 2 0 8 Apr. 39 G. H. Coulson, ... Lieutenant ... 18 Nov. SirF.W.E. Nichol- son, Bt., do. 7 Nov. A. H. Ingram, do. 129 Nov. W. C. Metcalfe,... do. 7 Nov. R. 0. Bridge, 1st Lt. Marines. 16 Nov. F.J. Polkinghorne, 2d Lieut. do. ... do. H. N. Thomas, Master 9 Nov. H. H. Franklin, Chaplain 29 Jan. R. H. Brown, Surgeon 18 Nov. J. Porter, Purser 7 Nov. R. Oram, Instr&Schoo!m. 20 Dec. S. S. Stanley Assist. Surgeon 18 Nov. CHILDERS, 16. (Bay of Bengal.) L.P. Halsted, Commander 8 Apr. R. Milbanke, Lieutenant 14 May M. Nolloth, Lieutenant 16 May J. Chegwyn, Master J. Moody, Surgeon 13 Apr. J.C. Heathman Purser 8 Apr. J. Simpson, M.D. . Assist. Surg. ... 16 July COLUMBINE,16. (China) T.G.Clarke,(Act.) Commander ... T. Carpenter, Lieutenant ... 31 May E. Tatham, do. 15 Nov. R.G. Wills, (Act.) Master 30 May A. Cross, Surgeon 1 June D. Conway, Purser 31 May J.J.Crawford, MD. Assist. Surg. 1 June CONWAY, 26. (China.) C.R. D. Bethune, Captain 9 Sept. T. M. Rodney, Lieutenant do. G. Beadon, do. do. H. Coryton, do. 23 July J. Urquhart, 1st Lt. Marines. 23 July G. Johnson, Master 9 Sept. F. Sharpe, (Act.). . Surgeon 7 Mar. G. Simmonds, Purser 1 Aug. C. Grier, ... Assist. Surg. ..d 7 Mar. Mate. 5 0 A. R. Henry 39 91 39 ... Sloop, built at Portsmouth, 1826.492 tons; 40 300 0 9 71 officers and 38 182 10 0 men, 24 boys, 38 do. 20 marines. 38 152 2 0 MATES. 38 C. H. May. 38 91 5 0 H. Hannant. 38 H.B. Hardman ...... and ... Built at Cha- tham, 1832, 652 tons; 102 36 350 0 2 officers 200 4 0 men, 33 boys, 182 10 0 25 marines. 39 do. MATES. 39 118 12 6C. E, Hodgkinson 36 182 10 0C. R. Read. 40 39 91 5 401 VOL. 11.] 281 On the Indian Station. Numes. Rank. Dule of Apol pointment. Pay. CRUIZER, 16. ... ... . Brig, built at Chatham, 1828, 38+ tous; 71 officers and d. men, 24 boys, 9| 20 marines. 0 0 Eust Indies.. £ H. W. Giffard, Commander '10 May 39 300 J. M. Hayes, Lieutenant 13 Feb. 38 182 J. Saunders, Master do. J.GG. Ballantine, (Act.) Surgeon 2 April 40 A. Nash,(Act.) Purser 10 Mar, 41 91 J. Allan, Asst. Surgeon... 14 Feb. 38 ... 0 10 2 1152 50 ... DRUID, 44. ... East Indies. IJ. Smith, C. B.... Captain ... 30 June Built 1825; 1169 tons; 191 ofli. cers and men, 39 boys, 50 40399 19 marines. MATES, 41200 4 OJ. Hancock. 39 182 10 CF. Brooke. 40 do. C. Nolloth. 39 118 12 6G, E. K. Gore. 39 do, S. S. L. Crofton. 39 182 10 0 E. Jones. A. Bland. 39 39 91 50 C. H. Douglas, Lieutenant 11 Mar, J C. Bynon, des, 10 Apr. J. C. Pitinan, do. 22 Dec. W. R. Maxwell,... 'Ist Lt. Marines 16 Apr. J. Pickard, 2nd do. 29 July J. Coaker, Master 10 Apr. Chaplain J. Coulter, M. D., Surgeon 17 May W. H. Breas, Purser 10 Apr. W. Searle, B. A... Nav. Instr. and Schoolmaster . 19 June R. Pottinger Asst. Surgeon... 3 May ... 39 39 ... ... 30 Oct. .. ENDYMIOX, 41. Eust Indies. Hon. F. W. Grey, Captain J. B. Marsh, Lieutenant 4 Nov, H. l'. Jaye, do. do. F. W. Horton, do. 31 Oct. V. Baker, do. . 14 Jan. 1st Lt. Marines P.C.P. Penrose,... 21 Lieut. do. 3 July J. Jackson. (6) Master 31 Oct. G. Beilumy, Chaplain 2 Dec. 1277 tons ; 191 officers aud 40399 197 men, 39 boys, 401200 4 50 marines. 1182 10 0 401 do. MATES. 41 do. G. H. Gunnell. Wm. Voorsom. 411 93 16 3 4. F. Webster. 40182 10 0 H. Chads, 40 159 28 1 W. W. F. Par- kinson. 401 40 91 5 01 C. Allison, M. D. Surgeon 9 Nov, T. Brown, Purser 31 Oct. Sav. Iostr, and Schoolmaster T. Hart, Assist. Surgeon 7 Nov. 40 FAVORITE, 18. Eust Indies. T. R, Sulivan, Commander R. J. W. Dunlop. Lieutenant E. P. 13. V. Donop do. T. B. Codoor, Master A. Kilroy . Surgeon PART II. VOL. 11. 2.5 July | July 5 Sept. 17 Aug. 115 Apr. Built 1823, 500 tons ; 71 offi. 40'350 02 cers and men, 38 182 10 0 24 buys, 20 39 113 12 6 marines. 38182 10 0 381 Nu 282" (PART 11. Royal Navy Names. Rank. Date of Ap- pointment. Pay. FAVORITE, Cnid W. B. V. Farror, (Act.) Purser 1 Aug. G. F. Munro Asst. Surgeon... 30 Aug. HERALD, 26. East Indies. J. Nias, C. B. Captain 24 May 39 37 91 5 0 38 Sloop, built 1829, 435 tons ; 71 officers and men. 24 boys, 20 marines. ... G. Gore, C. C. Hewitt, P. C. D. Bean T. Frazer J. Giles R. A. Bankier Lieutenant do. 28 Oct, Ist Lieut. Mar. 5 June Master 25 May Surgeon 27 Apr. Parser 25 May ... Assist. Surgeon 29 May 40 38 38 40 38 38 I.. HYACINTH, 18. East Indies. Commander 25 May R. A. Stewart, Lieutenant 18 July C. R. Airey, 17 Aug. J. R. Reid, Surgeon 5 Sept. J.R. Bluett,( Actg.) Purser 22 June W. Robertson, Asst. Surgeon 19 July ... Master 40 300 0 9 37 182 10 0 38 do. MATE. 37 152 2 0T. J. Drake. 40 91 5 G 37 JUPITER. Eust Indies. R. Fulton, Jas. Bowler, Wm. Crofton, Mr. Comundg. 24 Sept. 2d Master 23 Mar. Assist. Surgeon 28 April 38 40 212 40 71 Troop Ship, built 1823, 1873 tons. 6 8 MATE. 5 2 E. W. Vansit- tart. .. 10 Apr. LARNE, 18. East Indies.. P. J. Blake,(Capt.) Commander 17 Jan. J. Gus. Harrison Lieutenant J. Bascombe,(Act.) Master 10 Mar. J. West, . Surgeon 28 Mar. W. H. Norman, (Actg.) Purser 20 Jau, Assist. Surgeon Sloop,built 1829, 463 tons, 8+ 40300 09 officers & mer, 37 182 10 0 24 boys, 20 37 152 20 marines. 37 MATES. R. Edwards. 41 91 5 F. J. Diggens. T. Carmichael. 22 Nov. 37 MODESTE, 18. East Indies. H. Eyres, (Capt.) Commander Lieutenant J. W. King,(Act.) Master B. M Avoy, Surgeon W. Pinhorn, Purser Assist. Surg. 22 Oct. 24 Nov. 22 Nov. 40 37 37 ... 28 June NIMROD, 20. East Indies. F. H.H. Glasse,... Commander Lieutenant J. V. Willyams,... W. E. Hyne(Act.) Master R. W. 'Campbell, Surgeon Sloop, built at Deptford, 1828, 41300 0 9 502 tons ; 106 182 10 0 men and offi- 40 do. cers, 20inarines. 40 152 2 0 40 11 May 18 Jan. 20 Feb. It 283 VOL. 11.) On the Indian Station, Names. Rank, Date of Ap- pointment. Pay. 19 5 0 39 39 MATE. W. Kendall. F. Siddall, Purser 2 Dec. J. Davidson, ... Asst. Surgeon... 3 Dec. PELICAN, 16. East Indies. C. G. E. Napier,... Commander ... 30 Oct. C. Starmer Lieutenant ... 15 May R. C. Whyte 31 Oct. R. Stokes Master 31 Oct. J. K. Ballard ... Surgeon 14 Nov. J. Nott Purser 31 Oct. J. A. Corbett Assist. Surgeon 7 Nov. do. 40 41 40 40 40 40 40 PYLADES, 18. Sloop, built 1819, 433 tons; 84 officers and men, 24 boys, 20 marines. MATE. 39 300 0 9 39 182 10 0 111 2 0 East Indies. T. V. Anson, Commander ... 12 Dec. Lieutenant J. C. M. Touzeau, ... 14 Jan, Geo. Nosworthy (Act.) Master ... 8 June C. Priaulx, Surgeon ... 20 Feb. W. P. Carrigan,... Purser ...12 Dec. J. D. Tweeddale, Assist. Surgeon 14 Dec. RATTLE- SNAKE, 28. East Indies. W. Brodie Master Com.... 31 July E. F. Cavell 2nd Master | Aug E. H. Cree Assist. Surgeon 18 Sept. 41 152 40 39 91 39 39 39 391 SULPHUR, 8. Surveying Vessel. East Indies. E. Belcher (Capt.) Commander ... 9 Nov. W. C. Wood Lieutenant 7 July T. Goss, (Act.)... Master 16 June R.B. Hinds, (Act.) urgeon J. Julian, (Act.)... Parser 16 June Assist. Surgeon 36 38 38 38 19 June 37 13 Feb. 41 WELLESLEY, 72 East Indies. T. Maitland, C. B. Captain Commander Rt. Hon. Lord W. Lieuteuant Compton, Wm. H. Maitland (Actg.) P. Somerville, Addi. Lieut. J. Daly, do, J. Hancock, G. B. Jeffreys, do. R. Edward, do. A. Vyner, do. 40 41 41 do. 25 May 1 Mar. 28 May ditto. ditto, ditto. ditto. 284 (PART 11. Bengal Names. Rank. Date of Apel pointment. Pay. 40 37 95 16 3 18 1 . G. C. Fowler, do. dicto. Capt. Mar. F. J. White, 1sų Lieut. 6 Feh, E. P. H. Ussher .. do, 18 June Master J. Jones, Chaplain 28 Sept. W. Lindsay.M.D... Surgeon 13 Jnly E. S Stewart, Purser 19 June M.T.S. Raimbach. Nav. Instr, and M. A. Schoolmaster 13 July C. Smith, Asst. Surgeon... 19 Nov. H. H. Mook, do. 6 June 37 159 37 37 91 5 0 ... 37 38 39 MARINE LIST, ON THE BENGAL ESTABLISHMENT. Marine Board. Rs. per mensem W. Blunt, Esq. Ist Member Nil. Charles B. Greenlaw, Esq. Secretasy 1,254 00 Marine Pay Master and Naval Store Keeper's Department. Officiating Pay Mr. and Naval Store Keeper P. H, Reid, Head Assistant J. Marriott, 104-8, 3. Rebello, 704-8, D.R. James, 50, and J. Re: beiro, 40, Assistants 209 00 299 00 B. Harrey, Head Assistant in the Store Keeper's Department 313 8 0 R. Oakshot, Boatswain 150 00 W. T. Morgan, ... Acting ditto Mate 104 8 0 Marine Survey Department. Capt. R. Lloyd. I. N. Officiating Marine Surperor General 1,149 80 Lieut. Montrion, I. N. .. Assistant to ditto Lieut. Young, I. N. . ditto ditto 150 00 Lieut. Iveston, I. N. ...ditto ditto Mr. J. Rennie, I, N. ...ditto di:to Mr. Fell, I. N. ...ditto ditto 120 00 H. S. Mercer, Esq. .. Surgeon 627 0 0 J. G. Vos, Esq. Assistant ditto 500 0 0 Master Allendant's Department. Capt. A. B. Clapperton, ...1st Assistant acting M.A. 750 00 Capt. J.J. R. Bowman...(Agent for transports, China Expedion.) 2d dirto 348 5 4 Capt. A. Gillett, ...Officiating dirto 3-48 5 4 Capt. J. Robinson, 3d ditto 348 5 4 J. M. Seppings... Surveyor of Shipping H.J. Joakim, ... Head Clerk 400 0 0 300 0 0 ... VOL. 11.] 285* Marine List. ... ! Harbour Master's Department Re. per mensem. Mr. J. Black. Branch Pilot.... Officiating Harbour Master 500 0 0 F. A. Cornabe, 156-12, Wm. H. Porter, 156-12, Wm. Little, 1.16.12, B. Ducas, 136-12, E. Legget, 156-12, J. King, 156 12, .. Assistants 927 0 0 Jolin DeCruz, ...Clerk to the Harbour Master 52 + 0 Semaphore Line. Mr. M. Ronsscau,.. ... First Assistant 130 10 0 Mr. H. Lucas, Assistant to ditto 40 0 0 Mr. J. Hammerdinger,... ... Superintendent at Hooghly l'oint 80 0 0 Mr. A. B. Sharpe, Assistant in ditto 25 0 Baboo Rajkissen Soor, Superintendent Moyapore Station 50 0 0 Mr. R. 11. Childs,... Superintendent at Diamond Harbour and Har. bour Master 75 0 0 Mr. T. Munford,... Assistant in charge Phoolbaree Station, No. Il 40 0 0 Mr. L. L. Rousseau,... Superintendent of Semaphore Post Office, Row Boats, Buoys, &c. at Kedgeree Mr. J. C. Hutchinson, Assistant to ditto Mr. J. Hawks, Assistant and Keeper of the Light House at Cowcolly 35 00 Mr. T. Jenkins,... Superintendent of Semaphore and Light sta- tion at Middleton Point. Sauzor 100 0 0 Mr. J. Ryan,... ... Assistant to dilto 60 0 0 ... 0 J. H. Juhnston, .. J.. W. Julah, L. Helmich, Government STEAM DepartmeXT. Murinc Board Office. Licut. R. N., Controller 1,245 0 0 Controller's Office. Head assistant 300 0 0 assistant 150 0 0 Freight Office-Strand. Registrar 250 0 assistant 100 0 0 *J. Poirel. M. G. Castello, 0 0 G. C. Wproelin, J. & C. Manuel, ... J. P. Rnseirell. II. tlumphreys, FOUNDERY AND DOCKYARD. Kichlerpore. Charge of Stores, and Aceruntant 450 Assistants 150 0 0 Il'orkshop. Assistant accountant and clerk of cheques 200 0 0 Mustering Ufficer 100 0 0 Dockyard. Superintendent 200 0 Supernumerary mate 80 0 0 Dirto ditto 80 Shipwright 60 Coal Depot. ... Clerk in charge 150 0 0 0 C. J. Coffer, F. AL O Donnaghue, W. F. Hardy, Jas. Currie, E. D. Baptist, ... 286 [PART II. Bengal EnginEERS ATTACHED TO THE FOUNDERY. M. Jones, T. Place, T. Chapple, Pay per mens. Chief superintending Engineer 600 0 Superintending Engineer and Draftsman 400 0 Pattern-maker, &c. 250 0 0 0 0 Assistant to Ditto, G. H. Harding, J. Silverkie, J. Andrews, Draftsman Putting up new Tugs Ditto ditto 150 0 125 0 125 0 ... Assistant Mechanics and Apprentices. 0 0 0 ... ... C. Lodric, H. Y. Ledlie, W. J. Ross, E. Esteve, G. Miller, L. Michael, 20 12 10 25 0 0 60 0 W. M. Govern, 40 90C, Daniel, 40 0 0 G. Adams, 20 0 0 Jas. Paschal,... Artificer 20 0 0 H. Hibson,... Superin- 20 0 o tendent of coolies 20 0 0 MARINE STEAM DEPARTMENT. SEA AND TUG STEAMERS. Queen-China. 500 0 0 0 0 0 O. W. Warden, Commander Ditto,... ... Personal allowance, 200 during the vessel's employ- ment in China, G. J. Nihlett, Chief Officer Thos. Wollage, 2nd Officer Roht. Goodwin, 3rd Officer A. Brooks, Midshipman G. Ricketts, Ditto Ditto A. Robertson, Surgeon Clerk D. Steel, 2nd class Engineer F. Barnett, Ditto ditto W'. Harvey, Ditto ditto T. Higgs, 3rd Ditto ditto C. Borven, Apprentice H. Gearing, Ditto Enterprize-Calcutta. J. Russell, Commander Jas. Dicey, Chief Officer C. Cearns, 2nd Officer G. W. Hornby, 1st Class Engineer T. Drew, 2nd ditto R. Ewing, 3rd Class Engineer S, Stone, Apprentice W. Waddington, Ditto 700 0 300 0 150 0 100 0 32 0 32 0 32 0 300 0 120 0 125 0 125 0 125 0 83 5 40 0 40 0 .. 0 . 500 0 250 0 150 0 145 13 125 0 83 5 50 0 30 0 : ... ... ... ... ... VOL. II.) 287* Marine List. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Madagascar. Proceeded to China in August 1841, since reported to have been lost on that coast. Pay per mensem. J. M. Dicey, Commander 500 0 0 N. W. Oliver, Chief Officer 250 0 0 J. Bowman, 2nd ditto 150 0 Sharpe, 3rd ditto 100 0 0 Jas. Maxton, Surgeon 300 0 0 Mis Pillair, Clerk 80 0 0 J. Edmond, Ist Class Engineer 166 10 0 D. Wilson, 2nd dicto 125 0 0 C. Poirel, 3rd ditto 83 5 4 R. McNelance, Apprentice 40 0 0 W. H. Little, Ditto 30 0 0 Gunges-Moulmein. J. Woodley, Commander 500 0 0 W. Dicey, Chief Officer 250 0 0 G. Barrow, 2nd ditto 150 0 0 J. T. Stout, 3rd ditto 100 0 0 T. W. Bartlett, 1st Class Engineer 166 10 8 J. Thompson, Ditto ditto 125 0 0 J. A. Keyrner, Apprentice 40 00 St. J. Miller, Ditto 30 0 0 Diana-Straights. S. Congalton, Commander 350 0 0 T. W. Mitchael, Chief Officer 250 0 0 T. G. Read, 1st Class Engineer 208 5 4 R. Wisehand, Apprentice 40 0 3 W, A. Wiseband, Ditto 12 0 0 Phlegelhon-China. J. MacCleverly, Lieut. R. N., Commander 500 0 0 H. Ryves, Chief Officer 250 0 0 W. Goodridge, 2nd ditto 150 0 0 H. Coverly, 3rd ditto 100 0 0 W. Haydon, Surgeon 300 0 0 G. R. Playfair, Surgeon 300 0 0 G. Ommanney, Clerk 120 0 0 C. W. Smith, 1st Class Eugineer 208 5 4 T. Green, 2nd ditro 125 0 0 J. C. Davidson, 3rd ditto 83 5 4 W. Fleming ditto 83 5 J. Caspersz, Apprentice 50 0 0 G. Welner, ditto 30 0 0 Hooghly-China. R. S. Ross, Commander 500 0 0 A. Cops, Chief Officer 250 0 0 G. Crawly, 2nd ditto 150 0 0 P. Cusack, 3rd ditto 100 0 0 J Worthington, Clerk 80 0 0 G. Stone, 1st Class Engineer 250 0 0 W. Douglass, 3rd ditto 83 5 4 J. Wilson, Apprentice 50 0 0 J. Boyce, ditto 50 0 0 T. W. Ereth, ditto 30 0 0 ... .. .. .. . .. .. 288 (PART IL Bengal Proserpine-Moulmein. Pay per mens. J. J. Hough, R. N.. Commander 500 0 0 W. Purvis, lieut. R. N., Chief (fficer 250 0 0 Aribur Johns, 2nd ditto 150 0 0 J. Wallinger, 3rd ditto 101 00 Ja: M'Knpp, Surgeon 300 0 0 G. Potenger, ('lerk 120 00 (i. Nicks, Superintending Engineer 443 0 0 Jas. Barher, 2nd Clasz ditto 125 0 0 John Hubbard, 3rd dirto 83 Jins Hare. ditto 83 C. J. Burrows, Apprentice 40 00 R. Fleming. ditto 30 0 0 Tenasser im-Calcullu. A. P. Will, Commander 500 00 C. W. Parker, Chief Officer 250 0 0 13. W'. Dryden. 2nd ditto 150 00 S. 'Tonge, 3rd ditto 100 00 J. II. Cook, 32 0 0 W'. Bason, Ditto 32 0 0 W. V:uzlier, Dirto 32 0 0 G. Britton, Fitting Engines 203 5 4 G, Horton. (sent from Bombay.) Assistant T. Payne, Apprentice 27 00 C. Starling, Ditto 10 00 Irrawaddy, IRON STEAMER.–Calculla, Filting up for Service. J. R. Scott, Commander 500 0 0 Nenesis-China. J. Hall, R. N. Commander Midsh'pman ... ... Plulo on the Voyage out from England. Ixlaso STEAMERS. Experiment. J. Somerville, Commander 300 00 E. Hart, Apprentice (Engineer) 30 0 0 Jumna. Megva. J. Anderson, Commander... 300 00; P. Sparling.coinmander 300 00 Scoil, mite 8000 J M. Himilior, male 80 00 Ahing, in charge of engs.... 100 0 J. Betterson. in charge engs. 120 00 J. J Lumsdell, assistant 60 0 0 J. Davis, apprentice 30 0 0 E. Bason, apprentice 30 0 0 E. Vanthart, dirto 30 00 Lord Willium Bentinck. Thamcs. H. Heel, commander 300 OO Commander H. Massie, acting mate 80 0 J. Blegney, acting ditto 100 00 T. Augier,in charge engins 120 0 0 | W. H. Marshall, ditto mate 80 0 0 T. Churcher, assistant 60 0 0 T. Wilson, in charge engines 150 0 0 C. Helmich, assistant 40 00 W. Cornelius, apprentice ... 40 0 0 309 00 VOL. 11.] 289* Marine List. ... ... Hoorungotta. Berhampooter. G. W. Phillips, commander. 300 0 0 W. G. Templeton, comdr. 300 0 0 A. Ballands, mate 80 0 0 Porter, mate 80 0 0 W. Grant, in charge engines 125 0 0 T. C. Graham, in charge of David Main, assistant 80 0 0 engines. 100 00 J. O. Barber, assistant 70 00 J. Vangrecken, assistant 45 00 J. D. Frantz, apprentice 40 0 0 | R. Castello, apprentice 30 00 Accommodation Boats. Baugheeruttee. Jellinghee. J. R. Roberts, commander... 250 0 0 | U. G. Cooper, comdr, 250 00 P. M. Caroley, mate 80 0 0 A. Mackay, mate 80 0 0 Mr. Martyr, clerk 30 OO Matabangah. Soorma. K. G. Kingdom, comdr. 250 0 0 W. E, Williams, comdr. 250 0 0 T. Stenton, mate 100 0 0 Llewellyn, mate, 80 0 0 Collett, clerk 30 0 0 A. Authray, clerk 30 0 0 Katee Gunga. Luckia. W. White, commander 250 0 0 H. H. Sevenoakes, comdr.... 250 0 0 J. R. Lockington, mate 80 0 0 Hulks. Old Irrawaddy, J, 80 0 0 Diana,..... 1 HONORABLE COMPANY'S MARINE. Names. Date of Entry. To what Vessels Attached. .. Branch Pilots. (England) James Black, senior 1 June 1801 Senior Branch Pilot (on leave to Edward Dary Fabian, 1 June 1806 Joba Francis Twisden, 1 Aug. 1809 Thomas McDormond, 23 Sept. 1807 Megna Jobn Cearns, 8 April 1808 Saugor Walter Warden, 18 Nov. 1811 Commanding H. C. Steamer Queen John Cooper Owen, 116 Nov. 1812 Coleroon Joseph Crook, 15 April ditto Cavery James Black, junior 1 June 1814 John Ravenscroft, 1 Sept. ditio Sea Horse Benjamin Heritage, 1 Oct, 1814 Khrishna Jobo Dixon, 4 Mar. 1815 Masters. Joseph Sharling .. 27 Sept. 1815 Acting Branch Pilot James Smart, 12 Dec. 1816 Edward Hinder, 7 Feb. ditto John D. Cooper, 28 Aug. 1816 George Strevens, ditto John Dyer, 24 Sept. ditto Robert Hand, 4 Dec. ditto William Ridge, 1 Jan. 1817 Joseph Wells, 11 June ditto Stephen Read, 15 Dec. ditto Thomas Ross, 4 Sept. 1819 John Hammond, ditto On leave to Eogland PART II. VOL, II, N N* 290* (PART 11. Bengal Army. Names. Date of Entry To what Vessels Attached. ... .. OC .. .. Arthur Philip Wall, 22 Aug. 1820 Comg. H. C. Steamer Tenasserim Edmund Bartlett, 15 Nov, ditto Frederick Broadbead, 22 May 1821 John Childs, ditto George Bond, 2 Aug. 1820 On leave to N. S. Wales Sbearman Ransom, 3 Nov. 1821 Richard Wm. Walters, 13 June 1822 John Williams Roberts, .. 23 June ditto Thomas Pitkin, ditto On leave to England George Moxon 17 Aug. 1822 Christopher Blake, 12 Jan, 1823 George Walters, do April ditco On leave to England Jobn Bartlett, 9 May ditto Arthur Bedford, 18 Oct. 1823, Comg. Mermaid Buoy Vessel Henry Gill, .. 22 Jan, 1824 Edward Power, 8 June ditto Thomas Bartlett, 31 Oct. ditto Alfred Harris, 4 May 1825 First Mates. Acting Master James Hayden, 22 Nov. 1825 Ditto ditto W. R. T. Stout, 5 May 1826 Ditto ditto William Jackson, 19 Oct. ditto Ditto ditto James Keymer, 9 June 1827 Ditto ditto John Henry Garrett, 31 May 1828 Ditto ditto John Henry Chalke, 27 May 1828 In charge H. C. D. V. Pilot John Higgins, 27 May 1826 Pilot of the Seetakoond Steamer Thomas Scallan, 9 Sept. 1830 Thos. Lay Hart, 23 Oct. 1832 J. Montg. Hamilton, 26 Sept. ditto Edward Bowen, 2 May 1829 Robt. Fredk. Barlow, 25 Feb. ditto W. C. F. Rawlins, 24 July 1835 C, A. Beaumont, 31 Dec. ditto Charles Gyles Birch, 24 July ditto Francis Edwd. Bond, ditto Thomas Longden, 27 ditto Chief Officer of the Mermaid B. V. J. H. Benj. Newcomb, 5 Mar. ditto Geo. Fredk. Clark, 24 July ditto William Laing, ditto W. Bails, 4 ditto 1834 J. P. T. Porter, 19 Oct, 1835 C. A. Anderson, 4 Nov. ditto W. W. Powell, 16 Dec. ditto W. N. Cearns, 31 Dec. ditto James Cleghorn, 9 Feb. 1836 Thomas Nelson, 15 May ditto J. Richardson, 3 June ditto E. Mayer, 27 May ditto C. T. Harrison, 1 July ditto Senior Second Mates, T. Smart, 1 July 1836 Acting 1st Mate J. W. Edman, 18 Oct. ditto Ditto B. J. Filby, 8 ditto Ditto Chas. Harcourt Peirie, 13 June 1837 Ditto M. Haggard, 27 May 1836 Khrishna, Standing Mate James Rickie Howell, 12 June 1837 Megna, Standing Mate W. H, Smith, .. 16 Mar. 1839 Saugor, Standing Mate . .. O. O. VOL. 11.) 291* Marine List. Names. Date of Entry. To what Vessels Attached. James Hooper, 13 June 1837 Sea Horse, Standing Mate George Spence, .. 30 April 1839 Cavery, Standing Mate G, B. Smart, .. 20 Dec. 1838 Coleroon, Standing Mate A. P. Sandeman, .. 27 April 1839 Megna C. W. Warden, .. 12 Aug. 1837 Sea Horse Junior Second Mates E. W. Kearney, 18 Sept. 1838 Kbrishna ditto F. W. Ceely, .. 29 May ditto Saugor Thomas Warden, 17 May 1839 Cavery W. W. Coates, Megoa John Ireland, 1 April 1840 Saugor J. Hotson, 10 Oct. 1839 Sea Horse G. B. Parrott, 13 Nov, ditto Cavery Alfred Jones, .. 29 May ditto Cavery Henry Perrin, 18 June ditto Coleroon W. W. Laws, 24 Sept. ditto Sea Horse Geo. Arthur Pennington .. 1 April 1840 Khrishna Jas. Jordon Mussared. ditto Cavery Volunteers. E, N. Strover, C. Bowen, 13 Nov. 1839 Khrishna John Scott, 22 Dec. ditto Coleroon William Henry Harrison, .. 1 April 1840 Sea Horse F. A. Cumberland, ditto On leave to England J. H. Newcombe, 28 Nov. ditto Megna G. T. Atkinson, ditto Sea Horse W, Ford, 15 Feb. 1841 Sea Horse D. Richardson, 16 Nov. 1840 Saugor Thos. Gasper, Wright 2 June 1841Megoa C. J. McDormond. 9 July ditto Coleroon J. S. Retherdon, 8 ditto Megna Charles Blunt, 29 Aug. ditto Saugor W. H. Fielder, 16 ditto Saugor Jobn North, 31 July ditto Coleroon G. B. Mackay, 25 May ditto Cavery William Henry, 25 Sept. ditto Cavery Wm. Davis, 27 Oct. ditto Kbrishna P. S. Ransom, 8 Nov. ditto Saugor R. W. Laws, 22 Oct. ditto Coleroon George Noakes, 19 Nov. ditto J. G. Porter, 10 dit to Kbrishna Oo .. THE EAST INDIA COMPANY'S COVENANTED CIVIL SERVANTS ON THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. CORRECTED TO THE 30TH SEPT. 1841. PART 11. VOL. 11. BB 202 (PART 11. CIVIL LIST CIVIL SERVANTS ON THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. Names. Season of Appointmt. Number. Commence- ment of Ser- vice. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on service up to 30th Sep. Salary per Employments. Mensem. Y. M. D. 4 6 26 10,666 Governor and President in Council, 6th Mar. 1837. The Rt. Hon John, LORD ELPHINSTONE, G. C. H. Mar. 6, 1837 Mar. 6, 1837 Lieut. General Sir Hugh Cough, K.C.B. Aug. 12, 41 1 CM. Lushington, Esq. wf 1800 Mar. 10, 02 Sept. 1, 02 0 39 1 201 1 0 Commander-in-Chief. and Second in Council. 5,333 Third in Council, 230 January 1838, and President of the Revenue. Marine, and College Boards, 28th December 1840. 5,333 Fourth in Council, 4th Nov. 1840, and Chief Judge of the Court of Sudder and Foujdaree Adawlut, 28th December 1840. J. Bird, Esq. w f 1801 Feb. 2, 04 July 18, 04 37 2 14 A. Brooke, NS H. Dickinson, w f 5 M. D. Cockburn, w f A. D. Campbell, w f SENIOR MERCHANTS. 1793 Apr. 5, 1794 Sept. 14, 1794 38 6 12 691 Supt. of the Govt. Lotteries, 19th April 1836. 1805 Jan. 11, 09 July 5, 09 30 1 13 4,083 20 Puisne Judge of the Court of Sudder and Foujdaree Adawlut, 12th February 1841. 1806 Feb. 26, 08Aug. 22, 08 33 1 10 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Malabar, 1st November 1836. Dec. 1, 07 Sept. 30, 08 30 0 4,083 Member of the College Board, 31st January 1834, 1st Puisne Judge of the Sudder and Foujdaree Adawlut, 12th February 18+1. 3,500 ist Judge of the Provincial Court in the Western Mar. 13, 11 Do. 12, 1 30 0 19 Division, 21st August 1838. 1806 ist Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal, and Mar. 1, 11 Do. 10, 1 27 3,500 0 22 Circuit for the Southern Division, 8th April 1840. 4,000 ist Meinber of the Board of Revenue, 20th Jan, 1838. 1809 Jan. 7, 13 July 7, J. Vaughan, w f GJ. Waters, J. Dent, w f 13 28 2 25 VOL. 11.) 203 THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. 10 H. Montgomerie , w f lis Jan. 9.10131 25 3 10 1810 Do. 13, A. Chamier, w f 13 Do. 7, 13 28 2 25 Do. 25, 13 Sept. 6, 13 28 0 25 Feb. 16, 14 Do. 16, 14 20 ... 0 0 Jan. 25, 13 Aug. 9, 13 24 7 15 G. D. Drury, w f J. D. Gleig, w f G. M. Ogilvie, w f 15 G. J. Casamajor, w f W. R. Taylor w f N. W. Kindersley, w f Do. 3, 11 Apr. 1, 12 26 3 17 1813 Apr. 9, 13 Sept. 14, 13 19 0 13 Mar. 16, 14 Do. 16, 14 23 11 9 W. B. Anderson, w f 1814 Jan, 20, 3,500 1st Judge of the Provincial Court, Northern Division, 16th April 1840. 4,166 Chief Secretary to Government, 12th August 1831 — appointed Provisional Member of Council-(absent on leuve.) 3,408 20 Member of the Board of Revenue, 12th February 1841. 3,000 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Salem, 16th January 1838. 3,000 Principal Collector and Magistrate of the Northern Division of Arcot, 20th January 1837. 4,083 3d Puisne Judge of the Court of Sudder and Fouj- daree Adawlut, 12th February 1841. 3,500 1st Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal and Circuit for the Centre Division, 12th Feb. 1841. 3,386 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Tanjore, 22d January 1828. 3,208 2d Judge of the Provincial Court, Western Division, 21st Aug. 1838. Proceeded to England, 16th February 1839. Proceeded to England, 6th January 1841. 3,208 2d Judge of the Provincial Court, Centre Division, 22d February 1840. 3,208 20 Judge Provincial Court, Southern Division, 12th February 1841. 291 Without Employ, 5th January 1841. 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Bellary, 28th May 1838. 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Chittoor, 11th February 1840. 3,208 2d Judge Provincial Court, Northern Division, 16th April 1840—Cape, S. C.) 2,925 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Madura, 14th March 1834. 15 July 11, 15 23 6 22 *** J. Orr, w f 20 C. R. Cotton, wo f M. Lewia, w f Feb. 1, 15 Do. 20, 15 Jan. 31, 15 Do. 24, 151 Feb. 1, 1815 Do. 21, 1815 19 22 20 8 8 0 21 3 29 W. Harington, w f ... Jan. 28, 15 do. 11, 15 23 3 25 15 W, D Davis, w f J. Paternoster, w f :: Feb. 1, Ditto 15 Aug. 6, July 22, 26 22 I 26 9 12 15 25 A. E. Angelo, N.s. w f. ... Mar. 7, 15 do. 24, 15 21 7 5 T. E. J. Boileau ... Feb. 1, 15 do 22, 15 26 2 10 J. Blackburne, w ſ ... ... Ditto Aug. 6, 15 22 2 26 204 (PART 15. CIVIL LIST Commence- ment of Ser- Seasons of Appointmt. Number. Names. BRON Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on service up 1030th Sep. WWF--- Employment. Sulary per Mensem. vice. Y. M. D. 23 1 11 19 1 25 17 4 19 22 4 2 F. Lascelles, N.s.w f J. F. Thomas, N.s. 30 R. Nelson T. V. Stonehouse E Bannerman, wf W. Ashton, N.s. wf R. Clerk, wf y viga 1814 Feb. 1, 1815 July 24, 1815 Feb. 16, 16 July 17, 16 Jan. 26, 16 Ditto Dec. 30, 15 June 30, 16 Feb. 16, 16 July 27, 16 Ditto do. 16, Ditto do. 27, 16 ... 16 25 5 20 1 2 227 5 10 Mar. 29, 17 Aug. 5, 17 21 2 6 35 C. P. Brown, wf ΕλOΣ , P. Grant, w f D. Eliott, w f A. Robertson, w f 291 Without Employ, 21st September 1841. Proceeded to England, 20th February 1840. Proceeded to England, 31st December 1836. 2,918 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Nellore, 17th March 1835. 291 Without Employ, 28th December 1839. LISA 3,000 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Cuddapah, 28th May 1841. To 3,333 Secretary to Government in the Civil Department, 28th July 1835, Member of the Mint Committee, 7th February 1840, and Acting Chief Secretary to Govt., 27th August 1841. VIPILVEG OBL6" 5 1,100 Persian Translator to Govt. 23d January 1838. Mem- ber of the College Board, 25th September 1838, and Acting Post Master General, 31st Angust 1841. 2,675 Collector and Magistrate of Masulipatam, 230 January 1841. Member of the Indian Law Commission, 14th Jan. 1839. 3,225 Tamil Translator to Govt., 14th April 1816, Member of the College Board, 24th Dec. 1830, Collector of Madras, 11th Jan. 1833, and Acting 3d Member of the Board of Revenue, 17th Sept. 1841. 2,916 3d Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal and Cir- cuit for the Southern Division, 12th Feb. 1841. 1,529 Deputy Collector of Madras, 15th April 1828, Supt. of Stationery, 18th March 1831, and Acting Collector of Madras, 17th Sept. 1841. Apr. 8, 17 do. 4, 17 20 7 23 Jan. 29, 1815 Jan. 22, 17 do. 3, 17 17 June 26, 17 24 1 29 20 3 4 Do. 29, 17 July 3, 17 20 6 17 CILA G. S. Hooper, w f 40 J. A. Hudleston, w f Do. 7, 17 June 26, 17 24 3 5 VOL. II.) 205 THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. R. Grant, w f ... Jan. 3, 17 Aug. 10, 171 20 10 1 F. F. Clementson, w f A. Maclean, w f ... Do. 2, July 3, 17 June 26, 18 Do. 5, 17 18 23 23 6 28 3 26 18 A. F. Bruce, w f 45 J. Horsley, w f Ditto Ditto Apr. 6, Ditto 20 9 12 20 11 22 J. C. Wroughton, w f 1816 Ditto June 14, 19 19 9 12 J. C. Morris, w f 1817 Jan. 23, 18 Aug. 10, 18 20 4 23 H. M. Blair, Mar. 4, 18 Sept. 1, 18 20 5 1 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Nellore, 28th October 1834-(Cape S.C.) Proceeded to England, 23 January 1841. 3,166 Malyalum Translator to Government, 10th Dec. 1836, and Temporary Member of the Board of Revenue, 14th January 1839.GE 2,333 Post Master Genl., 14th Ang. 1838.—(Cape S. C.) 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Madura, 12th Feb, 1841, and acting Second Judge of the Provincial Court, Northern Division, 17th Sept. 1841. 3,019 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Coimbatore, 12th February 1841 4,083 Member of the College Board, 7th Nov. 1831, Teloo- goo Translator to Govt.. 3d January 1832, and Civil Auditor and Superintendent of Stamps, 1st January 1839. 3,000 Principal Collector aud Magistrate of Canara, 1st Jan- nary 1839 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Combaconum, 17th No- vember 1835. Proceeded to England, 8th March 1840. 2,500 Col. and Magistrate of Guntoor, 10th April 1838. 10 2.500 Col. and Magistrate of Rajamundry, 23rd Jan. 1838. 2,916 3rd Judge of the Provincial Court of Circuit for the Western Division, 12th February 1841, and acting 2nd Judge of do. 31st August 1841. 3,995 Private Secretary to the Governor,Canarese Translator, Member of the College Board, and 3rd Member of the Board of Revenue, 12th April 1839, and acting Secretary to Government in the Civil Department, 27th August 1841. 2,500 Collector and Magistrate of Chingleput, 14th January 1839. 2,333 Judge and Criml. Judge of Canara, 16th January 1841. F. M. Lewin, w f Aug. 6, ... 18 Jan. 20, 19 19 1 12 ... 1 ... ... 50 R. Eden, N 3 w f J. Goldingham, w f G. A. Smith, w f G. Bird, w f 1818 Jan. 6, Do. 26, Do. 7, July 26, 19 June 14, 20 Do. 21, 20 Do, 21, 20 Jan. 8, 19 20 20 22 18 17 17 16 4 3 7 25 8 23 0 28 W. Elliot, N s'w f 1820 Feb. 15, 21 June 14, 21 16 6 7 55 A. Freese, w f Jan. 30, 21 Do. 20, 21 17 11 25 W. Lavie, w f ... Sept. 13, 21 Mar. 5, 21! 16 1 41 206 TART 11.] CIVIL LIST Names. Number Seusons of Appointmt Commence- nent of Ser- vice. Date of Arrival. Actual Re. sidence on service up to 30th Sep Salary per Mensem, Employment. 1820 June 20, 1821 Mér. 5, 1822 16 W. H. Babington, w f W. A. Neave, w f R. A. Bannermaa, w f. Oct. 24, June 20, 21 May 5, 21 Do. 9, 22 22 1821 May 10, 22 Sept. 15, 22 60 E. B. Glass, NSW f J. C. Scott, NS A. P. Onslow, N swf. Do. 14, Aug. 26, 22 Do. 15, 22 May 9. 22 23 E. P. Thomson, NSW f. J. Walker, w f 65 H. Morris, w f June 26, 1822 Feb. 5, 22 Dec. 17, 23 Sept. 25, 22 23 3 15 2,916 3rd Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal and Cir- cuit for the Centre Division, 12th February 1841. 16 2 25 2.333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Salem, 20ch Dec. 1839. 15 7 19 2,850 Collector and Magistrate of Ganjam, and Commis- sioner in Goomsur and Sooradah, under the pro- visions of Act No. 23 of 1836, 2d January 1838, and Agent to the Governor of Fort St. George in Ganjam, under Act No. 24 of 1839, 26th Nov. 1836. 13 9 21 2,916 3rd Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal and Cir- cuit for the Northern Division, 27th August 1841. 128 12 Proceeded to England, 31st January 1839. 18 4 23 2,500 Collector and Magistrate of Trichinopoly, 1st Janu- ary 1839. 17 11 2 Proceeded to England, 14th November 1840. 14 9 23 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Cuddapah, 8th April 1840. 13 8 26 291 Without Employ, 24th Dec. 1840, and Actg, 3d Judge of the Provincial Court of Appeal and Circuit, Western Division, 31st Aug. 1841. 17 11 30 2,650 Collector of Sea Customs at Madras, 12th Feb. 1841. 13 2 12 2,595 Superintendent and Treasurer of the Government Bank, and Sub-Treasurer, 1st January 1839, Member of the Mint Committee, 7th February 1840, and Acting Civil Auditor and Superintendant of Stamps, 31st August 1841. 17 2 30 3,822 Member of the Mint Committee, 7th February 1840, and Accountant General, 11th February 1840.tapi Sept. 10, 23 Mar. 9, 24 W. E. Underwood, w f... A. I. Cherry, w f June 2, 23 Oct. 2, 23 Mar. 17, 24 Sept. 3, 24 S. Crawford, ... 24 Feb. 11, 24 July 2, (11 '704 207 THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. ... (T.J.W. Thomson, NS w S 23 Dec. 24, 24 June 7, 25 8 5 28 ... Oct. 6, 24 Mar. 28, 25 13 6 0 70 W. Douglas, w f H. V. Conolly, N 8 W f.. A. Mellor, w f E. B. Thomas, w f Bt. w f Sir H. C. Montgomery, 75 W. A. Morehead, wf May 19, June 30, 24 Feb. 9, 24 Sept. 13, 24 Dec. 26, 25 Aug. 11, 24 24 14 2 12 il 2 12 8 14 25 Do. 18, 25 Nov. 3, 25 13 6 9 Apr. 27, 25 Oct. 16, 25 13 0 26 ... ... R. T. Porter F. Anderson, w f June 20, Sept. 30, 25 Nov. 24, 25 25 June 19, 26 12 11 3 21 1 24 W.C. Ogilvie, N 8 w f ... May 26, 25 Nov. 3, 25 15 10 28 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Vizaga- patam, 12th February 1841. 2,187 Register to the Court of Sudder and Foujdaree Adaw- lut, 220 Septen ber 1835. 2,333 Collector and Magistrate of Malabar, 12th Feb. 1841. 2.333 Collector and Magistrate of Bellary, 220 Feb. 1840. 291 Without Employ, 29th June 1840, Acting Judge and Criminal Judge of Malabar, 14th Nov. 1840. 2,333 Collector and Magistrate of Tinnevelly, 14th October 1840. 2,333 Judge and Criminal Judge of Chingleput, 12th Feb. 1841 1,500 Sub Secretary to the Board of Revenue, 2d Jan. 1841. 291 Without Employ, 15th December 1840, Acting Sub- Collector and Joint Magistrate of Canara, 220 June 1841. 1166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Salem, 6th Sep- tember 1833, and Acting Judge and Criminal Judge of Bellary. 10th September 1841. 2,500 Collector and Magistrate of Vizagapatam, 6th March 1838, and Agent to the Goveruor of Fort St. George in Vizagapatam, under Act 24 of 1839, 26th Novem. ber 1839. 2,500 Collector and Magistrate of the Southern Division of Arcot, 28th May 1841, but to continue to execute the office of Commissioner in Kurnool. 1,696 Deputy Collector of Sea Customs at Madras, 12th February 1841. and Acting Judge and Criminal Judge of Madura, 17th September 1841. Proceeded to England, 8th February 1838. 2,000 Secretary to the Board of Revenue, 1st January 1839. Proceeded to England, 2d March 1839. 291 Without Employ, 5th May 1841. 291 Without Employ, 5th May 1841. W. U. Arbuthnot, w f ... 25 Dec. 21, 20 June 12 26 15 8 19 80 T. L. Blane ... Apr. 12, 26 Mar. 3, 27 14 6 29 J.G. S. Bruere, NSW f.. Mar. 21, 26 Aug. 25, 26 12 2 16 ... W. E. Lockhart P. B. Smollett, NS T. L. Strange, w f 85 T. Prendergast, w f W. A. Forsyth, w f Do. 1, Sept. 30, Do. 6, June 25, Aug. 10, 20 Sept. 12, 25 June 14, 26 Do. 20, 26 Oct. 22, 26 Jan. 9, 26 26 27 26 27 11 15 11 11 u 4 27 3 17 8 13 6 0 5 15 ... 208 (PART 11. CIVIL LIST Name s. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Commence- ment of Ser-1 Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on service up to 30th Sep. Salary pei Mensem. Employment. wice. H. Stokes 1825 Aug. 25, 1826 Jan. 9, 1827 Y. M. D. 11 99 W. A. D. Inglis, w f W. Dowdeswell, N swf. Feb. 21, Do. 9, 27 June 20, 27 Do. 23. 27 27 11 11 1 1 4 25 ... 90 G. L. Prendergast, w f... E. C. Lovell, w f E. Smith, w f J. F. Bishop, w f R. Davidson, w f Apr. 11, Do. 25, June 13, July 20. June 16, 27 Oct. 18, 27 Sept. 12, 27 Oct. 18, 27 Dec. 1, 27 Jan. 15, 27 27 27 27 28 12 10 12 10 13 6 14 5 14 3 0 9 27 8 17 ... ... 95 S. I. Popham, C. H. Hallett, N 8 w f 1827 Jan. 30, Feb. 6, 28 June 23, 28 July 14, 28 28 10 7 14 10 10 17 1,166 Assistant to the Commissioner in Kurnool, 26th July 1841. Proceeded to Europe, 20th July 1838. 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Madura, 8th April 1840, and Acting Judge and Criminal Judge of Nellore. 9th February 1811. 2,374 Deputy Accountant General, 11th February 1840. Proceeded to England, 25th February 1838. Proceeded to England, 17th January 1839. 2 16 Without Employ, 27th January 1841. 1,166 Sub-Colleetor and Joint Magistrate of Madura, 6th February 1838. Proceeded to England, 6th February 1839. 850 Head Assistant to the Account. General, 1st January 1841, and acting Collector and Magistrate of the Southern Division of Arcot. 28th May 1841. 291 Without Employ, 26th Dec. 1840, acting Judge and Criminal Judge of Rajahmundry, 17th Aug. 1841. Proceeded to England, 12th February 1841. Proceeded to England, 2d February 1841. Proceeded to England, 21st November 1839. Proceeded to England, 24th May 1841. Proceeded to England, 28th December 1840. Proceeded to England, 10th November 1839. Proceeded to England, 13th February 1840. 1,400 Assistant Judge of the Adawlut of the Zillah of Canara under Reg. VII. 1809, 14th Oct. 1840. Thomas A. Anstruther... May 21. 28 Sept. 23, 28 10 9 26 Charles R. Raynes, w f... R. D. Parker, w f 100 D. White, w f E. Maltby, w f E. Newbery, w f s. Scott, w f T. Pycroft, w f 105 G. S. Greenway, w f Nov. 19, 1828 Jan. 6, Do. 1, Do. 28, Do. 21, Do. 16, Apr. 28, Do. 1, 28 May 21, 29 Do. 16, 29 Sept. 9, 29 Do. 9, 29 Do. 9, 29 Do. 9, 29 Aug. 11, 29 Do. 11, 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 11 8 22 11 8 18 10 2 13 11 8 16 11 3 201 10 2 2 10 6 4 12 1 21 Vol. 11.) 209 THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. J. D. Bourdillon 1828 Jan. 28, 1829 Aug. 11, 1829 12 1 21 William Elliot July 22, ... 29 Jan. 25, 30 11 8 7 J, H. Cochrane, w f PART II. VOL. II. Do. 22, R. H. Williamson, w f... 29 Do. 25, 29 Do. 25, 30 30 10 2 18 7 11 22 Do. 22, 110 G. H. Skelton, w f ... Nov. 11, 29 Apr. 23, 30 7 5 19 J. H. Bell, w f Oct. 14, ... 29 June 28, 30 8 3 3 Hon. W. H. Tracy ... ... Nov. 11, 29 May 20, 30 , 10 l 29 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of the N. D. of Arcot, 6th February 1838. 647 Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Salem, 6th August 1834, and Acting Sub- Collector of ditto, 14th October 1840. Proceeded to England, 11th April 1840. 291 Without Employ, 5th December 1839, Acting Deputy Collector of Sea Customs at Madras, 17th September 1841. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Cuddapah, 16th April 1840, (permitted to proceed to England.) 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Malabar, 22d February 1840, Acting Chief Magistrate and Superintendent of Police, and Acting Chief Com- missioner of the Court for the recovery of small debts, 22d February 1840. 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Cochin, 6th July 1840—(Sea, S. C.) 291 Without Employ, 27th January 1841, Acting Deputy Secretary to Government in the Departments under the immediate charge of the Chief Secretary, 2d April 1841, 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of the Auxiliary Court at Trichinopoly, 22d January 1839. Proceeded to England, 16th April 1841. 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Salem, 6th March 1840. Proceeded to England, 12th December 1840. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Nellore, 1st January 1839. 1,166 Sub-Collector of Coimbatore, 13th November 1838. 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Rajah- mundry, 16th June 1840. T. B. Roupell, w f ... Jan. 13, 30 July 3, 30 6 4 22 H. D.' Phillips, w f 1829 Apr. 22, 30 Sept. 17, 30 11 014 115'C. J. Bird, w f H. Frére, wf July 7, Do. 7, 30 Feb. 10, 30 Dec. 19, 31 30 10 2 5 7 2 13 сс F. B. Elton, w f A. S. Mathison, w f Do. Do. 7, 7, 30 Do. 19, 30 Do. 19, 30 30 7 10 111 9 13 John Bird, w f 120 John Rohde, w f Do. Do. 7, 7, 30 Feb. 10, 30 Do. 10, 30 30 10 7 19 10 7 19 210 (PART 11. CIVIL LIST Names. Number. Seasons of Appointmt. Commence Date of ment of Ser- Arrival. vice. Actual Re. sidence on service uf to 30th Sep. Salary per Mensem. Employment. 10 M. D 4, 21 E. Story, w f F. N. Maltby, w f Charles Turton Kaye 1829 Oct. 27, 1830 May 1. 1831 1830 Jan. 12, 1831 Aug. 29, 31 10 1 12 Do. 12, 31 July 25, 31 10' 27 T. H. Davidson ... Do. 12, 31 Aug. 22, 31 10 1 10 31 125 Thomas W. Goodwyn George A. Harris, w f. Do. 12, Do. 12, 31 May 24, 31 July 25, 10 4 8 10 27 31 Do. 12, 31 Do. 25, 31 10 2 7 G. T. Beauchamp, w f... Henry Forbes, w f 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Guntoor, 14th November 1840. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Canara, 22d June 1841-(permitted to proceed to England.) 1,400 Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Chingle- put, 1st January 1841. 1,300 Senior Deputy Register to the Court of Sudder and Foujdaree Udalut, 23d January 1838. d 1,166 Sub-Collector of Malabar, 17th April 1840. Da 733 Head Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Bel- lary, 19th September 1838, and Acting Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Malabar, 13th September 1839. 700 Register to the Provincial Court of Appeal and Circuit in the Nor. Div., 16th June 1836-(Cape S. C.) 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Tanjore, 27th October 1840. 700 Register to the Provincial Court for the Southern Div., 7th August 1838, and Acting Assistant Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Cochin, 5th February 1841. 1,166 Additional Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Ca- nara, 22d June 1841. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Bellary, 14th August 1838. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of the Southern Division of Arcot, 18th February 1840. Do. 12, 31 Nov. 30. 31 9 10 1 Thomas I. P. Harris Apr. 22, 31 Nov. 5, 31 9 10 26 July 6, 31 Mar. 10, 31 9 6 22 130 Thomas D. Lushington.. Charles Pelley, w f Mackenzie Murray, w f.. Do. 6, 31 Jan. 14, 31 9 8 18 .. Do. 6, 31 A pr. 28, 31 9 5 3 1 211 (11 "I0A THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. Frederick Mole, w f ... 1830 June 15, 1831 Jan. 14, 1832 David R. Limond, w f .. July 6, 31 Dec. 18, 31 9 8 181 9 9 14 ... 135 C. Whittingham, w f Nov. 9, 32 31 July 6, ... 9 2 26 Sylvester D. Birch, w f... Do. 9, 31 May 26, 32 S. N. Ward F. H. Crozier, w f Jan 18, Do. 18, 32 June 7, 32 Aug. 24, 32 32 9 3 24 6 5 15 Harry A. Brett, w f Do. 4, 32 July 5, 32 9 2 27 140 Joseph J. Cotton, w f ... Do. 18, 32 Aug. 27, 30 9 1 5 600 Register to the Zillah Court of Salem, 13th Dec. 1834. 600 Register to the Zillah Court of Madura, 9th August 1836, and Officiating Assistant Judge and Joint Cri- minal Judge of Madura, 13th March 1838. 1,166 Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Tinnevelly, 4th May 1841. 1,400 Cashier to the Government Bank, and Assistant to the Sub-Treasurer, 1st January 1839, and Acting Sub- Treasurer and Superintendent and Treasurer of Go- vernment Bank, 30th August 1841. 700 Register to the Zillah Court of Canara, 31st Oct. 1837. 218 Without employ, 5th January 1841, Acting Register to the Zillah Court of Malabar, 23d March 1841. 525 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Salem, 8th September 1840, and Acting Head As- sistant to ditto, 22d December 1840. 700 Register to the Zillah Court of Combaconum, 1st Aug. 1937: to be Sub-Collector of Cuddapah from the date of Mr. Skelton's departure for Europe. Proceeded to England, 14th February 1840. 733 Head Asst. to the Col, and Magis. of Guntoor, Ist Ja- nuary 1839, and acting Register to the Zillah Court of Madura, 22d June, 1841. 700 Register to the Zillah Court of Chittoor, 14th July 1835, 733 Head Assist, to the Prin, Col. of Coimbatore, 1st Apr. 1840, and actg. Asst. Judge and Joint Criminal Judge of Salem, 3d September 1841. 733 Head Assist. to the Prin. Col. and Magis. of Madura, 4th Aug 1840, and actg. Head Assist. to the Prin. Col. and Magis. of the Northern Division of Arcot, 26th January 1841. 1,166 Principal Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate, and Agent to the Governor of Fort St. George in Vizagapatam, 26th November 1839. William M. Molle, w f... 1831 Do. 18, Francis Copleston, w f... Do. 18, 32 June 2, 32 Sept. 24, 30 30 7 9 8 131 07 Thomas Onslow, w f Murray P. Daniel Do. 18, Dec. 16, 32 Aug. 24, 31 July 11, 30 30 9 9 1 8 2 21 145 Arthur M. Owen ... ... Jan. 18, 32 Aug. 24, 30 9 1 81 Thomas B. A. Conway... 1830 July 6, 31 Dec. 18, 31 9 9 141 716 (PART 11. CIVIL LIST Names. Number. Seasons of! Appointmt. Commence- ment of Ser- vice. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- siaence on service up to 30th Sep. Salary per Mensen. Employment. Wm. B. Hawkins, w f ... 1831 May 9, 1832 Jan. 5, 1833 Y. 8 M. D. 8 27 Charles H. Woodgate ... Do. 9, 32 Oct, 10, 32 8 11 22 Wm. H. Bayley, w f ... July 10, 32 Dec. 28, 32 8 9 4 150 Arthur Hall, w f ... Do. 18, 32 Jan. 5. 33 8 8 271 32 Do. 16 33 8 8 16 700 Register to the Provincial Court of Appeal and Cir. cuit for the Centre Division, 26th July 1839. 733 Head Assist. to the Collector and Magistrate of Tri- chinopoly, 6th February 1838. 1,050 Deputy Secretary to Govt. in the Departments under the Chief Secretary's immediate charge, 4th January 1839, and Acting Resident at the Court of His Highness the Rajah of Tanjore, 30th March 1841. 733 Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of the Northern Division of Arcot, 25th Jan. 1839-(Calcutta on leave). 600 Register to the Zillah Court of Rajahmundry, 26th February 1839. 733 Hend Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Nellore, 12th Feb. 1839. 218 Without Employ 20 April 1841, Acting Register to the Zillah Court of Canara, 14th April 1841. 700 Register to the Zillah Court of Malabar, 14th Novem- ber 1837. 733 Asst. to the Collector and Magistrate, and Agent to the Governor of Fort St. George in Vizagapatam, 26th Nov. 1839. Proceeded to England, 4th Angust 1840. 733 Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Malabar, 12th March 1839. ... 32 Mar. 7, 33 8 6. 25 W. Edward Jellicoe, w f Do. 18, Arthur Purvis, w f Do. 18, C. J. Shubrick, w f Do. 18, R.W. Chatfield, w f Do. 18, 155 Wheeler H. G. Mason,wf 1832 Dec. 18, ... 33 32 May 11, ... 5 2 21 32 Feb. 16, 33 8 7 13 32 June 11, 33 8 3 20 Patrick Irvine James Silver, w f Jan. 16, Do. 16. 33 Sept. 4, 33 Do. 4, 33 33 6 11 1 8 0 27 [:11 '704 213 TIIE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. Henry Wood ... Do. 16, ... 33 Aug. 31, 331 5 11 301 350 Asst, to the Col. and Magistrate of Chingleput, 21st Sep. 1841, but to continue to act as Register to the Provincial Court of Appeal and Circuit for the Northera Division.. 'Thomas Clarke, w f 1832 Do. 15, FACTORS. 34 Sept. 8, 34 7 0 23 160 Geo. M. Swinton, w f Dec. 16, 33 July 11, 34 7 2 21 Robert B. M. Binning B. Cunliffe, w f 1834 Do. 25, 33 Apr. 7, 1832 Do. 15, 33 Oct. 5, 34 34 3 11 27 6 11 27 John F. Bury ... June 25, 33 Jan. 14, 35 6 8 18 Edward E. Ward, w f 1835 Jan. 28, 35 July 2, 35 6 2 301 165 William Knox, w f Do. 29, 35 35 Sept. 16, ... 6 0 15 700 Head Asst. to the Register to the Court of Sudder and Foujdaree Udalut, Ist June 1838. 700 Second Asst. to the Accountant General, 220 Decem. ber 1840, and Acting Head Assistant to ditto, 5th January 1841. Proceeded to England, 3d April 1839. 733 Head Asst, to the Col. and Mag. of the Southern Di- vision of Arcot, 4th May 1841. 558 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate, and Agent to the Governor of Fort St. George in Vizagapatam, 26th November 1839. 733 Head Asst. to the Collector and Magistrate of Masuli. patam, 2d July 1840. 733 Head Assistant to the Collector of Rajahmundry, 31st March 1840. 558 Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Tanjore, 27th October 1840. 600 Register to the Zillab Court of Nellore, 16th April 1840. 558 Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Canara, 22d June 1841. 558 Head Asst. to the Collector and Magistrate of Tinne- velly, 15th June 1840. Proceeded to England, 23d January 1840. 558 Head Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Chingleput, 22d Dec. 1840. 350 Asst. to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Northern Division of Arcot, 25th Sept. 1838, and acting Head Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Bellary, 22d March 1839. Henry D. Cook, w f June 16, 35 Dec. 28, 35 5 9 4 L. D. Daniel, w f C. W. Reade, uf 1836 Do. 24, Do. 26, 35 Feb. 19, 35 May 26, 36 36 5 5 7 u 4 6 ... ... Jan. 13, 36 Sept. 26, 36 5 0 11 J. R. Pringle, w f 170 A. P. Forbes, w f Ed. Peters, w f :: June 15, Do. 15, 36 Jan. 27, 36 Feb. 22, 37 37 2 11 28 4 7 7 Wm. Fisher, w f ... Do. 15, 36 Apr. 11, 37 4 5 20 214 (PART 11. CIVIL LIST Names. Seasons of Number. pruzuroddy Commence- ment of Ser- vice. Date of Arrival. Actual Re- sidence on service up to 30th Sep. Salury per Mensem. Employment. M. DI 0 18 1837 Jan. 18, 1837 Sept. 13, 1837 4 ... Do. 18, 37 Do. 13, 37 4 0 18 1: W. C. Oswell, w f Dawson Mayne, w f 175 G. P. Monckton, w f DDIG A. M. Sutherland, w f Do. 18, 37 July 30, 37 4 2 2 Do. 18, 27 Sept. 29, 37 4 0 2 1836 Dec. 13, 36 June 13, 1837 Jan. 18, 37 July 14, 37 37 2 4 A. Wittingham, w f R. R. Cotton, w f C. T. Arbuthot, w f 6.4 2 18 ary 1840. June 28, 37 Dec. 14, 37 350 Assistant to the Prineipal Col. of South Arcot, 29th October 1839. 558 Head Assist. to the Collector and Magistrate of Cudda- pah, 28th April 1840. 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Malabar, 25th January 1839. 558 Assittant to the Collector and Magistrates and Agent to the Governor of Fort St. George in Ganjam, 26th November 1839. Proceeded to Englend, 16th December 1839. 700 Register to the Zillah Court of Cuddapah, 22d Febru- 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Coimbatore, 6th August 1839, and acting Head Assst. to the Principal Col. and Magistrate of Ma- dura, 26th January 1841. 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Nellore, 23 February 1841. 350 Assistant to the Collector of Trichinopoly, 7th January 1840, and Acting Head Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Coimbatore, 3d Septem- ber 1841. 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Tanjore, 26th July 1839, and Acting Head Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Guntoor, 28th April 1840. 3 9 18 38 Aug. 25, 38 23 20 180 W. E. Cochrane, w f ... 1838 Jan. 24, BID R. J. Sullvian, w f Do. 24, ... 38 Aug. 2, 38 3 1 30 Gordon S. Forbes, w f... Jane 22, 38 Dec. 13, 38 2 9 19 VOL. 11.) 215 THE MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. |R. Hichens, w f 1838 June 22, 1838Dec. 20, 1838 2 9 12 F. Lushington, w f ... Do. 22, 38 Do. 11, 38 2 10 20 ... 185 A. Hamilton, w f 1839 Jan. 9, 39 Oct. 27, 39 1 11 5 ... Do. 3, 39 Aug. 1, 39 2 2 0 A. Hathaway, w f R. G. Clarke, w of Do. ... ... 9, 39 Do. 1, 39 2 2 0 J. W. Cherry, w f Do. ... 9, 39 Do. 29, 39 2 1 3 G. Ellis, w f Do. ••• 9, 39 Do, 29, 350 (Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Masulipa- tam, 25th August 1840, and Acting Register to the Zillah Court of Rajahmundry, 29th September 1840. 350 Assistant to the Collector of Chingleput, 7th January 1840, and Acting 2d Assistant to the Accountant General, 5th January 1841. 350 Assistant to the Principa! Collector and Magistrate of Salem, 20th July 1841. 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Nellore, 29th September 1840. 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Chingle- put, 23d February 1841, and Acting Cashier to the Government Bank and Assistant to the Sub-Trea- surer, 31st August 1841. 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of the South- ern Division of Arcot, 15th December 1840. 350 Doing duty as an Assistant in the Chief Secretary's Office, 20th July 1841. 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Tinne- velley, 7th November 1840. 437 Register to the Zillah Court of Bellary, 25th June 1841. 350 Asst. to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Co- imbatore, 15th Jan, 1841. 350 Assistant to the Col. and Magistrate of Rajahmundry, 9th July 1840. 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Madura, 20th July 1841. 350 Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Tanjore, 20th July 1841. 260 Student at the College: permitted to prosecute bis studies under the orders of the Collector of Malabar, 12th April 1841, 39 2 1 3 190 E. G. R. Fane, w f Do. 9, 39 Do. 29, 39 2 1 3 John Ratliff, w f .... Aug. 7, 39 Dec. 5, 39 1 9 27 John H. Goldie, w f Do. 7, 39 Jan. 23, 40 1 8 9 T. J. Knox, w f Jan. 9, 39 Sept. 13, 39 2 0 18 ... ... Aug. 7, 39 Feb. 28, 40 1 7 2 V. H. Levinge, w f 195 A. W. Phillips, w f ... ... ... ... Do, 7, 39 Jan. 19, 40 1 8 13 R. L. Garratt, w f Jan. 15, 40 Aug. 1, 40 1 2 0 216 [PART 11. CIVIL LIST Commence- ment of Ser- Names. Date of Arrival. Number. Actual Re- sidence on service up to 30th Sep. Salary per Mensem. Employment vice. ... ... Y. M, D. J. A. Hunter, w f 1839 Jan. 15, 1840 Aug. 19, 1840 1 1 13 350 Student at the College: permitted to proceed to Arcot for the purpose of prosecuting his Studies under the superintendence of the Principal Collector of the Northern Division of that District, 29th Sept. 1840. H. Newill, w f Do. 15, 40 Do. 1, 40 1 2 0 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Guntoor, 20th July 1841. G. N. Taylor, w f Do. 15, 40 July 17, 40 1 2 15 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Masulipa- tam, 3d August 1841. 200 James Fraser, w f Do. 15, 40 Aug.13, 40 1 1 19 350 Assistant to the Collector and Magistratc of Bellary, 20th July 1841. J. D. R. Robinson, Do. 15, 40 Sept. 15, 40 1 016 260 Student at the College : (Cape, S. C.) W. M. Cadell 1840 July 31, 40 Dec. 24, 40 9 8 350 Assistat to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Canara, 20th July 1871. W. Hodgson Do. 31, 40 Jan. 16, 41 0 8 16 260 Student at the College: permitted to proceed to the Neilgherry Hills for the purpose of prosecuting his Studies under the Superintendence of the Collector of Malabar, 2d April 1841. Hon. D. Arbuthnot 1841 Jan. 20, 41 July 7, 41 0 2 25 260 Student at the College. 205 Andrew Wedderburn (Not arrived.) 'James Law Lusbiogton . (Not arrived.) Note.—The deputation allowance of Civil Servants, 'Without Employ,' Acling in Situations, being regulated by the Civil Service Rules is not given in the above List. 0 ... VOL. 11.) 217 MADRAS ECCLESIASTICAL ESTABLISHMENT. ECCLESIASTICAL ESTABLISHMENT. CHURCH OF ENGLAND. Pay per Mensem. 2,133 The Right Reverend George Trevor Spencer, D.D. Bishop of Madras, The Venerable Henry Harper, A.M. Archdeacon of Madras. Special Commissary, and Acting Domestic Chaplain to the Lord Bishop F. Orme, Esq. Registrar of the 'Diocese and Archdeaconry of Madras, and Secretary to the Lord Bishop, CAAPLAINS. 266 212 Date of Ap. Date of Arri- Names. Number, pointment to the service. Pay per Station. val in India. Mensem. ... 99 ... 1 Rev. H. Harper, A. M. . Nov. 25, 1814 Sept. 9, 1816 1,200 Senior Presi- dency Chaplain 2 s. F. Spring, A. M.... May 29, 16 Ditto 980 Junior do. do. 3 s. E. P. Lewis, A. M. Jan. 12, 25 Sept. 3, 25 656 Masulipatam. 4 s. G.K. Græme, A.M. Aug. 23, 26 Feb. 5, 27 656 5 W.T. Blenkinsop, A. B. Jan, 24, 27 June 12, 656 St. Thomas' Mount. 6 H.W. Stuart, A. B. Aug. 10, 31 May 10, 32 656 Ootacamund. 78 J. C. Street, A. M. Sept. 28, June 11, 656 Mangalore. 8 s. G. J. Cobitt, A. M. May 2, 32 Sept. 24, 656 (On sick Certi- ficate.) 9 s. V. Shortland, ... Aug. 12, Jan. 5, 33 656 Ditto ditto. 10 s. G.W. Mahon, A.M. Jan. 22. 34 Oct. 5, 34 656 Fort St.George. 11 J. McEvoy, A. M. Vay 12, Do. 1, 656 Jaulnah. 12 H. Deane, A. M.... May 7, Do. 5, 656 Trichinopoly. 13 s. H. Cotterill, A. M. Feb. 3, 36 July 26, 36 656 Vepery. 14 s. G. Trevor, May 4. June 27, 37 6.56 Bangalore. ASSISTANT CHAPLAINS. 1 s./Rev. F.G. Lugard, A.B. July 3, 1837 Sept. 2, 1837 500 Vizagapatam. 2 s. A. Fennell, A. B. .... May 14, 38 500 Cannanore. J. Morant, A. M. .... Dec. 20, 500 Arcot. 4 s G. Knox. A. B. ... Oct. 17, 38 Jan. 24, 39 500 Black Town. 5 s. R. W. Whitford, A. M. Mar. 27, 39 Aug. 20, 39 500 Secunderabad. 6 s. J. Knox, A. M. May Jan. 18, 40 500 Cuddalore. 7 s. W. W. Lutyens. A. M. July 4, Do. 22, 500 Bangalore. 8 s. G. H. Evans, A.M. Jan. 15, 40 June 29, 500 Secunderabad, 9 s. E. Whitehead, A.m. Do. 29, Dec. 21, 38 500 Kamptee. 10 J. Rolandson, A.d: July 22, 500 Poopainallee, doing duty at St. George's Cathedral 11 s. F. W. Briggs, 500 Quilon. 3 3 s. 95 Note. --Those marked s in column No. 1, are Surrogates for granting episcopal licenses of marriage. • Exclusive of Fees. PART II. VOL, II, D D 218 (PART II. MÁDRÀS ECCLESIASTICAL AND MARINE LIST. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND. Date of Ap- Date of Arri. Names. Number, Station, pointment to the service. Pay per Mensem. val in India. 1 2 Rev. M. Bowie, A. M. . Sept. 14, 1831 Jan. 14, 1832980 Senior Minister R. K. Hamilton. A, M. Oct. 30. 39'Jan, 24. 401 656 4 Junior ditto. MARINE ESTABLISHMENT. Pay p. MARINE BOARD. Mens. President, The Honorable John Bird, Esq. Lieut. Col. William Strahan, Qr. Mr. General of the Army, Lieut. Col. Alexander Tulloch, C.B, Commissary General,... Members Ex-Offi- Lieut. Col. Benjamin Robertson Hitchins, Stipendiary cio. Member of the Military Board. Captain Christopher Biden, Master Attendant of Madras, J. R. Boyson, Esq., Acting Secretary,.. 450 MASTER ATTENDANT'S DEPARTMENT. Names. Pay per Station. Mensen. Captain C. Biden,... 1250 { J. F. McKenzie, Esq. Mr. R. Alexander,..... J. Flower, C. Hawkins, E. Brennen, J. Baggott, M. A. Platel, (in charge of Master Attendant's Office) W. Marsh. 500 105 105 70* 105 105 105 Master Attendant and Store Keeper, Madras. Assistant Master Attendant and Boat Pay Master, ditto. Master Attendant, Masulipatam. Coringa. Vizagapatam. Tellicherry. Tutucoreen. 91 95 Calicnt. Cochin. 105 SEA CUSTOM HOUSE. Names. Pay per Station. Mensem. W. E. Underwood, Esq. J. G. S. Bruere, Esq...... R. H Williamson, Esq. 2650 0 7 Collector. 1696 14 10 Deputy Collector(on other duty). 29| 10 8 Acting ditto. Personal allowance. VOL. 11.) 219 INDEX,-MADRAS CIVIL LIST. INDEX. Page 208 .... 203 ..... 213 ... 212 .. 210 .. 215 .... 216 .... 213 Scott, 1. C....... Page Page ANDERSON, W. B....... 203 Elton, F. B.. 209 Neave, W. A. 206 Anderson, F. 207 Nelson, R.. 201 Angelo, A. E. 203 FANE, E. G.R. 215 Newberry, E.... Anstruther, T. A.. 208 Fisher, w 213 ...... 208 Newill, å... Arbuthnot, w. U....... 269 216 Forbes, H. 210 Arbuthnot, C T.. Forbes, Gordon S..... 214 OGILVIE, G.M. Arbuthnot, Hon. D..... 216 203 Forbes, A. P.... 213 Ogilvie, W. C.. 207 Ashton, W............. 204 Forsyth, W.A...... 20? Ouslow, A. P...... 206 Fraser, j.. 216 Onslow, T.............. 211 BABINGTON, W.H...... 206 Freese, Arthur ........ 205 Orr, John... 203 Bannerman, E. 204 Freere, u... 209 Oswell, W. C.... 214 Bannerman, R. A...... 206 Owen, A. M.. 211 Bayley, W. H. 212 Glass, E. B.. .... 206 Beauchainp, G.T.. 210 Gleiy, L, D. 203 PARKER, R. D. Bell, I. H.. 209 Goldie, J. H... 215 Paternoster, John...... 203 Binning, R, B. M... 213 Gollingham, 1. 205 Pelly, C..... 210 Bird, John 209 Goodwyn, T. W. ..... 210 Peters, E. Bird, George ...... 213 .......... 205 Grant, R. ...... 205 Phillips, H. D.. 209 Bird, c. 1.... 209 Graut, P....... Phillips, A. W.. 215 Bird, 1..... 202 Greenway, G. S....... 208 Popham, s. I.......... 208 Birch, S. D............ 211 Porter, R. T 207 Bishop, I. P. 208 HALL, A... 212 Prendergast, T. Blackburne, John...... 203 207 Hallett, C. HI.. 208 Prendergast, G. L...... 208 Blair, H. M... 205 Hamilton, A. 215 Pringle, 1, R. Blane, T. L.. 207 Harrington, W Purvis, A.. Boileau, T. E, I. 203 Harris, T. 1, P........ 210 Pycroft, T. 208 Bourdillon, 1. D. 209 Harris, G. A.. Breit, H. A... 211 Hathaway, A... RaTLIFF, J 215 Browne, C. P.. 204 Hawkins, w. B....... 212 Read, c. W 213 bruce, A. F. 20.5 Hichens, R...... 215 Roberson, A. Bruere, I, G. S.... 207 Hudyson, W. 216 Robinson, J, D. R. Bury, I, P. Hooper, G. S.... ...... 204 Rhode, d... 209 llorseley, I... 205 Roupell, T. B.. 209 CADELL, W. M.... 216 Hudleston, I. A....... 204 Campbell, D. A........ 202 Hunter, J. A....., 216 206 Casamajor, G. J....... 203 Scott, S.... 208 Chamier, Henry........ 203 INGLIS, W. A. D...... 208 Shubrick, C. I...... 212 Chatfield, R. W. 212 Irvine, P........ ...... 212 Silver, James 212 Cherry, A. I.. 206 Skelton, G, H. 209 Cherry, J. W 215 JELLICOE, W. E........ 212 Smith, G. A.... 205 Clark, T, Smith, E. Clark, R. G. 215 KATE, CT. 210 Smollett, P. B.. 207 Clementson, F. F. .... 205 Kindersley, N. W 203 Stokes, u... Clerk, Robert. 201 Knox, W ... 208 Stonehouse, T. V. Cochrane, I. H. 204 209 Knox, T, I...... 215 Story, E... 210 Cochrane, W. E........ 214 Strange, T. L.... 207 Cockburn, M. D.. 202 LASCELLES, FRANCIS.. 204 Sulivan, R. I.. Conolly, H. V. 207 Lavie, W. 205 Sutherland, A.. 214 Conway, T. B. A...... 217 Levinse, H. V. 215 Swinton, G. M..... 213 Cook, I. D.. 213 Lewin, Malcolm 203 Copleston, F. ...... 211 Lewin, F. M. TAYLOR, W, R.. 203 Cotton, C. R. 203 Limond, D. R. 211 Taylor, G. N. Cotton, 1. I.. 211 216 Lockhart, W. Fo.... Thomas, J. F. Cotton, R. R.. .. 204 Lovell, E. C.. 208 Thomas, T. J. W. 207 Crawford, s 206 Lushington, C. M. 202 Thomas, E. B. 207 Crozier, F. H. 211 Lushington, T. D. 210 Cuuifle, B............ 213 Thompson, E. P. 206 Lushington, F. ........ 215 Tracy, Hon. W. H. 209 Lushington, J. L.... DANIEL, M.P........... 211 UNDERWOOD, W. E.... Daniell, L. D...... 213 206 MACLEAN, A...... 205 Davidson, Robert...... 208 Maltby, E...... 208 VAUGHAN, John,... Davidson, T. H........ 210 202 Maltby, F. N. 210 Davis, W. D... 203 Mason, w. H. G. 212 WALKER, J. Dickinson, Henry...... 202 “Mathison, A. S.. 206 209 Ward, s, N. 210 Douglas, W. 207 Mayne, D. Ward, E. E. Dowdeswell, w. 208 Mellor, A.. .. 213 207 Wedderburn, A..... 216 Drury, G. Ó. ...... 203 Mole, P. White, D... 208 Molle, W. M.......... 211 EDEN, Robert. Whittingham, Charles.. 211 205 Monckton, G. P........ 214 Eliott, D...... Whittingham, A. ...... 214 204 Moulgomerie, Huxh.... 203 Eliott, Walter.. Williain ou, R. H... .. 209 205 Montgomery, Sir H, C. Elliott, w.. Wood, H....... 209 213 BI. 207 Ellis, G.. Woodgate, C. H...... 215 Morehead W.A..... 212 207 Elphinstone, Rt. Hon. Wroughton, J. C....... 205 Morris, I.C. 206 Lord, Q. c. H.. ...... 202 Murray, M, 910 ...... 213 .... 208 .., 213 ...... 205 ..., 207 216 ..... 211 VOL. u.) 221 ARMY LIST COMMANDANTS OF DIVISIONS, FIELD FORCES, GARRISONS AND CANTONMENTS. Ranks. Names, Major General Brig. General Major General Brigadier 10 Sir Robert Henry Dick, K. C. B. & K. C. H. Centre Div.-Absent on other duty: John Woulfe Ceded Districts. Edward Millian Gullifer Showers Southern Division. George Makenzie Steuart Northern Division. Mysore Division. James Allan, c. B. In temporary Command, Mysore Division. George Wm. Paty, K, H. Malabar and Canara. John Leslie, K. H. Trichinopoly. Michael Riddel Hyd. Sub. Force. John Turuer Trewman Naypore Sub. Force. Johnstone Napier Vellore-In temporary command, Centre Divn.' Robert Home, C. B. Masulipatam. Lovell Ben. Lovell, K. H. Bangalore. John Thomas Gibson Bellary. w Joseph Luyan Tefas, Provinces. Henry Waipole Palaveram. James Ketchen .. St. Thomas's Mount. Thomas Marrett Jauluah. 93 Colonel ADJUTANT GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Rank. Names. Regt. Lt. Col... Robert Alexander 171h Regt... Adjt. General of the Army: Major Charles Alfred Browne 15th do. Deputy Arijt. Genl. of the Army. Captain.. Robert Gordon .. 37th do. Asst, Adjt. Genl. of the Army- Alisent on F. S., China, Lieut. William George Woods 6th L. C... Acig. Asst. Aujt. Genl, of the Army. Lieut. John M'Mahon Johnstone 4th Regt... Acty. Dep. Asst. Adjt. Genl. of the Army. ASSISTANT ADJUTANT GENERAL. Capin., John Grimes 8th Regt... Nagpore Subsidiary Force. Samuel Auchinleck Grant 16th do. Hyd. Subsidiary Force. Angustus Fred. Oakes Artillery St. Thomas's Mount. DEPUTIES ASSISTANT ADJUTANT GENERAL Captain.. Mathew Stewart Poole 5th Regt... Southern Division. Charles Frederick Liardet 14th 4o. Northern Division. Robert Shirrefr 2d 10. Centre Division. Thos. Geils Cowd. Gammell Kenny 20 E. L. 1. Tenasserim Provinces. William Patrick Deas 6th L. C... Mysore Division. Lieut. .. James George Neill Ist M.E.R. Ceded Districts. MAJOIL OF BRIGADE. Captain.. Ponsonby Shaw 31th Regt... Bangalore. John Jones 30th do. Cannanore-Acting. CANTONMENT ADJUTANTS, Lieut. Augustus John Curtis 7th L. C... Arcot. Captain.. Horatio Nelson Noble 40th Reyt... Palaveram. FORT ADJUTANTS. Captain.. Coghill Glendower Ottiey 39th Regt... Vellore. John Forbes Musgrove 36th do. Cannanore. William Cantis 15th do. Trichinopoly. John Ediund Glynn 4th do. .. Bellary. Josiah Webb Goldsworthy Ist do. Masulipatam. STAFF OFFICERS. Lieut. William Lovell Bunderson 29th Regt... Jaulnah-Neilgherries, S. C, Captain.. 'John Napleton Beaver 20 N. V. B. St. Thomis's Mount. Lieut. .. Frederick Secretan Gabb 52d Regl... Sholapore. Peter Grenville Cazalet 29th do Jaulna--- Jcting. Captain.. R. R. Gillespie 1. 15th Huss.. Poonamallee. 33 292 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. QUARTER MASTER GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Rank, Names. Regiment. Lieut.-Col. William Straban - 35th Regt. Qr.Mr.Genl. of the Army. Wm. John Butterworth,c.B, 2d Eur. L. I. Depy. Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army - Sea, S. C. Captain Daniel Heffernan Considine 21st Regt. Actg. Depy.Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army. Richd. Hippesley Bingham 7th do. Actg. Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. of the Army, Lieutenant Thomas Askwith Jenkins 33d do. Depy. Asst. Qr Mr. Genl. of the Army-Absent on other duty. Captain George Hamond 51st do. Actg. Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gepl. of the Army. ASSISTANTS QUARTER MAS- TER GENERAL. Captain William Gordon 6th Regt. · Nagpore Sub. Force. John James McMurdo 15th do. · Hyderabad Sub. Force. DEPUTIES ASSISTANT QUAR- TER MASTER GENERAL. Captain - Hamlyn Lavicount Harris -15th Regt. - Ceded Districts. George Wright 10th do. - Northern Division. John Charles Fortescue Ist do. - Southern Division. Richd. Hippesley Bingham 7th do. - Mysore Division-Absent on other duty. Charles Gordon - 13th do. - Centre Division. Richd. Hickley Richardson 7th L. C. Mysore Division, Actg. 3 99 . . JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL'S DEPARTMENT. Rank. Names. Regiment. Division and Stations. District. 99 JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. Captain - Thomas Bernard Chalon 33d Regt. DEPUTIES JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL Captain - William Hill Ist M.ER 1 Nagpore Subsidiary Force Thomas McGoun 6th Regt II Jaulnah & Secunderabad. Andrew Fraser 45th do. I Northern Division. Geo. Willoughby Osborne • 19th do. IV Mysore Division. V Malabar and Canara. Anthony Harrison - 38th do. VI Ceded Districts. George Burn. 14th do. VII Centre Division-Presi- dency with Mount. IT. Kensington Whister Artillery VIII Southern Division. Lieut. Lachlan Macqueen 3d L. Č. • 1X Tenasserim Provinces. 99 VOL. 11.) 223 ARMY LIST. COMMISSARIAT DEPARTMENT. Rank in the Dept. Rank and Names. Corps. Stations. do. Commy. General Lt. Col. Alex. Tulloch, c. B. uth Regt. N. I. No fixed Station, Depy.Comy.Genl. Lt. Col. Westrop Watkins 27th Regt. N. I. Madras. Major William Prescott ed Regt. N. I. Hoonsoor. Captain Arthur M'Cally 14th do. N. I. Bangalore. Assistants Com Captain John Johnstone 30 do. L. I. Van Dieman's Land- missary Genl. Captain John Hill 24h do. N. I. Ossore. [S. C. Captain James Robertson 9th do. Secunderabad. Captain Arthur Trotter 35th do. Kamptee. Lieut. Wm. Cosmo Gordon Artillery Masulipatam. Lieut. W. Alex. Mackenzie 17th Reyt. N. I. Trichinopoly. 21st Capt. Alexander Shirreffs Jauluah. Deputy Assists. Captain John Bower 28th do. Cominy. Genl. Presidency Div. Capt. Wm. Henry Bodd 31st do. T.L.I. Cannanore. Capt. Henry Chas. Gosling 7th do. N I. Sick, absent. Captain David Babington 17th do. Moulmein. Captain James Fitzgerald 42d Regt. N.'1. Kamptee. Lieut, Henry Jas. Nicholls 25th do. Vellore. Lieut. Edw. Every Miller Ist do. L.c. Sholapore. Sub-Assistant Capt. C. Moray Macleane 43d do. N.l. Madras. Commy. Genl. Capt. C. Augustus Butler 21st do. Penang. Capt. Fred. ewis Nicolay 29th do. Bellary. Capt. John Campbell 38th do. Secunderabad. Lieut. Chas. James Elphinstone.' 12th do. Bangalore. .. . 10 ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT. Names. Date of Appoint. Stations. PRINCIPAL COMMISSARY OF ORDNANCE, Lt. Col. Patrick Montgomerie, c. B... Ditto Frederick Bond, COMMISSARIES, • Captain Gleadowe O'Connell, Capl. Archibald Geddes Hyslop, Captain Peter Hamond, Captain Henry Strilles Poord, Captain Thomas Edmund Geils, Captain Peter James Begbie, Lieut. Joseph Lyon Barrow, DEPUTY COMMISSARIES. Lieutenant George Gibson, Captain Samuel Smith Trevor, Captain William Henry Miller, Lieut. Samuel Clarke, Lieutenant James Denton, Captain Chas. Wm. Rolland, ASSISTANT COMMISSARY. Lieutenant John O'Brien, DEPUTY ASSISTANT COMMISSARY. Lieutenant Wm. Brookes, Mar. 15, 1839 Arsenal of Fort St. George.---Absent on Foreign Service China--Sea, S.C. Apr. 7, 1840 Arsenal of Fort St. George-Actg. Sept. 13, 1811 Arsenal of Fort St. George. Feb. 16, 1830 Nagpore Subsidiary Force. April 5, 1831 lyd. Subsidiary Force. Oct. 2, 1835 Masulipatam, Mar. 26, 1839 Bangalore. Dec. 24, 39 Trichinopoly. June 30, 1841 China Force. July 31, 1827 Vellore. Mar. 1, 1833 Tenasserim Coast. Oct. 2, 1835 Cannanore. Feb. 5, 1839 Eur. S. C., 14th June 1839. Jan. 10, 1810 Supernumerary. Sept. 28, 1811 Bellary. Jan. 10, 1810 In charge Camp Equipage Depôt. July 31, 1837 Vizagapatam, PAY DEPARTMENT. OFFICE OF ALDIT. Major General Gilbert Waugh.. ..Military Auditor General. Lieut. Col. Peter Whannell.. . Deputy Military Auditor General. Capt. George Greig Mackenzie.. First Assistant Military Auditor General. Captain John Joseph Losh..... Second Assistant Military Auditor General. PAYMASTERS. Major Thomas Bowes Forster, Presidency. Captain James Alexander... Mysore. Captain George Henry Harper.. ..Hyderabad Subsidiary Porce. Captain George Elliot... Ceded Districts. Captain William Pitt Macdonald. . Trichinopoly. Captain Richard Hall.. Naypore Subsidiary Force, Captain John Sheil.. Vellore. Captain Peter Steinson... .Vizagapatam. DEPUTY PAYMASTERS. Captain Herbert Beaver.. Tenasserim Coast-Absent on other duty. Captaiu John Maxwell Charteris.. Malabar and Canara-Absent on leare. Captain R. R. Gillespie... .Poonamallee. Captain Peter Pope.. Masulipatam-Absent on other duty. Lieut. Ralph Wm. Ily. Leycester. Tenasserim Coast-(Acting.) Captain Wm. Somerville Mitchell. .Masulipatan-- Acting.) Captain Henry Power...i Malabar and Canara-( Acling.) 224 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FIRST REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. SHOLAPOEE._SERINGAPATAM.'-'AVA' Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. 29 Apr. 28 May 29 Apr. 1837 1790 Col. Sir D. Foulis, K.C.E., | July 1830 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1804 Lieut.-Col. R. James, 25 July SS 27 Oct. 1834 23 Major, T. A. A Munsey, 40 Eur, 12th March 1841, 24 Capts. J. W. Strettell, p. h. 24 Feb. 36 25 1. M. MacDonald, 37 Eur. 1st Aug. 1840. P.T. Cherry, 31 Dec. 37 Ag. Qr. Mr. & Inter. 27 J. F. Porter, 40 Eur. S.C. Feb. 4, 1840. R. H. C. Mowbray, 23 May 40 Eur. S.C. Feb.19.1811. 27 Licuts. J. S. Freshfield, 8 Jan, 35 Eur. 26th Feb. 1839, 29 E. E Miller, p. h. !4 Feb. 35 Sub-Asst. Comy. GL. 3+ J. Cameron, 24 Do. 36 35 H. Hall, p. h. 28 May 37 Adjutant. R. W. Raikes, 20 June 37 C. Campbell, 31 Dec. 37 37 M. H 0. Smith, 40 The Hon. D. Kennedy, 23 May 40, 37 Cornets G. J. B. Tucker, 2 Feb. 38 5 Oct. 1837 40 R. Stone, 16 Dec. 40115 June 40 411 F. T. Steward, 25 Mar 4122 Dec. 41 W. Supte, 18 Aug. 41 11 June 41 Qr. Mr. & Inter. J. Colquhoun, M, D. 1 Mar. 1836 Surgeon. J. W. G. Macdonell, 20 Dec. 37 Assistant Surgeon. T. Hagger, 29 Sep. 32 Veterinary Surg., N. S. Wales, C. S. J. Long, 4 Aug. 38/ 9 Feb. 1836 Riding Muster. 29 Apr. 40 SECOND REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. JAULNAI,- SERINGAPATAM.' 24 1837 1795 * Col. Sir J. Russel, K.C.B. 16 Mar. 1835 M.G.10 Jan, Europe. 1810 Lieut.-Col. J. Smith, 8 Oct. 40 30 Sep. 1840 19 Major H. Taylor, 14 Jan. Acig Qt. Mr. Jaulnah. 19 Capt. H. Inglis, 18 Mar. 33 Under the orders of the Resdt, at Hyd 20 R. Garstin, p. h. 4 May 3613 Feb. 1830 Cape & News Wales, SC, 15th June 1841. 21 W, T. Boddam, 5 May 3927 Apr. 37/Supedg. the repairs Mooghly Ghaut. 32 S. F. Mackenzie, 30 Sep. 40 2 May 38 Eur, 24th Aug, 1838. W. S. Ommanney, 14 Jan. 41 6 May 401 Sea S.C. Aug. 21, 1841 25 Lieut, W. R. Strange, 30 July 27 C 8 Jan. 41 Under the orders of the Resdt, at Hyd. 25 R. Taylor, 24 Nov. 27 C 8 Do. 41 25 G. R. Edwards, p. h. 12 May 29 C8 Do. 28 R. M. North 20 Mar. 34 2& F. J. Carruthers, 4 May 361 G. W. Russel, 5 May 39 Adjutant. J. E. Nonckton, 30 Sep. 40 35 W.C. R. Macdonald, p. h.14 Jan. Qr. Mr. & Inter. 40 Corriet F.T.L.G. Russeli, 16 Dec. 401 4 Mar. 1840 41 R. G. Jones, 25 Mar, 411 2 Jan. 41 The Hon. W. Arbuthnott, 19 May 41|27 Feb. Staff J.G. Coleman, M. D. 22 June 33 Surgeon. T.C. Jerdon, | Mar. 37 Assist, Surgeon, W. H. Wormsley, 28 Aug. 41 Veterinary Surgeon. J. Barker, 19 Oct, 1838'Riding Master. 41 32 VOL II.] 225 ARMY LIST. THIRD REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. SERINGAPATAM'-' MAHID PORE. [Bangalore. Names. Appt. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. . 10 Aug . 1796 Col.* Sir J.L. Lushington, 1837 G. C. B. 31 Dec. 1829 M.G. 10 Jan.'Europe. 1838 1836. 1802 Lt. Cols. P. Cameron, .. 10 Mar 38 M.G 28Jud. Eur. $. C. 10th June 12 Geo. Sandys, 12 Aug. 4113 May 1837 10 M jor S. Bullock, p. h. 28 June 38 Eur. S.C. Ist Feb.1859. 10 Cupts. Wm. Hyslop, 2 Aug. 28 20 Sep. 26 20 Geo. B. Arbuthnot, 31 May S3 Comg. Rt.llon Govr.'s Body Guard. 20 Wm. D. Harrington, 25 Mar 3713 Feb. 36 22 Chas. B. Lindsay, 31 Oct. 47 Eur.S.C.Dec 14, 1839. 25 H. S. Waters, 28 Junie 38 Ag. Qr. Mr. Inter. 25 Lieuls. Ewd, J. Hall, p.h 19 May 32 C8 Jan. 41 Eur. S.C 220 Jan 1841 27 L. Macqueen, 18 Oct. 32 Dy. Judge Advocate General. 30 A. J. Kelso, 10 Noy. SS 31 1 ke Hon. H. Arbuthnot, 24 Feb. 35 SS H. F. Siddons, 5 Jan. 36 Adjutant. S3 J. A. Corsar, 25 Mar. S7 S5 J. G. S. Cadell, 31 Oct. 37 Eur. S.C. 4th Jan 1849. 36 Thos. W. Clagett, 28 June 33 36 Corneis H. F. Phillips, 36 8 Mar. 36 37 J. F. Johnstone, 6 July 37 28 Feb. 37 37 Alex, R. Fraser, 2 Feb. 38 5 Oct. 37 41 A. H. Hope, 10 Apr. 412 Jan. 41 Sloff Wm. Butler, 19 Apr. 39 Surgeon. J. W. Mudge, M, D. 21 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. E. Vincent, . - 29 Sep. 29 Veterinary Surgeon. P. C. R. Laurent, .27 do. 36 Riding Master, • Facings, Pale Yellow-Lace, Silrer. FOURTH REGINENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. • SERINGAVATAM'-- Assaye’- MAHID PORE'. [Secunderabad. 1837 1783 Col. * Sir J. Doreton, G.C.B. 10 Nov. 1825 L. G, 10 Jan. 1809 Lt. C:6. J. Morison, p.h.- - 21 Nov. 39 4 May 1836 Fur. 20th Feb. 1838. 19 Major H. Coningham, 19 Mar. 39 20 Capis. T. Anderson, 2 Jan. SS Acting A djutant. 20 A. Borrodaile, 20 Feb. 33 23 F. Forbes, -12 Mar. 33 Eur. S. C. 10th Nov, 1840, 24 J. T. Brett, 12 Apr. S1 25 B. S, Sullivan, 19 Mar. 39 Under thie orders of the Resdt, at Hyd. 26 Lieuls. S. W. Hennah, 7 Jan. 39 Eur. S.C. Feb. 9, 1841. 26 F.GJ. Lascelles, p.ho- - 30 do. 34 Qr. Mr. and Inter. 28 W. L. Walker, 12 Apr. 34 Eur.S.C. Mar. 8,1859. 31 A. Tottenham, 4 July 37 36 S. T. Watson, 6 Aug. 38 Marlras S.C. 37 D. J. T. King, 19 Mar. S9 37 G. Lennox, 14 May 99 Eur.S.C.Sep. 8, 1880. S9 A. G. Garland, 12 July 401 39 Cornets T. H, Evans, 24 Dec. 39 5 Aug. 39 41 H. Acton, 2 Mar. 41 4 Dec. 40 E J. Ferrers, 17 July 41 % May 41 Staff F. G. J. Lascelles, 2 June 40 Adjutant. Q. Jamieson, M.D. 8 July 401 Surgeon E. S. Tribe, 1 Dec. A ssist. Surgeon. H. Hooper, 29 Sep. 32 Veteriuary Surgeon. G. Proudfoot - 27 do 36) 'Riding Xiaster. Facixgs, Doop Pello!o-LACE, Siircr. PART II. VOL. II. E E 1 40 226 MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. (PART 11. FIFTH REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. • Assaye.' (Bellary Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. 3 Aug. 11 Sep. 1837 1797 * Col. Sir J. Doveton, K.C.B.16 Mar. 1835 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. (George. 1806 Lt. Col. F. L. Doveton, 30 Mar. 39 31 May 1833 Towu Major, Fort St. 07 Major D. A. Fenning, 4028 June 38 18 Capis. A. Grant, 29 Oct. 33 20 C. H. Greine, p.h. 34 20 A. M'Leod, 2 May S5 Mily. Secretary to the Commr. in Mysore. 21 G. Elliot, 18 Nov, 36 Pay Master, Ceded Districts. 25 H. Fraser, 3 Aug. 40 25 Lieuts. L. Moore, p.h. 29 Oct. SOC 8 Jan. 41 25 G. B. B, Groube, p.h. 2 May 32 C 8 do. 41 Qr. Mr, and Inter. 26 N. Wroughton, 29 Oct. 33 31 F. Studdy, 2 May 35 34 G. L. H. Gall, 18 Nov. 36 Adjutant. S5 A. R. Thornhill, p. h. - - 25 Oct. 37 Adjt. Body Guard Extra Aid-de-Camp to the Rt. Hon, the Governor. 36 L. Barrow, 24 Nov. 39 S7 W. E. Remington, 40 39 Cornels G. Forbes, 3 July 39 24 Jan. 39 99 G. R. Phillips, 9 Oct. 3918 June 39 41 C. H, Abdy, 25 Mar. 41 22 Dec. 40 Staff G. B. B. Groube, 16 June J. B Preston, 29 July 37 Surg. Ceylon on leave. C.C. Linton, 11 Nov. 36 Assist. Surgeon. G. Chester, 11 June 38 Veterinary Surgeon. A. Davidson, 20 do. 4019 July 36 Riding Master. FACINGS, Pole Yellow-LACE, Silrer, 3 Aug. O SIXTH REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY, • NAGPORE,' (Kamplee. 1838 1795 * Col, W. Dickson, C. B. - 1 July 1830 M.G. 28 June Europe. 1812 Li. Col. D. Macleod, 21 Nov. 39 19 Mar. 1839 19 Major M. McNeill, 13 May 37 Eur. fur. Oct. 2, 1840. 19 Capts. W. E. Litchfield, 6 Oct, 28 20 3. Byng, 19 do. 31 20 J. R. Brown, 11 May 33 22 W.P. Deas, 12 Oct. S3 Depy. Assist. Adjt. Genl. Mysore Div. 25 J. Whistler, 5 Nov. 37 Act. Qr. Mr. & loter. 25 Lieuts. C. P. Wilder, 19 Oct. 31 C 8 Jan. 411 28 H. R. C. King, 17 June 32 Eur.fur. Feb. 4, 1840. 29 M. S. Ottley, p. h. --11 May 33 Eur. S.C.June 5, 1840 27 W. G. Woods, p. h. 30 Jan, 34 Acig. Assist. Adjt. Genl. of the Army.. 30 S. V. Pitcher, p.h. 5 Apr. 37 Adjutant. 32 W. Vine, 5 Nov. 37 35 W.N. Mills, 23 June 38 38 J. M. Macgregor, 14 July S8 1 Mar. 38 38 Cornets H. O. Mayne, :4 July 38 11 Mar, 38 38 D. Hay, 2 Mar. 41 20 Oct, 40 E. G. Wood, 19 May 41 8 Mar. 41 Staff E. Finnerty, M. D.- . 25 Jan. 37 Surgeon. C. G. E. Ford, 39 Assist, Surgeon. E. C. Collins, 11 Nov. Veterinary Surgeon. C. Black, 9 Feb. 36 'Riding Master. FACINGS, Orange--LACAR, Silver. 35 Aug 311 VOL. 11.) 227 ARMY LIST SEVENTH REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. Assam. [ Arcot. Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army Remarks. 1838 1797 Col. *J, Collette, 21 Nov. 1839 M.G. 28 Junt Europe. 1810 Lt. Col.T. K. Limond, 19 Aug. 40 28 June 38 Eur. 25th Aug. 1837. 18 Maj, A.W. Lawrence, P.H.26 Mar. 40 19 Capts. B.W.Cumberlege, - 27 Oct. 34 20 R. H, Richardson, 1 July S813 Feb. 36 Ag. Dy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Geni. Mysore Dive 23 H, B. Blogg, 2 Apr. 39! Eur. 10th Jan. 1840. 31 F. Hughes, .-117 Aug. 39 Eur. S. C. 29th Sept. 1840. 33 J. S. Cotton, 16 Mar. 40 34 Lieut: A. Strange, 10 May S7 35 R. Hunter, 11 June 38 Adjt. Ag. A. D. C. to Sir R. H. Dick C. W. Gordon, 1 July 38 Eur. S. C. 19th Feb. 1841 A. J. Curiis, 5 Mar. 39 Cantoant. Adjt. Arcot. 37 J, A. Campbell, 2 Apr. S9 Eur. S.C. 28 Jan. 1840. 35 The Hon. P.T. Pellew, P.H 25 June 39 Qr. Mr. & Inter. 39 R. McDowall, 17 Aug. 39 Eur. S.C. 20 Apr. 1841. | M. W. Isacke, 16 Mar. 40 Cornets A. S. Bruere, 25 Sept. 39 14 May 39 W. P. Cust, 9023 Dec. 39 0. Pelly, 6 do. 40 6 Jan. 40 41 C. C. Hook, 17 July 4110 May 41 Staf D. Falconer, 1 Mar. Surgeon. H. Stenbrough, u Jan. 41 Assistant Surgeon, J. Western, 25 May 371 |Veterinary Surgeon. 1 J. Hopson, ..120 June 40121 Mar. 361 Riding Master. • Facings, Buff-LACE, Silrer. 40 6 Apr. 36 18 Apr. EIGHTH REGIMENT OF LIGHT CAVALRY. MAHIDPORE.' [Trichinopoly. 1782 Col.* C. Rumley, .-10 Mar. 20 L.G.27 May 25 Europe, 180 Lt. Col. M, Riddell, 12 Aug. 41C.18 June 31 Brigadier Comg. Hy. 10 Maj. Francis Straton, 28 June 38 [Sub Force. 19 Capts. J. C. Wallace, 29 Sept. 28 20 J. R. Robertson, 29 Mar. 31 24 G. Dunsmure, - 29 Oct. 33 25 J. K. Macdonald, - 28 June 38 Cape and Australia, S. C. 2d May 1841. E. Down, 41 8 Jan. 41 Eur. 13th Dec, 1839, 26 Lieuls. J. Whitlock, 6 Oct. 27 21 J. Alexander, 15 July 29 C, 27 Apr. 37 Paymaster Bangalore. 30 J. Fowler, 20 Jan. 35 G, Cumine 3 May 36 34 F, H, Scolt, p. h. 2 Jan, 38 Qr. Mr. and Inter. 33 T. Newbery, 28 June 38 Adjutant. 36 H. H, Freeling, 11 July SO R. J. Pollock, 18 Apr. 41 38 Cornets G. K. Newbery 4 Sept. 38 28 Apr. 38 39 J. E. Mayne 39 24 Jan. 39 Eur. S. C. 21st July 40 C. H. Middleton, 29 June 40 6 do 40 [1840. J.G. Cookson, 19 July 41 2 Apr. Staff R. Oliphant, 19 Apr. 40 Surgeon. C. D. Currie, M. D. 30 Jan. Assistant Surgeon. C. Jackson, 6 Mar. Veterinary Surgeon, J. Orme, 22 do. 36 Riding Master • FACINGS, Deep Yellow-LACE, Silver, 31 35 10 Aug. 228 (PART 11 MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THE CORPS OF ARTILLERY. 6 6 Horse ARTILLERY.-Bangalore.' Java'—' Mahidpore'-'Nagpore.' First BATTA- LION.-Secunderabad. Seringapatam'—'Assaya'— Seetabuldee'—' Nagpore'- • Corygaum'—'Ava.' SECOND BATTALION.- Mount. Seringapatam'-' - Egypt - Assaye'_' Mahidporc'—' Nagpore'-—' Ara.' THIRD BATTALION.-Kamplee, FOURTH BATTALION OR GOLUNDAUZE.-Mount. 'Ara.' Appe. Names. In the Regt. In the Army .611 or Bat Remarks. 133 1779 * Cols. R. Bell, 4 Apr, 1804 G. 10 Jan. 4 Europe, 80' T. Clarke, 25 July LG27 May 2 1 Europe. 87 "Sir J. Sinclair, Bl. 1 May 24 MG22 July 31 3 Europe. 98 *E. M. G. Showers, 2 Jan. 3: VG28June 38 H A Comg Southern Div. of the Army. 98/W. .M. Burton, 26 Feb. 41:8 June 31 A Europe. 99 W. Morison, c. B. 14 Aug. 4 18 do. 31 2 Europe, 1804 L.. Cols W. Cullen, - 29 Jan. 28 C 22 Jan. 34 H A Resdt. Travancore and Cochin. 06 J. Ketchen, 1 Sep. 31 2 Brig. Comdt. of Arty. 08 F. Dervill, 20 Mar. 39 4 Director of Artillery Depot of instruction. 10 P. Montgomerie, C. B 20 Dec. 39 3 Principal Comy. of Ord.-Comg Det. of Arty. on service in China-Sea S.C. 14th Aug. 1941. 10G, Conran, - 26 Feb. 40 HA 10 F. Bond, - 14 Aug. 40 1 Ag. Principal Comy. of Ordnance-Sole Prize Agent Zora- pore Prize Money. 10 viaj.rs J, M. Ley, 2 Mar. 39 28 June 38 A A Eur, fur. sd Jan.1810. IS F. F. Whinyates, 4 Oct. 39 29 do. SXH A Do, do. 22d Dec. 1840. 13.C, Hosmer, 20 Deo. 39 28 do. 38 4 13 F. Blundell, -- 31. do. 39:23 do. 38 2 IS J. Wynch, 26 Feb. 40:8 do. S8 3 Do do. 22d Dec. 1840. 13. C. Taylor, 401 1 Superintendent Gun Powder Manufac- tory.-Sea, S. C. 1st Nov. 1839. 14 Capls, A. Shirreff 27 Eur. S. C, 15th Apr. 1841. 15 R. S. Yolland, 12 June HA Eur. S. C. 28th Aug. 1840. 15 P. Hamond, - 17 July 27 2 Comy. of Ord. Hyd. Sub-Force. 16 A. G. Hyslop, 6 Aug 27 HA Comy. of Ord. Nag- pore Sub-Force H, S. Foord, 29 Jan. 28 4 Comy, of Ordnance Masulipatam. 19 G, Alcock, 29 HA 21 E. Am sink, p. h. 5 Dec. 29 HA G. Midillecoat, 29 May 3 G. W. Onslow, 15 Aug 29 1 Under the orders of the Resdt. Hyd. P.J. Begbie, 2 Jan. S3 3 Comy Ord. Tri- chinopoly. T. E. Gells, 1 May 33 4 Comy, of Ord Ban- galore. (1810. C. U. Best 28 do. SÅ 2 Eur, S. C. Oxth Jan. 22 J. T, Baldwin, 22 Dec. .... 14 Aug. 8 May .... .... 5 July 93 .... 1 1 VOL. 11.) 229 ARMY LIST. Names. Appi. In the Regt. In the Army. titig or Bat Remarks. 12 Apr. 99 99 28 Sept. 9) 18221. Back, 5 Aug. 1855 T, Ditmas, 22 June S6 T. H. Humffreys 38 u B Eur. S.C. 30 Apr,1839 23 J. W. Croggan, p.h.--10 Sept. SS 8 NH. Fishe, 5 Oct. 38 HA S. S. Trevor. ..15 do. 38 2 Depy. Comp. of Ord. Tenasserim Coast. W. H. Miller 27 Nov, 38 4 Depy. Comy, of Ord. Cannanore. J. T. Ashton, 2 Mar. 39 18 Dec. 38 AA T, K, Whistler, 20 do. 39 7 Feb. 39 H A Depy. Judge Adv. General. G. Hall, 4 Oct. 39 17 June 89 A A P. Anstruther, 10 Nov. 3917 do. 39 2 R. C. Moore, p.h. 20 Dec. 39 17 do. S9 F. Burgoyne, SI do. S917 do. 39 1 G. W. Y. Simpson, - 26 Feb. 40 17 do, 39 S C. W. Rolland, 14 Sug: 4017 do. 39 2 r. Lavie, 6 Jan. 4113 Oct. 39 1 Deputy Seey. Milita- ry Board. 24 J. C. McNair, - - 26 July 4116 Dec. 39 4 Eur. S. C. 31 st Aug. 1841 25 1st Lieut. G. Briggs - 17 Dec. 24 C 16 Dec. 30 A A 1. Maitand, .-17 do 24 C 16 do 30 3 Supt. Gun Carriage Manufactory. M. Watts, - - 23 May 25 C 16 do 30 HA A. J. Begbie, 10 June 25C 16 do SO 4 W. Ward, ..12 Nov. 25 C 16 June 40 3 Under the orders of the Resdt, at Hyd. A. F. Oakes, 26 C 16 do 40 H Asst. Adjt. General of Artillery.ph G. Balfour, p.h.p. 12 June 27 C 16 Dec. 401 $ Staff Officer to the Detacht, of Madras Troops on Service in China. H. Montgomery, 27 do 27 C 16 do 40 3 11h Assistant to the Comr. in Mysore. W. K. Loyd 6 Aug. 27 C 16 do 40 3 Under the orders of the Resdt. at Hyd. E. Brice, 25 Feb. 28 C. 16 June 41AA E. S. G. Showers, 21 Dec. 28. C. 16 do. HA Aide de-Camp to Ma. jor Genl. E. M. G. Showers-Cape and N. S. Wales, S. C. C. Lancaster, 14 Mar. 29 C. 16 do. HA [1st Jan. 1841. 1. P. Beresford, 19 Apr. 29 C. 16 do. HA Eur. S. c. 18th Sept. 6. Rowlandson, p. h- 6 do. 31 C. 16 do. 2 (1838. W, A. Orr, 1 Sept. 31 2 Aide-de-Camp to the Right Hon'ble the Governor. 261. E. Mawdesley, 12 do, 31 HA C. J. Cook, p. h. 14 do. 31 HA Eur, S. C. 20th Nov, 1838. W. C. Gordon, 17 Nov 1 Dy. Asst. Comy. Genl. T, A. Chas. Godfrey 5 Dec. 1 1 Staff Officer to the Artillery at Penang, Malacca and Sin- gapore. [1840. 27 G, S Cotter, 23 May 32 2 Ear, S. C. 13th Nov. 1. Moore, 29 do. 32 I Eur. S, C, 20th Mar. 1840. G. M. Gumm, 15 Aug 32 4 B. W. Black, 2 Jan. 331 Hal 3 230 [PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army Brig. or Bal. Remarks, 1827 Wm. K. Worster, 1 May 1833 H. H. Bell, H. Congreve, J. Patrickson, 29 July 1 Apr. S3 34 28 May 34 1 Supt. Govt. Roads and Barrack Master at Fort St. George. Eur. S, C. 26th April 1 839. 1 Eur. S. C. 30th April 1839. 3 HA | Eur, S. C. 5th Feb. 1959. H A Doing duty with 20 Bt, Arty., Foreign Service, China. A, C. Pears, p. h. 28 J. K. B. Timins, F. B. Ashley, 5 Aug. 2 Feb. 15 do. 35 36 36 W. M. Gabbett, 4 June 36 9 37 38 4 2 Eur. S. C. 7th July 1840. 2 Comy. of Ord. For. 1 (Service China. HA 'H. Lawford, 22 do. J. Babington, 2 Sept. G. Dancer, 12 Apr, J. L. Barrow, 10 Sept. 29 J. A. Gunthorpe, p. h 5 Oct. G, P. Eaton, p. h. 5 do. J. D. Mein, 15 do. J. H. Bourdieu, 7 Nov. R. Kinkead, 22 Jan, J. G. Balmain, h. p. 2Mar. G. Selby, 8 Aug. H.T.M.Berdmore.p.h | 4 Oct. W. H. Grubb, O Nov. J. Caulfield, 20 Dec. 30 F. C. Vardon 26 Feb. » W. B. Stevens, p. h. 6 Mar. J. W. Goad, p.h.p.m 22 May, A. W. Macintire, 8 June 31 T. H. Campbell, A. Foulis, 6 Jan. » R. R. Little, 26 July 32 JD Scott, 17 Aug. 1 HC Wade, 17 do 34 C H Hutchinson, 7 do 37 37 37 37 37 39 S9 32 33 39 39 40 401 40 40 40 41 HA HA | HA 2 S 3 2 Eur. S.C. 3d Dec. 1839 4 (1839. 2 Eur, S. C. 97th Aug. HA % 4 Aug. 41 HA (1841. 4 Eur. S. C. 1st Jan. 4 3 3 Tempy, employed ou Survey, under the Commissioner, Te. nasserim Provinces. HA H A Doing duy 21 Bat. For. Serv., China. 35 F G Nuthall, » A T Cadell 17 do 7 do 41 41 41 41 3 39 B Macpherson, 7 do WCL Baker, 7 do 37 R C Buckle 17 do 392d Lieuts. A V Fall: 11 June F W Bond, Il do CA Purvis, Il do 40 H T Molesworth 10 Dec GS Elliott 0 do R G H Grant 1 June AN Scott, 11 do WCF Gosling, Il do ET Pasken, 11 do 41 CT Collingwood, 11 Dec, CD Waddell, !1 do A Stewart, 11 do TB Cox, I do 3911 June 1839 59 11 do 4 8911 do 39 1 3910 Dec. 39 2 3910 do 39 H A 4011 June 40 HA 4011 do 40 4 40111 do 40 | Penang 401 do 40 4011 Dec. 40 91 do 40 4110 do 40 S 40il do 40 3 (June 1811. on leare 25th VOL. 11.] 231 ARMY LIST. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Troop Brig or Bat. Remarks. :: 38 ::::: Staff, A. F. Oakes, 5 Feb. 1811 A sst. Adjt. Gen. ofArty F, Derville, ... Director of the Arty. Depôt of lostruction. Adjis. & Qrt.-Masters. J. A. Gunthrope, 2 Jan. 1 A, C. Pears, 9 Apr. 39 3 G. Rowlandson, 5 May 40 2 G. Briggs, 24 Aug 41 HA Adjulants, G. Balfour, - 7 May 33 4 On Foreign Serv.China Wm. B, Stevens, 4 Acting. B. W. Black, AH A Sholapore. BHA Kaintee. C AA Bangalore. C. Lancaster, 22 Jan. 39 DHA Jaulnah. E. Brice, 29 Mar. 38 E H A Bangalore. FHA Secunderabad. Qr. Mr. & Interp. Wm. B. Stevens, 5 May 40 4 Surgeons, W, K. Hay, - 20 Dec. 37 HA J. Ricks, M.D., | Feb. 36 1 J. White, 1 Mar. 37 4 Supg. Sg. N.S. Force. J. P. Grant, M.D., 19 ditto 37 2 On Foreign Serv.China G. B. Macdonell, 9 Feb. 39 3 Europe. W. R. Smyth, A. B., 31 Mar. 40 2 Assl. Surgs., J. Drever, 30 May 38 A H A Sholapore. J. Arthur, M.D., 12 Apr. 41 BHA Kamlee, J. E. Porteous, 8 Apr, S7 CHA Bangalore. A. Goodall, 28 Oct. 33 D HA Jaulnah, G. Morrogh, M.D., 21 Feb. 35 E H A Bangalore. S. Cox, 25 May 36 FHA Secunderabad, Wm. B. Thomson, 1 Mar. 37 4 J. Aoderson, M.D., 27 Oct, 37 S H. E. Hadin, 22 Nov. 39 3 H. W. Porteous, 27 do. 39 2 1, Macfarlane, M.D., 31 July 40 1 J. Middlemass, 1 Aug. 40 With the Detachment on Service in China. A. Blacklock, 13 Feb. 41 C. Wm. Pickering 24 July 41 1 Vety Surgeons, W. H. Wormsley, 30 Jan, 40 CHA T. Aston, 26 June 37 A HA Sholapore. Rdg. Mr. S. Burns, 9 Feb. 36 H A Bangalore. FACINGS, Red-Lace, Gold. CORPS OF ENGINEERS. HEAD QUARTERS, Fort St. George, * SERINGAPATAN.'-' Java.'-'AVA.' Raised in 1770. ::::: Appt, NAMEs. lo the Regt. In the Army. REMARKS. 1788 Cols.-- Sir J. L. Cald- well, ķ.C B. 1808 W. Monteith, K.L.S. 1 May 1824 13 do. 39 Lieut.-Cols.-D. Sim. 09 MG10Jan. 37 Europe. 18 June 31 Chief Engineer and Comg. Troops Gar. rison of Fort St. George. Stipy. Member of the Mily. Board & Mem. ber of the Board of Revenue in the Dept. of Public Works. poh, 2 Sept. 36 232 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. Appt. Names. In the Regl. In the Army. Remarks. 13 May 1839 . 1811 Lt-Col. A. Ross, 15 Majors J. J. Under. wood, 17 Dec. 38 H. C. Cotton, 13 May 39 Captains A. Lawe, 17 G, A. Underwood, 7 June 4 Nov. 25 26 19 A. T. Cotton, 5 June 29 Supg. Engineer H.S.P. 28 June 1838 Supg. Engineer Presi. dency. 28 do. 38 Civil Engineer 8th Di. vision and Acig. ia the 5th Division. M 28 June 38 Civil Eng. 7th Div, Secretary to the Rere. nue Board in the Depart, of Public Works. CivilEngineer 5th Div, N. S. Wales and Van Diemen's Land, S.C.20th April 1841. Eur.S.C.22d Jan 1841. Supg. Engineer My. sore Div, & Supt. of the Maramut Dept. in Mysore. Mint Masier. Eur.fur. 28th Feb, 40, Comg. Sap. & Miners, on Foreign Service China. Civil Engineerist Div. Eur. fur. 18th Feb. 40. 22 23 C. E. Faber, C. J. Green, 29 Dec. 30 4 March 34 25 J, T. Smith, W. H. Alkinson, T. T. Pears, 5 do. 2 Sept. 15 do. 35 36 38 23 38 39 A. De Butts, 17 Dec. E. Buckle, 13 May 1st Lieuts. E. Law. ford, 17 Dec. S. Best, 17 do. R. Henderson, p. h. 17 do. 25 25 25 F. C. Cotton, 17 do. 25 >> S. Vardon, J. H. Bell, W. I. Birdwood, 4 Nov, 25 Dec. 5 June 26 28 29 23 C 16 Dec. 40 Civil Engineer Sd Dir. C16 do. 40 Civil Eng. 2d Div. C 16 do. 40 Civil Engineer 6th Di. vision—with Saps. & Miners, in Scinde. C 16 do. 40 18t Asst. Civil Eng. 5th Div. - doing duty with Saps. & Miners, on Foreign Service China. C 16 June 41 ivil Eng. 4th Dir. C 16 do. 41 Eur, S.C. 17th Jan, 40. C 16 do. 41 ist Asst, to the Civil Eng. 4th Dis-Saps. & Miners, on For. Service, China, Eur. fur, 24th Dec. 39. Eur. SC. 28th Dec, 38. 1st Asst. Civil Engr. 8th Division--Acig. Civil Engr. 6th Dir. Eur.S.C.8th May 1840. Under the orders of the TravancoreGort. and Ag. Civil Eng. 8th Division. Adjutant of Engrs.-- 26 F. Ditmas, H. A. Lake, J.C. Shawe, - 23 July 29 4 March 32 5 do. 35 2 28 T. Smythe, W. H. Horsley, 2 Oct. 3 Aug. 36 38 1830 J. W. Rundall, 15 Sept. 38 31 S. O, E. Ludlow, 15 May 39 Doing duty Det. Sap. & Min. on For. Service, China. Supt. Magnetical Ob. servatory, Madras. Supg. Engineer N. S. Force, —with Saprs. & Miners, in Scinde. C. A. Orr, 17 June 39 VOL. II.) 233 ARMY LIST. Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. 2 Aug. 22 35 1832 C. M. Elliot, "I Sept. 1841 Supt. Magnetical Ob- servatory, Singapore. 2d Lieuts.-J. Ouchter- lony, p. t. 9 Sept. 37 6 Nov. 32 Ist Asst. Civil Engr. Sd Div.-with Saps. and Miners China, 33 J. W. Tombs 38 6 do. 2d Asst. Civil Engr. 4th Div.-Simla on leave 24th Dec, 1840, J. G. Johnston, 15 Sept. 6 do. Ist Asst, to the Civil Engr. 6th Div.-do. ing duty with Sap- pers & Miners China. R, F. G. Fast, 17 Dec. 6 do. Acting Civil Eugr. 7th Division. 35 G. C. Collyer, 13 May 39 13 Dec. S3 Eur. S, C. 30th Nov. 1838. C. C. Johnston, 17 June 13 June 34 Ist Asst, to the Civil Engr. 2nd Division --on duty at Kampte. 37 P. M. Francis, 29 July 40 11 Dec. 35 Ist Asst io the Civil Engineer 7th Div. 40 A. J. M. Boileau, 11 Sept. 41 I do. 38 Sappers and Miners in Scinde. 41 *H. W. Hitchins, Sappers and Miners. Staff.-J.W. Randall, 31 Dec. : 39 Adjutant. CIVIL DEPARTMENT. First Division.—Ganjam-Rajahmundry-Vizagapatam. Second Division - Masuli. patam-Guptoor-Nellore. Third Division. - Bellary-Guddapah. Pourth Divi- sion.-North Arcot--Chingleput-South Arcot. Fifin Division.- Tanjore-Trichi- dopoly. Sixth Division.-Salem-Coimbatore. Seventh Division. - Malabar and Kanara. Eighth Division.- Madura-Tinnevelly. Captain Joha Carne Boulderson, 35th Regt. N. 1.- Acting Assist, to the Supg. Engineer-Presidency Division. FACINGS, Purple Velvet.-Lace, Gold. • Supernunerary PART II, VOL. II. 234 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT, FIRST MADRAS EUROPEAN REGIMENT. SECUNDERABAD. On the Colours and Appointments. The Royal Tiger' with the Motto • SPECTAMUR AGENDO,' · Arcot'—' Plassey'— Condore' — Wandewash. – Sholingur'— Nundy Droog'- Amboyna'—Ternate'- Banda'—*Pondicherry'— Mahidpore' – Ava.' 6 Names. | Wing. In the Regl 12 the Army. Remarks. >> 95 -L 22 Sep. L 29 Sep. 8 May 1838 1798 Cols. F. W. Wilson, C. B.R 17 Feb. 1836 M.G. 28 June Europe, 99 J. Wabab, c. B. L 25 do. 39 18 June 1891 1806 Lt.-Cols. W.J. Bradford-L 27 Jan. 40 24 Oct, 37 Eur. fur. 7th Aug. 1836. 16 J. Bell, p. h. R 8 Aug. 4015 Feb. 40 19 Majors J. Kerr, L 6 Sep. 36 J. A. Howden R 4 Jan. 39 Ens. fur. 15th June 20 Capts. C. Butler R 3 Mar. 30 1841. P. Chambers R! 6 June 31 R. D. Weir R 27 Mar. 32 T. A. Duke L 9 Feb. 34 Comg. Escort Nag- pore Residency & Supt. of Bazars. W. Hill 55 Dy. Judge Adv. Gl. 21 J. C. Hawes, p.h. L 25 Jan. 36 25 T.J. Ryves 37 21 W. J. Manning R 4 Jan. 39j27 Apr. 37 25 A. Barker L 30 July 39 [1841. T. H. Hull R16 Dec, 39 Eur. fur. 9th Feb. [Ceded Dist. 26 Lieuts. J. G. Neil R 7 Nov, 28 Dep. Asst. Adjt. Gl. T. F. Nicolay, ph. R6 June 31 Eur.fur.July21 1840 S. G. C. Renaud, p.h.-- R 27 Mar. 32 (derabad. 28 J. N. Warrington, p.h. - R 2 Feb. S Post Master Seoun- 27 J. L. Stephenson L 35 28 H. Houghton -L19 June 35 Eur. fur. 16th Oct. 35 A. Waiker --'L 125 Jan. 36 1840. 36 M. Galwey (1898. 39 J. M. Rees. Ru June 37 Eur, S. C. 230 Nor. [1837. 36 A. A. Geils R 30 Dec. S7 Eur, S. C. 21st Feb. W. R. Browne 4 Jan. 39 J. F. Fotheringham 29 do. 38 C. W. Tulloch 30 July 39 37 CJ. Allardyce 15 Feb. 40 39 W. G. Lowe 3 Oct. 40 F. F. C. Dickson 3 do. W. H. West 21 July 41 A. J, Cattley 10 Sep. 41 Ensigns H. F. H. Jourdan 5 Dec. 39 16 Aug 39 40 A J. de H. Harris 22 July 40 10 Dec. 39 A. Ward 22 do, 3 Jan, J. Christie 27 Oct. 4011 Dec. S9 D. Brown 28 Dec. 40 7 Aug. 40 S, Waller 41 20 do. 41 T. Raikes 41 25 Dec. 40 G. M. Carter 29 July 41 25 do. Staff J. L. Stephenson L 7 Oct. 36 Adjutant. S. G. C. Renaud R21 Aug 40 'Qr. Mr, and Inter. R. Sladen -L23 Jan. S3 Surg. SupgSurg Ma. labar and Canara. S. Stokes R 22 Sep. 36 Surgeon, Sea $. C. J. B. Stevens L 19 Feb. 401 Assistant Surgeon. FACING , Whic-Lack Gold. L 6 Sep. 36 99 % Apr. 18 May VOL. 11.) 235 ARMY LIST SECOND EUROPEAN LIGHT INFANTRY, BANGALORE. . Cede nullis.' Raised 8th October 1839. Names. Appt. In the Regt. In the Army Remarks, 4 Aug, 16 Aug. À Aug. 1793 Col. * Sir Hopetoun Strat- 1830 ford Scott, K, C B. - 15 Oct. 1839 M. G. 22 July Europe. 1816 Lieut. Cols, Archibald Brown 1 Dyce 15 Oct. 39 31 Var. 36 Dy. Qr. Mr. Genl. of 17 Wm. John Butterworth, C.B.) 3 Sept. 41 26 Aug. 41 the Army, Secy. Genl. Prize Com- mitt-Cape, S. C. 07 John Wilson 8 Oct. 9928 June 38 [21st June 1841. 17 Patrick Thomson 40 ditto 18 Capıs. Frederick Wrighi hands 8 Oct. 39 14 Jan. 26 20 James Ricbardson. p. h. ditto 27 April 29 19 Thomas Pasly Hay ditto 5 July 29 (1840. 20 William Rawlins ditto 31 Eur, fur. 14th Feb. John Henry Cramer ditto 19 Mar. 3 Sec. Clothing Board. 19 William Brown Gilbay ditto 28 Oct. 34 John Shepherd ditto 6 April 35 Tho.GeilsEd.Gammel Kenny ditto ditto Depy. Asst. Adjt.Gl. and Dy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. Tenas. Henry Augustus Hornsby ditto ditto serim Provinces. 21 James Forbes. p. h. 40 27 ditto 37 Lieuts. Alberius Thoma: Bridge 8 Oct. 39 C.27 Apr. 37 Actg. Qr. Mr.&Inter. 18th N. I. (1838 Evelyn John Gascoigne ditto C. ditto Eur. S. C.10th Aug. 29 James Smith Du Vernet ditto C. 2 May 38 Employed in the Great Trigonome- trical Survey. 25 Alexander Wallace dito C. 8 Jan. 41 Eur. S. C. 121h Jan. 'Fidelio Robert Trewman ditto C8 do (1841. 27 Robert Dalzell Armstrong ditto 20 May 31 29 John Merritt, p. h. ditto 22 Aug SS 28 Gardiner Harrey ditto 31 do. 34 Arthur More Molypeaux ditto 16 Dec. 35 Crawford Cooke ditto 14 Feb. 36 Fras. Faithful Warden ditto 16 Jan. 37 William Pryce Devereux.p.h. ditto 27 do. Ag. Qt. Mr.37th N.I. 33 Henry Corbett Taylor ditto 26 May 39 Er.S.C.3dJune1840. 36 William Drew Maiowaring ditto 35 Frederic Nelson ditto 38 Henry Rees Owen 4 Aug. 39 Donald Tulloch 3 Oct. 40 George Ridout Pinder ditto Ens, W. Charles Callow 23 Jan. 40 27 Aug. 39 38 Charles Douglas 11 Feb. 40191 do S8 40 John Furley Croasdill 22 July 40 6 Jan, 40 Edwin Worsley 22 do 6 do Joseph John Pearce 28 do 16 Feb. Elenry Walker 14 Apr. Græme A. Fulton 28 Dec. 41 John Wood 18 May 4 2 Mar. 40 Thomas Wheatley Gibson 6 Sep 40 Staf Crawford Cook 10 July Adjutant. John Merritt Qr, Mr. & Inter. James Loraine Geddes 19 Dec. 39 Surgeon, Samuel Kent Parson 7 Dec. Asst do. doing duty with 37th N. I. Moses Rogers 8 do Assistant Surgeon. -Cape S. C. FACINGS, Paie Buy--LACE, Gold, 6 Aug. 6 Sep. 30 Aug. 28 Aug 236 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FIRST REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. (RIFLE COMPANY.)-MASULIPATAM.-SERINGAPATAM.'— SEETABULDEE.'- NAGPORE.'-'Ava.'-Raised at Tanjore in 1762. Appt. Names. In the Regi. In the Army. Remarks. COLONEL. 1838 1793 *A. Andrews, C, B. 5 Jan. 1837 M G 28 June Europe. LIEUTENANT COLONEL 1818 J. Campbell, 8 Sept. 41 23 Jan. 41 Supy. Lt. Col. to the s7th N. I. Chida. MAJOR. 19 J. D. Awdry, - 31 Oot. 401 CAPTAINS. 20J. W. Goldsworthy 15 June SSI Fort Adjt. Masuli- patam. M. W. Perreau 21 J. R. Graham 25 S. Talman J. C. Fortescue 17 Oct. 27 Mar, 4 Nov. 31 Oct. S41 35 36 40 8 Jan. > 41 Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gl. Southern Dis. LIEUTENANTS. 25 F. Gottreux, p. k. F. Davis 2 Apr. 15 June 26 J. W. C. Starkey 27 R. Hamilton 32 W.F. Eden 17 Oct. 10 Feb, 4 Nov. 36 28'C. 8 Jan, 41 Qr, Mr. and Inter. 33 C, 8 do. Actg. Depy.Pay mas- ter Masulipatam. 34 Adjutant. 36 2d Assistant to the Resdt, at lodore. 89 40 40 27 Aug. 6 July 37 A. R. Dallas A. Barlow 38G. T. Sayer Carruthers 39 H. B. T. St. John 3 Oct. 31 do. ENSIGNS. 39/C. Woodland 401 A. Davis J. H. Wright 41 C. Begbie L. M. V. Strachey 29 Aug. 28 Dec. 18 Jan. 18 May 21 do. 39/10 Mar. 1899 4015 June 40 41 20 Aug. 40 4122 Dec. 401 25 Jan, 411 STAFF. R. Hamilton F. Gottrex C. Desormeaux 13 Nov. 30 July 13 Feb, 88 99 41 Surg.-Sang. Surg. Hyderabad S. F. Assistant Surgeon. IR. Hicks 10 July 411 FACINGS, Deep Green-Lace, Gold. TOL. 11.) 237 ARMY LIST. SECOND REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, MADRAS.-'Assaye.'-'NAGPORE." Appt. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. COLONEL. 1802 T. Marrett - 29 June 1841 22 June 1834) Comg. Jaulnah. LIEUTENANT COLONEL. 07 J. Wright 25 Aug. 51 SO June 39 MAJOR. 15 W, Prescott 28 Aug. 39 28 June 38 First Asst. ComyGI. CAPTAINS. 20 E. A pthorp, K.S.F. 23J. H. B. Congdon 16 Jan. -29 Mar. 34 35 R. Shirreff 9 Jan. 36 9) Supg. the Roads in Canara, Deputy Asst. Adjt, Genl. Ceptre Div. Eur. S. C. 2d April 1839. 24 R. N. Paunce 3 Apr. 36 25, T, Back - 128 Aug S9 LIEUTENANTS. 25 H. Stewart, p. h. 26 W. G. Beagio E. Green 31 1. Wyndham 33 G. Carr S5 R. Shawe J. F. Erskine D. W. McKinnon 38 A. A, Shaw 3 Apr, 10 Oct, 4 Mar. 9 Jan. 3 Apr. 2 Aug. 28 do. 26 May 3 Oct. 33 C. 8 Jan. 41 Qr. Mr. and Inter. 33 34 36 Nizam's Service. 36 Alljutant, 37 39 40 Nizam's Service. 40 .... ENSIGNS. 39 S. Mainwaring, 40 T.J. M. Cunningham W. Touch H. Acton 41E.A. B. Travers 8 Nov. 22 July ditto 28 Dec. 18 May 39 15 Jan. 40 10 Dec. 6 Jan, 40 6 Sept. 41 17 Feb. 39 39 40 $0 41 STAFF. G. Carr H. Stewart H. G. Graham W. Rose - 20 Dec. 10 Jan. - 13 Feb. 8 July 39 S4 41 41 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon- Actg. Depot Surg. Cuddalore. 238 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THIRD REGIMENT, OR PALAMCOTTAH LIGHT INFANTRY. SECUNDERABAD, under orders to TRICHINOPOLY, • MAHIDPORE.'— AVA.' Raised at Trichonopoly in 1764-5. Appt, Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. COLONELS. 1800 Johnstone Napier LIEUT. COLONEL. 8 Sept. 1940 22 Jan. 1834 Brig. Comg. Vellore and Paymaster of Stipends-In tem- porary Command Centre Division. 41/16 Nov. 36 11 Charles Maddison Bird 31 July MAJOR. 18 Watkin Lewis Griffies Wil- liams, h. p. -2 June 38 Comdt. TalainCorps Moulmein. CAPTAINS. 20 John Johnstone 14 Mar. 30 23 Frederick Joseph Clerk Asst. Comg. Genl. Van Dieman's Land S.C.17th Nov, 1840 Police Magistrate Presidency. 11 do. 32 - 25 Walter George Yards Edwin Leander Durant 27 Thomas Fair June 24 July 1 Oct. 38 31 40 LIEUTENANTS. 27 Grant Allan 22 Dec. 32 Eur, S. C. 26th July 1840. 99 John Alexander Light 22 do. 33 29 William Brown 12 Sept. 34 30 Percy Tomkin Snow, p.h. 20 June 37 33 James Keating, p. h. 2 June 38 36 Vincentio Corbett Taylor 24 July 37 William Henry Baynes 23 Sept. 39 Janges Hav, p.h. I Oot. 401 38 Thomas Alexander Turquand 3 do. ENSIGNS. Adjutant. [1841 Eur.S.C. 16th Mar. O Qr, Mr. and Inter. - Robert Jones 39 Joseph Lidwill Heathorn 40 Andrew W. Lake Francis Mitchell Haultain 41 George Thomas Dick 1 Mar. 5 Dec. 28 do. 28 do. 18 May 39 11 Jan, 12 Sept. 49 11 June 20 Aug. 4131 Dec. 38 89 40 STAFF. 21 Aug. James Keating James Hay Thomas Taplin 40 41 112'Feb. | Dec. 1 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. L'ACINCS, Dark Green-L:C!, Gold, YOL. 11.) 239 ARMY LIST. FOURTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. BELLARY. (ASSAYE.' Raised some time prior to 1772. Appl. Names. In the Rege. In the Army. Remarks, COLONEL. 1739 C. Augustus Walker - 26 May 1835 M G June 28 Europe. LIEUT. COLONEL. 1S04 Maurice Tweedie 24 Dec. 39 6 Sept. 38 MAJOR. 18 Robert Nutter Campbell - 17 June 41 Comg. the Nair Bri. gade in Trancore. CAPTAINS, 30 39 Eurs.c. 1stFeb.1839 9 19 Hickman Rose Kirby Edward Haldanc 23 Thomas James Fisher 25 John Edmund Glyon Herbert William Wood 24 June 11 Mar. 3114 Sept. 3 Oct. S9 8 do. 8 Jan. 17 June 41 41 Fort Adjt. Bellary. LIEUTENANTS. 25 P. A. Secundus Powys p. h. 1 Mar. 24 Henry Colbeck 26 Joseph Dods, p. h. 1 Aug. 16 May 27 John M.Mahon Johnston 31 Mar. SI C.S.Jan. 41 Eur. fur. 9th March 1841. C. 6 May 40 Bom. 7th Sept. 1841 32 Ag. Qr. Mr. & Inter. 24th N, 1. 36 Atg. Dy. Asst. Adjt. Genl. of the Army. 38 'Eur, SC20th Sep 1839 39 Sea S. C. 230 July 1841. Ag. Qr. Mr, & Inter 40 ... Acting Adjutant. 41 28 William Lawless Seppings 4 Sept. 86 G. Wellington Nelson Dun- 3 Oct. lop 37 James Edward Palmer, p. h.- 8 do 38 Alexander Crombie Silver 3 do. 39 Allan Mackenzie Cleghorn 17 June ENSIGNS. 39 40 49 P. Raymond Jarvis Wood 40. James Denton John Francis Gordon 41 John Jones Brine 5 Dec, 28 do 2 Mar. 18 May S910 Aug 40 4 do. 41 30 Sept. 25 Dec. STAFF. Thomas Moore Lane 19 Apr. S9 James Robson, M.D. p. h. 16 Jan. 401 FACINGS, Orange-Lace, Gold, Srg-Oculist& Supt. Eye Infirmary. Assistant Surgeon. 210 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FIFTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. (Rifle Company.) PALAMCOTTAH, uuder orders to CANNANORE, Raised some time prior to 1727. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army Appt. COLONEL. 1790 Sir H. Fraser, K. C. B. 18301 12 Jan. 1835 M C 22 July Europe. LIEUTENANT COLONEL. 1803 H. Walpole 29 June 41 7 June 1830 Brigr. Comg. Pala- veram. MAJOR. 18 W. Justice 15 June 38 CAPTAINS. 19 M. S. Poole 27 May 34 2: H. Beaver 2 do. 36 Depy. Assist. Adjt . Genl.Southn.Dir. Deputy Paymaster l'ená sserim Coast -Offz. Supt. Gun Powder Manufac- tory. Actg. Qr. Mr. anul loter. 26 W. Leader 27 Ewd. T. Cox, p. h. S9 12 Mar. 30 Aug 31/A. E. Brooke 19 Sep. LIEUTENANTS. 34 A, Doria 8 Oct. 37 Eur. S.C.191h June 1841. J. O. Burgoyne 37 R. Shubrick J. J. O. Stuart W. James 10 Nov. 15 June 15 Feb. 12 Mar. 38 39 Adjutant. Eur. S, C, 9th Oct. 1840, 38D I. Money H. Broderip 39 A, M. Armstrong A. Wyndham 30 Aug. - 19 Sept. S Oct. 13 Nov. 40 27 ENSIGNS. 30 39 Hon'ble P. O. Murray J. H. A. Lillicrap 40 W. H. Watts $1 T. Gillilan C. C, Smith 31 Aug. 26 Sept. 28 Dec. - 18 May . 18 do. 39 10 Mar. 20 April 4011 June 4112 Dec. 20 Jan, 40 STAFF. J.J. O. Stuart G, Hopkins, M, D. J.J. Purvis IS Dec. 31 Mar. 25 Mar. 39 40 S7 1 Surgeon.- Europe. Assistant Surgeon Neilgherries,c.s. Facings, Black Veloc-LACE, GO!!!, VOL. 11.) 941 ARMY LIST. SIXTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, “ SERINGA PATAM."-" BOURBON." Mackenzie -Late 1st Bat. 6th Regt. N. I. raised at Trichinopoly, sometime prior to 1772, Arrived at Cuttack, 25th October 1838. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. * Thomas Marriott 29. July 1834 L. G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. James Drever 16 Jan. 41 29 Feb. 40 MAJOR. Thomas Atherton Howard 16 Apr. 40 Ear, fur. 20th Oct. 1840. CAPTAINS, Francis Archibald Reid pH Lachlan McLean Willam Gordon 17 Nov. 5 July 2 Jan, 34 36 6 Apr. 38 27 do. 35 37 Assist Qr. Mr. Genl. N. S. Force. Dy.Judge Adv. Gen, Thomas McGoun John Wilson Coates 16 Oct. 16 Apr, 39 401 LIEUTENANTS. Willam Maunton Gunthorpe 14 Mar. James Forsyth 12 Sep. p H Sampson Gompertz 5 July p H Henry Frederick Gustard 13 Dec. 32 34 36 Arthur Robert West 2 Jan. 38 Eur SC 9th Oct.1840 Extra Junior Asst. to the Commissioner in Mysore. In ch, of the Khoor- dah paik Companies Eur. S.C. 12th April 1839. John George Brown 27 do pH Arthur de Noe Walker 16 Oct. pH Francis Greetham Kempster(16 Apr. Arthur Loftus Steele 3 Oct. 39 40 Actg. Qr.Mr.&later. 50tb N, 1. ENSIGNS, Walter Swinton Frederick Harris Frederick Vigne Henry Desborough Charles Wilson Moore 30 Jan. 22 July 22 do 28 Dec. 18 May 3913 Apr. 40 10 Dec, 15 Feb. 6 Sep. 41 27 Feb, 38 29 40 41 40 Adiutant STAFF. James Forsyth Arthur de Noe Walker William Poole Henry Goodall 17 July 27 Oct. 7 Mar. 16 Oct, 39 40 Sulgeon Europe, Assist. Sargeon, | July 39Subadar Major. Shaik Omer FACINGS, Buf-LACE, Gold. PART II.-VOL. II. F F 942 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. SEVENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ Ava.” Cooke -Late 1st Bat. 7tn Regt. N. I. raised at Trichinopoly, sometime prior to 1727 Arrived at Secunderabad. Date of Commissions, Names, Remarks, In the Regt. In the Armg. COLONEL, George Jackson 9 Feb, 1835 MG 28 June Europe 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL. William Nicol Burns 29 June 41 25 Feb, MAJOR. Charles Widekind Nepean 27 Aug. 41 CAPTAINS. Richard Edward Boardman 128 Nov. 30 Richard Hippesley Biogham 20 May 35 Actg. A gst. Qr. Mr. Gl of the Army p H David Scotland 6 Mar. 36 13 Feb. 36 PH Henry Charles Gosling 25 Feb. 41 27 April 37 Depaty Asst. Comy. General. Peter Penny 27 Aug. 8 Jan. 41 Eur. fur, 5th Nov. 1841. LIEUTENANTS. [1842–3d July 1841 James Stewart 20 April 30 C. 8 Jan, 41 Neilg.SC till IstMar William Taylor 20 Nov. Alexander Richmond 20 May 35 Neilg. S. C. till 1st April. 1842-3d April 1841. Cyril Andrew Brown 5 Feb. 36! Robert Chester 6 Mar. Henry Blizard Herbert 8 Oct, 39 p H Thomas George Oakes 3 do. 40 Charles Campbell McCallum 19 April 41 Benjamin Hodson 27 Aug. EYSIGNS. Frederick Crewe 5 Dec. 39 10 Aug. 39 Daniel Alexander Rogers 28 do. 40 2 do. 40 Edward Henry Bloomfield 18 May 41 25 Dec. Heory John Beaumont Edward Aug. Saunders STAFF. William Taylor 6 Nov. 38 Adjutant. Thomas George Oakes 23 April 41 Qr. Mr. and Inter. Hope Stewart Fleming, M. D. 18 Juno 32 Surg.-Med, Store keeper, Presiden. cy & Lapatic Asg. nm. Thomas GlenJobpstone, M. D. 13 May 39 Assistant Surgeon. Ramasamy 1 Jan. 36 Subadar Major. FACINGS, French Grey-Lace, Gold. VOL. 11.] 243 ARMY LIST. EIGHTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ SERING APATAM. -"ASSAYE." Late 1st Bat. 8th Regt. N. I. raised in the Northern Division, sometime prior to 1772. Arrived at Vellore, 28th July 1811, Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, James Welsh 13 Feb, 1832 M G 10 Jan. Europe 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Arthur Cooke 11 Jan, 38 5 Apr. 31 MAJOR Thomas Bowes Forster 7 Sep. 38] Military Paymaster Fort St. George. CAPTAINS. Francis Blaney Lucas Arthur Cleghorn Wight Henry Pritchard pH Edwin George Taynton pH John Grimes 15 Dec, 27 15 Jan, 34 25 July 38, 7 Sep. Eur. Fur 5th Jan. 1841, 31 Assist. Adjt. Gel. N. Sub. Force. 4 Aug. 41! 8 Jan. LIEUTENANTS. Robert Mackenzie 31 Jan. Samuel Charters Macpherson 23 Mar. 30 31 Asst. to the Agent to the Governor of Fort St.George in Ganjam, 13 Apr, 33 12 Jan. 341 30 Oct. 361 p H Solin Seager Henry Geers Napleton ! Thomas Lodge Patch George Hay Smith Yates William John Cooks 38 25 July 7 Sep Eur S. C. 28th Aug. 1840, Thomas Carpendale Arthur Wellington Simkins 3 Oct. 40 4 Aug. 41 ENSIGNS. 39 40 John Curtis 3 July William Robertson Aikman 22 do. Albert Clerk 28 Dec. Henry Pickard 18 May W. Abingdon Otto Straham 1 Nov. 39 19 Jan. 40] 3 do. 121 Aug 41|25 Jau. 12 Jone 41 Doing duty 2d N. 1. STAFF. George Hay Smith Yates 16 Apr. 41 Adjutant. John Seager 23 Feb. 38 Qr. Mr. and Inter. George Aug, Campbell Bright 20 Dec. 37 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. Sheik Emaum 10 Dec. 39 Sabadar Major FACINGS, Bright Yellow -LACE, Gold. ..... MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. (PART 11. NINTH REGIMEMT NATIVE INFANTRY. " Ava." A Galley with the Motto "KHOOSKEE.WU TUREE." Kelley-Late 1st Bat, 9th Regt. N. I. raisəd at Madura about 1772 Arrived at Cannanore, 16th March 1840. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. John Woulle 3 Dec. 1831 M G 28 Jane Comg. Ceded Dis- 1838 tricts. LIEUT, COLONEL. John Polglase James 31 July 41110 Oct. 33 Eur. fur. 20th July 1841. MAJOR. 40 Thomas Macknight Cameron 4 Aug. CAPTAINS pH James Palmer Woodward 6 July PH Howland Roberts 8 Dec. James Henderson Macbraire 31 Oct. James Robertson 3 Aug pH, P. T. 2 4 do. 31 FortAdjt.Caupanore 33 Eur. fur, 15th Jan. 1841. 35 3727 April 37 Assist. Comy. Genl. 4014 Sept. 39|2d Assist. Military Auditor General. Tr. c. M. John Joseph Losh LIEUTENANTS, 31 33 William Garrow William Borthwick Henry Pix Hill Richard Stewart Dobbs 8 Nov. 13 Mar. 25 Oct. 8 Dec. (1837. Eur. S. C. 29th Dec. Eur.fur 4th Feb.1840 Under the Commisr. in Mysore. Claude Frederick Irby 15 May 36 Matthew Wood 25 Aug. p H Thomas Haines 3 do. 37 Thomas Maling Warre 4 Aug. 40 p H Thomas Hutchins Thomson 3 Oct. Eur, S C. 21st July 1840. ENSIGNS. Clarles Maxtone Shakespear 26 June Thomas Comyo Ansley 5 Dec. Francis Lawford 28 do. Alexander Grant Alexander Harcourt Jourdan 18 do. 39 12 Dec. 38 10 Aug. 39 4015 June 40 4122 Dec. 18 Mar, 41 18 May STAFF. 40 Thomas Haines 1 May Thomas Hutchins Thomson 28 Aug. Authony E. Blest, m. D. 13 July 41 Adjutant. Qr. Master & Inter. Surgeon. Assistaut Surgeon. Shaik Allie. 22 Sep. 36 Subadar Major. FACINOS, Gosling Green-Lace, Gold, 246 (PART II MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. ELEVENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “SERINGAPATAM," MacLean-Sied Homed - Late 2d Bat. 9th Regt. N. I. raised at Ellore, about 1772. Arrived at Jubbulpoor, April 1839. Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks, In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, * Thomas Stewart 8 Aug. 1826 M.G, 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Alexander Tulloch, c, B. 29 June 411 6 Mar. 36 Commissary Genl. MAJOR. John Clough 28 June 38 CAPTAINS. William Blood 9 Feb. 32 (1839 Eur, fur, 24th Dec. Michael Davies pH Daniel Wynter Henry Griffith 27 Apr. 7 Aug. 7 June 34 35 36 Acting Adjutant. Calcutta on leave till 25th April 1842- Ist Oct. 1841. Under the Resident at Hyderabad, Capt. 3d Nizam's Inf. George Jackson 28 do. 38 LIEUTENANTS, James Oliver Conway Farran 10 Jan. pPH William Anthony Halsted 2 Feb. Henry Langford Burleigh 27 Apr. 29 C 8 Jan, 41 33 3d Assist, to Comisr. in Mysore, Cape s. E. 18 Months 20th July 1841. Ear. fur. 24th Dec, 1839 35 Calcutta on leave till 36 37 25th| Mar.42-30th 38 July 1841. 341 p H Charles Ireland George Sturrock William George Owen James May Charles John Fullerton pH C. F. F. Halsted 7 Aug. 7 June 17 Sep 28 Jane 3 Oct. 16 July 41 ENSIGNS. 4010 Dec. 3 Jan. 39 40 Robson Benson Christian Disandt Grant Richard Drapes Ardagh George Girdlestone Walter Lloyd 22 July 22 do. 28 Dec. 18 May 17 July 20 Aug. 41 8 Jan. 41 2 May STAFF. Charles Ireland 24 Dec. 401 C. F. F. Halsted George Leetson 22 Nov. 39 8 Dec, 41 Adjutant - absent on leave. Qr, Mr. and Inter, Surg. doing duty with C. E. V.B. Assistant Surgeon. Shaw Bomed 8 March 39 Sabudar Major FACINGS, Gosling Green-LACE, Gold. VOL. 11.) 247 ARMY LIST. TWELFTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “AVA" Barim-Late 2d Bat. 8th Regt. N. I. raised at Madras, about 1772. Arrived at Trichinopoly, 18th June 184). Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Robert Home, c. B, 27 July 1841 MG 24 Nov. Brig. Comg. Nagpore 1841 Subsidiary Force, LIEUT. COLONEL. Wm. Borthwick 6 Jan. 4111 Oct. 39 Eur.fur.2d Mar.1841. MAJOR, Isaac Campell Coffin 24 July 40 CAPTAINS. Thomas Slater Rooke p H Philip Dagald Glover Oswald Bell Daniel Hall Stevenson George Pinnock 3 Feb. 32 25 Dec. 33 In charge of Details Royacottah. 27 do. 36 6 April 35 Acty. Qr. Mr. &Inter, 3 June 40 24 July Eur.S.C.2dJuly 1841 LIEUTENANTS. William Green Johnstone p H Charles Jas. Elphinstone Edward Dacre Roper 3 Feb. 25 Dec. 32 C,8 Jan, 41 33 S.A sst.Comsy. Genl. 24 Feb. 36 Eur. S, C, 24th Nov. 1840 Mark Beale Cooper Dennis R. Hodson Beadle 27 Dec. 8 Oct. 39 Eur. S. C. 2d Mar. 1841. 40 John Gustavus Halliday James Coombes Giffard Linnæus Tripe Frank Henry Thompson 27 June 24 July 3 Oct. 2 Feb, 41! Ear. S. C, 230 Nov, 1841, ENSIGNS. 4012 June 40 16 Sept. John Temple Barnett Ford Wm. Alex. Riach Wm. Edward Pascoe Percy Max. Carpendale 28 Dec. 28 do, 1 Feb 2 Mar. 18 May 41 6 do. 12 Oct. 27 Feb. 41 STAFF. William Green Johnstone 6 Dec. 36 Adjatant. H...........Qr. Master and Inter. Geo. Van Cummiug, m. D. 8 July 40 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. Sillar Homed, Bahadoor | Nov. 35'Subadar Major. FACINGS, Bright Yellow-LACB, Gold. 248 PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THIRTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. " SERING APATAM," Ulka-Alcock-Late 2d Bat. 3d Regt. N. I. raised at Madras in 1775. Arrived at Samulcottah, 9th Feb. 1841. Date of Comissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL William Charles Fraser 15 Nov, 1838 M, G. Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Scudamore Winde Steel, c.B. 27 Jan. 40 9 April 38 Secy, to Govt. Mili. tary Department. MAJOR, George Dods 3 Aug, 38 28 June 38 CAPTAINS. James Briggs Charles Fladgate James Campbell Glover 7 July 27 M.26 Nov.41 2d Assistant to the Comr, in Mysore. 3 Feb 29 Eur. far. 31st Dec. 1839. 18 Nov. 20 Sea, S. C.-7th Jan. 1840, 33 Payr. Cen, Division 38 6 April 35 John Sheil Joseph Standiver Sherman 25 May 3 Aug. LIEUTENANTS. James Fraser Leslie 1 May 24 C. 13 Feb. 36 Employed at Singa. Horatio Clarke Beevor 7 July 27C, 2 May 38 (pore. Geo. Cumberland Hughes 16 Oct, C. 14 do. 39 Charles Gordon 8 Mar. 32 C, 8 Jan. 41 Dy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gen. Centre Dir, James W. Gammell Kenny 25 May 33 C. 8 do. Josiah Smith 38 Eur, S, C, 21st Feb, 1840. PH Walter Fd. Goodwyn 8 Oct. 39 Arthur Robinson 21 Sept. 40 Stephen G. Prendergast 3 Oct. Sea and Straits, S.C. till loth February 1842 - 10th Aug. 1841, ENSIGNS. 3 Aug. Edward Becher Marsack Edmund Francis Burton Michael Riddell Francis Albony Brooking Charles Wm. Taylor STAFF. 6 Dec 5 do, 28 do. 28 do. 28 May 39 12 Jave 39 18 Sept. 4012 June 40 20 Aug. 41 25 Jan. 11 A. Robinson W. F. Goodwyn J, T. Maule 24 Dec. 39 A djatant. 14 Jan, 40 Qr. master &later, 19 Dec, 39 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. ............ 28 April 40 Subadar Major. FACINGS, While-Lace, Gold. Shaik Homed vol. 11.) 249 ARMY LIST. FOURTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ MAHIDPORE." Wahab - Late 2d ßat. 6th Regt. N. I. raised at Vellore in 1776. Arrived at Moulmein, 12th November, 1841. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Alexander Cappage 17 Jan. 1833 G, 26 Nov. Europe. 1841 LIEUT, COLONEL. John Freke Palmer 16 Dec. 40 8 Oct. 39 Eur. S. C. 29th Jan. 1841. MAJOR. Charles Wallace Young 18 June 39 CAPTAINS. George Burn H. Charles McEvers Palmer Chas. Francis Lellardy 25 Feb. 33 Dep.Judge Adr. Gi. 25 May 12 April 37 13 Feb, 36 Asst. to the Resd. Mysore and Suptoof Coorg. 21 Sept. 38 13 do. 18 June 39 27 April 37 Dep. Asst. Adjt. GI. Nor. Division. Frederick William Todd Charles Fred. Liardett LIEUTENANTS. Hugh Walker William Edward Gibb p A Henry Temple Hillyard pH Charles Foveaux Kirby po James Jackson 21 April 26 C. 27 Apr. 37 114 July 27 C, 2 May 31 124 May 33 25 do 12 April 27 Eur.S. C. 15th Jan. 1841. 3 Oct. With the Force of it, M. Shah Soojah. 21 Sept. 38 8 Oct, 39 3 do. 40 William Anthony Lakin William Youngsod Charles Kensington James Cadephead ENSIGNS. Thomas Peyton Wm. Ts. Kidmam Rolstop Edward Tomes Thomas Alex. Stannus Horatio Thomas Tapp 26 June 3912 Dec. 3 July 24 Jan. 22 do. 401 3 do. 18 May 41 12 Dec. 18 do. 30 Jan. 38 391 40 41 STAFF, Charles Foveaux Kirby Heory T. Hillyard Benjamin Williams 4 Nov. 36 5 Feb. 41 16 Oct. 38 Adjutant. Qr. Master & Ipter. Surg - Gar. Surgeon Trichinopoly Actg: Supg. Surg. Mala- bar and Canasa, Assistant Surgeon. 38 Subadar Major. Thomas Thomson Smith 16 do. Syed Hyder 1 Dec. Facings Buff-LACE, Gold. 250 TPART IL. MADRAS ESTABLISUMENT. FIFTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Davis-Late 2d Battalion 4th Regt. N. 1. raised at Tanjore in 1776. Trichinopoly, under orders to Palamcottah. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. Mark Cubbon 26 Oct. 1839 M.G.26 Nov. Comsr, in Mysore. 1841 LIEUT. COLONEL, Robert Fenwick 8 Sep. 40 3 April 32 Eur, fur, 25th Ang. 1840. MAJOR. John Ross 22 April 39 CAPTAINS. Chas. Alfred Browno 9 Oct. 30 p H Hamlyn L. Harris 19 Feb. 36 Dept. Adjt. Genl. of the Army & Major. Dep. Asst. Qr. Nr. General Ceded Districts. John Henry Bean William Cantis pH James Ross Arrow 11 July 38 22 April 39 16 Nov. 40 LIEUTENANTS. William Drysdale 2 June 31 Eur. far. 10th Joly 1838. William Bissett James Eykyo 119 Feb. 7 Aug. 36 37 Eur, fur. 16th Nor. 1841. Hornby Birley John Robertson William Randolph Studdy Walter Selby 4 Dec, | 14 April 38 22 do. 89 3 Oct. 40 Eur. S. C. 16th June 1840. Eur.fur.Iyr. 10th Aug. 1841. George C. Mowbray Martin Hickley 16 Nov. 30 Apr. 41 ENSIGNS. Ezekiel Gage Tom Harris Atkinson Hugh Heefke O'Connell Harris P, Thompson William Stevens Davis 9 Aug. 8 Oct. 30 Deo. 18 May 18 do, 397 March 39 4611 Dec. 30 Aug. 40 4112 Dec. 25 Jan. 391 STAFF, W. Bissett 130 Aug. Adjutant Martin Hickley 22 June 41 Qr. Mr. and Inter, Henry Smith Brice 25 Nov, Surgeon w. George Prichard, M. D. 20 do, 40 Assistant Surgeon Mahomed Tippoo 112 Mar. 39 Subadar Major. FACINGS, Orange-Lace, Gold. VOL. 11.] 351 ARMY LIST. SIXTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, (Rifle Company.) “ SERINGAPATAM."_" AVA." Line - Late 2d Bat. 5th Regt. N. I. raised at Trichinopoly 10th December 1776. Arrived at Kurnool, 25th October 1839. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks, In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL * Manassah Lopez Pereira 19 Sept. 1829 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe, 1837. LIEUT. COLONEL. James Kerr 26 Nov, 41 10 Sept. 41 MAJOR. Charles Wabab 26 Aug 4128 June 38 Eur.S.C.ad Feb. 1811, CAPTAINS. Fred. Broadwood White 22 April 26 M. 26 Nov. Ralph Skinner Gledstanes 20 Aug. 31 141 p Il Sam. Auchinleck Grant 20 July 36 13 Feb. 36 A sst. Adit. GI, Hyd. Sub, Force. p H Richard Lambert 8 Oct. 39 13 do Io charge of Roads Ganjain Districts Act. Civil Enginer Ist Div. pH Benjamin Heyne 26 Aug. 4112 May 38 LIEUTENANTS, Charles Arthur Moore pH Chas. William Hodson H George Carr Charles Robert Hobart George Stratford Mardell 110 Aug. 25 C. 14 Sept.39 31 May 33 C. 6 May 40 20 July 361C. 8 Jan. 41 21 Nov. 371 9 Oct. 38 Fur. S. C. 18th June 1841, 8 do. 39 30 Dec. 3 Oct. 40 Act. Qr.Mr.19th N.I. 26 Aug 41 With the Nizam's Service. Samuel Shaw Horatio Edward Walpole p H Arch. Montg. Campbell p H John Daniel ENSIGNS. 301 40 Thos. Crauford Longcroft 5 Dec. Francis Mardell 4 Aug, Francis Man 28 Dec. Wm. Reynold Davie 18 May Archd. Jao, Paterson Ewart 22 Nov. 3920 Aug. 40 8 Feb. 7 Aug. 41 25 Dec. 14 Aug. 41 STAFF. Charles William Hodson 8 May 32 Adjutant. George Cari 119 Oct, 41 Qr. Master & Inter. De Burgh Birch. M, D. 129 May Surg.. Neilgberries. Edmund Walter Eyere 25 Jan. 40 Assistant Surgeon. Shekh Sillar, S, Babadoor 118 March 26 Subadar Major, FACING8, Black Velvet -LACE, Gold, 952 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. SEVENTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. NAGPORE.” Butler-Late 2d Bat. Ist Regt. N. I. raised at Tanjore in 1777. Arrived at Vizagapatam, 13th January 1841. Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks, In the Regt. In ne Army. COLONEL, Jobo Briggs 25 Feb. 1839 M.G, 28 June Europe, 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL, Robert Alexander 129 June 4: 23 Jan, 41 Adjutant Genl. of the Army. MAJOR. James Fullarton 8 Oct. 39 CAPTAINS. Jubo Gunding Rd. Rabington Preston pH David Babiugton Walter William Ross 31 Dec, 28 M. 26 Nov Staff officer & Post 41 Mr. Ootacamund. Joint Magistrate District of Mala- bar & Coimbatore. 11 May 33 17 Nov. 35 Dy.Asst Comy Genl. 8 Oct. 3912 May 38 Employed with ibe Nair Brigade I'ra vancore, 9 do, 40 William Knox Babington LIEUTENANTS, pH John Macdongall Henry Augustus Tremlett William Alex, Mackenzie William James Church Wilijam Middleton p H Charles Gill 11 May 33 C, 8 Jan, 41! 21 Feb. 16 May Dep. Asst. Comy General. 17 Nov, 35 15 Oct. 37 125 May 39 Ag. Qr. Mr. &Inter, 27th N. I, 8 Oct. 3 do. 4 June 41 p H Thomas Philip Sparks Jas. Louis St. Clair Lascelles Lane ENSIGNS. 40 John Curry Day Edward Cannon ( harles Evans Bartley James Fraser ( aunan Sylvester L'Amy STAFF, 22 July 40 26 Jan. 28 Dec, 12 June 28 do. 18 May 4117 Feb. 1 22 June 6 Sept. 41 T. Philip Sparks John Macdougall John Macfarland 27 Oct. 40 8 Feb. 39 7 May 41 Adjutant. Qr. Mr. and Inter. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. 36 Subadar Major GbolamMoodeen Bahadoor NU Oct FACINGS, White-Lace, Gold. VOL. I.) 253 ARMY LIST, EIGHTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ Ava." Barclay-Late 2d Battalion 10th Regiment N. I, raised at Cuddalore in 1777. Arrived at Ahmudnughur, 1st Dec. 184). Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army COLONEL. John Turner Trewman 31 Mar. 40 M.G.26 Nov. Europe. 41! LIEUT. COLONEL. p H John Day Stokes 7 July 4119 Apr. 41 Resident in Mysore. MAJOR. Robt. John Hussey Vivian 9 Dec. 361 CAPTAINS. Payr. Vizagapatain. Peter Steinson Richard Wheeler Sparrow Mathew White Edward Cowie pH William Russell 5 Feb. 33 24 April 34 Il May 36! 31 do. 9 Dec. Neilghy. S. C. till 3 th Sept. 1842- March 1841. LIEUTENANTS, Henry Green Henry Gordon pH Gregory Haides Gregory Alfred Marshall Joseph Fisher Stevens Wm. Montague Johnston Charles Henry Wintield Sisley John Batten Herbert Bott 8 Aug. 26 C. 6 May 40 Europe S. C. 8th Sept. 1837. 20 June 28 C. 6 do. 24 March 35 Jan. Asst. to Comr. in Mysore. 12 April Eur S. C. 27th Aug. 1839. 11 May 36 31 do. 9 Dec. 14 April 39 21 Sept. 41 ENSIGNS. Henry Hughes George Edward Taylor 30 Jan, 26 June 3910) Ang. 38 12 Dec. Europe s. C. 17th Dec. 1839, 4010 Aug. 40 41 20 do. 12 June C.B. D. Willan Arthur Stevens Geoffrey Nightingale 28 Dec. 12 Jan. 1 Nov, STAFF. J. F. Stevens 1 June 41 Bt.Capt.A.T.Bridge2dE.L.I. R. Baikie, M. D. 6 April 38 Agnew Mackintosh, m. D. 9 Nov. 39 Shaik Nuddeem 5 Feb, FACINGs, Red-Lace, Gold. Adjutant. Ag. Qr. Master an Inter. Surgeon Neilg. S.C. Assistant Surgeon, 41'Subadar Major, 254 MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. (PART IT. NINTEENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. 'SERINGAPATAM," Muirhead -Late 20 Bat. 7th Regt. N. I, raised at Trichinopoly 1777. Arrived at Trichinopoly, 14th May 1840. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, William Woodhouse 29 Dec. 1831 M.G.28 June Europe. 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL. Jobp Anderson 6 Jan. 41 20 Aug. 31 Eur. S, C. 26th Nov. -1839. MAJOR. Godfrey Web. Whistler 29 Feb, 40 CAPTAINS. p H. Geo. Willoughby Osborne 25 May 30 16 Feb. 33 Depy. Judge Adv. General. Fort Adjt. Trichido- poly. Addrew Corentry George Nott Edwip Henry Atkinson p H Hen Dowoes Sheppard LIEUTENANTS. 15 May 28 Aug. 29 Feb. 34 35 40 Eur. fur. 27th March 1849. pH Henry Nott 25 May 30 C. 8 Jan. 41 Robert Younghusband 13 Dec. 32 Peter Brockburst Young 116 Feb. 33 Robert Browne Mylne 15 May 34 Eur. fur. 20th Dec. 1839. Wm. Walter Whelpdale 28 Aug. 35 Doing daty Sappers and Miners Paum- bom. Ralph W. Hy. Leycester 25 Sept. 38 Acting Depaty Pay: master Tebasserim Provinces. Richard Moorcroft 5 Oct. 39 With H. M. Shah Shoojah's Force. Her. Macworth Clogstoun 29 Feb. 40 Arthur Jobo Pattison 3 Oct. Neilg. S.C. till 20th May 1842-301b EYSIGNS Oct. 1841. Alfred Thomas Wilde 26 June 3612 Dec. 38 Geo. Hy, Grindall Watson 23 Dec. 4012 June 40 Arthur Noel Hill Lynch 28 do. 16 Sept. James Hoskins 18 May 41 27 Feb. 41 Charles James Birch 22 Nov, 11 Aug. STAFF. Peter Brockhurst Young 25 Nov, 36 Adjutant. Henry Nott 10 Apr. 40 Qr. Mr. and Inter- preter. John Wm. Sherman 25 Nov. 41 Surg: Ag. Gar.Surg. Trichinopoly, Assistant Surgeon. Sbaik Nergara 6 Mar. 40 Subadar Major. FACING.. French Greuther Gold VOL, 11] 255 ARMY LIST. TWENTIETH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ SHOLINGHUR."-"SERING APATAM." Baggot - Late 2d Battalion 2d Regiment N. I, raised 1777. Arrived at Belgaum. Names. Date of Commissions. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks, COLONEL. George Wahab 4 Aug. 1842 M.G, 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Christopher Lethbridge 25 Aug. 4123 Aug. 34 MAJOR, Francis Plowden 6 Sept. 38 28 June 38 CAPTAINS, James Mellor Clenient Clemons 131 May 17 Feb, 27 30 George Manro Arthur 15 May 33 Eur. fur, 29th Jan. 1841. Neilg. S. C.till 30th Nov. 1812-27th Feb. 1841, James Walker Bayley David Archer 15 Aug. 34 6 Sept. 38 13 Feb. 36 LIEUTENANTS. William Shelly 31 May Dashwood Strettell Thomas Goldie Silver John Alex, Church p H Henry John Brockman William Stephen Snow John White George Aitken George Hare 17 July 24 C.13 Feb. 36 Actg. Qr. Mr. and Inter. 18 Jan, 261C, 2 May 38 27|C. 6 do, 40 15 Aug. 34°C. 8 Jan, 41 18 do. 35 Duty duty 2dE.L.I. 13 July 38 6 Sept. 8 Oct, 39 3 do. 4 ENSIGNS. Vyvyan Scobell 30 Jan, 39| 1 Mar, 38 Walter Coleridge 3 July 24 Jan. 39 Johu Loudon 28 Dec. 4021 Aug. 40, John Elphinstone 18 May 4112 Dec. Fleetwood Pellew Drury i Nov. 12 June 41 STAFF. G, Aitkin 16 April 41 Adjutant. Qr. Mr. & Inter. And. Nicholson Magrath 15 Dec. 34 Surgeon Residency in Mysore. W. Evans, M. D. 19 Jan. 39 Assistant Surgeon. Mahomed Shallee 122 July 34 Subadar Major. FACINGS, Deep Green-LACE, Gold. 1 VOL. 11.) 267 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. "SERINGAPATAM."-"AVA." Dalrymple--Late 2d Bat. Ulth Regt. N. I. raised at Ellore, 1789. Arrived at Vizianagram, 19th January, 1841. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Rege. In the Army. COLONEL Richard Hassels Yates 20 Dec. 1830 M.G.28 June Europe. 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL, p H P Henry Sargent 11 Dec. 412 Sept. 41 Eur. far. 30th Oct. 1840, MAJOR. George Hutton 11 Oct. 39 CAPTAINS. John Francis Bird 21 June John Robert Sandford 9 May William De Monte Lys 20 Nov. pH P. F. $. Courtney Chalmers 8 Oct. p H Duncan Buchanan 11 do. 27 M.26 Nov.41 32 3813 Feb, 36 39 13 do. Eur. S. C, 230 Nov. 1841 27 April 37 Eur. for. Ist Feb. 1839. LIEUTENANTS, Wm. Somerville Mitchell p H Francis Russell John Beville Layard Thomas Palmer Moore p H Frederick Wm. Baynes 9 May 32C. 6 May 40 Atg. Deputy Paymas. ter Masulipatam. 133 Aug. 34 C. 8 Jan. 41 Acting Qr. Mr. and Inter. 15 April 36 Acting Adjutant. 1 Aug. 37! Cape. New South Wales till 7th July 1842 17th July 184u. 20 Nov. 88 Sea, S, C.- for 6 munths 1st Oct. 184i. 8 Oct. 39 Eur. S.C.2d April. 1841. 8 do. Eur. S. C. Ist Oct. 1841. Il do. 3 do. 40 With the Nizam's Service. Charles Hesketh Case William Guild Robertson William Dent Samuel Ponsonby Scott ENSIGNS. John Percival Frye Frederick Grierson George Charles Pybus Geo. Simpson Alexander Cannan 5 Deo, 39 12 June 39 5 do. 29 do. 122 July 40) 28 Dec. 6 Sept. 18 May 41|27 Feb. 411 40/ 8 FC STAFF. Thomas Palmer Moore 14 Apr. Frederick William Baynes 19 May George Thomas 15 Oct. Adit. sick absent. Qr. Mr. and Inter. absent S. C. Surgeon Assistant Sargeon. Jomaol Mahomed On 11. 258 (PART III MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-THIRD REGIMENT LIGHT INFANTRY, “ NOW OR NEVER." “ SERINGA PATAM"-"NAGPORE." Tolfry-Late 1st Bat. 13th Regt. N. I. raised at Madras, 1794. Arrived at Bangalore, 2d March, 1841. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In ihe Army COLONEL, " Thomas Webster 2 May 1832 M.G.28 June Europe. 1838 LIEUT, COLONEL. John Henry 8 Sept. 41 6 Feb. 30 Brig. Comg. Bellary. MAJOR. P H P Henry Prior 12 Sept. 40 CAPTAINS. 16 Sept. 39 6 Dec. 34, 29 do, 35 pH James Allardyce William Beaumont p H Joho Thomas Philpot T'homas William Cooke pH Ed. Wilson Kenworthy LIEUTENANTS. 19 Nov. 39 19 Jan. A) 8 Jan. Brigade Major Ban- galore. 41 Acting Adjutant. PH P. Thomas John Newbold 6 Dec. 34 Ear. for. Ilth Feb. 1840, James Henry Tapp 29 do. 35 William Bird 1 April 36 Sutherland G. Gordon Orr 8 Oct. 39 Geo. Collingwood Dickson 19 Nov. Henry Robert Nathall 12 Sept. 40 Francis Cunningham 3 Oct. With H. M. Shah Shoojah Force do do do lor. S. C, 29th Jade 1841. With H. M. Shab Shoojabs' Force Alex. H. Moira Chesney Charles borlase Stevens 4 19 Jan. 9 Alay ENSIGNS. 401 Charles Mortlock Richard John Vorpby Kenneth wacaulay John Frederick Stoddard Augustus Villars Layard STAFF. 19 Sept. 4016 Feb. 28 Dec. 16 Sept. 18 May 4111 Dec. 18 do. 12 do 18 do. 18 Mar. 41 - John Morton Adjutant. Acting Qnarter Mr. and Interpreter Surgeon. Staff Surg, Monlmein. Assistant Surgeon. 29 Feb. 40 William Mackintosh 29 do. Shekh Loodup 116 Feb. 32 Subadar Major. FACINGS, Derrk Green-Lac, Gold. TOL, II.) 359 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-FOURTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. (Rifle Company.) « SERINGAPATAM"-"ASSAYE". " BOURBON." McDonald-Late 2d Bat. 12th Regt. N. ). raised at Vellore, 1794. HEAD QUARTERS, Prince of Wales Island-2 Companies at MALACCA, Rifle Company Moulmein. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL Nathaniel Forbes 3 June 1824 L.G, 10 Jan Europo. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. George Hutchinson 20 Nov. 41 31 Oct. MAJOR. Charles Sinclair 31 Oct, 41 28 June 38 CAPTAINS, Francis Charles Scott John Lewis Peter Pope 21 Dec. 31 | Jan. 33 8 Oct, 39 13 Feb. 36 Depy. Payr. Masuli- patam, Secy to the Presidt and Govr. of the MadrasHigh School. Ag.istant Commissary General. 38 Asst. Sec. Military Board. John Hill 25 Ang. 40 13 do. Edward Winterton Snow 31 Oct. 41° 2 May LIEUTENANTS. Alexander Boyd Kerr Edward Martin 2 June 1 Jan. 32 C. 8 Jan. 41 33 Van Dieman's Land - Jeave 1 year 19th November 1841. Raymond Torin Snow Sebright Sheaffe Coffin pH William Thomson Nicolls 10 Oct. 36 26 March 37 8 Oct. 39 Under Sup. Gort. Nizam's Ser. Molyx. C. Spottiswoode Francis Young Henry Hoseason Charles John Bradley 8 do. 25 Aug. 3 Oct. 31 do. 41 ENSIGNS. Charles Maidman 5 Dec. William Hornidge 29 Ang Ed. Benj, Proude Longdill 28 Dec. Frederick John Mackie 18 May Frederick Keighly 22 Nov. 39'20 Aug. 39 40 18 April 40 7 Jug 4125 Dec. 1 Sept. STAFF. Raymond Torin Snow Lieut. J. Dods, 4th N.I. 13 Nov. 38 Adjutant. Acting Qr. Mr. and loter. Surgeon. Assista i Surgeon. Robert Scott 9 Feb. 39 Shai. Ahmad Dhandan 31 260 (PART 11, MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-FIFTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Kenny-Late 1st Battalion 13th Regiment N. I.- Raised at Vellore in 1794, Secunderabad, onder orders to Cudilepah. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Reit. In the Army. COLONEL, Thomas King 27 Jan. 1840 M.G.26 Nov Neilgherries. (1841 LIEUT. COLONEL. Hngh Ross 17 Aug. 406 Aug. 31 Cape S.C. 2 years - 27th Nov. 1840. MAJOR. Robert Dean O'Dell 7 Sept. 38 CAPTAINS. Nicholas Geoghegan John Mann 15 Sent. 32 7 July 34 William Biddle 24 May 37 Charles Hobson Warren 7 Sept. 38 Sea S. C. 1 year- 21st May 1841. Eur. S, C. 19th Oct. 1841. Ajde de-Campto Bri- gadier General Steuart. Under the orders Resident at By: derabad Capt. &d Nizam's Infantry. William Brunton Jackson 30 do. LIEUT. COLONEL. 15 Sept. pH George Halpin 30 April 29 C. 8 Jan. 41 pH Heory James Nicholls 321 Sub. Asst. Comsy General. Joseph Wiliam Farran 7 July 84 Henry Rodney Phillott 11 sept. Fran. Vardon 24 May 37 L’nder Sap. Gost. Nizam's Service. William Wallace Anderson 2 June George William l'eyton 7 Sept. 38 George Har dess i30 do Charles Preston Molony 3 Oct. 40 ENSIGNS. John George B. Griffin W. Jos ph Geils Richard John Blunt Hepry Charnock Bristow Edmund Fredk. Waterman 30 Jan. 39 12 Dec. 22 July 40 10 do. 22 do. 3 Jan. 28 Dec. 21 Aug. | Nov. 41 12 June 37 39 40 STAFF. 29 May 411 Joseph William Farran 22 March 33 Adjutant. G Halpin 5 April 39 Qr. Mr. and Inter. John Browo, M. D. Surg. doing daty Ist. M E. R. Robert H. Manley, M. B. 10 July + ssistant Surgeon. Shekh Meean, Babadoor I Nov. 31 Subadar Major, FACINGS, Feuilmort Yellow --Lace, Gold, VOL. 11.) 261 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, (Rifle Company.) “ Nagpore"_" KEMENdine."-"Ava." Iones-Late 2d Bat 13th Regt. N. 1. raised at Tanjore in 1794. Arrived at Belgaum, 21 January, 1839. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, J. Ogilvie 26 Mar. 1841M.G.26 Nov. Europe, (1811 LIEUT, COLONEL, Joho Thomas Gibson 8 Sept. 41 C. 22 Jan. 34 Brig. Comg. Vellore & Payr. Ştipends. MAJOR. p H Nicholas Johnson 19 Oct, 4 CAPTAINS. Harry Hall Watts William Halpin Thomas Maynor pH Owen Reynolds Stuart Bayly 1 Jan. 36 6 April 35 Cape S.C.18 Months. - 24 Nov. 1840. 19 Aug. 37 13 Feb. 36 14 Nov. 13 do. 1 Jan. 4027 Apr. 37 I Feb. 4114 May 39 LIEUTENANTS. William Hammond Welch 3 June 31 C.8 Jap. 41 Eur, S. C. 2d June 1840, Edward Pereira 1 Jan, 36 Ear fur. 11th Feb. 1810, John Wilson 19 Aug. 37 Thos. Floyer Vans Outlaw |14 Nov. Doing duty Sappers and Miners. John James Gibson 1 Jan. 40 Mathew Bradly Ward Lawrence Joboston 3 Oct. Geo. Frederick Shakespear, 19 do. John James Jenkins I Feb. 41 3 Apr EYSIGNS. Henry Phillips 27 July James Fras. john Stevenson 28 Dec. Henry Torrens Knox 14 Jan. Geo. Sanders Meyers Arthur James Shuldham 18 do, 40 16 Feb. 40 12 Jong 4110 Aug 12 Dec, 18 Mar. 41 18 May STAFF. John James Gibson 9 Nov. 40 Adjutant. Lt. R. Wooley, 28th N, 1. l. Acting Qr. Mr. and interpreter. Matthew Baillie Poilock 26 July 39 Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. Rungasamy-S. Bahadoor 114 Oct. 27 Subadar Major, FACINGS, Feuilmort Yellow-Lace, Gold. 262 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. « MAHIDPORE." Lindsay-Late 1st Bat. 14th Regt. N. I. raised at Trichinopoly in 1798. Arrived at - Russell Condah, 23d March, 1841. Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Alexander Fair c. B. 27 July 1836 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Westrop Watkins 3 Mar, 41 31 July 40 Dep. Comsy. Genl. MAJOR. Ed. Archdall M'Cardy 25 Oct. 37 CAPTAINS. Robert Thorpe 2 July 29 Cowper Rochfort Henry Morland 6 Oct. 32 30 April 37 13 Feb. Supt. of Family Payts. & Pensions. 36 Asst. Sur. Gl. Hgd. Survey. Eur s. C. 11 th May 1839 41 Adam Cuppage 25 Oct Geo. Gordon V'Dopell 6 April 41 8 Jan. LIEUTENANTS. John David Power O'Neil 9 Aug Hillyar Young Pope William Henry Boswell Edward Dumergue 6 Oct. 32 C. 8 Jan. 41 Eur S. C. 14th Sept. 1838. 36 C. 8 do. Eur. S. C. 4th Oct. 1839. 30 April 37 25 Oct, Eur. S. C. 22d Jan, 1841. 19 do. 39 13 Sept. 3 Oct. 21 March 41 3 June Montague Cholmeley Hy. C. Robt. Wm Smith Arthur Howlett Hamilton Hall MacLeod Geo, John Condy ENSIGNS. 18 May Francis Thomas Gerrard Charles H. Drury Charles Augustus Pierce John Ponsonby Watts James Orr 18 do. 18 do. 411 Dec. 40! 12 do. 25 do. 30 Mar. 41 19 July 19 do. 2 May STAFF. Wm. Henry Boswell 9 March 411 Adjutant. Lt. C. Gill, 17th N. I. Act. Qr. Mr. & later. Thomas Key 15 May 37 Surg, Under the Rest. Hyd. Wm Law 0. Moore, M. B. 1 Sept. 40 Asst. Sorg. Permaul, Şirdar Babadoor 6 Feb. 38|Subadar Major. FACINGS, Black Velvet-LACE, Gold. Vol. 11.) 963 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ MAHIDPORE." -" NAGPORE.”_" Ava." Martin-Late 2d Bat. 14th Regt. N. I, raised in 1798. Arrived at Mangalore. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. *Charles Thos. Geo. Bishop 5 Sept 1825 M. G. 10 Jan. Trichinopoly. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. PH P. Henry Smith 31 July 4115 June 33 MAJOR, Thomas Stockwell 15 Feb. 40 Eur. for, Jlth Dec. 1840. CAPTAINS. Edward Willis Henry Thomas Yarde PH Jubu Bower 25 May 11 Jan. 3 July 35 36 38 Deputy Asst. Com- inissary General. 40 P indw. Munro McCally pH Robert Farquhar 15 Feb. 22 July Eur fur. Ilth Sept. 1840. LIEUTENANTS. pH William Cornelius Bell 14 July 32 Eur. fur, Ilth Sept. 1840. Matthews Beachcroft William Scafe Charles Lamb Richard Andrew Doria 124 Dec. 25 May 11 Jan 30 Apr. 34 35 36 37 H Robert Woolley 3 July 38 In ch. Detachments Sappers & Miners, Bangalor, Ag Qr Mr. & Inter 26th N. I. Eur. S.C.21st April 1837. Ag. Qr. Mr. & Joir. 3uth N, I. Edward Martin 15 Feb, 40 pH Robert Balfour 22 July Herbert Octavius Fleming 3 Oct. ENSIGNS. 39 40 Edwin Yates George Baldock R. W. Nortimer Vivian Augustas Ritherdon Augustus Prichard 13 Jan. 23 July 4 Aug. 28 Dec. 18 May 40 24 Jan. 15 Feb. 8 Mar. 116 Sept. 41127 Feb. 41 STAFF. William Scafe William Cornelius Bell John Trebeck Copran 18 Sept. 401 6 Feb, 38 126 Jan, 41 Adjutant. Qr. Mr. & Inter. Surg. Supg. Surg. Nor. Div, Assistant Surgeon. William Burrell 22 do. Mahomed Cassim. S. Bdr. 12 Dec. 32'Subadar Maior 264 TPART IL MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-NINTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Macleod - Late 1st Bat. 15th Regt. N. I. raised at Masulipatam in 1798. Arrived at Jaulnah, 3d January, 1839. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. Sir Hector McLean, x. C. B. 4 Aug. 1824, G. 28 Jane Europe. 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL. James Sbaw Wyllie 129 Jone 4117 June 41 MAJOR. Wm. Ed. Allured Elliot 17 Jane CAPTAINS. Edward Servante Richard Hurlock Clande Adolphus Roberts pH Frederick Lewis Nicolay 30 June 29 Egr. fur, 16th Juno 1841. 15 Feb. 36 13 Feb. 36 | April 18 July Şub Assistant Com. missary General. 17 June 411 8 Jan. 41 Eur. S. C. 19th Oct. 1841, Charles Thorold Hill LIEUTENANTS. Edward Holwell Short John William F thergill Alexander Wood Wm Lovell Bi ulderson p H Peter Grenville Cazalet H Anoesley Knox Gore (31 Mar. 32 24 Jone 16 April 34 2 do. 35 15 Feb. 36 18 July Staff Officer Jaulnah, Acting Qr. Mr. and Inter, 520 N. I. Theophilus Wm. Stracbey Charles Henry Cazalet Frederick Charles Barber 8 Oct. 3 do. 17 June 39 40 4) ENSIGNS. I John Cystavus Russell Irancis John Mills Mason Geo. Lakington Wm. Dacres Stanley Alexander Geo. Davidson 30 Jan. 4 Feb. 28 Dec, 3912 June 38 40 10 Mar, 39 2 Ang. 40 41 25 Dec. 14 Aug. 411 18 May 122 Nov. STAFF. Wm. Lovell Boulderson P. G. Cazalet 13 Aug. 39 13 do. Adjutant Quarter Master and Interpreter. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. Joseph Wilkinson 13 Feb. Reddy ...'31 Dec. 38 Subadar Major. FACINGS, White-LACB Gold. VOL. II.] 265 ARMY LIST. THIRTIETH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ Ava." Crewe-Late 2d Bat. 15th Regt. N. I. raised at Hyderabad in 1799. Arrived at Mangalore, 30th January, 1841, Names. Date of Commissions, In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. COLONEL, *Charles Farran 12 Jan, 35 M.G. 10 Jan. Presidency. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. W. Williamson, C, B. 1 Dec. 41 22 Dec, 32 MAJOR, Edward Horne 22 Oct, 41 · CAPTAINS. Horatio Pace John Jones Wm. Couperus M'Leod p A P. John Halpin Abraham Henry North LIEUTENANTS, 23 Dec. 38 6 April 35 24 Nov, 40113 Feb. 36 Brigdr. Major Cau- nanore. 3 June 41 27 Apr. 37 Asst to the Resident at Ava. 1 Aug. 8 June 41 22 Oct. 8 do. Eur. S. C. 13th Mar, 1840. 39 Eur. S. C. 24th July 1840. Herbert Main Dobbie 31 July George Frederick Salmon 8 Oct. William Taylor Money, 8 do, Alex. Stephenson Findlay 3 do. Clem, Ed. Money Walker 24 Noy. 401 Neilg. S. C. till 15th Mar. 1842.-23d April 1811, Robert Wm, Duff Nickle Charles Ross Fraser Frederick Nepean Smith Walter Chas, Brackenbury 26 do, 3 Jane 41 1 Aug. 22 Oct. ENSIGNS. 28 Dec. 18 May 40 21 Aug. 41 25 Jan. Henry Wm. Rawlins John Henry Dighton Roger Delamere Dansey George Gladstone Francis Edwardes 40 41 Eur. S. C. 8th Oct. 1841. Not a rived. 1 Nov. I do. 22 do. 11 June 12 do. 1 Sept. STAFF. Adjutant. Lt. R. Balfour, 28th N. I, Act. Quarter Master and Interpreter. Thomas Grigg 12 Feb. 40 Surgeon - Europe. Samuel Kent Parsons 23 Dec, 41 Assistant Surgeon. Letchman Sing 118 May 40 Subadar Major FACINGS, White-LACE, Gold, PART II.VOL. II. I I 266 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THIRTY-FIRST REGT. (or TRICHINOPOLY) LIGHT INFANTRY. “ Now Or Never," "ManuDPORE." Genrett- Late fst Bat. 16th Regt. T. L. I. raised at Trichinopoly, 1799. Arrived at Moulmein, April 1839. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, * John Munro 3 June 1824 M.G. 10 Jan Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Adolphas Derville 11 Dec. 41 5 Nov, 41 MAJOR. James Davidson 5 Nov. Ear. S, C. 5th Jade 1840, CAPTAINS. Gilbert James Richardson George Hardy man Milnes John Gordon pH William Henry Budd 18 July 32 Act. Qr. Mr. & Intr. 16 Nov. 36! 6 April 35 19 Dec. 13 Feb. 36 26 Sept. 37 27 April 37 Dy. Assistant Com- 5 Nov. 41 6 May 401 missary General, De Renzie James Brett LIEUTENANTS. Stephen Charles Briggs 18 July p H Frederick Knyvett James Hy. Alfred V osper Rogor Jackson pH Edward Harrington Impey William Bayley Jackson Blacket Revell Henry Dyett Abbott il Jan, 32 C, 6 May 40 Under the Resident Hyderabad, Capt. 4th Nizam's Inty, C. 8 Jan. 41 16 Nov. 36 23 do, 29 do. Adjt. Talain Corps Moulmeio. 19 Dec. 26 Sept. 3 Oct. Under the Snp.Govt Nizam's Service. 5 Nov. 41 Europe S.C.8th Dec, 1840. 40 Colin Gib EYSIGNS, Hen. Le Fleming Hughes Charles Binny Gib John W. Stokes 5 Dec, 39 20 Aug. 39 29 June 41 15 Feb. 37 14 Jan. 41 10 Aug. 18 May 25 Dec. 2 Dec. I Sept. 41 40 Cape S.C.21st Dec. 1841. Richard John Clack Alexander Robert Stuart STAFF, 29 July Surg., Secy. Medical Adjutant. George Pearse, M. D. Qr. Mr.& Interpreter . 37 Board. David I'rail 13 do. Assistant Surgeco. Shekh Homed, Babadoor 20 Nov. 32 Subadar Major, FACINGS, Dark Green-LACE, Gold. VOL, II.) 267 ARMY LIST. THIRTY-SECOND REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, « Ava." Dyce - Late 16th Regiment N. I. raised at Madura, 1799. Arrived at Secunderabad. Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army COLONEL, Gilbert Waugh 27 Dec. 1833 M. G. 28Jupe Military Adjt. Gen. 1838 LIEUT, COLONEL, John Wilson 7 Dec. 40 25 May 33 MAJOR. Richard Budd 8 Oct. 391 28 June 38 Supt. Bangalore Divi- sion under the Comr. in Mysore. CAPTAINS. James Woodward 19 Dec. 29 Neilg.S.C.tillistjan. 1843-11th Dec. 1841. Henry Power pH Michael J. Rowlandson 22 March 34 8 Oct. 3913 Feb. PH Edward Baker pH Charles Heathcote Wilson 30 Nov. 4 June 36 Persian Interpreter to Head Quarters and Secretary to the College Board. 41 French Rocks and Neilg.S.C till 25th July 1843–3d July 1841. 41 8 Jan. LIEUTENANTS. Fred. William Humphreys 22 Oct. Robert Gordon 28 do. 34 C. 8. Jan, 41 Doing duty Sappers and Miners, For Ser. China, 36 38 39 William Charles Western David Blair James Carfrae Freese William Thomas Williams p H Henry John Manley Willoughby Crewe John Norman Maclean 21 June 17 Aug 8 Oct. 8 do. 30 Nov. 3 Oct. 4 June 40 4) ENSIGNS. William Alex. Greenlaw Benjamin Wm. Vaughan William T. Chamberlain Lewis Grant Alexander Harvey Peill STAFF. 5 Dec, 28 do. 18 May 130 Aug. 1 Nov. 39 18 June 39 Eur, S. C. 17th Jan, 40 12 do. 40 1840, 41 17 Feb. 4! 16 Sept. 41 22 June 41 James Carfrae Freese Henry John Manley W, Mortimer, M. D. Jonathan Flockton 8 June 41 19 Feb, 26 July 39 22 Sept. 36 Adjutant. Qr Mr.&Interpreter. Surgeon---Europe. Assistant Surgeon. Abd. 268 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THIRTY-THIRD REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Wahab-Late 1st Bat, 17th Regt, N. 1. raised at Guntoor in December, 1799. Arrived at Moulmein, 1840, Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Geo, Launcelot Wahab 15 July 40 M G 28 Jane Neilg. Hills. 1838 LIEUT, COLONEL. James Edwin Williams 8 Sept. 41 24 Sept. 40 MAJOR, 31 Oct. 40 Arcbibald Spiers Logan CAPTAINS. Thomas Barnard Chalon 30 May 33 Judge Advocate Ge. neral of the Army. 35 John Hutchings Thomas McClellan Hubart Marshall Geo. Alexander Tulloch 21 Jan. 22 do. 14 Feb. 31 Oct. 36 40 Act.Qr. Mr. & Inter. LIEUTENANTS. John Ladeveze P. Trapaud 7 July 30 May p H Thos, Askwith Jenkins 27 C. 8 do. 41 Eur. S. C. 4th Aug. 1835. 33 Dep. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gl. of the Army, lo ch. Dep. Sap. and Miners Paumbum. 35 Ear, far, 20th Dec, 1839, Hepry Howard 21 Jan, pHR. Levison Jas. Ogilvie 7 June Richard Alexander Bruere 112 July With H. M. Shah Shoojah's Force. Charles Mockler George Willes Ommaney Hy. Richard Geo. Dallas Arthur Newbolt Rich 8 Oct. 391 2 do, 40, 3 do, 5 Mar. 41 ENSIGNS. Wm, John Bappister Stewart H. S. Freece Lauchlan M. Mackenzie Henry Foley Robert Nicol 28 Dec, 2 Jan. 18 May 18 do. 122 Nov. 401 4 July 40 41|30 Aug. Il Dec. 22 do. 11 Aug. 41 STAFF, R. L. J. Ogilvie 18 May 41 Adjutant. Qr.Mr,&Interpreter. Surgeon. George D. Gordon, M. D. 8 July Assistant Surgeon. Shekh Sillar 27 Aug. 39 Subadar Major. FACINGB, Deep Yellow-LACE, Gold. VOL. 11.) 269 ARMY LIST. THIRTY-FOURTH REGIMENT (OR CHICACOLE) LIGHT INFANTRY. “Now Or NEVER.” “ AVA," Durand-Late 2d Bat, 17th Regt. C, L, I, raised at Chicacole in 1799. Arrived at Mercara. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks, In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. Charles M’Leod, C. B. 6 Dec. 1828 M.G. 28 June Europe. 1838 LIEUT, COLONEL. James Perry 31 July 4113 July 31 MAJOR. 1 April 39) Edward Armstrong CAPTAINS, Eur. S. C. 7th Feb. 1840. William White 19 Jan. 37 Hector Mackenzie 26 Nov. pH George Broadfoot 14 Mar. 38 Eur. fur, 14th Jan. 1840. Neilg. S, C. till 31st August 1842--21st Aug. 1841. Employed with the Force of H. M. Shah Shoojab, Eur. S. C. 19th Feb. 1839. pH Ponsonby Shaw pH Joho Sibbald 1 April 391 29 Sept. LIEUTENANTS. 25 Sept. 35 Eur, fur. 20th Oct. 1840. George Singleton p H Richard Walter O'Grady Robert Wallace pH William Forbes Hutton Thomas Thompson Thomas Clerk 19 Jan. 37] 18 March 26 Nov. 14 March 38) 6 June With H. M, Shah Shoojab's Force. Matthew Price 1 April 39 pH Montague Thomas Ffrench 29 Oct. Alfred Fox Place 3 do. 40 Act. Qr. Mr. and Inter. 47th N. I. ENSIGNS. John Baskerville Mortimer 3 July Henry John Anderson 8 Nov. Francis Wingrave Pinkney 22 July John Binny Speid 28 Dec. Henry Hickman 18 May 39 11 Dec. 15 Jan. 49 3 do. 21 Aug. 38 Eur, S, C. 9th Mar. 39 (1841. 40 41 25 Jan. 41 Eur. S. C. 2d Nov. 1841. STAFF. Thomas Thompson R. W. O'Grady Joseph Lawrence 11 Jane 391 Adjutant. 10 Jan. 40 Qr. Mr. and Inter. 30 July Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. 18 March 25 Şubadar Major. Dark Green Mahomed Ghalib Facines 270 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. THIRTY-FIFTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Parkinson-Late 1st Bat. 18th Regt. N. 1. raised at Bangalore, June, 1800. Secunderabad, under orders to Hurryhur. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL. Brook Brydges Parlby, C. B. 20 Nov. 1829 M. G.28June Europe. 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL. William Strahan 4 Jun 39 24 Dec, 35 Qr. Mr. General of the Army. MAJOR. Eyre Evans Bruce 12 June 38 CAPTAINS. William George White Charles Turner Samuel Richard Hicks Francis Stephen Senior Arthur Trotter 27 Sept. 29, 4 July 29 18 May 3 24 Oct. 37 12 June 34 | 20 May 38 6 April 35 12 June 13 Feb. 36 Assist. Commissary General, LIEUTENANTS. Patrick Oliphant John Carne Boulderson Richard Hoskin James Frederick Gray p H Philip Lane Spry p H Samuel Hay Peter Ogilvy Alex. Arbuckle Lighton Robert Adamson 18 Nov. 25 C.27 Apr. 37 8 Sept. 26 C. 2 May 38 Asst. SargveyorGenl. Ganjam District- & Actg. Asst.Sapg. 18 May 32 C. 8 Jan. 41 Eng. Presy. Div. 24 do, 83C.8 do. Ear. 3 years 15thJan. 1841. il April 37 124 Oct. Act. Qr. Mr. &Inter. 41st N.I. 19 June 38 With H. M. Shah Shoojah's Force. 3 Oct, 40 20 April 41 With the Nizam's Service. ENSIGNS. John Penrose Coode William John Tweedie David Duval John Mortlock Robert Ranken 13 Apr. 39 6 Oct. 38 5 Dec, 27 Aug. 39 28 do. 40 20 do. 40 18 May 41/12 Dec. 1 Nov, 12 June 41 STAFF. Patrick Oliphant 30 Sept, 36 Adjutant. Philip Lane Spry 28 Nov, 32 Qr. Mr. and Inter. James Smith 13 Feb, 41 Surg.-Gar. Surgeon Bellary. Charles Kevin 28 do. 38 Assistant Surgeon. Veerasamy-$. Bahadoor 17 Nov. 35 Subadar Major. Facinc, Pale Buff-Lace Gold Vol. 11.) 271 ARMY LIST. THIRTY-SIXTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, (Rifle Company. - Foreign Service, China.) “Ava," Nundy-Late 2d Bat. 18th Regt. N. I. raised at Nandidroog in July, 1800. Arrived at Vellore, Names. Date of Commissions. In the Regt. t.!In the Army Remarks. COLONEL. James Staart Fraser 17 Feb. 1836 M.G. 28June Resdt, at Hyderabad, 1838 LIEUT. COLONEL. John Low, C. B. 19 April 41 21 Feb. 34 Residt. at Lucknow. MAJOR, 40 George Cornish Whitlock 31 July CAPTAINS. 23 May 32 1 April 33 John Forbes Musgrove William Henry Simpson pH John Hayne Gorge Preston Vallancey With the RifleComp. on For, Ser. Chipa. 31 Aug 341 35 2 Oct. Under the orders Supreme Gov. Sup- pression ofThuggee. 39 Eur. fur. 13th Oct. 1840, Thomas Digby Roberts 13 April 41|14 May LIEUTENANTS. 23 May 2 Oct. pH John Wilton Fredick Cox Bishop Thomas Wishart Mitchell Henry William Blake 14 Jan, 8 Oct. 32 C, 8 Jan. 41 35 With the Rifle Comp, on For. Ser, China. 38 39 Neilg. S. C, till 4th June, 1842-21st Dec, 1841. William Frederick Blake Tbs. Dyer Thiselton Dyer Alex. Lawrence Tweedie 30 Nov. 6 July 31 do. 40 With the Rifle Comp. on For. Ser, China, William John Doveton Thomas Ruggles Fisher 3 Oct. 13 April 41 ENSIGNS. Fras. Wm. L, Gordon 23 July 40 16 Feb. 40 Eur. S. C. 8th Sept, 1840, Geo. Wm. Tower A. Loftus C. Inglefied John Craven L. Crowdy Andrew Cooke McMaster 28 do. 2 Jan, 13 May 118 do. 15 June 4111 do, 12 Dec. 8 Mar. 41 STAFF, 5 Dec. Henry William Blake John Wilton Donald Smith Young 23 Apr. 371 39 41 13 Oct. Adjutant absent. Qr. Master & Inter. Supg: Surg, Malabar and Canara & Act. in the Cen. Div. Assistant Sarg. John Forbes 8 Dec. Sheikh Bahoo 1 fan Qochodowa 272 (PART II, MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT, THIRTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY, Forbes-Late 1st Bat, 19th Regt. N. I. raised at Itchapoor in 1800. On Foreign Service, China. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Richard Lacy Evans, c. B. 25 Apr, 40 M.G.26Nov. Europe. 184) LIEUT. COLONEL, James Campbell 1 Oct. 41 31 Oct. 40 MAJOR. H Augustus Clarke 4 Jan. 39.. First Aset to the Commissioner in Mysore. CAPTAINS. Philip Bedingfield Edmund James Simpson Edward Wardroper pH Robert Gordon 24 Dec, 4 Jan, 23 Mar. 35 6 April 35 39 27 do. 37 40 6 May 40 Eur. S. C.M.C. 14th December 1841. Asst. Adjt. Genl, of the Army. 41 24 Sept. Alexander James Hadfield 7 July LIEUTENANTS. William Harvey Mercer Robert Cotton 24 Nov. 31 114 Feb. 33 Eur, S. C. 24th Jan. 1840. 40 Wentworth Bayly Wm. Henry Freese Charles John Power Fred, John Goldsmid William M. Berkeley Henry Southwell Coote 23 Mar. 24 Sept. 24 do, 24 do. 3 Oct, 7 July 41 Acting Adjutant. Ear. S.C.M.C. 14th Oct. 1841. Robert Mayne 13 do. ENSIGNS. George Francis Luard 1 Nov. 4115 Jan. James Alexander Day George O'Brien Crisp Lumley Hod. H. Holland 1 do. I do. I do. 18 do. 4 Sept. 25 Jan, 39 Doiog duty with 40th N. I. 401 do. do. do. Cochin on leave. 41 Doing duty 4th N. 1. Ferdinand Goldsmith I do. 13 June do. do. STAFF. Adjutant. Lt. W. P, Devereux2dE.LI George Harding Actg. Qr.Mr.&Inter. 20 Oct, 41 Surgeon, Actg. Surg. General Hospital, Presdy. Assistant Surgeon. Sevoosing 125 Sept, 38 Sabadar Major, FACINCS, Buff-Lace, Gold, VOL. u.) ARMY LIST. THIRTY-EIGHTA REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. (Rifle Company.) * Ava." McGregor-Late 2d Bat, 19th Regt. N. I. raised at Ellore in 1800. Arrived at French Rocks, 18th Dec., 1810. Date of Commissions, Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, David Courtney Kenny 27 July 41 MG, 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. John Wheeler Cleveland 24 Sept. 38 10 April 36 MAJOR. John Monson Boyes 23 June 41 28 June 38 CAPTAINS. Charlton Holl 5 Apr. 31 Eur. on far. 1 year 19th Feb. 1841. Charles Pooley Anthony Harrison Patrick Alex. Reynolds 15 June 34! 10 April 36 13 Feb, 8 Oct. 39 13 do, 36 Depy. Judge Adv, General Under the orders of the Supreme Govt. Captain Nizam's Cavalry &Saperin- tendent of Thuggeo. Rob. Grant Carmichael 23 Jane 41 13 do. LIEUTENANTS. pH Edward Clutterbuck William Cross pH H+ory Gordon pH John Campbell pH Edw. Arthur Henry Webb Charles Carter John Peter Mouat. Biggs pH George Harper Saxton A. Chichester Macartney ENSIGNS. Charles Winn Huet William Hindley Crichton John Henry Wahab Niostyn Owen John William Maingay 5 May 25 C. 2 May 38 Junior Asst. Com- missioner Myaore, I do. 26 C. 14 May 39 5 April 311 15 June 34 C. 8 Jan. 41 Sub. Asst. Comsry. General. I do, 38 Employed in the Ser. vice H M. Shah Shoojah's Force. 8 Oct. 39! 8 do. 3 do. 40 23 June 41 Employed in the Ser. vice AM. Shah Shoojali's Force. 8 Voy. 39' 9 March 39 5 Lec 28 do 4 do 5 Mar 2 uct. 3 Nov. 41 12 June 41 9 119 STAFF. H Gordon Geo. H. Saxton John McLeod 3 Sept. 41 3 do. 8 April 37 A djutant. Qr. Mr. and Inter. Surg - Sup. Surgeon Cen Div. Act. 3rd. Member Medical Board, Assistant Surgeon, C. H. Auchinleck, M. D. 16 July 38 Ironoh d. be 6 Sant Als atar MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT (PART I. THIRTY-NINTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ SEETABULDEE.”_"NAGPORE." Martin-1st Bat. 20th Regt. N. I. at Tanjore in 1804. Embarked for Singapore, 1841. Date of Commissions. Names Remarks, In the Rege. In the Army. COLONEL. Sir Jeffrey Prendergast, Kt. 25 Jan. 1826 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. William Taylor 26 Nov, 40 13 June 40 MAJOR. Edward Messiter 8 Dec, 40 CAPTAINS. James Victor Hughes Francis Eades 7 Dec. 3 Supt. Cotton Plan- ters Coimbatore. 26 Sept. 35 6 April 35 Art Qr. Master and Inter. 8 Oct. 39 13 Feb. 36 13 June 40 13 do. Fort Adjt. Vellore. 8 Dec. George Sidney Wilkinson Coghill Glendower Oitley Henry Harriott LIEUTENANTS. Eur. S. C. 9th Feb. 1841. Arthur Frederick Beavan 31 July 33 Edward Norman 26 Sept. 35 Septimus lp elix Corfield 119 Ang. 38 George Joh's Parvis I Dec, pll Gamaliel Fitzmaurice 8 Oct. 39 Roest hedden Dobbie 401 Heory B-ker Sweet 13 June Edward Bi gham Garrard 3 Oct Cbas Æsculapius Searle 8 Dec. ENSIGNS. 5 May Henry Douglas Hart Archibald W. M. Kerr Henry Frye 4011 Dec 27 July 28 Dec. 28 do. 11 June 12 do. 39 40 Egr. S. C. 1st Oct 1841. Henry Bruce John Smith Barclay STAFF. 18 May 18 do. 4) 22 Dec. 18 Mar. Artbar Frederick Beaven 6 Dec. 361 David Richardson 125 Jan. Adjutant. Qr. Mr & Inter. Surg - under the or. der of the Comr. Tenas. Provs, in Med charge lalaia Corps. Assistaot Surgeon. James Dorward 19 Dec. 361 Mahomed Ahmeen-Badr. 6 Sept. 34 Subadar Major. FACINOS, Dark Green-LACE, Gold. VOL. 11.] 275 ARMY LIST. FORTIETH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Volunteer-Jate 2d Bat. 20th Regt. N. I. raised at Tanjore in Sept. 1804. Arrived at Palaveram, 21st May, 1811, Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks, In the Regt. In the Army. COLONEL, Thomas Pollock, C. B. 20 Dec, 1830 M.G. 10 Jan Europe, 1837 LIEUT, COLONEL. Bryce Mc Master 125 Aug. 41 17 Nov. 34 Eur. S. C. 26th Nov. 1839. MAJOR, Charles Wilford 15 Jan. 41 CAPTAINS. Horatio Nelson Noble 26 May 30 Cantonment Adjutant Palaveram. George Henry Harper 11 Feb. 35 Paymr. Hyderabad Subsidiary Force. Geo, Paulett Cameron, c. B. 8 Oct. 3927 April 37 Eur. S. C. 26th Nov. 1840. John Bates 20 Dec. 4014 May 39 pH Robert Cappan, K. 8. P, 15 Jan. Junior Asst. Com- missioner Mysore, lo ch, of Naggur Div. LIEUTENANTS. pH Patrick Ogilvie Giffort Glascort Thomas Osborne 11 July 11 Feb. 12 do. 34 35 16 May 34 Eur. fur. 19th Juno 1840. 37 38 39 Albert H. A. Hervey Charles Alex. Blagrave Thomas Lee. Jackson James Douglas Dale Richard John Char. Smith Robert Crauford Oakes 25 do 24 Mar, 20 Dec. 5 May 3 Oct. 16 Jan. 41 ENSIGNS. Frederick Welland Charles Philip Taylor F. Huse Chitty 22 July 1 Aug. 2 Mar. 40|11 Dec 89 8 March 40 41 27 Sept. Ear. S. C. 22 June 1841. 22 Dec. 25 Jan, 41 8 May Henry R. Smith Henry Warre M'Causland 19 do. STAFF. Albert H. A. Hervey Patrick Ogilvie Robert Wight, M. D. 20 Jan 37 Adjutant. 10 Oct. Qr Mr and Inter. 128 Dec. 38 Surg. Garrisou Sarg. Fort St George, absent on duty. 8 Dec. 41 A sot, Surgeon. 5 Dec. 36 Subadar Major, Rark Green-LACE, Gold, Robert Henry Repnick Cassim Sahib S. Babadoor 276 (PART 1 MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FORTY-FIRST REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Irton-Late 1st Bat. 21 st Regt. N. I. raised at Chicacole in 1804, Arrived at Madras, 25th February, 1840. Names, Date of Commissions. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. COLONEL. Frederick Bowes 18 July 1835 M.G. 28 June Europe. 1838 LEUT. COLONEL. Frapcis Haleman 24 Dec, 39 19 Feb. 36 MAJOR. John Camphell 2 Sept. 391 Principal Asst Go. vernment Agent of Fort St. George jo Ganjam. CAPTAINS. George Logan 127 Jan. 31 Fort Adjt. Fort St. George and Sapg Officer Gent emen Cadets. Paymaster Trichi- popoly. pH William Pitt Macdovald 9 Nov. Henry Hall 24 do Gustavas Cowper Rochfort 19 Oct. pH Chas. Wentworth Burdett 15 Mar. 33 38 13 Feb. 36 LIEUTENANTS, Wiotney Bread. M'Cally 17 Sept. 28 C. 8 Jan. 41 Under the Resident Hyderabad Capt. Nizam's Infantry. Francis Grant 5 Oct. 31 C. 8 do. George Thomas Haly 9 Nov, Wm. Ed. Prescott Cotton 28 do. 36 R, Wm laylor Money 19 Oct. 38 Joseph Mac Viccar 2 fept. 39 William Joseph Hare 8 Oct, Employed in the Nizam's Service. George Emmerson 15 Mar 4G Charles (sbaldeston Lukin 3 Oct. Eur S. C. 30th Jaly 1839. ENSIGNS John Fincher Trist Richard Tomes Charles Edward Holmes Anbone S. Surt es Arthur Burford Smith 29 Jan, 40 18 Sept, 39 22 July 10 Dec. Eur. S. C.24th Sept. 1841. 28 Dec, 6 Sept. 18 May 41/17 Teb. 41 1 Nov. 21 June STAFP. Actg. Qr. Mr. and Joseph MacViccar 10 Apr. 40 Adjutant. Lt, Samuel Hay 35th N. 1. inter H. C Ludlow. M. D. 13 Feb. Surgeon Barnpe. Alexander Lorimer, M. D. 26 Jan. Assistant Surgeou. Mabomed Jaffer | Jan. 41'Subadar Major. FACINGB, Bright Yollow-LACE, Gold. VAL. u.) 977 ARMY LIST. FORTY-SECOND REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. “ Ava." McFarlane - Late 2nd Bat. 21st Regt. V. I. raised at Ellore in 1804. Arrived at Husingabad, 19th March, 1839. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt. In the Army. COLONBL. Richard West 5 Jan. 1837 M G. 28 June Residing at Madras. 18:8 LIEUT. COLONEL. Lawrence Macdowell 11 Dec. 41119 Nov. 39 Eur. S. C. 11th Dec. 1838. MAJOR, Francis How Ely 10 Feb. 37 CAPTAINS. Patrick Henderson pH P. James FitzGerald 6 Aug. 25 June 31 36 13 Feb. 36 Sub Assistent Comy. General in charge Post Office Nagpore. Eur. S. C. 230 Mar. 1841. James Cbar. Grant Stuart 10 Jan. 37 pH Coll Macleod Henry Wakeman LIEUTENANTS. 10 Feb. 11 April 39 Ed. Vere Pere. Holloway Henry Octavius Marshall Charles Burton 25. Oct. 8 Feb. lá Sept 26 C. 14 May 39 36 C. 8 Jan. 41 Depy. Supt. Govt. Roads-Neilgy. on leave 6 months 27th July 1841. 37 Alexander Tod PH Francis Henry Sansom Charles Roper William Henry Tanner George Mathew Martin PH Thomas Jenkins 10 Jan. 10 Feb. 13 Jan. 11 April 26 Aug. 39 Ear. S. C. 12th Mar. 1841. 3 Oct. 40 ENSIGNS. 39 Septimus Gibbon Richard Edward Comyn Charles J. Anthony Deane James Miles Reilly Græme H. Atkioson 3 July 39 15 Jan. 5 Dec. 21) Aug 27 Oct. 40111 Dec. 129 Dec. IA Aug. 18 May 41 25 Dec. 40 STAFF, Ed. Vere Pere. Holloway 23 Jan, 38 A jutant. F.H. Sansom 10 do 40 Qr. Mr. and Inter. Robert Davidson 1 Dec, Surgeon-Sopg. Surg. Ceded Districts. John Grant, M. D 26 April 38 Assistant Surgeon Shaik Audam, “Sirdar Ba. badoor" 119 April 36 Subadaa Major. 278 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FORTY-THIRD REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. "AVA." Whittie -Cumbum-Late 1st Bat, 22d Regt. N. I. raised in Nellore 1804. Arrived at Kamptee, 23d March, 1841. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks In the Regt. In the Army COLONEL, • Arthur Molesworth 4 Jan. 1826 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. Lewis Wentworth Watson 11 Jan, 41 8 Oct, 39 MAJOR. George Graptham 1 Aug. 39 CAPTAINS, pH John Millar 24 Jan. 35 Eur. fur. 10th April 1840. Sub. Asst Commis- 1 March 361 sary General. pH Charles Moray Macleane Henry Thatcher Arch. Goldie Young 19 Dec. 19 Feb, 39 Durwar leave till 15 April 1842 - 4th September 1841, Eur. S. C. 2d April 1 Ang. Robert Philip Bourdillon LIEUTENANTS. 1839. 361 Rodney James Kempt PH P. Wm. John Wilson 1 Mar. 128 April Acting. Asst. to the Agent for the Govt. of Fort St. George in Ganjam Eur, S, C. 26th June [1840. Eur, S. C. 18th Jan. 1839. James Richardson Robert Peers Keith Watt Edm Whiteford Metcalfe Samuel Denholm Young H Thomas Alfred Boileau Char. Wm. francis Whish 5 May 16 Oct. 19 Dec. 31 Jan. 38 39 19 Feb. | Aug. Lucknow and Rengal on leave till Suth July 1849 – 26th Nov. 1841. Eur. S. C. 14th June 1839. Francis William Sellon 3 Oct, ESSIGNS. 38 30 Jan, 13 April 22 July May 18 do. A lvie Campbell George Frre James Robert Campbell 1 harles Philip Y. Triscott Astell William Drayver 3912 June 12 do. 40 6 Jan. 4112 Dec. 117 Feb. 401 Adjutant STAFF. Robert Peers Keith Watt Ivie Campbell David Boyd 30 April 41 20 Oct. 40 18 June 30 Qr. Mr. and Inter. Surgeon Superio- tending Surgeon Mysore Division. Assistant Surgeon. Subados !!!... Thom: Horatius Cappan 18 Jan. 88 VOL. II.) 279 ARMY LIST. FORTY-FOURTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Buckan - Late 2d Regt. N. I, raised at Trichinopoly, in 1804. Arrived at Moulmein, 26th April, 1841. Date nf Commissions. Names. In the Regt in the Army Remarks. COLONEL, * Richard Podmore 3 June 1824 M.G. 10 Jan Europe 1837 LIEUT. COLONEL. p H P. Charles Dennis Dun 15 Oct. 39| 4 May 39 Neilg. S. C. till 10th Oct.1842- 3d Apr. 1841. MAJOR. Robert 1ierney Wallace 1 Sept. 40 CAPTAINS. Ar hur M'Cally Alexander Adam Francis Dudgeon John William Rumsey Josiah Wilkinson 9 July 34 3 June 33 Asst. Comy Genl. 29 do. 12 do. 34 Under the orders of the Resident Hyd. 29 Oct. 37 13 Feb. 36 4 May 39 Eur. S. C. l6th Feb. 1841. 1 Sept. 40114 Sept. 39 ) LIEUTENANTS. Robert Gill 8 Sept. 26 C. 6 May 40 PH W. Campbell Onslow 22 Jan, 27'C. 6 do. Under the orders of the Commissioner in Mysoie. Thomas Longden Place 29 July 34 C. 8 Jan. 41 Doveton Hodson 7 April 36 C. 8 do pH W. Morrison Wahab 29 Oct. 37 Uuder Supreme Go. vernment, pH Richd Pakenham Podmore 4 May 39 George Staple Dobbie 20 Aug William Henry Stone 1 Sept. 40 Richard Western 3 Oct. ENSIGNS. George Paxton pH Edward James Lawder Wm. C. Phillips Wm. Fraser Stanley W. Alven 26 Aug. 11 Jan 28 Dec. 28 do. 18 May 39.10 Mar. 39 40 18 June 12 do. 16 Sept. 4118 Mar. 41 4 STAFF. Doveton Hodgson R. P. Podmore Thomas O'Neil 27 Oct. 40 19 Jane 22 Sept. 41 John McKenna 19 Dec. 39 Adjutant. Qr. Nir and Inter. surg. Female Asylum &c. Assistant Surgeon. !: badar Major Fran . 280 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. FORTY-FIFTH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Shaw-Late 1st Bat. 22d Regt. N. I, raised at Wallajahbad in 1804. Arrived at Quilon, 9th February 1840. Date of Commissions. Names. Remarks. In the Regt In the Army. COLONEL. Edward Boardman 17 July 1824 M.G. 10 Jan. Europe. 1837 LIEUT, COLONEL, John Laurie 19 April 41 4 Aug. 40 MAJOR. pH P. A.M Jas, Macdonald 22 Aug. 39 Neilg. S. C. till 31st Dec. 1842 - 19th April 1841. CAPTAINS. pH Andrew Fraser James Wyllie John James M'Murdo 8 Sept. 26 Depnty Judge Ad- vocate General. 13 June 28 11 Jan, 34 Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. Hyd. Sub Force. 12 Feb. 36 Ear fur. 1 year lith June 1811, 22 Aug. 3927 April 37 Wm. R. Andrew Freeman John Gerrard LIEUTENANTS. pH George Woodfall William Elliot Lockhart Frank Bryan Lys p H Richard Crewe John Kitson Richard ( ooper Heber Drury Henry Menars Francis Tower 8 Sept. 36 c. 27 Apr. 37 Europe S. C 21sf Jannary 1840 3 Mar. 27 C. 6 May 40 With the Nair Bri- gade Travancore. 15 Sept. 28 C. 8 Jan, 41 12 Feb. 36 17 Oct. 20 Mar, 38 19 June 22 Aug. 39 3 Oct. 4v Eur. S. C, 18th Aug. 1840. ENSIGNS. Robert Spence Howe Mackay Ferguson Edvard Davie Frank Barber Charles George Cottoll 39. Nov. 39 12 Dec. 37 30 do, 11 Mar. 38 22 July 401 6 Jan. 46 18 May 41 17 Feb. I Noy. 1 June STAFF. 38 Frank Bryan Lys Richard Crewe John Richmond 17 July 4 May 6 Mar. 14 Adjutant. Qr Mr. and Inter. Surg Nor. West Dist. & Ag. Gar. Surg. Force St. Geo. Asst. Surg. Neilg.S.C. Robert Magipniss 9 Dec, 39 34'Subadar Major. Hossain Sheriff, Babadoor 1 Jan. FACINGS, White-Lace, Gold. VOL 11.] 281 ARMY LIST. 461. REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Lord-Late 2d Bat. 230 Regiment N. I. raised in 1804. Arrived at Bangalore. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. J. Marshall, [1837 3 June 1824 m. g. 10 Jan. Europe. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Wallace, 1 Dec. 41 23 Nov. 39 Major. J. Low, 23 Nov. 39 Principal Assist. Pro. vince Wellesley South of Malacca. Captuins. A. Pinson, R Codrington, J. Benwell, C. Yates, 3 June 31 May 16. Dec. 9 Oct. 26m. 26 Nov. 41 Eur. Fur, 5th Oct.1838. 33 [1838. 35 Eur. S. C. 23 Nov. 39| 2 May 39 Neilg till 31st May 42. -6th Aug. 1841. 14 do 39 41 221 Dec. 33 (P) H. C. Rowland- son, 23 Nov. Lieutenants. E. B. Stevenson, 27 Nov. A. Russell, 31 May (P) H.,C.R. Macken- zie, 8 Jan. (P)GA H. Falconer, 13 July À.J. Greenlaw, 16 Dec. W. R. Fullarton, 8 Oct. T. Greenaway, 9 do. A.K.C. Kennedy, 3 do. A. Cooper, 19 Feb. 351 37 39! 40 4) Ensigns. 40 W. Newton, 22 July J. Fulton, 28 Dec, W. C. Rich, 22 Jan, W. Murray, 18 May J. W. Stubbs, 18 do. Staff C R. Mackenzie, 31 Dec. G. A. H. Falconer, . 11 June J. Ladd, 23 Sept. 40 15 Feb. 6 Sept. 41 i do. 12 Dec. 27 Feb. 41 39 41 39 Adjutant. Quarter Mr. and Intr. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. Abdullah Eeg, 5 Oct. 37 Subadar Major. Facings, White--Lace, Gold. PART II. VOL. II. L L 282 [PART 11 MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. 47TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Chitty_Late 1st Bat. 24th Regt. N. I. raised at Ellore in 1819. Arrived at Dharwar, 30th November 1838. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. [1838 10 Oct. 1833 mg. 28 June Europe. W. Clapham, ... Licutenant Colonel. () H.P.,J.Garnault, 6 Jan. 41 8 Oct. 39 Major. W. Bremner, 29 Jan. 41 Captains. J. Blaxland, C. Woodfall, C. Taylor, J. H. Kennedy, J. E. Hughes, 8 Sept. 8 Oct. 1 May 22 Dec. 29 Jan. 37 13 Feb. 39 13 do 40 14 May 36 Eur, fur, 29th Oct.1841 39 418 Jan. 41 Eur. fur. 29th Oct.1841 Lieutenants. A. Salmon, 17 April 34 (P) H., H. P. White, 23 May 35 J. S. Allan, 19 Feb. 37 H. D. Innes, 8 Sept. C. Dysart, 8 Oct. 39 D. G. Pollard, 1 May 40 H. Geo. W. Rich, 3 Oct. E. Walker, 22 Dec. S. Taylor, 29 Jan. 41 1 Ensigns. 40 G. R. Rolston, F. Waugh, G. S. Pechell, T. Parkinson, J. W. Rutherford, 22 July 28 Dec. 2 Mar. 19 July 22 Nov. 4015 Feb. 16 Sept. 41 30 do 30 Mar. 11 Aug. 41 STAFF. H. P. White, 5 Feb. 41 Adjutant. Lt. M. T. French 34th N. I. Actg. Qr. Mr. and Intr. Geo. Knox, 2 Mar. 39 Surg., Garrison Surgeon, Bangalore. D. Sturrock, M. D. ... 1 Dec. 40 Assistant Surgeon. Ramsing,.. 23 Oct 40 Subadar Major. Facings, Pale Buff-LACE, Gold. FOL. 11.) 285 ARMY LIST. 4874 REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Wough-Late 2d Bat. 24th Regt N.I raised at Wallajahbad 16th June1819. Arrived at Secunderabad. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. T. Boles, 1830 9 Oct. 1824 m.g. 22 July Europe. Lieutenant Colonel. 40 2 Jan. 38 (P)H., J. Leggett,... 31 Jan. Major. T. D. Carpenter. 7 Sept. 41 Supt. of the ex-Rajahs of Coorg and Satara, and joint Magistrate, &c. Benares. Captains. R. R. Ricketts, D. Littlejohn, Geo. Gordon, C. Taylor, C. Mackenzie, 17 Oct. 5 Mar. 13 Nov. 23 Jan. 30 36 13 Feb. 38 27 April 41 16 May 8 Jan. 36 Eur.S.C. 24th Dec. 1839. 37 40 Ag. Qr. Mr. and Intr. 41 Under the orders Govt. of India. 7 Sept. Lieutenants. J.S. Lang, 7 Aug. C.F. Compton, 17 Nov. (P) H. H. Ferrier,.. 5 Mar. 28 c. 8 Jan. 31 36 41 Eur. fur.27th July 1841. Eur.fur. 20th Nov. 1840. Asst. under Govt. East- ern Settlements Dep Supt. Govt. Roads. A. Robertson, 20 Dec. J. H. M. Babington, 13 Nov. Hy. A. O Const, 3 Oct. Geo. G. Southey, 3 Jan. W. S. Simpson, . 23 do P. F. Ottley, 7 Sept. 38 40 41 Eur.S.C.18th Jan, 1839. Ensigns. J. Obbard, 28 Dec. 40 2 Aug. 40 J. S, Sword, 18 May 4112 Dec. E. Cheetham, 18 do 22 do W. Southey, 23 June 22 do Eur.S.C.27th Aug.1841. E. Metcalfe, 22 Nov. 1 Sept. 41 STAFF. J. H. M. Babington, 29 June 41 Adjutant. Qr. Mt. and Intr. G. W. Scheniman, .. 6 July Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. C. Cawn, 8 Oct. 39 Subadar Major. Facings, Pale Buff-Lace, Gold. 284 (Part II MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. 49TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. (Rifle Company.) Nundy-Late 1st Bat. 25th Regt. N. I. raised at Nundidroog in 1819. Arrived at Kamptee, 16th April 1838. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. 1837 Sir C. Deacon, K.C.B. 6 Dec. 1828 mg. 10 Jan Europe. Lieutenant Colonel. H. Dowker,.... 7 July 41 28 Aug. 39 Major. H. Moberly, 5 Mar. 38 10 Jan. 37 Secy. Military Board. 27 Feb. 25 May Captains. C. Hewetson, A. Douglas, E. Roberts, (PH) R. Hall, J. T. Lugard, 19 Dec. 5 Mar. 27 [March 1842. 31 Neilg. S. C. till 20th 25 6 April 35 3. 6 ditto Payr. Nag. Sub. Force. 38 27 ditto 37 9 Apr. Lieutenants. G. Forster, 19 Jan. 33 c. 6 May 40 Comg. Resdt. Escort Nag. & Supt. of Bazars. (PH)J.M. Charteris, 20 Oct. 33 c. 8 Jan. 41 Deputy Paymaster Ma- labar and Cauara. J. A. S. Coswell, 27 May 34 (PH)P.E.L.Richards 17 April 35 J. Stewart, 19 Dec. 35 Eu.Fur. 18th Dec. 1810. R. "rowe, 19 do 361 H. Man, 5 Mar. 38 In ch. Head Qrs. Sap. and Min. & Actg. A. Qr. Mr. H.P. Keighly,..... | 9 April 38 Employed in the Niz. Service. J. H. Butler, 18 Feb. 31 Ensigns. T. II. Dury, 3 July 3912 Dec. 38 J. (). Buttler, 22 do 40 3 Jan. 40 R. Taylor, 28 Dec. $020 Aug. 40 W. R. Broome, 2 Mar. 41 30 Sept. J. Cundy, 18 May 41 25 Dec. 40 STAFF. Adjutant. P. E. Rickards, .... 29 June 41 Quarter Mr. & Inter. F. Godfrey, 5 Dec. 39 Surgeon, Europe. J. Cornfoot, M. D. 1 June 37 Assistant Surgeon. Lookman Sirdar Ba- hadoor, 5 Oct. 27 Subadar Major. 401 Facings, Bright Yellow ---Lace, Gold. VOL. 11.) 285 ARMY LIST. 50TH REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Fenwick,-Late 2d Bat. 25th Regt. N. I. raised at Palamcottah in 1819. Arrived at Berhampore, 8th March 1811. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. J. Carfrae, 1838 21 May 1834 mig. 28 Junc Europe. Lieutenant Colonel. J. Wright, 20 Nov. 4120 Dec. 39 Eastern Coast--- Bang.& Neilg. S. C. till ist Dec. 1872--20th Nov. 1841. Major. T. L. Green, 27 Jan. 37 32 3:31 First Assistant Military Auditor General. 33 Captains. J. Dickson, 27 Dec. (PH)GG Mackenzie, 9 June (PA)E.T. Morgan, 12 Oct. A. R. Rose, W. W Dunlop, 27 Jan. Lieutenants. H. A. Thompson, 2 June (PH) A. M. Donald- son, 23 Nov. - Aug. 30 Eur. S.C. 20 Nov 1838. 29 c. 8 Jan. 41 31 33 A. K. Cockburn, R Rollo, J. Campbell, 9 June 12 Oct. 21 Dec. Junior Assist. to Com- missioner Mysore. Eur. Fur. 20th Oct. (1840. In ch E. Compy. Sap. & Miners, Berhampore. With II. M Shah Soo- jab's Force. 3+ R. O. Gardner, 2 Aug. 36... W. D. Grant, F. J. Loughnan, 12 Oct. 8 do 39 Ensigns. J H. I. Grant, G. E. Cotton, A.M. Maddison, H. Bell, C. Pulley, 26 June 26 do 5 Dec. 2 Mar. 18 May 39 27 Mar. 3912 Dec. 3920 Aug. 4130 Sept. 4 125 Dec. Van. Dieman's Land & New South Wales till 9th Sept 1842–15th Sept. 1810. 38 38 39 Eur. S. C. 23rd Nov. 40 [1841. 40 STAFF. H.. Thompson, 29 Jan. 39 Adjutant. Lt.F G Kempster,6th N. I. Act. Qr. Mr. & Inter. R. Cole, 13 Feb. Surg --in charge of sick. Officer St. Thome,&c. E G. Bedwell, 19 Dec. 41 Assist. Surgeon. Kahder Khan, 19 June 3 Subadar Alajor. Facings, Bright Yellow-Lace, Gold. 286 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. 51st REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Leighton-Late 1st Extra Regt. raised at Palamcottah, Ist Feb. 1826. Arrived at Sholapore 11th October 1841. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colonel. J. Ilackett, 27 July 1836 mg 28 June 1838 Residing Western Coast. Lieut. Colonel. J. H. Winbolt, 18 Mar. 4015 June 38 Mojor. Benj. R. Hitchins,... 9 Apr. 38 10 Jan. 37 Stipy. Member Military Board, and Member Marine Board, Lieut. Colonel. Captains. W. Langford, 2 May 29 C. Evans, 19 Apr. 30 M. Blaxland, 15 Dec. 32 Acting Quarter Master and Staff Officer, Sholapore. G. Leacock, 9 Apr. 38 6 April 35 Acting Adjutant. (PH) G. Hamond, 8 Oct. 39 13 Feb. 36 Actg. Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gl. of the Army. Lieutenants. C. Stafford, 8 Sept. 26 c 27 Apr. 37 Eur. S. C. 4th June 1841. J. C. Power, 1 Mar. 29 c 2 May 38 Ewd. Ussher, 2 May C 8 Jan. 41 Eu.S.C.24th Jan. 1840. (PH) J.M. Madden, 15 Dec. 32c 8 ditto Neilg. S C. till 15th May 1842, Bombay G.O. 11th Nov. 1841. Ewd. Armstrong, 31 Jan. 35 F Templer, 12 do. 38 W. Isacke, 9 Apr. J. C. McCaskill, 8 (ct. 39 Ewd. W. Boudier, 3 do. 40 Ensigns. O. G. De Wet, 30 Jan. 39 11 Feb. 38 A. Tripe, 1 Mar. | Mar. W. Johnstone, 8 Nov. 14 Jan. 39 Eu.S.C. 26th Feb. 1841. Wm. B. Griffith, 128 Dec. 40 20 Aug. 40 D. S. Hughes, 18 May 41 25 Dec. Staff. J. M. Madden, 21 Sept. 40 Adjutant-Absent SC. Qr. Mr. & Inter. C. Currie, 122 Sept. 36 Surgeon,-Supdg. Surg. Southern Division. W. Beauchamp, 11 Nov. 36 Assistant Surgeon. Ununoop Sing, S. Babador, 1 May 27 Subadar Major. Facings, White--Lace, Gold. ... VOL. 11.) 287 ARMY LIST. 52ND REGIMENT NATIVE INFANTRY. Steuart—Late 2d Extra Regt. raised at Bangalore, 1st Feb. 1826. Arrived at Asseerghur, 16th Nov. 1841. Names. In the Regt. In the Army. Remarks. Colorel. G. McK. Steuart, .. 15 July [1841 40 m. g. 26 Nov. Comg. Nor. Div. of the Army. Lieut. Colonel. J. Morgan, C.B. .. 20 Nov. 4124 Dec. 31 Brig. Comg. Masulipa- tam, and Govt. Agent Chepauk Palace, and Payr. Car. Stipends. 15 June 38 10 Jan. 37 Major. C. St. J. Grant, Captains. R. Dowell, G. A. Baillie, H. Bower, 24 Apr 1 Mar. 32 37 6 Apr. 13 Feb. 5 July F. A. Clarke, (PH) T. Bayles, 15 June 12 July 38 13 do 41 14 May 35 36 Eur. S. C. 14th Jan. 1840. Eur. Fur. 2d June 1840. 39 Employed under the orders of the Govnr. of India. Lieutenants. (PH) R. R. Scutt,... 27 May T. P. Walsh, 24 Apr. W. B Littlehales, 31 July (PH) F. S. Gabb, . 1 Mar. H. W. Tulloch, 15 June (PH) R. S. Wilson, . 3 May 27 c 6 May 40 Eur. Fur. 7th Dec. 1841. 32 C 8 Jan. 41 Employed in Affghanis- tan. 33 37 38 39 Employed in the Ser- vice of Shah Sooja- ool-Moolk. 14 39 40 H. Crisp, 3 Oct. A. M. Cooper, 12 July C. W. K. Sharp,.. 19 Dec. Ensigns. T. H. L Miller, 5 Dec. B. M. Macdonald, 18 May T. Crofton, 18 do E. Leicester, 1 Nov. A. H. Gordon, 24 Dec. STAFF. F. S. Gabb, 22 Aug. L. A. K. Gore, 29th Regt. N. I.,.. T. L. Mathews, 27 Dec. 39 27 Aug. 41112 Dec. 29 do 12 June 41 5 Sept. 37 Adjutant. 41 Actg. Qr. Mr. & Inter. Surgeon. Assistant Surgeon. 34 Subadar Major. Peer Khan, 1 Jan. Facings, Pale Buff-Lace, Gold. 288 (PART II MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. CARNATIC EUROPEAN VETERAN BATTALION. Arrived at Vizagapatam, 30th August 1813. Names. When Invalided. Date of Rank. Remarks. Licutenant Colonels. C. Herbert, C. B. C. F. Smith, J. N. Abdy, 21 Sept, 1838 19 April 1833 Eur. Fur. 15thJan.1841. 24 Oct. 37 27 Dec, 36 Commanding; 27 Nov. 3815 Oct. 38 Eur. S.C. 30th Nov. 38. Majors. (P) H.P.M.J. Crisp, 1 April 33 2 Sept. J. Howison, C. Farran, A. Woodburn, R. F. Eames, 16 April 18 June 15 Jan. 29 do. 40'28 June 39 21 Sept. 41 20 Dec 22 do. 32 President Mily. Exami- ning Committee of the Hon. Lan. Mah. Trans. to Govt. Actg. Astronomer to H. C. 38 Eur. S.C. 26th Jan. 41. 30 Eur S.C. 26th Jan.41. 40 Ganjam on leare till 30th June 42-2nd Dec. 1841. Captains. * G. O'Connell, .... 28 Aug. 32 Comissy. of Ordnance, Arsenal, Fort Saint George. Eur. S C. 26th Apr.39. 33 37 G. T. Pinchard, C. Bond, G. A. Smith, 24 July 8 Sept. 1 Feb. 38 22 Dec. 37 1 April 41 27 April Lieutenants. J. Nixon, C. Newsam, W. Brookes, 5 Feb. 13 July 36 8 Sept. 3812 May 19 Jan. J. Denton, 30 May 26 33 Eur. S.C. 27th Nov 38. 36 Dept. Asst. Comy. of Ord Vizagapatam. Depy Comy. of Ord., Fort St. George. 38 Asst. Comy. of Ord. in charge Camp Equi. page Depot. 39 J. O'Brien, 9 July 27 Aug. F. Childers, C. J. Rudd, R. Morgell, 8 Oct. 39 13 April 10 June 40 31 Dec. 22 May Eur. S.C.230 June 40. Staff 14 June N. Hobart, Geo. Beetson, 33 Adjutant. Surg. In Medl. Charge. Facings, Blue. FOL. 11.) 289 ARMY LIST. 1st (OR MADRAS) NATIVE VETERAN BATTALION. Arrived at Madras, 13th December 1813. Names. When Invalid- Date of Rank. ed. Remarks. Lieutenant Colonel. C. Mandeville, 9 Oct. 1819 4 June 1814 Commanding. Majors. J. Chisholm, 31 Dec. 3928 June . . . . F. Minchin, 1 May 40 8 Oct. J. E. Butcher, 7 Sept. 41 23 Jany. 39 Europe furlough, 7th Jan. 1840. 39 Eur. S. C. 17th Nov. 1840. 41 Neilg. S. C. till 30th June 1842. Western Coast fur. till 30th June 1842- 18th Nov. 1841. Neilg. fur. till 30th Apl. 1842-6th Nov. 1841. J. B. Barnett, ...... 27 Aug. 25 Feb. C. Davinier, 22 Oct. 3 June Captains. J. Smith, 13 Apr. D. Walker, 28 Feb. T. Locke, 17 April H. S. Burgess, 17 May S. Stuart, 1 Aug. W. Johnstone, 16 Feb. A. Chisholm, 14 Nov. W. F. Du Pasquier, 9 Oct. 18 7 June 21 26 Oct. 27 8 June 34 10 Mar. 28 3 Apr. 30 21 Oct. 40 8 Apr. 27 do. 13 19 25 26 29 33 37 Eur. S. C., 13th Oct. 1810. 39 Eur. 16th Feb. 1841. R. H. Robertson, .. 13 Apr. 4114 May Lieutenants. [1840. 25 Eur. S.C., 13th March R. A. Joy, C. C. Cottrell, W. Leggatt, 6 Nov, 25 May 35/15 June 32 23 July 23 Apr. 30 Comg. Genl. Depot Eur. Pensioners at Cuddalore. 39 Dep. Comsy. of Ord. Eur. S. C. 14th June 1839. S. Clarke, 5 Aug. STAFF. 7 Mar. A. Forsyth J. Richmond, 34 Adjutant. Act. Garrison Surg. Fort St. George in Medical charge. 38 Subadar Major. 41 Do. Lallameah, Pitcha, 28 Sept. 30 June Facings, Blue. PART II. VOL. II. M M 290 (PART II. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. 2ND (OR ARNBE) NATIVE VETERAN BATTALION. Arrived at Wallajahbad, 24th March 1831. Names. When In- valided. Date of Rank Remarks. Lieutenant Colonels. J, Haslewood, .22 Feb. 1811 21 Oct. 1809 n Furlough Van Die- man's Land- 15th Majors. Dec. 1840. W. T. Brett, 13 Mar. 29 17 July · 27 Commanding. C. O. Forthergill, ... 25 May 30 || Apr. 29 Cuddalore. J. Thomas, 10 Feb. 37 10 Jan. 37 Ditto. J. Ward, 8 Dec. 40 28 June 38) Captains. J. N. Beaver, 5 July 36 12 July T. A. Chausel, A. A. Mussita, II. J. Lodinton, H. Lee, H. Millingen, 15 Aug. 10 Oct. 1 June 7 Aug. 12 Sept. 34 18 June 2614 Dec. 29 29 Mar. 35 29 Jan. 34 24 May 24 Tranquebar and Neilg. S. C, till 10th Jan. 1843–1th Dec. 1841 25 Arnee. Ongole. 27 Eu. S.C.4th Feb. 1840. 30 Cannanore-Actg. Post Master. 35 Guntoor. 38 Eu. S. C.22d Jan. 1839. In charge Pensrs. at Chingleput. 39 Cuddalore. Do. 40 Eu. S.C. 26th Feb. 1841. R. Prettyman, E. Lloyd, J. Wright, 28 Aug. 19 Feb. 15 do. 35 6 Aug. 39 31 Jan. 15 June W. Herford, T. W. Steele, J. I. Sherwood, 12 Mar. 30 Aug. 19 Jan. 15 Feb. 118 May 41|12 Sept. Lieutenant. J. I. Jackman, E. Gaitskell, H. R. H. Steer, W. H. L. Geyt, E. R. Sibly E. J. Colebrooke, G. Gibson, 6 July 20 Mar. 10 Sep. 17 Jan. 7 May 13 Nov, 24 1 May 27 15 April 41 22 Sep. 3713 Nov. 4131 Jan. 4018 May 8 Nov. 24 Nellore. 25 35 36 Cuddalore. 37 Do. 39 Dep. Commissary of Orduance, Vellore. Staff 5 July W. Wheeler, R. Plumbe, H. Beg, Ravanapah, 36 Adjutant. [charge. Asst. Surg. in Medical 39 Subadar Major. 40 Do. 29 Nov. 2 Oct. Facings, Blue. VOL. 11.) 291 ARMY LIST. 99 ..i 3d 9 M. D. MEDICAL STAFF. Dale of Apo Rank. Appointment pointir ent. PRESIDENCY. Surgeon L. G. Ford, Ist Member Medical Board 26 Feb. 1839 Sec S. C. G. Adams, 2d do do and Actg. Ist Member 6 do. 41 R. Sladen, do do do 2d do 8 Oct. J. Macleod, Actg. 3d Member 18 Dec. J. Wylie, M. D. Supg. Surgeon Presidency 1 Mar. 39 H. S Fleming, Medical Storekeeper and 7 June 36 Surgeon Lunatic Asylum 124 Jan. 37 G. Harding, Acting . Supt. Medical School 30 Mar. 41 T. M. Lane, .. Superintendent Eye Infirmary, and Physician to His Highness Nuwaub 22 June 24 J. Lawder, .. Surgeon, North East District Jails, and Native Infirmary, in Charge of 11 Nov. 35 the Vaccine Depot and Superinten- dent, Chindadrepet Dispensary ... 23 Jan. 23 G. Pears, M. D. Secretary to the Medical Board 30 May 37 R. Cole, Surgeon, South East District, and in charge of sick Officers, St. Thome 30 do J. Richmond, Surgeon North West District 25 June 39 T O'Neill, 14 Feb. 34& House of Industry 25 39 Asst. Surg. J. Shaw, Permanent Assistant General Hospital and Assistant Supt. Medical School 8 Oct. 41 S. Rogers, - - Garrison Assistant Surgeon & Port j | 2 Aug. 36& i and Marine Surgeon 25 June 39 J. Shaw, Governor's Body Guard 4 April 37 W. G. David-! son, . - Superintendent Govt. Dispensary.... 3 do 38 SUPERINTENDING SURGEONS OF Divisions or the Army. Surg. J. McLeod, - - Centre Division-Absence on other duty 10 Nov, C. Currie, Southern Division 14 Aug. 33 J. T. Conran, - Nothern Division 6 Feb. 36 J. White, Nagpore Subsidiary Force June D. Boyd, Mysore Division 8 Dec. 37 J. Wyllie, M. D. Presidency Division 1 Feb. 38 C. Désormeaux Hyderabad Subsidiary Force 16 May R. Davidson, - Ceded Districts 26 Feb. 39 D. S. Young, - Malabar and Canara, Acting in the Centra Division Dec. 41 B. Williams, - Malabar and Canara, Acting 30 Oct. 40 STAFF SURGEONS. Surg. J. Morton, - | Tenasserim Provinces | 28 Jan. 41 GARRISON SURGEONS. Surg. B. Williams, - Trichinopoly, Absent on other duty 1 Mar. 1836 J. Smith, - Bellary 29 ()ct. W. A. Hughes. Masulipatam 29 May 38 R. Wight, M D. Fort St. George, Absent on duty 6 March G. Knox, Kangalore I do 39 J. Richmond, - ForiSt. George, Acting, J.W. Sherman, Trichinopoly do 30 Oct. 38 79 97 9 . . . . • 33 41 292 (PART IF. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT, MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT- Continued ). Names. Date of Com-Corps or Sla- missions, lions and De- partments. Remarks. .. Surgeons. L. G. Ford, - 21 July 1816 Ist Mem. Med.Board Sea SC.2ys.-Sep. 24, 1841 G. Adams,... 1 Sept. 181 2d do. do. Ag. Ist Mem. Med. Boarii, R. Sladen, 11 Apr. 19 3d Member Med. Board Actg. 2d Member. J. McLeod,..... 3 July 38th Regt. Supg. Surg. Centre Div. Ag. 3d Mem. Med. Bd. C. Currie, 26 June 2051st ditto Supg. Surg. Southern Div. J. T. Conran, 9 Aug. 22 28th do. Supg. Surg. Northern Dir. J White, 17 Sept. 23 4th Bat.Arr. Supg. Surg. Nagpore Sub. sidiary Force. D. Boyd,... 10 Nov. 2443d Regt. Supg. Surg. Mysore Dir. J. Wylie, M.D., | July Ist M. E. R. Supg. Surg. Presidency, C. Desormeaux, . 21 Feb. 26 Ist do. Supg. Surg. Hyd. Sub- sidiary Force R. Davidson, 122 Nov. 420 do. Supg. Surg. Ceded Dist. D. S. Young, 6 May 27 36th do, Do.do. Malabar & Canara & Actg. in the Cen. Dis. B. Williams, 16 Dec. 141h Regt. Gar. Surg. Trichinopoly Ag. Supg. Surg. Mala- bar and Canara. G. Knox, 17 May 29 47th do. Garrison Surg. Bangalore. J. Smith, 14 Aug. 35th do. Garrison Surg. Bellary. Wm. A. Hughes, 9 Nov. 21st do. Gar. Surg. Masulipatam. J, Morton, 15 Apr. 30 231 L. I. Staff Surg. Moulmein. G. B. Macdonel, 3 Feb. 31 3d Bat, 'rt. Eur. Fur. 7th Jan. 1840. R. Wight, M.D... 22 do. 40th Regt. Garrison Snrg. Fort St. Geo. (absent on duty.) H.S.Fleming, M.D. 4 Nov. 7th do. Med. Storekeeper Presd. and in charge Lunatic Asylum. (poly. J. W. Sherman, .117 Feb. 32 19th do. Ag. Gar. Surg. Trichino. W. K. Hay, 28 March Horse Irt. [June 1841. S. Stokes, | Jan. 33 Ist M. E. R. Sea, S.C. 18 months-4th F. Godfrey, 2 Feb. 49th Regt. Eur. Fur. 141h Jan, 184'. J.G.Coleman,M.D 2 Apr. 21 L. Cav. J. Brown, M.D. 13 Aug. 251h Regt. Doing duty 1st M. E. R. W. Mortimer, MD.14 do 32d do Eur. S. C. 7th Dec, 1841. R. Scoit, 15 Sept. 24th do. J. B. Preston, 27 do 516 L. Cav. Depôt. Surg. Cuddalore. W. R. Smyth, A.B 28 do 2d Bat Art. J. L. Geddes, I Nov. 2d E. L. I. T. M. Lane, M. D. 18 do 4th Regt. Oculist and Supt. of the Eye Infirmary. J. Macfarland, 8 Jan. 34 171h do. . R. Baikie, M.D. 8 Feb. 18th do. Neilg. S.C. till 31st May 1842-18th Sept. 1811. A. N. Magrath, 30 May 2012 do. Residency Mysore. D. Falconer, .. 11 Sept. 7th L. Cav. . YOL. Ir.] 299 ARMY LIST. 29 Apr. MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT-(Continued). Date of Com-Corps or Sta- Names. missions. Remarks, lions and De- parlments. Surgeons. A. E. Blest, M.D. | Feb. 35 9th Regt. [& Native Inf. J, Lawder, ..1 do North East District, Jail R. Sutherland, 16 March Ist Bit, Ari. J. Colquhoun, 8 Jan. 36 Ist L. Cav. G. Hopkins, M. D. 15 do 5th Regt. Eur. S C. 2d Apr. 1839. G. A. C. Bright, 22 Feb. 8ih do. R. Oliphant, 1 March 8th L. Cav J. P. Grant, 18 May 2d Bat. Art. On Foreign Ser. China. D. Richardson, .. 20 July 39th Regt. Under the Commissioner Tenas. Provs, in Med. charge Talain Corps at E. Finnerty, m,d.' 3 Jan. 33 6th L. Cav. [Moulmein. 1. Key, 1. Feb. 27th Regt. Under the orders of ihe G. V. Cumming, Resdt. at Hyd.- Sur. M. D. 23 do 12th do, 8 h Nizam's Infantry. G. Pearse, M. D. 25 March 31st L. Infty.Secy. Medical Board. G. Beetson, 11th N. 1. In Med. Ch. C, E V. Bt. De B. Birch, M.D. 3 July 16th Regt. Supy. Med. Officer Neilg. G. W. Scheniman, 18 Jan. 38 481 h do. Hills. T. Taplin, 15 Mar. 3d L, I. Q. Jamison, M.D.. 16 May 41h L. Cav. J. T. Maule, 25 do 13th Regt. W.G.Maxwellm D. 18 Oct. 2d do. W. Poole, 14 Jan. 39 6h do. Eur. S.C. 15th Sep. 1840. W. Butler, 26 Feb. 3d L. Cav. N. B. Pollock, 25 March 26th Regt. J. Ladd, 30 June 461h do. H. S. Brice, 18 July 151h do. T. Grigg, 24 do 301h do. Eur. Fur 9th Nov. 1841. J. Lawrence, il Jan. 40 341h I.. I. G. Thomson, 20 July 22. Regt. R. Cole, 150th do. Surg. S. East District in charge of Sick Officers St. Thomé. H.C. Ludlow, M.D 4 Nov. 41st Regt. Eur. Fur 29th Dec. 1840 J. Wilkinson, 18 Jan. 41 28th do. H.G. Graham, 2 Feb. 10th do. J. Richardson, 2 do 451h do, Surg. N. W. Dist. & Ag. Gar.Surg. Fort St. Geo. T. O'Neill, 28 do 44th do. Surg to Police & House of Industry & Female Asylum. G. Harding, 1 Sept. 371h do. Acting Surg. Genl. Hos- T. L. Mathews, 10 Dec. 52d do. pital, Presidency. F. Cooper, 17 do 33d do. Assistant Surgeons. W. Burrell, 28 Aug. 1827 28th Regt. [preme Govt. W. Laurie, M. D. 13 Oct. Under orders of the Su- S. Brooking, 31 do. Residency Tanjore. S. Rogers, 12 Dec. Port and Marine Surgeon and Gar. Assist. Surg. Fort St. George. . 24 Sept. 294 (PART 11. MADRIS ESTABLISHMENT. MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT_(Continued). Corps or Sta- Names. Date of Com. tions and De. Reinarks. missions. partments. [1341. ... .. ... 30 18th 3043d ... ... ... Assistant Surgeons. [Resdt. at Hyderabad. S. A. G. Young, 10 Jan. 28 ... Under the orders of the J. Eaton, M.D. 16 April Physiciau to the Rajah of E. W. Eyre, 10 May 16th Regt. Travancore. J. M.Kenna, M, D. ... 20 do. 44th Regt. J. Flockton. 27 June 32d do. C. H. A uchinleck, M.D 25 Sept 38th do. [1842–16th July 1841. J. Inres, 20 Jan. 29 Cape S. C, till 6th April C. C. Linton, ... 9 Mar, 29 5th Lt. Cav. W. G. Davidson, | April Supt. Govt. Dispensary. A. Goodall, 21 do. Horse Arty. J. Kellie, 11 May Europe Furlough 2d Feb. C. J. Cowie, 27 do. Europe Furlo' 24th Dec. J. J. Pursis, 30 do. 5th Regt. [1839. G, E. Edgucome, 30 do. ... Civil Est. Bellary. D. Sturrock, M. D., 27 Aug. 47th Regt. J. Lovell, 30 do. ... Europe s.C. 22d July 1839. A. Shewan, 30 do. ... Europe S.C. 14th Feb. 1840. J. Gill, 30 do. Zillah of Madura. R. Plumbe, 10 Oct. 22 N. V. C. J. W. Millardette, 25 Nov.: Eur. S. C. 29th Jan. 1811. A. Mackintosh, M. D... 12 Jan, Regt. W. Gilchrist, 17 do. Farm in Mysore. T. Horatius Cannon... 27 Feh, Regt. E. Smith, 5 March Civil Surgeon Guntoor. W. Middlemass, 8 do, Assist. Assaye Master. T. D. Harrison, . 28 do. Eur. S. C. 23d Feb. 1841. J. Hichens, 1 May Eur. Fur, 24th July 1840. H. Goodall, 24 Aug. 6th Regt. J. Forbes, 24 do, 36th do. H. Cheape, M. D. 15 Oct. Zillah Surg. Vizagapatam. T. White, 22 Jan. 31 ... Civil Surgeon, Cochin. A. J. Will, 22 do. Eur. Fur. 16th Nov, 1841. A. Simpson, M. D. 9 April Civil and Judicial Esta. blishment Chittoor. M. F. Anderson, 15 May Civil Surgeon, Tellicherry. C. I. Smith, 15 May ... Under Comsr. Mysore. J. Hamlyn, 7 June Zillah Surg. Chiogleput. J. Dreyer, 12 do. Horse Art. R. H. Manley, M. B ... 12 do. 125th Regt. W, Evans, M. D. ... 24 Aug. 20th Regt. C. Paterson, M. D. Residency Surgeon, Tra. J. C. Campbell, 15 Nov. 1831 Zillah Surg. Cuddapah Medical Ch. Escort to Coinmrs Kurnool. J. C. Fuller, 27 Jan. 32 ... Europe S. C. 13th April J. Dorward, 12 Feb. 39th Regt. W. B. Thompson, 27 May 4th Bat. Art. W. Griffith 27 do. Under orders of the Supreme ployed in Upper Assam. S.T. Lyall, 112 Aug Zillah Surg. Negapatam. J. E. Porteous, 19 do. Horse Art. S. Cox, 21 do. do W. Beauchamp, 24 Oct. 51st Regt. C. Kevin, 24 Noy. 35th do R. H. Buchanan, 12 Jan. ..Civil Surgeon Valabar. J. Cornfoot, », D. . 27 do. 19th liegt. ... (vancore. ... 22 Oct. ... [1841. Govt.-Em- 33 ... VOL. 11.] 295 ARJY LIST. MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT-(Continued). Corps ur Stue Names. Date of Com- tions and De Remarks. missions. partments. Assistant Surgeons. T. T. Smith, 26 March J. E. Mayer, 26 do. D. Trail, 15 April R. Hicks, 19 June E. G. Bedwell, 7 July W. Mackintosh, 4 Nov. P. A. Andrew, M. D.... 23 do. W. P. Molle, 23 do. G. S. Scott, J. Shaw, 6 April 19 May J. Supple, 21 Dec. W. Rose, M. D. 21 do. R. H. Rennick, 21 do. W. Mackenzie, A. M.... 14 Jan. G. Morrogh, m. V. 1+ Jan. J. Kerby, 14 do. C. Ferrier, 21 do. C. Don, 9 Feb. P. Roe, M. D. 24 do. J. Middlemas, 1 June . ... J. Cadenhead, J. W. G. Macdonell,.. T. C. Jerdon, J. Anderson, M. D. J. Adams, M. D. 21st do. 8 Sept. 11 do. 8 Dec. 16 Jan, 14th do. Eur. S.C. 9th Nov. 1841. 31st Lt. Inf. Ist Regt. N.I. 50th Kegt 230 Lt. Inf. [num Zillah Surg. Combaco- Zillah Surg. Coimbatore Presy, and St. Thos. Mount, S. C. 6 months ---19th Oct. 1841. 34 Zillah do. Rajamundry. Governor's Body Guard Permt. Asst. to the Off. in ch, of Gl. Hos and Asst. Supt. Med. School. ... Zillah Surg. Tinnevelly. 2d Regt. 10th do. [Govt. 35 Under the orders of Sup.. Horse Art. [1839. Europe S. C. 11th Jan. Eur. S. C. 22d Dec. 1840. Eur. S. C 27th March 1840. Zillah Surg. Mangalore. 2nd Bt. Aty. Detachment of Artillery Foreign Service China, Zillah Surgeon Salem. Ist L. C. 2d do. 3d Bat. Art. 36 .. Jo Medl. ch. of the Est.. of the Colr, and Agen 42d Regt. of the Govt. of Fort St. 4 1st do. George in Ganjam. Eur. S. C. 12th May 1840. Horse Art. 36 Eur. S. C. 7th May 1838. Eur, S. C. 30th May 1837. Employed in Nizam's Sore 21st Regt. [vice. +5th do. 7th do. 27th Regt. 4th do. Mergui. Med. Ofñcer Neilg. Hills. sap. & Mins. On Foreign Ser. China. In Med. ch. details Ellore. Doing duty under Supg. Surg. H. S. Force. ... Civil Surg. Masulipatam. 30th Regt. 15th do. (Moulmein. Doing duty DetArty. 6th L. C. 3.30 Regt. J. Grant, m. D. 16 do. A. Lorimer, M. D. 6 Feb. J. Mathison, M. D. 9 do. J. Arthur, M. D. 14 do. T. W. Stewart, M. D... 8 Mar. J. Dodd, 16 April D. Macpherson, M.D... 18 May hE. G. Balfour, 2 June R. Magionis, 2 do. T. G. Johnston, M.D... 8 do. W. L. O. Moore, M. B. 30 July hJ. Robson, M. D. 9 Aug. J. D. V. Packman, 26 do, J. Sanderson, 27 Oct. J. Williams, 17 Dec. J. H. Orr, 22 Feb. D. D. Foulis, M. D. ... 24 do. 37... . ... J. A. Reynolds 28 Feb. S. K. Parson 4 April W. G. Prichard, M.D. 4 do, J. M. Jackson 2 June hC. G. E. Ford 29 Aug. G, D. Gordon, M.D. ... 21 Dec. 296 (PART 11. MADRAS ESTABLISHMENT. MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT--(Continued). Corps or Stu- Names. Date of Com-tions and De- Remarks. missions. partments. do. ... 21 Aug. ... Assistant Surgeons. hD. Macfarlane, M.D.... 11 Jan. 38 Ist M. E. R. H. W. Portuous 10 Feb. 2d Bat. Arty. hA. C. B. Neill, M.D.... 1 March Med. officer attached to the Asst, to the Agent of the Govt. of Fort St. George in Ganjam on special duty in Khonde. J. Coleridge Udo. Eur. S. C., 22d Feb. 1$40. hJ. Kennedy, M.D. 27 In Med. charge 45th N. I. D. T. Morton, 27 do. Doing duty 630 Foot. W. C. Maclean, M.D.... 29 April 2d Bat. Arty. On Foreign Ser. China. J. B. Stevens 29 do. Ist M.E. R. G. F. H. Primrose, B.a. 4 July Doing duty under Staff Surg. Ten, Provinces. kC. W. Pickering Ist Bat. Arty. B. G. Evens 15 Jan. 39 Eur. S. C., 29th Oct. 1841. A. H. Ashley 15 do. In Med. ch. Art. at Penang hJ. T, Blenkin 15 do. Doing duty under Supg. Surg. Malabar & Canara. kW. Moorehead 15 do. ... in Med. ch. det. 24th N. I. and details at Malacca. J. F. Fernandez, M. D. 15 do. Act. Zil. Sur. Tinnevelly. kW. Kirkwood 24 do. In Med. ch, of details at Seetabuldee. H. E. Hadwen 26 do. 3d Bat. Arty. H. Stanbrough 24 Feb. 7th L. C. A. Cheyne, M.D. 24 do. Doing duty 39th Foot. B. S. Chimmo 9 March In Med. ch. of convicts Western Road. J. C. Burton, M.D. 14 May Under Supg. Sarg. Nag. Sub, Force C. Timins 1 Sept. Doing duty 3d Bat. Arty. H. Smith 12 do. Sea S. C., 2 yrs. 7th Dec. 1841. J. Reed 23 do. Doing duty 63d Foot. E. S. Tribe 26 Oct. 4th L. C. C. Barclay 23 Dec. Eur. S. C., 16th Feb. 1841. J. Peter, M.D. 3 do. Doing duty 94th Foot. M. Rogers 3 do. 2d E. L. I. Cape S.C. -230 July 1841. C. D. Currie, M.D. 3 Jan. 40'8th L. C. hA. A. Howe, M.D. 3 do. Doing duty 39th Foot. J. Lancaster 6 do. Do. 2d Eur. L. I. attached to H, M. 15th Hussars. 6 do. Doing duty under Saps. Surg. Mysore Div. at- tached to H.M. 15th Hrs. J. T. Done, M.D. 6 do. Doing duty Lt. W. 57th Foot. C. J. Martyr 6 do. Do. with Lt. W. do. W. R. Gingell 6 do. G. C. Courtney 6 do. Do. 2d Bt. Arty. W. Lloyd, M. D. 6 Jan. 1840 Doing duty H. M.49th Foot. J. Peterkin 6 do. Do. left 4th wing do. J. Pringle, M.D. 6 do. ... Do. left wing 4th do. W. Johaston, M.D. 6 Jan. In Medical charge, Rifle Company, 36th n. L. For Service to China. :: ... ... J. Boyd .. ... ... 2d Regt. ... VOL. 11.) 297 ARMY LIST. MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT. Names. Date of Com- Corps or Sta- tions and De- missions. partments. Remarks. ASSISTANT SURGEONS. A. Blacklock, h G. G. Holmes, 8 Feb. 1840|1st Bt. Art. 8 ditto Doing duty H. M. 4th Foot. 3d Lt. Cav. J. W. Mudge, M.D., .. 8 Mar. T. W. Whitelock, 10 ditto E. J. Barker, 12 ditto W. W. Rawes, 14 April G. F. H. Eastall, 11 May J. Welsh, M.D., 11 ditto E. M. Jackson, 6 June J. A. Horrak, m.D... 6 Sept. E. James, 30 ditto J. Tait, 12 Oct. J. Mackintosh, 22 Dec. W. Hilber, 25 ditto J. Fitzpatrick, 29 ditto 41 C. Richardson, W. H. Scales, W. Scott, M.D., A. Wilkinson, T. Dunlop, W. H. S. Burn, J. K. Ogilvie, M.D., A. C. Macleod, R. R. Sutleffe, . J. Ratton, W. Forrester, R. Chaytor, M.D., F. Le Meurier, E. Young, G. Dry, 8 Jan. 25 ditto 30 ditto 30 ditto 17 Feb. 17 ditto 17 ditto 8 Mar. 8 ditto Doing duty 1st M.E. Rt. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto H. M. 94th Foot. Ditto 2d Eur. Lt. Inf. Ditto H. M. 4th Foot. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto 2d Eur. Lt. Int. Ditto 1st M. Eu. Regt. Ditto 2d Bat. Arty. Ditto 2d Eu. L. Inf. Ditto II. M. 57th Foot. Ditto ditto 4th Foot. Belgaum. Doing duty 2d Eur. L. I. Ditto H. M. 57th Foot. Ditto ditto 630 Foot. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto 2d Battalion Art. Ditto H. M. 57th Foot. Ditto General Hospital. Ditto 2d Battalion Art. Ditto ditto ditto. Dittd ditto ditto. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto ditto ditto. Ditto General Hospital. Ditto ditto. VETY. SURGEONS. 8 Feb. 27 ditto 4 Aug. ...... 25 Dec. N. F. Clarkson, G. Chester, J. Western, J. F. Jennings, H. Hooper, T. Hagger, E. Vincent, E. C. Collins, C. Jackson, W. H. Wormsley, T. Aston,.. 3 June 1 May 30 Aug. 27 Ilorse Arty. Eur.fur. 12th Oct. 184). 5th Lt. Cav. Rt. Hn. Gov.'s Body Guard 7th Lt. Cav. C.S.V-25th June 1841 28 4th Lt. Cav. [C-26th June 1840. Ist ditto New South Wales, C.S. 3d ditto 6th ditto 8th ditto 2d Lt. Cav. Horse Arty. PART II. VOL. II. N N 298 (PART 11. MILITARY SALARIES, MILITARY SALARIES, FORT ST. GEORGE. Table of Salaries and Personal Allowances to Staff Officers, 8c. sc. in Garrison, Cantonment, and the Field. In Garrison or Cantonment. In the field. STAFF APPOINTMENTS. REMARKS. Salary. Total. Salary. Total. The Hon'ble Company's Troops. cil, • As Member of Coun- 4958 2 10 R. A. P. R. R. R. R. A. P. R. A. P. R. R. | R. R. A. P. As Commander-in- The Commander-in-Chief, if a Chief, 1458 2 10 Member of Council, 6416 5 8 0 0 525'6941 5 8'6416 5 8 0 0,5256941 5 8 Rs. 6116 5 8 Do. if not a member of Councilt 4791 8 2 0 0 525 5316 8 2 4791 0 600 05391 8 2 A General Officer or Brigadier + As General Officer General upon the Staff, 3333 5 0 0 3333 5 4 3333 5 4 0 600 03933 5 4 on the Staff. 3333 5 4 As Commander-in- Chief,.... 1458 2 10 Military Auditor General, 2916 10 0 2916 10 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dpy. Military Auditor Genl. 700 0 0 0 700 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4791 8 2 Asst. Military Auditor Genl. 350 0 0 0 350 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Commander-in-Chief also Second Assistant do. do... 280 0 0 280 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 receives an allowance of Rupees 280 per mensem for the provi- ( B Adjutant Genl. of the Army. 2000 0 sion of Chubdars, Hircarras, 0 0 02000 0 0 2000 0 0 0 02000 0 0 Peons, &c. &c. Dpy. Adjt. Genl, of the Army 539 5 4 60 0 0599 5 4 539 5 4 60 0599 5 4 a. With the Subsistence of their B Quarter Master General of the al Rezimental Rank. Army, ... 2000 0 01 0 0 0 2000 0 0 2000 0 0 0 0 2000 0 ob.-The Adjutant General and Deputy Quarter Master Gen- Quarter Master General of the eral of the Army, Army and their Deputies are 5 60) O) 599 539 5 4 601 01 599 5 entitled to the Full Batta of their 9 이이​이이​이이 ​이 ​이 ​... 539 ('11 "IOA 299 FORT ST. GEORGE. &... * Regimental Rank (less House Rent) on all occasions of their absence from the Presidency in attendance on His Excellency the Commander-iu-Chief. 0323 0 10 263 0 10 6000323 0 10 c.- These Officers receive Full Batta at all times according to their Regimental Rank (less House Rent.) d.-Regimental Full Batta to be drawn by all Brigadiers appoint- ed by Government without re- ference to ne Batta received by the Troops under their com- 0 235 0 0 175 00 60 이 ​0235 0 0. mand. ė. -Staff Salary.. 10000 0 Stationery.... 40 0 Rs. 1040 0 0 0 2500 0 02200 0 0 0 800 03000 0 0f.–Staff Salary. 730 0 0 Stationery.... 20 0 01070 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 이 ​00 0 Rs. 770 0 a 0 0 0 to Assist. Adjutant General and Assist. Qr. Mas, ter Genl. of the Army. Assist. Adjutant General and Assist. Qr. Master 263 0 10 600 Genl. of Field Forces. Assist. Adjutant General of Artillery, Deputy Assistant Adjutant Ge- neral, and Deputy Assistant Quarter Master General of the Army, 175 0060 0 Officers under the rank of Genl. Officer when exercising the Command of the Regular Di- visions of the Army: 2200 0 300 First Class attached Brigadier Garrison & 1040 30 0 D 2nd Class Cantonments l ditto, being Govt. of Commands.770 00 30 0 Brigadier in the Field and Head Quarters of two Corps in Camp, Garrison or Cantonment not being Go 9 vernment Commands. 520 0 0 30 Officer Commanding Neilgherry Hills 400 0 0 H Commissary General, 2189 7 9 Deputy Commissary Genl., 1063 10 11 Asst. Comissary General,... 709 15 8 이 ​C {Depy. Asst. Commis. Gepl., 356 2 10 0] | Sub-Asst. Commis. Genl.... 181 2 10 0 ol e 0 0 0 0 0 800 0 0 0 0 0 0 이 ​이 ​00 g.-Staff Salary. 0 Stationery.. 500 0 20 0 0 0 Rs. 5200 0 or more 0 0 550 0 0 520 00 30 0 0 0 0 400 0 0 0 0 0 02189 792181 7 9 0 1063 10 11 1063 10 11 0709 15 8 709 15 8 0356 2 10 356 2 10 h. - The Commissary General will be required to provide Tents in 0] 550 0 0 the Field for his establishment, charging the same on honor. 1.- Sub-Assistant Commissary 0 0 0 0 General when in charge of one 0 2189 7 9 of the General Military Bazars 0 1063 10 11 within the Company's Terri- tories to draw the Allowances 0709 15 8 of the next higher rank. 0 356 2 10 3ub Assistants of the Commissariat in cases where they shall be placed in a separate charge in 0 181 2 101 the Field, or at a Field Station, 0 0 181 2 10 181 2 10 이 ​ 300 (PART 11. MILITARY SALARIES, In Garrison or Cantonment. In the field. STAFF APPOINTMENTS. REMARKS The Hon'ble Company's Troops. Salary. Horse Allowance. Tent Allowance. House Rent. Total. Salary. Horse Allowance. Tent Allowance. House Rent. Total. R. R. R. A. P. 0 0 150 0 0 O 0 permitted to draw the allowances 0 709 15 8 of Deputy Assistants. The Officer in charge of the Re. mount duties at Oossoor draws 0 0 0 0 an additional salary of Rupees 0 0 0 0 175 per month each 0 j.-Moiety chargeable to 0 0 0 Presidency. 0 0 0 0 R. A. P. R. R. R. R. A. P. R. A. P. R. Officers temporarily appointed to the Commissariat by Govt. 150 0 0 0 0 0 150 0 0 150 0 이 ​이 ​C Joint Agent for the purchase of Remount Horses for the Madras and Bombay Armies, 709 15 8 0 0 709 15 8 709 15 8 01 Stipendiary Member of the Mi- a litary Board, 2000 0 0 0 2000 0 0 0 0 0 Secretary to ditto, 1400 0 0 0 1400 0 0 0 0 Deputy Secretary, ditto, 500 0 0 0500 0 0 0 0 Assistant Secretary ditto, 330 0 0 0 0 0330 0 0 0 0 Aide-de Camp to the Right Honorable the Governor and His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief, 149 9 8 60 0 0209 9 8 149 98 60 Aide-de-Camp to a General Officer on the Staff, 1499 8 30 0 0 179 98 149 9 8 30 C{ Military Secretary to the Commander-in-Chief, 891 8 7 60 0 0 951 8 7 891 8 7 601 Deputy Asst. Adjt. Ge- neral of Divisions,.. Deputy Asst. Qr. Master 143 15 11 60 0 0 203 15 11 143 15 11 60 General of ditto, Brig. Maj. to a Division, 0 0 209 98 8 0 0 179 98 0 0 951 8 7 15 m 0 0 203 15 11 vol. 11.] 301 FORT ST. GEORGE, 60 60 Brig. Maj. to a Brigade or De- tachment in the field or to Garrison or Cantonment such k as Bangalore, 184 0 0 Judge Advocate General, ... 1000 0 0 C Depy. Judge Advocate Genl., 350 0 0 Persian Intr. at Head Quarters, 350 0 Comdt. of Arty, when not a 1 Genl. Officer on the Staff, 125000 с Chief Engineer when not a Genl. Officer on the Staff, 1250 0 0 0 0 0 0 244 0 0 10600 0 350 0 0410 0 0 184 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 244 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60 0 30 0 1280 0 0 1250 0 0 30 0 0 1280 0 0 m 0 30 0 01280 0 0 1250 0 0 30 0 0 0 0813 10 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 276 2 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 } 0 0 0 0 0 0433 10 11 0713 10 11 0 106000 0 310 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 1280 0 Ok.-Staff Pay. 124 0 0 Allowance for а 0 0 0 0 writer, ... 40 0 0 Do. for Stationery, 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rs. 184 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.-Inclusive of the Extra allow- 0 0 ance of 520 Rs. per month, and of every other personal Staff 0 0 0 0 Salary: 0 0 0 m.-Inclusive of every other per- sonal Staff Salary. 0 0 0 n. -The Superintending Engineer at the Presidency Civil 0 100 0 0 Architect draws a Salary of Rs. 250 per month in addition. 0 60 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30 0 0 0 as 30 이 ​0 100 0 0 70 00 30 Supg. Engr. at the Presidy. 813 10 11 Ensign 276 2 11 Lieutenants C Supg. Engr. Captain, 433 10 11 of the Div. Major Lieut. Col. 713 10 11 Town Major of Fort St. Geo..... 1000 0 Fort Adjutant Fort St. Geo., 280 0 0 Fort Adjutant at Out Stations,... 70 0 Cantonment or Line Adju. tant, 70 00 Officer Comg. Arty. or field force, or at a field or full batta sta. tion, consisting of more than a Troop or Company, if a Regimental Field Officer,...... 0 0 0 Ditto do, under the rank of do., 0 0 0 Officers not belonging to those branches of the Service ap- pointed to the temporary charge of Engineers orOrd- nance Departments......... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30000 000 200 0 0 0 0 0 300 000 0 200 0 0 105 o o o o o 105 o o o o ol 이 ​ol o ooo 302 (PART II. MILITARY SALARIES, In Garrisop or Cantonment. In the field. STAFF APPOINTMENTS. REMARKS. Total. Salary. The Hon'ble Company's Troops Salary. Total. R. A. P. R. R.R. R. A. P. R. A. P. R. R R. R. A. P. Station Staff Officer at Jaul. pah, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C 60 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0456 2 10 0 0 0 0 O 60 0 0 0.-The Barrack Master at the Presidency draws a Salary of 0 0 0 Rupees 185 per month in addi- tion, for the charge of Civil buildings. He is also Superin- 0 0 0 tendent of Government Roads without salary for that appoint- ment. 0 이 ​0, 450 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 200 0 0 0 0 0 0 P 0 215 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 P.-Inclusive of all charges for Writers, Stationery, Peons, &c. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Barrack Mr. at the Presi- dency, 456 2 10 Director of the Arty. Depôt| of Instruction, 450 0 0 Officer Comg. the Genl. Depôt of European Pensioners at Cuddalore, 200 0 C Officer Comg. Residt.'s Escort, 0 0 Muster Mr. at the Presidency, 215 0 0 Supdt. of Family Payments and Pensions, 600 0 0 Supdg. Officer of Gentlemen Cadets, 200 0 0 Officerin charge of the Native Pensioners at Chingleput, . 70 0 0 Inspecting Officer of Ordnance at the Presidency if a Field Officer, 200 0 0 Do. Under the rank of Field Officer, 0&c. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 70 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 01 0 0 0 100 0 o) 0 0 0 ol 0 0 0 0 VOL. 11.] 303 FORT ST. GEORGE. ... 1000 이 ​0 1000 0 0 0 0 ( 0 0 0 0 0 0 700 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 0 9.-Including the accounts of Te. 0 nasserim, Penang, Singapore and Malacca, T. -Mysore, Trichinopoly and Se. 0 cunderabad. 8.- Vizayapatam, Vellore, Ceded Districts and Nagpore. 01.-Malabar and Canara, and Ma- 0 sulipatam. u.-Salary as Deputy Pay- master 200 0 0 Do. as Staff Officer 50 0 0 OI 0 1000 0 350 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Principal Commissary of Ord. nance, 0 0 Supdt. of the Gun Carriage Manufactory. 700 0 0 Supdt. of the Gun Powder Manufactory, 1000 0 01 Commissary of Ordnance, 350 0 0 Deputy Commissary of Ord. Dance being a commissioned Officer, 250 0 Pay Mr. at the Presidency,q . 1000 0 Pay Master at ſ ist Class.r 600 0 Outstations, 72d do.s 400 0 Deputy Paymasters, t 300 0 Depy. Pay Mr. and Staff Offi. cer at Poonamallee, 250 0 0 Supdts. of the Magnetical Ob- servatories at Madras and Singapore, 300 Ist Member 2450 0 0 V Medical Board 2d do. 2450 0 (3d do. 2150 0 ol 01 Rs. 250 00 0 250 0 1000 0 600 0 400 0 300 0 0 0 0 IL r.-The Salary of Members of the 0 Medical Board is inclusive of Lieutenant Colonel's Pay, (Sub- sistence) Ilalf Batta, Tent Al- lowance and House Rent. 10.--Salary 1510 00 CI Allowance for a Writer 45 0 0 Ditto for ditto 35 00 Ditto for Stationery 20 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 300 0 0 2450 0 0 2450 0 0 2450 0 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Superintending Surgeon. 1640 0 0 0 01640 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 590 500 400 ::: 0 0 0 0 0 C 0 590 0 500 0 400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rs. 1610 0 0 0 The Salary of Superintending Sur. 0 geon is inclusive of Major's Pay 0 (Subsistence) Half Battil, Tent Allowance, and House Rent. .-Staff Salary: .......... 525 0 0 Allowance for a Writer 45 0 0 Ditto for Stationery 20 0 0 0 Rs. 590 00 0 y. - Fort St. George, Bangalore, Masulipatam, Trichinopoly and 0! Bellary. 2.- To remain upon the same Staff 0 allowance as for the charge of Regiment. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Staff Surgeon, Garrison Surgeon, Depôt Surg. Cuddalore,y Asst. Surg. Poonamallee, Secy, to the Medical Board, Medical Storekeeper at the Presidency, 0 0 0 0 ( 165 700 0 0 ( 165 0 0 700 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 700 0 0 0 700 0 0 0 0 0 304 (PART IF. MILITARY SALARIES, 0 0.400 0 0 In Garrison or Cantonment. In the field. STAFF APPOINTMENTS. The Hon'ble Company's Troops. Salary. Total. Salary. Total. a.-Consolidated allowance inclu- sive of Regimental Pay and Al. lowances of every description. A. P. R. R R. R. A. P. R. A. P. R. R. R. R. A. P. b.-Salary 175 0 0 Supdt. of the Eye Infirmary. 525 0 0 Conveyance Allowance for 0 0 0 525 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 affording Medical Aid to a the Warrant Officers at. Medical Officer in charge of tached to the Arsenal of Sick Officers at St. Thome Fort St. George........ 30 0 0 and South East District, 400 0 0 0 0 90 490 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rs. 205 0 0 Surgeon in charge of Lunatic Asylum, 525 0 0 0 0 525 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C.-Staff Salary. 124 0 0 0 0 Stationery 40 00 b Garrison Assistant Surgeon Rs, 120 00 Fort St. George, ... 205 0 0 0205 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 d.-Staff Pay 124 0 0 Allowance for a Writer 40 0 0 Senior Regimental Surgeon Ditto for Stationery 20 0 0 of the Company's Troops in charge of the Medical Rs. 184 0 0 Stores at Secunderabad, e.-Inclusive of every Allowance Nagpore and Cannanore,... 120 0 0 0 0 0 120 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 이 ​0 0 0 whatever except that of the tra- Senior Medical Officer Neil- velling Batta of Major while tra- gherry Hills, 320 0 0 0 0 0 320 0 velling on duty. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Medical Officer ditto ditto,. 250 0 0 0 0 0 2500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Surgeon of the General Hos- pital, 600 0 0 0 0 0600 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Supt. of the Medical School attached to ditto, 010 0 0 0 0 с ['11'101 305 FORT ST. GEORGE. 0 0 450 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Permanent Assistant to ditto ditto, 450 0 0 Medical Officer attending the Staff at Secunderabad, Kamptee and Moulmein,... 30 0 0 Baggage Master, 0 0 0 Deputy ditto, 0 0 0 0 0 PART II, VOL. II. 0 0 0 0 0 0 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 350 0 175 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60 30 0 0 0 0 0 0410 0 0 0205 0 0 See note page 304. HER MAJESTY'S TROOPS. с OOO ao Deputy Adjutant Genl., 748 9 2 60 803 9 2 748 9 2 60 0 0 808 9 2 Deputy Qr. Mr. Genl. 748 9 2 60 0 808 9 2 748 9 2 60 0 0 808 9 2 Brigade Major, 184 0 60 0 0 244 0 0 184 0 60 0 01 244 0 0 Inspector Gl of Her Majesty's Regimental Hospitals, ... 2150 0 0 0 0 0 2150 0 02150 0 0 0 0 02150 001 N. B.--Cavalry Officers holding Staff situations are not entitled to Regimental Horse Allowance. Table of Salaries and Personal Allowances to Military and Medical Officers Employed in Civil and Political Situations. 0 0 APPOINTMENTS. Resident in Travancore and at Cochin, 2800 0 0 Ditto in Mysore, 2500 0 0 Ditto at Tanjore ... 1400 0 0 Government Agent at Chepauk, 525 0 0 Asst. to the Resident in Mysore & Superintendent of Coorg,... 1000 0 0 Brig. Comdg. Vellore for charge of the Stipend Pay Office, 270 0 0 0 0 0 0 OOOO 01 0 ΟΙ Ο 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2800 0 0 0 A 2500 0 0 1400 00 0 525 06 m 0 0 1000 00 a 0 0 270 00 0 0 0 0 0 04-Inclusive of the subsistence of 0 0 0 their Regimental Rank, 0 0 4.-Difference between the Allow. 0 0 0 ances of a Brigadier of the 1st and 2d Class. 0 0 0 OL 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 O' 0 306 (PART II. MILITARY SALARIES. In Garrison or Cantonment. In the Field. APIOINTMENTS. Salary. Horse Allowance. Tent Allowance. | House Rent. Total. Salary Horse Allowance. Tent Allowance. House Rent. R. A. P. R. R. R. 0 0 0 R. A. P. R. A. P. R. 6 2000 0 0 0 0 0 0 с 600 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 5 0 Secretary to Govt. Mily. Dept.. 2000 0 0 Deputy Secretary ditto, 600 Private Secretary to the Right Hon. the Governor, 729 D Military Secretary ditto, 409 Secretary to the College of Fort St. George. 500 Mint Master, 70000 0 60 0 0 01 O 7291.51 469 80 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total. 16.-In addition to Regimental subsistence. c.-With the Pay, Full Batta, Gra- tuity and House Rent of his Re- R. R. R. A. P. gimental Rank. d. -The Military Secretary while 0 0 absent from the Presidency on 0 0 of duty with the Right Honorable the Governor entitled to full 0 0 0 0 0 Batta, less House Rent, of his Regimental Rank. le.- In addition to the consolidated ol 0 0 0 0 Pay and Garrison Allowances of Ol 0 0 0 0 his Regimental Rank less Horse Allowance. |f. With the Pay and allowances 0 0 of his Regimental Rank includ- 0 0 0 0 O ing Full Batta, less House Rent. g.-With the Pay and full allow- ances of their Regimental Rank. 0 0 0 0 0h.- With the Pay and Garrison Allowances of their Regimental 0 0 0 0 0 Rank. 1.-At 4 Rupees per day for the number of days actually residing 이이 ​0 0 0 in Tents in the performance of ¿ public Duty. 1200 820 j.-At 3 Rupees per day do. do. do. 0 0 k. With the Pay and Allowances S90 290 0 0 of their Regimental Rank in- 2900 190 0 o cluding Full Batta, less House 0 0 350 Rent. 0 1.-North West District and Black 0 0 180 0 O Town. m.-Inclusive of Pay and Allow- 0 0 0 OL ances of every description. 500 00 700 00 e 350 00 0 35000 0 0 0 0 0 0 800 0 0 0 0 0 800 0 0 0 0 0 9 200 00 0 0 0 ... 200 0 OL 0 이이 ​0 Mahratta Translator, Secy, to the Revenue Board in the Dept. of Public works, Deputy Supdts. of Roads, Civil Engineer, Assistant Civil Engineer. Ditto 2nd Class, Assistant Surveyor General Assistant Surveyor 1 District Surgeon 700 0 200 0 100 0 350 0 180 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 70000 700 0 0 0 0 h 20000 2000 0 0 0 10000 100 0 0 0 0 S 350 00 350 0 0 0 0 2 180 0 0 180 0 O m 0 90 490 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 k 400 O 0 0 0 o 303 MILITARY SALARIES. (PART 11. I. At the Presidency. No. 137 of 1838.-1. in giving effect Chief Engineer, to the orders of the Hon'ble the Court Adjutant of Engineers, of Directors contained in their Milita- Deputy Secretary to Government Military ry Despatch to the Governor of Ben. Department, gal No. 33, dated 10th April 1838, and Town Major, Fort St. George, Fort Adjutant, and Superintending Officer zette 10th July 1838 ; the Right Hon. published in the Fort St. George Ga- of Gentlemen Cadeis, Fort St. George, the Governor in Council is pleased Paymaster do. Deputy Military Auditor General, to direct, that, in assimilation to the Ist Assistant do. system obtaining in Bengal, all Offi- 20 do. do. cers holding Staff situations, the du. Deputy Secretary Military Board, ties of which do not render them liahle Assistant do. to move (enumerated in the margin) Principal Commissary of Ordnance and shall cease to draw Regimental Tent Superintendent Gun Carriage Manufac. allowance. tory Presidency, Ditto Deputy do. do. Commissary of Ordnance, do. 2. In lieu of Regimental Tentage, Superintendent Manufactory of Gunpow. forfeited as above, the following spe- der, cial rates of · House Rent or Tent- Barrack Master, Presidency, age' drawn by Staff Officers in Ben- Secretary Clothing Board, gal, are established for Staff Officers Ditto Medical Board, of this Presidency. Dilto Department of Public Works, Superintendent of Pensions and Family At the Field Officer... 1807.5 Payments, Presiden- Captain... 135 Superintending Engineer, Presidency, Inspector of Ordnance on the Works of cy: Subaltern... 90 Fort St. George, In the Superintendent of Roads, Provin- | Field Officer... 120 Garrison Surgeon, Fort St. George, ces or at y Captain... 90 Assistant do. do. Out-Sta Subaltern... 60 Surgeon General Hospital Presidency, tions. Assistant do. do. Medical Storekeeper, Presidency, N. B.-Officers in Staff situations at Superintendent Eye Infirmary, ditto, Physician to His Highness the Nabob. the Presidency, the duties of which Port and Marine Surgeon, and generally render them liable to move, do not for- all Medical Officers in fixed situations feit Regimental Tent allowance; but not in receipt of consolidated salaries. while at the Presidency they draw the In the Provinces. superior rates above established, in Brigadiers Commanding fixed Stations in which Regimental Tent allowance is the established Divisions of the Army. held to be included. Paymasters of Stations, Deputy do. 3. Staff Officers provided with Pab- Commissary of Ordnance do. lic Quarters are not entitled to the su- Deputy do.' being a Commisioned Officer, perior rates of · House Rent or Tent. Officer Commanding Neilgherry Hills, age,' but draw Pay and Regimental Fort Adjutants of Stations, allowance (full or ordinary as attach to Cantonment Adjutants do. Garrison Surgeon, their appointments) less Tent allow ance. Depôt Surgeon, Director of Artillery Depôt, St. Thomas's Mount, 4. During absence on duty, medical Medical Staff, Neilgherry Hills. certificate, or private affairs within the Note Para, 3. Siaff ai the Presidency prescribed limits and periods, Staff occupying Public Quarters, such as the Officers resume their right to Regi- Town Major of Fort St. George, Fort Ado mental Tentage, forfeiting the superior jutant, Garrison Assistant Surgeon Com- rates. missary of Ordnance, Surgeon and Assis- tant Surgeon General Hospital, are 5. The following are the rates of con- disqualified to draw special House Rent and forfeit Tentage, in lieu of which they solidated Pay and Regimental allor- draw where not in receipt of full Batia ances, less tent allowance, benceforth Regimental House Rent as part of Regio to be drawn by Staff Officers in receipt mental Pay and Allowances. of superior House Rent or Tentage. To be drawn in Staff Abstracts. VOL. 1.1 309 FORT ST. GEORGE. CAVALRY. ARTILLERY AND ENGINEERS. INFANTRY. Consolidated Pay and Full Regimen- tal allowances de- ducting Tent al- Consulidated Pay and Ordinary Re- gimental allow- deducting lowance. Tent allowance. ances An, NairdirOSTO allow and Full Regimen- tal alluwances de- ducting Tent al- Consulidated Pay and Ordinary Re- Consolidated Pay lowance. Teut allowance'. gimental ances nonpap -11aui!say ng puw allow- tal allowances de dncting Tent al- Consolidated Pay aud Ordinary Re- deducting lowance. gimental Tent allowance. ances RS, A. P. RS, A. P. RS. A. P. RS. A. P. RS. A. P. RS. A. P. Lieut. Colonel 887 00682 10 0852 4 ! 617 14 0 832 4 0 617 14 0 689 6 4 511 1 10 639 3 ( 190 14 6 639 3 0 490 14 6 398 0 4 336 11 41 358 10 ( 317 5 0 310 6 0 299 1 0 Major Captain...... Lieutenant...... Ensign, or Cornet. 255 40224 6 0 215 12 181 14 0206 10 0 175 120 200 10 4 179 15 10 1635 ( 112 10 6 132 0 2 131 5 8 6. Staff Officers in receipt of Full Batta in virtue of locality, draw that allowance, consolidated as above, with other regimental allowances. 7. Staff Officers in receipt of Full Batta in virtue of their appointments (vide N. B. to para. 3 •Full Batta,'G. O. G, No. 85 of 1838) draw in the usual manner in their Staff Abstracts . Difference between Full and Half Batta deducting House Rent.' 8. The foregoing provisions will have effect from the 1st August 1838 ; but the Right Honorable the Governor in Council is pleased to direct that they shall not be applied to the present incumbents, not in receipt of Full Batta, of Staff appointments, whose allowances would be reduced thereby. (Signed) S. W. STEEL, Lieut. Colonel, Secretary to Government. 1 1 LIST OF TIIB EAST INDIA COMPANY'S COVENANTED CIVIL SERVANTS OF THE BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT, Corrected to the 31st December, 1841. THE COUNCIL. THE HON'BLB G. W. ANDERSON, took his seat, 28th April 1811. His EXCELLENCY Lieut. Genl. Sir Thomas McMAHON, BT. K.C.B., Commander-in-Chief and Second Member of Council, took his seat, 14th February 1810. The Hon'ble J. H. CRAWFORD, Third Member of Council, took his seat, 28th April 1841. The Hon'ble L. R. REID, Fourth Member of Council, took his seat, 7th September 1841. 312 (PABT II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. | Number. Season 1 Appt. NAMES. 1 J. H. Crawford, 2 G. W. Anderson,.... 3 S. Marriott, 4 J. Box,...... 5 J. Williams, Actual Re- Date of Commencement promotion to Date of Arrival. sidence on of Service. Service. present How EMPLOYED. grade. I. CLASS. 1805 12 Feb. 06 20 June 06 16 2 0 1 Dec. 41 3rd Mem, of Council, 28th Apr. 1841, and Offg. 29 Nov. 29 Chief Judge of the Court of Sudder Dewanee II. CLASS. & Sudder Foujdaree Adawlut, 27th Sep. 1841. 1806 11 Jan. 09 24 June 09 30 7 27 4 Noy. 28 Governor and President in Council, 28th April 21 May 14 18+1. do 7 Apr. 07 1 Sept. 0734 4 0 Do Puisne Judge of the Court of Sudder Dewanee and Sudder Foujdaree Adawlut, 24th June 1835. Re-appointed 15th Jan. 1840. 1808 14 Feb. 12 20 Oct. 1222 7 216 Dec. 29 On furlough to Europe, per Steamer Victoria 14 Jan. 25 left 31st March 1840. 1812 25 Jan. 1327 Oct. 1323 4 21 Do Sub. Treasurer, General Paymaster and Super- 13 May 23 intendent of Stamps, 24th Dec. 1834. do do do 13 28 7 22 Do Supdt. of Stationery and Opium Agent, 23d Apr. 1838. Stipendiary Commr. of the Court of Re- quests, 230 June 1834. On leave to the C. of G. Hope per Ship Malabar, sailed 2d Jan. 1841. 1814 28 Dec. 1427 do 1521 7 28 27 May 35 Judge and Session Judge and Agent for the Go- 2 Sept. vernor at Surat, 6th Dec. 1837. 12 Oct. 33 1815 23 Dec. 15 26 June 1625 6 515 May 36 Acct. Gl. and Rev. Jdel. Acct. and Acct. Gl. to the Sapreme Court, Acting, 21st April 1841, confirmed 3d Sept. 1841. do do 15 May do 25 7 16 Do Civil Auditor and Mint Master, Acting, 21st April 1841, confirmed 3d Sept. 1841. do 16 Feb, 16 22 Sept. do 25 3 9 Do Revenue Commissioner, 3d Dec. 1838. do 23 Dec, 1515 May do 25 16 Do Puisne Judge of the Court of Sudder Adawlut and Judicial Commissioner for the Deccan and Khandesh, Acting, 21st Feb. 1839, and 20th Jan. 1840, confirmed 29th March 1841. 6 F. Bourchier, 7 G. L. Elliott,.. 24 8 W. C. Bruce.... 9 E. E. Elliott, 10 J. Vibart,... 11 A, Bell,..... 7 Put 314 (PART IL BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Number. NAMES. Season of Appt. Actual Re- Date of Commencement of Service. Date of Arrival. sidence on promotion to Service. present grade. How EMPLOYED. 23 D. Greenhill, 1810 16 Feb. 24 W. R. Morris, 1818 20 Oct. Do. 2 W. Simson, ... do do 8 Do. 26 B. Hutt, do do 26 27 D. A. Blade, 1818 18 Feb. .. 1421 May 14 21 11 29 29 May 1839 Puisne Judge of the Court of Sudder Adawlut 5 July 32 and Judicial Commissioner for the Southern Marhatta Country, 24th June and 28th Sept. CLASS II. 1839. [Lost Rank under 53 Geo. III. Cap. 155, Section 85.] 19 24 Mar. 2018 5 7 Secretary to Govt. in the General and Persian 24 May 28 Departments, 1st Jan. 1840, and in the Fi- nance Department, 13th Sept, 1841. do 12 May 2018 3 Principal Collector and Magistrate of Surat, 3 Feb. 36 29th June 1840. do 24 Mar. 2018 2 Do. Acting Judge and Session Judge of Ahmednug- 29 Apr. 26 gur, 22d Nov. 1941. 20 7 June 20.118 6 28 7 June 1840 Political Agent in Kattiwar, 23d Oct. 1839. 31 Dec. 3; Acting Secy. to Govt. in the Revenue Depart. ment, 13th Sept. 1841. do 7 June 2018 125 Do. Collector and Magistrate of Ahmedabad, 31st 12 July 37 Dec. 1838. do 7 June 2021 6 24 Collector and Magistrate of Tanna, 3rd Dec. 1838. dol do 18 5 20 Do. Collector and Magistrate of Rutnageeree, 17th 9 Jan. 34 Oct. 1838. 21|18 10 4 12 Dec. 41 21 10 June 21/16 1 6 10 June 1841 Collector and Magistrate of Khandesh, 6th 17 Apr. Nov. 1839. do 11 June 21 17 4 12 Do. Collector and Magistrate of Sholapoor, 15th July 1810. do 31 Oct. 21 20 Senior Magistrate of Police and RevenueJudge, 31st Jan. 1840. 28 Sir R.K. Arbuthnot, Bt. do 7 Jan. 29 J. H. Jackson, do 18 Feb. Do. 30 A. Elphinston, do 12 Apr. 5 July 31 J. Warden, ... do do 17 Apr. Do. .. 1820 9 Feb. 3 32 R. K. Pringle, 33 E. Montgomerie, 34 P.W. LeGeyt, do 28 do 5 Apr. 34P. 38 do 11 Apr. 01 Do. VOL. 11.) 313 CIVIL LIST. .. 35 H. A. Harrison, do 29 Dec. 2010 June do 20 6 21 Do. 36 R. T. Webb, 28 Feb. do 21 16 2 3 Do. do 5 Aug. 36 37 H. Brown, do 9 do 5 28 Do. 38 J. W. Muspratt, Collector and Magistrate of Ahmednuggur, 16th Nov. 1834. Military Accountant, and Deputy Accountant General and Depy. Revenne and Judicial Ac- countant, 9th Jan. 1840, and 30th Apr. 1841. Judge and Session Judge of the Konkun, 13th Oct. 1840. Judge and Session Judge of Dharwar, Acting, 21st April 1841, confirmed 3d Sept. 1841. Collector and Magistrate of Poona, Acting, 23d May 1839, confirmed 29th March 1811. Register to the Court of Sudder Adawlut, 31st Jan. 1840. do 29 Dec. 6 12 do 10 June 3 Feb. 2010 June 2 May 21|28 Jan, 13 June 22127 Apr. Do. 21 16 35 21 17 401 22 15 37 22 19 39 P. Stewart, u. do 12 Sept. 6 1 Do. 1 40 G. Grant, H. do 16 Jan. 6 4 Do. CLASS III. 41 D. H. Townsend, 1821 27 Feb. do 11 June 30 Nov. do 16 31 42 W. C. Andrews, H. do do 43 J. W. Langford, u. 11 June 14 Nov. di 11 June 19 Nov. do ... 22 16 38 22 15 36 27 do 44 N. Kirkland, H. do ... 20 do de u June 22 19 ... 6 6 1515 Aug. 1834, Collector and Magistrate of Belgaum, and Poli- tical Agent in the S. M. Country, 9th Jan. 1840. On leave to the Cape of Good Hope, per Childe Harold, sailed 6th Jan. 1841. 1 26 Do. Judge and Session Judge of Ahmedabad, Acting 14th Oct. 1839, confirmed 10th Nov. 1841. 8 171 Do. Sub-Collector aud Joint Magistrate of Broach, 29th March 1841, and Act. Collector of Con- tinental Customs and Excise, 22d Feb. 1841. 20 Do. Collector and Magistrate of Kaira. Acting 23rd Jan. 1837, confirmed 9th Jan. 1840. 29 Do. Acting Collector and Magistrate of Dharwar 16th Oct. 1841, and Deputy Civil Auditor and Mint Master, 3d Sept. 1841. 23 Do. On Sick leave to Europe, per Steamer Bere. nice, left Ist May 1841. 9 19 Do. Asst. Judge and Session Judge of Tannah for the Detached station of Rutnageeree, Acting 21st April 1841, confirmed 30 Sept. 1841. 45 A. N. Shaw, H.M. do 27 do 13 4 46 Charles Sims, H. ... do do 0 do do 31 Dec. 22 Oct. 10 June 8 Nov. dc 11 June + Sept. 28 June 28 40 22 15 36 22 12 33 40 47 W. J. Hunter, do 16 Jan. 316 (PART 1 BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. How EMPLOYED. Number. NAMES. Actual Re- Date of pro- Comencement Date of Arrival. sidence on motion to of Service. Service. present grade. Season of appt. CLASS III. 48 W. Richardson, H.M., do 13 Sept. 1822 12 Mar, 1822 23 July 2327 Oct. 0 do do do 13 6 49 J. Erskine, H.M., 50 G. H. Pitt, 51 T. H. Talbot, H., 52 W. Birdwood, H., 2 Feb, 5 Mar, do 10 May 24 23 May 10 Sept. 1 Dec. do 1823 24 17 25 16 Do, Do, 8 53 E. G. Fawcett, H.G.,.... 1824 23 March 2513 40 25 6 June 14 Feb, do 12 Dec. 8 Nov. 23 18 9 19 15 Aug. 1834 Senior Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Surat for the Detached station of Broach, 17th March 1835. do 16 12 27 Oct, 1835 On Furlough to Europe, per Ship Bombay, sailed 8th Nov. 1 39. 26 Do On sick certificate to Europe, per Ship Lord 33 Auckland, sailed 21st September 1840. 7 21 7 Senior Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Ahmedouggur for the Detached station of Dhoolia, 7th May 1835. 6 17 6 June 1837 Employed on special duty, 20th March 1840. 1 22 Do Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Nassuck, 15th July 1840, and Acting Collector and Ma- gistrate of Belgaum, and Political Agent in S. M. Country, 16th Oct, 1841. 8 Do Political Agent in Kutch, Acting 16th Feb. 1841 confirmed 30th March 1841. 1 6 Acting Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of 41 Broach, 16th Oct. 1841. 016 Do On Furlough to Europe, per Ship Carnatie, sail- 35 ed 1st Feb. 1838. 211 10 13 13 Jan. 1839 On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Berenice, left 5th Dec, 1888, do 4112 8 21 25 13 54 H. W, Reeves, H.M.,... do 24 Aug. 39 26/15 2 do 29 April 25/13 Do 55 A, Malet, H.,..... do 2 Nov. 56 R. D. Luard, H.M........ do 24 Aug. 57 A. Hornby, H............. do 2 Nov. 58 A.W. Ravenscroft, H.m. 1825 26 July 59 R. C. Chambers, H.,.,. do 30 Aug. do 12 Dec. 14 Mar. do 19 May 1 Dec. 2623 Jan. 26/10 do 1 Apr. 110 Nov. Do VOL. 11.) 317 CIVIL LIST. 60 G. Coles, 1..... do 27 Sept. do31 Mar. 27/14 9 0 Do do 14 9 0 Do 61 W. W. Bell, A.G.M.,.... do do 1 62 P. Scott, A.M.P.,.......... 1826 21 Feb. 27 12 June 12 Feb. do il 41 4 5 Do 63 W. Escombe, I.M. do 25 Apr. do 26 Oct. 16 July 27 32 11 7 3 Do 8 27 Do do 5 Apr. 9 July 281 1 June 10. April do 5 do 28 10 341 28 12 41 do 11 1 64 J. G. Lumsden, H.,..... do 18 July 65 J. Gordon, 1. G. M., 1827 23 Jan. 66 H. Liddell, 1... do 21 March 67 J. Webb, 1.,.... do 6 do 25 1 June First Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Surat, 2d Nov. 1838, and Act- ing Sub-Collector and Joint Magistrate of Broach, 24th Dec. 1838. First Assistant to Collector and Magistrate of Ahmednuggar, 2d Dec. 1838. First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Poona, Acting 17th Feb. 1841, confirmed Ist March 1841. First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Dharwar, 5th Dec. 1838. Acting Opium Agent and Supt. of Stamps and Stipendiary Commissioner of the Court of Requests, 5th April 1841. Assist. to the Judge and Session Judge of Surat, 27th Sept. 1835. (On special duty in Kutch.) 40 Acting Deputy Civil Auditor and Mint Master, 28th April 1841. On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Berenice left 28th Nov. 1839. 20 Asst. to the Collector and Magis. of Amed. nuggur, 26th Feb. _1834. Placed in charge of the Govt Sheep Farms, 15th Dec. 1837. On leave to England, on sick certificate, per Steamer Berenice, left 1st Feb. 1841. On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Zenobia, left 1st Jan. 1840. Political Superintendent of Sawunt Warree, 26th May 1840 On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Berenice, left 5th Dec. 1838. First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Sholapoor, 1st Jan. 1840 5 23 Do 5 22 1 June 4 Dec. do 10 32 Do 7 6 Do 68 G. A. E. Campbell, H., do 69 J. S. Law, H.G.M......... do 21 May 30 July do 20 Nov. 11 Aug. do 13 Feb. 2 8 37 29 10 10 11 Do 70 W. Courtney, H.M.,..... do do 0 Do 31 Dec, 1 do 30 Nov. 28 10 35 28. 10 71 G. Malcolm, H.M.,...... do do 0 Do 72 G. J. Blane, u., do do do 13 Do $18 (P.RT 17. BOMBAY ESTABLISIIMENT. Number. Season of Appt. do 4 6 do Actual Re- Date of NAMES. Commencement Date of Arrival. sidence on promotion to How EMPLOYED. of Service. Service. present grade. 73 R. Spooner, H.,....... 1829 30 July 1828 30 Nov. 1828 12 4 01 June 1840 On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Cleopa- tra, left 1st April 1841. 74 G. L. Farrant, H.,....... do 13 Feb. 29 12 10 18 Do Senior Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Poona for the detached station of Sholapoor, Acting, 10th Oct. 1838, confirmed 10th Nov. 1841. 75 C. Price, H.,........... do 26 Nov. do 14 May do 12 7 17 Do First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Rutnageeree. 26th May 1840. 76 A. Spens, H., 1828 28 Jan. 29 3 July do 12 5 28 3 July do Depnty Collector of Customs and Land Reve. nue at the Presidency, 4th Dec. 1839. 77 H. P. Malet, H.,. do 1 July 29 2 Dec. do 11 29 Do On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Berenice, left 1st May 1841. 78 J. M. Davies, G., 1829 dlo do 6 June 30 11 25 6 June 41 First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Tanna, 9th Sept. 1840, and Political Supt. IV. CLASS. of Colaba, 7th Nov. 1840. 79 W. E. Frere, H.G........ do do do do 5 June 3010 8 26 Do On Furlough to Europe, per Steamer Berenice, left Ist March 1841. 80 A. Remington, H.M.,... do 20 Jan. 30 15 May 7 16 Do First Assistant to the Political Commissioner of Guzerat and Resident at Baroda, 31st May 1839. 81 R. Keays, H.G.... do 31 do 29 16 June do 11 6 15 6 do 38 First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Kaira, 22 Dec. 1838. 82 H. Young, H.......... do 28 April 30 20 Nov. 30 11 1 11 Do Deputy Collector of Continental Customs and do Excise, 3d Sept. 1838. 83 A. Campbell, H.G.C.... do do do 1 11 Do First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Belgaum. 9th Jan, 1840. 84 M. Larken, H.M......... do 7 July do 8 Jan. 31 7 8 2 Do First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate 12 Feb. 41 of Khandesh, Acting 17th Feb. 1841, con- firmed 1st May 1841. 30 11 ('I '704 319 CIVIL LIST. 85) A. Bettington, H.C.,.... 1829 12 Feb. 1830 8 Jan. 86 J. D. Inverarity, H.M., 1830 12 Jan. 31'11 May 87 W. H. Harrison, H.M., do do 3 0 27 Sept. 10 Jan. 27 Sept. 88 R. Y. Bazett, Fl.......... do do 3 4 89 H. E. Goldsmid, H.,.... do do 21 May 90 E. H. Dallas, H.M...... do do 19 June 31/10 1 23 6 June 1839 Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Belgaum, 9th Jan. 1840. On sick leave to sea per Ship Parkfield, sailed 8th Aug. 1841. do 10 7 2011 May 39 Second Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Surat, and Acting First Assist- ant do 6th June 1840. do 7 Do Deputy Register to the Court of Sudder Aday- 27 lut, 31st Jan. 1840. 31 10 Do Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Rutnageeree, 3d Oct. 1838. do 10 7 10 Do Supt. of the Revenue Survey in the Southern Marhatta Country, and Assistant to the Col- lectors of Dharwar and Belgaum, 30th Aug. 1841. do 10 6 12 Do Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Khandesh, 21st Feb. 1838. 30 10 7 011 May 39 First Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Ahmedabad, 9th Jan. 1840. 32 9 11 11 Do. Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis. trate of Tanna, 9th September 1840, and Act- ing First Assistant do., 7th Nov. 1840. do. 9 Do. Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Sholapoor, 17th Oct. 1838. 28 Do, Second Assistant to the Political Commissioner 37 for Guzerat, 13th May 1840. 31 10 3 4 Do. Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Poona, and Assistant to the Agent for Sirdars in the Deccan. Acting 7th Jan. 1841, confirmed 18th Feb. 1841. do. 7 5 2 Do. Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Dharwar 36 15th July 1840, and acting First Assistant Collector, 15th Sept. 1841. 91 C.G. Prendergast, H.G. 1830 do. 30 May 92 E. C. Jones, A.M. do. 22 April 31 20 Jan. 93 E. M. Suart, H.G. do. 6 July do. 29 March 9 11 ! do. do. 326 0 94 T. Ogilvy, H.M.G. 95 C. M. Harrison, H.M... 20 Jan. 13 June do. do. 27 Sept. 96 T. C. Loughnan, H.G.c do. do. 4 Dec. 29 do. 320 (PART II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Number Season of Appt. do. 1 19 Actual Re. Date of NAMES. Commencement Date of Arrival. sidence on promotion to of Service. How EMPLOYED. Service. present grade. IV. CLASS 97 F. Sims, H. G. 1830 9 Nov. do. 19 June 32 9 6 12 11 May 1839 Third Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Surat, 15th July 1840, and act. ing Second Assistant do. 5th May 1840. 98J. H. Pelly, jur., H.G.c. 1831 18 Jan. 32 11 May do. 9 7 2012 June 40 Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Dharwar, 9th Jan. 1841, and acting Assistant Judge, 15th Sept. 1841. 99 J. N. Rose, H. M. do. 6 July do 15 do. do. 9 7 16 Do. Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Poona, 9th Jan. 1840. 100 J. W. Woodcock, 1. G. do. 12 do. do. 9 7 14 Do. Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Ahmed- nuggur, 15th April 1841. 101 A. K. Corfield, * ... do. 18 Jan. do, 16 July do. 3 1 Do. 29 Oct. 12 Dec. 41 102 H. Hebbert, H.M.G. do. 18 July do. 2 March 33 8 9 29 Do. Assistant Judge and Session Judge of the Kon- kun, Acting 10th January, 1840, coofirmed 10th Nov. 1841. 103 A. W. Jones, H.G. do. do. 4 Sept. do. 4 17 Assistant to the Collector of Continental Cus- 12 Feb. 41 toms and Excise, 6th March 1841. 104 E. W. Burton, H. do. 16 Jan. do. 19 July 33 8 5 12 19 July 41 Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Ahmedabad, 15th July 1840. 105 H. R. Stracey, H. 1832 10 July 33 2 do. 34 7 5 29 Do. Assistant Judge and Session Judge of Ahmed- abad, Acting 24th July 1830, confirmed 6th April 1841. V. CLASS. 106 H. B. E. Frere, H. M.G. 1833 15 Jan. 3123 Sept. do. 7 3 823 Sept. 39 Assistant to the Revenue Commissioner, 28th Oct. 1835. (Draws the salary of a Second Assistant Collector,) 21st Sept. 1840. 39 6 Do. VOL. II.) 321 CIVIL LIST. 107 S. Mansfield, 1.M., ... do. do. 7 Oct. do. 7 2 241 Do. 108 A. C. Stuart, 1.G., ... do. do. 5 912 Do. do. 10 April 41 PART II. VOL. II, 109 J. Buchanan, H., do. do. 8 Do. 13 Aug: 16 April 34 4 10 41 35 23 Sept. 35 6 2 8 23 Sept. 110 D. Davidson, H.M., 1834 28 Jan. 111 A.A.C. Forbes, H.M.,... do. do. 112 W. Hart, H.M., I do. do. 6 4 Do. do. do. do. 3 1 29 Do. 8 May 2 July do. 3 Feb. 40 113 E. L. Jankins, H.M., . do. 26 June 36 5 10 28 Do. Second Assistant to the Collector and Magis- trate of Kaira, 15th July 1840, and acting Second Assistant Collector of Belgaum, 10th Nov. 1841. Third Assistant to the Collector of Ahmedabad, 14th April, and acting Assistant Judge and Session Judge at Surat, 29th April 1841. Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Poona, 5th May. 1841, and acting Second As- sistant to Collector of Tanna, 10th Nov. 1841. 40 On Furlough to Europe, left per Steamer Vic- toria, Ist Dec. 1841. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Ahmednuggur, 21st Sept. 1840. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Poona, 15th July 1840. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Khandesh, 13th May 1840. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Kaira, 24th May 1838, and acting Second Assistant do, 3d June 1840. 40 Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Dharwar, 7th Aug 1840, and acting Se- cond Assistant, 15th Sept. 1841. 41 Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Sholapoor 15th July 1840. Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Ahmednuggur, 17th July 1839. do Fourth Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magistrate of Surat, 28th July 1840, and act- ing Third Assistant do. 12th June 1839. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Tanna, 7th Aug. 1840. 114 J. R. Morgan, H., do. 28 Jan. do. 1 Dec. 35 6 1 0 Do. 115 J. W. Hadow, H.M........ 1835 8 Jan. 35 29 Aug. 36 5 4 0 29 Aug. 36 10 Jan. 37 4 11 21 10 Jan. do 3 May do 4 116 G. B. S. Karr, H.M.G.,.. 1836 15 June 117 C. E. F. Tytler, H.M... do 118 A. S. J. Richardson, H.P.G.................... 1837 18 Jan. 7 28 Do 37 3 Oct. do 4 28 3 Oct. 119 W. J. Turquand, H.P... do 28 June do 21 Jan. 38 3 11 11 10 Do 322 [PART II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Number. Season of Appt. NAMES. Actual Re- Date of Commencement promotion to Date of Arrival. sidence on of Service. Service. present grade. REMARKS. 120 . Babington, H.,....... 1838 22 June V. CLASS. 38 20 Oct. 1838 3 2 11 20 Oct. 38 Assistant to the Accountant General, 7th Aug. 1840. 121 G. Inverarity, a m. 1839 7 Aug. VI. CLASS 39 29 Apr. 401 8 212 Mar. do 15 Jan. 40 10 Oct. dol i 2 22 Do 122C. J. Erskine, H., 123 H. L. Anderson, H., do do 10 Aug. do 1 4 21 Do 124 J. S. D. De Vitre, H.,.... do ,do 6 May do i 7 25 Do 40 Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Belgaum, Acting 25th August 1841, con- firmed 10th Nov. 1811. Assistant to the Principal Collector and Magis- trate of Surat, 13th Jan. 1841. Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Poona, 13th January 1841. Private Secretary to the Hon'ble the Governor, 28th April 1841. Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Dharwar, and acting Third Assistant, 22d October 1840. 41 Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Belgaum, 15th Oct. 1841. Third Assistant to the Collector and Magistrate of Rutnageeree, 13th May 1841. dol 41 2 do 41 0 7 3012 Jan. do 21 Apr. 12 Jan. do o do o 125 W. A. Goldfinch, H.,... 1840 31 July 126 A. C. Travers,... do do 127 C. Forbes, H.,... do 128 A. D. Robertson,... 1841 28 July 129 G. Grant do 11 Oct. 130 T. A. Compton,.. do 10 Nov. 8 10 11 20 Do Do do 12 Dec. do 11 Oct. do 10 Nov. do o 41 0 41 0 0 2011 Oct. 2 21 Do 121) Do LIST OF AUTHORITIES. XXXüi Poisons, a Toxicological chart of, ineluding those commonly used in India.–J. Jackson, Esq. M. B. Bengal Medical Establishment. Post Office, Bengal, Public Records, and information communicated by the Postmaster General, Deputy Postmaster General, and Agra P. M. G. Post Office, Madras, Information connected with the --Postmaster Gene- ral, Madras. Road Book, the Indian,- Records of the Quarter Master General's Office, arranged by W. Philipe, Esq. Retenue, Sudder Board of, Sketch of its management in former times, various modifications, &c.—Capt. J. A. Curric. Saugor and Nerbudda Territories, Statistical notice of,-D. McLeod, Esq. B. C. S. Principal Assistant to Commissioner. Salt, Memorandum on, N. l'eacock, Esq. Sand Heads, Directions for approach to,-Marine Board. Settlement Officer, N. W. P, Note on the duties of,-F. Head, Esq. Sikh Protecled States, List of chiefships with their estimated Annual Re- venues, -G. Clerk, Esq., B. C. S. Stamps,- Public Records. Steam Traveller's Guide, Inland,--Capt. Scott, Jumna. Steam Vessels on the Indus and Euphrates, Public Records and Parliament- ary Papers. Steam Vessels, Sea and Inland, Rules of, -Public Records, and Capt. Scott H. Co.'s Steamer Jumna. Steam Vessels, Bombay,- Bumbay Almanac. Steam Vessels, Bengul, -Capt. Johnstone, R. N. Storms, Law of, for Indian and China Seas,-H. Piddington, Esq. Sudder Aneen and Moonsiff, Government order respecting, -Public Records. Surveyor, Revenue, Note on the daties of, and return of revenue Survey operations, -Capt. S. A. Abbott, Public Records. Sunderbuns, Cominissioner of, Note on constitution of Office,-M. Shawe, Esq. B. C.S. Tennusserim Wastes and Forests, Notice of, -Capt. W. C. McLeod, and Public Records. END OF THE NEW SERIES. VOL. 11.1 (323) INDEX TO THE BOMBAY CIVIL LIST. 9 54 9 45 No. No. No. ANDERSON. H. L..... 123 GiberNE, G. 14 Muspratt, J. W ...... 38 -, Hon'ble G.W. 2 Glass, H. H......... 20 Andrews, W. C...... 42 Goldsmid, H. E....... 89 OGILVY, T............ 94 Arbuthnot, Sir R.K. 28 Goldfinch, W. A..... 125 Gordon, J.... 65 PELLY, J. H....... 98 BABINGTON, S. 120 Grant, G. 129 J. H..... 12 Bax, J. 4 G. 40 Pitt, G. H......... 50 Bazett, R. Y... 88 Greenhill, D.......... 23 Prendergast, C. G... 91 Bell, A. 11 Price, C... 75 W. W. 61 Hadow, J. W... 115 Pringle, R. K. 32 Bettington, A......... 85 Harrison, C. M....... 95 Pyne, J. 17 Birdwood, W.......... 52 H A... 35 Blane, D. A......... 27 W.H...... 87 RAVENSCROFT, A.W. 58 G. J........ 72 Hart, W... 112 Reeves, II. W. Borradaile, H. 22 Hebbert, H......... 102 Reid, L. R..... 13 Bourchier, F..... 6 Horuby, A......... 57 Remington, A. 80 Boyd, W. S......... 21 Hunter, W. J........, 47 Richardson, A. St. J. 118 Brown, H... 37 Hutt, B...... 26 W...... 48 Bruce, W. C. 8 Robertson, A. D..... 128 Buchanan, J. 109 INVERARITY, G...... 121 Rose, J. N........ 92 Burton, E. W. 104 J. D. 86 Scott, P. 62 CAMPBELL, A. 83 Jackson, J, H....... 29 Shaw, A. N....... G. A. E... 68 Jenkins, E. L. 113 J. A.... 19 Chambers, R. C. 59 Jones, A. W........ 103 Sims, C. 46 Coles, G. 60 E. C.......... 92 F. 97 Compton, T. A. 130 Simons, W. Corfield, A. K. 101 Karr, G. B. S....... 116 Spens, A... 76 Courtney, W. 70 Keays, R. 81 Spooner, H. 73 Crawford, J. H....... 1 Kirkland, N.......... 44 Stewart, P.. 32 Stracey, H. R......... 105 DALLAS, E. H. 90 LANFORD, J. W...... 43 Steuart, A. C......... 108 Davidson, D. 110 Larken, M........ 84 Suart, E. M. 93 Davies, J. M. 78 Law, J. S.... 69 De Vitre, J. S. D. 124 LeGeyt, P. W.... 34 TALBOT, T. H. 51 Liddell, H... 66 Townsend, E. H. 41 ELLIOTT, E. E. 9 Loughnan, T. C..... 96 Travers, A. C. 126 Elliot, G. L. 7 Luard, R. D.......... 56 Turquand, W. J.... 119 Elphinston, A. 30 Lumsdeu, J. G....... 64 Tytler, C. E. F....... 117 Erskine, C......... 122 J. 49 MALCOLM, G.......... 71 VIBART, J............. 10 Escombe, W. 63 Malet, A. 55 H. P....... 77 WARDEN, J. .... 31 FARBANT, G. L. 74 Mansfield, S.......... 107 Webb, J. 67 Fawcett, E. G. 53 Marriott, S. 3 R. T....... 36 Forbes, A. A. C. 111 Mills, E. B... 16 Williams, J. 5 C. 127 15 Willoughby, J. P.... 18 Frere, H. B. E. 106 Montgomerie, E. 33 Woodcock, J. W.... 100 W. E. 79 Morgan, J. R. 114 Morris, W. R......... 24 YOUNG, H............. 82 25 ..... R.... [ 5241 (PART 11. TABLE OF PAY, IN THE CIVIL DEPARTMENT. Per Month Remarks 0 Governor and President in council,... 10000 0 0 Payable in Sicca Rs. Members of Council, 5000 0 o Ditto do. Supreme Court of Judicature. Chief Judge, 5000 0 이 ​Puispe ditto, 4166 10 8 Court of Sudder Dewanee and Sud- der Foujdaree Adawlut. Senior Puisne Judge, 3333 5 4 Three of the Judge receive Second ditto, 3000 0 Rs. 316 10 8 per month, Third and Fourth ditto, 2916 10 8 for travelling allowances Registrar, 2100 0 as Visiting Judicial Com- Deputy ditto, 700 0 0 missioners. Assistant ditto, 500 0 0 Secretaries to Government. Chief Secretary in the Territorial and Financial Departments, 3333 5 4 Also receives Rupees 300 Secretary in the Secret, Political,and Judicial Departments, per month, as house rent. 2916 10 81 Do. in the General and Persian De- partments, 300 0 Also receives Rs. 300 per month as Secty. to the Secretary in the Military and Naval Civil Fund. Departments, 2000 0 0 The Military net pay of his Private Secretary to the Governor... 1500 0 0 rank is deducted from Accountant General in the Revenue this, and drawn for in a & Judicial Departments, 3333 5 4 separate Abstract, from Do. in the Supreme Court, 74 1 2 the Military Dept. 3407 6 Deputy Accountant General in the Revenue and Judicial Departments & Military Accountant, 2000 0 0 Do. in the Supreme Court, 74 1 2 2074 1 2 Assistant Ditto ditto, 500 0 Civil Auditor and Mint Master, 3333 5 41 Deputy ditto ditto, 1250 0 debited to the Audit, and Sub-Treasurer, 1500 the other half to the General Pay Master, 500 Mint Department. Superintendent of Stamps, 500 2500 Post Master General, 2000 0 0 Deputy Ditto ditto, 300 Receives also House rent Opium Agent and Superintendent of Rs. 150 per mensem. Stationery, 2000 0 0 Superintendent of Govt. Printing Presses, 300 0 Police Department. Senior Magistrate of Police, Revenue Judge at the Presidency, 2000 0 Also receives Rs. 200 per month as house rent. 6 0 0 0 0 FOL. 11.) 325 PAY IN THE CIVIL DEPARTMENT. Per Month. Remarks. Police Department.-Continued. Junior Magistrate of Police, Superintendent of Police, Assay Department. Assay Master, Deputy ditto, Mint Department. Mint Engineer, Assistant do., 1200 0 0 Also receives Rs. 100 per month as house rent. 500 0 0 The Mily. net pay of his rank is deducted from this and drawn for in a sepa- rate Abstract from the Military Department. 1250 0 0 Also receives Rs. 250 per 750 0 0 month as Secretary to the mint committee. 2391 0 0 The Military net pay of 650 0 os their respective ranks is deducted from this and drawn for in a Se- parate abstract from the Military Depart- ment. 3000 1400 0 0 One Third of those Sa- laries is debited to the Collector of Land Re. venue, 330 0 0 3000 800 0 0 400 0 0 3750 0 550 0 OOOOO Customs Dept.-- Bombay. Collector of Customs, and Land Re. venue, and Reporter General of External Commerce, Deputy ditto ditto, Collector of Assessment and wheel Tax, Collector of continental Customs and Excise, Deputy ditto Assistant ditto, Revenue Commissioner, Assistant ditto, Collectors, &c. Magistrates of Zillas. Principal Collector of Surat, Collector of Tannah, Ahmedabad. Kaira, Belgaum, Dharwar, Poona. Sholapoor, Ahmednuggur and Candeish, Collector of Rutnagherry, Sub-Collectors, First Assts. Rutnagherry and Kaira,... Second Assistant, Third Assistant Principal Collector, Collectors, Fourth Asst. Principal Collector, Assistant Collectors, 2666 10 8 2333 5 1916 10 1400 0 800 0 700 0 550 0 500 0 400 0 450 0 400 0 350 0 300 0 200 0 100 0 4 The Coltr. of Belgaum alsa 8 receives Rs. 200 as Pol. 0 Agent, S. M. Country. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 이 ​0 0 2500 0 0 2300 0 0 Assistant Collectors, Unpassed, Assistant Magistrate at Mableshwar, Judge &c. of the City Courts. Judge and Session Judge of Surat,... -of Poona, -of Concan, Ahmedabad, Dharwar, and Ahmed- puggur, Senior Assistant Judges and Session Judges for the detached stations,... Assistant do, for the Sudder ditto,... 2333 5 4 1200 0 0 7 Also receive fees for 700 00S Regy. Deeds paid by the parties. 326 [PART II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Per Month. Remarks. Guzerat Political Commissioners. Political Commissioner in Guzerat and Resident at Baroda, First Assistant do. Second ditto ditto, Political Agent, in Mhyee Caunta,... Assistant ditto, Superintendent of Guicowar's con- tingent in Kattywar, Resident, &c. at ihe Foreign Courts. Resident at Sattarah, salary,600 0 0 Personal allowance, ...500 0 0 4166 10 8 1000 0 0 750 0 0 1500 0 0 400 0 0 ... 400 0 o The Mily. net pay of his rank is deducted from this and drawn for in : separate abstract from the 1100 0 0 Military Department. 1600 0 0 Ditto ditto. Political Agent in Kutch, Ist Assistant Political Agent in Kutch, Political Agent at Lower Scinde, Ist Assistant ditto, 2d Ditto ditto, Extra Ditto ditto, Political Agent at Balmeer in Cutch, Political Superintendent of Sawunt Warree, Ditto Angria's Colaba, Resident in Persian Gulph, 700 2500 750 700 500 700 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ditto ditto. o Ditto ditto. o Ditto ditto. 0 Ditto ditto, 0 Ditto ditto. 0 1400 1400 2400 0 0 0 0 0 o Ditto ditto, and receives also Rs. 100 per month as house rent. o Ditto ditto. 0 756 20 500 0 ... Assistant, Agent for the Governor at Surat, Ditto for the Adjustment of claims against Sirdars in the Deccan, Agent in Candeish, and also com- manding the Bheel Corps, Bheel Agent and 2nd in command,... Adjt. to ditto Bheel Agent at Ahmednuggur and commanding Ahmednuggur Police Corps, Political Agent in Kattiawar, . an additional 500 0 0 The Military net pay of 800 0 0 their respective ranks 600 10 0 is deducted from this, 500 0 0 and drawn for in a se. parate abstract froin the Military Depart. 716 0 01 ment. 2000 0 0 Also receives 200 Rs. per Month as allowance in lieu of De. putation. 700 0 0 The Military net pay of 0 0 their respective ranks 2500 0 0 is deducted from this, 1600 0 0 and drawn for in a 600 0 0 separate from the Military Department. 1600 0 0 1200 0 0 525 0 0 100 0 0 Receives also fees. 175 0 0 500 0 0 500 First Assistant ditto, Second ditto, Political Agent at Bussorah, Ditto at Aden, Assistant ditto, Officers employed in the Supreme Court. Advocate General, Company's Solicitor, Master in Equity, -Clerk for trying Small causes,... Examiner to Master in Equity, Attorney for Paupers, Chief Interpreter and Translator in the Guzerattee and Hindoostanee, Interpreter and Translator in Mah- ratta, abstract, 600 0 0 400 0 VOL. 11] 327 PAY IN THE CIVIL DEPARTMENT. Officers employed in the Supreme Per Month. Court.-Continued. Remarks. Clerk of the Crown, Deputy ditto, Sheriff, Deputy ditto, Coroner, ...350 0 0 Allowance for conveyance,... 70 00 525 175 350 300 0 0 0 0 0 0 o Receives also fees. 0 400 300 0 0 0 o Ditto ditto. Stipendiary Commissioners to the Court of Requests, Clerk to ditto, Clerk to Her Majesty's Justice of the Peace, Officers employed in Miscellaneous stations. Oriental Translator Government, 120 0 0 1844 0 Superintendent of Repairs and Sur. veyor of Buildings, Civil Architect, Superintendent, in Boring for Water in Guzerat, 300 0 300 0 O'The Mily, net pay of his rank drawn for in a Se- parate abstract from the Mily. Dept., is deducted 0 from this, also Receives 0 Rs. 156 per month for Estabt. and Stationery. o Ditto ditto. Also receives Rs. 70 per month for of- fice, tent, and Establish- ment. 이​.. 456 0 Commandant of the Guzerat Irre- gular Horse, Second in Command, Adjutant, 1000 500 170 8 of vitto ditto. 0 o Receives also second Horse allowance at Rs. 30 per mensen. 0 Commanding the Sawuntwarree local Corps, Adjutant and 2d in Command, Commanding the Guzerat Cooly Po- lice Corps, 600 427 0 8 } Vitto ditto. 0 Adjutant to ditto, Comdg. Guzerat Provincial Battn. Adjutant to ditto, Post Master at Poona, Do. ditto at Belgaum, Do. ditto at Aurungabad, Aden, Ku- rachee, Hydrabad, Baroda, Deesa, Mhow, Malligaum, Bhooj and Sho- lapoor, Superintendent of Hindoo College... Commanding Poona Police Corps & Superintendent of Police, Superintendent of Revenue Survey in the Deccan, Assistant ditto, 2000 o In addition to the Military Pay and Allowances (less net pay which is drawn for in a separate abstract) from the Mily. Dept. of the officer who may stand 427 8 appd. to the situation. 645 6 0 Paid in the military and 479 1 05 debited to the civil de- 200 0 0 partment, after deduct- 100 0 0 ing the Military net pay of their respective ranks which is debited to the Military Depart- 50 0 0 ment. 120 0 0 526 0 615 12 200 0 0 Do. do. also receives Rs. 75 0 per month as Office, Tent and Estbt. and the Assts. receive Regimental allow- ance of their respective ranks. 328 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Per Month. Remarks, Ecclesiastical Department. 2133 5 8 0 ...1200 1466 10 8 666 10 8 Also receives 100 Rs. per month as House rent. 980 0 0 Do. do. 666 10 666 10 8 Receives also allowances at 8 Rs. 70 per month for visiting Broach. Bishop of Bombay, Archdeacon of Bombay,... 266 10 Senior Chaplain, 0 Chaplain of Christ's Church at By- culla, Senior Minister of Saint Andrew's Church, Junior Minister of Saint Andrew's Church, Chaplain at Surat, Medical Department. Superintendent of public Dispensary and Medical Stores, Civil Surgeon at the Presidency, Superintendent Vaccination at the Presidency, Surgeon to the H. the Governor, Do. Attending the Central Schools... Do. to the Native General Hospital at the Presidency, Oculist at the Presidency, Surgeon in charge of the Lunatic, Asylum, 200 0 300 0 0 Also receives Rs. 127 4 per month as consolidated al- 150 0 0 lowance. 600 0 0 60 0 0 0 400 811 0 475 12 ... O Also receives Rs. 30 per month for Palaokeen Al- lowance for attending the Mechanists of the mint. Ditto at the Police, to the Coroner and Assistant Civil Surgeon at the Presidency, Salary of the Surgeon attending the Gaol and House of Correction at the Presidency, Superintending Vaccinators in the Concan, Deccan, and Guzerat, Civil Surgeon at Surat, ...150 0 0 Do. Suptg. Civil & Insane Hospital, ...100 0 3000 o lo addition to the Military Pay and Allowances of the Medical officer filling 100 0 0 the appointment. 350 0 0 0 250 0 0 Receives also head money for attending theSurat Se- bundees with Mily. Pay and Allowances from the Military Department. 0 Civil Surgeon at Poona,...400 0 Do Superintending Civil & Insane Hospital do. do 100 0 0 500 0 Do. at Ahmedabad, ......300 0 Do. Suptg. Civil & Insane Hospital, ...100 0 0 0 Also receives Head money for attending the Police Corps. 0 400 0 0 Ditto. do. 515 4 0 Civil Surgeon in Scinde and Katty- war, Persian Gulph and Turkish Arabia, Civil Surgeon Attending the Politi- cal Comr. and his Establishment...) Ditto in Cutch, Civil Surgeon attending the Political Agent at Aden, 200 200 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 Vol. II) 329 PAY IN THE CIVIL DEPARTMENT. Per Months. Remarks. Medical Department.--Continued. Civil Surg. at Dharwar, Tannah, Rutnagherry, Broach, Kaira, Sho- lapoor, Nassick and Candeish, 360 10 10 The Civil Surgeons of Tan- nah, Rutnagherry, Ah- mednuggur, and Can- deish, also receive head money for attending the Irregular Corps, and the Civil Surgeons at Nassick and Dharwar and Khan. deish, receive as Assist- 150 0 0 ant Magistrate, Rs. 100 per month. 530 4 o Receives also head money allowances. Civil Surgeon at Belgaum, Surgeon attached to the Irregular Horse in Guzerat, Superintendent of the Botanical Gar- den at Dapooree, ...250 0 0 Ditto Consolidated Allow. ance, ...252 4 0 Supt. of Cotton Culture at Broach... 502 4 0 700 0 0 Engineer Officers employed under the Supt. of Roads, Tanks, gc. Supt. of Roads, Tanks, &c. Supt. of Public Works in Candeish... Assist. do. and Supt. of Roads, &c. ..., 1033 10 0 The Military net pay of his rank as above, and re- ceives also Rs. 125 per month as Office, Tent and Establishment. 853 10 0 Do. do, and do. 75. 200 0 0 Receives Reg. allowance of their respective ranks to- gether with Rs. 75 for Office, Tent and Estbt. Receives Rs. 2 per day. Receives extra allowance at Rs. 6 4 annas per 100 men per month. Officers Commanding the Subsidiary Jail Guards, Surg. Attending the Convicts in do... PART II. VOL 11. R R [ 530) (PART II THE BOMBAY ARMY LIST. COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. His EXCELLENCY LIEUT. GENERAL SIR THOMAS MCMAHON, Babt. K.C.B. Her Majesty's 94th Regiment of Foot. OFFICERS ON THE STAFF. Major General Sir J. F. FitzGerald, K. C. B., H. M. 85th Regiment.... Commdg. Poona Division. Major Genl. R. A. Willis, 15th N. I. Commdg. Northern Division, Major Genl. P. Delamotte, C. B., 3rd Lt. Cavy. Commdg. Southern Division. . OFFICERS COMMANDING DIVISIONS, FIELD FORCES, BRIGADES, STATIONS, GARRISONS, &c. BRIGADIER, 1st CLASS. Brigd. P. Fearon, 2d Gr. Regt. N. I............ Comg. Mhow Brigade. BRIGADIERS, 2D Class. Brigdr. R. England, K. H., H. M. 41st Regt.... Commanding Scinle field Forie Brigdr. T. Valiant, K. H., H. M. 40th Foot...... Comg. Bombuy Garrisor. Major General J. Morse, 6th N. I..... Comg. at Baroda. Bridg. F. Farquharson, 1st Gr. Regt........ Comg. at Ahmednuggu.- command at Kurrachel. Lieut. Col. S. Hughes, C.B., Ist Eur. Regt...... In temp. Command al Ahmed. nuggur. Brigadier J. Gibbon, 3d N. I... Comdg. at Deesa. Brigadier T. Morgan, 1st Eur. Regt..... Condg. in Candeish. Col. J. G. Baumgardt, C. B., H. M. 2d Q's. Royals....... Bt. Col. F. Roome, 9th N. I..... Lieut. Col. C. Uvans, 4th N. I......... Comdg. Poona Brigade. Comdg. at Asseerghur. Comg. at Sattara. THE HONORABLE G. W. ANDERSON, Esq., GOVERNOR, &c. &c. &c. PERSONAL STAFF, OF THE HONORABLE THE GOVERNOR. H. L. Anderson, Esq........ Private Secretary. Capt. M. F. Willoughby, Artillery ......... Militury Secretary Lieut. G. A. D'Arcy, H. M. 94th Regiment Aide.de-Camp. Cornet W. W. Anderson, 1st Lt.Cvly. (Lancers) Acting Ditto. J. McLennan, Esq............ Surgeon. OF THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. Capt. T. W. McMahon...... Mily. Secy. and Aide-de-Camp, Lieut. J. K. Wedderburn, H. M. 55th Regt..... Aide-de-Camp.-On duty with his Regt. in China. Lieut. R. P. Hogg, 2nd Grdr. Regt......... Persian intr. and Extra A.D.C Fol. 11 ) 331 ARMY LIST. REGIMENT OF ARTILLEY. Horse BRIGADB, • Beni.Boo- Alli'-' Ghuznee' – Khelat- Afghanistan.' Ist BATTALION, Seringapatam' '-'Egypt'' Assaye.' 2ND BATTALION, Seringapalam'- Kirkee' – Aden - Ghuznee'—' Afghanistan.' GOL. BATTALION, • Aden' _ Ghuznee'' Afghanistan.' HEAD QUARTERS, BOMBAY. COMMANDANT OF ARTILLERY.. Lieut.-Col. Julius G. Griffith, MAJOR OP BRIGADE ...Bt.-Major W. M. Coghlan. BRIGADE OF H. ARTY. HD. Qrs. Poona. GOLUNDACZE Bx, HD, Qrs. AHMEDNUGGUR. 1st Troop... Field Service Scinde Ist Company Ahmednuggur 2nd Troop Poona 2nd Ditto .Bhooj 3rd Troop ..........................Poona 3rd Ditto Upper Scinde 4th Troop: ..Deesa 4th Ditto Ahmedabad Ist BN. ARTY. HD. Qna. AHMEDNUGGUR. 5th Ditto. Ahmednuygur Ist Company.. Ahmednuggur 6th Ditto .Ahmednuggur 2nd Ditto ..Boinbay and Persian Gull 7th Ditto 3ru Ditto Upper Scinde 8th Ditto ..Aden Ith Ditto . Bombay 20 BN. ARTY. HD. Qrs. BOYBAY. Ist Company , Bombay end Ditto.. Field Service, Scinde 3rd Ditto Bombay 4th Ditto ...Aden .........Baroda Names. Regll. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonels. C. Hodyson.. 30 Sept. 25 M.G, 28 June28 Eur. Furlough, 9th April 1826. 2 R. Whish.. 23 do. 26 do do Ditto ditto 26th Jan. 1831. GS. R. Strover... I Jan. 33 m.g.26 Nov. 41 Ditto (litto 2 February do. HL. C. Russell, C.B.. 26 Dec. do do Dittu S.C. Ist February 1836. Lieul. Cols. HJ. G. Grifith...... 6 May 33 Commandant of Artillery, and Member of the Military Board. 1 A. Manson.. 28 do. do Comg. Ist Battn. Arty. P.D.A. GF. Schuler..... 4 June 38 Comg. Arty, N.D, A. GF. P. Lester 9 Aug. 40 Secretary to the Military Board.-S. C. Majors. to Neilgherries. 2 G. W. Gibson... 4 June 38 10 Jan. 37's. C. to Cape. GJ. W. Watson.. 30 Sept. 39 do Principal Comy.of Ordnance, Bombay. HM. C. Decluzeau... 13 Dec, dol Comy. Horse Brigade. 2 W. Jacob.... 9 Aug. 40 ..:: Agent for the Nanufacture of Gunpow- der. Captains. GJ. Lloyd 20 May 296.m. 23 July 39 Comg. Artillery in Scinde. HJ. S. Leeson.. 7 Aug. do Ditto, 4th Troop. 9G. Yeadell, h.... 3 Apr. 31 Ditto, Arty. at Åden. GJ. Sinclair.... 30 Dec. do Coiny. of Ordnance, Poona Divn. 2 E. Stanton.. 1 Jan. 33 Agent for the Manufacture of Gun HJ. H. M. Martin. 6 May do Comg. 3d Troop. (Carriages. HJ.T. Leslie,.... 24 Dec. do Ditto, Ist Troop. HA. Rowland....... 26 do Ditto, ad Troop. GF.J. Pontardent. 7 Feb, 31 Ditto, 3d Comy. Ist Batt le. HW. M, Coghlan..... 16 June do b.m. 13 Nov. 39 Brigade Major Arty: IN, Lechmere., ..... 20 Aug. 35 Comg. Arty. Karrack. 2 M. F. Willoughby.. 14 May 36 19 Dec. 35 Fort Adjutant, &c. Bombay.--Secy, to Clothing Board, & Mily. Secretary to the Hon'ble the Governor, 1 W. Brett ......... 8 Sept. 37 ditto Europe, S. C. 4th May 1840. 10. Lucas 30 Mar. 38 ditto Comy. of Ordnance, Northern Divn. GH. W. Trevelyan 4 June do ditto Place at the disposal of the Supreme Government. GT. E. Cotgrave 20 Jan. 39 ditto Junior Depy. Comy. of Ordnance, Presideney. [Field Force. GH. Stamford... 8 July do 9 July 36 Upper Scinde, Cory. of Ordnance, Sukkur. 2 W. T. Whitlie, i... 30 Sept. do ditto Kurrachee. 2 J. Grant 13 Dec. do ditto Deputy Comy. of Ordnance, Sukkur. 2 W. M. Webb 9 Aug. 10 ditto Senior Deputy Commissary of Ord- nance, Bombay, 1st Lieutenants. 1 E. A. Farquharson 10 June 216.c. 9 June 36 Deputy Comy. of Ordnance, Ahmed- nuggur, & Acty. Ex-Engr. 1 C, Blood ditto ditto 1 R. Warden, 1. M... do Nov, 22 do 10 May 37 Comy. of Ordnance, South Div.Army. GG. Hutt 21 Sept. 27 do 15 Oct. 40 Adjt. to the Go!. Battn.-Adjt, and Qr. Mr. to Arty, in Scinde. do • Regine plal duty, fempcrarilly. VOL. 11 ] 333 ARMY LIST. CORPS OF ENGINEERS. 3rd Company-' Beni-Boo-Ali'—* Afghanistan'--'Ghuznee.' 1st & 2nd Companies Afghanistan' — Ghuznee.' HEAD QUARTERS-BOMBAY. CHIEF ENGINEER...... ........ Lieut, Col T. Dickinson, ADJUTANT OF ENGINEERS,.. ........ Lieut. J. J. F. Cruickshank. CORPS OF SAPPERS AND MINERS, OFFICERS COMMANDING. Lieut. F. Wemyss. ACTING ADJUTANT AND INTERPRETER............... 2d Lieut. W. F. Marriott, Names, Regl. Rank Army Rank. Remarks. 4 July 5 Aug Colonels, (1838 S. Goodfellow........ | 29 July 1825 m.g. 28 June Eur. Furlo' 28th Jan. 1835. E. H. Bellasis.., 30 Oct. 38 ditto. Eur., Furlo.' 25th Feb. 1839. Licut. Colonels. T. Dickinson.. 110 Apr. 30 Chief Engineer, aud Member of the Military Board. G. R. Jervis. 28 June 38 Eur., S. Č. 25th Feb. 1839. Majors. J. Jopp.:: 26 Mar. 35 Eur. S.C. Ist April 1810. C. Wadrlington. 28 June 38 Supt. Eur. S. P. Captains. C.W. Grant... 10 Apr. 30 Suptg. Engr. Northern Provinces, A. C. Peat, c. B....... 20 Feb, 31 M, 28 July 39 Supt. of Roalls and Tanks in the 4 Collectorates. R. Foster.. Emr. S. C. Ist Feb. 1811. W. C. Harris, R. M. P.... 8 Aug. 34 On a Political mission, W. B. Goodfellow.. 20 Aug 31 CivilArchitect, Garrison Engr. & Ex. Ollicer, Presidency. W. Scott....... 20 Mar. 35 Civil Engr. in Candwish, OfTg. Supt.. Engr. Southern Provinces. H. B. Turner, w...... 25 Mar. 38 Mint Engr., and Supg. Building of Steam Factory: T. M. B. Turner...... 28 June 38 Engineer to the Dock Yard. J. Kilner.. 7 Oct. 40 Ex-Engineer at Mhow. 1st Lieutenants. H. Berthon..... 28 Ex-Enzineer, Ahmedabad, Hursole, 1 Baroda and Kaira. J. J. F. Cruikshank, H.. 20 Apr. 29 Assist, to the Chief Engr. and Acty. Assist, Secy. Mily. Buard. J. Estridge..... 10 Apr. 30 Executive Engineer, Poona, W. G. Helbert, B... 20 Tel. 31 Europe, 8. C. 7 Oct. 1811. d. I. G. Crawford. 4 July 32 Executive Engr. at Alimenuggur. G. Wingate, M....... 27 July 3: Eur, fur. for 1 year, 28th Aug. 1841, W. S. Jacob... 1 July 33 First Assist, Grand Trigonometria cal Survey; C. W. Tremenhere... 17 Apr. 31 Eur. S. C. 6th Feb, 1840. F. Wemyss, H.M... 34 Comz. Sappers and Miners. T. Stoddert... 34 At the disposal of the Envoy & Minis- ter atCabool. H. J. Margary. 26 Mar, 35 Eu S.C. 6th Feb. 1810. W. Graham 21 Oct, 36 Ex.-Engr. Dharwar Division. G. B. Munbee, H. 25 Mar, Ex. Eugr, Lower Scinde. R. Leech.... 28 June 38 Major in Afn. 7 Aug 38 Politically employed in Affghanistan, J. A. Curtis..... 18 June Assist. Ex: & Field Engr. Aden, A. Nash, H.M. 7 Oct. Assist. to Rev. Surveyor, Deccan. 2d Lieutenants. P. L. Hart.. 9 Apr. 36 14 Dec. 32 Assist. to Supt. of Roads, &c. C. F. North. 21 Oct, 36 11 June 33 On duty in Affghanistan. W. S. Suart, 1.......... 25 Mar. 38 13 Dec. 33 Supt. of Repairs, & Survey of Build inys. -Doing duty under the Mint Engineer. F. Wemyss. 28 June 38 13 Dee. 33 Europe, S.C. 6th Oct. 1838. J. Hill... 23 Oct. 39 13 June 31 Acting Ex.-Engr. Upper Scinde. J. Burke. 18 June 401 Dec. 31 Europe S.C. 5th June 1811. W. F. Marriott, H.. 7 Oet. 4011 Dec. 36 Acting Adit, and interpreter to the Corps of Sappers au Miners. H. W. B. Bell.. 31 Mar. 411 June 39 Acig. Ex.-Engr. Dharwar. Supernumerary. H. Rivers.. 11 June 39 Issist. to Supt. of Rev. Survey. Conductor. (Southern Mar. Country, T, Dunn... 40) Coal, Red; Facings, Blue Velvet; Lace, Gold. 8 Aug. 20 Aug. 7 Apr. 834 [PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. IST REGIMENT (LANCERS). "Ghuznee' and Affghanistan.' Deesa-arrived 13th May 1811, ordered to Muow. Names. Regl. Rank.) Army Rank. Remarks. LI. Col. Comd'. B. Sandwith, c. B... 29 Apr. 39 Eur. Furlough, 28th April 1840. Lieut. Colonel. D. Cunninghame, .29 Apr. 39 . Major. S. Poole, 3 June 41 Captains. J. Penney, 7 Nov. 37 Brig. Major at Deesa. C. J. Owen, ..30 Oct. 38 G. K. Erskine, ..! I Nov. 38 Comg. Poona, Auxy. Horse. A. Tweedale, 6 Mar. 41 S. C. Eur., 26 Oct. 1841. W. F. Curtis, 3 June 41 Commg. the Scinde Rissalab, Lieutenants. B. H. Combe, 5 Dec. 34 H. Sportinwoode, 21 July 36 Adjutant. R. C. LeGeyt, ditto 19 July 35 H. M. Shah Shooja's Service. W. Loch, 4 Feb. 37 2nd in Command of The Poona Auxy. Horse, G. C. Kemball, 1.... 23 Nov. 38 Qr. Mr. and Interpr. L. Vardon, 19 Feb. 39 P. L. Fagon, 6 Mar, 41 L. M. Valiant, H. 3 June do Cornels, F. H. Denys, 24 Dec. 3813 Feb. 39 H. R. Parker, |:23 Sepi. 34 21 Dec. 39 W. W. Anderson, n. 6 Mar. 4l 4 do 40 Actg. A. D. C. to the Hou'ble the Govr. E. d. Harily, 3 June do 2 Feb. 41 Staff. Adjulant H. Sportiswoode, .21 June 37 Qr. Mr. and Intr. G C. Kemball, 23 May 39 Surgeon. A. J. Montefiore, 17 Jan. 40 | May 39 Assist. Surgeon W. Babington, 21 May 4118 Feb. 391 Veterinury Surg. G. E. Nison, 24 May 26 Jacket, French Grey: Facings, White. . . VOL. II.] 935 ARMY LIST. SECOND REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. Mhow-arrived 24th January 1839, ordered to Deesa. Names. Regl.Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonels. J. P. Dunbar, I May 24 m.g. 28 June 38 Europe, Furlough, Ist July 1826. Lieut. Colonel. J. Sutherland, .. 27 Mar. 40 28 Feb. 38 Resident at Gwalior. Major. J. Brooks, 29 Apr. 39 Captains. G. Rowley, 14 July 35 Supdt. of Pensions and Family Payments. W. Trevelyan, W. J. Ottley, H. 19 do. do. I Dec. 37 Europe, Furlongh, 12th March 1840. H. L. Salmon, C. F. Honner, 29 Apr. 39 12 Dec. 40 14 July 40 Lieutenants. ... P. G. Dallas, .. 25 June 32 B.c. 27 Dec. 40 C. F. Jackson, 2 Nov.do. B.c. 17 Feb. 41 A. Prescott, 14 July 35 Europe, Furlough, 21st March 1840. W. Kenyon, 22 Apr. 38 Brig. Major at Mhow. J. McK. Taylor, 24 Dec, do. Adjutant. W. Marriott, h. 29 Apr. 39 Acg. Qr. Mr. and Intr. E. H. Simpson, 30 July 40 W. F. Hunter, 12 Dec, do. Cornets. L. M. Jones, . 23 Nov. 3813 Feb. 381 E. M. MacGregor, .30 July 4012 April 40 C. F. Loch, 12 Dec. do 4 Dec. do. C. H. Barnewell, 17 Nov. 41 2 Feb. 41 Stapf. Adjutant. J. McK. Taylor, 23 Dec. 39 Actg. Qr. Mr.& Intr. W. Marriott, 12 do. 40 5 Apr. 35 Surgeon. W. B. Taylor, .. 25 Sept. 41 11 April 59 Assistant Surgeon. W. Neilson, M.D. 6 July 41 10 Mar. 38 Verly. Surgeon. H. Freake, 26 Feb. 41! Jacket, French Grey; Facings, White. 336 (PART II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. THIRD REGIMENT LIGHT CAVALRY. On Field SERVICE, SCINDE. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. - Colonel, P. Delamotre, C.B.H. 27 Apr. 26 M.G. 28 June 38 Commg. South. Divi- sion of the Army. Lieut. Colonel. C. J. Conyngham, . 6 Apr. 41 6 Mar. 41 S. C. to Neilgherries, 17th Sept, 1840. Major. M. Stack, 22 Sept, 39 Supt. of the Stud Es- tablishment. Captains. C. H. Delamain, H. - 12 Sept. 34 E. Walter, 5 Dec, do, D. C. F. Scott, 12 Oct. 35 Furle' to Australia, 2nd Sept. 1837. G. G. Malet, • - 28 Feb. 38 4 Jan. 38 Supdt. &. Commdt. at Balmeer. H. Bury, - 22 Sept. 39 15 June 39 Supg. Guicowar's Contingent, Katri. war, S. C. to Cape Lieutenants. 25 Oct. 41. F. Farrent, K.L.S. - 1 Apr. 27 B.c. 15 Aug. 39 On duty in Persia. G. 0. Reeves, - 10 do 28 B.C. 5 Sept. 39 Acig. Qr. Mr. T. Eyre, 1 Jan. 33 B.C. 11 Mar. 41 Europe S. C., 15th May 1841. G.S. Ravenscroft,-- 12 Sept. 34 B.C. 25 July do. W. F. Hay, 5 Dec, do. Europe S. C., 23rd April 1840. F. F. Taylor, .-'12 Oct. 35 J. Forbes, - 28 Feb. 38 Adjutant. J. C. Graves, 12 do 40 Cornets. W. Ashburner, I Dec, 37 19 Jan. 37 Acting Qr. Mr. T. A. Mackenzie, - . 22 Apr. 38 6 June 37 R. B. Moore 22 Sept. 3910 Feb. 39 J. L. Aitken, 17 June 4025 do Stapp. Adjutant. J. Forbes, - 20 Feb. 28 Qr. Mr. & Inr. Vacant. Surgeon. R. B, Owen, M. D. 20 Dec. 39 30 Jan. 39 Assist Surgeon. Vacant. Vety. Surgeon. E. Battersbee, . - 24 Sept. 36 Jacket, French Grey ; Facings, White. 40 TOL. 11.] 333 ARMY LIST. 6 Ist REGIMENT OF EUROPEAN INFANTRY. Seringapatam' -— Kirkee Beni-Boo-Alli — Aden.' Bombay-arrived 9th Dec. 1841, A Detachment op Service, -AT KARRACK. RIGHT WING. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. . [D. A. Colonel. [1818. J. W. Morris, 1 Nov. L. G. 10 Jan. Eur., Furlo' 18th Jan. Lieutenant Colonels. [1817 [1837 T. Morgan, 4 Sept. 27 m. G. 26 Nov. 41 Comg. in Candeish. S. Hughes, c. B. 10 Dec. 40 9 Feb. 30 In tempy. Commd. at Major. Ahmednuggur. J. T. Osburne, 10 Sept. 36 S.C. to Neilgherries, 30 Captains. March 1840. C. Hagart, 6 Nov. 27 B. M. 13 Nov. 39 Depy. Adjt. Genl. R. Mignon, 11 Sept. 30 Karrack. A. McD. Elder, 17 Apr. 32 Eur., S. C. 28th Jan. 1841. J. Hobson, 5 Sept. 35 1 March 35 T. Tapp, 17 Aug. 40 | Jan. 37 Qr. Mr.--Actg. Sub- Assist. Comy. Genl., Lieutenants. Presy. T. G. Fraser, 8 Sept. 26 B.C. 5 Mar. 38 Adjutant. H. J. Woodward, 10 May 29 Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. P. J. Ramsay, 11 Sept. 32 R. J. Shaw, n. .21 Apr. 36 Sub-Asst. Comy. Genl. and in charge of Bazars, Sukkur. H. B. Rose, H. M. 10 Sept. 36 W. E. Evans, H. M... 24 Dec. 37 Actg. Asst. to Supt. of Deccan Rev. Survey. A. P. Hunt, 8 Oct. 39 Eur. S.C. 10 Apr. 1841. J. P. Grant, 17 Aug. 40 Actg. Adjt. Guzt. Ir- regular Horse. C. T. Trower, 3 Oct. 40 Actg. Qr. Master and Ensigns. Pay Master. W. S. Furneaux, 8 Oct. 39 3 Feb. 39 Asst. to Supt. of Roads J. F. W. Poley, 8 Oct. 39 11 June 39 and Tanks. F. S. Kempt, 8 Oct. 39 6 July 39 W.C. Anderson, 7 Mar. 40 6 Aug. 39 H. E. Pattullo, 3 Oct. 4010 March 40 Eur., S. C., 11th Feb. H. Daly, n. 12 Dec. 40 i Sept. 40 1841. E. Dansey, 12 Dec. 40 20 Sept. 40 G. Scriven, 6 Feb. 4122 Oct. 40 G. E. Herne, 17 Mar, 4111 Dec. 40 STAFF. Adjutant. H. J. Woodward, 16 Oct. 41 Qr. Mr. T. G. Fraser, 29 Dec. 34 ..Actg. Sub-Asst. Com. Actg. Intr. Genl., Presy. H. B. Rose, 4 Dec. 401 Surgeon. C. D. Straker, 2 Jan. 41 5 June 39 Assist. Surgeon. PART 11. VOL. II. S s . . 334 [PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Ist REGIMENT OF EUROPEAN INFANTRY. Seringapatam'— Kirkee.'— Beni-Boo-Ali_ Aden.' BOMBAY--arrived 9th December 1841. A Detachment on Service at KARRACK. LEFT WING. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Major. J. P. Cumming, 10 Jan. [1839 S.C., Europe. Captains. W. Burnett, .. 30 Dec. 29 R. St. John, 5 July 36 Post Master, Poona. H. Stiles, H. M., 6 Dec. 37 L. M. McIntyre, 17 Oct. 38 Comt. Officer, and in charge of Bazars, Aden. W. E. Rawlinson, 10 Jan. 39 . Lieutenants. C. R. Hogg, .. 27 Sept 28 Eur., S. C. 20th May 1840. G. F. Sympson, 7 Apr. 30 O. D. Ottley, . 26 July 31 Eur. S. C. 16 Oct. 1841. J. B. Seton, 19 Aug. 31 F. Jackson, 5 July 36 Karrack, Actg. Adit . and Qr. Mr. to Det. Eur., s. C. 17th July 1841. T. R. Morse, 6 Dec. 37 F. E. Woodhouse, 17 Oct. 38 Karrack. R. W. D. Leith, 10 Jan. 39 Ditio. W. A. Anderson, 3 Oct. 40 Acting Field Engr., Karrack Ensign. D. Cameron, 37 .. 29 June 38 11 Dec. Facings, White. 1 VOL 11] $35 ARMY LIST. 2ND REGIMENT OF EUROPEAN LIGHT INFANTRY. Poonai-arrived 8th October 1839. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. Sir E. G. Stannus, Kt. 0. B.... 21 Jan. 1829 M.G. 28 June1838 Eur. Furlough 25th Nov. 1826. Lieutenant Colonels, R, Taylor, 12 Oct. 39 7 Sept. 31 Pol. Agent at Bussorah. F. Stalker, C. B...... 26 Dec. 39 28 June 28 Majors. S. Powell, 8 Oct. 39 28 June 28 Adjt. Gen. of the Army. H. Spencer,.. 1 Apr. 41 Captains. J. Fawcett, H. 2 Apr. 27 M, 24 Nov. 41 Assist. Adjt. Gen. N. D, A. G. Macan, H. M.... 9 Feb. 29 T. R. Wynter, 13 Sept. 29 G. Thornton, 30 June 32 Supg, the erection of Salt Chowkies: in the Rutnagherry Collectorate. C. Denton, H....... 9 June 331 A. P. Leessurier, 8 Oct. 3921 May 35 Actg. Pay Master at the Presidency. J. S. Ramsay, 8 Oct, 3927 Aug 35 Acta. Executive Engr. at Belgaum. F. N. B. Tucker, 8 Oct. 39 25 Feb. 37 8. C. to N. S. Wales, 27th June 1810. J. B. M. Gillanders, 5 Oct. 40 14 May 37 R. Shortrede, 41] 4 Jan. 38 Ist Asst. Trigl. Survey. 1 Apr. 8 Apr. Lieutenants. J. G. Gordon,.... 7 Dec. 28 B.C. 8 June 39 Europe, 8. C. 7th April 1838. E. A. Guerin, 9 May 27 B. C. 7 Dec. 39 Adjutant. J. R, Hibbert, H. 8 Oct. 27 B. c. 31 Mar. 41 Qr. Mr. and Intr. in Hin, G, H. Bainbridge, 26 Apr. 32 H. C. Jones, 9 June 33 S. C. to Neilgherries 21st Jan. 1840. J. L. Hendley, 20 Dec. 35 Comg, the Guards over Suby. Jail, Ahmednuggur, and Actg. Supt. of Roads, &c. C. F. Christie, 36 H. J. Barr, H. 25 July 36 Qr. Mr. and Int to Marine Bat. Act. Asst. Audr. Gen. and Muster Master, Presidency. A. E. Saunders,........ 24 Dec. 37 Eur. S. C. 20th March 1841. M. F. Gordon, G. H..... 10 Sept. 38 Govt. Agent at the Port of Soon- meanee. H. J. Willoughby, 8 Oct. 39 Asst. to Supt. of Roads and Tanks. C. R. W. Hervey, G.H.M. 8 Oct. 39 2d in Command of Scinde Irregular Horse. J. A. Evans, I Nov. 39 Placed at the disposal of the Govt. of India. C. 8. Whitehill, 12 Nov. 39 J. M. Wiseman, 3 Oct. 40 H. Miles, 3 Oct. 40 Eur. S.C., 16 April 1811. W. F. Sandwith, 5 Oct. 40 W. P. Shakespear, 1 Apr. 41 Ensigns. W. Brassey, C. J. Bourchier,... W. Campbell, A. P. Campbell, H. Shewell, R. J. Madden, J.P. Winfield, H. E. G. Close, H. P. Tyacke, L. Pelly, H... 26 Oct, 6 Dec. 3 Oct. 3 Oct. 19 Nov. 19 Nov. 12 Dec. 6 Feb. 17 Mar. 39 28 July 39 | 8 Aug. 40 10 Mar. 40 13 Aug. 40|31 Aug 40 31 Aug. 4022 Oct. 4122 Oct. 4112 Dec. 41/12 Dec. 391 39 Eur, S. C. 23rd Aug. 1811. 40 40 40 40 40 40) 40 40 19 Apr. 9 Dec. 40 STAFF. Adjutant. E. A. Guerin, Qr. Mr. and Intr. J. R. Hibbert, Surgeon. T.S. Cahill, M. D.... Assistant Surgeon. Vacant. 19 June 40 2 Jan, 41 Facings, Pale Buff. 336 (PART I, BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. 6 FIRST OR GRENADIER REGIMENT. Mangalore'-SUKKUR. Ordered to Ahmednuggur. Names. Regt. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks, [1825 Colonel. [1837. A. Robertson, 19 Mar. mg 28 June1838 Eur., Furlo' 26th Jan. Lieutenant Colonel. F. Farquharson, H.m. 21 Jan. 29 mg 26 Nov. 41 Comg. atAhmednuggur. Major. T. Clibborn, 27 Apr. 40 Captains. J. S. Down, 19 Oct. 27 m 26 Nov. 41 T. Donnelly, 8 July 30 Assist. Adjt. General, Poona Divn, Army,- to Sea, 27th July1831. T. Foulerton,.....2 Mar. 37 Eur., S. C., 11th Feb. 1840. P. C. N. Amiel,.... 31 Aug. 40 W.C. Stather, G.H.m. 3 Sept. do Assistant in the Deccan Survey. Lieutenants. H. C. Rawlinson, H. M. F...... 26 Feb. 35 b.m. 2 June 37 At the disposal of the Envoy and Minister at Cabool. H. W. Prescott, 2 Mar 37 C. D. Delamotte, 17 Oct. do A.D.C. to Major Genl. Delamotte, B. Comg. S. D. A., S. C. to Neilgherries. A. C. Honner, 19 July 38 Adjutant. [1841. E. C. Peacocke, 27 Apr. do Furlo' Eur., 25th Nov. G. Malcolm, H. 31 Aug. do Adjutant Scinde Irre- gular Horse. E. C. Fanning, 1. do Actg. Qr. Mr, and Intr. G. L. Lye, 3 Sept. do G. U. Price, 3 Oct. do Ensigns. R. M. Johnstone, 1 Sept. 4011 Dec. 39 J. P. Sandwith, ditto ditto R. W. D'Arcy, 10 do 17 do C. C. Hodgson, 3 Oct. doll June 40 W. Price,... 17 Mar, 4112 Dec. do C. do STAFF. Adjutant. A. C. Honner, 29 June 40 Actg. Qr. Mr. f. Intr. E. Č. Fanning, ditto. Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. R. H. Davidson, m, d. 10 May 4116 Jan. Facings, White. 391 VOL 11.] 337 ARMY LIST. SECOND OR GRENADIER REGIMENT. Egypť— Koregaum'— Kirkee.'-KURRACHEE. Ordered to Sattara. Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. Sir J. Sutherland, K. L. S. Lieut. Colonel. 8 Feb. M.G. 28 June Eur., Furlo' 10th Feb. [1829 [1839 1826. Major. D. Forbes, 30 May 36 Captains. W. Rollings, 1. 22 Mar. 26 M. 26 Nov. G. Boyd, 21 Aug. 29 G. LeGrand Jacob, H. M. P. 5 Sept. 36 6 June 41 Eur., S. C. 30th Sept. 1841. 36 1st Assist. to the Pol. Agent in Kattiwar. S. V. W. Hart, H. M. 21 Mar. 39 J. C. Hartley,..... 8 May 41 Eur., S. C. 30th Sept. 1841. Lieutenants. P. W. Clarke, . R. H. Young, u. 5 Aug. 33 30 May 36 R. H. Mackintosh,.. 5 Sept. do. Adjutant. Qr. Mr. and Inter. in Hindoostanee, S. C. to Neilgherries 9th Oct. 1841. Depy. Assist. Qr. Mr. Genl. Persian Interpreter and Extra Aide-de-Camp to H. E. the Com- mander-in-Chief. 41 Eur., S. C. 30th April 1831. R. P. Hogg, H.H.M.P. 11 May 37 J. Bedford, 31 Aug. do. J. W. Morison, 3 Oct. do. J. C. Moore, 25 June 41 G. R. Grimes, 9 Aug. do J. W. Schneider, 27 Oct. do. Ensigns. J. Alexander, 14 May 41| 2 Jan. W. F. Leeson, 22 June do. ditto H. R. C. Moyle, 25 ditto 10 ditto T. Jermyn, 16 Aug. do. 27 ditto St. J. O. N. Muter . 27 Oct. do. 18 March STAFF. Adjutant. P. W. Clarke, 18 May 35 Qr. Mr. and Intr. R. H. Young, 12 Mar. 40 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. R. Collum, 21 Feb. 38) Facings, White. 41 S. C. to Neilgherries. 338 (PART 11, BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. THIRD REGIMENT. Seilaseer—Seringapatam'—' Beni-Boo-Ali.' AHMEDABAD-Arrived, 17th April, 4841., Names. Regtl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. B. W. D. Sealy, 1 May M.G.10 Jan. 1837 Eur., Furlo' 21st July (1824 1825. Lieut. Colonel. J. Gibson, 25 May 29 Brigadier Comdg. at Deesa. 30 Mar. 37 Major. E. W. Jones, Captains. C. Johnson, H. 30 Oct. 27 M. 26 Nov. J. D. Hallett, H..... 29 Nov. 33 J. Wright, 14 Sept. 35 D. A. Malcolm, 30 Mar. 37 C. Birdwood, H..... 17 July do Lieutenants. A. M. Haselwood, m. 8 July 33 41 Eur., Furlo' 28th Aug. 1841. Depy. Asst. Comy.Genl. Belgaum. Eur.S.C.30th Apr. 1841. Asst.Resdt. Hyderabad. Sub. Assist. Comy. Ge- neral, Mhow. Qr. Mastr. and Intr. in Hin. Actg: Adjt. to Nat. Vet. Batt. Adjt. to Guzt. Cooly Police Corps. H. M. Shah Shooja's Service, Adjutant. E. W. Agar, 15 Sept. 34 A. Crawford, H. .. 14 do. 35 H. Richards, 9 Mar. 37 T. L. Jameson, 14 do. do. F. Forbes, 30 do. do. R. Richards, 8 Oct. 39 A. S. Young, 3 do. 401 C. F. Grant, 26 Sept. 41 Ensigns. G. F. Barra, 21 Jan. 38/13 June E. Grant, 8 Oct. 39/12 do. W. A. Neale, 3 do, 4029 Dec. G. Skottowe, 12 Dec. do. 1 Sept. W. D. Dickson, 26 Sept. 41 2 Mar. STAFF. Adjutant. H. Richards, 10 July 39 Qr. Mr. and Intr. A. M. Haselwood, 10 July 39 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. Vacant. Acting Adjt. to the Guza Cooly Police Corps. 37 39 do. 40 41 . Facings, Sky Blue. TOL. II.) 939 ARMY LIST. FOURTH REGIMENT (OR RIFLE CORPS.) Seringapalum,' Flank Companies. · Beni-Boo-Ali.' BARODA--arrived 26th November 1839. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. M. P. H. M. 1 ... Colonel. W. Kennedy, G. H. 4 Sept. M.G. 28 June Oriental Translator to (1837 [1838 Government. Lieut. Colonel. G. Ovans, 20 Nov. 38 5 Sept. 35 Resident at Sattara. Major. C. Crawley, 10 Apr. 38 Captains. F. C. Darke, 9 Feb. 30 Eur.S.C.7th Nov. 1830. J. H. Chalmers, 16 do. 33 Comg. Marine Battn. G. J. Jameson, 28 Apr. 37/27 Apr. 35 Depy. Mily. Auditor Genl. and Secy. to the Mily. Fund. J. D. Smythe, 10 do. 39 2 June do S.C. to Neilgherries 5th Dec. 1840. R. W. Honner 19 Apr. 4111 Feb. 36 Acting Adjutant. Lieutenants. F. C. Holl, 8 Sept. 26 B.c. 17 Jan. 39 N. H. Thornbury, G. [Board. 6 Nov. do B.C. 7 Dec. 39 Actg. Secy. to the Mily. C. C. Lucas, H. 16 Feb. 33 B.C. 17 Feb. 41 Qr. Mr. & Intr. in Ilin. C. W. Prother, 28 Apr. 37 B.C. 8 Sept. 40 [1838. W. H. B. Watkins,... 10 Apr. 38 Eur. S. C., 15th June A. Price, 8 Oct. 39 Adjutant Sawant Waree Local Corps. J. S. Aked, H. M. 2 May 40 W. G. C. Hughes, 3 Oct. do A. Morris, H. 19 Apr. 41 Ensigns. J. Hunter, H. 8 Oct. 39 2 June 39 A. R. Manson, 2 May 4010 Dec. J. B. Dunsterville,.. ditto 29 Sept. do Eur. S. C., 29th Oct. 1840. J. Finlay, 12 Dec. do 14 do. 40 C. H. Bayne, 25 June 41 10 Jan, STAFF. Acting Adjutant. R. W. Honner, Qr. Mr. and Intr. C. C. Lucas, 8 Mar. 33 Surgeon. J. McMorris, 15 Jan. 30 Fur. Eur., June 21, 1840. Assist. Surg. T. Brickwell, .31 May 41 19 Feb. 291 Jacket, Rifle Green ; Facings, Black Velvet. do! 41 340 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. FIFTH REGIMENT (LIGHT INFANTRY). Sedaseer, '— Seringapatam'— Kahun-(Flank) Companies. · Beni-Boo-Ali.' Poona-arrived 28th March 1841. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Salter, c. B. 4 Sept. M.G. 28 June Eur. Fur. 5th Oct. 1839. Lieut. Colonel. (1827 [1838 C. B. James, 28 Mar. 40 8 July 33 Major. W. N. T. Smee, 6 July 39 Captains. R. A. Bayly, 28 June 34 S.C. to Europe, 2d Dec. 1840. C. DeB. Prescott, .. 31 July 3727 Mar. 36 Furlo' to Europe, 10th Nov. 1841. J. C. Heath, 28 June 38 Pay Master l'oona Div. of the Army. L. Brown, 1. 6 July 39 B M. 2 Apr. 41 Comg. the Guzt. Cooly Police Corps. R. H. Wardell, 7 Mar. 40 Lieutenants. [1841. R. Dennis, 14 June 34 Europe, Furlo' 7th Oct. H. Rudd, 1. M. 28 do do Comg. the Poona Police Corps. C. Mellersh, .... 31 July 37 S. C. to Europe, 15th Sept. 1840. G.T. Pogson, 1 May 38 Furlo'to Australia, 15th. Sept. 1838. A. J. Alcock, H..... 7 July do Actg. Adjutant Qr. Mr and Intr. C. J. Symons, 7 Mar. 40 H. Stanley, 3 Oct. do W. W. Taylor, 2 Nov. do G. F. Shum, 16 Aug. 41 Ensigns. E. McCullock, 7 Mar. 40 6 Aug. 39 H. N. Robertson, 3 Oct. do 10 Mar. 40 Eur. S. C, 28th Aug. 1841. C. W. Walker, ditto ditto H. A. Taylor, H. ditto 4 Aug. do J. T. Francis, 16 Aug. 4112 Jan. 41 STAFF. Adjutant. A. J. Alcock, 15 Oct. 41 Qr. Mr. and Intr. Vacant. Surgeon. C. J. Collier, 1 Mar. 41 Assist. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Black, VOL II) 311 ARMY LIST. SIXTH REGIMENT. 6 Seringapatam.'-Upper SCINDE. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 38 Colonel. J. Morse, 19 Aug. M.G.28 June Commg. at Baroda. Licut. Colonel. [1841 [1838 F. T. Farrell, 20 Nov. 41 29 Nov. 40 Fur. to Europe, 10th Dec. 1841. Major. J. R. Woodhouse, 1.29 Nov. 40/28 June Captains. W. Macan, 7 Sept. 41 S. C. to N. S. Wales, 17th July 1840. W. Maunsell, .. 26 Apr. 32.. Eur. S. C., 8th Mar. 1836. D. Carstairs, 10 Oct. 33 R. Farquhar, H. 26 June 4013 Jan. 37 W. Thatcher, 29 Nov. do 25 April 39 Lieutenants. F. Mayor, 1 June 29 B.c. 9 April 40 Adjutant. W. B. G. Blenkins,.. 15 Jan. 32 J. Tait, 20 July 34 * C. D. Mylne, H. m. 13 Apr. 27 Supdt. of Bazars at Poona. E. B. Eastwick, H. Mi 26 June 40 Assist. to Pol. Agent, Lower Scinde. J. McC. Rarclaud,.. 10 Sept. do C. C. Johnston, 3 Oct. dol B. Kay, n. 29 Nov. do Qr. Mr. & Intr. in Hin. E. M. Nixon, 21 Sept. 41 P. G. Ensigns. C. Hodgkinson, 10 Sept. 4011 Dec. J. Field, 3 Oct. do 22 do E. D. Halswell, 12 Dec. do 22 Oct. J. A. S. Faulkner, 17 Mar. 4112 Dec. H. F. Davies, .. 26 Sept. do 2 March 39 do 40 do 41 STAFF. Adjutant. F. Mayor, .. 10 Sept. 40 Qr. Mr. g. Intr. B. Kay, 28 Nov. do Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Black. * Regt. duty, temporarily. PART II, VOI. II. T T 542 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. SEVENTH REGIMENT. Sedaseer,'-— Seringapatam.'-Flank Companies.- Beni-Boo-Ali. Mhow.-arrived 16th Feb. 1839. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. Sir D. Leighton, K. C. B. 4 July 21 m.g. 10 Jan. 37 Europe, Furlo' 11th March 1831. Lieut. Colonel. J. G. Dunsterville, .. 20 Nov. 38 10 July 33 Commissary General. Major. T. B. Parr, u. 19 Oct. 39 Captains. G. St. B. Browne, h. 12 Apr. 29 Assist. to Supdt. of Roads and Tanks. P. M. Melvill, . 18 do 33 Secy. to Gov., Mily. and Marine Depts. J. Cooper, 20 Dec. 34 B. Stockley, 23 July 39 3 Jan. 37 Sub-Asst. Comy. Genl., Ahmednuggur. E. Skipper, H. ..19 Oct. do 29 May do Europe, Furlo' 31st Mar. 1841. Lieutenants. G. C. Stockley, 11. 24 Mar. 25 B.C. 29 May 38 At the disposal of the Govt. of India. E, Andrews, 15 Aug. 34 Under the orders of the Resdt. at Indore. W. Topham, 20 Dec. do Adjutant. H. M. Blake, H. 23 July 39 Acting Qr. Mr. & Intr. H. T. Vincent, 8 Oct. do J. T. Barr, u. 19 do do Adjt. to Guzt. Prov. A. W. Lucas, 13 Feb. 40 [Bat. E. S. Niblock, 3 Oct. do R. W. Wheatstone, 6 June 41 . Ensigns. ... 12 Nov. 3928 July 13 Feb. 40 6 Aug. 3 Oct. do 31 Mar. 3 Feb. 4131 Aug. 6 June do 2 Jan. 39 dol 401 do 41 .. F. G. Green, E. Bate, G. A. Lister, W. M. Brodie, J. T. Jameson, . STAFF. Adjutant. W. Topham, Qr. Mr. 8. Intr. Vacant. Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surgeon. D. Davies, 17 June 40 12 Apr 41 i Feb. 37 Attached, Facings, White. VOL. 11.) 343 ARMY LIST. EIGHTH REGIMENT. UPPER SCINDE. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. F. D. Ballantine, 15 Dec. M. G. 28 June S. C. to Europe, 13th [1830 [1838 Jan. 1836. Lieut. Colonel. T. Leighton 28 Nov. 4028 June 38 S. C. to Cape of Good Hope, 30th Nov. 1840. Major. H, Sandwith, H., 25 July 36 Captains. *W.J. Browne, H. M , 18 Nov. 27 m, 26 Nov. 41 Brigade Major, Baroda. C. Richards, 11 Sept. 28 Supt. & Comdt. Bal- meer, placed at the disposal of Supreme Govt., Field Force. A. N. Maclean, 7 Apr. 32 Paymr. to the Sinde. A. S. Hawkins, 25 July 36 Europe, Furlo' 29th April 1840. H. C. Morse, 4 May 41 3 May 40 Eur. S.C.9th Dec. 1839. Lieutenants. C. Thomas, 11 Sept. 28 B. c. 16 May 40 Agent at Kurrachee. F. Cristall, 6 Dec. 30 Adjt.-Act. Asst. Pol. T. R. Steuart, 7 Apr. 32 Act. Adjutant [1839. R. W. Horne, H. M., 25 June do. Europe, S. C. 23 Sept. M. Wyllie, 1 Jan. 35 Eur. S.C.19th Feb.1839. E. C. Cotgrave, H.,.. 2 May 36 Qr. Mr. & Inter. in Hind. H. J. Pelly, H. M. P., 3 Oct. 40 Assist. in the Deccan. Survey [1841. A. Austen, H. M., 12 Dec. do. Europe, S. C. 9th Dec. G. E. Ashburner, 4 May 41 S. C. to Van Dieman's Land, 2d May 1840. Ensigns. D. H. Jameson, 8 Oct. 3911 June 39 E. Thompson, 4022 Dec. do. J. W. Younghusband, Ditto 19 Aug. 41 C. E. Brasnell, 12 Dec. do, 31 do. do. F. W. Mackenzie, 25 June 41 10 Jan. 411 STAFF. Adjutant. F. Cristall, 20 Aug. 33 Qr. Mr. & Inter. c. Cotgrave, 1 Jan. 35 Surgeon. 3 do Assistant Surgeon. J. Mckenzie, 10 May 41' 7 Mar. 37 Facings, White. • Regimental daty, temporarily. 344 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. NINTH REGIMENT. 'Seringapatam.'—DEESA — Arrived, 22nd October 1840. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. C. B. [1837 • Colonel. Sir T. Corsellis, k. [1825. 19 Sept. M. G. 10 Jan. Europe, S. C. 4th Dee. Lieut. Colonel. [1822 F. Roome, 3 Feb. 29 c. 22 June 34 Comg. the Fortress of Major. Asseerghur. M. M. Shaw, 1 Nov. 39 Captains. R. J. Littlewood, 8 May 3721 Feb. 361 [1840. J. B. Bellasis, 11. M., 12 July do Eur. S. C. 30th March, W. Purves, 28 June 38 Act. Ex. Engr. Deesa. E. Whichelo, 28 Aug. do. Assist. Commy. Gen. P. D. A. P. K. Skinner, H., 1 Nov. 39 Depy. Judge Advocate Genl. N, D.A.-Aitd. Lieutenants. Poona Div. W. J. Morris, H., 29 June 33 B. C. 16 July 402nd in Comd. of the Bheel Corps, and Bheel Agent in Can- deish.-- Actg.Comdt. of do. & Acting Bheel Agent. J. Ramsay, 1., .. 27 Aug. 34 B. C. 20 Feb. 41 Sub.-Assist. Comy Gen. at Quetta, 1840. H. W. Evans, 15 June 36 Eur. S. C. 14th Oct. J. C. Wright, H., 8 May 37 Qr. Mr. and Intrp. in Hind. H. Vaillant, 12 July do. Adjutant, Actg. Depy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Gen. South. Div. Army. C. Halkett, 28 June 38 Acting Adjutant. W. G. Arrow, H., 25 Aug. do. Europe S. C., 26th Oct. S. Thacker, I Nov. 39 [1839. F. Fanning, H. M., 3 Oct. 40 Asst. to Supdt. Bazars, Ensigns. Poona, J. Pyke, . 20 Apr. 3911 Dec. 38 C. R. Baugh, 8 Oct. do. 12 June 39 F. F. Strachey, 6 Dec, do. 6 Aug. do. E, H. Ford, 13 Oct. 4011 June 40 E, Younghusband, ... 17 Mar. 41 12 Dec. do. STAFF. Adjutant. A. Vaillant, 14.Oct. 40 Qr. Mr. 8. Intr. J. C. Wright, 18 June 38 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. W. Sullivan, 26 May 4026 Feb. 331 Facings, Black. VOL. II.] 345 ARMY LIST. TENTII REGIMENT. Aden-arrived 22nd March 1840. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. .. Colonel. E. Frederick, C.B. 28 June M.G. 28 June Europe, Furlough 7th Lieut. Colonel. [1838 [1838 Sept. 1838. G. J. Wilson, 16 July 40 8 Oct. 39 S. c. to Europe, 26th Mujor. Oct. 1841. C. Cathcart, 30 May 35 Captains. E. Ilallum, 8 Sept. 26 m J. D. Browne, H. .. 22 Apr. 29 ..S. C. to Neilgherries, 19th Nov. 1840. J. G. Hume, 27 do 31 C. B. Morton, 30 May 35 W. S. Adams, 11 Mar. 36 Actg. Asst. Qr. Mr. Lieutenants. Genl. Presy. H. Aston, H. M. 8 Sept. 26 B. c. 7 Jan. 39 24 Asst. to Pol. Agent in Kattywar. S. C. to Cape, 27th Nov. 1840. T. Jackson, H. .. 18 Nov. 27 B. C. 25 do 40 Fur. to Eur. 11th Nov. 1841. C. Threshie, 20 Feb. 29 B. C. 20 Feb. 41 Actg. Asst. Comy. Gen. & in charge of Depy. Coiny. Genl. Offices, Presy. F. Fenwick, ..... 30 May 35... Europe, s. C. 6th Feb. 1841. A. Robertson, ditto 7 June 34 Europe, S. C. 14th Dec. 1840. T. R. Prendergast, .. 11 Mar. 36 J. G. J. Johnston, H. 23 Feb. 37 S. C. to Europe, 16th Nov. 1839. H. Vincent, 22 Sept. 38 J. H. Ayrton, H. M. 3 Oct. 40 Adjutant. Ensigns. [1840. H. Lodwick, G.H.m. 14 Mar. 37 17 Jan. 36 S.C. Europe, 25th Nov. T. G. Ricketts, 13 Nov. 38 6 Mar. 38 Ditto do. 17th Oct. J. S. Gell, 8 Oct. 39 11 June 39 (1839. J. C. Coley, 3 do 40122 Dec. do G. Moyle, do 12 June 40 STAFF. Adjutant. J. Il. Ayrton, 5 Mar. 391 Qr. M. f. Int. Vacant. Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surgeon. C. Black, M. D. 114 July 4012 Feb. 37Attached. Facings, Bluck. VOL. II] 347 ARMY LIST. TWELFTH REGIMENT, • Kirkee.' BAOOJ-arrived 12th Nov. 1840. A Wing at Kurrachee. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. W. Sandwith, c.B. 2 Apr. m. g. 28 June Eur. Fur, 6th Jan.1828. Lieutenant Colonel. [1827 [1838 J. Shirreff, 9 Mar. 371 7 Apr. 30 S. C. to Neilgherries, Major. 21st Jan. 1840. A, T. Reid, H., 20 Oct. 37 Captains. W. II. Jackson, .... 21 Nov. 28 m. 26 Nov. 41 Comt. Agent, Bhooj. Actg. Paymr. N.D.A. S. Hennell, H. P. 10 July 33 Resident in the Persian Gulf. R. M. Hughes, 1.,. . 29 Sept. 35 22 Dec. 34 Actg. Deputy Judge Advt. Genl. N.D.A. G. Fisher, 20 Oct. 37 30 do. 36 Kurrachee. T. Maughan, 5 July 39 18 Jan. 37 Actg. Line Adjt.& Actg. Comt. Agent, Bhooj. Lieutenants. G. Clarkson, 8 Sept. 266.c. 5 Jan. 39 Eur. S. C, 11th Nov. 1839. J. Holmes, 120 do. 276. c. 5 June 40 Kurrachee. W. J. Eastwick, H.P. 21 Nov. 28 Eur. S. C., 30th Nov. 1840. R. N. Meade, 29 Sept. 35 Actg. Assist. Qr. Mr. Genl. N.D.A. W. Brown, 30 June 37 Adjutant. H. E. D. Jones, H.m.20 Oct. do Qr. Mr. & Intr. E. Wood, 5 July 39 R. Fitzgerald, 110 do. do Kurrachee. F. F. Bruce, 3 Oct. 40 Ensigns. E. L. Russel, 21 Jan. 38 4 Sept. 37 Kurrachee. W. Lodwick, H., 8 Oct. 39 12 June 39 Kurrachee. V. Carter, H. 26 June 4011 Dec. do J. Daun, H., 3 Oct. do 11 Jan. 40 W. F. Holbrow, 12 Dec. do 4 Sept. do STAFF. Adjutant. W. Brown, 11 Nov. 39 Qr. Mr. f. Intr. H. E. D. Jones, .. 15 July 39 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. J. Fraser, 26 June 4016 Sept. 30 Facings, Deep Buft. 349 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. THIRTEENTH REGIMENT. 'Egypť— Kirkee' Beni-Boo-Ali. SURAT-arrived 3rd July, 1838.–Left Wing, BROACH. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. m. g. 10 Jan. .... 24 Dec. 37 Colonel. G. R. Kemp, 1 May Eur.Fur. 8th Feb. 1825. Lieutenant Colonei. 1824 [1837 C. Payne, u Nov. 39 16 Sept. 33 Major. [lar Horse. II. G. Roberts, 9 Nov. 35 Comg. Guzerat Irregu- Captains. E. W. Kennett, 27 Mar. 26 m. 26 Nov. 41 [Army. J. M. Shortt, 17 Aug. 29 Agent for Clothing the A. Bradford, H., 20 do. 35 S. C. to Europe, 28th Dec. 1840. C. W. Wenn, 9 Nov. do. In charge of public works, Surat & Broach. T. Dickson, Lieutenants. G. Sparrow, 1 July 28 b. c. 7 Jan. 40 N. P. McDougall, 20 Aug. 35 Comt, Agent, Surat. H. Lavie, 9 Nov. do Furlo' to Europe, 29th Oct. 1839. P. E. Warburton, 11., 18 July 37 Depy. Asst. Adjt. Genl. 1 South. Divn. Army. A. N. Aitchison,.... 24 Dec. do 2nd in Command of Gu- zerat Irregular Horse. W. H. C. Lye, H., 10 July 38 Adjutant. J. L. P. Hoare, 3 Oct. 40 Fort Adjutant, Surat, H. A. Adams, 19 Jan. 41 Assistant to Supdt. of Roads and Tanks. W. M. Leckie, .... 23 Sept. do Assistant to officer in charge of public works, Ensigns. Surat and Broach. D. J. St. Clair, 8 Oct. 39 11 June 39) C. D. Ducat, 1. M... 3 Oct. 40 22 Dec. do Actg. Qr. Mr. and Intr. F. J. Groube, 19 Nov. do 31 Aug. 40 G. (). Geach, ditto 22 Dec. 39 W. Scott, 23 Sept. 41 2 Feb. 41 STAFF. Adjutant. W. H. C. Lye, 1 Aug. 40 Actg. Qr. Mr. g. Intr. C. D. Ducat, 2 Jan. 41 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. Facinge, Buff VOL 11.] 349 ARMY LIST. FOURTEENTH REGIMENT. RAJCOOTE-arrived 3d February 1840. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. (1819 (1837 [Feb. 1838. H. S. Osborne, 25 June M. G. 10 Jan. Europe, Furlough, 7th Lieut. Colonel. M. Soppitt, ...... 10 Sept. 41 26 Jan. 381 Major. [Survey. G, P. Leessurier, 15 Sept. 41 In charge of the Scind Captains. A. Troward, 9 May 27 Comg. Sawant Warree Irregnlar Corps. 1. S. Stuart, 29 Sept. 3) S. C. Europe, 25ih Nov. 1841. [gaum. A. R. Wilson, H. 8 Oct. 3920 Feb. 36 Brigade Major at Milli- D. M. Scobie, 19 Nov. 4030 Dec. do. Joint Remount Agent for the purchase of Horses for Madras and Bombay. J. Burrows, H. .. 15 Sept. 41 29 May 37 Supt. of Police, Bom- bay ; Collector and Assessor of House Tax without the town Lieutenants. of Bombay, and As- sessor of Wheel Tax. R. D. Stuart, ..., 28 June 38 Adjutant. W. Reynolds, H. M. 8 Oct. 39 Magistrate and Assis- tant in the Thnggee G. F. Thorne,.. 1 Sept. 40 Dept. J. D. Stewart, H., 3 Oct. do. Actg. Qr. Mr. & Intr, G. S. Montgomery,.. 19 Nov. do. in Hindoostanee. F. Wolley, 23 do. do. W. S. Horwood, 25 Aug. 41 S. Lowry, 15 Sept. do. C. H. Morse, 21 Oct. do. Ensigns. f}. Weston, 19 Nov. do. 31 Aug. do. P. S. Fearon, 12 Dec. do. 14 Sept. do. O. D. Lancaster, 25 Aug. 41 25 Jan. 41 R. M. Westropp, 15 Sept. do. 2 Feb. do. S. W. Long, 27 Oct. do. I June 41 STAFF. Adjt. R. D. Stuart, 22 May 40 Actg. Qr Mr. & Intr. J. D. Stewart, Surgeon. C. Lush, M. D. 1 Dec. 401 4 Nov. 40 Assisi. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Light Buff PART II, VOL. II, U U 350 (PART II BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. FIFTEENTH REGIMENT. KURRACHEE. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. . . Colonel. [1831 [1838 R. A. Willis, 7 Sept. M.G. 28 June Comg. Northern Diri. Lieut, Colonel. sion of ihe Army. M. E. Bagnold, 12 Nov. 41 7 Oct. 32 Brig. Commg. Anrunga- bad Div., Nizam's Major. Army. J. Saunders, 4 Sept. 37 Captains. . C. Benbow, 18 June 28 Actg. Bheel Agent, and Comg. the Ahmed. nuggur Local Corrs. • W. Ward, H... .. 26 Feb. 30 Barrack Mr. and Off. Fort Adjt. Bombas, and Offy. Secy.Cloih- ing Board. A. Hamerton, H. 4 Sept. 37 Govt. A gent at Muscat. H. S. Watkin, 8 Oct. 39 A. H. O. Matthews, 22 Nov. 40 Lieutenants. * F.C. Wells, H.M.P. 6 Jan. 35 Actg. Assit. to Supt. of Deccan Rev. Survey • W.F. Cormack, G. H. M. 22 Dec. 36 Assist. Civil Engineer, Candeish. T. Postans, G. H. P. 4 Sept. 37 Line Adljt. at Blion- Assist. Pol. Agent Upper Scinde. G. R. Remington,.. 10 Mar. 38 Adjutant. T. W. W. Whittard, 4 Nov. do. H. Heyman, 20 Sept. 39 J. Rose, H. M. 3 Oct. 40 Qr. Mr. & Intr. At the disposal of the Gov. H. Pottinger, 22 Nov, do of India. W. H. Seale, H. 19 April 41 Ensigns. F. Levien, H. 8 Oct. 39 12 June 39 F. A. C. Kane, 3 do. 4020 Dec. do T. B. Webster, ditto 31 Ang. 40 R. N. Laurie, 12 Dec, do. I Sept. do. R. Laurie, 19 Apr. 4112 Dec. do. Staff. Adjt. G. R Remington,.. 8 Oct. 39 Qr. Mr. & Intr. J. Rose, 22 Oct. 41 Surgeon. R. Wight, 7 Dec, 41 9 Feb. Assist. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Light Buff. • Regl. duty, temporarily. 29 VOL. Ir.] 351 ARMY LIST. SIXTEENTH REGIMENT. Head Quarters, KARRACK-arrived 13th June 1840. Left Wing,-Aden-arrived 13th April 1840. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. [1840 [1838 (July 1837. 9 Nov. M.G. 28 June Europe, S.C., 18th Colonel. P. Lodwick, Lieut. Colonel. C. Davies, Major. B, Seton, Caplains. D. G. Diff, B. Crispin, H. M., C. Hunter, H. M., C. A. Stewart, G. S. Brown, Lieutenants. S. London. H. M., E. P. De 'Hoste 28 Nov. 404 Sept. 37 Comg. the Troops at Karrack. 9 Jan. 39 Town Major of Bom. bay, & Secy, to the Genl. Prize Commit. tee. 25 Jan. 29 16 Sept. 33 [the Army. 15 Aug. 35 Pay Mr. South Div. of 23 June 38 25 Feb. 37 At the disposal of the 9 Jan. 39 do. do. Govt. of India, [Survey 8 Sept. 26 B. c. 7 Jan. 39 Assist, in the Deccan. 7 Dec. 28 B c. 21 Feb. 39 Assist. Qr. Mr. Genl C. Giberne, H., 29 do do. B. c. 28 May 40 Qr. Mr.&lntr. in Hind. & in charge of Comt. Karrack. C. G. G. Munro, 25 Jan. 29 B. c. 17 Feb. 41 Act. Adjutant, E. P. Lynch, K. L. s. 16 Sept. 33 K. Jopp, H. Pig 15 Aug. 35 Adjutant.-Staff Offi- W. Orrok, 1:23 June 33 cer, & Persian Intr. C. P. Rigby, 1. M.24 Mar. 40 to Force at Karrack, & in charge of Police and Bazars. A. Raitt, 3 Oct. do. Eur. Furlo', 5th May Ensigns. 1841. H. E. Marriott 13 Nov. 38 6 Mar. 38 L. N. Raikes, 9 Jan. 3930 June do. J. L Evans, H., 24 Mar. 40 29 Sept. R. T. Goodwin, 3 Oct. do. 25 Feb. 40 F. 0. Shum, 12 Dec. do. 20 Sept. do. STAFF. Adjutant. K. Jopp, 12 Dec. 32 Qr. Mr. &. Intr. C. Giberne, 16 Oct. 39 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. F. Harrison, 17 Dec. 40 5 Jan. 35 Facings, Light Bull 39 352 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. SEVENTEENTH REGIMENT. Muow-arrived 31st January 1839. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. J. Cunninghame,.. 1 May M. G. 10 Jan. Europe, Furlough, 15th (1824 [1837 August 1822. Lieut. Colonel. H. D. Robertson, 12 Nov. 41:28 June 38 Officiating as Resident in the Persian Gulf. Major. H. Macan, H. M., 17 Oct. 41 Depy. Comy. Genl. Captains. D. Davidson, H., 18 Feb. 35 J. Pope, H. M, 21 Oct. 36 W.J.B Knipe, 5 Aug. 39 T. T. Christie, H.,.. 30 Apr. 40 J, Anderson, M, 17 Oct. 41 Acting Interpreter. Appointed to Survey the Nerbudda. Lieutenants. W. H. Godfrey, C. Mauger, C. F. Sorell, W. R. Simpson, L. Scott, A. M., C. Ponsonby, H. L. Evans, H., J. Miles, 18 Feb. 35 30 July do, 29 Nov.do. 5 Aug. 38 14 May 39 30 Apr. 40 3 Oct. do. 17 Oct. 411 Act. Qr. Master. Adjutant. [18:0 Europe, S. C. Ist July Adjt. Marine Battalion. Actg. 2.1 Assist, to Re- sident at Indore. . Ensigns. J. Pogson, 8 Oct. 39 11 June 39 H. B. IIodgson, 30 Apr. 4010 Dec. do G. J. Young, 3 Oct. do. 29 do. do. W. H. Palin, 12 Dec. do. I Sept. 40 J. W. Savile, 27 Oct. 4112 June 41 STAFF. Adjutant. C. Mauger, 6 Nov. 38 Qr. Mr. and Intr. Vacant. Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. J.J. Hilton, a. D.,.. 22 Mar. 371 4 June 27 Facings, Pale Yellow. TOL. 11.) 353 ARMY LIST, EIGIITEENTH REGIMENT. Flank Companies, — Beni-Boo-Ali.' BARODA-arrived 3rd January 1838. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. [1824 [1837 J. F. Dyson, 1 May M. G. 10 Jan. Europe, Furlo' 7th Feb. 1827. Lieutenant Colonel. R. Sutherland, .. 28 Nov, 40 9 Nov, 35 S. C. to Neilgherries, 28th Dec. 1840. Major. H. N. Corsellis, .. 29 May 41 Captains. J. St. C. Jameson, . . 20 Apr. 31 Actg Asst. tothe Garri- son Engr. Bombay. H. James, H., 19 Aug. do Acting Brigade Major, Baroda. A. Meadows, 12 July 38 S. H. Partridge, 12 Dec. do Actg Asst. Pol. Agent, Mahee Caunta. F. Westbrooke, ... 29 May 41 Lieutenants. D. Davidson, H., .... 19 Aug 3] Supt. of the Nassick Survey. R. Wallace, H., 18 Jan. 33 S.C. Europe, 14th Nov. 1841. C. W. Maude, 20 Apr. 34 Nizam's Service, H. Cracroft, 5 Oct. 36 Adjutant. A. Macdonald, H., 28 June 39 Qr. Mr. and Intr. in Hindoostanee. L. S. Hough, ... 12 July do Actg. Adjutant to 11th N. I. D'O. T. Compton, 1. 12 Dec. do Asst. to Supt. of Roads and Tanks. J. E. Taylor, 11., 3 (ct. 40 Interpt. in Mahratta. R. L. Taylor, 11. M., 29 May 41 Ensigns. J. J. Combe, 13 Nov. 38 11 June 381 G. S. A. Anderson, 1, M., 12 Dec. di 12 do. do Assist. to the Supt. of Revenue Survey, S. M. Country HJ. E. Jacob, 3 Oct. 4025 Feb. 40 S. N. Raikes, 12 Dec. di 18 Sept. F. Harvey, 25 June 4112 Jan. 41 STAFF. Alljutant. H. Cracroft, 12 Dec. 38 Qr. Mr. 8. Intr. A. Macdonald, 15 Oct. 35 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. F. S. A. Arnott, M.D.,!19 Dec. 38 19 Feb. 291 Facings, Yellow. del 354 (PART II. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. NINETEENTH REGIMENT. • Ghuznee'-'Affghanistan.' BOMBAY-arrived 22nd February 1840. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. U.. Colonel. [1824 W. D. Cleiland, 1 May M.G. 10 Jan. 1837 Europe, S. C. 9th Apr. Lieutenant Colonel. 1826. Sir H. Pottinger, Bt. 17 Mar. 29 m.g.26 Nov. 41 British Commissioner Major. and Envoy to China. H. Hancock, H.m. 28 June 38 M. 26 Nov. 41 Captains. R. M. M Cooke, 7 Dec. 28 G. J. Mant, 28 Nov, 31 Depy. Judge Advocate Genl. S. D. A., Actg. Aid-de-Camp to Maj. General Delamotte, Comg. S. D. A. J. Swanson,.. 26 Jan. 32 Paymaster at the Presy. Acting Stipendiary Member of Mily. Brd. H. Jacob, G.H.M., 28 June 38 29 May 37 E. H. Hart, H., 8 Oct. 39 2 Sept. 37 Lieutenants. D. E. Mills, .. 30 Nov. 24 B.c. 17 Jan. 39 Europe, S. C. 6th June 1839. J. A. Eckford, H., 5 Aug. 25 B.C. 14 Feb. 39 Actg. Qr. Mr. and Intr. to Marine Battalion. D. C. Graham, .... 30 do. 26 B.c. 11 Mar. 39 Comg. the Bheel Corps in Candeish. J. McDonnell,...... 26 Jan. 32 B.C. 7 Dec. 39 H. M. Shah Shooja's Service. W. B. Salmon, H.m. . So June do B.C. 20 Feb. 41 Sub-Asst. Comy. Genl. and in charge of Ba- zars at Deesa. J. W. Renny, H., 28 June 38 Qr. Mr. & Intr. in Hin. H. Rolland, 8 Oct. 39 Adjutant. C. M. Barrow, H. 2 May 40 On leave, Neilgherries. J. B. Dunsterville, .. 3 Oct. do Attached to Coint. Ensigns. Dept. at the Presy. P. M. Briggs, 8 Oct. 39 3 Feb. 39 J. A. Anderton, 3 do. 4016 Feb. 40 H. Fenwick, ditto 9 Feb. do H. J. Day, 8 May 41 12 Dec. do W. H. R. Green, .25 do. 2 Jan. 41 STAFF. Adjutant. H. Rolland, 5 Dec. 36 Qr. Mr. 8. Intr. J. W. Renny, 3 May 37 Surgeon. B. White, 8 Jan. 41 4 Nov. 401 Assistant Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Deep Yellow. VOL. Ir.) 355 ARMY LIST. TWENTIETH REGIMENT. UPPER SCINDE. Names. Regl. Rank Army Rank. Remarks. ... . Colonel. [1839 71838 G. B. Brooks, 8 Oct. M. G. 28 June Lieutenant Colonel. G. Moore, 10 Sept. 41 28 June 38 Stipendiary Member of the Mily. Board.-S. C. to Neilgherries, 20th Nov. 1840. Major. J. Forbes, 25 Aug. 38 28 June 38 Captains F. Apthorp, K. I. C.... 3 Feb. 29 R. Bulkley, 28 July 34 1 June 34 Depy. Judge Advt.Genl. P.D.A.S.C. to Neil- gherries, 18th Oct.1841 H. H. Hobson, .... 25 Aug. 38 6 Oct. 35 Offg. Depy. Judge Adv. Genl., Scinde Force. T. Candy, n. M.... . 20 April 39/11 Feb. 36 Supdt. of Govt.Schools. C. Shirt, 8 Oct. 39| 4 Jan. 38 Lieutenants. S. C. Baldwin, 8 Sept. 26 8. c. 17 Jan. 39 H, Ash, H. 22 Mar. 25 b. c. 17 Feb. 41 Eur., S. C. 13th Feb. 1840. *J. R. Keily, H. M. 4 April 38 Qr. Mr. and Intrpr. in Hin. and Mahratta, Assist. Pol. Agent, Myhee Caunta. E. Baynes, 122 May do. Adjutant. T. H. Godfrey, 25 Aug. do Sir F. J. Ford, Bart. 20 April 39 W. E. Macleod, 8 Oct. 39 R.R.Younghusband, H 3 do. 40 H. Lancaster, 14 July 41 Ensigns. J. F. Goodfellow, 20 April 3911 Dec. 38 J. A. Wood, 8 Oct. 39 6 July E. Campbell, 3 do. 40/23 Feb. 40 R. J. Edgerly,.. 12 Dec. do. 14 Sept. do. R. M. Hammond, 14 July 41 12 Jan. 41 STAFF. Adjutant. E. Baynes, 8 Oct. 39 Qr. Mr. and Intr. J. R. Keily, 27 Dec. 33 Surgeon. J. Scott, 30 Nov. 41 4 Nov. 40 Assist. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Yellow, • Regimental duty, temporarily. 39 S56 (PART IT. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-FIRST REGIMENT, UPPER SCINDE. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. [1824 W. Gilbert, 1 May M.G.10 Jan. 1837 Eur., Furlo' 21st Sept. 1836. Lieutenant Colonel. D. Barr, 11 April 28 M.G. 26 Nov. 41 Military Auditor Genl. and Member of the Mily. Board Major. W. Cavaye, ... 8 April 36 Contains. *W. Wylie, u 124 Dec. do. B.m. 13 Nov. 39 Brigade Maj. at Poona, Actg. Asst. Adj Genl., Scinde force. E. M. Ennis, 11 July 35 28 Feb. 35 W. Lang, H.m. 18 July 39 25 Feb. 37 Political Agent in the *G. N. Prior, H. 19 July 40 b.C. 29 May 37 Myhee Caunta. Lieutenants *S. J. Sterens, i. 21 Aug. 27 B. c. 7 Jan. 40 Qr. Mr. and Intr. in Hindoostanee. Actg. Asst. to Gar. Engr. &c. Bombay. E. Green. I 24 Dec. 33 Adjutant. G. Rippon, A.M..... 22 Nov. 341 Intr. Scinde Field Force. J. McGrigor, G. H... 18 July 39 Adjutant to Guzerat Ir- regular Ilorse, S. C. to Neilgherries, 17th Oct. 1840. *H. Fenning, H. M... 8 Oct. 39 Assist. in the Deccan Survey. G A. Leckie, 6 Oct. 39 Eur., s. C. 24th Sept. W. E. Wilkinson, 19 July 40 E. A. Green, 17 Dec. 40 F. Burr, 26 Aug. 41 Ensigns. C. A. Moyle, 3 Oct. 4022 Dec. 39 M. J. Battye, 19 Nov. do 31 Aug. 40 A. P. Barker, 17 Mar. 4112 Dec. do. J. J. Laurie, 15 Sept. 41 2 Feb. W. L. Merewether . 26 do. do. 18 Mar. do. Staff. Adjutant. E. Green, 2 April 35 Qr. Mr. and Intr. S. J. Stevens, 19 Feb. 34 Surgeon. - J. Patch, 17 Jan. 40/20 Dec. 33 Assistant Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Pale Yellow. • Regimental duty, temporarily. 1839, 1 41 VOZ. 12.) 357 ARMY LIST: TIENTY-SECOND REGIMENT. MALLIG.IUM-arrived 31st May 1810. Names. Regl.Rank Army Rank. Remarks, Colonel. B. Kennett, 1 May 24 m.g. 28 June 33 Neilgherry Hills, un- cmployed. Lieut. Colonel. F. Hickes, 23 Nov. 40 28 April 37 Major. H. Cracklow, 19 Oct. 36 Caplains. II. J. Parkinson, 4 Nov. 33 Comg. the Goizerat Provincial Balln. J Hale, I Sept. 35 L. W. Ilart, 11., 22 July 315 H. I. Shah Slonja's Service. R. L. Shawe, 13 Sept, do G. Pope, G. II. M. P., 10 Feb. 24 Assist. Comy. Genl. Lieutenants. J. Holland, 11. M. P 21 Jan. 29 B. C. 4 Jan. 38 Depy Qr. Mr. General of the Army. H. Bose, II., 22 July 36 Qr. Mr. &. Interpreter in Hindooslanee. J. D. Leckie, 13 Sept. de Assist. Pol. Agent, Lower Scinde. W. B. Ponsonby, - 20 Feb. 38 Europe, S, C. 220 Feb. 1811. E.C. Beale, 11. 24 Feb. 40 T. A. Cowper, 3 Oct. dol Adjutant. M. M. Macdonald, 14 May 41 J. G. Scott, 2 July do W. Thomas, 13 Sep. do Ensigns. J. G. Millar, 3 Oct. 40) 9 Dec. 39 W. S. Jones, ditto 12 June 40 A. J. S, Hessman, 14 May 4112 Dr. do G. A. F. Nichol, 22 July do 12 Jan. 41 J. Laing, 13 Sep. do 2 Feb. do STAFF. Adjutant. T. A. Cower, -2 July 41 Qr. Mr. &. Intr. H. Bose, 22 July 36 Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surg. D. Grierson, m. D.,- 12 Feb. 40 2 June 321 Facings, Dark Green, PART II. VOL. II. V V 358 (PART 11. BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-THIRD REGIMENT (LIGHT INFANTRY). · Kirkee.'-UPPER SCINDE. Ordered to BOMBAY. Names. Regl. Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. 38 Colonel. A. Aitchison, 1 May 24 m.g. 28 June 38 Eur. S. C., 25th Feb. Lieut. Colonel. 1894. W. Gordon, 17 Oct. 27 c, 22 Jan. 34 Europe S.C., 29th May Major. 1841. C. Newport, 8 Oct. 39 28 June Captains. J. Scott, 8 Sept. 26 H. Lyons, M. 25 May 27 Pay Mr. N. D. A. J. Outram, 7 Oct. 32 B. M. 13 Nov. 39 Political Agent, Upper Scinde. J. Watkins, 23 Apr. 25 17 Sept. 31 J. Liddell, H. 8 Oct. 3921 Feb. 36 Europe, S. C. 26th Oct. 1839. Lieutenants. * P. T. French, H. 8 Sept. 26 B. c. 25 May 37 Bheel Agent, & Comg. the Ahmednuggur Police Corps. S. Parr, - 25 May 27 B. C. 6 Feb. 40 Europe S.C.,28th Sept. 1840. E. W. Cartwright, 4 Aug. do B. c. 15 Oct. 40 T. Síock, 26 Nov, do Adjutant. J. Sinclair, 23 Apr. 35 R. Travers, 10 Jan. 381 H. M. Shah Shooja's Service. J. G. Forbes, H. 8 Oct. 39 Assistant in the Deco can Survey, S. C. to Neilgherries, 17th Dec. 1840. W. J. Boye, do do do S.J.K. Whitehill, H. 3 do 40 Actg. Qr. Mr. & Intrrr. Ensigns. N. J. Newnham, 10 Jan. 38 8 Feb, 37 Europe S.C., 12th J E. Bowles, 8 Oct. 39 3 Feb. 39 Dec. 1840. J. Payton, do do 29 July do G. F. Duke, 3 do 40 10 Mar. 40 R. Bainbrigge, 17 Mar. 41 Il Dec. do Staff. Adjutant. T. Stock, 3 July 35 Acig.Qr, Mr. &. Intr. S. J. K. Whitehill. Surgeon. E. W. Edwards, 17 Dec. 39 | Nov. 39 Assist. Surgeon. Vacant. Facings, Dark Green Regtl. duty, temporarily. VOL. 11.) 859 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-FOURTH REGIMENT. "Aden.'-Poona. Arrived 9th June 1840. Names. Regl.Rank. Army Rank. Remarks. - - M., . Colonel. W. Roome, 4 May 20 M. G. 10 Jan. 37 Europe, Furlough, 7th Dec. 1816. Lieut.-Colonel. D. Capon, H. M., 2 Oct. 40 30 May 36 Major. R. Ori, 19 Aug. 41 Caplains. G. More, 18 Oct. do J. E. G. Morris, A. 9 Mar 30 Actg. Supdt, of Bazars, Poona. H. N. Ramsay, h. - - 19 Dec. 39 29 May 37 Actg. 21 Assist. to the Political Agent in Kattiwar. A. Shepheard, H., - 18 June 40 25 Apr. 39 Acig. Brigade Major, Poona. W.G. Duncan, H.,. - 19 Aug. 4131 Mar. 41 Assist. to Political Agent in Cutch. Lieutenants. G. H. Bellasis, 7 Nov. 32 B. C. 16 May do F. Jackson, 14 Apr. 35 Europe, S.C. 20th Mar. 1841. G. J. D. Milne, 8 Oct 39 Adjutant, attached to Comt. Dept., Ahme- dabad. A. B. Rathborne, do B. G. Morison, 6 Dec. do G. Stack, H. M., 119 do do Qr. Mr. and Intrpr. in Hin, and Mahratta. W. Ballingall, 18 June 40 'T. E. Stone, 3 Oct. do J. Wray, 19 Aug 41 Acting Adjutant. Ensigns. W. Montriou, 2 May 40/10 Dec. 39 J.H. Champion, H., 18 June do do C. Commeline, 3 Oct. do 22 do do J. Shrigley, do 12 June 40 G. R. Scatcherd - 26 Sept. 41 6 March 41 STAFF. Adjutant. G. J. D. Milne, I Feb. 41 Attached to Comt. Dept Qr. Mr. & Intr. G. Stack 2 Sept. 41 Surgeon. Vacant. Assistant Surgeon. J.P. Malcolmson,- -10 Dec. 35 17 Dec. 28 On duty at Adent. Do, do H. P. Ha- 11 May 40 27 June 27 Attached, Facings, Dark Green. thorn, 360 (PABT 11 BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. TWENTY-FIFTH REGIMENT. UPPER Scinde. Names. Regl. Rank Army Rank. Remarks. Colonel. (1826 [1838 E. W. Shuldham, - 8 Septr. M.G. 28 June Europe, Furlough, 16th Jari. 1827. Lieul. Colonel. F. T. Farrell, 4 May 41 29 Nov. 40 Major. B. Mellanon, H. M. 27 Feb. 40 Comdg. Western Malma contingent. Captains. H. C. Trasdale, 1.25 May 29 A. Woolburn, 11. • 8 Oct. 3911 Feb. 36 J. Jackson, 15 do do 5 Mar. 38 G. Fulljames 27 Feb. 40 Assistar.t to Mint Engr. J. R. F. Willough- by, u. 4 June 4120 Feb. 41 Europe S.C., 28th Aug. 1840. Lieutenants. F. W. Follell, 6 Oct. 33 Adjutant, H. W. Preedy, u - 4 Nov. 34 Sul-Assist. Comy. Genl., Lower Sujude. C. P. Leeson . - 15 do 37 # G H. Robertson, II. M. 8 Oct. 39 Assist. Deccan Rerenne Surver. Placed at dis. posal of Poll. Agening Upper Scude. A. Hall, 15 do do Europe S.C, 21st April E. Glennie, 27 Feb, 40 1841. 3 Oct. de R. Phayre, 11. I Dec. do E. C. Marston, 4 June 41 Ensigns. O. Bourdinion, 27 Feb. 40 6 Ang. 39 A. J. Thomson, 3 Oct. d. 13 Arg. 40 D. Bourchier, 17 Mar, 4112 Duc. do G. Mayor, 6 June dal 2 Jan. 41 G. T. Sheppard, 16 Aug. do 12 Jan. du Europe S.C., 28. h Aug. Starr. 1841. Adjulant. F. W. Fulleit, 10 Sep. 40 Qr. Mr. 8. 11 tr. Vacant. Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surgecn. A. Wriglit, 110 May 41 3 Dec. 37 Facings, Pale Yellow. • Regl, duty temporarily. , VOL 11.) SG1 ARMY LIST. TWENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT. Muow. Arrived Ist May 1841. Names Regl. Runk Army Rank. Remarks. 8 Sept. Colonel. [182 (1838 J. Mayne, C. B. 11.6.28 June Europe, Furle.511. Feb. Liiul. Culowel. 1826. W. Spiller, 20 Nov. 35 23 June 38 Major. W. 021lve, 26 Jan. 3-10 Jan. 37 Judge Alls. Gen. of the Caplains. Army. G. Smirti, 15 Dec, 31 A. F. Bartlet, 21 Mar. 3 * Jan. 3-11 T. H Gilley, 11. 8 Oct, 3:6 Oct. 35 Acry. Assist, to Civil Engineer in Candle sh. R. J. Crozier, 11. 26 do di 0 Feb. 35 Acting Ass'. Hiji. Gen. Poona Div. Arnis. G. Wilson, H. 30 Apr. 415 Mar. 39 Europe, S. C. 31st Dec. Lieutenants. 1870. R. H. Goodenough. 11. 21 Mar. 3- 3. c. 14 July 40 Qr. Mr. & Intr. in Hin- doonlance. J. W. Auld, 23 Jan. 2.3. c. 20 Feb. 41 Arijuesit 10. Candeish incel Corps.-Aerg 2il in Commalli of 110, and more. Bheel Ayeut at kunnur, B. R. Powell, 8 Oct. 39 Adjutant. E. Buwen, 11. do Europe s. C., 10th Apr. 1839. S. "'. Brown, do Du du. 1211 Feb. 1839. J. D. DeVitre', g. 11. 26 do Deps. Pay. Mr. Mhow. E. I. S. Bowdich, 1339 Apr. 40 J. S. limball, 3 Oct. do Assistant in Suidt. of Roads & Tauks. G. Mackenzie, - 3 Mar. 41 Ensigns. W. B Gray, II. 8 Oct. 39 12 June 39 G. B. Scoti, 30 Apr. 4010 Dec. J. W. Collell, 3 Oct. do 5 Feb), 40 R. J. Lowry, 12 Dir. dult Sept. J. W. Hope, 3 Mar. 4111 Dec. dol Staff. Adjutant. B. R. Powell, 8 Oct. 39 Qr. Mr. &. In!r. R. H. Goodenough, I Nov. 40 Surgeon. Vacant. Assist. Surgeon. D. Buddo, 9 Nov. 3916 Feb. 271 Facings, Light Buff. M du S62 (PART IL BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. CORPS OFFICERED FROM THE LINE. MARINE BATTALION.-BOMBAY. GUZERAT PROVINCIAL BAT. Capt. J. H. Chalmers, 4th N. I. Comg. TALION.-KAIRA. Lieut. W. R. Simpson, 17th Regt. N. I. Capt. H.J. Parkinson, 22d N.I., Comg. Adjutant. Lieut. J. T. Barr, 7th ditto, Adjt. Lieut. H. J. Barr, 2d Eur. Lt. Infy. Facings, Light Yellow ; Loce, Gold. Qr. Mr. and Interpreter (Act. As. sist, Audr. Genl). CANDEISH BHEEL CORPS.-HEAD Bt. Capt. J. A. Eckford, 19th N. I. QUARTERS, DAURRUNGAUM. Actg. Qr. Mr. and Intr. Bt. Capt. D. C. Graham, 19th N. L., J, Boyd, Esq., Surgeon. Comg. Facings, Dark Green ; Lace, Gold. Bt. Capt. W. J. Morris, 9th Regt. N. I., 2nd in Command. POONA IRREGULAR HORSE. Bt. Cap. J. W. Anld, 26th N. I., Adjt. SEROOR. Coat, Dark Blue ; Lace, Gold. Captain G. K. Erskine, 1st Light Cav., Comg. NATIVE VETERAN BATTA- Lieut. W. Loch, 1st Lt. Cavalry, 2d in LION.-DAPOOLEE. Command. Lieut. Col. P. D. Ottey, Comg. Lt. A. M. Haselwood, 3d N. I., Actg. GUZERAT IRREGULAR HORSE. Adjt. HEAD QUARTERS, AHMADABAD. A. Duncan, Esq., Surgeon. Major H. G. Roberts, 13th Regt. N. I., Facings, Deep Blue ; Laee, Gold. Commanding Lieut. A. N. Aitchison, 13th Regt. N. SCINDE IRREGULAR HORSE. I., 2d in Command. RAISED 8TH AUGUST 1839. Lieut. J. McGrigor, 21st Regt. N. I., -Vacant........ .... Comdt. Adjt.-S. C. to Neilgherries, 17th Lieut. C. R. W. Hervey, 2d E. L. I. Oct. 1841. 2d in Command. Lieut, J. P. Grant, 1st Eur. Regt., Lieut. G. Malcolm, 1st Gr. Regt. Adjt, Actg. Adjutant. [geon. Vacant..... ........ Surgeon. H. T. Chatterton, Esq. Assistant Sur. Uniform, Rifle Green, Lace, Silver. INVALID ESTABLISHMENT. When Invalided. Army Rank. 32 27 Apr. 40 8 Oct. Lieutenant Colonels. S. Whitehill, I Nov. P. D. Ottey, 27 Feb. Majors. G. Taylor, 30 Mar. S. Robson, 10 Sept. J. Laurie, 1 Oct. W. H. Waterfield,... 15 Sept. Captains. A. P. Hockin, 5 July 37 8 July 36! 5 Sept. 32 10 Jan. 41 28 June 26 Eur., S.C. 29th April 1841. 39 Comg. Nat. Vet. Bat. 33 Comg. Sion Fort. 35 Eur., Furlo' 12th Dec. 1839. 37 Eur. S. C. 5th Oct. 1839. 38 36 7 Apr. 361 i June 38 17 Mar. 39 27 Apr. 38 19 Oct. 30 Paymaster of Pensioners, S. Concan. 30 Supt. of Bazars, Dapoolee. 34 35 Europe, S. C. 17th Dec. 1840 36 Commisst. Agent, Dapoolee. ... H. Pelham, H. 11 Mar. C. J. Westley, 22 Mar. J. E. Lang, 20 Apr. J. Tyndall, 10 Feb. Lieutenants. C. H. Boye, 20 Nov. W. T. C. Scriven,... 17 May W. P. Cotes, 23 Nov. 34 28 Sept. 30 16 Nov. 40 8 Oct. 27 Paymaster of Pensioners, N. Concan. 27 Europe, S. C. 6th Feb. 1841. 39 Eur. S. C. 8th Dec. 1840. VOL. 11.) [ 363 ) MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT, MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, QUEEN'S TROOPS. E. A. Loinsworth, Esq......... Assist. Surgeon Barrington..... Acting Inspector General of Hospital. ..In medical charge, Colaba Depot. MEDICAL BOARD. Names. Date of Com. Date of Ap- mission as pointments. Surgeons. Rank. 10 J. McAdam, 18 May 1822 31 Dec. 1838 Ist Member. 10 R.H. Kennedy, M.D. 2 June 22 15 Jan. 402nd ditto. 13 F. Sheppee, 113 Feb. 23 1 Mar. 41 3rd ditto. SUPERINTENDING SURGEONS. RANK AS Names. Remarks. Surgeon. Date of Arpt. 14 W. A. Purnell, 15 D. C. Bell, 1.5 R. Pinhey, 17 J. Bird, 18 J. Glen, 18 C. Kane, u Mar. 182331 Dec. 1838 N. W. Div. of Guzerat. 22 July 23 15 Jan. 40 Eur, S. C. 21st Jan. 1840. | May 24 31 Jan. 40 Nor. Div. of the Deccan. 19 July 24122 Oct. 40 S. Div. of the Deccan. 21 Nov. 25/ 3 Jan. 41 Presidency Division. 8 Sept. 261 1 Mar. 41 Scinde Force. A GENERAL LIST OF THE MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. SURGEONS. RANK AS Names. Remarks. Surgeon. Assist. Surg. 10 J. McAdam, 18 May 1822 8 June 1811 Medical Board. 10 R. H. Kennedy,m.D. 9 June 22 ditto Ditto. 13 F. Sheppee, 13 Feb. 23 14 Nov. 14 Ditto. 14 W. A. Purnell, 11 Mar. 23 9 Aug. 15 Supg. Surg. N. W. Div. of Guzerat. 15 D. C. Bell, 22 July 23 15 May 16 Do. do. S.C. to Europe, 21st Jan. 1840. 15 R. Pinhey, 1 May 21 22 Sept. 16 Do. do. Nor. Div. of the Deccan. 17 J. Bird, H. 19 July 24 2 Aug. 18 Do. do. Southn. Div. of the Deccan. 18 J. Glen, 21 Nov. 23 5 April 19 Do. do. Presidency Diva. P. H. Lavens, 3 Aug. ... Her Majesty's 14th Lt. Drs. 18 C. Kane, ...! 8 Sept. 26 I May 19 Supg. Surg. Scinde Force- Sick Bombay. ... 20... 361 (PART II. BOMBAY MEDICAL ESTABLISIMENT. RANK AS Names. Remarks. Surgeon. Assist. Surg. 29. ... .. .. . 18 W. Gray, H. 6 Sept. 1827 12 June 1819 Staff Surgeon, Mhow, 19 C. Downey, 17 June 28 8 Feb. 20 Eur. s c. 15th May 1840. 19 R. Wight, 6 Feb. 29 27 April 20 15th Regt. N.I. 19 A. Duncan, G. 4 April 29 ditto Native Veteran Battalion. J. McAndrew, M.D. 30 April Her Majesty's 40th Regt. 20. A. 'Tawse, n. 21 Jan. 30 6 Dec. 20 Garrison Surgeon, Surat. 20 J. Inglis, MD. 6 July 30 2 Jan. 21 Eur, S.C. 24th Feb. 1840. 20 J. McLeudan, 13 Nov. 33 7 day 21 Medical Storekeeper, Pre- sidency ; Civil Surg. aud Surg. to the Hon. Gorr. 20 J. Patch, 29 Dec. 33 6 June 21 21st Regiment N, I. 20 W'. Erskine, u. 16 Feb. 34 ditto Under the orders of the Resident at Sutiarah. 20 A. Graham, 26 May 34 ditto 15th Roge. N. I. and Surg. N. Hosp. House of Cor. rection aud Centl. Scliool. 20 J. Burnes, K. 1., bl. P.-II. ditto ditto Secretary Medl. Board. 21 J. Howison, 4 Jan. 35 25 May 22 s. C. to Cape, 26th March 1840. 21 J. Mc.llorris, 15 Jan. 35 ditto Eur, S. C. 21st June 1840. 21 J. A. Sinclair, 5 April 35 ditto Civil Surgeon, Poonah. 21 C. Dicat, 1 May 35 2 Supt. 22 Eur. S. C. 30th Sept. 1811, 23 H Johnston, II.M.P. | Sept. 3.5 26 Feb. 2 Eur. S, (. 2411 Nov. 1840. 2: I. T. Kays, M. V... -1 Dec. 35 4 April 23 Assay Master. 23 T. Robson, H. + June 36 : Muy 2:32d Battalion Arrillery. 23 R. Frith, M. D. 26 April 37 8 May 23. C. Eur., 230 Jan, 1840. 23 T. H. Grahain, :3 Jin. 38 12 Dec. 2:3 Ditto 291h August 1839. W. 11. Young 13 July 3 H. M 2d Q's Riegt. *23 A. Montgomery,. . 31 Dec. 38 18 Feb. 21 1st Bat. Arty:-ictg. Ciril Surg, at Annieduuygur. 23 H. Gibb, h. 2 Jan. 39'21 ditto 24 Eur. S. C. 71h Sept. 1840. 24 R. B. Owen, M. D... 30 Jan. 39 dirto 3d Regt. Ligbt Caralry. 24 W. 1. Taylor, 1 April 39 1 Mar. 24120 diito. 24 d. J. Montefiore,.. 1 Nəy 39 15 June 24 Ist diito. 24 C. D. Straker, M.... 5 June 39 5 Aug. 24 1st Europe Regiment. 24 E. W'. Edwards, i Nor. 39 2 (et. 2+234 Regiment N. I. 25 A. Gibson, 1. DI. 39 23 Jan. 23 Supdt. of Botanical Gar. dens, Dapovree. *25 J. Doig, 3 Dec. 39 6 Feb. 25 Deputy Medl. Storekeeper and Staff Surg., Belgauin. J. A. Ore, 6 ditto 39 Her Majesty's 22d Regt. 25 J. Dun M.D.-I. 16 ditto 39 8 Feb. 25 Depy. Medi. Storekeeper & Staff Surg. Poona. 23 J.J. Cunningham, H. 21 ditto 3211 Jan. 26 Depsi Medi. Storekeeper & Staff Surg., Ahmedabad. 25 J. Boyd, 15 Jan. 40 21 May 26 Marine Battalion. J. Chambers, | Muy H. M. 4th light Drs.-Eur. 2.5 T. S. Cahill, m. D... 8 June 40 6 June 26'2d Regt. Eur. Light Infy. 2. B. P. Rooke, 13 Oct. 4025 July 26 Carrison Surgeoni, Bombay. 26 A. Aruott, m. D. .. 4 Nov. 40 2 Jan. 27 Eur. S. C. 19th Feb. 1839. 26 J. Stewart, M. D. ditto 19 ditto 27 Placed at the disposal of the Resdı. at Hyderabad. 26 J. Scott, h. ditto ditto 20th Regt. N. I. 26 B. White, 1. ditto 16 Feb. 27 19th ditto. 26 C. Lush, M. D. ditto ditto 14th ditto. 26 R. Brown, M. D. 3 Jan. 41 ditto Surg. Eur. Genl. Hospital. 26 C. F. Collier, I Mar, 41 5 Feb. 27 Regiment N. I. ...20 Nov. 40. . VOL. II.) ARMY LIST. ASSISTANT SURGEONS. Names, Date of Commission. Remarks. R. H. A. Hunter, J. W. Moffat, 26 D. Buddo, do J. Bowstead do J. J. Hamilton, do. H. P. Hathorn, do. J. Murray, H. 9 Jan. 1827 H. M. 2d or Q's Regiment, 8 Feb. do H. M. 14th Lt. Drs. 16 Feb. do 26th Regt. N. I. 3 Apr. do Europe, S. C. 25th May 1839. 4 June do 17th Regt. N. I. 27 ditto do 24th Regt. N. I. ditto Convalescent Station of Mahabalesh. war. . do. J. Ross, *27 W. Leggett, do. H. T. Chatterton, do. T. Mackenzie, do. R. J, Behan, do. W. B. Barrington, do. H. R. Elliot, m do. M. Stovell, 28 J. P. Malcolmson, do. Thomas Brickwell, 22 July 3 Jan. 18 Feb. 22 ditto 14 Mar. ditto 25 May 8 Oct. 17 Dec. 19 Feb. . *do, F. S. Arnott, M. D. ditto *do. A. Burn,m. D. 1 Apr. do. C. Morehead, M. D-H.26 ditto *do. John Bouchier, M. D. . 12 May do. John Fraser Heddle, 23 June John Murtagh, 11 Feb. 31 R. Kirk, 24 July J. Campbell, 29 ditto *do. T. Waller, P. 3 Apr. do. D. Ritchie, M. D. 11 Aug. *do. J. H. Peart, ditto do. J. Fraser, . 16 Sept. do. J. W. Ryan, ..11 Nov, . . do Residency Surgeon, at Bussorah. 28 Civil Surgeon, Tannah. do Guzerat Irregular Horse. do Europe, S. C. 30th April 1841. do Bombay on S. C. Lunatic Asylum. do Civil Surgeon at Dholia. do Oculist. do 24th Regt. N. I. (On duty at Aden.) 29 Attd. to 4th Regt. N. I. (or Rifle Corps.) 18th Regt. N. I. do Civil Surgeon, Broach. do Storekeeper of Eur. Genl. Hospital. do Europe, S. C. Ist June 1841. do Depy. Assay Master. 30 H. M. 6th Foot, do 1st Grenadier Regt. On a mission. do Her Majesty's 221 Regt. 31 Vaccinator in the Concan, do With the Mission to Herat. Acting Marine and Port Surgeon. do 12th Regiment N. I. do Assist. Gar. Sur. and Deputy Medi- cal Storekeeper, Presidency. do Civil Surgeon, Rajcote. 32 Europe, S. C. 24th March 1840. do Europe, S. C. 9th April 1838. Political Agency, Lower Scinde. do S. C. Europe, 38h Nov. 1841. do Europe, S. C. 18th Jan. 1839. do 22d Regt. N. I. 20 Troop Horse Brigade. do H. M. 40th Regt. 33 Nizam's Service. do 4th Troop Horse Brigade. 9th Regiment N. I. do s. C. to Neilgherries, 24th April 1840. do Vaccinator N. E. Div. of Guzerat. do Civil Surgeon Nassick. do Marine and Port Surg., S.C. to Neil. ghery 17th Sept. 1841. 84 Civil Surgeon, Rutnagherry. do H. M. 40th Regt. 35 Actg. Vacr. S. W. D. of Guzerat. 116th Regt. N. I. *do. B. A. R. Nicholson, . . 18 Nov. *do. Peter Gray, 7 Feb. *do. F. Forbes, 21 ditto *do. A. H. Leith, ditto *do. P. W. Hockin, 25 ditto do. R. A. J. Hughes, 7 Apr. *do. David Grierson, M.D. 2 June do. W. Parsons, ditto E. M. Macpherson, 4 Dec. 32 A. Walker, M. D. 6 Feb. do. J. Cramond, 28 ditto *do. W. Sullivan, ditto do. D. Clark, 27 Apr. do. John Keith, *do. F. W. Watkins, m. do. M. Alex. Ranclaud, 20 May 17 July 2 Aug. . . 33 J. W. Winchester, H. Hadley, M. D. *35 W. Pitcrain, do. F. Harrison, .. 14 Jan. 28 Nov. 5 Jan. ditto PART II, VOL. II. W W 306 (PART II BOMBAY MEDICAL ESTABLISHMENT. ASSISTANT SURGEGNS.-Continued. Names. Date of Com- mission, Remarks. . . *35 J. Jephson, M.D. 1 Mar. 1835 Depy. Medical Storekeeper at Suk. kur. *36 W. Arbuckle, M. D.,C. 19 Feb. 36 Civil Surgeon, Dharwar. do. S, Sproule, M. D. 11 May do Civil Surgeon, Ahmedabad. *do. C. 'Thatcher, 1 Sept. do Civil Surgeon, Kaira. 37 A. Durham, 17 Dec. do S. C. to Europe, 26th Oct. 1841. *do. D. A. Carnegie. M. D. 9 Jan 37 Attd. to 3rd Regt. N. I. do. D. Davies, 1 Feb. do 7th Regiment N. I. do. C. Black, M. D. 12 ditto do Attd. to 10th Regiment N. I. do. J. Mackenzie, 7 Mar. do Attd. to 8th Regiment N. I. do. J. Deas, 20 ditto do Attd. to 6th Regiment N. I. do. W. H. Bradley, 12 Apr. do Nizam's Service. do. J. J. Atkinson, 6 June 37 Civil Surgeon, Ahmedauggur. 38 M. Thomson, 7 Nov, do 11th Regiment N. I. dr. A.Wright, 3 Dec. do Attached to the 25th Regiment N. I. 38 R. Collum, M. D. ... 21 Feb. 18382d Grenadier Regiment N. I. * W. Nellson, M. D. 10 Mar. do 2d Lt. Cavalry. do. G. M. Grant, 11 April do Attd. to the Court of H. M. Shah Shooja Ool-Moolk. do. W. P. Gillanders, do. Gen. duty, Scinde. do. D. Costelloe, M. D. do. Civil Surgeon, Sholapore. A. S. Thomson, 23 Nov. do H. M. 17th Regt. E. W, Stone, 5 Oct. 38 H. M, 14th Lt Drs. 39 H. D. Glasse, 13 Dec. do Civil Surgeon, Broach, Actiog Vacor., Deccan. do. R. H. Davidson, M. D.... 16 Jan. 39 Atid. to 1st Gr. Regiment. do. R. T. C. Baxter, 3 Feb. do 1st Troop H. Brigade. Acting Store keeper Eur. Genl. Hospital. do. A. Campbell, M. D. do. do Surg. to the Police ; Surg. to the Coroner, and Assist. Civil, Surg. Presy. do. J. Craig, 6 do. do Indian Navy. J. B. Thomson, 15 do. do H. M. 17th Regt. do. W. F. Babington, 18 do. do Civil Surgeon, Persian Gulf. J. Jopp, 22 do. do H. M. 2d or Q's Regt. do. C. R. O. Bloxham, 21 July do Indian Navy. 40 R. Hosken, 22 Dec. do Attached to 13th Regt. N. I. do. J. H. Carter, 5 Feb. 40 Detals at Balmeer. do. R. Woosnam, 15 Feb. do On duty to China. J. Anderson, M. D. 8 May d. H. M. 22d Regt. do. J. P. Morier, u June di Indian Navy. do. G. M. S. Seaward, 25 July d General dity, Malligaum. do. J. D. Campbell, 28 Oct. di Attd. to 1st Batt. Artillery. do. G. Baines, 2 Dec. do 20th Regt. N. I. do. E. Impey; 4 do. do 3rd Troop H. B. R. D. Smith, 12 do. do A. M. 17th Regt. 41 S. McMorris, 2 Jan. 41 Wing of 16th Regt., Karrack. do. G. J. Shaw, M. D. do. Indian Navy. do. T. B. Larkins, do. Gen. duty, Baroda. do. H. S. Moore, do. Indian Navy. do. R. Dent. 4 do. do Ditto. do. T. W. Ward, 5 do. do General duty, Rajcote. do. T. Ellis, do. Gen. duty N. Div. Deccan. do. W. Thom, do. Attached to 2d Batt. Artillery. do. R. R. Smith, 9 do. dolladian Navy. VOL. II.] 567 ARMY LIST. Names. Date of Com missioner, Remarks. do. do. do. P. Cruickshank, 10 Jan, 1840|Indian Navy. do. W. H. Pigou, 25 do. do 11 Eur. Lt. Infantry. do. R. De C. Peele, 25 do. do Indian Navy. do. G. K. Dickinson, do. Gen, duty N. Div. Deccan. do. F. Lodwick, 2 Feb. do sth Regt. N. I. do. E. J. P. Pridbam, do. 20 Eur. It. Infantry. do. J. S. Sproule, M. D. do. Scinde. do. W. Bowie, M. D. 10 Gen. duty, Kurrack. N. Hefferman, M. D 11 H. M. 17th Regt. do. T. A. Boyrenson, M. D 2 Mar. do Eur. General Hospital, Presy. do. G. F. Forbes, 6 do. Gen. duty, Scinde. do, J. E Batho, 7 do. Ditto ditto. do. F. Manisty, do. Ditto ditto. do. G. M. Ogilvie, M. D. 9 do. do Eur. Gen. Hospital, Presidency. do. W. Colium, 9 do. Ist Light Cavalry. do. J. J. Faithful, 11 do. Genl. duty S. Div. Deccan. do. W. L. Cameron, 12 do. Genl. duty, Bhooj. do. J. L. Lowry, M. D. 18 do. Ditto, Surat. do. T. Cannan, do. Ditto, Scinde. do. H. Hudson, do. Ditto, Rajcote. do. E, J. Wallace, 2 Apr. do Genl. duty, Ahmedabad. do. G. Allender, M. D. 12 do. Ditto, ditto. do. E, Sabben, 21 do. do Native Genl. Hospital. do. S. D. Milligan, 2 May do Indian Navy, do. S. M. Pelly, 2 June do Leave to Neilgherries. do, T. Mc. Grath, 8 do. d. H. M. 22d Regt. do. W. Broskenridge, 5 July do Not arrived. do. G. J. McKenzie, 3 Aug. do Eur. Genl. Hospital. do. E. Mahalfy, M. D. 24 do. do Not Arrived. do. W. R. Demock, 2 Sept. do Not Arrived. 36 G. E. Nixon, Not recd. 1st Regt. Lt. Cavalry. d». E. G. Battersbee, do. 3d ditto ditto. 39 J. S. Stockley, do. Horse Brigade. J. G. Phillips, 28 Aug. 38 H. M. 14th Lt. Drs. 40 H. Freake, Not recd. 2d Regiment Light Caralry. do. J. Hoey, do. 41 W. McDowell, do. Attached to Horse Brigade. STAFF OF INDIAN NAVY.* Captain Robert Oliver, R. N. Lieut. H. C. Boulders on, Commander G. Robinson, Lieut. C. Montriou, Mr. J. C. Ibbs, G. Sutherland, F. G. Bone, ... Superintendent. ... Assistant do. ... Assistant Secretary Military Board I.N. Department ... Acting Draftsman. ... Accountant and Store Receiver, Buil. der's Department. ... Clerk to Committees of Survey. ... Chief Clerk Naval Branch Superin. tendent's Office, ... Acting Chief Clerk Civil Branch and Clerk of Cheque. 9 ,, J. Ward, 368 (PART II, BOMBAY ESTABLISHMENT. Captain G. Simpson, Mr. J. Harrison, Assistant Surgeon J. Peart, Ardaseer Cursetjee, Esq. Indian Navy Storekeeper. Assistant to do. Port and I. N. Surgeon. Chief Engineer and Inspector of Ma- chinery. MASTER ATTENDANT'S DEPARTMENT. . ... Daniel Ross, Esq. Walker Roberts, Lieut. W. R. Hayman, Hugh Atkinson, Esq. Mr. D. Lachlan, R. Waller, G. Donald, W. Wise, T. F. Goward. J. Grew, W. Aers, W. Bartley, G. Anderson, E. Dive, G. Ireland, H. Steele, W. Corke, J. A. Higgs, W. Presswick, Master Attendant and Inspr. of Port. Ist Assist. to do. on furlo' to England. Acting Ist Assist. 2d ditto, 3d ditto. Acting Signal Officer, Lighthouse. Senior Pilot. Pilot. ... ditto. ... ditto. ... ditto. ... ditto. ... ditto. ditto. ditto. ditto. ditto. Master Sailmaker. Boatswain of Yard, ... • For a List of the Indian Nary, vide Vol. I, Part II, p. 45 to 47. VOL. 11.) 389 INDIAN NAVY. TABLE OF SALARIES TO OFFICERS IN THE INDIAN NAVY AND MARINE DEPARTMENT, UNDER THE PRESIDENCY OF BOMBAY Appointment. Salaries. Remas ks. In addition to the net pay of his rank. ... 9 Superintendent, ... 2500 Assistant Superintendent, 450 Master Attendant, 1250 Ist Assistant do. 600 2d ditto do. 570 3d ditto do, 400 Pilot, senior, 200 Ditto 2d class, each, 120 Ditto 3d and 4th do. each, 108 ... The Pilots residing in the Port, are allowed, in addition Rs. 80 per month, house rent, and those at Colaba 50 Rs. per month, if not occupying pub- lic quarters. Store Receiver and accoun- tant ... 380 In addition to the Pay of purser Rs. 120. Includes house rent Rs. 60. Master Smith, Master Builder, 2d ditto, 310 800 680 Includes an allowance of Rs. 80 as Draughtsman of the Dockyard. :: 1st Assistant, 100 2d ditto, 950 2d Supernumerary Assistant Builders, 200 Assistant Draftsman, 20 Assistant Secretary Military Board (Marine Branch,)... 650 ... Inclusive of Naval Pay and allow- ances. 12 Draughtsman, 300 Timber Convertor, 150 Inspector of the yards, 20 Indian Naval Storekeeper, 1285 Assistant Storekeeper, 330 Signal Officer at the Light House, 120 Superintendent of Dockyard Steam Engine, 200 Assistant ditto, 100 Surgeon Indian Navy, 467 Commodore at Surat, 1300 11 Draws in addition to det pay of Purser Rs. 120. 4 Rs. per day.-In addition to the Pay of an Invalid Lieut, 9 ... Includes 90 Rs. house rent, and 20 Rs. Palankeen allow- ances. Pay Rs. 900 Table Allowance, 400 House Rent, 90 1990 Pay, 900 Table allowance. 400 1300 Commodore in the Persian Gulph, ... |1300 Persian Interpreter to do, Commodore's Clerk, Superintendent of Pattemars,) 60 200 90 In addn, to the net pay of his rank 370 (PABT a. BOMBAY MARINE ESTABLISHMENT, TABLE OF PAY TO OFFICERS OF THE INDIAN NAVY. Runk Amt. Rank. Amt. Rs. As. 50 50 ... 306 10 12 206 10 When Employed Afluut. Captain 1st Rate A Ditto 2d dintos Comdr. 3d rate! B. ditto 4th ditto Ditto 5th rate. Lieut.-firt fifteen, Ditto all other, Pursers, 2d rate, Ditto 3d do. Clerk in charge, Pay Rs. 50 Allowance, Mates, C Rs. When Employed Afloul. Midshipmen, 900 Capts. Clerks, 800 Assist. Surgeon in charge of 600 Ship, 400 Servants wages, 175 Do. when unemployed, 145 When Unemployed. 270 Captain, 250 Commander, Senior. Lieut. first-fifteen on the list, 100* Junior ditto, 50 Pursers, Midshipmen, 400 300 ...50 150 120 120 ... 50 IRON STEAMERS. 225 100 .. 200 .. 100 Indus Flotilla. 2d Class Vessels. Commander, 600 0 Acting Master, + Lient. 145 0 CSecond, | Assistant Surgeon, 306 10 0 3d Class Vessels. † Purser, 250 0 0 Acting Master, 1st Class Vessels. Second, Acting Master, 250 0 0 Second, 100 0 09 NOTE. ---Officers sick on shore allowed house rent as follows: Lieut. and Purser, 90 3 Rs. per day. Midshipmen, 60 A. If employed on shore, Rs. 602 * With additional half Ratta, B. Ditto, 422 | la addition to Full Batta. C. lo addition to the net pay of their rank. | 2 do: do. CEYLON CIVIL SERVICE. 1841. 1 374 (PART 11. CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT. Names. Dale of Rank. Office. Annual Sa. lary. d. 0 0 0 0 0 0 600 0 0 0 0 0 600 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 500 1,010 0 0 0 Gort Agent at Trincomali [1824 for the Eastern Province J.W. Huskisson, Esq 1 Mar. Collector of Custonis and Fis- cal for dito, Govt Agent at Colombo for the Western Province, balf C. R. Buller, Esq... 9 May 25 salary.t An Ex officio Memher of the Legislizive Council and of the School Commission rActing Gort. Agent at Trin- Priniali far the Eastern Pro J. S. Rodney, Esq. 1 June 25vince hall's:hory. i Acty. 'ollector for Customs U and Fincat from dirto, R. Wells, Esq. . 20 Sep. 25 District Judge of Kandy norili, half salarr * W. H. Wbiting, Esq 20 June 26 Dinn ditto of Colombo north, r Ditin diito of Kandy south half saları, Acting Govt. Agent at C lombo for the Western Pro- P.E.Wodehouse, Esq 14 Vay 28 vince. half salary. An det. Ex-officío Minhen of the Leg Council 11 d of the School Commissin, . CP.Tarard, Esq. in Dec. 28 listrict Judge of Trincomali, A. Stewart, Esq. 9 Mar, 301lista ditro of Galle. Hitto dirto of Watelle, G. R. Mercer, Esq. . 2; i une 30 Three years anual incre: st! under the annexed minner Asst. Govt. Agent & District Judge of Munar, balf sa. C. Webster, Esq. 29 July 30 lary, Acring District Judge o Kandy nortu, half salary, 500 0 0 600 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1000 550 0 0 350 0 0 400 0 0 0 List of Civi? S'rpants on the Cey'on Civl Istablishment belonging to what is termed the · New Cwil Service.' and who are not entitled lu any pension, EI. ceiling in the speciul cuses noted. W. C. Gibson, Esq 10 Sept. 32 Asst. Col. Secy, ard clerk to the Executive and legislative ('ouncils 800 a A. Walker, Esq. 10 Oct. 2 District Judge of Negombo. 550 0 0 [ Asst. Govi, ageni at l v.onibus 36X) Personal allowance. 200 0 60 6 E. S. Waring, Esq. Three years annual increase ditto Inspector of ( innamon attie sudi, of the Convi, Cimia mon sorting estabiisi mitut 0 0 0 0 • Under suspension. + Absent in Europie, on leave, ah These yenilemen nie enchantitled on retireinent 10 a peusion of £ 100 a year for furuur services, us assistants in the Cinnumnun Departments. VOL 11.) $75 CIVIL LIST. Annual suo Names. Date of Rank. Office. lury. .€ 550 75 0 550 0 75 0 0 0 0 0 275 00 500 0 0 700 0 60 0 0 0 550 80 75 0 0 0 0 0 0 550 25 0 0 0 0 150 0 0 350 80 Assi. Govt. Aperit and Dis- c J. Caulfield, Esq. , 10 Oct.1832 trict Judge of Chilaw, ? Thirre svars-annual increase, dJ. D. Browne, Esq. ditto | As.l. Gort. Agent at Vatura. ✓ Three years'amust increase, [ Asst. Govt. Agent and Dis- trict Judge of Suffragain, & F. Price, Esq. ditto laif salary, | Acting District Judge of Kandy Soutlı, half salary, Aist. Govt. Åpent and Dis. R. Atherton, Esq... 4 Nov. 32 trict Judge of Baticaloa. Twojevrs' anpu il increase, Assi. Govt. Agent and Dis- trict Judge of the Four aud E. R. Power, Esq. . 16 Oct. 37 Three Korles, Travelling allowance, Three years annud increase: Asst. Gort. Arnt and bis C. P. Walker, Esq. . ditto i ict jurig of Hambantotte Zone years anual increases roosi. Gort Agent at Tiiuco mali, half salary, Acting Asst. Gost. Agent Hon. G. C. Talbot, , 23 June 33, and Acung lirict Judge of M101T, half silary, One Far's amal increase, Assi. Govt. Agent at Galle. half salary, W.G. Forbes, Esq. . 5 Sept. 38 Aciing Asit. Gort. Agent and Acting District Judge of Saffragam, bulf salary,.. Asst. Govt Agent in the W. Norris, Esq. . . 29 Sept. 38 Seven Korles, Two years' annual increase, Acring Asst. Govt. Agent at J.T. Tranchell, Esq. ditto Trincomali, half salary, .. First year's annual increase Asst. Cort. tgent at Kards J. G. Layard, Esq. 30 July 39 Tuovralis' and increase Asst. Gov. Ayent at Jaffua, H. O'Grady, Esq. . il July 3: Overear's annual increasi,. Acring Asst. Gove. Agent al T. C. Power, Esq. Gale, half salary. one year's annual increase H. Templer, Esq. Sub-Collector of the luistons Department at Callura K. Mackenzie, Esq. 29 Sept. 40 Sub-Col!ector of the Customs Department at Barberyn, R.H. F. R. Somerset. Esq. Extra Asst in the office of the Govt. Agent for the Western Province at Colombo, 0 0 0 0 150 0 275 0 0 0 700 60 0 0 150 0 0 20 0 0 300 0 0 40 3:0 0 0 20 0 150 20 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 100 00 0 0 0 cde These gentlemen are ench entitled on retirement to a pension of £ 100 a year for former serviets, as assistants in the Cinnamon Wepartininis, 376 (PART IL CEYLON ESTABLISIMEXT. List of Officers on the Ceylon Civil Estublishment who do not belong to either the Old Civil Service,' or the · New Civil Serrice.' Names. Length of Office. l'er darum. Se, vice. ť 7,000 0 His Excellency, Jot. Genl. sir C. 15 Jan.1811 Campbell,K.C B. Governor, President of the Executiv. and Legislative Council,' 0 0 0 800 0 0 100 00 0 0 0 500 0 0 45 126 300 0 0 45 12 6 100 00 . Civil Engineer and Surveyor General's Drparlmen'. ( Civil Engineer and Surveyor General, Allowance for the keep of 2 F. B. Norris, Esq. - 26 Aug. 32 { basses, An Ex officio Member of the Legislative Coun. cil, Assistant Civil Engineer and Surveyor, G. M. Parsons, Esq. 1 Oct. 37 Allowance for the kerp of a horse at 23. 61. per diem, Acting As-istant Civil En. gineer and Surveyor, A. Robertson, Esq.- 30 June 37 Allowance for the keep of a horse at 2s 60 per di-m. ['the full salary of the Appo- i meni is £500.] J. Morphew. Esq. Apr. 41 Acting Assistant Surveyor, Il estern Provnice. Lieur. F.B Templer,, Feb. 407 rAt 7 6 per diem, W. Hardisty, Dec. 38 7 6 dito, J. Vicdonald June 36 7 6 ditin), W. Bagenail. Mar, 40 15 0 ditin, F. Wallbeoff. Esq. Feb. 41 7 6 dito, J. Wallbeoff, Esq. July 41 76 ditto, Southern Province. Lieut. W. Kirk. Apr. 36 7 6 ditto, Euxiern Province. R Farraner, Esq. A pr. 39 100 ditto, Northern I'rovince. Liell. C. Warbu ton. June 36 100 ditto, V. Burleigh, Esq. 7 6 ditio, D. Quinton, Esq. Feb. 37 7 6 dito, Centrul Prorince. Lieut. R. Milius, May 33 10 O dirlo, A. Watson, Jan. 37 ū 6 dinto, 11. Duverneit. May 39 76 dicto, G. Tatiersall. Nov, 3-1) 76 dinto, W. Lucas, Esq. July 3: For attending on sick prisoner. in the Hospital at Kaudy ai 48. 6d. per diem, 136 17 6 136 li 6 136 17 273 15 0 136 17 6 136 17 6 136 17 6 Field Assistants and superintendents, 192 10 0 182 10 0 A pr. 39 136 17 6 19 182 10 0 136 17 6 136 1; 6 136 17 6 62 26 Civil Medical Depurlment &c. Sur. G. Barclay, Sept. 3 Principal Civil Medical Officer, T. G. Allen, Esq. . 30 Apr. 3: Superitendent and Civil Medi. cal Officer in the Chilaw Dis. trict, M.1).. 300 0 0 300 0 0 • Commander-in-Chief and Vice Admiral. TOL. II.) 377 CIVIL LIST. Numes, Length of Sernice, Office. Per Annum, S. d. £ 90 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 90 90 0 0 0 0 300 0 0 Regel. Assist. Sury R. Templeton. 1 Sept. 40 Superinteudent at Colonıbo, - Staff Assist. Surg. P Roberison, 1 Aug. 39 Ditto at Galle, Regil. Assist. Surg (i, Ramler, M.D. | May 40 Ditto at Trincomali, S: Sif Assist. Surg. J. Grant, 7 Sept. 39 Dirto at Jaffna, W.Jolicas. F. q. 1 July + Ditto at Kundy, H. T. Norwansell. Esq. 16 May 39 Supdt. of the Botanical Garden at Peridunia in Kandy. Master Attendait of l'olom bo, and luspector of the J. Stuart, Esq. 9 May 2011 Pearl Banks. I A commissioner the Loan ( Board. T. 11. Turnam. Esq 1 A11.. 22 Master Attendant of Galle, J. Hiyos. Esq. I lay :3! Dito Trincomali, Cap. 11 E. Tavard, I feh. 41|hairman of the Sirring's Bank. J.ient. J. Burleigh, 1 Jan. 38/ Superintend, of the Manufac- ture of salt at Putlain, Capt. T. W. Rogers 1 Jan. 31 As-istant (inut. Ayent and District Judge of Badulla. G. I ee, Esq. 1 Feb. 3 2. Pristmaster lieveral. Di.rict Judge of Anoorada - T. Mylius, Esq. 23 May 37 poara. Asst. Gurt. Agent at ditto, 700 0 0 0 200 500 400 100 0 0 0 0 0 63 0 0 0 270 300 0 0 0 300 0 0 0 0 0 750 00 ICO 0 0 225 0 0 100 0 0 2,500 0 0 0 0 0 Customs, Judicial, Ecclesiusticul, &c. F. Saunders. Esq. 3 Aug. 36 Controller of Customs, P. J. Truter, Esq. July 39-41b.l'ollector of the custom: Deparment al Negombo, - F. Gray, Esq. I Mar. 361. Assintani Collector of Custom at Jiffu: A.V. Ferguson, Esq May 41 ub-Collector of the Custom: Department at Point Pidrie r(hief Justice of the Suprem Court. Hon'ble Sir A. Oli Judge of the Vice Admiralık phaut, Kt. 22 Oct. 38 Court. LA Member of the Schoo 1 Commission, H. C. Selhv. E:q. I May 39 Private Secretary, H»n'ble W, 0. Curr. Esl. April 33 Senior Puisne Justice of the | Supreme Court, W. Il Kelson, Esq. 1 Jan. 41 Private Secretary, Ilon'ble J. Star, Esq 10 Dec. 39 2nd Puisne Justice of the Su. preme Court, Samuel Hanna, Esq. 8 Apr. 41 Private Secretary, Queen's Advocate, Hon'ble A. Buller, An Ex officio Member of the Esq. 17 Oct. 40 Excutive and Legislative Councils, D 270 0 0 0 0 1 1.500 180 0 0 0 0 1,500 0 180 1,200 u 0 0 0 000 373 (PART II. CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT. Numes. Lengti Service, Office. Per Annus. € 8. d. 1,000 0 600 0 0 0 0 0 210 12 150 0 0 0 - 180 0 0 0 1,000 5.0 25 0 0 0 0 0 225 550) 50) 223 225 2:25 225 225 0 0 0 0 C. Temple, Esq. • . 17 Oct.1840 Deputy Queen's Advocate, Registrar of the Supreme 1 Court, V. W. Vanderstra: Nov.1797 Registrar of the Vice Admi aten, Esq. ralty Crui, & a Cominis. sioner of the Loan Board P. A Loos, Esq. Feb. 96 1st Deputy Registrar of thi Supreme Court, J. L. Cramer, Esq. Oct. 1802 2nd dirto disco, Advocate for Paupers and H. J. Staples, Esq. Nov. 34 Prisoners in the Supreme Court, R. Langslow, Esq. 8 June 40 vistrict Judge of Colombo South, | Do. of ('altura, T. Lavalliere, Esq. 1 Jan. 31 | One year's annual increase, - J. J. Kriekenbeek. Esq. | Jan. 12 Do. of Amblangodde, F. De Livera, Esq. I Nov. 34 Do, of liarra. Two years' annual increase, . J. R. Rabinel. Esq. | Apr, 3910 of Tungalle, W.H. Burieigh, E-9.11 May 21:30 of Malligam, PF. T-Slot. Esq. 1 Jan. 1000, of Point Pedro, E. J. W ou, E:q. I O«t. 32 Do. of (havogucherry, J. R. Vlontiall, Esq. | Nov. 1 Do. of Kails, C. 1, Vanderstraaten Esq. | May 2 Do of Mulletirne, J. Armour, Esq. - 1 Jan. 1o De of the serin Korles. IT'w years' annual increase,- Die of Nuwara Ella, Capt. C. Kelson, - | May 31 Asst to Govt. at d. Fiscal al Colon for the Western Provincs, J. Juneaux, Esq I June 3 fres during the last few months, J. Dalzil, Esq i Oct. 39 updı. of Police at Colombo,- * V-bie J. M. S. Glenie, 3 Apr. 1: Archdeacon of Colombo and Queen s Visitor, II. J. Staples, Esq. 1 Nov. 34 iegistrar of the Archdeaconry, Senior Colonial baplain.- 8 Apr. 31 ) Allowance for Mily. duties.- Rev. B. Bailey, M.A. Superintendent of the Or- pihan Asylum at Colonbo, Coronial i bapr. ai Colombo. Rev. 1. P. Horsford, 1 Jan. 31 A Member of the School Commission. Portuguese Colonial Chapo' laju at Colombo, Rev. J. C. Arndt, 1 Jan. 26 { flead Master of the female chool in the Pettah of Colombo, Rev. J. H. DeJaram, i Nov. 20 Singhalese Colonial Chaplain at Colombo, 225 50 50 0 150 0 0 0 0 - 500 0 0 0 0 300 0 2.000 0 100 0 800 100 0 0 0 0 700 0 0 0 0 0 0 103 60 00 M. A. 400 00 • The present Archideacon is entitled on retirement to a Pension of £600 a year by right of purchase by subscription. VOL. 11.) 379 CIVIL LIST. Names. Length of Service. Office. Per Annum, s. d. 0 0 250 { 108 0 600 0 100) 0 600 0 0 0 0 0 100 600 100 0 0 0 0 Rev. S. W. Diat, 1 Mar. 39 Singhalese Colonial Chaplain at Galkisse & Morottoo, Rev, J. J. Ondaatje, Aug. 19 Malabar Colonial Chaplain al Colombo, Rev. J. Wenbam, m.n. 29 Mar. 31 Colonial Chaplain at Galle, - Allowance for Mily, duties.- Rev. N. Jarstin, L.L.D. 1 Mar. 30 , Coloniai Chaplain at Kandy. Illowance for Mily. duties.- Colonial Chaplain at Triu- Rev. S. O. Glenie, I Nov. 34 comali, 1 Allowance for Mily. duties, Rev. C. David, 1 Mar. 01 Malabar Colonial Chaplain at Jaffna, Rev. S. D.J. Ondaatje. Dec. 40 Colonial Chaplain at Jaffna.. Colonial Chaplain of the Scotch Churclı, Rev. J. G. MacVicar, 7 Nov. 39 A Vember of the School Commission, Rev. J. D. Palm, - 27 Aug. 12 " leremmin of the Dutc! Church, G. Lee, Esq. i Feb. 3.2 Secretary to the School Com mission and Inspector of Schools, Head Master of the Colomb J. B. H. Builey, Esq. 16 July 38 Academy, 200 100 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 350 0 0 200 0 0 Feus 202 200 0 0 0 0 EXECUTIVE COUNCIL, His Excellencr Lientenant Gorneral Sir Colin Campbell, K. C. B., ...Gorernor and Commander in Chief. The Trouble Colonel W.fi, l'over, C. B. K. II ,.... Commandant of Colombo, The Hon'bie P. Anstrusher, Esq.,.. . I'mlonial Secretary. Ilie Hon'ble A. Buller. Esq.... Quien's Advocate. The Hon'ble ( Turnour, Esq., .. 'Treasurer ard Commisjoner of stamps. The Hon'blev II. Il right, Esq,,.. Auditor and decountant Generit, W. C. Gibson, Esq.,.. Clerk to the Council. LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL. His Excellency Lieutenant General Sir Colin Cainphell, K. C. B. ... Governor and Commander-in (hief. The Houble Colonel W. G, Power, C. B. K. H., ... Commandant of Colombo. The llou'ble P. Austruther. Esq., ... Colonial : critarr, The Hou'ble A. Buller. Esq, ... Queen's Advicale. The Hon'ble H. Wrighi, E-., ... Auditor and Accountant General, The Hon'ble G. Turnvur. Esq., ... Treasures and commissioner of Stamps. PE. Wodehouse, E-q.,... Acting Government Agent for the Western Province. J. N. Moyauri, Esq., ... Guvernment Agent for the Central Province. F. B. Norris, Esq., ...Civil Engineer and Surveyor General, F. J. Templer, E.q., ... Principal Collector of Customs, J. G, l'hi ipsz. Esq, J. G, Hillebrand, Esq., S. C. Chitty, Esq., Unofficial Members. J. Armitage, Esq., G. Crabbe, Esq., D. Wilson, Esq. W. C. Gibson, Esq., ... Clerk to the Council. .. 330 (PART 1 CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT. MINUTE By the Governor. ...Ditto The Right Honorable the Governor has great satisfaction in announcing to the Civil Servants of this Government, that Her Majesty's Secretary of State for the Colonies has been pleased to sanction the following classification of the Junior Menibers of their Service, and to authorize the encrease of salary here- in specified. In compliance with His Excellency's recommendation, these augmentations of fixed salary, and annual progressive encrease of pay are to take effect fruen the 1st June 1839 ; at which date this arrangement would have come into operation, if circumstances had not rendered further reference to the Secretary of State unavoidable. Salurics of Junior Civil Servants. The Junior branch of the Civil Service is in future to be divided into three classes. The salary of the 1st Class is fixed at £100 per annum, with an annual encrease of £:30. till it am 111111s to £350. The salary of the 2114 Class is fixed at £550, with an annual encrease of £25 till it a mounts, £650), The salary of the Britilass is fixed at £300 per annum with an annual en. crease of L20 till it amounts to £140. Schedule of Classificuliun. 1ST CLAss. Siren Korles- Assistant Government Agent. Badulla, ...Ditto ...and District Judge. Batticaloa, ... Disti, Manar. ..Dirto ... Victo. Anuradhapura, ... Ditto ... Litto. 2sp CLASS. Seven Korles, ... District Judge. Narnia- Assistant Government Agent. Dino ... District Judge. Callura, ..bilo. Chilaw — Assistant Corerument Agent, ... Dilen. Ngombe. ... Dirto. Four and Three Korles~ Assistant Government Agent, ... Hinto. Saffragani, ... Dirto Hambantotte, ...Diito ...Ditto. Mulelle, ... Dirto. 3RD Class. Colombo, ... Assistant Gorernment Agent. Jaffna, ... vitin Galle, ... Diting Trincomali, ... Dirio. Kandy, .. Dilin. The above mentioned rates of salary will be borne on the salary abstracts from the 1st instant. But all Assistants or District Judges who would have become entitled to any augmentation of salary had the new schedule come into operation on the 1st June 18:38, will apply for printed authorities to draw for the difference as unfixed contingencies, to the end of the past month. The progressive annual encrease will in future be borne on the Salary Ah- stracts, taking effect either from the 1st June 1838, or any subsequent date of appointment to each Class. If any Civil Servant is moved at his own request from one situation to another of the same Class, he will only draw the fixed salary, and will re- commence from that date to compute his annual augmentation. ... ... Dito VOL, 11.1 381 ARMY LIST. In the instances of absentees, either on leave or filling other appointments temporarily, the acting Servants will draw the whole of the augmentation ; the absentee, if ou leave, drawing only the half of the fixed salary (if he be entitled to it); or the augmentation of the Office he is temporarily filling (if that Office carries an augmentation)-In the event, however, of an acting Servant reverting to his former Office, he is to compute the period of his filling his temporary Office in the term which would entitle him to his augmentation in his permanent situation. The following appointments are abolished from the 1st instant. Assistant Government Agent of Negombo Do......... Do...... Caltura. Do......... Do. and District Judge of the Three Korles. All Civil Appointments not comprized in the above Schedule will continue to be borne on the salary abstracts at the present rate of pay, and without any annual augmentation. By His Excellency's Command, Colonial Secretary's Office, GEORGE TURNOUR, Kandy, 10th June 1839. Acting Colonial Secretary. LIST OF OFFICERS ON THE MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT OF CEYLON. Name. Date of Rank. Office. Annual Sa. lary. 8. d. His Excellency, Lt. Genl. Sir C. Campbell, K.C.B. Lieut. General, Commanding 6 Apr.1841 the Forces, Colonel of the 72nd Regt. [Aid-de-Camp to the Govrn. at 10s. per diem, Asst. Mily. Secy. at 9s. 6d. £ 1,500 0 0 0 0 0 182 10 0 per diem, 173 7 6 It. Arthur Wel.2 lington Campbell, 14th Regt... ditto 82 16 0 118 12 6 165 12 0 182 10 0 Lieut. Geor. Mac-> lean, Royal Ar- tillery, ditto 142 19 2 Staff Allowance £6. 18. a month, Lieut, of the 14th Regt. at 6s. 6d. per diem, Island Allowance £13, 16. a month, Aid-de-Camp to the Govrn at 10s. per diem, Lieut. Royal Artillery at 7s. jod. per ditto, Staff Allowance at £6. 18. a month, Island Allowance at £13. 16. a month, Aid.de-Camp to the Lieut. Genl. at 9s. 6d. per diem,... Lieut. 23d R. W. Fusileers, at 68 6d. per gitto, Staff Allowance at £6. 18. a month, Island Allowance at £13. 16, ditto, 82 16 0 165 12 0 173 7 6 Lieut. The Hon'ble Francis Villiers, 23rd R. W. F...S ditto 118 12 6 82 16 0 165 12 0 PART II. VOL. II. Y Y 982 (PART 11. CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT. Names. Date of Runk. Office. Annual Sala- ries. 8. 346 15 173 7 d. o 6 Bt. Lt. Col. Ewd. Charlton, K.H.- h.p. unattached, 4 May 1838 192 83 0 385 0 182 10 0 Capt. Thos. Mait- land Wilson, 96th Regt. 1 June 41 211 7 11 82 16 0 165 12 0 346 15 0 Bt. Lt. Col. John Fraser,1st Regt. 26 Dec. 27 Vet. Battn., 173 7 6 ... 192 12 385 0 0 182 10 0 Capt. Tho. Skinner? C. R. Regt. ... S 1 Nov. 32 Deputy Adjt. General at 198. per diem, Lieut. Col. h. p. at 9s. 6d. do. Staff Allowance at £16. 1. a month, Island Allowance at £32. 2, ditto, Deputy Ass. Adjt. Genl. at 10s, per diem, Captain of the 96th Regt. at 118. 7d. ditto, Staff Allowance at £6. 18. a month, Island Allow. at £13. 16. do. Depy. Quarter Master Genl. at 19s, per diem, Lieut. Col. Ist R. Vet. Battn. h. p. at 9s. 6d. do. Staff Allowance at £16. I. a month, Island Allow, at £32. 2. ditto Deputy Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. at 10s. per diem, Capt. of the C. R. Regt. at Ils. 7d. ditto, Staff Allowance at £6. 18. a month, Island Allow. at £13. 16. do. Staff Surgeon, Queen's Pay £1. 5. 3. per diem,* Queen's Allowance for serv- ing in a Colony where the Forces consist of 1,500 men or upwards, 58. per diem,* Island Allowance as staff sur geon £23.19. a month,* One half ditto in addition as Head of the Department, £11. 19. 6. a month,* Staff Asst. Surgeon, Queen's Pay 108. per diem,t Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Asst. Surgeon, Queen's Pay 78. 6d. per diem I Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Allowance for having charge of the Medical Store at 58. 211 7 11 82 16 0 165 120 419 15 0 Staff Surg. G. Bar-) clay, m.D). Actg. P. MI. Officer, 1 July 41 91 5 0 287 8 143 14 182 10 0 Staff Assist. Surg. ? P. Robertson,... } 6 July 39 150 0 0 136 17 0 Staff Assist. Surg. J. C. Cameron, 21 Jan. 36 150 0 0 N.D. per diem, 91 5 0 • Deputy Inspector of Hospitals ; Dr. Stewart having proceeded to England on siek leave, the staff Surgeon is doing the duty of Principal Medical Officer, + After 10 years actual service. Under 10 years actual service. VOL. 11.) 383 ARMY LIST. Name. Date of Rank, Office. Annual Salary. 3. 136 17 } d. 6 ... 150 0 0 :} 136 17 6 150 0 0 136 17 6 son, M. D. 150 0 0 } 136 17 6 150 00 afhoa Koste Series 136 17 6 150 0 0 136 17 6 150 0 0 } 354 12 0 [3718 Staff Asst. Surgeon, Queen's .? Pay 7s. 6d. per diem, 5 Sept. L. Kelly, M.D.... S Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Asst. Surgeon, Queen's Staff Assist. Surg. Oct. 37 Pay 78. 6d. per diem, 23 J. Grant, Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Assist. Surg., Queen's Staff Assist. Surg. Pay 7s. 6d. per diem. Geo. Stew. Beal. 10 Sept. 39 Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Assist. Surg., Queen's Pay 78. 6d. per diem 1 Feb. 401 George Galland. S Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Assist. Surg., Queen's Staff Assist. Surg. Pay 78. 6d. per diem 7 July 40 Island Allowance at £12. 10. a month, Staff Assist. Surg. Staff Assist. Snrg., Queen's Pay 7s. 6d. per diem, George William 9 Oct. 40 Island Allowance at £12. 10. Powell, M.D.... Staff Assist. Surg. a month, John Marshall,.. 1 June 35 r Commandant of Colmbo £29. 11. a month, The Hon'ble Col. Col. of the Royal Artillery William Green- shields Power, 6 Apr. 41 at 188. 1d. per diem, Island Allowance at £45. 9. R. A. ditto a month, Comdg. Royal Arty. £5.4.do. Staff officer at Colombo at Capt. T. Lillie, ) 108. per diem, Ceylon Capt. of the C.R. Regt. at| Rifle 25 May 41 Ils. 7d, do. Regt........... Island allowance at £13. 16. a month, Commandant at Putlam at £2. 14. do. Lieut. J. Burliegh, Lieut. of the C. R. Regt. at Ceylon Rifle 25 Nov. 37 Regt.... 78. 6d. per diem, Island Allowance at £8. 5. a month, Commandant at Trincomali at £30. a month, Bt. Major J. Gor- don, Royal Ar- Major of the Royal Artillery 1 May 41 at 14s. ld. tillery,........ Island Allowance at £23, 19. a month, Staff Officer at Trincomale Lieut. A. T. Hayo) at 10s. per diem, Lieut. of the 95th Regt. at land, 95th Re 23 Apr. 40 6s. 6d. do. giment,... Island Allowance at £8. 5. a month, Einbarked for Enzland in August 1839. 330 0 5 545 62 8 8 0 0 182 100 211 7 11 165 12 0 32 8 0 135 15 6 99 0 0 360 0 0 257 0 5 287 8 0 182 10 0 188 12 6 99 0 0 384 (PART II. CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT. Names. Date of Office. Rank. Annua Sal. lary. £ s. d. 47 140 211 7 11 165 120 per diem, 182 100 292 0 0 287 80 per diem, 182 100 211 711 165 120 32 80 118 126 54 0 0 Commandant at Jaffna at £3. 19. 6. do. Capt. G. Cochrane, Capt. of the C. R. Regt. at Ceylon Rifle 1 Mar. 1841 Ils. 7d. per diem, Regiment, .. Island Allowance at £13. 16 a month, Commandant at Galle at 10s. Major J. Walter, 95th Regiment, $ 21 Apr. 40 Maj.of the95th Regt. at168.de Island Allowance at £23. 19 a month, Staff Officer at Galle at 10s. Capt. P.B. Reyne Capt. of the C.R. Regt. at Ceylon Rifle 22 Feb. 39 Ils. 7d. do. Regiment. Island Allowance at £13. 16 a month, Commandant of Hamban totte at £2. 14. do. Lieut. H.A. Raitt, Lieut. of the C.R. Regt. ai Ceylon Rifle 19 Apr. 41 6s. 6d. per diem, Regiment,... Island Allowance at £4. 10. a month, Commandant at Kandy ai £25. ditto, Lieut. Col. C. R. Regt at 17s. Lieut. Col. 1.2 Fletcher, Ceylon 16 June 40 Island Allowance at £32, 2. per diem, Rifle Regt. ...... a month, Comdg. C.R. Regt. at £5. 4. ditto, Staff officer at Kandy at 10s. Capt. W. Fisher, Ceylon Capt. of the C. R. Regt. at Rifle 16 Apr. 41 Ils. 7d. ditto, Regiment,... Island Allowance at £13. 16. a month, Commandant at Badulla at £3. 19. 6. ditto. Capt. T. W. Ro-> Capt. of the C. R. Regt. at gers, Ceylon 16 Apr. 35 ils. 70. per diem, Rifle Regt........ Island Allowance at £13. 16. • month, Commandant at Kotmale £3. Capt. C. Kelson, 19. 6. a month Ceylon Rifle Oct. 40 Capt. C. R. Regt. at 11s. 7d. Regiment, ... Island Allowance at £13. 16. a month, 300 00 310 50 385 40 62 80 per diem, 182 100 211 7 11 165 0 47 14 0 211 711 165 120 47 14 0 per diem, 211 7 11 165 120 VOL, 11.) 385 ARMY LIST. Regiments Stationed in Ceylon. Names. Date of Commission. Rank. Remarks. ! . Royal Artillery. W. G. Power, C.B. KH. 2 June 1835 Colonel Comdt. of Colombo. John Gordon, 5 Aug. 16 Brevet Major .. Ditto Trincomali. W. J. Stokes, 29 June 36 Captain W. L. Kaye, 12 July 36 Ditto F. W. Hamilton, 17 Aug. 32 Lieutenant, C. R. Wynne, 5 June 35 Ditto Evan Maberley, 24 June 37 Ditto J. Travers, 6 Oct. 38 Ditto On leave to England. T. W. Lawrence, 19 Mar. 39 Ditto M. C. Dixon, ditto Ditto R. Templeton, 6 May 33 Assist. Surg. Gun Lascars. A. Hope, 1 Jan. 13 Lieutenant Royal Engineers. M, C. Dison, 25 June 35 Lieut. Col. G. F. Thompson, 1 Mar. 14 Brevet Major W Gregory, 6 Oct. 31 Captain E, Ogle, 10 Jan, 37 Lieutenant J. S. Hawkins, ditto Ditto H. M. 90th Regt. J. Singleton, R. H.. 17 July 40 Lieut. Col. G. D. Griffith, ditto Major J. Wilson, 26 Mar. 29 Captain On leave to England. H. R. Thurlow, 27 Mar. 35 Ditto G. D. Bowyer, 21 Sept. 38 Ditto J. B. B. Maun, 2 June 35 Ditto M. Grule, 11 Apr. 40 Ditto Ditto. P. P. Galway, 17 July 1840 Captain Employed. in the Dy. Qr. Mr. Genl's Office. T. Webb, 27 Mar, 35 ditto A ssist. Comy. Genl., Co. F. Woodgate, 25 Jan. 39 ditto [lombo. N. E. Blackall, 21 Aug. 35 Lieutenant, C. V. Pugb, 11 April 40ditto J. M. N Walter, 3 July 39ditto R. Owen, 5 June K.W. S. Mackenzie, 17 July 4 Oditto On leave, China. T. Ross, 18 May 4 Iditto W. P. Purnell, 24 Mar. 38 Ensign H. A. Evatt, 22 June 38 ditto H. Lukey, 25 Jan. 39 ditto At Depot. F. B. Morley, 5 April 39 ditto ditto, J. W. B. Peddie, 26 Oct. 39 ditto A. Grove, 7 Feb. 40 ditto ditto. H. Y. Eager, 16 April 18 Paymaster D. Daviss, 30 Oct. 40 Adjutant W. Newland, 15 Sept. 37 Quarter Master R. Ellson, 16 Feb. 41 Surgeon On passage to Ceylon. R.K. Prendergast,.. 7 Oct. 36 Assist. Surgeon G. A. Cowper, 30 June 38 ditto H. M. 95th Regt. J. Campbell, K. #... 28 June 38 Lieut. Col. Brev. Colonel J. Walker, 13 July 32 Major Commandant of GJlle. .. 40ditto .. 386 (PART II. CEYLON ESTABLISHMENT, Names. Date of Commission. Runk, Remarks. W. N. Saunders, 18 Dec. T. S. Leger Alcock, 20 Apr. C. A. Brooke, 1 Dec. D. Dickson, 26 Jan. J. G. Champion, 2 Feb. W. Fisher, 28 Aug. N. T. Heyland, 8 July J. R. Ford, 4 Aug. H, 0. C. Master, 2 Feb. G. Cornwall, 9 Mar. E. Thompson, 116 Mar. R. C. Pratt, 8 June J. F. T. Dennis, 31 Oct. J. W. P. Bingham, 16 Feb. W, Venour, 9 Mar. F. W. Chapman, 16 Mar, G. J. Dowdall, 8 June F. Feneran, 1 Dec. W. A. Rogers, 2 June W. H. Rogers, 116 Feb. J. Ewing, 7 Sept. F. H. Clarke, 15 Sept. H. M. Ceylon Rifle Regt. T. Fletcher, 27 Feb. J. Macpherson, 27 Mar. J. Anderson, 2 May S. Braybrooke, 27 Feb. A, Montresor, 11 May G. A. Franchell, 9 Oct. P. B. Reyne, 21 Dec. T. W. Rogers, 7 June G, Cochrane, 13 Feb. H. A. Atchison, 27 Feb. C. Wallett, 25 Sept. T. Skinner, 3 Apr. B. E. Layard, 14 May 28 Captain 32 ditto 37 ditto On leave to England. 38 ditto 38 ditto ditto. 38 ditto Staff Officer, Kandy. 36 Lieutenant 37 ditto 38 ditto 38 ditto 38 ditto 38 ditto On leave to England. 38 ditto 38 Ensiga 38 ditto 38 Vitto 38 ditio 23 Paymaster 30 A djutant 38 Quarter Master 09 Surgeon 37 Assist. Surgeon . .. .. .. C. Kelson, G. T. Parke, C. H. Roddy, T. Bonnyr, W. Dickson, W. T. Layard, T. Lillie, W. Driberg, R. Mylins. T. E. Hodges, J. Stewart, A. Mackay, C. Warburton, R. Phelan, D. Meaden, J. J. Durger, J. Burleigh, M. Jones, .. 35 Lieut. Colonel . Commandant of Kandy. 35 ditto 34 Major 35 ditto On leave to England. 26 Captain 26 ditto 26 ditto Staff Officer of Galle. 27 ditto Commandant of Badulla. 27 ditto Ditto Jaffaa. 35 ditto On leave to England. 35 do. & Brev. Maj ditto. 36 ditto Dy. Asst. Qr. Mr. Genl. 36 ditto Chairman of the Saring's Bapk. 37 ditto Commandant of Kotwall. 37 ditto Depy Commy. General. ditto On leave to England. 38 do. & Brev. Maj 39 ditio 39 ditto 39 ditto Staff Officer of Colombo. 24 L ieutenant 24 ditto Asst. C. Engineer's Dept. 24 ditto [materials. 24 ditto Storekeeper of Building 24 ditto 25 ditto Asst. Civil Engr.'s Dept. 25 ditto 26 ditto 29 ditto 29 ditto Commandant of Patlam. 29'ditto 5 May 27 Oct. do 20 Nov. 5 July 16 Aug. 8 Nov. 5 Aug. 30 May 22 Feb. 11 Nov. 15 Nov. 18 June 8 Sept. 3 Feb. 23 May 24 June .. 23 July .. VOL. II ] 387 ARMY LIST. Names. Date of Commission. Rank. Remarks. .. | Apr. .. L, Clare, 28 Apr. W. Caldwell, 8 Jane T. B. Bayly, 8 May W. Hardisty, 8 Jan. A. Watson, F. Ostheyden, 13 May J. M. Macdonald, 29 June G. B. Tattersall, 28 Apr. R. Macbeath, 22 Sept. W. J. Kirk, 27 Oct. W. Price, 8 May H. Bird, 22 May N. Fenwick, 117 Sept. B. B. Keane, 11 Jan, E. J. Holworthy, 25 Mar. H. G. Remmett, 28 June H. A. Rait, 5 July H. DieVarnett, 2 Aug. J. B. Stavelley, 16 Aug. C. T. Smith, 29 May W. H. Underwood,,. 2 Oct. C. Garstin, 15 Dec. R. Watson, 7 July JB. Travers, 8 July C, A. Cobhe, 6 July F, B. Templer, 20 July R. B. Gwilt, 20 Oct. W. Bagenall, 2 Nov, J R. G. Pattison, 7 Dec. J. Bourne, 11 Jan. J. B., Kersteman, 28 June W. Hopson, 4 July H. Lucas, 5 July W.C. Vanderspaar,.. 16 Aug. F. May, 20 Sept. R. B. Stavely, 10 Jan. W. Brett, 29 May H. Skinner, 16 Dec. R. Jefferson, 6 May J. Black, 10 Aug. D. Ewing, 10 Sept. W. Lucas, 25 May G. Ramley, M. D. 19 Apr. Mounted Orderlies. The Hon'ble F. Vil. tiers, 30 Lieutenant 33 Ditto 35 Ditto 36 Ditto Asst. Civil Engr.'s Dept. 36 Ditto ditto. 36 Ditto 36 Ditto Asst. Civil Esq. Dept. 37 Ditto Ditto. 37 Ditto Not joined since appd. 37 Ditto Asst. Civil Eng. Dept. 38 Ditto Do. Royal Eng. Dept. 38 Ditto Dy. Asst. Commy., Kandy. 38 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto Commdt. of Hambantolle. 39 Ditto Asst. Civil Engr.'s Dept. 39 Ditto 40 Ditto 40 Ditto 40 Ditto [comali. 37 21 Lieutenant .. Dy. Aast. Commy., Trin. 37 Ditto Adjutant. 38 Ditto Asst. Civil Engr.'s Dept. 38 Ditto Ditto. 38 Ditto 38 Ditto 38 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 39 Ditto 40 Ditto 40 Ditto 40 Ditto Not joined since appd. 36 Paymaster 26 Quarter Mr. Oo leave to England. 26 Surgeon 26 Asst. Surg. 27 Ditto . .. .. .. Lieutenant Lt. of the 23rd R. W. Fusileers. INDEX TO Der Majesty's Forces Serbing in India and China. . . > - G.T. 1 . O . 106 1 Paze ADAM, Sir F. • 123 Barrek, J. C. Adams, T. 79 Barrom, F. B. H. W. 99 Barrow, T. W. Adamson, J. 111 Bartley, R. Addison, T. 88 G.F. Ahmuty, w. 124 W.T. Ainslie, F. G. . 101 G Airey, J. T. 89 J. C. Aldworth, R. 129 Barton, C. Allan, A. T. . 124 Base, W. W. W. 82 Baumgardt, J. G. J. 123 Bayly, J. T. Allman, W. H. 92 Baylee, P. Alms, T. F. H. 104 Bebee, RN. Anderson, A. B. 91 Beete, J.P. G. 103 Bell, W. J. 104 W. W. H. A. 14 Bellers, R.B. S, B. D. · 118 Bennett, F.L. J. 119 Bentley, A.C.D. Andrews, A. 102 Bere, É.B. Annesley, F. B. • 128 Beresford, M. S. F. B. - 128 Bernard, S. Anson, O. H, St. G. 90 A. Apthorp, R. P. 82 W. B. Arbuthnot, Sir R. 161 Bethune, D.M. Archer, J. H. .110 Betts, W.T. W. H. 81 Biddingfield, J. G. Armstrong, H. A. · 112 Birdmore, V. W, A. 98 Black, R. E. D. E. · 124 Blackall, J. A.W.S.F. 100 Arther, F. L. 91 Blackburn, J. Ashton, T. H. . 130 Blair, H. Astier, A. P. - 125 Bluntish, R. Atkinson, J. s. 109 A, Alty, W. F. W. 108 Blyth, S. Aubin, P. 123 Boalth, J. Austin, G. I. 89 Bolton, S. Aylmer, Lord M. 99 A. .J.G. Bace, W.G. 106 Bond, H. - H. W. 102 Bond, W. W. Baddeley, W.H.C. 118 Bonham, P. Baker, J. 100 Bainbridge, T. 123 Booth, W. Baird, W.D. 98 Balders, C.W.M. 78 Borlean, S. B. Baldwin, G. . 107 Borton, A. Baldwyn, E.I. 92 Boscawen, P. S. Balfour, w. 116 Bourchier, L. C. Ballard, V.V. 94 Bourke, O. P. Banon, R, G D. 126 T. J. Barbauld, M. 122 T. Barlow, C. . 124 Bowden, H. Barnes, w. 98 Bowles, F. W. W.E.F. C. 96 Brabazon, C.G. Barnwell, c. 93 Bray, E.W. Barr, M. 89 Brenchly, A. G. Page 82 Brennen, J. 80 Breton, H. W. 88 Bridge, G. · 117 Brockman, J. 118 Brodribb, S. 118 Bromwich, A. E. 120 Brooke, J.C. 92 81 Brough, R. W. • 124 Brown, G. J, 87 J. 130 G. 127 Browne, M. G. B P. 101 G. ,W.P. K. • 129 Bruce, W.T. . 120 Buchanan, C. 96 Bulkeley, T. . 119 Buller, H. G. 85 Bulter, R. 89 W. E. 100 Burchell, B.H. 120 Burgh, T. - 109 Burke, T. 94 J. 106 Burn, J. 113 Burns, W. - 128 Burrell, G. 104 H.D. 109 Burridge, J.o. 118 Burslem, R.G. 114 Bush, J.R. 89 Butler, H.T. 94 Byrne, J. 94 A. • 117 J. 81 • 107 CADETT, H. • 102 Caine, W. . 118 Caldwell, C.M. 18 Call, G.F. 92 —, G.I. 85 Cameron, D.M. , A.J. . 113 Sir J. • 130 C. 103 H, 94 J. • 111 Campbell, J.C. Page - 104 91 89 . 120 82 80 108 - 121 - 87 80 123 113 • 114 • 90 115 117 • 100 125 107 129 • 114 82 89 114 129 . 120 92 . 114 99 100 86 96 106 122 107 92 80 SR. 9 a O O ,J.B. • 119 . . • 116 105 123 • 100 100 89 90 93 . 105 128 91 93 115 117 • 125 121 . 122 • 104 • 109 .114 129 92 97 . 98 - J08 . llg • 104 · 129 79 • 102 • 107 80 Sir A. C. J. A. C.D. J. 79 G.W. . W. M. ü Index to Her Majesty's Forces. Page -, H. D. -, F. H. -, C. J. . 97 3 • 106 - - . > 9 - . 91 198 9 • 117 Page Page Campbell. F. M. 91 Coultman, H. W. 812 Dely, W. A. - 103 R. D. 80 Cowell, J. D. 79 De Montmorenci, R.E. 105 Campion, G. E. 80 Cowen, C. - 100 Dennie, W. H. • 95 Cardew, H. C. - 129 Cowper, J. 99 Dennis, J. 89 Carew. W. M. 127 J. L. 117 H. 96 Cox, H. 88 Dent, T. E. B. Carev, R. - 112 · 110 DeQuincey, H. . 108 Carney, J. 87 -, J. W. 96 Dermot, D. Carpenter, G. 113 Craigie, P. E. - 121 Desborough, L. Carroll, J. 100 ('rawley, T. R. - 132 Deshon, F. G. T. 104 Carruthers, R. 87 W. 92 Carter, W.F. • 128 Creagh, C. M, 94 De Tessier, J. F. H. 98 J. C. L. - 116 Croad, G. H. 80 DeWend, J. D. 115 W. S. 120 Crocker, J. L. 98 Dickens, R. M. Cary, A. . 116 E. 98 Dickson, W.F. 126 Casement, R. 79 W. 97 ---, F. Cassidy, W. G. 94 E. - 109 ---, A. • 98 L - 12+ H. B. 124 Diddep, J. 114 Chads, J. H. 124 Crowe, T. 122 Dillon, R. Chalmers, J. - 103 Crowley, H. - 127 Dillon, F. W. 09 Chamberlain, H. P. 90 Crowther, W. G. L. 128 Dodgin, W. H. • 116 Chambers, J. 80 Croxon, B.J. 98 Doherty, H. E. D. F. 92 Crozier, G. 130 Domvile, W. 209 Chambre, J. 81 Cubitt, G. 94 Dorchill, G. 1$ Chaproniere, A. H. - 121 Cuddy, W. H. L. D. 121 Dore, P. Charlton, J. Ć. 128 Cumberland, E. S. 116 Dorehill, W.J. Chatterton, T. 89 Cumming, J. S. 94 Douglas, C Chetwode, R. 98 J. - 106 R. G. 92 Cureton, C, R. 85 Dowman, J. Christie, F, G, 95 E. B. 86 Downes, H. G. L. 89 Currie, S. 90 Downing, G. T. Churchill , C. H. . 107 R, H. - 110 Drummond, Sir G. Chute, T. 103 Drysdal, W. Cilland, J. G. S. 87 DANE, J. 126 Du Bourdieu, A. Clarke, H. H. F. 120 D'Arcy, G. A. K. 129 Duff, C. M. . 118 G H - 125 Dacres, C. 104 Dunbar, C. W. 82 Dalliac, G, C. 80 E. los E. M. 98 Dalhousie, G. 87 Duncan, J. E. 109 W. 81 Dalrymple, J. F, R. 109 Dundas, T. 10$ Clinton, Sir W. H. - 121 Dampster, W. 1 13 Dunford, A. .IN Clunie, J. 0. 89 Daniell, J. H. . 118 Dunne, J. Coats, J. 121 E. G. . 122 Duperier, C. 105 Cobban, G. G. M. 119 . 122 Dyer, J. E. 78 Cochran, J. - 113 C. · 122 Dynon, P. S8 Cochrane, J. 100 Danley, J. • 97 Dyoth, M. Cockburn, W. P. 100 Darby, c. Codd, J. E. 78 Dare, W. H. 129 EAGER, R J. , R. B. 98 Darell, Sir H. E. H. A. F · 128 Darling, Sir R. 113 Edgar, H. Coddington, F. 111 W. J. - 128 Edlin, G. 79 Codrington, C. B. 86 Dartnell, N. 79 Edmonds, R. J. Coles, J. R. J. 80 Daubeney, C. B. 122 Edwards, C. A. . 104 F. S. 122 Edwards, G. Collinson, C. J. R. 99 Daunt, R. 94 D. Colls, R. S. 110 Davenport, H. W. H. Colman, W. T. W. D. - 129 Effingham, K. A., Colville, H. G. - 110 Davidson, J. Earl of Connor, F. 88 Davis, G. L. 93 Egan, H.JW. 129 Considine, J. - 128 Dawson, G. K M. 81 Egar, J. F. Conway, T. S. . 103 R. 112 Elliott, J. Cookes, G. 79 Day, R. S. 128 Elmhirst, C. Cooper, D. 98 Deare, G. - 101 Elphinstone, W. K. Coote, H. J. 103 G. 102 Eman, J. Cormick, E. H. 98 De Blaquiere, J. 114 England, R. E. 79 Decre, J. E. . 114 Enoch, J.J. Coster, J. 82 Deedes, G. 97 Erskine, J. Cotton, C. 129 De Havilland, T. 121 Estwick, F. · 103 . 100 > . 3 - C. A. 9 88 . 107 - 100 . 105 . . 100 --, G. R. - - 109 . - 121 - 120 1 26 94 161 . 113 . 119 97 150 Index to Her Majesty's Forces. iii Page > , - O - 115 ; W.H, > 80 5 Page Evans, T. O. - 114 Gahan, H. H. A, G. 103 Gall, R. H. W. 116 Gamble, R. Evatt, G. 125 Garrell, R, H. Eyre, G. 109 Gason, C H. Gavin, G. 0. H. FABER, W.R. 117 Gaynor, C. S. Fairbairn, W. H. 114 Gee, F. Fairtlough, W.H. 122 Geils, T.W. Fairtlough, J. W. 172 George, F.D. C. E. 128 Gibbons, T. P. Fane, H. - 98 Gibson, E.J. Farmer, T. M. 114. T. Faulkener, H, C. 88 Gildea, F. Faunce, T. 91 Glazbrooke, J.H. Faunt, C. 118 Goddard, J.K. Fawcett, D.L. 121 Goldie, M.W. Fearon, R. B. 111 Goodfellow, J. Fendall, w. 80 Gordon, C. A. Fenwick, J.H. 96 Gough, Sir H. Ferryman, A.H. JB. Field, J.F. 94 Graham, 0. T. Finch, Hon. E. 103 Grant, D. T, Firebrace, W.J. 102 J. T. Fisher, S. 78 Grant, J.H. A. 79 Grattan, J. W. 129 Graves, J.W. Fitzgerald, J.F. S.W. J.F. 82 Graves, J.S. J. 103 -, Hon. G. W.H. 105 Gray, H. Fitzpatrick, F. C. F. D. W. 124 Gray, 0,w. Fleming, H. H. McK.. 114 , J. Flynn, T. 1:0 Gray, A.W. Flyter, C. 118 Graydon, A. Flood, N.H. 90 Green, c.w, Forbes, Lord J. 101 -, C. G. 79 Greenwood, J. Forester, Hon. E.J.W,. 96 Gregg, E. R. Forster, J. B. 126 Gregory, C. Fortye, F.J.C. 116 Greham, P. Foster, C.j. 86 Green, G. Fothergill, w, - 119 Griffilhs, C.T. Foulston, J. 127 H.T. Foule, J. 128 Grigg, W. Frampton, H.J. 120 Grimes, C.R. Francis, T.J. 80 J.J. Fraser, G. R. 124 H. W, K. 80 Gordon, W, Æ. W. 109 Gubbins, R. Franklin, H. 79 Gunton, H. French, J, • 118 Gwynne, F.X. Frend, G. · 108 Gwynne, M. J, 122 Frend, A. 129 HACKETT, F. Frere, R. E. 96 Hadfield, W.H. Frost, L. 124 Hadley, W.H.S. Fullarton, G.N. 81 Haines, F.P. Fulton, R.R. 16 Halahan, R. R. H.S.M.D. - 126 Hale, J.R.B. Fyers, W, A. 112 Halfhide, B. Fyler, L. 85 C.A. Fyfe, s. 97 Halket, H. Halkett, J.T.D. GAHAN, R. B. 94 Halkett, Sir C. Page 124 Hall, W. S. 98 82 Hamilion, G. W. 88 92 C. T. 110 118 H. M. 126 . 125 G. . 122 85 Handfield, J.C. 90 94 Harcourt, J. • 116 110 Hardie, J. • 128 80 Harding, F. P. 103 103 Hardinge, W. 110 118 E. 110 92 Harker, R. 104 91 Harries, T. 128 88 Harrioti, G. 86 92 Harrison, G.N. - 128 81 J. 80 103 Hart, T. F. 129 106 H. 108 90 -, H.W. . 108 - 161 Harthill, R. 94 78 Hartman, E.F.A. 94 · 102 93 - 116 Harvey, W. 94 .117 J, 116 88 W. F. 98 99 E. 81 100 Haultain, T.M. 110 125 Havelock, W. 80 80 W. 81 81 C.F. 78 • 109 H, 95 82 Hawkes, R. 91 - 110 Head, J. 96 111 Heatley, J. 118 • 116 Hefferman, N. 98 120 Henderson, J. 79 90 Herbert, A.M. 126 120 Herbert, A. • 109 - 108 Heriot, T.A. - 12 - 105 Hessing, G. W. - 114 117 Hewitt, 1.H. 100 87 Hext, C. S. 92 • 127 Heyman, H. 80 81 Higginbotham, C. 109 Hill, H. 124 122 H. - 119 Hilbert, G. . 11 117 Hilliard, G. 100 112 Hillier, G.E, 126 98 K. E. · 126 Hilton, W. D. . 103 - 119 Hobhouse, J. B. 96 - 130 Hodgson, J. 91 86 Hodson, H. F. 80 H. F. 82 - 116 Hogarth, G. 105 78 Hogs, A. . 116 88 Holcombe, A. E. F. 96 62 Holder, F. 81 116 Holdsworth, T.W.E.- 88 78 Hollund, F. 102 115 Hook, L. 95 . 118 Hook, A. 113 - 112 Hope, J. R. 90 80 Horner, J. 121 107 Horton, s. L. 128 124 . 126 O . . 118 iy Index to Her Maj sty's Forces. 9 • 105 . 110 a 9 . 129 . 7 N. . - 9 • 125 • 199 . . 108 O O . . 130 . O 7 9 . •115 . Page Page Page Hough, H. W. 119 G.F.G. 96 MacDuff, J. Houghes, R. G. 96 W.J. • 101 Macgowan, J.A. Houston, H. 80 1:22 M'Grath, T. Hudley, H. 112 , J. 88 M'oregor, J. Huey, F. 112 Kipling, R. 116 MacGregor, M. . 101 Humbley, W.W.W.- 80 Kirby, W. H. 129 Sir W.. 100 Hunt, G. A. 124 Kirk, S.W. 100 Mackay, A.W. . 101 R. 124 Kirwan, M. 80 GJ. 195 R. 123 Kitson, J. · 125 Mackenzie, B. G. Hunion, R. W.S. R. - 124 Knowles, F. 79 MacKinnon, D.H. 86 Hunter, N. W 98 W. · 119 Mackrell, T. 115 Hunter, R. H. A. 88 Maclean, L.H.G. 118 Hurford, R. J. G. 86 LACELLES, E. W. • 103 191 Hutchins, H. T. 125 Laing, F. · 102 Macleod, D.B. 94 Hutchins, W. J. 128 Lake, H.H. • 105 A. Huilon, G. D. 114 Lamb, S.B. • 102 M’Mahon, Sir T. Hyder, W. A. 80 Lambert, C. · 126 Macquarie, L. Lane, F.W. • 118 MacQueen, A. Irge, E. 80 C.H.J. . 126 Macready, G. W. Inglis, W. R. 124 128 McVarmee, J. Jones, W. S. M. 86 Langford, J. E. 124 98 McKenstry, A. Irvin, F. C. 127 Lavens, P.H. 28 Mckenzie, C.F. Law, R. . 108 Mackenzie, B. Jackson, H. . 125 Lawrence, w. 114 Mackler, J. 134 Jackson, F. H. 124 Layard, A. 94 J. McLachlan, L.N. 124 B.G. 109 Maclean, A. Sir, K. H. 80 Leatham, J.B. 128 SS S. F. Macpherson, E.M. 128 Lee, E. - 112 E,M. James, D. W. G, 88 H. 86 97 M'Pherson, F. James, W. 105 Lees, H. 128 L.J. 98 C. H. 108 Leighton, T.R. 103 Jean, P. Macpherson, A. 102 Leslie, .1. 91 92 Madagan, J.A. Jenkins, J. E. 108 Lewis, R. Jennings, P. R. 96 Lindesay, P. • 128 Jephson, S. W. 88 Lindsay, G.T. Magrath, RN. 129 Johnson, W. W. 114 Lister, F.D), J, R. -, J. 12 Lister, FT. Johaston, R. G. 98 Little, T.S. A. L. 102 Lloyd, M.S.H. 87 Mainwaring, G. . 115 T. 80 W. 105 Malcolm, G. A. S. McV. 126 Manleverer, J.T. Johnstone, W. · 117 Lockhart, A. 97 Manners, Lord C. S.. 105 Lockwood, G.H. Jones, M. R.C. . 106 Loinsworth, F.A. G. E. 123 Longmore, A. A. T. 129 Longworth, D.F.G. • 129 Marshall, G. C. 104 Maryan, T.C. W. Jopp, J. 88 Lowe, A.C. 80 Marston, A.F. Joyce, E. 128 Lowrie, W.F. 128 S.P. 120 Luird, J. 101 Massy, H. R.J. Lugard, E. 107 Master, H. KAINS, T. 90 Lushington, F. 93 Masterson, T. B. Keating, J. 92 Lynch, E.A.T. 124 Mathias, W. Kelly, E.H.M. 129 Lyster, W.M. W.B. 87 Matthews, J. H. S. • 130 Maude, F. F. T.C. 107 J. . 120 M'Alpix, W.B. May, W. Kelley, W.B. • 130 Maycock, D. · 103 MacAudrew, ), 117 J. Kemp, P. 81 J.L. Kemph, Sir J. 87 92 Mayer, F.G.H.F. J.D. Kennedy, I, M. 104 112 Mayne, H. G. 112 Mayo. J.P. 91 MacCarthy, W.J. Kerrieson, Sir E. 124 McAdam, D. 81 J.E.D. Kershaw, J. 124 McBean, J. 95 Macdonald, R.R. King, G. 91 McCaskill, J. 96 J. A. 88 • 129 Madden, J. . 44 Maguire, J. - 120 Mahon, G. • 110 Mahood, J. 302 . O 78 98 78 . , J.w. . 78 Logan, 78 Mannin, J. • 127 Maunsel, G. 126 Mansel, G. 129 98 107 . 124 Low, A. O 85 Martin, J. . 79 100 116 . O 80 . O . . 113 . 108 . 104 o 86 101 93 118 100 • 118 . . . 93 C.H. 1 Index to Her Majesty's Forces. Page . 99 ", A. , S. H. V. - - 100 **, J. G, - - 128 Page Page McCaskill, H. · 121 Murdo, W.M.G. 104 Paty, G. W. 129 McCoy, D. 121 Murray, D. 96 Payne, W. A. T. McCrea, RB. 115 · 100 Pearson, T. H. 85 McDonald, A. . 105 . 119 H. McDowell, G. J. - 118 85 · 129 Peddie, J. C. - 101 Mellveen, D. • 108 Myers, A. - 103 Pender, T. . 107 McKenzie, K. • 90 Mylius, G. F. · 105 W.A. - 125 McKie, P. 89 Pengefather, J. L. - 103 Mckinlay D. R. · 104 McMahon, w. - 116 Nash, F. R. - 128 Penny, H. 96 McNair, W. . 126 Naylor, C, S. • 112 Pennycuick, J. 97 Meacham, W.G. 90 Need, A. 86 Perceral, J. P. - 104 Meason, M.R.L. • U2 Needham, H. - 119 -, J. P. Meik, A.C. . 98 129 Negale, J.T. 97 Persse, W. 85 FT. 85 Neill, J.M.B. 111 Peterson, C. 81 J.P. · 117 Nelson, A.A. • 112 Petit, J. . 119 Mein, G. 96 T.LK. 112 Phillips, C. 112 Menzies, A. 90 Nettleship, w. 82 82 --, J, S. 130 Neville, R. H. 114 Phipps, H. B. . 106 Meredith, R.M. 95 P. P. 127 Piercy, G. 88 Mercer, A. U. H. 90 Newton, G. 78 H. 88 --, E.S. 129 Nichells, H. 129 Piggott, J. . 105 Messiter, G.H. 98 Nicholas, G. 125 Pilfold, M. R. . 88 Michell H.S. - 118 Nicholson, R. - 102 Pilleau, H. Miller, A. . 106 Nicolls, Hon. Sir J. - 132 Pine, C. • 106 A.R. 81 Nixon, M. G. 109 Piper, J. • 106 P.W. - 112 Norman, R. 107 Pipon, G.T. W. - 86 C, 97 Pitman, E. - 122 T. - 111 Plaskett, T H. . 108 Milner, St. R. · 129 OAKES, A. 96 Pole, A. C. • 127 Minster, H.F. 114 O'Brien, C. D. C. 128 Pollard, J. L. R. - 108 Mitford, J. P. 100 O'Connor, J. R. 86 Poole, J. H. • 103 Mollan, W.C. 116 -, R.J R. 98 T.C. • 130 Moller, J.O. 116 Ogle, A. 93 Poore, RF. 80 Montgomerie, A. 96 O'Grady, J. 87 Postlethwait, H.J. W. 105 R. T. 79 Oldbam, W.J. 88 Potter, J. 92 J.M.- 117 O'Leary, 4, - 121 Powell, C. T. - 103 Monttizanbart, G.S. 114 Oliver, J.B. . 111 T. F. - 86 Moore, R, A. 79 Olpherts, G. E. - 125 W. W. 94 . 108 Olpherts, R. 112 Powys, Hon. C. . 79 J. 120 O'Molony, H. A. - 120 Pratt, E, J. 85 T.L.P. - 114 O'Neil, R. 91 T. S. - 105 J.G.P. - 130 O'Neill, C. - 115 Pratt, E. J. • 128 E.C. 98 Ore, J.A. 104 G, B. 127 L.C. 98 Orme, W. K. 86 , R. - 114 Moorhead, A.G. 105 Osborne. Hon. W, G. 105 Prendergast, T. 98 Morant, C. *2 O'Toole, J. McC, - 118 Prettejohn, G. D. - 118 Morgan, A.B. 124 Otter, C.J. 91 Pretejohn, R. B. - 82 94 Otway, A.J. 88 Prevost, T. W. Morphett, J. 124 O.ens, J. - 123 Price, R. - 113 M. 123 Owen, E.B. 98 ,T. D. . 125 Morris, T.G. 92 FM. - 128 Primrose, W. . 116 E. 117 Oxley, T. 96 l'rout, A. A. 96 Morrison, E. 95 - 110 Morshead, C.A. 114 Mortimer, T.B. . 101 RABAN, W. 103 J.L. • 102 PALMER, J. 92 Raikes, F. T. - 126 Monat, J. 92 Parbly, W. 80 Rainey, H. . 117 C. A. 120 Park, W. B. · 106 Ralph, W. N. 87 Mounsey, W.H. 91 Parker, R. S. 96 Ramsay, J. - 118 Mountain, A.S.H. 105 Parry, W. 92 Ramsbotton, H.B. 92 Moyle, T. 99 Pasley, G. - 117 Rand, G. . 118 Muffat, J.W. 82 Paterson, J. 105 Randolph, J. W. . | 29 Mullen, E.C. - 129 Pattinson, R. 86 Ratcliff, T.H. - 88 Munro, W. - 110 Pattison, R. 95 Rattray, D. • 109 Pattle, T. 86 Rawstorne, J. G. . 125 9 : G.F. - --, R.G. - 102 *, J. 3 - 96 W. vi Index to Her Majesty's Forces. Page , TB. . 101 --, H. . 87 , 94. , J. W. . . . . • 105 . . J. B. 2 . 1 . Page Page Raymond, S. 94 Seccombe, T. 105 Sparks, R. M. Reed, T. · 125 Sedley, A. G. 127 Sparrow, R. . 108 T.J.D. 88 Seton, A. 101 Speedy, J. Reignolds, T. S. • 117 W. C. 129 96 Reynolds, C. W. 85 Sewell, W. H. 129 Spence, J. 88 Sexton, S 92 F. 107 Rhys, C. H. 106 Seymour, H. 112 Spier, J. 198 Richardson, T.F. 124 H. R. 128 Squire, T.C. 95 Ring, W.F. 102 Shadforth, T. 123 Stanford, F. 94 Roberts, T.P. 92 Shakespear, A. R. 118 Stapleton, H. . 119 Robertson, J. - 96 Shanks, A. 122 Stanley, É. D. S. . 108 Shaw, C. . 107 Stapylion, G.G.C. 96 Robinson, Sir F.P. 109 G. B. . 108 Stark, k. . 110 0. G. G. 80 Stehelin, F. W. G. G. 81 W.F. 95 T. • 115 Shawe, A. G. 102 Stephens, T. Robson, A. H. 90 Shearman, R. 125 F.H. 81 Roche, E. 79 Shelton, J. 115 Stephenson, A. $$ Bloch fort. G. 89 W. 94 Sterling, J. $8 Rodgers, J. F. 116 Stevenson, R. Rofe, s. 82 Sheppard, W.C. 92 Stewart C.L. 110 Rogers, C - 100 W.C, 91 -, C. SI T. O. G. 122 Sheridan, M. 96 D. Rose, J. R. H. 79 Shortt, W. T. 125 - ·, A. I), A. 121 Shortt, J. S. 91 Stisted, H.W. $9 Ross, G.M. 124 Shum, J. 105 Stock, J.C. 101 M.J. M. 86 Sibley, C, W. 105 Stoildard, J. Rosser, C.P. 82 Sierewright, F. 94 Stokes, H. F. G. 86 Simmons, J 113 Stopford, C, P. J. . 104 Rouse, J. C. 89 J.E. 88 -, J, Routh, R. 86 Simmons, P. 100 Strachan, H. A. Rumbold, C. A. H, 102 Sims, G. - 126 Strange, H. P, • 105 Russell, F.T L.G. 112 Simth, Sir L. III Stuart, E. R. . 110 ; A.H. 103 A. W. lo3 Stratford, Hon. C, H, 100 J. 120 C.H.M. 104 Strong, R. H, . 106 Rutledge, T.0. 98 Sinclair, J. 110 Stuart, J. R. Ruxton, J.H.H. 91 96 J. P. Ryan, T. . 119 J. H, • 122 Sullivan, J. Skinner, T. 107 Summers, J. Smith, E.S. • 104 Sutherland, W, J. . 101 SADLIER, A. 114 F. W. A. J. 91 B. R. 103 Swayne, T. . 115 Sale. Sir R. H. 95 T. W. 82 Sandham, B. L. • 126 W. 110 Sweenes, J. Sargent, J. J. 99 Sir L. . 111 Swelenham, H, D. A. W. 103 Swinburne,'F. Sarson, J. 98 W. - 110 Swinton, E. G. Saunders, W. J. 123 L. 124 S. Savage, W. 102 H. G. 161 Swiny, Ilon. J. Sawyer, C. 90 M, 93 E, S. Z. Sayers, H. K. 108 R. A. 85 Synge, R. Schaw, J. G. 122 J. P. 82 Schoedde, J. H. J. S. 122 Scobell, F. E. 96 · 125 H. 90 TALBOT, G. Scott, E. 80 C. G. M. 104 Tallan, L. . 114 J. 94 94 Smyth, J. G. • 119 Taylor, A. J. 80 E. S. 88 J. F. P.C. 96 R. D. 98 J.G.D. J. S. 108 H, M. 124 Teale, C. S. 125 Snodgrass, J. 91 Tew, G.M.L. W. B. 115 Snow, W. 122 J. Me. Scullamore, A. 80 Somerset, Lord, R.E. T'hackwel, J. E. A. 82 H. 80 Sir J. Seals, T. F. 129 Somerville, W. 104 Thain, w. Sealy, T. 87 Souter, T. A. . 116 Thomas, G. L. Seaton, J. Lord 119 • 105 Sparkes, M. G. O 1 . 10 --, W. A. - W. 9 W. 9 • 1/6 • 125 E. W. . 100 . 116 . 1:8 5 . - 121 9 . ; A.B. 1 03 9! . 118 , T. K. 103 78 101 ܝ 117 J. W. Index to Her Majesty's Forces. vii • 130 9 · 116 . 116 9 G. 9 9 - - 9 9 - 108 Page Page Page Thompson, C. W. 82 Vaughan, E. J. 114 White, M. 78 W. - J. E. W. 78 R. - 105 Vigors, H. N. 95 79 C.A. 90 J. U. 94 W. K. 86 Thomson, J. B. 98 G. F. 107 A. S. 98 WADDY, R. . 119 W.G. Thorp, J. 128 Wade, H. C. 96 H. J. Tinley, F.E.N. 102 96 Whittingham, F. 105 W. N. 110 F. M. - 116 Whitry, E. G. 106 R. N. 109 Wahib, H.J. 130 Wigston, F. 99 Tippen, J. H. 88 Waite, T. 130 Wilby, W. 92 Tobin, G. E. A. 88 Wakefield, H, F. III Wilkins, W.M. 114 Todd, J. A. 80 Walker, C. J. lio Wilkinson, A.P. S. 96 11 G. W. 100 J. G. 126 J. A. 82 H. T. 90 Willes, W. G. 107 Tomlinson, N.R. 99 Walker, Sir G. T. 119 William, W. 96 Tonge, J. H. 81 Wallace, A.F. 106 Williams, T. 91 Tottenham, C.H. 1 20 Walpole, H. • 109 W. 86 Townsend, J. 81 Walshe, B. 94 Sir E. K: 93 Tranter, w. 124 Warsle, J. H. T. . So W. W. - 94 Traquair, TG. 122 Ware, R. . U18 Willshire, Sir T. 87 Travers, J.H. 79 Warren. C. Wilmer, W. 85 Tritton, J. 78 H. H, · 122 Wilton, J. 122 RB. Watson, J. - 102 Wily, H. W. 120 Tronson, E.T. 95 - 128 Wingate, T. 88 Trower, F.C. 86 Waugh, w: P. · 86 Wodehouse, N. 119 Tuckey, C.T. 114 Webb, G. G. 88 Wolfe, W. C. 109 Tudor, W.L. - 119 Webster, A, C. 114 Wood, H. 79 Tuffnell, T.J. W, 85 W · 109 Tupper, F.W. . 102 Wedderburn, J. K. 129 J. S. . 96 Turnbull, W. - 130 Weir, G. 119 J. J. 100 Turner, W.W. J. Woodwright, O. 110 - 116 Wells, H. 125 Woolhouse, E. 115 Tyler, H. C. - 111 Welman, H. W, P. - 98 Wright, T. - 109 L.B. . 126 123 Wrixon, N. - 101 Tytler, G.A. 94 Werge, R. D. 109 J, N. - 102 Weston, G. 81 Wyld, J. 79 UNETT, W. 78 W. • 78 Wynyard, S. B. W.- 98 Upton, Hon. G.F. - 125 J. - 79 Urmston, L.B. . 107 W. R. S6 Urquhart, D. - 109 G. F. - 107 YERBURY, J. W. 78 W. G. 116 Yonge, G. N. K. A. - 88 VALIANT, H. F. H.J. 116 Young, D. 105 · 11 Wetherall, J. 113 G. D. 107 Sir, F.A. 97 J. D. 115 Vance, J. Y. - 112 Wetherel, F. A. 98 A. S. H. · 121 Van Cortlandt, H.C. - 107 H. . 123 • 126 Vandeleur, Sir J. O 85 White, F. W, H. 88 VanStrawbenzee, C.T. 109 G. M. 11| Yule, R. A. 86 --, J. W. - 116 9 - 106 --, C.E. H. , T. - T.J. 9 9 INDEX TO THE Honorable Company's Troops, Bengal Establishment. Page . . - 240 1 • 165 . 270 . 945 • 211 913 195 9 - - 266 . 218 Page Page A BBOTT, A. - 145 Angelo, J. - 163 Barbor, G. A. 168 F. - 159 F. - 256 Barclay, J. 256 P. 246 R. - 208 , A. 186 J. 145 Angus, G. - 232 J. S. R. 951 J. R. 186 Anquetil, T, J. 216 , R. C. . 949 S. A. - 225. Anson, F. W. 192 Baring, J. D'O H. E.S, 248 Anstruther, R. L. - 166 Barker, T. B. Abercrombie, J. 147 A. J. 228 J. W. - 160 Apperley, W. W. 164 Barnard, H. C. Adams, R. R. 186 H. 146 Barnes, W. R. 201 Adlam, H. C. - 216 Apthorp, C. 215 Barr, W. 146 Agar, S. D. 229 Armit, J. 0. - 220 Barrett, J. . 173 Agnew, A. K. - 180 Armstrong, G. C. . 221 E. J. - 205 Arnaud, H. H. 208 W. P. W. - 203 Arnott, J. - 266 Barry. H. A’hmuty, J. 144 Ashe, St. G. - 220 Barstow, J.A. Aitchison, J. - 256 B. - 2.36 Bartleman, J. Alcock, C, B. P. 159 Atkinson, J. 258 Bartlett, H. T. R. P. 220 F. D. . 173 Barton, E. W. 219 C. D. O, . 214 N. D. 166 Alderson, J. C. · 256 Aubert, F. - 204 Basden, C. B. 935 Alexander, J. 145 W. W. 208 Baseley, C. J. 239 Austen, A, G. 148 Batson, s H. 165 G. P. 192 Batten, J. G. WC - 170 Austin, E. G. 146 Baltine, W. C. 234 Baugh, F. W. R. H. 179 BACKHOUSE, J. B. 145 Rayley, D. F.J. 168 Bacon, J. F. - 264 Bazely, F.R, W. 170 B. E. 224 Bazett, c. Y. J.S. 160 C. B. G. 177 H. Y. Allen, E. - 147 Baddeley, W. C. - 248 Beadnell, G. Alpe, H. 215 P. F. H. 264 Beale, A. Alston, W. • 201 Bagot, A. 189 Bean, J. D. D. J. S. · 242 Bagshawe, S. R. • 181 C. J. Anderson, J. 146 Baillie, H. D’O. 129 Beatie, A. P. C. 238 G. 238 Beatson, R. W. W. • 233 A, W. 244 W.F. W. 145 W. 221 TF. D. J. 159 Baird, A. F. 192 D. C. T. J. 193 Baker, 0. 145 A. B. J. 218 W: E. 159 Beaty, F. J. . 265 F. H. F. 266 W. 169 Beavan, R. G. G. • 189 , J. 262 F. R. - 166 F. M. • 239 Beaumont, E. C. F. - 206 R.C. • 181 Balderston, A. 190 Bedborough, H. Andrews, C. . !73 Baldock, J. 196 Bedford, J. 175 W.E. 247 Baldwin, R. H. . 178 · 146 Becher, G, R. P. J. R. B. . 226 Balfour. J. - 266 224 C. G. - 267 Bamfield, D. - 230 H. D. 0. Banks, J. S. • 207 G. M. 180 Barber, J. 235 - 214 S. H. . > . 900 167 145 169 165 217 268 197 235 . 256 . a 170 • 188 . • 169 185 172 936 205 . 230 9 269 -, H. M. C. G. A. M. • 235 Bengal Establishment. ix . A. . --, N. C. > - . 242 - . - W. 9 3 9 - . > Page Page Page Becher-, S. J. 185 Boscawen, H. A. 228 Brownlow, C. St. 189 214 Boswell, B. 176 Bruce, R, R. 147 J. R. 160 176 L. 186 Beckett, w. 183 J. C. 264 J. 264 Bell, G. B. 187 A. C. 193 H. A. 264 C. H. • 144 Bott, J. 165 Bruere, J. E. 187 Bellew, H. W. 230 Boult, E. • 266 C.F. 187 Belli, H. S. 192 Boulton, C. · 221 Bryant, Sir J. 172 Bennett, J. W. . 172 F. D, - 191 E. P. Benson, R. 227 R. - 167 Bryce, A. - 262 W. 164 Bourchier, G. • 147 Brydon, W. • 265 Berwick, G.J 263 Bousfield, H. 199 Buckle, E. · 146 Besant. T. H. G. 195 Bouverie, P. A. P. • 209 Buckley, F. 229 Betis, E. J. 256 Bowen, H. 229 Budd, 11. R. 163 Bicknell, I 270 H.C. 203 H. P. 191 Biddulph, E. 144 Bowhill, J. - 268 Buist, G. 170 • 219 Bowling, H. H. · 267 Buller, S. W. 240 G. - 219 Bowring, G. G. - 163 Bunce, J. 222 Bigge, H. L. 240 Bowron, J. 261 Buncombe, J. 173 Biggs, J. d. 144 Box, T. · 172 Burkinyoung, J.W. 179 Bignell, W, P. 213 Boyd, M. • 227 Burlton, W. 164 F. D'o 184 F. 1. 239 F. M. H. 226 Birch, R. J. H 191 H. 189 Burmester, 8. G. 222 F. W. 215 A, 173 Burn, H. P. 175 W.C. 179 B. 242 Burnett, R. L. 228 T. C, • 265 Boyes, W. R. 269 C. J. F. 173 W • 181 Boys, W.J. E. . 166 F. C. 146 Bird, L. S. • 198 Bracken, ) • 203 J. H. 190 H. L. • 222 Bradford, J. F. 162 Burney, H. 242 R. W. 178 E. 197 G. 2:2 J. W. L. 156 Brander, J. M. 178 Burroughs, W. 203 R. H. L. 268 Brassey, R. J. - 265 F. W. 191 Birrell, D. 172 Brett, F.H. • 261 Burt, B. 242 J. R. 185 G: A. 215 Burt, C. H. 238 Bishop, G. W. 245 Brewster, D. E. 236 T. S. 159 W. L. M. 220 Briggs, D. 191 H. W. 220 W.D. 204 Brind, F. . 115 T. W. 262 Blackall, R. 224 J. 146 J. R. 166 Blackwood, W. 233 Bristow, G. W. G. 245 Burton, C. E. 214 A. 233 D'OR. 147 N 206 Blagrave, T. C. 200 E. W. 175 Bush, J. T. 198 J, W. B. 248 JS, 245 R. Y, B, 239 Blair, J. 182 193 Butler, J. 177 E M. - 165 Broadie, T. 173 J. 229 C. D. 170 G. M. 226 Butler, J. H. - 268 Blake, G. 144 Broadfoot, W. • 172 Butter, D. . 260 M, T. • 230 Brooke, G. 144 Byers, P. 207 Blanshard, J. H. 237 *, G. P. 242 Bygrave, B. Blayds, T. 239 F. C, · 181 Byng, Hon. R. B. Bleaymire, J. 173 J. C. 237 E. D. · 172 Blois, T. F. 185 Broome, A. 146 Blundell, G. S. 225 Brougham, T. 147 CADDELL, W. - 201 Bogle, A. 176 J, P. 268 Caddy, D.T. - 244 Boileau, H. C. 2012 Brown, R. 259 Cade, w, J. 187 J. T. 159 P. · 203 Caley, H. F. 178 A. H. E, 159 W. - 243 Campbell, R. 221 F. B. 145 C. . 192 C. E.J. 209 G, G. . 261 Sir E. A.- 163 G. W. 208 E. J. . 160 A. 162 J. T. 269 J. C. 266 W. . 213 Boland, W. H. R. 181 Brown, G. R. 173 R. • 217 Bolton, T. W. 176 Browne, S. 240 0. 257 Bond, H. R. 222 B. 145 A. . 263 Bonham, G, W, 214 C. R. 234 228 Boutein, J. 225 S. J. 220 J. 227 Bosanquet, F. B. · 190 Brownlow, G. A. 163 D. 215 . . . . . > J. W. 9 . 179 • 236 2 227 > 9 1 . х Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page . . . O • 205 221 173 146 . . 3 . . O . . 3 . 199 J. W. 173 - 219 194 . Page Page Campbell, K. 219 Chinn, P. S. 225 Cooper, B. S. . 213 A. L. 169 Chitiy, R. 214 Corbet, J. 263 C. 216 Chuwne, J. H. 240 Corbett, S. 199 G. 145 Christie, A. - 147 Corbyn, F. 259 257 E. 146 Corfield, J. 175 W.C. 204 J. • 163 F. B. 194 A. 232 C. R. H. - 166 W.R. J. H. 146 R, 265 C. Cameron, w. • 259 R. • 165 A. H. --, T. M. 229 A. • 193 Cornish, F. W. Cantor, T. 268 P. . 147 P. G. Capel, E. S. 227 Christopher, L. R. 245 Corri, A, A. L. 228 Cardew, G. S. - 244 G. E. 265 Corsar, C. 258 -, E. R. 268 Clapperton, J. B. 166 Costley, W. R. C. 199 Carleton, F. A. 210 Clark, A McK. 248 H. T. 202 H. A. 146 Clark, C. 172 Cotton, H. 941 Cailyon, C. 211 H. 233 Coventry, F. 166 Carnegie, J. W. 189 Clarke, J. 175 C. 206 Carnegy, A. 189 J. 199 Cowles, C, W. . 956 W. 232 Clarkson, J. O. . 216 Cowslade, J. 175 Carpenter, G 223 Clarkson, .). H. 180 Cox, H. C. M. Carr, G. . 195 J. P. 218 G. 234 Carrington, A. • 198 Clayton, H. 164 C. V. Carle, W. E. 235 Clifford, G. H. 147 C. L. . 269 Carter, H. 247 Clifton W C. 241 Coxe, H D. W.C. 208 Close, F. A, 239 H. W. H. 190 E. • 206 Craigie, G. H. J. W. 240 Coare, G. 234 P. Cartwright, E. 231 Cobbe, C. H. - 231 J H. C. T. 189 Cock, H. 197 Crane, C. J. Cary, B. • 180 J. 225 Crawfurd, G. R. Casement, Sir W. - 197 Codrington, R. . 223 Crigan, C. C. Caglfeild, J. 170 ,C. 223 Cripps, J. M. A. D. 236 Coke, J. · 184 Croly, F. R. J G. 242 Cole, T. G.A. J. P. 177 -, A. N. 184 Crommelin, J. A. Caylbeld, G. - 220 Colebrooke, T. E. 187 G. R. 168 Cautley, P.T. 145 Collrins, C. McF. 257 H. B. 269 170 Collyer, F. 165 Crossman, C. ., G. 168 - 267 F. G Cavenagh, 0. 206 Colnett, J. R. 1SI A.F. Cecil G. - 186 Colquhoun, A. 263 Croudace, J. Chadwick, T. 956 Colvin, J. R. . 132 Croxton, W. Chalmers, A. - 261 -, J. . 159 Crozier, A. W. C B. - 268 Colyear, T. D. 167 Cullimore, D. Chamberlain, M. B. 190 Combe, H. T. 112 Cumberland, w C.T. 202 Comberbach, W. Chambers, R. E. 165 S. 267 Cumberlege, J. ---, R. W. 185 Commeline, C. 187 NJ J. 195 Comon, J. R. 268 E. A. Champion, w. 222 Comyn, P.J. 242 Cuninghame, J. Champneys, E. G. J.. 207 Conolly, J. B. 194 G, W. Chapman, G. . 210 Conolly, A. 166 Canliffe, Sir R. H. - 178 H. 261 Conran, H. M. - 147 Cunningham, J. C. Charlton, A. 248 Cook, L. A. 201 A. Charteris, W. J. H. 219 T. 191 Chauner, G. G. • 146 B. W. D. 230 Curling, C. S. Cheape, J. 159 W. A. - 176 Curtis, J. G. W. C. 225 Cookson, W. 169 J. C. Cheek, G. N. . 261 G. R. - 178 A. H. . 268 Coombs, M. N. • 209 Cheere, A. 248 Cooper, J. C. - 223 D'AYUILAR, G. Chester, c, W, G. 245 Dallas, A. Cheyne, G. M. - 267 G. 208 Dalıymple, J. Chiene, P. J, • 203 G, L. - 146 Dalston, G. Chilcott, J. 248 C. - 197 Dalton, E. T. • 900 937 • 186 159 -, R. • 181 N. 219 220 . • 185 • 195 268 970 . --, R. B. . 963 215 2:18 097 299 9 . • 298 160 160 W.R.- 180 219 211 . 946 . 178 - 197 . 190 • 169 3 . • ISS Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page . > • 241 1 9 9 213 265 . J. G. 9 . 171 7 1 T. W. O 1 O . 234 Page Fenning, S. W. 145 Fraser, J. E. Fenwick, C. F. 204 Frederick, H, 0. A. B. 234 Free, J. Fergusson, J. A. D. 166 Freeman, J. H. J.D. 210 Freeth, W. J. H. - 207 French, J. Fernie, R. 223 Frith, W. H. L. Ferrie, R. 187 Frost, H. W. Ferris, J. 194 Frushard, J J. H. 186 Fulcher, F. P. W. s. 186 Fullarton, S, M. Fiddes, T. 220 Fuller, C. W. Field, C. 183 Fullerton, W, Finch, C. . 231 Fulton, J. H. • 205 J. H. Findon, W. 258 Furnell, F. Finnis, J. 225 Fytche, A. Firth, J. H. Fisher, T. 222 GAHAN, J. B. D. A. 209 Gairiner, W.J. J. 197 Gaitskell, F. G.A. - 175 W 170 Gale, C. Fi'zgerald, G. F. C. 145 Galloway, A. A. 145 A. S. W.R. 159 Garbett, H. J. C. Fitzmaurice, J. C. 191 Garden, A. Fitzsimons, H. - 203 W. Fleming, F. 246 Gardiner, T. J. Fleniyng, T. F. 210 P, F. Flyter, J. 238 Gardner, R. Foaker, E. 266 E. C. Fogarty, G. T. C. 268 H. C. Foley, R. 189 Garner, T. Fooks, G A. St. P.- 224 Garrett, R. Foord, W. W. 195 --, C. Foquett, H. 230 E. Forbes, W. N. 159 Garstin, E. W. 201 J. F. W. - 235 W. T. J. V. 256 E. S. E. • 193 -, M. A. C. • 269 Gascoyne, C. M. Ford, G. E. - 246 Gastrell, J. E. J. • 162 Gaussen, D. C. W. - 216 Gaynor, G. Fordyce, J. 145 Geddes, W. Forrest, T, - 220 Geils, J. T. L. T. 214 Gennys, R. H. Forsyth, J. - 260 Gerard, P. A. 231 Germon, R. C. Fowle, C. 256 Gerrard, J. G. Fowlis, J. 181 M. A. B. Francis, C, B. • 241 W. R. R. B. - 187 A. H. Franklin, R. M. 214 Gibb, W. Fraser, A. J. 230 Gibbings, A. G. J. 162 Gibbon A. J. • 171 Gibbs, J. R. W. 219 Gibson, L. W. A. W. W. 257 Gifford, J. S. T. 167 J. H. - 159 Gilbert, W.R. J. W. F. McD A. - 219 Gilmore, M. W. Page 178 Gilmore, H. C. · 241 ----, R, S. • 147 170 J. 159 - 259 Ginders, T. • 264 - 229 Girdlestone, W. B. 220 188 Glasfurd, J. 159 144 Goad, S. B. 162 214 S. T. a. 194 · 173 C. E. 241 G. P. 175 213 Godby, C. 910 263 Goddard, T. 218 · 188 Godfrey, J. 217 229 Goldie, A. • 177 B. W. 261 Golding, G. W. 173 244 Goldney, P. 178 Goodeve, H, H. 200 E. 269 • 188 Goodridge, W.C. 269 145 Good wyn, H. 159 200 A, G. 169 256 Goodyar, W. D. - 232 Gordon, W. 223 163 R. K. 246 145 J.ord Al. . 175 • 263 W.C. 227 • 259 G. 224 210 · 190 182 203 J. 163 187 A. C. 214 J. T. . 189 212 P. 185 . 187 W. 263 - 243 169 J. 243 J. 159 T. 239 240 Gorges, J. A. H. 231 244 Goss, J. 262 179 Gowan, G. E. 199 G. T. 201 16i Graham, J. 187 C. 216 229 • 173 J. 224 . 145 C. 234 G. T. 143 218 J. 181 256 W. H. 159 187 R.J. 216 172 S. F. 180 176 W. • 207 W. 267 227 Grange, R. G. 184 . 173 R. 218 - 212 Grant, F. 266 C. • 256 P. 201 175 W. A. 209 W, F. 176 J. W. 21S J. . O • 245 • 233 • 180 3 . . • 260 • 229 . - 268 1 . . 215 . 115 . 235 • 257 • 201 • 263 1 176 159 • 260 . 196 Bengal Establishment. xiii Page Page . 169 9 J.J. G. W. • 203 • 216 • 172 • 209 224 147 234 236 · 166 • 231 2014 2:26 - 204 . . 9 219 210 . - 222 235 1 244 185 169 • 220 192 • 256 • 239 . 177 .226 - 7 214 • 206 . 175 184 • 206 C. . • 256 182 .241 . 177 177 .241 . 166 • 182 • 172 . 169 Page Grant, J. 259 Halliday, A. 258 Hay, P. 269 Hamilton, J. W. E. Graves, H. M. 190 C. 196 E. Gray, D. McQ. 191 C. W. • 200 R. ,J C. C. 292 • 210 W. J. C. C. 195 J. C. Graydoni, W. 190 P. S. • 165 Hayes, F. F C. Green, W. A. 264 T, B. 197 Hearsey, J. B. C. a. 147 G 227 Heuchman, H. P. B. F. 270 G, T. 198 Henderson, F.C. T 2:22 0. 167 C.M. G. WG. 173 C. V. 6. Greene, w. c. - 234 J.J. B. G. 1 159 Hammersley. W. F. • 215 Hennessy, J. G. N. 244 Hammond, H. 147 Hepburn, D. Greenscreet, J. 234 Hampton, J. A. 224 Herbert, G. E. Gregory, W. • 256 R. Herbert, R. A. Greig, J. 213 W. ! 205 C. A. · 267 W. 188 Herring, E. Gresley, F. 188 Handscomb, 1. H. 200 Herver, A. Greville, F. B. 171 Handyside, C, B. 9264 G. A.F. S. 172 Hannay, s. F. 214 Hewett, J. Grierson, M. . 263 Hannyngton, J. C. • 198 Hewitt, W. H. Griffin, c. • 225 Harcourt, R. 216 F. J. . 198 Hardisty, J. C. 236 Hickey, C. E. Griffith, S, M. 265 Hardwick, F. W. W. A. G. Griffiths, C. 211 Hardyman, L. H. 165 Hickman, J. P. 242 Hare, E. 209 Hicks, G. H.C. Harington, T. 165 J. W. Grimes, H. S. Harper, G. 238 W.C. 220 Grindall, R. F. Harpur, E. T. 165 E. W. • 182 168 Harriott, D. Grindlay, H. R. G. W.S. F. J. Grissell, J. R. H. - 220 Harris, P. W.J. • 244 C. 235 Grounds J. E. J. 166 Higginson, J. • 220 J. Grove, S. J. - 173 Hill, R. 242 J. S. • 204 G. M. Guise, J. 198 R. R. C. 247 C. L. --,J.A. 267 W.0, 206 Hillersdon, W. R. --, H. J. 202 J. T. • :91 Hilliard, J. Gullan. D. · 262 W.D · 173 Hinde, C. T. E. Garnell, R M. - 242 Harrison, F. - 172 Hinton, H, B. Guihrie, H. . 167 C.I. 239 Hire, S. J. *, C. - 256 Hart, T. B. 188 Hobday, T, F. 159 Harrey, E. 170 Hobson, G. B. Guyou. H. J. 205 Hasell, C. 222 Hockin, P. R. Gwatkin, E WV, L. 218 Hodges, C. W. C.R. 234 Haslewood, W. K. 172 Hodgson, H. HAGART, C. 226 Haslock, J. C. • 213 J.A. Haig, C, W. 179 Hastings, H C. 229 Hodgson, J. S. A. J. W. . 198 Hon. E. P. Hoey, J. R. W.R. Y. - 226 R. H. 206 Hoggan, J. Hailes, M. H. - 170 Hatch, G C. 231 Haines, E. . 160 R. C. • 215 Hogge, c. Hal lave, c. 20 Hatchell, J. H. 243 Holbrow, J. R. 219 Hathorn, H. V. 192 Hollings, W. C. Halford, W. H. 215 Haughton, J. C. - 205 G. E. Halhed, C. N. 228 Hawkes, R. 162 H. Hall, A. - 165 Hawkey, J. P. P. T. 248 Holmes, G, H. • 177 Hawkins, F.S. 212 W.B. J. • 182 Hawkins, A. W. 147 S. W. L. · 173 Hawks, J. S. . 181 G. E. J. F. D’E. W.. 196 Hawthorne, R. J. 167 J.G. E. 226 Hawtrey, F. H. . 211 Holroyd, G. J. T. s. 186 Hay, H. . 171 C. G, W. M. • 200 P. M. 244 Home, J. - 162 201 1 •, C.'S. 187 3 . 196 - 232 178 • 191 244 160 227 269 239 · 267 196 • 246 246 222 256 • 186 . 188 186 164 227 237 146 . 175 . 221 . 212 • 240 181 186 263 246 233 217 210 211 . . -, W. . . . . 9 > xiv Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page Page - . - T. T. . . 967 - 228 . . -, W. . 26 | Koe, H. 243 . 1 95 . > - 239 . • 2 18 . --, R. R. . Page Home, R. 194 Innes, J. 237 King, G. 239 Hood, J. 223 Irvine, A. - 1 59 Hook, F. A. 247 R. H. · 263 Kingston, G. Hooper, W. • 186 Irving, J. 162 Kinleside, R. R. 146 Hope, J. 264 Irwin, T.S. . | 62 Kinsey, R. B. Hopkins, P. 201 W. B. 184 Kirby, J. A. Hopkinson, H. 244 Irwin, H. • 204 G. Hoppe, J. 190 Kirk, K. W. 267 Hopper, W. 144 JACK, A. 204 Kirke, H. 186 E. K. • 247 Jackson, I. • 259 Kilson, C, A. A. Q. 198 W. 259 Killoe, M. . 180 H, B. 205 F. A. 236 Knatchbull, R. E. . 146 Hore, W. 199 G. 164 Knox, J. S. 192 H.C. 219 Knyvelt, A. Horne, W, G. • 229 J. 264 Horsburgh, C. B. 179 C. A. 205 T. S. 206 C. 213 W.J, B. Horsford, R. 145 Jacob, W. Hough, H. F. 258 Jamies, J. A. W. 256 T. J. 167 H. C. . 206 LACY, T, S. Houghton, R. · 286 -, M. 202 Laing, w. c. Houstoun, Sir R. . 169 H. R. 218 H. H. J. . 175 Jameson, W. 267 Lamb, Y. 995 Howorth, H. 213 Jamieson, J. W. H. 226 J. 261 Hudleston, H. 181 Jellicoe, A. H. 229 G. Hudson, G. I. 241 Jenkins, R. B. W. Hughes, M. 218 F. 22 1 J. C. • 236 C. V. 162 Lanıbard, J. 231 E. J. . 231 S. R. 174 Lambert, P. C. . 147 Huish, G. - 200 Jenner, B. W. R. 238 .178 A. 146 Jeremie, W, H. 212 Lander, J. D. 183 Hull, L. N. 190 Jervis, J. . 179 Landers, J. E. Hulme, J.J. • 224 W. - 2 16 Landon, C. G. .189 Hulse, H. C. 270 Ts. 245 Lane, C. R. W. .183 Hume, A. 172 Johnson, H. 900 J.T. Humfrey, H. - 256 Johnston, G. Humfrays, A. 146 F.J, T. .172 Larkins, G. . 151 Hungerlord, T. J. W. 147 J.C. 203 W.H 176 Hunt, J. • 196 F. 226 R. Hunter, W. 189 Johnstone, J. 260 Latter, R. J. G. 193 H. C. T. R. M. • 247 Jones, N. 231 LaToucle, P. H. • 232 W.P. . 196 Laughton, R. J. 191 ). 222 J. . 161 T. H. W. 1 60 Law, D. M. C. D. T. C. . 266 J. H. C. P. St. J. 185 A. 199 Jorden, C. .173 W. G. 227 Jowett, J. 268 Lawrence, G. Si. P. - 172 Hutchinson, J. • 259 H, 941 G. 1 59 Kay, R. D. . 1 76 H. M. . 145 A. C. 146 Kaye, E. 147 R.C. 247 W.C. - 1 48 Kean, A. . 265 J. G. 199 T.C. 263 Keane, L. R. 206 Layard, F. P. . 193 Huthwaite, H. 189 Keates, W. 248 Leacock, H. W. E. • 144 Kellier, D. C. - 180 Leadbeater, W.E. B. 27 Hution, T. - 257 Keir, A. 264 Leathes. A, S. Hyslop, M. • 233 Kemble, M. F. . 2 15 Leckie, T. Kemm, W. H. - 236 Lees, T. E. B. JMPEY, H. B. 244 Kendall, B. - 173 Leese, J. V. Inglis, J. . 171 J. 202 Leeson, J. , J. 263 Kenna way, G. 256 LeFevre, P. lunes, W. · 189 Kennedy, J. 165 Legard, W. B. J. 194 W. 181 212 Leigh, R. T. P. . 188 J, D. . 199 LeMesurier, H. • 189 Kent, R. . 192 Lennox, W. G, J. C. 235 Kent, G. E. 195 Lewes, C. J. O 1 220 Lang, J. 9 • 241 1 - 269 -- J. > . . 215 . W. • 917 . Bengal Establishment. XV - 7 > • 245 . 160 Lewin, W, C. J. Lewis, A. H. Lightfoot, s. Lindesay, H. Lindsay, w. Liptrap, J. Liptroll, J. Lister, F. G. Lisler, .4. G. Litchford, E. B. Littler, J. A. Llewellyn, C. --M, J.L Lloyil, Wici. G, W. A. 187 265 . 270 145 2:22 210 O . - H H. 197 224 264 . !! 190 2 9 O 214 2 -, A.C. Paye Page Page 257 McBarnet, G. G. . 229 McLean. R. N. . 176 • 206 Mcl'ance, J. 239 H. • 262 147 Mc('ausland, J, K. 244 J. 256 270 McClelland, J. 264 W. G. M. 163 McConnochie, R. C. 266 McLeod, D. 248 184 Meu ushi, J. 264 MacLeod, Sir, D. 2 12 216 McCullock, W. N. C. - 173 McCurdy, C. D. A 262 . 226 McDermott, W. R. B. . 164 • 176 McDonald, J. H. B. W. - 259 J. 235 D. - 159 J. D. 213 McMahon, A, H. T. • 189 261 C. J. 241 MeMorine, C. 145 245 R. D. H. 168 Machiuilen, S. F. • 166 227 - J. 246 F. S. 172 • 202 A. R. 178 H. K. 211 246 J. .224 A. L. • 210 J. B. 204 J. R. 256 A. • 214 MacNab, D. 223 D. 194 Macnaghren, J. D. • 165 - 193 J.J. 248 Mc Xair, R. 247 185 Macdonell, A. A. 214 McNeile, w. 2 lo 266 Macdonell, R. 170 Maconochie, W.M.G. 171 • 179 MacDougall, J. 193 McPherson, D. . 177 247 G. G. 259 232 Macfarquhar, H. 2 14 J. D. . 196 201 McGaveston, J. 201 Alacpherson, A. F. - 2 17 • 237 Mucgeorge, H. J. 181 R. D. . 1 89 265 W. 245 J. - 268 195 McGregor, W. L. 202 Macqueen, A. - 2 16 195 R, G. 257 Macrae, J. - 269 A. N. M • 240 • 267 257 J. A. P. 202 J. • 263 G. H. 16 McRae, J. • 263 189 McGrath, F. V. • 236 D. - 267 263 Macinues, J. • 247 McSherry, T. - 204 208 Macintire, J. 267 Mactier, W. . 164 213 Macintyre C. • 204 A. . 1 66 19.5 Mackay, Æ. J. · 190 Macvitie, J. • 145 206 R. F. • 223 • 270 Mackean, A. 26. Madden, E. • 145 215 265 C. 265 226 R. 191 Magnay, E. . 172 2:29 McKenly, H. C. 256 Magrath, J. 261 180 McKenzie, K, F. 238 Muinwaring, E. R. - 190 145 Mackenzie, J. C. J. . 175 186 .. 168 P. - 207 188 H. 173 H. C. . 175 183 A. 185 J. I. - 216 173 M. 146 H. • 176 • 232 G. S. 196 N. W. • 247 144 F. 250 Maitland, H. D. 246 • 201 Mackeson, F. 188 F. . 178 W. L. . 195 Maling, C. S. 212 185 J. A. 207 C. R. - 202 - 217 Mackinlav, J. H. - 237 Mallock, Z. M. 146 - 211 McKinnon, C. - 264 Mann, G. S. 208 - 208 Mackinnon, C. . 260 Nannin, F. E. - 190 - 172 K. 262 Manson, J. - 2-16 202 Melntosh, R. 261 Marley, R. 180 Mackintosh, W. 1 73 C. H. • 256 T. - 198 Marquis, J. - 195 • 207 226 J. . 175 190 W.L. . 217 Marriott, E. 231 - 266 Maclagan, R. . 166 Marsden, F. C. • 203 • 263 McLaren, J. 190 Marsh, H. | 63 221 McLean, L. A. • 241 Marshall, J. 2 35 206 H. C. H. E, s. F. Lloyd, B. P. Loch, w j. J. B. Lockett, J. M. J. W. Loftie, M. E. Logan, T, B. Login, J. S. Lomer, O. Lomer, W, H. Long, s. Loughnan, J. M. Loveday, L. B. M. Lovell. M. Low, R. J, I. Lowry, R. Lowth, c. J. B. Lowther, W. W. H. Luard, PW. Ludlow, J. E. H. IVA. Lukin, J. H. H. Lumley, J. R. Lumley, W. B. Lumsdaine, J. C. Lumsden, 1. D. H. B. Lyıliari, w. Lyell, H. Lyons, E. R. S. A. Lysaght, T. C. . 164 J. J. . . 163 - 233 9 - . . ;A. MACADAM, J. Macan, C. G. Macansh, J. McAnully, A, A. McAndrew, G. xvi Index to tke Honorable Company's Troops. Page Pane . CEAE 9 . R. . . • 250 • 212 3 187 9 • 257 . .495 T. 9 9 9 O 1 82 . > Page Marshall, J. 258 Milner, E.T. 204 NAISMITH, J. 263 E. . 2.56 Minchin, F. C. - 241 Napier, R. C. 212 Minto, W. 192 Napleton, TE. A. - 234 W. H. 191 A. M. McK, 264 Nasb, S J. S. 245 Mitchell, W. • 206 J. D. 256 G. T. 209 W.St. L. . 187 J. J. N. • 247 E. 265 Nation, H. M. 197 266 Mitchelson, W. 1 72 S. Martin, T. D. • 202 Milford, W. V. | 69 J L. 931 J. R. 259 Mockler, R, H. . 2 18 aylor, C. H. 173 W. - 226 Moffat, J. D. · 171 Need, C. T. 1 94 Moir. G. . | 47 Nelson, FJ. W 267 J DeW.C. J. - 202 Nembhard, J. F. W.J. - 183 Money, E. K. 147 Nepean, E. P.T. R. - 160 J. · 147 Nesbitt, N. S. 196 207 , E. J. D'O.T.: 199 J 217 C. M. A. . 199 A B. Masson, J. • 231 Monro, E. A. G. R. Master, G. W. . 164 Monteath, T. 209 Newhouse, T. H. R. A. - 167 Montgomerie, W. . 259 L. R. 193 E. P. . 146 C. J.- 189 Newbery, c. 169 W. . 167 J. 234 Newbolt, G. Matheson, J. B. Y. 226 Moody, S. 181 Newton, T. Mathias, J. 207 Moore, G. 233 C. Mathison, R. 180 F. 257 Nicholas. R. Mathews, H. W. 217 H. . 268 Nichell, T. 145 Matthie, J. 1 72 108 Maule, R. 146 U. Nicholetts, W. H. 230 G, A. Maunsell, H. D. 236 J. R. 199 Nicholson, J. 901 Maxwell, C. 261 Moorhouse, T. M.E. 209 A J. W. · 147 Morgan, N. 260 A. L. Mayhew, W. A. J. T. W. 188 Nicoll, H. Mayne, w. 211 W D. 196 R. G. • 233 Morice, J. Nicolson, S. 261 P Mayow, J. H. W. - 173 Morison, A C. 266 G. E. Meade, R. J. - 239 Morrieson, R. 226 C. A. 199 Meares, w, P. 2 16 H. A. 237 Mee, G. A. Nightingale, M. 232 J. 204 Nisbet, M. 260 Mellis, J. 258 228 Mellish, D.G.A.F. H, 170 Morris, A. B. Nisbelt, D, 194 Melville, H. B. 228 CA. 203 . 192 Menteath, w. s. Norgate, c. 243 Morton, W. E. 160 Menzies, J. 200 J. Norion, H. 260 Mercer, H. S. R. B. • 259 G. E. · 269 916 A. Noti, W. • 244 Moseley. G. W. 238 Metcalf, w. 209 Mosley, W. B. 170 Metcalfe, J. · 177 Motiley, C. Nugent, H. N. • 260 F. R. 165 Mount, F. J. Nuthall, T.J. 268 D. 147 Moule, J. W. F. 197 Meyer, A. · 232 Moultrie, W. 231 Michell, J. W. 223 Mowall, J. L, OAKES, G. N. 145 219 G. B. · 173 Moxon, G. G. W. H. 296 H. J. 246 Mulcaster, W. E. 2:38 C.R. Middleton, J. F. 206 Mullins, F. E. 186 Miles, F. A - 1 46 Mundy, C. F. M, O' allaghan, ! 208 R. H. . 175 Munro, J. 170 O'Conor, E. N.T.R.- 235 R. M. 179 , R. 184 O'Dwyer, J. Mill, J. · 147 Murray, T. Millar, J. . 20 . G. · 168 W.F. G. . 199 A. 26,2 O'Halloran, Sir. J. - 24 A. G. 213 J. 265 O'Hanlon. P. Mills, C. E. .146 W. 196 O'Hara, C. A.S. 232 T. 267 Oldftild, J. R. . 176 P. c. 210 Oldfield, 1. E. T. Milne, H. 195 B. H. • 217 C. J. Milner, F. C. J. 183 T. W. W. P. Oliver, T. 1 . . W. J. . . > -, R. M. 020 . . . - > . • 189 · 224 Ogilvie, 1 e. 213 . 169 . 159 H. 178 . 2 10 186 > • 205 Bengal Establishment. xvii . 9 . . . 1 . 261 ---, H.G. C. . - • 211 - Page Page Pahe Oliver, T. S. 179 Pew, P. L. 144 Prole, W. S. 211 247 Phasre, A. P. 181 Prout, IV. R. 250 Olgheris, w. · 147 Plubbs, J K • 215 Pughe, J R. - 221 --, A. A. · 147 Philips, J. 163 Pulman. T W. • 1 17 Ommanney. E. L. 160 Phillimore, W. T. 184 Purves, J. • 164 Onslow, N.R. • 164 Phillips, B. 1. 167 Quin, T. . 164 A. W, 215 0. - 230 RABAY, H. • 210 Orchard, J. 172 J S. 147 Radcliffe, C, W. 167 Ormby, W.C. 237 J. C. 234 Rae, G. - 266 Osborn, H. R. 228 Philipson, R. 265 Raikes, RN, O'haughnessy, W.B. 265 Philloll, J. . 184 Ruincy A. C. 199 Ortler, G. O'B. 186 Phillpotis. C. E. 215 Rainsford F. 241 Ouseley, J. R. 34 J. S. 240 Raleigh, F. 175 J. W,J. 212 Pirrey, H. J. 2-23 ,E MW. 262 R. 224 Pilkington, R. W. 194 Ralfe, C. - 177 Owen, A. W. - 185 Pillars, W. S. 145 Ramsay W. M. - 256 Oxley, T. 264 Pirman, R. 228 J. - 209 Pitt, W. 267 .V. - 231 PALEY, W. 146 Plait J 197 R. . 184 Palmer, N. 2.28 Playtir, G. 58 G. · 199 222 W D 207 H. • 2.27 T 201 Plowden, J. C. 191 RA • 209 Palegrave, J. H. 160 A - 281 Panton W. -:58 1.W.C. 163 W. 215 Paik, A. • 2013 E W. C. . 165 Ranken, J. • 259 Parke, Nd. 232 --., A C. 224 • 243 W. J. 172 PL mbe, T 200 Rainkin, G. C. • 265 Parrot, B . 193 Plunkett, J. 180 Ransford, J. 262 Parts, RB 270 Po klington, W.T. 212 Raper, F. V . 244 Parsons, JD. 24 Poelt J J. M. • 238 Palch, H. 247 Poyson, R. W. 221. Rallray, C. • 194 Paterson, F. . 228 W Q. 217 J 176 F. T. • 2.2 J F 221 T. 238 Paton, J. - 252 Pollard, W, E. 172 Ravenscroft, E. W. 257 G. - 26h Pollock, G. . 144 Rawlins, J. 144 J. S. 88 D T. 248 Rawlinson, G, H, . 145 A. • 267 RH 157 Rawson, J. S. - 237 Paitenson, C. 178 F. . 160 Read. H. E. 224 T F. 176 Polubele. T. . 2:6 Rearle, W. W. 223 H. T. 48 Pond, J. R. . 172 Redelse, G B. • 203 Pattisodi, E. 168 S. 220 Rees, C. M. 2.39 Partle, W. - 169 Ponsonby, G. C. 171 Reeves, F. C. • 183 Palton, R. • 191 Poole, C. . 259 Reill, f', S. . 146 Partillo, J. - 172 Pope, A 170 G. • 162 Paul, T 4. • 194 Polenger, A. D. H. A. · 245 M.C. - 183 Port, G. . 177 D. • 147 Parne, W. 204 D. 221 A. 265 Paynter, F. • 205 S. 160 A.G. 221 Pearson, J. T. 261 Portinger, T 2:28 D T. 227 H. E. 192 Povoleri, ('. W, R. C. · 184 Peckett, J. 159 Powell, M. 260 • 225 Peel. J. 183 2012 -H • 232 Pemberton, G. R. 241 Pownall. T 213 B T. 208 Peng ee, G. 257 J. W. H. . 226. Reilly, B. Y. 159 Pennefather, R. P. 163 Powdex. R. 144 Remingt n, J. 186 Pennington, R.C 185 Powrs. Hon R V. S6 Remington, J C. - 192 Penny, G, R. 18i Prendergast, W.G. 168 F. F. 148 N. 243 G, M. 218. Renns, C. 259 Penrice, G 147 Price, W. P. 175 T. 160) Pepper, HN 145 J 221 R. 221 Pereira 1. 144 182 Repton, W. W. 2.30 Ferkins, W. H. 192 R 241 R vell, J.R • 257 Perreau, C. J. A. - 2:32 Price, G. J. 194 J. L. 173 Pery, on H. H. 173 Pringle, A. . 164 Reynolds, H. C. · 214 Pesier, H. L. - 237 W. . 267 C.S. - 2:23 Peitingal, E. • 213 Prior, C. • 238 J, H. 227 - . 3 . . . 179 9 . • 250 J.H. . , J. . . , T. S. 7 xviii Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page O 0 247 160 . 197 7 7 O O 1 . • 298 96) · 189 . 209 212 231 173 210 215 188 267 - 259 219 172 · 191 446 %88 - 163 . 814 226 J. F. O "", G. P. O C . 268 . 193 261 . 172 O O . 915 O . 160 O Page Page Rice, J. G. A. 180 Row, J. 259 Shand, w. Rich, R. 243 Rowcroft, F. 175 Sharp, J. N. Richards, A. 205 Rowlatt, E. A. 195 Sbaw, R. Sir W. 20 Roxburghi, J. 213 s. C. J. • 199 Rumley, H. W. 269 D. S. 222 Russel, T. . 265 R. Richardson, J. L. . 226 C. W. 197 Shawe, II. R. C. J. - 231 Rutherford, w. 202 Sheil, J. D. L. . 256 H. 145 Shelton, H. R. R.E. T.- 236 Rutledge, F. 256 Sherer, G. M. W. 247 Ryan, F. M.. 194 Sherwill, M. E. J.L.C - 146 Ryley, J. S. G. 171 W. S. M. 264 Ryves, W. H. 235 JL. T. C. 192 Shepherd, A. H. R. - 163 SAGE, W. 29 Shillito, W. - 223 Sale, R. H. • 183 Shirreff, F. Richmond, A. F. 207 T. H. 160 Short, G. Rickards, E, J. 180 S:Ikeld, J C. · 179 Shortreed, w. Ricketts, G. P. 162 Salmon, W. B. 200 P. Riddell, W. 234 146 Showers, St. G, D. T. 234 C.S. 231 C.1. Rideout, H. F. 221 Salter, H. F. 171 Shubrick, T. Righy, H, 160 G. 178 Shuckburgh, H. A. Rilev, s. D. 2:36 Salusbury, E. W. 172 Shuldham, T. H. Rind, J. N. 211. Siimler, F. 184 Shum, T. H. M. McN. 264 Sampson, T. E. 196 Shurlock, W. Ripley, J. P. 172 Sandeman, R. T. 207 Shute, D. C. Ribarts, C. J. 2:7 Sanders, E. 159 Shuter, R. V. Robbins W. P. 189 T. 145 Shuttleworth, F. Roberts, H. C. 205 A. 218 Sibbald, H. R. 144 P.A. 195 Sibley, J. T. 181 Sandys, F. H. 210 Siddons, G.R. A. - 246 Sunders, J. 224 H. H. T. 167 S. J. 915 W.Y. W.M. 204 Saurin, W. Robertson, J. C. 195 Savary, W.T. 20 Sim, H. G. R. 244 Say, H. H. 219 Simeon, R. G. P. G. 245 Scott, W. L, L. · 162 Simmonds, J. H. C. C. 185 > C. C. J. 206 Simonds, w. H. L. 239 J A. 162 Simons, A. P. A. 147 J. C. 194 Simpson, E. H. G. 211 J. 229 D. J. D. G. 185 F.J. Robinson, T. A C. 244 T. 240 T. 8, 212 R. S. J. G. 239 G. E. J. 166 E. I. 167 E. W. S. A. . 193 C. Sissmore, J. • 201 Roebuck, G. D. 245 K. M, T. H. 265 Rogers, C. 194 E. E C. 246 F. . 270 -, R. 198 Skardon, C, R. Rolfe, W. A. • 268 Scrivenor, F. 237 Skene, A. Ronald, J, 260 Seager, T. W. Skinner, J. 204 Roope, 8. 184 Seale, R. H. 194 Sluter, M.J. Rose, Sir J. 237 Sealy, W. F. - 266 Sleemani, W. I. W. K. McL. 262 Seaton, T. J. 209 A 223 -1. Smalley, E.T. 172 Ross, A. Smalpage, 259 Seely, G., B. F.J. , 269 T. H. R. 188 Serrell, J.H. 264 D, 225 Sewell, T. Smith, E F. 185 L.H. C. G. 193 A. H. C. • 221 G. A. W. H. 204 Shakespear, J. I). 145 F. E. A H. 216 Sir R. C. 146 W XI. B. E. J. 173 H. J. C.- 196 R. C. C.G. 940 J. T. 193 Rotliney, J. H. - 268 Shand, D), M. 233 R. B. O 205 Sill, H. 263 181 170 . . 9 . 956 . 198 . 203 • 181 . 172 1. 229 231 201 243 O 1 . 198 146 Singer, d. s. 197 . 243 . • 242 • 235 179 175 229 * 9 - 905 . 197 . 166 183 5 9 139 1 > T. P. 1 . 191 - 160 Bengal Establishment. xix 2 . 261 . 172 • 194 • 196 • 261 • 146 • 203 D • 211 a . . 7 . · 225 Stuart, J; . 260 • 230 ***, D. ,, F.J. Page Page Page Smith, T. 189 Stevenson, W. Sen, 260 Tanner, H. • 256 s. · 169 W. Jun. 261 Tapp. H. T. 238 J. N. 193 R. C. - 246 Tayler, A. W. - 173 R. A. 193 Steuart, J. F. - 260 Taylor, T. M. 171 • 261 Steward, R. 190 H. 261 W. J. 237 Stewart, A. R. 239 W. • 193 R. J. S. • 168 W, J, L. 200 L. • 146 D. J. H. G. • 194 J. W. 196 C. R. G. • 171 T. 168 H. S. R. C. · 222 C. F. . 213 R. • 236 Tebbs, G. 207 J. . 261 D. M. 183 Teissier, H. P. de. 147 T. • 257 St. George, T. G. 191 Templer, (.. 196 J. C. 265 J. H. 181 W. H. 235 St. John, Hon. S. M. 164 Tennant, J. 144 F. H. 208 Stiven, W. S. • 258 Ternan, A. H. - 177 Smyth, C. c. 163 Stokes, G. W. - 233 Terraneau, W. H. · 198 G. C. 163 J. • 262 Terrot, C. S. J. • 203 W. M, • 159 Story, P. F. - 169 Thutcher, R. • 183 R. 146 Stoli, T. . 264 Thelluson, F. G. 203 J. H. • 147 Strachey H. 240 Thomas, F 247 J. • 261 R. 160 C, T, 189 Sneyd, C. M. 201 Stragways, G. 245 C. H. 185 N. R. 231 261 Sirong, F. P. G. P. H. W. L. 238 202 Stover, N. M. 190 J. N. 213 Snook, J. V. 147 Strover, T R. 267 F. H. 222 Snow, 'T, R, • 169 Struthers, W. 188 E. 244 Somerville, J. T. Sotheby, F. S. - 206 Thompson, J. A. 172 • 145 A. W. W.J. 186 2:22 Spankie, T. A. McD. 264 Speck, S. 178 C. B. 177 . 173 Speirs, A. . 199 F. 265 Spence, J. K. 194 J. J. C. 223 • 216 A. N. 210 Studdy, T. B. Spencer, W. 168 Thomson, R. L. 184 • 262 R. Sturt, W. MN. • 200 G. - 214 A, A. 180 160 J. . 259 J. L. D. . 160 W. A. A. . • 259 166 Spilsbury, G. G. 260 Spilta, C. L. Sullivan, J, S. • 160 R. M. M. 260 146 Spoitis woode, H. Sunderland, E. 196 W, B. 241 A. C. 211 Sutherland, E. 201 H. 164 J. 230 Spread, C. H. D. • 246 T. . 268 Spry, H. H. • 262 266 J. S. W. - 261 Stacy, L. R. 217 A. G. C.. 199 268 Stafford, W.J. F. • 210 J. 269 Thoresby, C. 242 Staig, J. A. • 266 Swalman, W. 239 Thornton, S. L. Stannus, H. J. · 190 Swayne, S. 179 ----, H.J. Stansbury, D. 234 Swetenham, E. 256 Thorpe, R. Staples, J. • 167 Swiney. G. 144 Thring, E. B. - N. A. · 147 Swinley, G, H. 145 Thullier, H. E. L. 147 M. • 249 Swinhoe, s. 247 Tickell, R. 159 Starkey, S. C. • 181 F. W. 147 J. 247 Steart, A. W. • 260 Swinton, A. R. R. S. Stedman, R. A. . 167 *, C. 209 ---., S. R. Stein, R. • 223 J.M. - 227 Tierney, E.T. • 212 ·, S. C. A. 168 Timbrell, T, . 144 Steel, J. • 263 Syers, J. D. 193 J. • 173 Sykes, J. W. 223 Timins, G. 208 C. E. • 235 Symons, W. J. 145 Tod, S. H. Sleer, W. W. . 211 l'odd, F. B. S. H. - 230 TABOR, S. J. · 167 E. D. A. 146 Stephen, J. W. V. 215 Tait, T. F. 173 Toke, J. S. 260 H. V. 19. Talbot, J. R. 233 Tombs, H. 148 J. G. • 182 • 173 J. Stevens, H. B.. A. C. - 235 W. H. 179 J. E, . 227 F. 193 232 Stubbs, O. - 184 Spens, J. . G. F. • 187 264 . 188 269 O 206 - 246 205 202 --, H. W. • 146 - 215 - 256 O 1 , G.R. - 166 • 215 . 180 1 Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page Page 166 • 166 . • 252 A.J. . 182 • 176 • 147 0 1 - . 3 G. . . . . 928 266 O D 2 . 263 245 184 • 161 • 268 208 . 169 Page Tombs, F. C. - 192 Tytler, J. M. B. F. 211 Waring, E S. S. Toone, J. H. L. M. 171 Warner, W. K. 146 Torckler, P. A. 145 Unwin, R. . 190 E.C. Tottenham, J. L. - 163 Urquhart, C. F. • 256 Warreu, G. F. R. . 167 F.H. Toulmin, S. • 237 VAN HEYTHUYSEN, J.S. 247 Towgood, J. 209 G.E. 198 Waterfield, J. • 219 Townshend, E. DuP. 183 Van Homrigh, H, D. 22! Waleman, T. P. Trail, u. 160 Vanrenen, E, D, 211 Waters, E F. Travers, H. M. • 200 Walt, A. J. D. C. E. 166 T, M. 225 Vaughan, J. L. - 195 Wats, E. R. 145 Tremenheere, G B.. 159 Veah, W. - 207 Watson, A. 162 Trench, H. LeP. . 209 Verner, J. E. 234 E. J. 733 Trevor, Rs. 163 183 W.C. A. H. 232 Ve.ch, H. 228 H. 191 Trimmer, F. 221 Veysie. W. 256 W. Trilton, E, • 261 Vibari, E . 171 1. W. M. 200 MJ, 147 E. D. Trollope, F. 236 F. E. 165 Waugh, A, S. 100 Tronson, R. N. 173 Vicary, N. - 173 Weaver, H. Trotter, R. A. 217 Vincent, W. 182 Webb, A. Troup, W. A. 189 G. F. F. - 182 Webber, M. C. C. 222 R. 241 Webster, W. B. H. 240 Von Meyero, Ba.F.A. 227 Weilderburn, J. R. 257 Vos, J. G. 265 Welchman, J. Trower, J. - 146 Voyle, F E. 213 Weller, J. A. --, C. F. 207 W. W. D. - 183 Wells, W. W. C. P. 197 G. E. 147 Wemyss, J. Truscott, J. 219 - WB Tucker, H. T. 182 WADDILOVE, G. M. · 198 Western, J. R. A. 169 Waddy, W. P. 147 Westmacoll, G. F. 211 T T. 168 Wade, J P. IN7 Weston, J. S. H. 205 H. J. 266 Sir C. M. 219 G. R. Tudor J.C. 2:20 Wake, W. A. • 218 CS. Tulloch, J. 234 C, H. - 208 Wethered, T. A. S. WR. 196 D. L. 222 Wheatley, a. J. S. D. 191 Wakefield, J. H. - 191 Wheeler, H. M. E 243 Wale, - 222 Wheelwrighi, C. . 147 Tulloh, T. 207 llalker, F. - 177 Wheler, S, G, R HD. 213 A. furnbull, G 260 T'. - 170 T. T. M. J. 167 . 146 Wish, W. S. 160 JL. 2.45 G. P. Turner, C. · 169 H. 267 Whish, M. B. J. W. H. 2ifi Hallace, N. - 176 White, M. Р. Р. • 235 S. R. R. D. V. F. T. • 162 T. . 177 (, E. G. . 173 F. • 257 C, H. F. 146 W. F. N. 248 II. L. J. . 9:25 W. R. • 2:25 M.G. 175 Waller, R. 146 A. G 267 Wallington, C. A, G. 235 H.J. G. 268 Willich, N. 259 J. S. D. Turton, J. 145 G. C. 172 Whilefoord, J. · 177 W:Ish, C. G. • 188 Whitehead, Sir T. Tweldell, H. M. 261 Warburton, R. 147 Whiteclocke, G. F. Tweedie, T, • 257 Warı, A. G. 242 Whittall, R. Tweedale, F. 165 H. - 207 Wiggens, E. W. H. . 168 161 Wiggius, E. R. T'wemlow, G 145 J. . 175 F.C. Twycross, W. S. 247 Warile, W. W 245 Wilcox, R. Twysden, H, D, 207 Warden, W, E. 197 J. Tylee, G. 2:27 Waidlaw, 1. 243 Wild, C F. 'Tyler, R. C. 212 J. 198 Wildig, H. P. W.F. 169 Wardroper. F. B. 199 Wilkie, D. ) . . 110 165 O - 265 . -, A. D. . 213 195 243 . 164 • 256 • 250 240 . 9 . 146 . J. . 187 . 968 226 . 2019 .244 . 178 20$ 7 Madras Establishment. xxi 0 • 260 . O 5 O 9 2 Page Wilkie, J. 265 Wilton, G. R. Wilkinson, C, D, • 228 Winboli, S. T. 166 Windsor, C. H.W.J. 180 Winter, F. Willan, J. D. • 218 Wintle, A. Williams, D. 219 E. S. 182 Wise, W. W. H. 241 T. A. GW. • 203 Wollaston, C. H, M. • 201 E, O. Williamson, D. 215 Wollen, W. K. F. A. • 237 J. G. Willis, P. W. 159 Wood, H. J. R. 168 A. J. 165 J. Wilson, J. - 173 A. 0. - 260 Woodburn, J. R, W. • 239 J. A T. A. • 173 D. T. . 176 D. A. 262 Woodhouse, C. R. 184 Woodrooffe, G. H. H. 178 Woodward, R. C. 256 Woolley, W. A. 238 Woore, J. A. 145 Worrall, H, L. W. T. • 232 J. T. W. 266 Worsley, H. T. F. 187 Wrench, A. H. M. • 182 Wright, C. T. H. • 231 J. A. Page Page - 178 Wrightson, R. W. 264 Wroughton, R. • 243 227 F.T. 182 • 233 R. C. 186 147 Wgats, E. • 241 - 245 Wyld, W. 164 203 Wyllie, R. 1 80 263 Wylly, A. W. M. . 168 - 168 A. F. • 169 • 236 • 193 216 YATES, W. A. 225 144 Yeatman, E.J. • 260 259 Young, F. • 205 266 T. • 176 188 • 242 • 183 K 224 • 218 W. . 167 259 W.0 146 262 C.B. - 160 237 W. 212 144 J. 147 176 H. E. 238 257 H. E. 166 170 J. • 178 164 J. N. • 209 261 P.A. 177 243 Younger, J. R. - 230 • 165 Younghusband, A. G. F. J • 209 - 244 Yule, H. 160 G. . . O , J. D. . 9 • 175 INDEX TO THE Monorable Company's Troops, Madras Establishment. Page 9 7 2 J.MD Page Page ABBOTT, H. D..... 266 Anderson, M. F. .. 294 Ashley, A. H. ... 296 Abdy, J. N. 289 W. W. 260 Ashton, J. T. 229 C. H. 226 J. M.D... 295 Aston, T. 297 Acton, H. 225 H. J... :. 269 Atkinson, W. H. 232 H. 237 Andrew, P. A. 295 T. H. .. 250 Adam, A. 279 Andrews, A. C. E.. 236 G. H. 277 G. 292 Ansley, T. C. 244 E. H. 254 295 Anstruther, P. 229 Auchinleck, C. H., 294 Adamson, R. 270 Apthorp, East K.S.F. 237 Awdry, J. D. 236 Aikman, W.R.. 243 Arbuthnot, G.B. 225 Aitkin, G. 255 The Hn.W 224 BABINGTON, J. 230 Alcock, G. 228 TheHn. H 225 D. 252 Alexander, R. 252 Archer, D. 255 W. K... 252 J. 227 Ardagh, R.D. 246 J. H.M. 283 Allan, G. 238 Armstrong, E. 286 Back, J. 229 J.S. 281 A. M... 240 T. 237 Allardyce, J. 258 R. D.. 235 Baillie, G. A. 287 C. J.. 234 E. 269 Baikie, R. M. D. 292 Alven, S. W. 279 Arrow, J. R. 250 Baker, W.C.L. 230 Amsinck, E. 228 Arthur, G. M. 255 E. 267 Anderson, J. 259 295 Baldock, G. 263 T. 225 Ashley, F. B. 230 Baldwin, J. T. 228 9 J. M. D. xxii Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page > ' . 0 .. 250 J. W. 7 Page Page Balfour, G. 229 Biddle, W. 260 Brackenbury, W.C. 265 R. 263 Biggs, J.P. M. 273 Brassey, 0. 245 E. G. 295 Bingham, R. H. 242 Bremner, W. 282 Balmain, J. G. 230 Birch, C. I. 254 Brett, Wm. T. 291 Bannister, W.J. 268 D. B. M. D... 293 J. T. Barber, F. 280 Bird, J. F. 257 D. R. J. 266 F. C. 264 C. M. 238 Brice, E. 229 Barclay, J. S. 274 258 H. S. 293 C. 296 Birdwood, Wm. I. 232 Bridge, A. T. 235 Barker, A. 234 Birley, H. 250 Briggs, J. 252 E. J. 297 Bishop, C. T. G. 263 James 248 Barlow A. 236 - F. C. .. 271 G. 229 Barnett, J. B. 290 Bisset, W. S.C. 266 Barrow, L. 226 Black, B. W. 229 Bright, G. A. C. 293 J. L. 230 Blacklock, A. 297 Brine, J. J. 239 Bartley, C. E. 252 Blagrave, C. A. 275 Bristow, H. C..... 260 Bates, j. 275 Blair, D. 267 Broadfoot, G. 269 Batten, S. J. 253 Blake, H. W. 271 Brockman, Hy. J... 255 Bayles, T. 287 W. F. 271 Broderip, H. 240 Bayley, J. T. 25 Blaxland, J. 282 Brooke, A. E. 240 255 M. 246 Brookes, W. 289 Bayly, s. 261 Blenkin, J. T. 296 Brooking, F. A. 248 W. 272 Blest, A. E. M. D... 292 S. 294 Baynes, W. H. 238 Blogg, H. B. 227 Broome, W. R. 284 F. W. 257 Blood, W. 246 Brown, J. R. Beachcroft, M. 263 Blomfield, E. H. 242 D. 234 Beadle, D. R. H. .. 247 Blundell, F. 228 J. M. D. 292 Beagin, W. G. 237 Blunt, R. J. 260 C. A. 242 Bean, J. H. 250 Boardman E. 280 Beauchamp, W. 292 R. E. 242 J. G. 241 Beaumont, w. 258 Boddam, W. T. 224 Browne, C. A. HJ 242 Boileau, A. J. M... 233 W. R. 254 Beaven, A. F. 274 T. A. 278 Bruce, E. E. 270 Beaver, H. 240 Boles, T. 283 J. N. 291 Bolton, C. G. 256 Bruere, R. A. .. 268 Bedingfield, P. 272 Bond, F. 228 A. S. 227 Bedwell, E. G. 295 F. W. 230 Buchanan, D. 257 Beetson, G. 293 C. 289 R. H. 293 Beevor, H. C. 248 Borrodaile, A. 225 Buckle, E. 232 Begbie, P.J. 228 Borthwick, W. 247 R. C. A. J. 229 244 Budd, R. 267 C. 236 Boswell, W. H. 262 W. H. Bell, R. 228 Bott, H. 253 Bullock, S. J. .. 234 Boudier, E. W. 296 Burdett, C. W. H. H. 230 Boulderson, J.C. 270 Burgess, H. S. J. H. 232 W. L. 264 Burgoyne, J. O. .. 200 247 Bourdillon, R.P... 278 F. W. C. .. 263 Bowdler, H. 256 Burleigh, H. L. H. 285 Bower, J. 263 Burn, G. Benson, R. 246 H. 287 W. H. S. 297 Benwell, J. :. 281 Bowes, F. 275 Burns, W. N. Berdmore, H. T. M. 230 Boyd, D. 292 Burrell, W. Beresford, J. P. 229 J. 296 Burton, W. M. Berkeley, W.M. 272 Boyes, J. M. 273 - E. F. Best, s. 232 Bradford, W. J. 234 C. C. H. 222 Bradley, C.J. 239 7 W. 238 > 9 250 9 - H. :::::::: W 266 275 290 7 246 249 248 9 J. C, v. D. 296 3 Madras Establishment. xxiii W. 9 K. C. B. 296 9 224 Page Page Page Butcher, J. E. 290 Chalmers, E.S.C... 257 Colquhoun, I. m. D. 293 Butler, C. 234 Chalon, T. B. 268 Compton, C. F. 283 225 Chamberlain, W. T. 267 Comyn, R. E. 277 J. H. 284 Chambers, P. 234 Condon, J. H. B... 237 C. A. 256 Charteris, J. M. 284 Condy, G. J. 262 Butterworth, W. J. 235 Chatfield, W. 245 Congreve, H. 230 Buttler, J. O. 284 Chauvel, T. A. 291 Coningham, H. 225 Byng, J. 226 Cheape, H. 294 Conran, G. 228 Cheetham, E. 283 Considine, D. H .. 256 CADELL, J. G. S. .. 225 Cherry, P. T. 224 Const, H. A. O. .. 283 A. T. 230 Chesney, A.H.M. 258 Coode, J. P..... 270 Cadenhead, J. 295 Chester, G. 297 Cook, W.J. 243 J. 249 R. 242 A. 243 Caldwell, Sir J. L. Cheyne, A. M.D. 296 T. W. 358 231 Childers, F. 289 C. J. 229 Callow, W.C. 235 Chimino, B. S. C. 235 Cameron, P. 225 Chisholm, J. 290 Cookson, J. G. 227 J. 224 Chisholme, A. 290 Cooper, F... 293 T. M. .. 244 Chitty, F. H. 275 M. B. 247 G. P. 275 Cholmeley, M. 262 R. 280 Campbell, J. 236 Christie, J. 234 A, 281 J. 272 Church, W. I. 255 A. M. .. 287 C. J, A. 252 Coote, H. S. 272 J. A. 227 Clack, R. J. 266 Corfield, S.I.. 274 T. H. 230 Claggett, T. W. 225 Cornfoot, J. 295 R. N. 237 Clapham, W.. 282 Corsar, J. H. 225 A. M. 251 Clarke, S. 290 Cotrell, C. C. 290 J. 256 T. 2:28 Cottel, C. G. 280 J. 273 A. 272 Cotter, G. S. 229 1. 276 F. A. 287 Cotton, H. C. 232 J. 285 Clarkson, N. F. 297 J. S. 227 J. R.. 278 Cleghorn, A. M. 239 F. C. 232 J.C..... 294 Cleveland, J. W. 273 W. 245 Cannan, T. H. 294 Cleinons, C. 255 R. 272 --, R. K.S.F... 275 Clerk, F. J. 238 W. E. P... 276 J. F. 252 ---, A. 242 G. E. 285 A. 257 T. 269 Courtney, G. C. 296 Cannon, E. 252 Clogstoun, H.M. 254 Coventry, A. 254 Cantis, W. 250 S. R. 256 Cowie, È. 253 Carfrae, J. 285 Clough, J. 246 C. 294 Carmichael, R. G.. 273 Clutterbuck, E. 273 Cox, T.B. 230 Carpendale, T.... 242 Coats, J. W. 241 S. 295 P.M., 247 Cockburn, A. K. 285 E. T. 248 Carpenter, T. D. .. 283 Codrington, R. 281 Coxwell, A. J. S... 284 Carr, G. 237 Coffin, I. C. 247 Cramer, J. H. 235 G. 251 S. S. 259 Crewe, F. 242 Carruthers, F. J. 224 Colbeck, H. 239 R. 280 --,G.T.S.. 236 Cole, R. 293 W. 267 Carter, G. M. 234 Colebrook, E. J. 292 Crichton, W. H. 273 C. 273 Coleman, J.G. M.D. 292 Crisp, J. 289 Carthew, M. 256 Coleridge, J. 296 G. O'B. 272 Case, C. H. 257 W. 252 H. 287 Cattley, A.J. 254 Collette, J. 227 Croasdill, J.F. Caulfield, J. 230 Collingwood, C. T. 230 Crofton, T. 287 Cazalet, P. G. 264 Collios, E. C. 297 Croggan, J.W. 329 C. HI. 264 Collyer, G. C. 233 Cross, W. 273 > 7 3 2 9 > 235 xxiv Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page i. 233 J. 9 9 .. M.D. . > -... 237 9 K.C.B. 9 > Page Page Crowdy, J. C. L... 271 Ditmas, T. 229 Eaton, J. m. D. 294 Crowe, R..... 284 Ditmas, F. 232 Eden, W.F. 236 Cubbon, M. 250 Dobbie, H. M. 265 Edgcome, G. E. 294 Cullen, W. 228 G, S. 279 Edwardes, F. 265 Cumberlege, B. W. 227 R. S. 274 Edwards, G. R. 224 Cumine, G. 227 Dobbs, R. S. 244 Elliot, G. 226 Cuming, G. V.M.D. 293 Dodd, J. 295 C. M. Cundy, J... 284 Dods, G. 248 Elliott, G. S. 230 Cunningham, TJ.M. 237 239 ---., W. E. A. 264 F. 258 Don, C. 295 Elphinstone, C. J.. 247 Cuppage, A 249 Donaldson, H. M.. 285 J. 255 A. 262 Donne, J. T. 296 Ely, F. H... 277 Currie, c. 292 Doria, A. 240 Emmerson, G. 276 C. D. M.D. 296 R.A. 263 Erskine, J. F. Curtis, A. J. 227 Dorward, J. 294 Evans, R. L. c. 272 J. 242 Douglas, J. F. 256 T. H. 225 Cust, W. P. 227 A. 284 C. 286 C. 235 W.MD. 294 DALE, J. D. 275 Doveton, Sir J. B. G. 296 Dallas, A. R. 236 G.C.B. 225 Eykyn, J. 250 H. R. G... 268 Sir J. Eyre, E. W. 294 Dancer, G. 230 226 Daniell, J. 251 F. L. 226 FABER, C. E... 232 Dansay, R. D. 265 W. J. .. 271 Fair, A. C. B.. 262 Davidson, A. G. 264 Dowell, R. 287 T. 233 J. 266 Dowker. H. 284 Falconer, D. 292 R. 292 Down, E. 227 G. A. H. 281 W. G... 294 Drayner, A. W. 278 Falls, A. V. 230 Davie, W. R. 251 Drever, J. 241 Farquhar, R. 263 E. 280 , J. 294 Farran, C. 265 Davies, M. 246 Drury, H. 286 C. 289 Davinier, C. 290 C. H. 262 J.O. 246 Davis, A. 236 255 J. W. 260 W. S. 250 Dry, G. 297 Fast, R. F. 233 Day, J. C. 252 Drysdale, W. 250 Faunce, R. N.. 237 S, J. A. 272 Dudgeon, F.. 279 Fenning, D. A. 226 Deacon, SirC.K.c.B. 284 Duke, T. A. 234 Fenwick, R. 250 Deane, C. J. A. 277 Dumergue, E. 262 Fergusson, H. M... 200 Deas, W. P. 2:26 Dun, C. D. 279 Fernandez, T. E. De Butts, A. 232 Dunlop, G. W. N. . 239 296 Dent, W. 257 285 Ferrers, E.J. 225 Denton, J. 239 297 Ferrier, C. Derville, F. 2:28 Dunsmure, G. 227 Ferrior, H. 266 DuPasquier, W. F. 290 Ffrench, M. T. 269 De Sausmarez, G. . 256 Durant, E. L. 238 Fielde, E. T. 245 Desborough, H. 241 Dury, T. H. 284 Findlay, A, S. Desormeaux, C. 292 Duval, D. 270 Finnerty, E. M. D... 293 Devereux, W. P. 235 Du Vernett, J. S. 235 Fischer, T.J. Devis, F. 236 Dyce, A. B. 235 Fisbe, N. H. 229 De Wet, 0.G. 286 Dyer, T. D. T. 271 Fisher, T. R. Dick, G. T. 238 Dysert, C. 282 Fitzgerald, J. Dickson, W.C. B. 226 Fitzmaurice, G.. J. 285 EADES, F. 274 Fitzpatrick, J. F. F. C. . 234 Eames, R. F. 289 Fladgate, C. C. G. 258 Eastall, G. F.H... 297 Fleming, H. S. M. D. 293 Dightou, J. H. 265 Eaton, G. P. 230 5 F. P.. .. M. D. W.W. 9 293 283 --, A. 265 239 . . . 271 277 274 297 . 248 H.O..... 263 Madras Establishment. XXV G. 1 7 . 9 .. 293 *, A. A. -- J. J. --, T. W. . . . . . . 9 Page Page Page Flockton, J. 294 Gardener, R. O. .. 285 Gordon, H. 273 Foley, H. 268 Garland, A. G. 225 G. 283 Foord, H.S. 228 Garnault, J. 282 F. W. L. 271 Forbes, N. 259 Garrard, E. B. 274 G. Dal.m.D. F. 225 Garrow, W. 244 296 226 Garstin, R. 224 J. F. 239 J. 235 Gascoyne, E. J. 235 Gore, A. K. 264 J... 294 Geddes, J. L. 292 Gosling, W. C. F. 230 Ford, L. G. 292 Geils, T. E. 228 H. C. 242 C. G. E. 296 A, A. 234 Gottreux, F. 236 B. 247 W.J. 260 Græme, C. H. .. 226 Forrester, W. 297 Geoghegan, N. 260 Graham, J. R. 236 Forster, T. B. 242 Gerrard, J. 280 H. G. 293 G. 284 Gerrard, F. P. 162 Grant, A. 226 Forsyth, J. 241 Gib, C. 266 S. A. 251 Fortescue, J. C... 236 ---, C. B. 266 J. P. Foskett, W. R. 245 Gibb, W. E. 249 R. G. H. 230 Fothergill, C. 0... 291 Gibbon, S. 277 L. 262 J. W. 264 Gibson, J. T. 261 244 Fotheringham, J. F. 234 G. 291 C. D. 246 Foulis, Sir D. K.C.B. 224 261 F. 276 230 235 C. St. J. 287 D D. M. D. 295 Gifford, J. C. 247 W. D. 285 Fowler, J.... 227 Gilby, W. B. 235 --, J. M. D. 295 Francis, P. M. 233 Gilchrist, W. 294 -, J. H. J. .. 285 Fraser, Sir H.K.C.B. 240 Gill, R. 279 Grantham, G. 278 W.C. 248 J. 294 Gray, F. 270 J. S. .. 271 C. 252 Green, C. J. 232 A, R. 225 Gillilan, T. 240 ---, E. 237 A. 280 Gingell, W. R. 296 H. 253 H. 226 Girdlestone, G. T. L. 285 C. R. · 265 Gladstone, G. 265 Greenaway, T. 281 W. 279 Glascott, G. 275 Greenlaw, A. J. 281 Free, G. 278 Gledstapes, R. S. . 251 W, A... 267 Freeling, H. H. 227 Glover, I. C 248 Grierson, F. 257 Freeman, W. R. A. 289 P. D. 247 Griffin, J. G. B. 260 Freese, J. C. 267 Glynn, J. E. 229 Griffith, H. 246 S. S. H. 263 Goad, J. W. 230 W. 294 W. H. 272 Godfrey, T. A. C.. 229 Griffiths, W. B. 286 Freshfield, J. S. 224 F. 292 Grigg, T. 293 Fry, J. P. 257 Goldsmid, F.J. 270 Grimes, J. 243 Frye, H. 245 Goldsmith, F. 272 Groube, G. B.B. 226 Fryer, G. 274 Goldsworthy, J. W. 236 Grubb, W. H. 230 Fullarton, C. J. : 246 Gompertz, S. 241 Gumm, G. N. 229 Fuller, J. C. 294 Goodall, A. .. 294 Guning, J. 252 Fullerton, J.. 252 H. 294 Gunthorpe J. 230 W R. 281 Goodwyn, W. F. 248 - W.M. .. 241 Fulton, G. A. 235 Gordon, A. H. 287 Gustard, H. F. 211 J........ 281 Gordon, R. 267 W. 241 HACKETT, J. 285 GABB, F. S. 287 229 Hadfield, A. J. 272 Gabbett, W. M. 230 C. 248 Hadwen, H. E. 276 250 H. 253 Hagger, T. 297 Gaitskell, E. 291 J. 266 Haines, G. 253 Gall, G. L. 226 W.C. 227 T. 244 Galwey, M. 234 R. 272 Haldane, E. 289 . . 7 246 • .. .. . . • C. W. . Gage, E . Madras Establishment. xxvii Page -79 ---, . 7 ... > . -91 > Page Page Jourdan, A. H. 244 Lascelles, F.G.J... 225 Loudon, J... 255 H.F.H. .. -34 Laurent, P. C.R... -25 Loughman, F. J. -85 Joy, R. A. -90 Laurie, W. M. D. -24 Lovell, J. -94 Justice, W. -40 Laurie, J. -80 Low, J. C. B.. -71 Lavie, T. -29 J. -81 KEATING, A. -85 Law, W. C. -56 W.G. -34 J. -58 Lawder, J. -92 Luard, G. F. -72 Keighly, F. -59 E. J. J. T. -84 H.P. -84 Lawe, A. -32 Lucas, F. B. -43 Kellie, J. -94 Lawford, H. -30 Ludlow, S. E. O, .. -32 Kelso, A. J. -25 E. -32 H. C. M. D. -93 Kempster, F. G. -41 F. -44 Lukin, W. A...... -49 Kempt, R. J. -78 Lawrence, A. W... -27 C. 0. -76 Kennedy, The Hon. J. -93 Lushington, Sir J. D..... -24 Layard, J. B. -57 L. G. C. B. -25 A. K. C. -81 A. V. -58 Lyall, S. T. -95 J. H. -82 Leacock, G. -86 Lynch, A. N. H. -54 J.M.D. -96 Leader, W. -40 Lys, W. D'M. -57 Kenny, D. c. -73 Lee, H. -91 F. B.. -80 T. G. E. G. -35 LeGeyt, W. H. JW.G. -48 Leggatt, J. -83 MACARTNEY, A. C. -73 Kensington, C. -49 W. -90 Macaulay, R. -58 Kenworth, E.W. -58 Le Hardy, C. F. -49 Macbraire, J. H. -44 Kerby, J. -95 Leicester, E. -87 Macdonald, J. M.... -24 Kerr, J. -51 Le Mesurier, F.M.D. -97 J. K. -27 A. B. -59 Lenox, G. -25 J. -80 A. W. M. -74 Leslie, J. F. -48 W. P. -76 Ketchen, J. -28 Lethbridge, C. -55 W.C.R -24 Kevin, E. -56 Lewis, J. -59 B. M... -87 C. -95 Ley, J. M. -28 Macdougall, J. -52 .93 Leycester, R.W. H. -54 Macdowall, L. -77 Kiernen, T. -45 Liardet, C. F. -49 R. -27 King, T. -60 Light, J. A. -38 Macfarland, J. -92 D. J. T. -25 Lighton, A. A. -70 Macgregor, J. M. -26 H. R. C. -:6 Lillicarp, J.H.A. -40 Macintire, A. W.. -30 Kinkead, R. -30 Limond, T. K. -27 Mackenzie, W. A. -52 Kirby, H. R. -39 Lindsay, C. B. -25 R. .... -43 C. F. -49 Linton C. C. -94 S. F.... -24 Kirkwood, W. -96 Litchfield, W. E.... -26 H..... -69 Kitson, J. -80 Little, R. R. -30 G.G.. -85 Knox, G. -92 Littlehales, W. B.. -87 C. R... -81 H. T. -61 Littlejohn, D. -83 L. M... -68 Knyvett, F. -61 Lloyd, w. -46 C. .... -83 W. K. -29 W.A.M. -95 L'Amy, S. -52 H. -56 Mackie, F. J. -59 Lackington, G. -64 E. 2 -91 Mackinnon, D. W. -37 Ladd, J. -93 W. M. D. -96 Mackintosh, W. .. -95 Lake, H. A. -32 Locke, T. -90 A.M.D. -94 -38 Lockhart, W. E. -80 J. -97 Lamb, C. -63 Lodington, H. J. -91 Maclean, W. C. -96 Lambert, R. -51 Logan, A. S. -68 - J. N. H. -67 Lancaster, C. -29 Loyan, G. -76 Macleane, C. M. .. -78 Lane, T. M. -92 Londill, E. B. P. -59 Macleod, D. -26 L. -52 Longcroft, T. C. -51 H. H..... -62 Lang, J. S. -83 Loriiner, A. M. D. ... -95 Macpherson, B. -30 Langford, W. -86 Losh, J.J. •41 Macqueen, L....... -25 7 Key, T. 9 5 7 A. W. .. xxviii Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page . ... . 2 . . . . T. P. O M.D. 5 - 9 . W > .. .-58 .. ... 9 . Page Page MacViccar, J...... 276 Mein, J. D. 230 Moorcroft, R. 254 Madden, J.M -86 Mellor, J. -55 Moore, R. C. Maddison, A. M. ., -85 Menares, H. -80 J. Maginness, R. -95 Mercer, W. H. -72 L. -26 Magrath, A. N. -92 Merritt, J. -35 C. W. ..41 Maidman, C. -59 Messiter, E. -74 C. A. -61 Maillardette, J. W. -94 Metcalfe, E. W. -78 -57 Maingay,J. W. -73 E. -83 W. L. O, Mainwaring, W. D. -35 M'Farlane, D. m. D. -96 S. -37 M'Goun, T. -41 Moorhead. W. .-96 Maitland, J. -29 Middlecoat, G. -28 Morgan, J. C. B. -87 Man, F. -51 Middlemass, W. -94 E. T. -85 H. -84 J. -95 Morgell , R. -89 Mandeville, C. -90 Middleton, C. H. -27 Morison, W. c. B, -28 Manley, R. H. M. D. -94 -52 J. H.J. -67 Millar, J. -78 Morland, H. Mann, J. -60 Miller, E. E. - 24 Morphy, R. J. .-58 Manning, W. J. -34 W. H. -29 Morrogh, G. M. D. • -95 Mardall, F. -51 T. H. L. .. -87 Mortimer, W. m. D.- - 92 Mardell, G. S. -51 Millingen, H. -91 J. B. -69 Marrett, T. -37 Mills, W. N. -26 Mortlock, C. Marriott, T. -41 Milnes, G, H. -66 J. ..70 Marsack, E. B. -48 Minchin, F. -90 Morton, J. Marshall, H... -68 Mitchell, W. S. -57 D. T. -96 H. O. -77 --- T. W. -71 Moubray, R. H. C. -24 J....... -81 M.Kenna, J. -94 Mowbray, G. C. -50 G. A. -53 M‘Lean, Sir H. K. Mudge, J. W. M. D. -25 Martin, E. -59 -64 Muoro, J. -66 E. -63 - -41 Munsey, T. A. A.... -24 G. M. -77 M‘Leod, C. C. B. -69 Murray, The Hon. Martyr, C.J... -96 - A. -26 P. O. Mason, F. J. M, -64 W.C. -65 -81 Mathison, J. M. D. -95 J. -92 Musgrove, J. F. .71 Matthews, T. L. C. -77 Mussita, A. A..... -91 Maule, J. T... -93 --, A. C. -97 Mylne, R. B.. Mawdesley, J. E. -29 M‘Master, B..... -75 Maxwell, W.G.M.D -93 A. C.... -71 NAPIER, J. -38 May, J. -46 M.Murdo, J. J. -80 Napieton, H. G. -43 Mayer, J. E., -95 M‘Nair, J. C. -34 -29 Neil, J. G. Mayers, G.S. -61 M'Neill, M. -26 Neill, A. C. B. M. D. -96 -35 Mayne, H. o. -26 M‘Pherson, S. C.... -43 Nelson, F. -27 D.M. D. -95 Nepean, C. W. R. -72 Moberly, H. -84 Newberry, T. Maynor, T. -61 Mockler, C. -68 G. K. -27 M'Callum, C.C. -42 Molle, W. P. -95 Newbold, T.J. .-58 M'Cally, Á. -79 Molesworth, A. ..56 -78 Newell, T. G. A. M. -63 H.T. - -30 Newsam, C. -89 W. B. .-81 -76 Molony, C. P. -60 Newton, W. M'Caskill, J. C. -65 -86 Molyneux, A. M... -35 Nickle, R. W. D. M'Caulay, W. H... -56 Monckton, J. E. -24 Nicol, R. . -68 M'Causland, H. W. -75 Money, R. W.T -76 Nicholls, H. J. . -60 M'Clellan, T. -68 W. T. .. -65 Nicolay, F. L. M'Curdy, E. A. -62- D. I. -40 -34 T. F. M'Donnell, G. B... -92 Monteith, W. -59 -31 Nicolls, w. T. -53 G. G. -62 Montgomerie,P.C.B. -28 Nightingale, G. --J.W.G. -95 Montgomery, H... -29 Nixon, J. C. B. L. 2 . C W. -93 .. 2 . . . J.E.. > . ... 1 .. Madras Establishment. xxis Pnge -86 > 1 - 9 ) .. > Page Page Noble, H, N. 275 Patch, T. L....... 273 Power, H. 267 Norman, E. -74 Paterson, C. M. D. -94 C. J. -72 North, R. M. - 24 Patrickson, J. -30 J.C. A. H. -65 Paxion, G. -79 Powys, P. A. S .. -39 Nott, G. -54 Pearce, J. J. -35 Prendergast, Sir J. - H. -54 Pears, A.C. -30 K't. -74 Nuthall, H. R. -58 T. T. -32 ---, S.G.. -48 F. G. -30 Pearse, G. M. D. -93 Prescott, W. -37 Pechell, G. S. -82 Preston, R. B. -52 OAKES, A. F. • 29 Peill, E. P. -67 J. -92 T. G. -42 Pellew, The Hon. Prettyman, R. -91 R. C. -75 P. T. -27 Price, M. -69 Obbard, J. -83 Pellowe, W.O. -47 Prichard, A. -63 O'Brien, J. .-89 Pelly, 0. -27 Primrose, G. F. H. O'Connell, G. -89 Penny, P. -42 B. A...... -96 H. H. -50 Pereira, M. L. -5] Pringle, J. M. D. -96 O'Dell, R. D. -60, E... -61 Prior, u. -58 Ogilvie, J. - .61 Perren, M. W. -36 Pritchard, H. -43 P. -75 Perry, J. -69 W. G. R. L. J. -68 Peler, J. M. D. -96 M. D. -96 J. K. 0... -97 Peterkin, J. -96 Pulley, C. -85 Ogilvy, P. -70 Peyton, G. w. :: -60 Purvis, G. j. -74 O'Grady, R. W... -69 T. -49 C. A. -30 Olipliant, R. -93 Phillips, H. F. -25 J. J. -94 P. -70 G. R. -26 Pybus, G. C. -57 Ommanney, W. S. -24 H. -61 G, W. -68 W. C. -79 Raikes, R. W. -24 O'eil, J. D. P. -62 Pniliou, H. R, -60 T. -34 O'Neill, T. -93 Philpot, J. T. -58 Ranken, R. -76 Onslow', G. W. -28 Pickard, H. -43 Rankiny, J. L. -96 W.C. -79 Pickering, C. W. -96 Ratton, J. -97 Orr, W. A. -29 Pierce, C. A. -62 Rawes, W. W. C. A. -32 Pinchard, G. T. -89 Rawlins, W. -35 S. G. G. -58 Pinder, G. R. -35 H. W. -65 J. -62 Pinkney, F. W. .. -69 Reece, W. -45 J. H. -95 Pinnock, G. -47 Rées, J. M. -34 Osborne, T. -75 Pinson, A. -81 Reid, F. A. -41 G. W. -54 Pitcher, St. V. -26 J. -96 Oiter, C. J. -74 Place, T. L. -79 Reilly, R. L. -45 Ouler, M. S. - 6 -., A. F. -69 Remington, W. E. -26 P. F. -82 Plowden, F. -55 Renaud, s, G. C. -34 Ouchierlonr, J. -33 Plumbe, R. -94 Rennick, R. H. .-95 Ontaw, T. F. V. -6! Podmore, R. -79 Revell, B. • -66 Owen, M. -73 R. P. .. -79 Reynolds, 0. --61 W. G. -46 Pollard, D. G. -82 P.A. -.73 H. R. -35 Pollock, T. c. B... -75 J. A. ..96 R. J. -27 Riach, W. A. - -47 Pace, H. -65 Pollok, M. B. -93 Rich, A. N. ..68 Packman, J. D. V. -95 Poole, M. S. -40 W. C. --81 Palmer, C. M'E... -49 -93 H. G. W. --82 J. F. -49 Poolis, C. -73 Richardson, D, ..93 J. E. -39 Pope, P. -59 G.)...66 Parkinson, T. -82 H. Y. -62 R. H. -27 Parlby, B. B, C, B. -70 Porter, J. F. -24 J. - .35 Parson, S.K.... -96 Porteus, J. E. -95 J. ..78 Pascoe, W. E. -47, -, H, W, C. ..97 -97 . .. . . ... • - W. 9 > -96 9 XXX Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. 1 - M. .. - . . C. 9 > 9 W. M. D. 9 > Page Page Page Richmond, J. 293 Russell, J. G. - 264 Showers, E. M. G. 228 А -42 Rutherford, J. W. -82 - E. S. G. ..29 Rickards, J. W. -56 Ry ves, T. J. -34 Shubrick, R. . -40 P. E. L. -84 Shuldham, A. J. -61 Ricketts, R. R. -83 SALMON, A. -82 Sibbald, J. -69 Riddell, M. -27 Sanders, E. A. .42 Sibley, E. R. -48 Sanderson, J. • -95 Siddons, H. F. Rielly, J. M. · -77 Sandford, J. R. -57 Silver, T. G..... -35 Rigg, H. -56 Sandys, G. -25 - A.C...... -39 Ritherdon, A. - .63 Sapte, W. -24 Sim, D. -31 Roberts, C. A. -64 Sanson, F. H. - -77 Simkins, A. W. H. -44 Sargeant, H. • •57 Simpson, G. E. .-84 Saxton, G. H. · -73 EJ. -72 T. D. -71 Scafe, W. • -62 G. W. Y. -29 Robertson, J. -44 Scales, W. H. - .97 A. M. D. .94 J. R. -27 Scheniman, G. W. -93 W H... .71 J. -50 Scobell, V. -55 W.S, -83 W.G. -57 Scott, Sir H. S. Sinclair, Sir J. Bl. -28 R. H. - -90 K. C. B. -35 A. -83 F. H. .-27 Singleton, G. -69 Robinson, A. . -48 A. N. -30 Sladen, R. Robson, J. M. D. . -95 F. C. -59 Smith, C. F. -89 Rochfort, c. • -62 J. D. - -30 H. G. C. ..76 R. - -92 J. Roe, P. M. D. -95 G. S. --95 M. H. O... -24 Rogers, S. --94 -97 J. T.. M. -35 S. P. -57 C. C. -40 D. A. .42 Scotland, D. -41 J. -48 Rolland, C. W. .-29 Scutt, R. R. -87 G. A. -89 Rollo, R. -85 Seager, J. -43 H.C.R.W.. -66 Rolston, G. R. .-82 Searle, C. Æ. . .74 E. -94 W.T.K. - -49 Sebly, W. --50 J. Rooke, T.S. -47 Selby, G. --30 F. N. -65 Roper, E. D. -47 Sellon, F. W. .-78 R. J. C. C. . -77 Senior, F. S. -70 H. R. Rose, A, R. - -85 Seppings, W.L. - -59 J. W. --95 Servente, E. --64 C.I. -94 Ross, H. • -60 Shakespear, G. F.-.61 T. T. A. -32 C.M. - -44 H. J. · -50 Sharp, C. W. K. -87 A. B. -76 W. W. - -52 Shaw, J. C. -32 Smyth, W. R. A, B. -92 A. -45 P. - -69 Smythe, T. Rowlandson, G. -29 S. • -51 Snow, Ed W. -59 M. J.-67 J. -95 -59 C. -81 Sheil, J. -48 P. T. Rudd, C. J. - -89 Shelly, W. -55 W. S. -55 Rumley, c. -27 Shepheard, J. -35 Southey, C. G. -83 Rumsey, J. W. - -79 Sheppard, H. D. -54- W. Rundall, J W. - -32 Sherman, J. S. -48 Sparks, T. P. Russell, Sir J. J. W. -92 Sparrow, R. W. K. C. B. -24 Sherwood, J. J. -91 Spence, R. -80 F. T. L. G. -24 Shewan, A. -94 Speid, J. B. -69 - -53 Shirreff, R. -37 Spottiswoode, M.C. -59 F.. . -57 - Æ. -28 Spry, P. L. A. --81 Shirreffs, A. -56 St. Aubyn, E. P. .. ...45 G, W. -24 Short, E. H. --64 Stafford, c. -86 9 -96 9 > - - MR T. > - 1 W. 7 Madras Establishment. xxxi . 7 O -30 1 9 9 C. W. -58 O 1 - 9 - 7 Page Page Page Stanbrough, H. 296 Supple, J. • 295 Trapaud, J. L. P. - 268 Stanly, W. D. -64 Surtees, A. S. - -76 Travers, E. A. B. -37 Stannus, T. A. -49 Sutherland, R. · -92 Tremlett, H. A. -52 Stapleton, G. J. -45 Sutleffe, R. R. -97 Trevor, S. S. • .29 Starkey, J. W. C. • -36 Sweet, H. B. -74 Trewman, J. T. -53 St. Clair, J. L. -52 Swinton, W. -41 F. R. . -35 St. John, H. B. T. -36 Sword, J. S. -83 Tribe, E. S. •.96 Steel, S. W. C. B. -48 Tripe, L. · .47 Steele, A, L -41 Tait, J. -97 - A. ..86 T. W. -91 Talman, S. -36 Triscott, C. P. Y. . -78 Steer, H. R. H. . -91 Tanner, W. H. -77 Trist, J. F. . -76 Steinson, P. -53 Taplin, T. .93 Trotter, A. • -70 Stephenson, J. L. -34 Tapp, J. H. -58 Tucker, G. J. B. . -24 Stevens, W B. H. T. -49 Tulloch, A. C. B. -46 J. F. -53 Taylor, H. -24 G. A. .68 J. B. - -96 C. -28 H. W. -87 A. .-53 H. G. A. -45 -34 C. B. .-74 D. -35 Stevenson, E. B. . -81 R. -24 Turner, C. ..70 D. H. -47 W. -42 Turquand, T. A. •-38 J. F. J., -61 C. W. -48 Twedie, M. -39 Steuart, G.M. -87 H. C. -35 Tweedie, W. J. . -70 Steward, F. T. . -24 G. E. . -53 A. L. -71 Stewart, T. 46 СР. - -75 A. -30 V. C. -38 UNDERWOOD, J.J. - -32 H. -37 C. -83 G. A. -32 J. -42 C. -82 Usher, E. . -86 J. -84 S. -82 T. W. -95 R. -84 VALLANCEY, G. P.--71 Stockwell, T. -63 Taynton, E. G. -43 Vardon, F. C. -30 Stoddard, J. F. -58 Templer, F. -86 -32 Stokes, J. D. -53 Temple, J. . -47 - -60 S. -92 Thatcher, H. · -78 Vaughan, R. W. •-67 J. W. -66 Thomas, J. -91 Vincent, E. Stone, W. H. -79 Thompson, H. A. - -85 Vine, W. -26 R. -24 T. . -69 Vigne, F. -41 Strachey, L.M.V. -36 T. H. -44 Vivian, R. H. -53 T. W. -64 F. H. -47 - R. W. M. - -63 Strahan, W. -70 H, P. -50 Vosper, J. H. A. -.66 W. A. O. -43 Thomson, G. - -93 Strange, W. R. -24 P. -35 A. -27 Thornhill, A, R. -26 WADDEL, C, D. .-30 Straton, F. -27 Thorpe, R. - -62 Wade, H, C. .-30 Stratton, F. - 45 Timins, J. K. B. -30 Wahab, G. .-55 Strettell, J. W. .24. C. . -96 G. L. ..68 -55 Todd, F. W. -49 . -34 Stuart, E. R. -66 Tod, A. -77 C. .51 J. C. G -77 Tolson, G. B -45 W. M. -79 J. J. O -40 Tombs, J. W. -33 J. H. --73 S. - -90 Tomes, E. -49 Wakeman, H. --77 Stubbs, J. W. -81 ----, R. -76 Walker, W.L. .-25 Studdy, F. . -26 Tottenham, A. .-25 H. -35 W. R. -50 Touch, W. -37 D. --90 Sturrock, D. M. D. - -94 Tower, F. --80 C. A. . -39 G. -46 - G. W. --71 A. de N. -41 Sullivan, B.S. -25 Trail, D. -95 H, .49 - . M. D 9 -MS. -, F. .-97 - - - D. J. C. B. 3 > 9 2 . xxxii Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. Page 2 P O 9 2 9 . . . P. . , M. B. - 7 • -36 ..91 . 7 - Page Page Walker, A. 234 Western, R. - 279 Wood, H. W. . 239 C, E. M. -65 Whelpdale, W. W. -54 P. R. J. . 39 E. -82 Whinyales, F. F. -28 M. Wallace, J. -81 Whish, C. W. F. -78 A. J. C. • -27 Whistler, J. -26 Woodburn, A. -88 R. . -69 G. W. -54 Wordfall, G. A. --35 T. K. -29 C. R. T. - -79 White, F. B. -51 Woodhouse, W. .-54 Waller, s. -34 J. . -31 Woodland, f. -36 Walpole, H. - -40 T. - .94 Woods, W. G. .-26 H. E. .-51 M. -53 Woodward, J. Walsh, T. P. -87 J. -55 - Wapshare, W. H. -45 W. -69 Wooley, R. . -63 Warl, W. ..29 W. G. • -70 Wormsley, W. H. - -97 •-61 H. P. -82 Worsley, E. - 35 J. •-91 J. -92 Worster, W. K. A. - 34 Whitelock, r. W. - -97 Woulfe, J. Warden, F. F. -35 Whitlock, J. - -27 Wright, J. H. Wardroper, E. -72 G. C. -71 J. Warre, T. M. .44 Wight, R. M. D. -92 G. Warren, C. H. -60 A.C. -43 J. Warrington, J. N. - -34 Wilde, A. T. -54 J. Waterman, E. F. -60 Wilder, C. P. -26 Wroughton, N. Waters, H. S. -25 Wilſord, C. -75 Wylie, J. M. D. Watkins, W. -62 Wilkinson, G. S. J. S. Watson, S. T. -25 J. •-79 J. L. W. --78 J. . -93 Wynch, J. G. H.G. -54 A. -97 Wyndham, A. A. W. -56 Will, A. J. -94 A. Watt, R. P. K. -78 W llan, C. B. D. -53 Wynter, D. T. W. 45 Williains, B. --92 Watts, M. .-29 J. E. -65 W. H, -40 W. L. G. -38 YALDWYN, J. . -56 H. H. -61 W.T. -67 Yarde, W. G. J. P. -62 J. -95 H. T. -63 Waugh, G. -67 Williamson, W. -65 Yates, R. H. F. -82 Willis, E. -63 C. -81 Webb, E. A. H. -73 Wilson, F. W. -34 G. H. S. Webster, T. -58 J. -67 Yolland, R. S. Weir, R. D. -34 J. - -35 Young, P. B. .-54 Welch, W. H. . -61 J. -61 F. . -59 Welland, F. • -75 C. H. -67 D. S. Welsh, J. -43 W. J. --78 S. A. G. .-94 J. -97 R. S. -87 E. ..97 West, R. -77 Wilton, G. .-71 C, W. -41 Winbolt, J. H. -86 A.G. W. H. -34 Winfield, C. H. 53 S. D. ..78 Western, J. -97 Wood, E. G. -26 Younghusband, R.. -54 W.C. -67 ---, J. -35 Youngson, W. - - . . 0 > > 9 - > . - . 5 -, A. R. > - ..19 9 INDEX TO THE Monotable Company's Troops, Bombay Establishment. Page . W. W. . 9 ... 5 Page Page ADAMS, H. A. 318 Barr, J. T. 342 Boye, W. J...... 358 W. S........ 345 Barra, G. F. 338 Boyrenson, T. A. ... 367 Agar, E. W. 3:38 Barrington, W. B.... 363 Brabazon. H. L...... 332 Aitchison, A. N. 343 Barrow, C. M......... 35+ Bradley, W. H. 366 A. 358 Bartlet, A. F.......... 361 Brasneil, C. E. 342 Aitken, J. L... 336 Bate, J. C............. 346 Brassey. W. 335 W, D. 332 E. 312 Brett, H. W. 332 Aked, J. S...... 339 Batho, J. E. 367 R. B. 332 Alcock, A. J.......... 340 Battersbee, E. G. 367 W. 331 Alexander, J.......... 3:37 Battye, M. J. 356 Brickwell, T. 265 Allender, G. 367 Baugh, ('. R. 34+ Briggs, P. M.. 35+ Aniel, P. C. N....... 336 Baxter, R. T. C...... 367 Brodie, W. M. 342 Anderson, J. 366 Bayly, R. A. 340 Brooks, G. B... 355 J. 352 Bayne, C. H. 339 J. 335 G. S. A.., 353 Baynes. E. 355 Broskenridge, W. 367 W. A. 33+ Beale, E. C. 357 Brown, G. S. 351 W.C. 333 Bedford, J........ 337 S. W..... 361 334 Behan, R. J. 365 L. 340 W. F. 346 Bell, H. W. B. 333 R. 364 Anderton, J. A.... 3:54 D, C. 363 W. 347 Andrews, E. 342 G. K.. 332 Browne, G. St. B. 342 Apthorp, F. 355 Bellasis, E, H. 333 J. D. 315 Arbuckle, w.. 366 G, H. 359 W. J.......... 342 Arnott, A. 364 J. B.......... 314 Bruce, C. J... 332 F. S. 365 Benbow, C..... 350 --, F. F. 347 Arrow, W. G. 344 Bird, J. 363 Buddo, D. 365 Ash, H. 355 Birdwood, C. 338 Bulkley, R. 355 , J. 302 Black, C. 366 Burke, J. 333 Ashburner, G. E. 343 Blake, E. S. 3:32 Born, A... 365 W. 336 342 burnes, J. 364 Ashton, H ............ 345 Blenkins, W. B. G. 341 Burnett, W. 334 Atkinson. J. J. 366 Blood, C............... 331 Burr, F. 356 Auld, J. W. 361 R... 346 Burrows, J. 349 Austen, A. 343 Bloxham, C. R. O.... 366 Bury, H. 336 Ayrton, F. 332 Bourchier, C. J....... 335 D. 360 BABINGTON, W.F... 366 J. 365 CAHILL, T. S. 364 Bagnold, M. E. 350 Bourdillon, O..... 360 Cahusac, W. L. 346 Bailey, B. 332 Bowdich, E. H. S.... 361 Cameron, D. 334 Bainbridge, G. H. 335 Bowen, E. 361 W. L. 367 Bainbrigge, R. ...... 358 Bowie, W. 367 Campbell, A. P...... 335 Baines, G. 366 Bowles, J. E. 358 A. 367 Baldwin, S. C...... 355 Bowstead, J. 365 E. 355 Ballantine, F. D. 313 Boyce. A. R. 346 N. 346 Ballingal, W.......... 359 Boyd, D... 346 J. D. 366 Barker, A. P.. ... 356 G. 337 W. 335 Barnewall, C. H...... 335 J. 364 J. 365 Barr, D. 356 Boye, C. H. 362 Candy, T. 355 Barr, H. J........... 335 H. 357 Cannon, T........... 367 . --, H. M. ......... .. ... 2 9 Bombay Establishment, XXXV Page 339 ... ... 345 ... 333 ... Page 354 Hughes, W.G. C. 334 Hume, J. G. 333 Hunt, A. P. 365 Hunter, C. 354 J. 357 R. H. A. 333 W. F. 337 Hutt, G. 351 ... 339 . ... . . 365 335 331 ... 337 366 364 ... 335 تانتان 9 359 334 9 ... 345 , W. H. 353 IMPEY, E. 338 Inglis, J. 365 JACKSON, C. F. 343 332 336 T. 340 W. H. 333 Jacob, G. L. 365 H. 367 H. E. 335 J. 347 W. 333 W. S. 335 James, C. B. 357 346 Jameson, D. P. 350 G. J. 335 3-47 337 354 ... ... 353 332 331 333 340 W..... H. ... 353 9 .. . . J. St.C.... 313 339 353 342 333 ... ... 357 ... ... 364 2 Page Gell, J. S. 345 Hancock, H. Gibb, H. ................. 364 Hardy, E. A. Gibbon, J 338 Harris, W. C. Giberne, C......... 351 Harrison, F. H. 332 Hart, E. H. Gibson, A. 364 L. W. G. W. 331 P. L. Gidley, T. 346 J. V. W. Gilbert, W. 356 Hartley, J. C. Gillanders, J. B. M. 335 Harvey, F. W. P. 366 Haselwood, A M. Glasse, H. D...... 366 Hathorn, H. P. J. M. .... 332 Hawkins, A, S. Glen, J. 363 J. R. Glennie, E. 360 Hay, W. F. Godfrey, T. u. 355 Heath, J. C. 352 Hebbert, W. G. Goodenough, R. H. . 361 Heddle, J. F. Goodfellow, J. F. 355 Hefferman, N. S. 333 Hendley, J. L. W. B. . 333 Hennell, S. Goodwin, R. T... 351 Herne, G. E. Gordon, J. G. 335 Hervey, C. R. W. M. F. 335 Hessman, A. J.S.. 358 Hewett, W. S. Graham, D. C. 354 Heyman, H. T. H. 364 Hibbert, J. R. W. 333 Hickes, F. A. T. W. Grant, C. F. 338 Hill, J. E. ... 338 Hoare, J. L. P. G. M. 366 Hobson, A. H. 333 J. 331 Hockin, A. P. J. P. 333 P W. Graves, J. C. 336 Hodgkinson, C. Gray, W. ... 364 Hodgson, W. W. B. 361 C. P. 365 C. C. Green, E. H. B. E. A. ... 356 Hoey, J. F. G. ... 342 Hogg, A. ; W. H. R. 354 C. R. Grierson, D. R. P. Griffiths, J. G. 331 Holbrow, W. F. Grimes, G. R. 337 Holl, F. C. Groube, F. J. 348 Holland, J. Guerin, E. A. ... 335 Holmes, J. Honner, A. C. Hadley, H. 365 C. F. Hagart, c. 333 R. W. Hale, J. 357 Hope, J. W. Halkett, c. 344 Horne, R. W. Hall, A. 360 Horwood, W, S. Hallett, J. D. 338 Hosken, R. Hallum, E. ... 345 Hough, L. S. Halswell, E, D. ... 341 Howison, J. Hamerton, A. ... 350 Hudson, H. Hamilton, J. 332 Hughes, R. M. J. J. 365 R. A, J. Hammond, R. H. M, 355 S. ... 366 C. W, J. 9 9 337 333 334 338 364 345 336 341 338 335 347 335 357 333 366 351 ... ... 356 ... ... 346 J. T. 332 T. L. 333 Jephson, S. W. 348 Jermyn, T. 355 Jervis, G. R. 333 John, R. St. 362 Johnson, C. 365 H. 341 Johnston, J. G. J. 332 Johnstone, R. M. 331 C. C. 336 Jones, E. W. 352 H. C. 367 H. E. D. L. M. 334 W. S. 337 Jopp, J. 347 J. 338 K. 357 347 KANE, C. 336 F. A. C. 335 Kay, B. 339 Kays, M. T. 361 Keily, J. R. 343 Keith, J. 319 Kemball, A. B. 366 -- G. C. 353 Kemp, G. R. 364 Kempt, F. S. 367 Kennedy, R. H. 347 V. 365 Keir, J. T. 333 Kennett, B. 365 Jopp ... 1 ... > . 363 350 341 364 355 365 332 334 348 333 363 339 332 9 ... ... ... 1 ... ... 357 Xxxvi Index to the Honorable Company's Troops. ... 363 2 ... ... ... 9 ... 366 ... 337 ... Page Page Page Kennett, E. W. 348 Lse, G. L. 336 Meadows, A. 353 G. P. 332 W. H. C. 348 Mellersh, C. 340 Kilner, J. ... 333 Lynch, E. P. 351 Melvill, P. M. 342 Kirk. R. 365 Lyons, H. 358 Merewether, W. L. 356 Kneller, C. F. 346 Mignon, R. 333 Knipe, W.J. B. 332 MACAN, G. ".. 335 Miles, H. 335 H. 352 J. 352 LAING, J. 357 W. 341 Millar, J. G. 357 Lancaster, H. 355 Macdonald, A. 353 Milligan, S. D. 367 0. D. 3-19 M. M.... 357 Mills, D. E. 354 Landon, S. 351 MacGregor, E. M.... 33.5 Milne, G. J. D. 359 lang, W. 356 Mackenzie, F. W.... 343 Minster, T. 346 J. E. 362 G. 360 Moffat. J. W. 365 Larkins, T. B. 366 McKenzie, J. 366 Montefiore, A. J. 364 Lavens, P. H. J. 367 Montgomery, A. 364 Lavie, H. ... 349 Mackenzie, T. 365 - G. S. 349 Laurie, R. N. 310 T. A. 336 Montriou, W. 359 R. 350 Mackintosh, R. H. 3:37 Moore, G. 355 J.J. 3.56 Maclean, A. N. 313 H. S. 366 J. 362 Macleod, W, E. 355 J. C. 337 Lechmere, N. 331 Macpherson, E. M.. 365 R. B. 336 Leckie, G. A. 356 Mudden, R. J. 335 More, G. 3.39 J. D. 357 Mahalfy, E. 367 Morehead, C. 365 W. M. 348 Malcolm, D. 336 Morgan, T. 333 Leech, R. 3:33 D. A. 338 Morier, J. P. LeGeyt, R. C. 334 Malcolmson, J. P. . 365 Morison, J. W. Lesson, C. P. 360 Malet, G. G. 336 Morris, A. 339 W. F. 337 Manisty, F. 367 J, E. G. 3.39 J. 331 Mann, G. K. 332 J. W. 333 Leggeit, W. 365 Manson, A. 331 W. J. 344 Leigbton, Sir D. 342 Mant, G. J. 354 Morison, B, G. 339 T. 342 Margary, H. J. 333 Morse, C. H. 3 49 Leith, R. W. D. 334 Mariott, A E. H, C. 3+3 A. H. 365 Marriot, W. F. 333 J. 341 Lellessurier, A. P. 335 Marston, E. C. 360 T. R. G. P. 349 Martin, J. H. M. 331 Morton, C. B. 345 Leslie, J. T. 331 Massie, W. 332 Moyle, C. A. 336 Lester, E. P. 331 Matthews, A. H. 0. 350 H. R. C. 337 Levien, F. 350 Maude, C. W. J. G. Liddell, H. 346 Mauger, C ... 352 Munbee, G. B. J. 358 Maughan, T. ... 347 Munro, C. G. G. Lightfoot, J. G. 332 Maunsell, W. 341 Murray, J. 365 Lister, G. A. 342 Mayne, J. 360 Murtagh. J. 365 Littlewood, R. J. 344 Mayor, F. 3+1 Muter, St. J. 0. N. 337 Lloyd, J. 331 G. 360 Myine, C. D. 341 Loch, G. F. 33) McAdam, J. 363 ... 334 McAndrew, J. D.... 36+ Nash, A. 333 Lodwick, P. 351 McCullock, E. 340 Neale. W. A. 338 H. 345 McDonell, J. 354 Neilson, W. 366 F. 367 McDonnell, T. G.... 332 Newpham, N, J. 358 W. 347 McDougall, N. P.... 348 Newport, C. 358 Logie, A. W.J. 316 McDowall, W. 367 Niblock, E. S. 312 Loinsworth, F. A. 363 McGrath, T. 357 Nichol, G. A. F. 357 Long, S. W. 349 McGrigor, J. 356 Nicholson, B. A. R. 365 Lowry, J. L. 367 Alcintyre. L. M. 334 Nixon, E. M. 3+1 R. L. 361 Mclennan. J. 364 G. E. 367 S. 349 McMahon, B. 360 North, C. F. 333 Lucas, A. W. 342 Sir T.... 330 C. 331 McMorris, J. 364 OGILVIE, G. M. 367 C. C. 339 S. 366 W. 361 Lush, C. 363 Meade, R. N. 347 Ord, R. 359 ... 351 ... ... 353 .., 345 ... 383 ... 331 ... W. ... ... . . Bombay Establishment. Xxxvii ... O. H. . ... ... W. ... ... W.F. ... ... ... ... ... ... .., 358 9 3 ... ... Postiche, 8. H. Page Page Page Ore, J. A. 364 Prescott, C. De B.... 340 Russell, L. C. .. 331 Orrok, W. 351 W. H. 336 Ryan, J. W. 365 Osborne, H. S. 349 Price, A. 339 Osburne, J. T. 333 G. U. 336 SABBEN, E. 367 Ottey, P. D. 362 W. 336 Salmon, H. L. 335 Ottley, 0. D. 314 Pridham, E. J. P. 367 W. B. 354 T. H. 361 Prior, G. N. 356 Salter, J. 310 W.J. 335 Prother, C. W. 339 Sandwith, B. 334 Ovans, c. 339 Pruen, G. A. 332 312 Outhwaite, W. C.... 332 Purnell, w, A. 363 J. P. 336 Outram, J. 358 Purves, W. 344 347 Owen, C. J. 334 Pyke, J. 344 335 R. B. 364 Savile, J. W. 352 RAIKES, L. N. 381 Saunders, A, E. 335 Palin, W. H. 352 S. N. 353 J. 350 Parker, H. R. 334 Raitt, A. 351 Scatchard, G. R. 359 Parkinson, H. J. 357 Ramsay, H. N. 359 Schneider, J. W. 337 Parr, S. J. S. 335 Schuler, F. 331 T. C. 342 J. 333 Scobie, D. M. 349 Parsons, J. E. 346 J. 344 Scott, D. C. F. 336 W. 365 Ranclaud, M. A. 365 G. B. 361 353 J. McC... 365 J. G. 357 364 Rathborne, A. B. 359 J. 364 Pattulo, H. E. 333 Ravenscroft. G. S.... 336 J. 358 Payne, C. 348 Rawlinson, H. C. 336 J. 358 Peacocke, E. T. 336 W. E. 334 L. 352 Peart, J. H. 365 Reeves, G. 0. 336 W. 333 Peat, A. C. 333 Reid, A. T. 347 W. Peele, R. D. C. 367 Remington, G. R.... 350 Scriven, G. 333 Pelham, H. 362 Renny, J. W. 354 - W. T. C.... 362 Pelly, H. J. 343 Reynolds, W. 349 Seale, W. H. 350 S. M. 367 Richards, C. 343 Sealy, B. W. D. 338 I.. 335 H. 338 Seaward, G. M. S.... 366 Pepney, J. 334 R. 338 Seton, B. 351 Petrie, J. G. 332 Ricketts, T. G. 345 J. B. 334 Peyton, J. ... 358 Rigby, C. d. 351 Shakespear, W. P.... 335 Phayre, R. ... 360 Rippon, G. ... 356 Shaw, G. J. 366 Phillips, J. G. ... 367 Ritchie, D. 365 M. M. 344 Pigou, w, H. .. 367 Rivers, H. 333 333 Pinhey, R. 363 Roberts, H. G. 348 Shawe, R. 357 Pitcairn, W. 365 Robertson, A. 345 Shepheard, A. Pogson, G. T. 340 A. 336 Sheppard, G. F. 366 J. 352 G, H. 360 Sheppee, F. 363 Poley, J. F. W. 333 H. D. 352 Shewell, H. 335 Ponsonby, c. 352 H. N. 340 Shirreff, J. 347 W. B. 357 W.D. 346 Shirt, C. 355 Pontardent, F.J. 331 Robson, S. 362 Shortt, J. M. 348 Poole, S. 334 T. 364 Shortrede, R. 335 Pope, G. 357 Rolland, H. 354 Shrigley, J. 359 J. 352 Rollings, W. 337 Shubrick, W. B. 360 Postans, T. 350 Rooke, B. P. 364 Shuldham, E. W. 360 Pottinger, E. 332 Roome, F. 344 Shum, G. F. 340 Sir H. 354 W. 259 F. O. 351 H. 350 Rose, H. B. 333 Simpson, E. H. 335 J. 332 J. 350 W. R. Powell, B, R. 361 Ross, J. 265 Sinclair, J. 358 S. 335 Rowan, A. F. 332 J. Powpoll, T. C. 332 Rowland, A. 331 J. A. 364 Preedy, H. W. 360 Rowley, G. 335 Skinner, P. K. 344 Prendergast, T.R.... 345 Rudd, H. 340 Skipper, E. 342 Prescott, A. 335 Russell, 347 Skottore, G. 338 348 ... 9 ... ... ... 9 ... ---, R. J. ... ... 359 2 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 9 ... 2 ... ... 9 ... ... 352 3 ... ... 331 .. xxxviji Index to the Honorable Company's Troops, ge. Page ... ... , R. D. ... .., 353 ... 362 ... 349 .. ... ... ... M. ... 336 ... ... Page Page Smee, W. N. T. 340 Teasdale, H. C. 360 Wells, F. C. 350 Smith, G. 361 Terry, W. S. ... 332 Wemyss, F. 333 J. G. 332 Thacker, S. 344 F. 333 366 Thatcher, C. 366 Wenn, C. W. 348 R. R. 366 W. 341 Westbrooke, F. Smythe, J. D. 239 Thom, W. 366 Westley, C. J. Soppitt, M. 349 Thomas, C. 343 Weston, H. Sorell, C. F. 352 Thompson, E. 343 Westropp, R. M. 349 Sparrow, G. 348 M. 366 Wheastone, R. W.... 342 Spencer, H. 335 A. S. 366 Whichelo, E. 344 Spiller, W. 361 Thomson, A. J. 360 Whish, R. 331 Spottiswoode, H. 334 J. B. 366 White, B. 363 Sproule, S. 366 Thornbury, N. H.... 339 Whitehill, C. S. 3.35 J.S. 367 Thorne, G. F. 349 S. 362 Stack, G, H. 359 Thornton, G. 335 8. J. K.... 358 336 Threshie, C. 345 Whitlie, W. T. 331 Stalker, F. 335 Topham, W. 342 Whitelock, C. R. 346 Stamford, H. 331 Travers, R. 358 Whitmore, J. 346 Stanley, H. 340 Treasure, C. N. 346 Whittard, T. W. W, 350 Stannus, E. G. 335 Tremen heere, C. W. 333 Wilkinson, W. E. 356 Stanton, E. 331 Trevelyan, H. W.... 331 Willis, R. A. 350 Stather, W. C. W. 335 Willoughby, H. J.... 335 Stevens, S. J. ... 356 Troward, A. 349 J. R. 360 Stewart, J. 364 Trower, C. T. 333 M. F.... 331 J. D. 349 Tucker. F. N. B. 335 Wilson, A. R. 349 T. R. 343 Turnbull, S. 332 G. 361 Stiles, W. 334 Turner, H. B. 333 G. J. 345 Stock, T. 358 T. M. B. 333 Winchester, J. W.... 365 Stockley, G C. S. 342 Tweedale, A. 334 Winfield, J. P. 335 1. 342 Tyacke, H. P. 335 Wingate, G. 333 J. S. 367 Tyndall, J. 362. Wiseman, J. M. 335 Stone, E. W. 366 Wolley, F. 349 T. E. 359 Unwin, J. S. ... 332 Wood, E. 347 Stov ell, M. 369 J. A. 355 Strachey, F. F. 344 Vaillant, A. 344 Woodburn, A. 360 Straker, C. D. 364 Valiant, L. M. 334 Woodhouse, F. E.... 344 Strover, S. R. 331 Vardon, L. 334 J. R. 3+1 Stuart, C. S. 349 Vincent, H. 345 Woodward, H. J. 333 R. D. 349 H. T. 342 Woolcombe, J. D. ... 332 Studdert, T. 333 Woosnam, J. B. 332 Suart, W. S. 333 Waddington, C. 333 R. 366 Sullivan, w. 365 Walker, A. 365 Worgan, J. 332 Sutherland, Sir J.... 337 Wallker, C. W. 340 Wormald, R. C. 332 J. 335 Wallace, R. 353 Wray, E. 332 R. 353 E. J. 367 J. Swanson, J. 354 Waller, T. 365 Wright, A. 366 Symons, C. J. 340 Walter, E. 336 J. 338 Sympson, G. F. 334 Warburton, P. E. 348 J. C. Ward, T. W. 366 Wyllie, M. 343 Tait, J. 341 W. 350 W. 356 Tapp, T. 333 Wardell, R. H. 340 Wynter, T. R. 335 Tawse, A. 364 Warden. R. Taylor, F. F. 336 Waterfield, W. H.... 362 YEADELL, G. 331 G. 362 Watkin, H. S. 350 Young, A. S. 338 H. A. 310 Watkins, F. W. 365 G. J. J. E. 353 J. 358 R. H. 337 J. Mck. 335 W. H. B. 339 W. H. 36+ R. 335 Watson, J. W. 331 Younghusband, E.... 344 R. L. 353 Webb, W. M. 331 R.R. 365 W. B. 364 Webster, T. B. J.W. 343 W. W. 340 Welland, E. 332 ... ... 1 ... 359 ... ... 2 . ... 344 ... 331 **. 352 ... ... 350 ADDENDA. List of Civil Appointments since the 1st January, 1842. Names. Season. Actual residence Date of promo- Date of arrival. up to 28th Jan. 1842. tion to the pre- sent grade. Appointments. Salary per Month. W. Blunt, Years. Months. Days. 1798 42 2 28 1797 I Nov. | Nov. 4,350 J. Trotter, 1808 24 October 1808 31 5 1 8 May 4,350 J. C. Brown, 1816 27 August 16 25 5 2 30 April H. S. Oldfield, ditto 1 March 17 21 9 13 ditto 3,500 J. H. Patton, 1821 23 June 22 19 7 4 30 April 1809 Junior Member of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and of the Marine Board, 13th January 1842, 19 Senior Member of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and of the Marine Board, 13th January 1842, 27 Acting Sessions Judge of 24-Pergunnahs for the Special powers of disposing Commitments made by Mr. R. Torrens, 18th January 1842, Opium Agent and Superintendent of Salt Chokeys in Behar, 26th January 1842, 32 Chief Magistrate of Calcutta, with concurrent authority as Joint Magistrate of the 24-Pergunnahs, Baraset, Hooghly, Nuddea and Jessore, 11th January 1842, 34 Collector of Government Customs at Calcutta, 13th Jan. 1842, S5 Civil and Sessions Judge of 24-Pergunnahs, 11th Jan. 1842, 36 Agent to the Lieut. Governor at Kumaun, 24th Jan. 1842. 37 Officiating Magistrate and Collector of Bijnore, 8th Jan. 1842. Civil and Sessions Judge of Shahabad, riih Jan, 1842, Offg. Civil and Sessions Judge of Futtehpore, 14th Jan. 1842. 38 Officiating Civil and Sessions Judge of Purneah, 18th Janu- Magistrate of 21.Pergunnahs and Superintendent of Allipore Jail, 11th January 1842. Offy. Assistant to the Sub-Treasurer, 19th Jan. 1842. 18 3,000 3,000 2,500 J. J. Harvey, R. Torrens, G. T. Lushington, C. C. Jackson, W. S. Alexander, C. R. Tulloh, Hon. R. Forbes, 23 24 25 26 1823 20 Sept. 1824 9 October 1825 2 ditto 1826 22 June ditto ditto ditto 4 Dec. 1827 3 Feb. సరానికలు 3 5 10 9 1 2 7 9 5 13 21 24 6 30 April 30 do, 30 do. 30 do. ditto ditto 30 April 2,500 26 27 ary 1842. R. H. Mytton, ditto 4 June 27 11 9 14 ditto 2,333 G. Adams, ditto 4 Feb. 28/ 10 5 6 ditto ii ADDENDA. Names. Season. Actual residence Date of promo- up Date of arrival. tion to the pre- 28th January 1842. sent grade. Appointments. Salary per Month. W. Onslow, 1828 22 Oct. 1828 10 28 29 31 32 33 18 7 14 G. F. Houlton, ditto 10 do. R. N. Farquharson, 1829 21 do. F. B. Kemp, 1831 11 Nov. J. A. O. Farquharson, 1832 17 Oct. G. D. Wilkins, ditto 6 Mar. F. A. Dalrymple, ditto ditto E. E. Woodcock, 1833 22 June H. V. Bayley, 1835 25 Sept. 13 12 10 9 8 5 30 do. 1,500 420 1,854 1,854 420 1,000 1,000 3 3 2 3 10 2 12 9 2 3 30 April 1839 Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Champarun, 18th Jan. 1842, Off. Civil and Sessions Judge of Mymensing, 18th ditto, ditto Collector of Patna, 11th January 1842, 30 April 40 Collector and Offg. Magistrale of Sarun, 11th Jan. 1842, 39 Officiating Collector of Behar, 11th January 1812, 11 30 do 40 Magistrate of Patna, 18th January 1842, ditto Magistrate of Sarun, 11th January 18-12, ditto Exercising the powers of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of 24-Pergunnah, 18th January 1842. 30 April 41 Offg. Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Champarun, 18th January 1842. 30 do. 40 Deputy Secretary to the Government of India and Bengal in the General Department, and Ex-officio Secretary to the Council of Education, and to its several Sub-Committees, 13th January 1842, ditto In charge of the office of Joint Magistrate and Deputy Col- lector of Monghyr, 18th January 1842. 33 8 5 35 6 4 4 D. Cunliffe, 1,500 ditto 13 Dec. 35 15 ADDENDA. iii INDIAN BREVET. 26th Nov. 1841. BENGAL. TO BE LIEUT.-GENERAL. Price, Major-General James, Infantry, on furlough. TO BB MAJOR-GENERALS. Colonels- Andree, Richard Collyer, Infantry, on furlough. Barton, Ezekiel, Infantry, Town and Fort Major, Fort William. Battine, William, C. B., Art., on furlough. Bryant, Sir Jeremia, Kt., and C. B., Infantry, on furlough. Caulfeild, James, C. B., Cav. Dun, John, Infantry, on furlough. Dunlop, William, Infantry, Q. M.-General. Galloway, Archibald, C. B., Infantry, on furlough. Hamilton, Charles William, Infantry, Com. Delhi. Hodgson, John Anthony, Infantry, on furlough. Hunter, George, C. B., Tofantry, on furlough. Kemm, William Henry, Infantry, on furlough. Kenvedy, James, C. B., Cav., Com. Rajpootana Field Force. Le Fevre, Phillip, Eur. Infanry, on furlough. Littler, John Hunter, Infantry, Com, Eastern Frontier. Macleod, Duncan, Engs. on furlough. Murray, Thomas, Infantry on furlough. Nesbitt, Joseph, Infantry, on furlough. Paul, Thomas Henry, Infantry, Com. Ferozepore. Roberts, Henry Tuffrel, C. B., Cav, on furlough. Roope, Benjamin, Infantry, on furlough. Shubrick, Thomas, Cav., on furlough. Smith, Samuel, Cav., on furlough. Tapp, Horatio Thomas, Infantry, on furlough. Tickell, Richard, C. B., Engs. on furlough. Vincent, William, Infantry, on furlough. Walker, Foster, Infantry, Barrackpore. Waters, Edmund Frederick, C. B., Infantry, Com. Rohilcund, Whish, William Samson, C. B., Art. Wyatt, Edgar, Infantry, on furlough. TO BE LIEUT.-COLONELS. Majors Campbell, Sir Edward Alex., Kt, and C. B. 3d Cav., Kurnaul. Penny, Nicholas, 69th N. I. TO BE MAJORS. Captaing- Bellew, Henry Walter, Dep. Assist. Quartermaster-Gen. Birrell, David, 1st Eur. Regt., Kurnaul. Blundell, George Snow, 51st N. I., Benares. Brown, William, 69th N. I., Benares. Croudace, James, Uth N. I., Etawah. Dixon, Charles George, Artillery Sup. in Maihwarrah, &c. &c. Douglas, Claud, 14th N. I., Nusseerabad. ADDENDA. V TO BE MAJORS. Captains- Bird, John Francis, 221 N. I., Vizianagram. Briggs, James, 13th V.1., Samulcottah. Cotton, William, 10th N. 1., Vellore. Fraser, Andrew, 45th N. 1., Eeq. Judge Adv.-Gen. N. Dirision. Foord, Henry Suilles, Com Orri., Masulipalam. Gunning, Jolin, 17th' N.l., Staff Officer, Neilgherries. Hammond, Peter, Com. Ord., Hydrabad. Hands, Frederick Wright, 2d Eur. Regt., Bangalore. Hewelson, Charles, 49th N.I., Kemptee. Hyslop, Archibald Geddes, Com. Ord. Nagpore. Hyslop, William, 3d Cav., Sholapore. Litchfield, William Edmund, 6th Cavalry, Kamptee. Lucas, Francis Blaney, 8th N.l., Vellore. Mellor, James, 2014 N.I., Asseerghur. Penson, Albert, 46th N.I., on furlough. Sheriff, Æneas, Artillery, Secunderabad. Underwood, George Augustus, Sup. Engineer, Fort St. George. Wallace, John Charles, 8th Cavalry, Trichinopoly. White, Frederick Broadwood, 16th N..., Kurpool. Wyllie, James, 451h N.I., Quilon. Yolland, Rebert Sarrell, Horse Art., Bangalore, on furlough. BOMBAY TO BE MAJOR-GENERALS. Colonels- Carr, David, 21st N.I., Mil, Aud. Gen. l'earon, Peter, 2d N..., Com, Mhow. Farquharson, Francis, 1st N.I., Com. Ahmednugger. Morgan, Thomas, Ist Eur. Regt., Com. Candeish. Pottinger, Sir Henry, Bart., 19th N.I., China. Roome, Frederick, 181h N. Í., Com., Asseerghur. Russell, Lechmere Coare, C.B., Art., on furlough. Strover, Samuel Roger, Art., on furlough. TQ BE MAJORS. Captains Benbow, Clifton, Asst. Mag., Ahmednuggur. Browne, Walter John, 8th N. 1., Brig.-Maj. Baroda. Cooke, Richard May Mignan, 19th N.I., Bombay. Down, James Somers, isi N.I., Brig. Maj., Sukkur. Fawcett, John, 2d Eur. Regt., Assist. Adji. Gen. N. Div. Gidley, Thomas, Ilth N.1., Ahmedabad. Jackson, William Henry, 12th N.I., Comt. Agent, Bhooj. Johnson, Charles, 3d N.J., Ahmedabad. Kennett, Edward William, 13th N.1., Surat. Lyons, Humphry, 230 N.Í., Dep. Paymaster, Upper Scinde. More, George, 24th N.I., Poonah. Ord, Richard, 24th N.1., Paymaster Div. Richardes, Charles, 8th N. 1., Pol. Agent, Kotah. Rollings, William, 2d N. I, Sukkur. Scott, James, 2:30 N.I., Sub-Assist. Com. Gen. Up. Scinde, Troward, A., 141h N.I., Com. Irregular Horse, Sawunt Warree. vi ADDENDA. THE BENGAL VOLUNTEER REGIMENT. Raised 1st February, 1842. Rank and Names. From what Corps. Army Rank. Remarks. Lieutenant Colonel. G, W. A. Lloyd, 28th N. I. 7 Jan. 1836 Commanding. Majors. R. Kent, 18th N. I. bm. 28 June 38 Captains. O. Phillips, 156th N, I. (P) J. Platt, 23d N. I. W. H. Halford, 41st N. I. (P) J.H. Shuldham.. 152d N. I. (PC)J.H. Wakefield. . 17th N. I. W. Innis, 15th N. I. A. R. J. Swinton, 32d N. I. J. Sissmore, 123d N. I. bm.28 June 38 28 July 33 11 April 34 1 Jan. 38 11 Jan. 38 1 April 38 16 Jan. 39 bc.28 Sept. 40 Lieutenants. W. W. Davidson, 32d N. I. J. Turton, 3d N. I. (PC) G A.F. Harvey.. 3d N. I. (P) J. W.H. Pownail... 52d N. I. F. Beavan, 56th N. I. A. W. Onslow, +1st N. I. H. Watson, 17th N. I. 23 April 25 Aug. 19 April 4 Sept. 8 Oct. 28 Feb. 1 Oct. 35) 36 39 391 39 40 41 Ensigns. H. R. Shawe, 115th N. I. 119 Mar. 46 Surgeon. D. McQ. Gray, M.D. .. Assistant Surgeon. C. L. Cox, HISTORIES OP VARIOUS OFFICES AT HOME, AND IN BENGAL, AGRA, MADRAS AND BOMBAY. Ni virtus, fidesque vestra satis spectata mihi forent...... neque per ignaviam, aut vana ingenia incerta pro certis captarem, sed quia multis, et magnis tempestatibus vos cognovi fortes fidosque; &c. PART III.-VOL. Iİ. PART III. VOL. II. HISTORY OF OFFICES. PART III.-VOL. II. THE BOARD OF CONTROL, OR INDIA BOARD. In the year 1784, all the political parties in England had become convinced that some very material change in the government of the East-India Company's extensive acquisitions of territory in India was indispensably necessary. In this crisis, Mr. Fox brought forward his famous lodia Bill, the grand object of which was to abolish both the Court of Directors and the Court of Proprietors of the East-India, Company, and to vest the Government of India in the hands of seven commissioners, who were to be appointed by Parliament. The coalition between Lord North and Mr. Fox had rendered their administration exceedingly unpopular, and their opponents and the Company took advantage of the unpopularity of the ministry to raise an extraordinary clamour against this India Bill. The Company stig- matised it as an invasion of their chartered rights, and the opposition party represented the parliamentary nomination of commissioners as a daring invasion of the prerogative of the Crown, and an insidious at- tempt of the minister to render himself all-powerful by means of the patronage of India. The Bill passed through the Commons, but, in consequence of the popular ferment which had been excited about it, and of the avowed disapprobation of the King, the Lords threw it out, and this defeat overthrew the coalition ministry. Mr. Pitt formed a new ministry, and in a new Parliament he secured a decided majority in both houses, and carried his India Bill successfully into a law, controlling the Company in the government of India by a board of Royal Commissioners. On the 18th of May, 1784, the Act of Parliament of the 24th of George the Third, chapter the twenty-fifth, received the royal assent. It empowers the King to appoint six Privy Councillors to be Com. missioners for the Affairs of India, one of his Majesty's principle Secretaries of State, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer, for the time being, always to be two of them, three of whom shall make a Board, and the Secretary of State to be President, and in his absence the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and in the absence of both, the senior commissioner shall be President. The President has the casting vote. The King may revoke the commission at pleasure and appoint new commissioners. The powers of this Board are very great; they have the superinten- dence and control over all the British territorial possessions in the East Indies, and over the affairs of the United Company of Merchants trading to the East Indies. The Court of Directors of the East India Company, must, if required, lay all their letters and papers to and from India before this Board, and receive their orders; and they are not contented therewith, they can appeal to the King in Council. Neither the commissioners nor their chief Secretary are disqualified from being elected members of Parliament. Commissioners are to have access to all papers belonging to the Company. The Company is 4 (PART III. History of Offices. bound to deliver to the Board copies of all minutes, &c., of both coarts, concerning the government or revenue; and to obey all orders relating thereto; and in case of delay, the Board is empowered to forward iis own despatches 10 India. In 1786, the Act of 20th Geo. III., c. 57. erected a Royal Court of Supreme Judicature in India, and provided that members of the Board of Commissioners should not compose a part of the new court. The 28th of Geo. 111., c. 8, empowered the Board to direct the pay. ment in India, of the expenses of raising, transporting, and maintain. ing royal troops to the number of 8,045 men, and of Company's Euro- pean forces to the number of 12,000 men, including, in both cases, the commissioned and non-commissioned officers. And the 31st of Geo. III., c. 10, extended the number of royal troops as much as 2,652 additional. The Charter Act, the 33rd Geo. III., c. 52, empowered the sovereiga to appoint commissioners under the great seal; two Secretaries of State and the Chancellor of the Exchequer always to be included ; three com- , missioners to form a Board ; the commissioner first-named in the com- mission to be President, and in his absence the next ; whoever presides to have a casting vote. The Board may appoint secretaries and officers; the salaries of the establishment to be paid by the Company quarterly; those to the Board not exceeding five thousand pounds a year, and those of the officers and others not to exceed eleven thousand pounds a year. Commissioners and officers to take certain oaths. The powers of the first Board not to cease until the second Board is appointed, and their powers respecting troops continued. This act greatly extended the power of the Board over the Company ; especially in giving them poli- tical power over the commercial affairs of the Company. The 37th Geo. III., c. 117, requires the consent of the Board to legalize regulations of the Company for the India trade of nations in amity with the crown, and cap. 142 obliges the supreme government to transmit to the Board ten copies of the regulations, issued by them in each year, concerning all persons amenable to the provincial courts ; also to transmit to the Board, for the royal assent, all new forms of process for the courts of judicature at Madras and Bombay. The 39th and 40th Geo. III., c. 79, makes the consent of the Board necessary for appointing what part of the territorial revenue or civil servants under Madras and Bombay should be under Fort William, Madras, and Bombay; and for changing such appointments. The 47th of Geo. III., c. 68, renders the consent of the Board necessary for establishing public Banks in India. By the 51st of Geo. 111., c. 75, the Board received power to augment its own expenses so as not to exceed the sum of twenty-two thousand pounds a year. The Charter Act of the 53rd of Geo. III., c. 155, again added very greatly to the Board's power over the Company, especially in licens- ing ships and persons to proceed to India; it also required the ap proval of the Board to render valid any duties imposed in India; it gave the Board full power over all colleges and seminaries, abroad and at home; also over the apportionment of the territorial revenue, and of Joans in India to the Company's trade, and forbade the Company to send out any despatches on the subject until approved by the Board ; it for- bade the Secret Committee of Directors from disclosing any despaich without the authority of the Board, and forbade the Company from fil- ling op vacancies in India without the approbation of the Board, except in Council, generals on the staff, advocates, attornies, chaplains, un- covenanted servants, writers, cadets, and assistant-surgeons; the restor- VOL. II. 5 India Board. ation of servants was declared invalid without the consent of the Board, and no gratuity above six hundred pounds could be paid without the consent of the Board ; this Act also empowered the Crown to grant superannuations to the officers of the Board. Again, by the 55th of Geo. III., c. 64, sec. I, it was enacted, that no gratuity is to be good above £600, unless confirmed by the Board. According to the established form of the Indian Government in Eng- land, the Board of Control consists of a first commissioner, who is President, of two active commissioners, together with several commis- sioners, inclusive of the King's principal cabinet ministers; but all these ex-officio and extra commissioners may be deemed honorary, as they do not receive any salary or perform any duty. From the year 1784 until 1793 his Majesty's principal Secretary of State for the Home department was always the President of the India Board, without salary; on this footing Lord Viscount Sidmouth, Lord Grenville, and Lord Melville, were successively appointed. In 1793, Parliament changed the system, and the office of President was made a separate appointment, with a salary. The President has now been salaried for a period of forty-seven years, and in this short period no less than eighteen appointments have been made: even three new Presidents have been appointed to the Board in a single year. Sometimes, the Crown appointed a President who had made a voyage to India, as in the case of Lord Buckinghamshire. The other salaried commissioners are generally appointed in conse- quence of their claims on the party in power, without any reference whatever to their peculiar qualifications for controlling the affairs of India. From 1784 until 1832 the India Board had but one secretary, since then it has had two secretaries ; the secretary in like manner with the commissioners, is a political partisan of the minister of the day, who can get himself a seat in the House of Commons. The clerks do not go out of office with their patrons; they are fixed officers, brought up in the office, and rise by seniority. They give all their attention to their respective duties, and they understand the affairs under their superintendence well. Under manifold disadvantages, the clerks are the recognized depositories of the Board's knowledge of the affairs of India. In the year 1814, the number of clerks below the rank of senior was ten, and there was a precis writer. On the 7th of May, 1816, the secretary represented to the Board that he had been obliged constantly to employ a private secretary, and that he should on many occasions have been disabled but for such assistance from executing the Board's orders with punctuality and despatch, and that few persons in an official situation such as he had the honour to hold were without the assistance of some confidential and personal clerk. On the 25th of June, 1816, the Board made a minute, in which they said, -' The secretary, together with the assistant-secretary and chief clerk, having represented to the Board that the number of clerks was by no means sufficient for the current miscellaneous business, and having snggested the expediency of taking advantage of the resignation of the then assistant-secretary to increase the numerical strength in the lower parts of the office, the Board determined not to fill up the office of chief clerk, the duties of which were to be performed by the secre- taries, or, under their superintendence, by the junior clerks, whose number it was intended to augment.'--The Board also allowed the secretary to employ a private secretary; and they directed, that in consideration of the laborious duties performed by the librarian, and [ 'II 'TOA La India Board. A List of Presidents of the Board of Commissioners for the affairs of India, all of whom being Privy Councillors are Right Honorables :- Appointed. President. Service. Other Name or Title, &c. Salary, per annum, Died. Y. M. D. 2 nil nil 2,000 2,000 2,000 1801 July 15 1822 Aug. 12 Secretary of Home Department Ditto Lord Grenville, in 1791... Ditto Lord Melville Earl of Dartmouth Marquess of Londonderry 4 Sir Gilbert Elliott, Gov.-General in 1806 15 4 7 Viscount Melville 27 Dudley Ryder, Earl of Harrowby 28 Viscount Melville Lord Hobart; Governor of Madras 1800 8 Appointed Governor-general in 1826 24 6 3 1784 Viscount Sydney 1790 W. W. Grenville 1792 Henry Dundas 1801 April 25 Viscount Lewisham 1802 July Viscount Castlereagh 1806 Feb. 11 Earl of Minto July 15 Thomas Grenville Sept. 30 George Tierney 1807 April 4 Robert Dundas Saunders 1809 July 11 Lord Harrowby Nov. 7 Robert Dundas 1812 April 4 Earl of Buckinghamshire 1816 June 4 George Canning 1821 Jan. 12 Charles Bathurst 1822 Feb. 5 Charles Watkins Williams Wynne 1828 Feb. 4 Viscount Melville Sept. 17 Lord Ellenborough 1830 Nov. 22 Charles Grant 1834 Nov. Lord Ellenborough 1835 May Sir John Cam Hobhouse, Bart. 2 collocco Noror.co | III e IVA BALIT115 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 - 1816 Feb. 15 1827 Aug. 8 7 13 Robert Dundas 22 Lord Glenelg And yet in office, 1st July, 1841 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 4,000 4,000 4,000 11 8 [PART III. History of Offices. A List of the several Commissioners for the Affairs of India, from the first Commission until the present Commission, still in force, 1st January, 1841. Appointed. Commissioners. Other Name or Title. Remarks. Died. S 1794 Banks Jenkinson .. { 1795, Liverpool 1798 1784 William Pitt Henry Dundas Lord Walsingham Until 1786 W.W. Grenville Lord Mulgrave 1790 Lord F. Campbell Dudley Ryder.... Earl of Harrowby 1791 Duke of Montrose Lord A. Campbell Thomas Steele [Gen. 1793 Earl of Mornington Marq. Wellesley Until 1798; Gov.- Viscount Belgrave Lord Apsley...... Earl Bathurst .. Edward James Eliot Salary £1,5002 Aug. 6 5 Hawkesbury Until 1804 1795 William Wyndham Until 1796 Sylvester Douglas. William Dundas.. Salary £1,500 1800 George Canning .. Salary £1,500 1801 Thomas Wallace.. Salary £1,500 Earl Temple..... Salary £1,500 April 25 Duke of Portland Duke of Montrose Lord Hawkesbury Earl of Liverpool Lord Hobart Henry Addington Earl Bathurst Lord Glenbervie William Dundas.. ş Nephew of Thomas Wallace Lord Arden Lord Pelham Salary £1,500 Edward Golding.. Salary £1,500 1803 Oct.29 Charles Yorke Thomas Maitland 1840 May 26 Duke of Portland Lord Hawkesbury Earl Camden Marq. Camden Lord Harrowby William Pitt Lord Glenbervie Viscount Dunlo .. Earl of Clancarty 1806 Feb. 11 Earl Spencer William Wyndham Charles James Fox 1806 Sep. 13 { H. Dundas} Until 1804 VOL. 11.) Court of Directors. 17 showing when first elected, and how long they have been the 14 th of April, 1841. Vacated. Served. Remarks, Age. Cause. Date. Y. M. D. Ex-Governor of Madras. .. Member of Supreme Council. Deceased 1773 Oct. 12 20 0 0 Disqualified . 1809 May 10 53 0 0 Deceased 1786 Mar. 15 30 0 0 Deceased 1783 25 0 0 Captured Gheriah. Resigned ..1783 Went out 1803 Not re-elected. .. Deceased Deceased 1809 45 0 0 1787 Dec. 5/ 22 0 0 Disqnalified . 1783 Nov. 26 13 0 0 Resigned on loss of Fox's Bill Disqualified . 1782 July 31 12 0 0 Deceased 1788 Dec. 2 17 0 0 Excluded 1806 April 35 0 0 Abused his patronage. Deceased 1786 Dec, 19 12 0 0 Disqualified. 1781 Oct. 3 7 0 Deceased 1803 May 25' 2900 Deceased .. 794 May 30 19 0 0 Disqualified . 1785 Aug. 10 7 0 0 Deceased 1810 Oct. 16 31 6 8 Deceased 1803 Nov, 30 23 00 Went out 1802 April 21 0 0 Bombay. Deceased 1810 Jan. 16 28 3 13 PART III. VOL. II. D 18 [PART II. History of Offices. A List of the Directors of the Vacancy Date of Promotion, Election. Director. Person, Cause. Dep Chu, 1782 John Townson Aug. 22 Jacob Bosanquet ... 1797 1798 1783 Sir S. Lushington, Bt. 1789 1790 1784 Thomas Parry Paul Lemesurier April Sir Hugh Inglis, Bt. 1796 1797 (1785 Aug. 10 Charles Mills 1801 1801 Thomas Fitzhugh 1786 Mar. 15 Abraham Robarts 1801 1802 April John Travers Dec. 19 Hn. W. F. Elphinstone... 1803 1804 1787 Thomas Pattle, jun. Dec. 5 Robert Thornton 1812 1813 1788 Sir David Scott, Bt. 1795 1796 1789 April Sir T. Metcalf, Bt. Simon Fraser 1791 Stephen Williams 1792 Walter Ewer Smith, N. Disqualified 1794 May 30 Charles Grant 1804 1805 1795 April Joseph Cotton 29 George Smith 1805 James Irvin 1796 Feb. 26 A.M. Campbell Sept. 27 G.W. Thelluson 1797 April 5 Edward Parry 1806 1807 Irvin 1798 Mar. 6 Sweeny Toone Fitzhugh Deceased 1800 Jan. 29 Wm. Thornton Astell 1809 1810 Hunter Deceased 1803 Jan. 19 Wm. Adair Jackson Scott Disqualified April 14 Richard C. Plowden Tatem Not re-elected April 14 John Hudleston Burgess Deceased May 25 John Inglis 1814 Darell Deceased Nov. 30 Thomas Reid 1815 1816 Jackson, W.A. Deceased 1804 Nov. 20 John Bebb 1816 1817 Williams, S. Deceased 1805 Mar. 28 James Pattison 1817 1818 Mills, W. Disqualified Aug. 10 Charles Mills Lemesurier Deceas 1806 Jan. 8 George Millett Thellusson Not re-elected 1807 April 9 C. Marjoribanks 1818 1819 Lushington Deceased April 8 Sir J. Jackson, Bt. Fraser Retired 1808 April 13 Sir G. Robinson, Bt. 1819 1820 Parry Not re-elected April 13 J.A. Bannerman Bensley Deceased 1809 April Robert Williams Manship Disqualified May 10 William Wigram 1822 1823 Travers Deceased Oct. 18 James Daniell Deceased 1810 Jan. 16 John Blagden Taylor Roberts Deceased April 11 Richard Twining Baring Deceased Oct. 10 Samuel Davis : VOL. 11.) 19 Court of Directors. East India Company, &c.—continued. Vacated. Served. Remarks. Age Cause. Date. Father of the Court. Not re-elected. Retired . 177 The Triton. Retired. 24 Major. Retired. The Royal Charlotte. Deceased 1797 Apr. 5 Disqualified 1827 Mar. 27 Went out 1807 April Went out 1807 April Deceased 1806 Jan. 8 Went out 1813 April Disqualified 1815 Mar. 9 Deceased 1800 Jan. 29 Disqualified 1815 Oct. 25 Deceased 1809 Oct. 18 Resigned 1825 April Disqualified 1795 April 29 Went out 1814 April Disqualified 1820 Aug. 16 Deceased 1814 Went out 1807 April Deceased 1805 Mar. 28 Disqualified 1795 Apr. 29 Deceased 1823 Nov. 26 Disqualified 1823 May 28 Disqualified 1833 July 23 Deceased 1798 Mar. 6 Deceased 1796 Aug. 17 Excluded 1808 Apr. 9 Deceased 1827 July 25 Disqualified 1831 Feb. 23 Went out 1841 April Deceased 1804 Nov, 201 Deceased 1830 Feb. 17 Disqualified \1826 Mar. 8 Deceased 11822 Aug. 28 Deceased 1824 Feb. 29 Disqualified 1830 Apr. 6 Disqualified 1830 Apr. 7 Deceased 1822 Aug 28 Went out 1813 April Deceased 1840 August Deceased 1820 May 17 Disqualified 1829 Mar. 20 Disqualified 1817 Mar. 12 Deceased 1812 July 29 Went out 1813 April Went out 1825 April Deceased 1820 Aug. 4 Disqualified 1817 Jan. 29 Deceased 1819 July 14 Y. M. D. 15 0 0 44 7 5 24 0 0 23 0 0 22 0 0 29 0 0 29 7 0 15 0 0 29 7 10 23 6 0 38 4 0 8 0 27 0 32 0 0 18 0 14 0 0 3 0 0 29 5 27 18 0 20 28 2 24 2 10 6 0 5 19 12 0 0 30 3 20 32 11 17 41 2 10 1 0 0 26 9 9 22 11 0 19 3 3 20 3 23 25 4 16 25 010 17 0 18 7 3 0 33 0 0 13 1 0 20 11 11 8 11 3 3 3 0 31 11 4 15 6 0 10 6 19 6 9 18 8 9 4 Libelled Swartz. Abused his patronage. Colonel Father of the Court. Reid, Irvin, and Co. Resigned ; served 60 years Resigned. • 61 • 80 The King George. Retired. The Arnistone, £5,000. Served in India. Governor of Penang. The Thames. Re-elected 1815, April 10. Madras. 111-health. Accountant-general I 20 (PART IIT History of Offices. A List of the Directors of the Vacancy. Date of Promotion Election. Director, Person. Cause. Dep.Cha, ... ... Williams, R. Deceased 1812 July 29 Robert Clerk Inglis Retired 1814 Apr. 10 Hon. Hugh Lindsay 1826 1827 Metcalfe Deceased Ditto John Morris Out Ditto Sir David Scott, Bt. Millett Retired Ditto Sir Alex. Allan. Bt. Mills, C. Disqualified 1815 Mar. 9 Wm. Stanley Clarke 1834 1835 Thornton, R. Retired Apr. 10 William Wigram Clerk Deceased Aug. 16 Richard Parry Robarts Disqualified Oct. 25/ John Thornbill Twining Disqualified 1817 Jan. 29 John Lumsden Bannerman Disqualified Mar. 26 George Raikes Parry, R. Deceased July 23 Sir R. Campbell. Bt. 1830 1831 Lumsden Deceased 1818 Dec. 30 Wm. Taylor Money Davis Deceased 1819 July 14 John G. Ravenshaw 1831 1832 Jackson Deceased 1820 June 9 Chas. Elton Prescott Scott Disqualified Aug. 16 Josiah D. Alexander Allan Deceased Oct. 11 Neil B. Edmonstone Taylor Deceased 1821 April John Loch ... 1828 1829 Inglis, J. Deceased 1822 Aug. Charles Mills, jun. Cotton Disqualified 11823 May 28 John Baillie Grant Deceased Nov. 26 John Masterman Reid Deceased 1824 Mar. 23 Jobo Petty Muspratt Money Disqualified 1826 Mar. 1 Sir R. T. Farquhar,Bt... Hudleston Disqualified Mar. 8 Henry Alexander Daniell Retired Apr. 12 Henry St. G. Tucker 1833 1834 Elphinstone Retired Apr. 12 James Stuart Bosanquet Disqualified 1827 Mar. 7 Sir J. R. Carnac, Bt. Parry, E. Deceased July 25 Sir J. L. Lushington,Bt... 1837 1838 Robinson Disqualified 1829 Mar. 20 Sir Wm. Young, Bt. Plowden Deceased 1830 Feb. 17 Rt. Hn. R.C. Fergusson... Farquhar Deceased Apr. 14 George Lyall Bebb Disqualified Apr. 6 John Forbes Pattison Disqualified Apr. 7 Henry Shank Toone Disqualified 1831 Feb. 23 Russell Ellice Prescott Deceased 1832 June 27 Sir R. Jenkins, M. P. 1838 Stuart Deceased 1833 Apr. 30 John Cotton Baillie Deceased May 14 P. Vans Agnew, C. B. Smith Disqualified July 23 William B. Bayley Fergusson Disqualified 1835 June 17 John Shepherd Raikes Disqualified 1836 July 13 Francis Warden Morris Disqualified 1838 Jan. 30 Sir H. Willock, K. L. S. Carnac Disqualified Dec. 12 Martin Tucker Smith Alexander, J. Deceased 1839 Sept. 11 James W. Hogg, M. P... Ravenshaw Deceased 1840 William Henry Sykes Marjoribanks Deceased Archibald Galloway 1835 1836 *** 00 :::: 22 [PART III. History of Offices. List of the Chairmen and Deputy Chairmen of the Court of Directors of the East India Company for nearly a century. Election. Chairman. Deputy. Remarks. 49 59 ... 65 71 1748 Apr. Chauncy Braddyll Baker Chauncy 1750 Chauncy Gough 51 Drake Baker 52 Baker Chauncy 53 54 55 56 Godfrey Payne 57 Payne Sullivan 58 Sullivan Drake Godfrey Boyd 1760 Sullivan Rous 61 Sullivan Rous 62 Rous Dorrien 63 Dorrien Sullivan 64 Rous Boulton Boulton Dudley 66 67 Rous Saunders 68 Boulton Colebrooke 69 Colebrooke ... Cust 1770 Colebrooke ... | Purling Purling Dudley 72 Colebrooke ... Sullivan 73 Boulton Wheler Oct. 12 Wheler Harrison 74 Wheler Harrison 75 Harrison Roberts 76 Roberts James 77 Wombwell Devaynes Wombwell James James Devaynes 1780 Devaynes 1 Sulivan 81 Sullivan James 82 Gregory Fletcher July 31 Fletcher Smith, N. 83 Fletcher Smith Nov.26 Smith 1 Devaynes 84 Smith 2 | Devaynes 85 Devaynes 2 Smith Michie Motteaux 87 Motteaux Smith 88 Smith, N. 3 Michie Dec. 2 Devaynes 89 Devaynes 3 Lushington 1790 Lushington, Si | Devaynes 91 Burges, J.S. 1 Baring Baring, F. 1 Burgess ... Boulton died. 78 ... Both created barts. 79 Fletcher created bart. Gregory disqualified. Fletcher disqualified. 86 Michie deceased. { Lushington created a 92 VOL. 11.) 23 Court of Directors. Election. Chairman. Deputy Remarks. 99 Scott being impeached by his colleagues, re- signed. ... 13 ... ! ... 1793 Devaynes 4 Cheap 04 Devaynes 5 Hunter 95 Lushington 2 Scott 96 Scott, Ď. 1 Inglis, H. 97 Inglis, H. 1 Bosanquet 98 Bosanquet 1 Lushington Lushington 3 | Inglis, H. 1800 Inglis 2 Scott 1 Scott 2 Mills, C. Sept. 2 Mills 1 Robarts 2 Robarts 1 Bosanquet 3 Bosanquet 2 Robarts 4 Elphinstone 1 Grant 5 Grant 1 Smith, G. 6 Elphinstone 2 Parry, E. 7 Parry 1 Grant 8 Parry 2 Grant 9 Grant 2 Astell 1810 Astell 1 Bosanquet 11 Bosanquet 3 Inglis, 11. 12 Inglis 3 Thornton, R. Thornton, A.1 Elphinstone 14 Elphinstone 3 Inglis, J. 15 Grant 3 Reid 16 Reid 1 Bebb 17 Bebb Pattison 18 Pattison... 1 Marjoribanks 19 Marjoribanks1 Robinson 1820 Robinson 1 Reid 21 Reid 2 Pattison 22 Pattison... 2 Wigram Wigram 1 Astell 24 Astell 2 Marjoribanks 25 Marjoribanks2 Robinson 26 Robinson 2 Lindsay 27 Lindsay ... 1 Pattison 28 Astell 3 Loch 29 Loch 1 Astell 1830 Astell 4) Campbell 31 Campbell 1 Ravenshaw 32 Ravenshaw 1 Marjoribanks 33 Marjoribanks3 Wigram Loch Tucker 34 Tucker 1 Clarke Clarke 1 Carnac 36 Carnac 2 Loch 37 Carnac 2 Lushington 38 Lushington 1 Jenkins 39 Jenkins Bayley 1840 Bayley Lyall 41 Lyall Lushington .., 1 23 ... Resigned rather than surrender the Com- pany's property for their present annuity. 35 24 (PART IL History of Offices. A List of the Directors of the Hon. East India Company, for the year 1841. Committee. Remarks. Years to serve. Finance and Home, Political and Military. Revenue, Judicial, and Legislative. Dorset square. FH FH FH FH PM FH FH FH PM PM 3 Chairman... ... George Lyall, Esq., 17, Park Crescent. 3 Dep. Chairman Major-Genl. Sir James Law Lushington, G.C.B., 26, 3 William Wigram, Esq., 56, Upper Harley-street. 2 Hon. H. Lindsay, 22, Berkeley-square. 1 William Stanley Clarke, Esq., Elm Bank, Leather-head. 2 Sir Robt. Campbell, Bart., 5, Argyll-place, Argyll-street. 4 Major-Genl. Archd. Robertson. 4 John Loch, Esq., Park. 4 Charles Mills, Esq. Camelford House, Oxford-street. 3 John Petty Muspratt, Esq. 21, Russell-square. 1 Henry Alexander, Esq., 5, Clarendon-place, Hyde Park Gardens. 4 Henry St. Geo. Tucker, Esq., 3, Upper Portland Place. 1 Sir William Young, Bart., 24, Upper Wimpole-street. 4 RJL Henry Shank, Esq., 62, Gloucester-place. 4 RJL John Cotton, Esq., 30, Upper Harley-street. 3 Lieut.-Col. Patrick Vans Agnew, Esq., C.B., 32, Lower Brook-street. 1 RJL John Shepherd, Esq., Holly Lodge, Walton-on-Thames. 1 RJL Francis Warden, Esq., 28, Bryanstone-square. 2 RJL Sir Henry Willock, K.L.S., Little Campden House, Kensington. 3 Jas. Weir Hogg, Esq. M.P., 40, Upper Grosvenor-street. 3 RJL Martin T. Smith, Esq., 34, Eaton-place, Belgrave-square. 2 Lieut.-Col. Wm. H. Sykes, 47, Albion-street, Hyde-park. 1 Col. Sir Jeremiah Bryant, C.B., Richmond. 4 RJL Wm. H. Chicheley Plowden, Esq., 8, Devonshire-place. PM PM FH PM THE COMMITTEE OF BY-LAWS. The Charter of 1698 invested the general court with the power of en- acting by-laws; and the first general court of the United Company appointed a Committee of fifteen proprietors, of £2,000 of stock, to frame by-laws. Their code ordained that, thenceforward, a Committee of seren was to be balloted, annually, in June; but, in 1716, the general court dis- pensed with the ballot, and substituted a show of hands; and in 1775, a motion to revert to the ballot was negatived. The Charter Act of 1813 rendered a revision of this code necessary, and then much labour devolved upon the Committee. The code is to be read annually in each court. In the long period of the thirty years which elapsed from 1786 to 1816, the Committee of by-laws made but two reports to the general court, and during the space of seven entire years, it had not eveu met at all. Lo VOL. 11.) 9 India Board. Appointed Commissioners. Other Name or Title. Remarks. 1806 Lord Henry Petty .. Marq. Lansdowne Jn. Henry Addington July 15 Earl of Carysfort Salary £1,500 1807 April 4 Earl Camden Lord Hawkesbury Lord Castlereagh Duel, 220 Sept. George Canning Duke of Portland { both resigned. Spencer Perceval Lord Lovaine Lord Teignmouth Thomas Wallace George Johnstone .. Until 1810 1809 July 11 Robert Dundas 1810 June 30 Richard Ryder : .. Secretary of State Marquess Wellesley Secretary of State Viscount Lowther Earl Bathurst Duke of Portland Lord F. A. Spencer Spencer Perceval Lord Lovaine Lord Teignmouth .. Sir J. Shore, Bart. Governor-General Thomas Wallace 1812 April Viscount Castlereagh Sept. 1 Earl Bathurst Viscount Sidmouth Nicolas Vansittart' Lord Bexley Lord Teignmouth .. Sir J. Shore, Bart. Thomas Wallace Until 1816 Viscount Lowther. Until 1818; Salary John Sullivan (£1,500 Viscount Apsley.. Until 1818; Salary 1814 Aug. 27 Lord Binning [£1,500 Wm. Sturges Bourne 1816 June Viscount Častlereagh Mar. Londonderry Earl Bathurst Viscount Sidmouth Earl of Liverpool Nicolas Vansittart Lord Binning Wm. Sturges Bourne 1818 June 13 Viscount Cranborne Lord Walpole 1822 Feb. 5 Secretary of State Earl Bathurst ... Secretary of State Sir Robert Peel ... Secretary of State Earl of Liverpool Nicolas Vansittart Lord Teignmouth John Sullivan PART II1. VOL. II. с 10 (PART IN History of Offices. Appointed. Commissioner. Other Name or Title. Remarks. 1822 Feb. 5 Viscount Cranborne W. H. Freemantle Sir G. Warrender, Bt. Dr. Joseph Philli- more, L.L. D. 1823 Feb. 7.F. J. Robinson .. ViscountGoderich Earl Bathurst George Canning Robert Peel Earl of Liverpool Lord Teignmouth John Sullivan Marg. of Salisbury W. H. Freemantle Sir G. Warrender, Bt. Dr. Joseph Philli- more, LL. D. 1826 June 2 Earl Bathurst George Canning Robert Peel Earl of Liverpool Duke of Wellington Marq. of Salisbury Lord Teignmouth John Sullivan Sir G. Warrender, Bt. Dr. Joseph Philli- more, LLD William Yates Peel 1827 May 17 Viscount Dudley. .. Dudley & Ward Viscount Goderich Wm. Sturges Bourne George Canning Lord Teignmouth John Sullivan Sir G. Warrender, Bt. Dr. Joseph_Philli- more, LL.D. Sir J. Macdonald, Bt. 1828 Feb. 4 Robert Peel Earl Dudley and Ward William Huskisson Duke of Wellington Henry Goulburn Lord Wallace John Sullivan Lord Ashley Marquess of Graham Lawrence Peel June 21 Robert Peel ........ Sec. for Home dep. Earl of Aberdeen .... Do. Foreign do. Sir G.Murray, G.C.B. Do. Colonial do. VOL. 11.] India Board. 13 A list of the several Secretaries and Joint Secretaries to the Board of Commissioners for the Affairs of India, from the first Commission until the present Commission, still in force, 1st January, 1841. (The Se- cretaries are always Members of the House of Commons.) Appointed. Secretary Salary Service. Other Office. Remarks. ... 1784 1791 1802 1805 1807 1808 1810 ... ... £ Y. M. C. W. B. Rouse... 1,800 7 M. P. for Henry Beaufoy.... 1,800 Yarmouth. Hon. W. Brodrick 1,800 3 Geo. Peter Holford 1,800 Thomas Creevey : 1,800 -Woolford.... 1,800 2 Geo. Peter Holford 1,800 6 Sir Parick Murray| 1,800 1 6 Thos. P.Courtenay) 1,800 14 George Bankes 2,000 2 Hon. J.S. Wortley) 2,000 6 Viscount Sandon 2,000 6 Thos.Hyde Villiers 2,000 Thos. B. Macauley 2,000 Ex-Commiss. S Robert Gordon .. 1,800 6 s do. J. A.S. Mackenzie 1,800 S {do. 1812 1828 1830 May 15 Nov. 1831 1833 May 1834 May 2. ... Nov. 6 1835 May 4 6 M. W. Praed ... { 1,800 {Robert V. Smith": 1,800 {William Clay Sdo. do. 1839 Dec. 1,800 1,800 2 Eldest son of the Duke Llof Somerset. The Under Secretaries and the Assistant Secretaries. Appointed. Secretary. Salary. Service. Other Office. Remarks 1784 1798 1802 1816 1828 1835 1836 £ Hon. W. Brodrick... 1,200 William Cabell 1,200 John Meheux....... 1,350 John Wright 1,200 Benjamin S. Jodes... 1,200 H, S. Alves 1,200 William Cabell 1,200 Y. M. 18 ... Secretary. 4 12 12 Yet in Office, 14 (PART M. THE COURT OF DIRECTORS OF THE EAST INDIA COMPANY pany, &c. This Court is composed of twenty-four (not of thirty ') proprietors, qualified by Act of Parliament and chosen by ballot from the body of the electors. The necessary qualifications are natural-born or a nalur- alized subject of Great Britain,--the possession of £2,000 stock, no matter for what previous period in his own right or for his own use, not being a Director of the Bank of England or South Sea Company, a Resident in England for two years after holding office in India, or having held no maritime office in the service of the Company for two years previous to his proposed election, and not having under any plea or pretence whatsoever, endeavoured to obtain directly or indirectly a vote for the election of himself or any other person to be a Director. If elected he takes a solemn oath in pursuance of an act passed (the 33d George III.) of which the following is the substance: After bind- ing him to carry on no private trade, to have no dealings with the Com- pany except as a private individual, not to hold any place of emolument under the crown :-He further swears pot to accept or take either any emolument or present for any appointment or nomination of persons to any place or office in his gift, or that of the Company, or on account of appointing the voyage of any ships in the Company's employ, or on account of, or any ways relating to, any other business or affairs of the Company, and further swears to be faithful to the Company, and accord. ing to the best of his skill and understanding to give his best advice and assistance for the support of the good government of the Com- The hye-laws enact that a Director must make a report to the Court previous to leaving England; he has no power to remain beyond the seas more than one year, and is liable to removal by the Court of Pro. prietors; every Director absent on a Court day is fined £l. 18. Six Directors retire appually by rotation and are not again eligible for one year, and in case of death or removal, the Director who may be chosen to fill the vacancy, holds it only during the remainder of the term which his predecessor had to serve. Seven month's public notice is given of any annual election ; printed lists of members, qualified candidates, are published thirty days before any election. A chairman and depaty chairman are annually chosen by ballot. The Court must meet at least once in every week ; not less than thirteen Directors form a court; on all questions of importance the sense of the Court is taken by ballot, and in case of any equality of votes, the drawing of a lot by the Treasurer determines. The Court of Directors enjoy full authority over all matters at home as well as abroad, relating to i he political, financial, judicial, military, and commercial affairs of the Company, (with the exception of matters of the highest importance entrusted to the Committee of Secrecy) but its proceedings are subject to various acts of Parliament, to the superin- tendence of the Board of Control, and in several matters to the appro- val of the General Court as before detailed. The Court of Directors have the patronage of India, and they have power to remove any officers or servants, except those appointed by the Crown. They are to lay certain accounts annually before Parliament; to frame regulations for the trade of friendly nations with India ; and to report half-yearly on recruiting. They expend the revenues of India, and their declaration of an officer not having settled his accounts, ren- ders him ineligible for the directon, for two years after his return. VOL 11.7 15 Court of Directors. | They are to frame estimates of Home expenses; and to regulate the promulgation of laws in India. They can suspend the Council boards in India, or reduce the number of their members. The Court of Directors regulate the distribution of patronage in India, and they are specially directed to take into their consideration, all drafts of laws respecting slavery in India, transmitted from India, and to give instructions thereon. For the better fulfilment of these multifarious duties, the Court is divided into Departmental Committees, with distinct subordinates. The chief committees of the Court are as follows : Secretary Committee. Finance and Home Committee. Revenue, Judicial Legislative Military and Political Committee. Committee. Committee of Secretary.-The Cabinet Council of the Company,- functions ministerial,-defined by act of Parliament, composed of the Chairman, deputy Chairman, and senior Director, who receive and de- liberate on all despatches of the hightest importance relative to peace, war, or negotiation abroad, and all matters of a delicate nature at home, confer with the Broad of Control thereon and officially sign private despatches from the Board, the responsibility and power remaining with the letter. The mode of transacting the business of the E. I. Company with the Governments of India is as follows. Despatches from India are on their arrival delivered to the proper department, and when necessary to address the Governments, either in answer to despatches or otherwise, a draft is framed under the superintendence of the Chief of the Depart- ment to which the business belongs. The draft thus prepared is sub- mitted to the Chairman and Deputy Chairman, and when approved by them, is usually (if of an important nature, or upon a subject on which any serious difference of opinion is likely to arise) transmitted in what is called 'previous communication to the Board, who return it with such alterations as they desire to be made.-The views of the Board having been thus ascertained, the draft is either altered to meet them or not, as the chair may determine, and in the state which they approve, it is laid before the proper Commiitee, by whom it is considered and forwarded to the Table of the Court. There it undergoes full discussion, and in the form finally determined by the Court is transmitted Officially for the approval of the Board. Jf returned approved, it is despatched, to India forthwith; if altered, the alterations become the subject of fresh consideration and (if at variance with the impressions of the Court) of correspondence and remonstrance. When the final decision of the Board is obtained, the altered draft is forwarded as a despatch in the form mentioned. In some cases where no necessity appears for making a Draft, the subject of the proceedings is dispensed with. The preparation of drafts sometimes requires communications between different departments of the house, these do not assume a formal Charac- ter, they are made either personally or by transferring the papers accom- panied by short unofficial notes or memoranda. VOL. 11.) 25 Court of Directors. June, 1814, at the first Midsummer meeting after the Charter was renewed, in consequence of the old Committee having never been in the habit of meeting to discharge their duties, some proprietors intended to expose their neglect, but the chairmain re-appointed the old Committee of seven. Even then, the subject was brought forward, and the Company felt the need of a reform in the Committee. The Committee appointed to inspect the Company's by-laws met at the India House, and, on the 16th of February, 1815, they made a report, recommending various alterations. Amongst the alterations made, the following may be noticed : the Company's books of Home accounts had been balanced on the 30th June ; but, because their India accounts and parliamentary accounts were brought up only to the 30th of April , that date was adopted for the Home account also, as tending to exhibit a more correct view of the pecuniary concerns of the Company. The accounts of each Presidency were in future to be signed by the accountant-general, on pain of dismissal on refusing or neglecting to sign them. In the annual account laid before the proprietors, the proviso for including the guarantee fund was now omitted, because the new Charter Act directed the way in which that fund was to be appro- priated. The general accounts of the Company must consequently exhibit its amount and application; and therefore that part of the old by-law became unnecessary. The charter of 1793 had obliged the Company to supply tonnage for private trade; but now the India trade was opened to private British ships ; and therefore the rule for accounts of this tonnage was abrogated. A more correct check on the treasury account than that resulting from the old by-law was also recommended for adoption. Here- tofore, the law was, that every tender should be entered as the same is re- ceived, and remain upon the records of the Company; but because many of the offers for goods contained so much extraneous matter, and are so long and incoherent, that the entering of such into a book was a work of very great labour and of no apparent utility,' it was now ordained merely • that an abstract, containing the substance,' should be recorded. As the proprietors of private trade now obtained the right to direct the sale of their goods when they please,' the old by-law on the subject became useless, and therefore it was dropped in framing the new code. In drawing from the bank, instead of the cashier's signature being sufficient, it was proposed, as a more secure check on the Company's cash, that the signature of a chairman and of another director, countersigned by the cashier, should be required, and that only the cashier should present the draft for payment. The Secret Committee of Directors, which existed previous to the Secret Committee enacted in 1793, was revived for the management of such part of the commercial affairs as might be of a nature to require secrecy. Com- mittees of Directors had been obliged to report immediately to the Court of Directors; but now, in order to enable absentees to inform themselves on points discussed, previous to reporting, fourteen days were allowed for the report. The Committee of Shipping was abolished, and those of buying and warehouses were united into one. In order to invest the chairman with the same power as in most other corporations, it was proposed to invest him with power to call a Court of Directors as often as he thought fit, and that no Director should quit the Court without leave of the chairman. Superannuations of the Home Es- tablishment not to be laid before the general court, but gratuities exceed- ing £600 to be reported to a special general court being submitted to the Board. A Committee empowered to license exports on the Company's ships, as it would be extremely inconvenient to have the sense of thirteen Directors on such matters. Licensed ships to be reported annually. The Company now allowed the Court of Directors to invest the Company's PART III, VOL. II. E 26 (PART III. History of Offices. money in shipping for the general service of the Company, that is, to hold Indiamen. In 1816, the Committee was increased to fifteen members, and was ob- liged to meet, at least, twice a year; and up to the year 1829, it actually met fifty times. In 1835, the Chairman of the Company said, that on no occasion, within his memory, had it happened that a nomination from the chair had been set aside. BY-LAWS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE CORPORATION OF THE EAST INDIA COMPANY. CHAPTER I. Accounts. Sec. 1.- It is ordained, that the books containing the general accounts of this Company in England shall be balanced to the 30th day of April yearly, and the balance be drawn out within six calendar months after the receipt of the Indian books of account, corresponding in period with the books about to be balanced in England. Sec. 2.--Item, It is ordained, that the books of this Company's affairs in India shall, once every year, be balanced in every of the said Company's stations the 30th April in each year; and transcripts or copies thereof, signed by the chief civil servant of each station, and those from the Pre- sidency by the Accountant-general, shall be sent to England by the first opportunity following: that those persons, whose duty it shall be to make up the same, and who shall refuse or neglect so to do, shall become liable to dismission from the Company's service ; and that those accounts, when prepared, shall be accordingly transmitted to England by the first safe conveyance. Sec. 3.-Iterr, It is ordained, that the Secretary or his assistant in the department of accounts, or such other officer as the Court of Directors may appoint, with the person keeping the journal in that department, do, within fourteen days after the end of every month, examine all entries of receipts and payments of that month by their respective vouchers, and the addi- tions and balance thereof, and certify under their hands, upon the cash- book, that they have so done, and how they find the same. Sec. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that all accounts shall be examined by the respective Committees, and pass the Court of Directors quarterly. CHAPTER II. Buying, Selling, Hiring, and Contracting. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that an abstract, containing the substance of every tender for selling or furnishing to this Company any sort of goods or merchandize, or for performing any business whatsoever, shall be entered as the same is received, and remain upon the records of the Company. SEC. 3.- Item, It is ordained, that all purchases for exportation by the Court of Directors, or any Committee thereof, excepting bullion, be made by open competition (excepting in cases where the Court or Committee shall be of opinion that this mode cannot be adopted beneficially for the Company); and that, in all such cases, no private contract shall be com- pleted without the concurrence and approval of the Court of Directors to such contract. VOL. 11.] 27 Court of Directors. Sec. 3.- Item, It is ordained, that all the provisions regulating the mode of building, hiring, and contracting for ships for the service of the Com- pany, which are contained in the Act of the 58th Geo. 3, cap. 83, intitu- led, “ An Act to amend and reduce into one Act the several laws relating to the manner in which the East-India Company are required to hire ships,” shall be and be considered as By-laws of the Company. SEC. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that the Court of Directors shall not ac- cept the tender of any ship, but such as shall be first made by one or more of the owners in writing, wherein shall be expressed the names of all the other owners. CHAPTER III. By-Laws. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that the general court be held yearly in the month of June, a committee of fifteen shall be chosen, whereof five to be a quorum, who, being hereby authorized and empowered, are required to meet at least twice in the year, to inspect the By-laws, and to make in- quiry into the observance and execution of them, and to consider that al- terations and additions may be proper to be made, and to report their opi- nion from time to time to the general court; and that the said committee shall be summoned to meet, by the secretary for the time being, on the requisition of any two memebers thereof. Sec. 2.- Item, It is ordained, that the By-laws shall be read in the first Court of Directors, and first general court after every annual election. Sec. 3.— Item, It is ordained, that no By-laws shall be ordained, altered, repealed, or suspended, without the consent and approbation of two gene- ral courts, specially to be called for that purpose : of the first of which ge- neral courts fourteen days' public notice the least be given. CHAPTER IV. Cash. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that the Court of Directors shall not invest any of the Company's money in purchasing any part or share in the capital stock of this Company, without the consent of the general court first had. Sec. 2.-Item, It is ordained, that the Court of Directors shall not invest any of the Company's money in shipping, excepting for the service of the Company. Sec. 3.- Item, It is ordained, that the cash of this corporation, except such sums as the Court of Directors shall think necessary to trust under the care of the Company's cashier, from time to time, for the current business, shall be kept at the Bank of England, in such method as the Court of Di. rectors shall appoint. Sec. 4.- Item, It is ordained, that for every sum drawn out of the Bank of England, a write-off or draft shall be signed by the chairman or deputy chairman for the time being, and one other director of the finance and home committee, and countersigned by the principal cashier or his first assistant, or by such other officer or officers as the Court of Directors shall appoint for that purpose, and that no other person but the principal cashier or his first assistant shall present the said write-off or draft for payment; except- ing nevertheless, that all bills of exchange accepted by order of the Court of Directors, and the dividends on the Company's capital stock, and also orders for monies made payable to others; then the cashier, or his first assis- tant, may, if the Court of Directors should think fit so to direct, be paid at 28 (PART II. History of Offices. the Bank of England, in such manner as may be arranged between the Court of Directors and the Bank. Sec. 5.--Item, It is ordained, that no money relating to the affairs of the Company shall be disposed of without an order of the Court of Directors, and that the interest, and all other advantages arising and growing upon the cash of the Company, shall be brought to the account of the said Company. Sec. 6. Item, It is ordained, that the book containing the state of the cash shall be laid before the Court of Directors once in every week by the cashier, and that he sign the same. Sec. 7.-Item, It is ordained, that the Chairman or Deputy Chairman, and two of the Court of Directors, do once a month, or oftener, examine the several species whereof the balance of the cash consists, and certify the same under their hands. Sec. 8.-Item, It is ordained, that no unlimited vote of credit shall be given by the Court of Directors to the Finance and Home Committee on the Company's account. Sec. 9.— Item, It is ordained, that no bill of exchange, draft, or note, other than notes of the Bank of England, shall be taken in any payment whatsoever to the Company, except bankers' notes payable on demand, for the due payment whereof, the parties, paying them in, shall engage to be responsible for the three following days. CHAPTER V. Committees. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that the report of every committee ap- pointed by the Court of Directors shall be signed and laid before a Court of Directors within eight days. Sec. 2.--Item, It is ordained, that the quorum of the Finance and Home Committee shall never consist of less than three Directors. CHAPTER VI. Directors, Officers, and Servants. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that a Court of Directors shall be sum- moned and held once in every week, at the least. Sec. 2.- Item, It is ordained, that at the first Court of Directors after every annual election, a chairman and deputy chairman shall be chosen for the year by the ballot, and that each of them be allowed five hundred pounds a year, every other director three hundred pounds a year, for his attendance upon the business of this Company. Sec. 3.-Item, It is ordained, that in all cases, no Director of this Com- pany shall have any dealings or business with the Company upon his own account, either separately or in conjunction with any other person or per- sons, for or in respect of buying for, or selling to, the Company, any bullion or other goods ; or in the making of any other bargain or contract by, to, or with, this Corporation, other than at any of the Company's public sales. Sec. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that no Director of this Company shall, directly or indirectly, tender to the Court of Directors any ship or vessel of which he shall be an owner, or part owner; and that in case any ship or sbares of ships, in the service of the said Company, shall come to a Direc- tor by bequest or marriage, or as next of kin of any person who shall die intestate, such Director shall give notice in writing to the Court of Directors of this being so interested, and shall sell and dispose of his interest in such shipping withiņ twelve months next after the same shall bave accrued, or 30 History of Offices. (PART II. cap. 85. Sec. 14.-Item, It is ordained, that any Director who shall dissent from any resolution of the Court of Directors shall have the liberty of entering his dissent, with the reasons thereof, on the minutes of the said court, within fourteen days from the passing of such resolution ; and that when- ever the Court of Directors shall pass a resolution of protest against orders or instructions given by the Board of Commissioners for the affairs of India, after remonstrance on the part of the court, such resolution of protest shall be laid before the next general court. Sec. 15.-Item, It is ordained, that no order shall be sent by the Direc- tors to, or be obeyed by, any persons employed in the service of this Com- pany in India, or any other parts beyond the Cape of Good Hope, but such as shall be signed by thirteen or more of the Directors for the time being ; except such orders as are directed or allowed to be issued by the secret committee, pursuant to the Act of Parliament, 3 and 4 Wm. # Sec. 16.— Item, It is ordained, that no Director, officer, or servant of this Company in Europe, shall trade, either as principal or agent, or ex- ecute any mercantile commission, either directly or indirectly, under any colour or pretence whatever, to or from India, otherwise than in the joint stock of the Company, or transact any kind of business for persons resi- dent in India, for any gain or emolument whatever ; and that whatsoever Director, officer, or servant of this Company in Europe, shall offend against this ordinance, shall forfeit to the use of this Company the value of such goods, merchandizes, and money, as he or they shall trade for, or be con- cerned in executing any mercantile commission fot, contrary to this ordi- nance, and shall be incapable of serving the Company in any place or office whatever, the qualification for which is subject to regulation by the general court; and if a Director, shall be further liable to be removed from that office. Sec. 17.-Item, It is ordained, that no officer or servant of this Com- pany in Europe shall have any dealings or business with this Company, upon his own account or for his own profit and advantage, directly or in- directly, solely or in conjunction with any other person or persons, or in any manner whatsoever without the express permission and authority of the Court of Directors in writing, signed by the secretary. Sec. 18.-Item, It is ordained, that no officer or servant belonging to the Company shall, directly or indirectly, demand or accept any fee, reward, or present, other than such as shall be allowed and established by the Court of Directors, and contained in a table or tables of fees, to be printed and ex- posed to public view in every office where fees are allowed to be taken. Sec. 19.-Item, It is ordained, that no officer or servant of this Com- pany shall be or take upon himself the office of a broker. CHAPTER VII. Elections. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that if any member of this Company shall, by menaces or promises, collusive transfer or transfers of stock, by any fee, present, reward, or remuneration, under the plea of defraying travelling expenses, or under any other plea or pretence whatsoever, directly or in- directly obtain, or endeavour to obtain, any vote for the election of him- self or any other to be a Director, and be declared guilty thereof at a general court, to be called for that purpose, such person shall be incapable there- after of holding any office, the qualification for which is subject to the re- gulation of the general court; and if a Director, be further liable to be removed from his office. VOL. 11.] Court of Directors. 31 Sec. 2.-Item, It is ordained, that no list shall be received for any elec- tion, after the glass is finally sealed up according to the time prefixed. Sec. 3.- Item, It is ordained, that if, upon the scrutiny for Directors, any two or more persons qualified shall have an equal number of votes, the election in such cases shall be determined by drawing lots in the general court in which such scrutiny shall be reported. Sec. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that it, on the scrutiny, two or more per- sons qualified for the same office have the same Christian and surnames, and are not distinguished by their additions, or if a wrong Christian name or any list is placed to a surname when but one person of that surname is qualified, or literal mistakes are made in Christian or surnames : in every of the said cases, the majority of the scrutineers may determine the person or persons intended; but in case of the scrutineers being equally divided, the question shall be decided by drawing lots. Sec. 5.—Item, It is ordained, that previous to every annual election of Directors, at least seven months' public notice shall be given thereof, and two printed lists of the members who appear qualified to vote shall be ready to be delivered; the first at least five months, and the second at least fourteen days before the day of the election. Sec. 6.-Item, It is ordained, that a list shall be published, thirty days before the annual election of Directors, containing the names of such Pro- prietors, qualified agreeable to law, as shall signify in writing, to the secre- tary, their desire of becoming candidates for the direction, thirty-two days before such annual election. Sec. 7.-Item, It is ordained, that in all elections to be annually made of six Directors for four years, in pursuance of the Act of Parliament of the 13th year of his Majesty King George 3, cap. 63, each Proprietor voting shall give in a list, containing not more than six names of persons duly qualified to be Directors; and if any list shall contain the names of more than six persons duly qualified, every such list shall be totally rejected. SEC. 8.-Item, It is ordained, that the fourth and seventh sections of this chapter shall be inserted at the end of every printed list delivered to the Proprietors, at or before the annual election. Sec. 9.-Item, It is ordained, that in all elections of committees made by ballot, in a general court, the same method (so near as the case will admit) shall be observed, under such penalties as are before prescribed concerning the election of Directors. Sec. 10.-Item, It is ordained, that whenever two or more ballots are to be taken on distinct questions on the same day, the same ballots be taken in rooms ; and that upon every public ballot, the directors in charge of the glasses, at their being opened, shall require the scrutineers, should any be then present, to satisfy themselves of their being empty, and that at the conclusion of each ballot, the Directors in charge of the glasses deliver the same, sealed up, to the scrutineers. CHAPTER VIII. General Courts. Sec. 1.- Item, It is ordained, that if at any general court nine of the members present, duly qualified to vote, shall demand a ballot for deter- mining any question, except for adjourment, or the previous question, or an amendment, such question shall be put by the ballot, and not otherwise. Sec. 2.-Item, It is ordained, that if any doubt shall arise in the general court upon, or relating to, any declaration which shall be made, from the chair, upon the question for adjournment, or the previous question, or an 32 History of Offices. (PART IIL amendment, such question shall be determined by a division of the Proprie- tors, duly qualified to vote, then present. Sec. Ž. ---Item, It is ordained, that all questions, in any general court, except the previous question or for adjournment, shall," if required, be stated in writing, before the same shall be put, and the chairman shall not adjourn or dissolve the court without a question. SEC. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that no motions shall, in future, be made in a general court, to forgive any offences committed by any of the Company's servants, or to make any grants of any sums of money out of the Com- pany's cash, without notice being given in writing by the persons proposing the same, and published by the Court of Directors, at least, fourteen days previous to the holding of such general court. Sec. 5. Item, It is ordained, that all notices of motions for considera- tion in the general court shall be advertised in two or more of the London morning newspapers, at least, three days before the day of meeting, at which the motion is to be taken into consideration. Sec. 6.— Item, It is ordained, that no persons be admitted to be present at any general court who shall not, at the time, be possessed of five hun- dred pounds stock. CHAPTER IX. Offices, Salaries, Pensions, and Gratuities. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that no new office, either at home or abroad, shall be created by the Directors with any salary exceeding the sum of two hundred pounds per annum, without the approbation of two general courts, to be summoned for that purpose. Sec. 2.-Item, It is ordained, that no additional salary, exceeding, in the whole, two hundred pounds per annum, shall be annexed to any office without the approbation of two general courts to be summoned for that purpose. Sec. 3.- Item, It is ordained, that every resolution of the Court of Directors for granting a new pension, or an increase of pension, exceeding, in the whole, two hundred pounds per annum, to any one person, sball be laid before and approved by two general courts, specially summoned for that purpose, before the same shall be submitted to the Board of Com- missioners for the affairs of India, in the form of a report, stating the grounds upon which such grant is recommended, which resolution and report shall be signed by such Directors as approve the same ; and that the documents upon which such resolution may have been formed shall be open to the inspection of the Proprietors, from the day on which public notice has been given of the proposed grant; and that such allowances, in the nature of superannuations, as the Court of Directors are empowered to grant to their officers and servants in England, by 53 Geo. 3, cap. 155, sec. 93, shall be laid before the next general court. Sec. 4.-Item, It is ordained, that every resolution of the Court of Di- rectors for granting to any person, by way of gratuity, any sum of money, exceeding in the whole six hundred pounds, shall be laid before and ap- proved by two general courts, specially summoned for that purpose, in the form of a report, stating the grounds upon which such grant is recommended, which resolution and report shall be signed by such Directors as ap- prove the same, and that the documents, on which such resolution may have been formed, shall be open to the inspection of the Proprietors from the day on which public notice has been given of the proposed grant. VOL. II.] 33 Court of Directors. CHAPTER X. Parliamentary Papers and Proceedings. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that copies of such accounts and papers, as may, from time to time, be laid before either House of Parliament, by the Court of Directors, and copies of all bills or resolutions in either House in anywise regarding the East India Company, shall be laid upon the table of the reading-room appropriated to the Proprietors, and shall be laid before the next general court; and that all proceedings of Parliament which, in the opinion, of the Court of Directors, may affect the rights, in- terests, or privileges, of the East-India Company, shall be submitted by them to the consideration of a general court, to be specially summoned for that purpose, before the same shall be passed into a law. CHAPTER XI. Register of Bonds and other Instruments. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that the Court of Directors do cause a register of all bonds for money borrowed at interest to be kept, under the inspection of those who have the custody of the seal. Sec. 2.-Item, It is ordained, that a register be kept, in like manner, for the entry of all other bonds and instruments, of what kind soever, which shall pass under the Company's seal. Sec. 3.—Item, It is ordained, that the secretary, for the time being, do see that the said register-books be laid before the Court of Directors at the first court in every calendar month. CHAPTER XII. Seal of the Company. Sec. 1.-Item, It is ordained, that the common seal of this corporation shall be kept under three locks. That the key of one of the said locks shall be kept by the chairman or deputy chairman, for the time being ; that the key of another of the said locks shall be kept by the secretary or his assistant; and that the key of the third lock shall be kept by the exami- ner of India correspondence or his assistant. That in case of the indis- pensable absence of the chairman and deputy chairman, they be autho- rized to place their key in the custody of such other officer as they may select for that purpose : and that the said seal shall not be set to any writing or instrument, but by an order of the Court of Directors first had for that purpose ; and in the unavoidable absence of the chairman or de- puty chairman, not to be affixed but in the presence of the secretary and the examiner of India correspondence, or their respective assistants, and of the officer who may be in charge of the chairman and deputy chair- man's key PART III. VOL. II. E 34 (PART IIL History of Offices. 1838. 1839. 1840, 51 43 42 Military 22 22 09151 10 Mindsto se do OLIG i tot asa A List of the several Establishments of the East India Company in England, and of the Salaries and Allowances payable by the Court of Directors in respect thereof, on thelst day of May in each year of their present Charter of the Govt. of India, according to the 3 & 4 Wm. IV., c. 86, s. 119. Persons. Allowances in £ sterling. Department 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838 1839. 1840. 1835. 1836. 1837. Secretary's 45 103 80 85 85 84 16,090 37,717 36,817 40,200 40,523 41,188 Examiner's 47 43 43 19,910 18,282 17,109 17,840 18,407 19,143 Finance 75 32,416 22 22 22 8,560 8,855 8,362 9,100 9,524 9,323 Library 2 3 4 790 790 1,105 1,205 1,205 1,205 Works 3 3 2 2 2 2 855 855 355 355 355 455 Hydrography 1 1 4001 400 Geography 1 1 100 100 100 200 Law -Counsel .. 1 1 1 1 1 500 500 500 500 500 500 Solicitor ..: 1 1 1 1 1 500 500 500 500 500 500 Medical ;-Physician 1 1 1 1 1 470 4701 470 4701 470 470 Veterinary 1 1 1 1 1 1001 100 100 100 100 100 Clerical ;-Chaplain 1 1 1 1 1 100 1001 100 1001 100 100 House;--Court Room, Messengers, &c. 6 6 6 6 6 5 1,400 1,415 1,415 1,400 1,400 1,270 Ditto ditto 28 27 25 25 25 26 2,390 2,340 2,380 2,195 2,345 Housekeepers, Firemen, Watermen... 12 12 12 12 12 12 661 671 671) 671 671 671 Sale Room ;—Crier and Auctioneer 1 1 1 220 2201 220 Storekeepers 20 26 26 26 21 24 4,472 4,735 4,7831 5,140 4,823 5,359 Warehouse, Tea... 37 32 18 11,389| 7,235 4,635 4,185 Ditto Bengal and Coast 10 9 4,353 3,530 3,090 Ditto Private Trade 25 15 5 4 4,940 4,620 3,870 4,700 1,9901 1,505 Ditto Pepper and Petre ... 8 8 5 2,070 1,739 1,580 45 44 43 41 45 7,220 7,220 6,842 6,341 6,555 6,691 Seminary 57 65 57 67 57 67 8,938 8,9581 8,936 9,070 9,103 9,020 Recruiting ;-Depôt at Chatham 26 26 26 26 26 3,599 3,611 3,620 3,6241 3,6241 3,889 Ditto in the Districts 19 19 19 19 23 2,116 2,055 2,366 2,2961 2,400 5,476 Home Establishment 494 467 402 382 404 1,34,464 1,16,018 1,09,926 1,10,092 1,04,646 1,09,410 2,195 14 15 13 College 48 30 87 36 (PART I. History of Offices. copies of various public documents to be laid before it for discussion and consideration; but by Act of Parliament it is prevented rescinding, sus- pending, revoking, or varying, any order or resolution of the Court of Directors relative to the Revenues, or civil or military Government, after the same shall have received the approbation of the Board of Control. EAST-INDIA COLLEGE. HAILEY BURY HERTS. Visitor. The Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of London. Principal. The Rev. Charles Webb Le Bas, A.M. Dean. The Rev. James Amiraux Jeremie, A.M. Registrar. The Rev. Frederic Smith, A.M. PROFESSORS : European Department. Classics The Rev. J. A. Jeremie, A.M. | The Rev. J. W. Lucas Heavişide, A.M. Mathematics History & Political Economy ... The Rev. Richard Jones, A.M. Law Wm. Empson, Esq., A.M., F. R. S. L. ORIENTAL DEPARTMENT : Visitor. H. H. Wilson, Esq., A.M., F.R.S. Professors. Hindee, Hindustani and Mahratta... Vernon Schalch, Esq. Arabic and Persian......... Meerza Mohammad Ibraheem. Sanscrit and Teloogoo ...... Francis Johnson, Esq. } The Rev. Fred. Smith, A.M. ........ NOMINATION OF STUDENTS. Regulations and Preparatory Instructions. No Candidate for the College can be nominated thereto, until he has completed the sixteenth year of his age. And no person who has been dismissed from the Army or Navy, or expelled from any place of education will be nominated to the College. The parents or guardian of every candidate for the College will be re- quired to address the following letter to the nominating Director :- Sir :- I beg to assure you, on my honour, that my to whom you kore been so good as to give a nomination to the College, has not been dismissed from the Army or the Navy, and that he never has been expelled from any place of education. 'I have the honor to be, &c. Candidates for the College must produce the undermentioned docu. ments, previously to their being nominated as students. An extract from the parish register of their birth or baptism, properly signed by the minister, churchwarden, or elders ; and, in addition thereta, a certificate, agreeably to the following form, signed by the parent, guar- dian, or near relation : VOL. 11.) East India College. 37 on I do hereby certify, that the foregoing extract from the register of baptisms of the parish of , in the county of contains the date of the birth of my who is the bearer of this, and presented for a nomination s a stu den at the Easi- India College, by -, Esq. ; and I do further declare, that I received the said pre- sentation for my gratuitously, and that no money or other valuable considera- tion has been or is to be paid, either directly or indirecily, for the same, and that I will not pay or cause to be paid, either by myself, by my- -, or by the hands of any other person, any pecuniary or valuable consideration whatsoever to any person or persons who have interested themselves in procuring the said presentation for my from the director above mentioned, Witness my hand, this day of in the year of our Lord In the event of no parish register existing or to be found, a declaration of such circumstance is to be made before a magistrate to the following effect, viz. :) 1, —, presented as a student for the East India College by do de clare, that I have caused search to be made for a parish register whereby to ascertain my age, but am unable to produce the same, there being none to be found ; and, further, 1 declare, chat from the information of my parents (and other relations), which informa- tion I veri believe to be true, that I was born in the parish of the county of in the year and that I am not at this time under the age of sixteen, or above twenty-one years. Witness my hand, this day of in the year of our Lord The parent, guardian, or near relation, must then add his certificate as to the truth of the declaration, which must be similar to that ordered to be annexed to the extract from the parish register. The above-mentioned certificates (and declaration, in cases where a de- claration shall be required) are to be annexed to the petition to be written by the candidate, and they are to sign a declaration thereon, that they have read these printed instructions. The same declaration is to be signed by the parent, guardian, or near relation of the candidates respectively. Candidates will be interrogated in an open Committee as to their charac- ter, connexions, and qualifications, conformably to the General Court's resolution of the 6th July, 1809. The nature of this interrogation may be known on application to the Clerk of the College department. And the following Rules and Regulations are to be observed with respect to the examination of candidates :- Each candidate shall produce testimonials of good moral conduct, under the hand of the principal or superior authority of the college or public in- stitution in which he may have been educated, or under the hand of the private instructor to whose care he may have been confided; and the said testimonials shall have reference to his conduct during the two years im- mediately preceding his presentation for admission. Each candidate shall be examined in the Four Gospels of the Greek Tes- tament, and shall not be deemed duly qualified for admission to Haileybury College, unless he be found to possess a competent knowledge thereof; nor unless he be able to render into English some portion of the works of one of the following Greek authors :-Homer, Herodotus, Xenophon, Thucydides, Sophocles, and Euripides ; nor unless he can render into English some portion of the works of one of the following Latin authors ; -Livy, Terence, Cicero, Tacitus, Virgil, and Horace; and this part of the examination will include questions. in ancient history, geography, and philosophy. Each candidate shall also be examined in modern history and geography, and in the elements of mathematical science, including the common rules of arithmetic, vulgar and decimal fractions, and the first four books of Euclid. He shall also be examined in moral philosophy, and in the evi- dences of the Christian religion as set forth in the works of Paley. 38 History of Offices. (PART It is, however, to be understood, that superior attainments in one of the departments of literature or science, comprised in the foregoing plan of examination, shall, at the discretion of the Examiners, be considered to compensate for comparative deficiency in other qualifications; and also that the examination shall be so conducted as to give to each candidate reasonable time to prepare himself for the said examination. A student publicly expelled the College will not be admitted into the Company's Civil or Military service in India, or into the Company's Mili- tary Seminary. No person can be appointed a Writer in the Company's Service whose age is less than eighteen or more than twenty-three years, nor until he shall have resided four terms at least, in the College, and shall have obtained a certificate, signed by the Principale, of his having conformed himself to the statutes and regulations of the College. On a student's appointment to be a Writer after he has left the College, a legal instrument is to be entered into by some one person (to be approved by the Court of Directors) binding himself to pay the sum of £3,000, as liquidated damages, to the Company, for breach of a covenant to be entered into, that the student's nomination hath not been in any way bought, or sold, or exchanged for any thing convertible into a pecuniary benefit. The rank of students leaving the College is determined by the certificate of the Principal, which is granted with reference to the industry, pro- ficiency, and general good behaviour of the students. Such rank to take effect only in the event of the students proceeding to India within six months after they are so ranked. TERMS OF ADMISSION FOR STUDENTS. On hundred guineas per annum, for each student; a moiety whereof to be paid at the commencement of each term, there being two in the year, besides the expense of books and stationery. Students to provide themselves with a table-spoon, tea-spoon, knife and fork, half a dozen towels, tea equipage, and a looking-glass; also, with not less than two pair of sheets, two pillow-cases, and two breakfast cloths. Ten guineas to be paid on leaving the College by each student, for the usc of the philosophical apparatus and library. COLLEGE TERMS. Ist commences 19th January ands entleh Decembe} in each Year. in 2d 15th December N. B. The Students are to provide themselves with proper Academical Habits. MILITARY SEMINARY. Addiscombe, Surrey. PUBLIC EXAMINER AND INSPECTOR. Col. C. W. Pasley, C.B., F.R.S., F.A.S, F.G.S., Royal Engineers. LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR. Major Gen. Sir Ephraim G. Stannus, Knt. C.B., Bombay Army. Chapluin Rev. Thomas Bisset, A.M. Major T. Ritherdon, late Bombaye Staff Captain... Artillery. VOL. II.] 39 Military Seminary. Orderly Officers Lieut. J. D. Scott, Madras Art. Lieut. and Brev. Capt. Henry T. Tucker, Bengal N.I. ... Public ExAMINER, ORIENTAL DEPARTMENT, Horace II. Wilson, M.A. F.R.S., Sanscrit Professor, Oxford. ... ... PROFESSORS AND MASTERS. Rev. Jonathan Cape, A.M, Alexander Anderson, LL.D., Mathematics and Classics ... Samual Parlour. Rey. T. Bisset, A.M. (Chaplain). John B. Rudduck. Fortification... ſ Capt. Hector Straith. Lieut. T. Cook, R.N., F.R.S. Military Drawing Edw. B. Metcalf. Military Surveying... Major Basil Jackson. Landscape Drawing ST.Ü. Fielding J.C. Schetky. Oriental Languages Richard Ilaughton, M.R.A.S. Chemistry and Geology J. F. Daniel, F.R.S. Marin de la Voye, Member of the French Hist. and Lit. French Inst. Sword Exercises H. Angelo, Jun. {Charles Bowles { ... Purveyor and Steward, R.M. Leeds. (By a Resolution of the Court of Directors of the 16th January, 1828, all Cadets at the Military Seminary, and all subsequent nominations thereto, are deemed for general Service until brought forward for public exami- nation.) TERMS OF ADMISSION. Conditions and Qualifications for a Candidate. 1. No candidate can be admitted under the age of fourteen, or above thc age of eighteen, years. 2. No Person can be admitted who has been dismissed, or obliged to retire, from the Army or Navy, the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, or from any other public in- stitution. 3. Every candidate must produce a certificate of his birth taken from the parish register, and signed by the minister, and countersigned by the church wardens; or, if born in Scotland, by the session's clerk and two elders, accompanied by a declaration from his father, mother, or nearest of kin, the forms of which may be had in the Military Department. In the event of there being no register of his birth or baptism, the candidate will be furnished with the form of a declaration to be taken by bim previously to his being apppointed. 4. No candidate will be admitted without a certificate that he has had the small-pos, or has been vaccinated ; nor without a certificate, in the Vol. 11.] 41 Military Seminary. 4. The Cadets will, on their first joining Addiscombe, be supplied with the following books, the cost of which will be charged to their parents or guardians, viz. Hutton's Mathematics, French Grammar, Straith's Treatise on Fortification, Ditto Dictionary, Hindustani Grammar, De la Voye's French Instructions, First Vol. Hindu Selections, Cæsar's Commentaries. Fielding's Perspective, Any books not included in the above enumeration, or which may be hereafter required at the Seminary, to be paid for by the cadets. 5. A cadet entering in a term, at whatever part of it, must pay the regulated sum for the whole term in which he enters, which will count as one of the four terms of his residence ; and no return of any portion of the advance will be made in the event of a cadet's quitting the Seminary. 6. Previous to the cadet's admission, his parents or guardians shall fur- nish him with the following articles, viz. Twelve shirts (including three night-shirts), eight pairs of cotton stock- ings, six pairs of worsted ditto, six towels, six night-caps, eight pocket- handkerchiefs, one pair of white trowsers (to be repaired, or if necessary, to be renewed by the parents or guardians at the vacation); two combs and a brush, a tooth brush, a Bible and Prayer-book, a case of mathematical instruments of an approved pattern, to be seen at the shop of Mr. Gil- bert, Optician, 148, Leadenhall-street, or at Mr. Jones's, 62, Charing- Cross. 7. The payment of the fixed charges for each term is to be made in advance; and the payment for clothes, pocket-money, and books for the preceding term, is to be made previous to the cadet's return to the Seminary PROHIBITION. :-The cadet must not join the seminary with a greater sum in his possession than one guinea, and a further supply from any of his relations during the term may subject him to dismissiou from the Seminary. VACATIONS.—Midsummer commences about the middle of June, ends 31st July Christmas commences about the middle of December, ends 31st January. At the close of every vacation, the cadet must apply at the Cadet De- partment, Military Office, East-India, House, for an order for his re-admis- sion, and all sums then due to the Company must be paid up. This order will express that he is only to be re-admitted upon his returning with the same number of books and instruments which he took home with him, that his linen is put into proper repair, and that he is in a fit state of health to renew his studies. Notice to Parents and Guardians. The friends of every cadet are hereby informed, that provision being made for furnishing him with every requisite, he cannot really want a sup- ply of money to be placed at his disposal while at the Seminary; and if they do notwithstanding think proper to furnish him with money, they put it in his power to commit irregularities, which must always retard his stu- dies, and may eventually lead to his removal from the institution. The parents and friends are further particularly desired not to attend to any application from the cadet for money, under the pretence of his hay- PART III. VOL. II. G VOL. 11.] 43 Military Seminary. and all the time passed by them at the institution, after they attain the age of sixteen, counts as so much time passed in India in calculating their period of service for retiring pensions on full pay. MEMORANDUM. Test of Qualification for Direct Appointments to the Corps of Artillery, according to the regulations of the Court of Directors of the East India Company, for their Millitary Seminary at Addiscombe (section 7, articles 4 and 5), modified where necessary. SECTION VII. « Art. 4. The proficiency in mathematical study will comprise at least the course laid down by Dr. Hutton, as far as the resistance of fluids in- clusive, or the equivalent parts of the course, recently published by the Rev. Jonathan Cape, Professor of Mathematics, &c. at Addiscombe, for the use of that institution. 65. The above course, together with the whole course of Fortification, Artillery, Plates, Drawing, Military Drawing and Surveying, is hereby de- clared to be the minimum of qualification for Artillery service." As the Cadets, who are candidates for the same service at Addiscombe, pass eighteen months or two years at that institution, and know before- hand the precise nature of the qualification, and mode of examination, and also ascertain what portions of the mathematical course are either not taught at all, or usually passed over, the following remarks have been drawn up for the information of the parents or guardians of the candidates for direct Artillery appointments to India. First. In respect to Mathematics.—The qualifications to be determined by any of the old editions of Hutton's Course, from the 1st to the 10th inclusive; but not by Dr. Olinthus Gregory's Ilth edition, nor by Ram- say's Rutherford', or Davies's editions, all of which have been so far altered and new-modelled, as to put the course into a very difierent form from that which was contemplated by the regulations. Supposing the candidate to obtain any of the old editions of Hutton's Course above-mentioned, he may omit the following portions of the course, viz. 1. Cubic Equations. multiplication must be under- 2. Infinite Series. Part Second. stood. 3. The whole of Land Surveying, the 5. The Hyperbola in Conic Sec- rules for which, as there given, tions. have become obsolete. 6. The Equilibrium of Arches. 4. The Measurement of Artificers' | 7. Practical Gunnery. Work, excepting that duodecimal Secondly. In Respect to Fortification. This is taught at Addiscombe, from a treatise, published by Capt. Straith, Professor of Fortification and Artillery. The present qualifications for the Artillery Cadets at Addis- combe are,-a knowledge of the substance of Capt. Straith's Treatise on Fortification, from the definitions, p. 1. to p. 390 inclusive, omitting the appendix to chapter 9, and omitting also chapter 12. The Plates of Fortitication required correspond with those in the Atlas to Capt. Straith's Treatise; but must all be drawn on a larger scale, and are as follow: 44 [PART 1 History of Offices. Plate 1, Figures 3 and 4. _Plate 2, Figures 17, 14, and 18, (To be filled in and shaded) Plate 3, Fig. 28. Plate 4, Fig. 53. Plate 5, Fig. 54. (In outline only.) Plate 6, Figs. 102, 117, 118. Plate 7, Figs. 124, 125. Plate 8, Figs. 134, 135. Plate 11, Figs. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Plate 12, Figs. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19. Plate 13, Figs. 26, 27, 28, 29. (To be filled in and shaded.) Thirdly. In Artillery.-The qualification for the Artillery Cadets at Addiscombe is a knowledge of the substance of Captain Straith's Memoirs on Artillery, from Part 1 to 15 inclusive, omitting Part 14 ; but the plates are not always drawn. N. B. Qualifications both in Mathematics and in Fortification, equiva- lent to the above, will be satisfactory, no matter from what authors, or according to what system, the candidates may have studied. But in respect to Fortification and Artillery particularly, considering that those branches are not taught in all parts of the kingdom, the Public Examiner has been instructed to make allowance for the difficulty of findiug com- petent masters, and therefore the candidates for direct Artillery appoint- ments may be passed without possessing a knowledge of all the details contained in Capt. Straith's Treatise before quoted; but they will be expected to understand the nature of Works of Permanent Fortification, according to Vauban's first system, or the modern system, and to be able to explain the operations of a siege; and they must also have some knowledge of Field Fortification. They must produce drawings of Forti- fication, and a plan of attack of a regular fortress, executed by them as students, which, if satisfactory, may be fewer in number than those required at Addiscombe. These plans must have been constructed ac- cording to scale, and not mere copies, as a proof of which, the candidates may be required to drawing the outline of some work from dictation. Únder the same consideration, should the candidates be qualified in other respects, a very moderate knowledge of Artillery will be accepted, as they will have the opportunity of acquiring it in India. ARTILLERY, CADETS &c. Fourthly. Drawing and Surveying: -The Cadets at Addiscombe are taught Civil and Military Drawing, and are taught the practice of survey. ing according to the rules contained in Major Basil Jackson's printed Course of Military Surveying, which they follow in making surveys of the country near Addiscombe. The candidates for direct Artillery appointments will produce drawings in whatever style they may have been taught, whether landscape and figures or topographical—the latter to include their actual surveys; and the common practice of land-surveying by the theodolite will be considered satisfactory. As soon as any candidate who has obtained a nomination to a direct Artillery appointment shall be considered competent, his friends will send notice thereof to Mr. T. R. Clarke, and the East India House, by whom they will be informed as to the periods of examination appointed, when they will be required to appear before Col. Pasley at Chatham for that purpose, who will make a report of the qualifications of individual candi- dates, of whom several will be brought forward at the tame time. Each examination will occupy several days, as is usual at the private exainina- 46 (PART IIL History of Offices. in London for six months ; or at some general Hospital in the country (within the United Kingdom) for six months, provided such provincial Hospital contain at least, on an average, one hundred in-Patients, and have attached to it a regular establishment of physicians as well as surgeons. No attendance on the practice of a physician at any Dispensary will be admitted. The assistant surgeon is also required, as a condition to his appointment to subscribe to the military or medical retiring fund at his respective pre- sidency. The assistant surgeon is required, by resolution of Court of the 21st of May 1828, to apply at the Cadet-office, and actually proceed within three months from the date of being passed and sworn before the Military Com- mittee; he will then be furnished with an order to obtain the certificate of his appointment, signed by the Secretary, for which he will pay a fee of £5 in the Secretary's Office. CAVALRY OR INFANTRY CADETS. Cadets nominated for either of the above corps must be 16 years of age and under 22, unless they have held a commission in her Majesty's service for one year, or in the militia or fencibles when embodied and have been called into actual service, or from the company of cadets in the royal regi- ment of artillery, they are then eligible if not more than 25 years of age; and they must procure similar certificates and vouchers to those prescribed for cadets entering the siminary. No person who has been dismissed the Army or Navy, the Royal Mili- tary College at Sandhurst, the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, or who has been obliged to retire from any public institution for immoral or ungentlemanly conduct, will be appointed a cadet direct for India. No person will be appointed a cadet direct for India, without producing to the Military Committee a certificate, signed by two practising surgeons, that he has no mental or bodily defect whatever to disqualify him for military service. CADETS AND Assistant SURGEONS. At a Court of Directors, held on Friday, the 27th Feb. 1818 :-RESOLV- ED, That cadets and assistant surgeons be in future ranked according to the seniority of the Directors nominating them, from the date of sailing of the several ships from Gravesend, by Lloyd's list, and that those who may embark at any of the out-ports be likewise ranked upon the same principal from the date of the ship's departure from such outports by Lloyd's list. At a Court of Directors held 21st May 1828 :-RESOLVED, That all the cavalry and infantry •cadets and assistant surgeons who shall fail to apply at the Cadet Department for their orders within three months from the date of their being passed and sworn before the Committee, or shall not actually proceed under such orders, be considered as having forfeited their appointments, unless special circumstances shall justify the Court's depar- ture from this regulation. By a Resolution of Court of the 4th Dec. 1833, all direct Cadets ap- pointed or sworn in between the 10th March and 10th June, or between loth Sept. and 10th Dec. (or the days which may be fixed on for the public examination of the Seminary Cadets), do rank after the Seminary Cadets who may pass their said examinations, provided the latter sail for their respective destinations within three months after passing said examiua- tions. vol. 11.) [ 47 ] GOVERNOR GENERAL IN COUNCIL, AND GOVERNORS. The Legislative, Revenue and Judicial Council of the Government of India meet every Monday at 11 o'clock and generally last till 1 or 2. The rest of that day is devoted to the Secret and Political Department. On Tuesday mornings the R. II, the Governor of Bengal transacts bu- siness with the Secretary and Deputy Secretary in the Revenue and Judi- cial Department of the Government of Bengal. On Wednesday, at 11, the Supreme Council attend to the Military Department from 11 till 1 or 2, o'clock and to the General and Financial for the rest of the day. The chief portion of the correspondence of the Salt, Opium, Customs, and Marine Boards, and the general management of that portion of the Revenue falls within the province of the Governor of Bengal in the Gene- ral Department. The Post Office correspondence comes before the Council of India, &c. All subordinate Governments send abstracts of their weekly proceedings for the inspection of the Supreme Government. All extraordinary outlay of public money by the subordinate Governments requires the confirma- tion of the Supreme Government; pensions likewise ; and here it may be noticed that on one occasion, in answer to a question of the Governor in Council enquiring with reference to the provision of the pension rules, whether the local Government was not competent of itself to sanction such pensions, it was stated that the terms of the 59th Section of act 3d and 4th Wm. IV. Cap: 85. were too precise to admit of any latitude of interpre- tation. Its provision is conclusive against the power of the subordinate Governments to make any increase without the previous sanction of the Government of India. Where pension is claimable under distinct rules passed by the Government and approved by the Hon'ble Court, such sanc- tion is sufficient. But in respect to pensions to the families of persons killed in the performance of their duty, though the rules recognized the claim to pension, they do not specify the amount, and a reference to the Government of India would seem to be necessary. The New Charter provides for most matters relating to the constitution of the Government, but we may here notice the following: The Senior Member of Council when the Commander in Chief stands appointed to that situation, becomes president of the Council during the temporary absence of the Governor General, but does not succeed to the position, in consequencc of such seniority, when permanently vacated, even if no provisional appointment exists. At the present time Mr. Robertson has been appointed by the Home Authorities Provisional Governor General, if within the period during which Mr. Robertson would have been entitled to remain in Council, had he not taken the Lieutenant Governorship of Agra, a vacancy should occur, and no other successor be on the spot to fill it, i. e. till 17th Sept. 1843. Members of the Supreme Council may be selected from any Members of the Hon'ble Company's Service of 12 years standing. Ordinary Councilorships of the subordinate presidencies must be Civil Servants of those presidencies, of 12 years standing. For their commissions Members of Council have to pay at the E. I. House, Stamps 4£ 15s. and fees 96£. In future no Member of Council may accept the annuity of the Civil Service, as such. 48 [PART III. History of Offices. Members of Council proceeding to sea or elsewhere within the limits laid down in the Civil Service Rules, do so without creating a vacancy or forfeiting their allowances. But if the Council owing to such absence be incomplete, i. e. if there are less than three members present, the number required to pass any act, the provisional Member shall be called in. The above relates to the Supreme Council. In the Subordinate Councils the provisional Member is called in at the discretion of the Governor. All Memorials to the Home Authorities must lay 20 days on the Council Table before transmission to England, and if not coming through the proper channels they are always liable not to be received. The Fourth Ordinary Member of the Council of India is declared not to be entitled to sit or vote in the Council, except at meetings for the making of Laws and Regulations. The law, however, does not preclude him from sitting in Council or prohibit his aid being always made available without his vote. He accordingly does attend every Council. He however signs no despatches except those relating to Laws and Regulations. The removal of the seat of Government on the occasion of that of Madras being removed to Ootacamund in 1840, was ruled by the Home authorities to be contrary to Law, and it was ordered to be brought back to the Presidency and not again removed. A Governor of Madras and Bombay, when separated from his Council, is vested with none of the powers of Government, and as a general rule, subject only to exception on very extraordinary occasions, the Hone Government forbid the absence of the Governor of Madras and Bombay from their seats of Government. In future the circumstances under which the absence of the Governor, or any Civil Councillor, from either of the Presidencies, takes place, are to be fully reported to the Government of India. Bombay GOVERNMENT IN 1840*_Has the immediate and direct arrange- ment of all the Steamers on the River Indus. Bombay Government are also left to be guided in all matters relating to Steam Communication (except upon occasions of emergency) by instruction direct from England. SUCCESSION OF GOVERNORS AND GOVERNORS GENERAL IN BENGAL. ... > Mr. Freeke Cruttenden... Braddyll ... Forester Dawson 1733 | Mr. Fytch 1738 Barwell 1739 Drake 1746 | Colonel Clive... 1747 | Mr. Holwell 1745 1750 1756 1709 1760 ... • BOMBAY GOVERNMENT IN 1694. • The Company in England, receiving accounts from every one that came from India of Annesley's mal-administrations, sent out Sir Joha Gayer to take care of their affairs. Sir John Gayer arrived in Boinbay as Gorer- nor in Anno 1694, with the lofty title of General of all India.' Sir Johii was a ran not vicious in his temper, yet he had some slips in l.is Government that provedi, &c.-lu matters of common commerce, he acted pretty regularly, till a young Lass of £40) portion marle him dispense with the common methods of matrimony. She had no relations are and unadvisedly married one. Mr. Solomon Loyd, a factor, and the marriage was ciandes. tine, which was positively against the statute law of Bombay, where no marriage is biad ing, but when the Governor's consent is tackt to it. This law Sir John had got by heart, and unmarried the poor factor, and married her to his own son, &c. Whilst ber husland was at China, one Coleman was ordered to teach her good English, but neglecting those orders, &c. &c. . The poor schoolmaster was sent in irons on board of a ship for Engidad Old Book entituled . A new account of the East Indies.' VOL. 11.] 49 Succession of Governors, &c. ... JOC ... ... Mr. Vansittart 1761 | Mr. Udny, Vice President and » Spencer 1765 Deputy Governor, August 1805 Lord Clive 1765 Sir George Hilaro Barlow, Bt. Mr. Verelst 1757 K.B. Governor General 1805 Cartier 1759 | The Right Hon. Gilbert Lord Hastings 1772 Minto, July 1807 Wheeler (acting) 1781 Mr. J. Lumsden (officiating), M'Pherson .. 1785 Vice President and Deputy Earl Cornwallis, K.G. 1786 Governor, August 1809 Mr. Speke, (officiating) 1793 Lieutenant General Hewitt, Sir John Shore, Baronet 1793 Vice President and Deputy Mr. Speke, Vice President and Governor, October 1809 Deputy Governor 1797 Mr. J. Lumsden, Vice Pre- Sir Alured Clarke, (provision sident and Deputy Governor, ally), March 1798 March 1810 Earl Mornington (Marquis The Marquis of Hastings, G.C.B. Wellesley), May ... 1798 October 1813 Sir Alured Clarke, Vice Presi Mr. John Adam, January 1823 dent and Deputy Governor, The Right Hon. Earl Amherst, December 1798 August 1823 Sir George Hilaro Barlow, Bt, Mr. W.B. Bayley 1828 "do, do.. October 1801 | The Right Hon. Lord William Marquis Cornwallis, K.G. 1805 Cavendish Bentinck, K.C.B. Sir George Hilaro Barlow, Bt. and G.C.H. 1828 Vice President and Deputy Sir C. T. Metcalfe, Bt. and Governor, August 1805 G.C.B. (acting), March 20, 1835 The Right Honorable George EARL OF AUCKLAND, G.C.B., Governor General, March 4, 1836. The salary of a Governor General is Rs. 2,50,800 and of a Governor or Lieutenant Governor Rs. 1,20,000 per annum. ... U.. ... ... ... ... ... SUCCESSION OF GOVERNORS OF FORT ST. GEORGE. nor Sir W. Langhorne, prior to 1672 | Mr. R. Prince, Deputy Gover- Mr. S. Master 1678 nor Presidency of Fort St. W. Gifford 1681 David's 1749 E. Yale 1687 R. Starke, Deputy Gover- N. Higginson 1692 1752 Sir J. Goldsborough, Kt. 1692 T. Saunders, Governor... 1752 Mr. N. Higginson 1693 G. Pigot 1755 T. Pitt 1698 R. Palke 1763 G. Addison 1709 C. Bouchier 1767 E. Montague, Provisional J. Du Pre 1770 Governor 1709 Mr. A. Wynch 1773 W. Fraser 1709 Right Hon. Lord Pigot 1775 E. Harrison 1711 Mr. G. Stratton 1776 J. Collett 1717 J. Whitehill 1777 F. Hastings 1720 T. Rumbold 1778 N. Elwick 1721 J. Whitehill 1780 J. Macrae 1725 C. Smith... 1780 G.M. Pitt 1730 Right Hon. Lord Macartney · 1781 R. Benyon... 1735 Mr. A. Davidson 1785 N. Monso 1744 Sir. A. Campbell, K.B. . 1786 Major S. Lawrence, in charge Mr. J. Holland 1789 of the Garrison 1749 | Mr. E. J. Ilolland 1789 PART III. VOL. II, H > ... 50 History of Offices. (PART M. ... Major Gen. W. Meadows 1790 | Right Honorable Hugh Elliot 1814 Sir C. Oakley, Bart. 1792 Major Gen. Sir T. Munro, Right Hon. Lord Hobart 1794 Bart. K.C.B. 1820 Lieut. Gen. G. Harris 1798 Mr. H. S. Græme 1827 Right Hon. Lord Clive 1798 Right Hon. S. R. Lushington.. 1827 Right Hon. Lord W.C. Ben Lieut. Gen. Sir F. Adam, K.C.B. 1832 tinck 1803 Mr. G. E. Russell 1837 Mr. W. Petrie 1807 Right Hon. Lord Elphinstone, Sir G.H. Barlow, Bt. K.B. 1807 1837 Lieut. Gen. the Hon. J. Abercromby 1813 ... G.C.H. ... SUCCESSION OF GOVERNORS OF BOMBAY. ... ... ... .. Sir G. Oxden 1665 | Mr. T. Hodges 1767 Mr. G. Aungier 1667 W. Hornby 1776 T. Rolt 1667 R. H. Boddam, 1784 Sir J. Child, Bart. 1680 A. Ramsay 1788 Mr. J. Vaux 1690 Sir W. Medows, K.B. 1789 B. Harris 1690 Sir Robert Abercrombie, K.B. 1790 Annesley 1692 Mr. G. Dick 1794 Sir J. Gayer 1698 J. Griffiths, 1795 Sir N. Waite 1702 J. Duncan, 1795 Sir H. Oxenden, Bart. ... 1707 G. Brown... 1811 Mr. W. Aislabie 1709 Sir Evan Nepean, Bart, 1812 C. Boone 1734 Hon. Mountstuart Elphinstone 1819 W. Phipps 1734 Sir John Malcolm, K.C.B. 1827 R. Cowan 1734 Sir T. S. Beckwith, K.C.B. 1830 J. Horne 1734 Mr. J. Romer, Esq. 1831 S. Law 1739 Earl of Clare 1831 W. Wake 1742 Sir Robert Grant 1835 J. Geekie 1742 Mr. J. Farish 1838 R. Bourchier 1750 Sir J. R. Carnac, Bart 1839 C. Crommellin 1760 Mr. Anderson 1841 Note-The Administration of each Governor ended when that of the suceeeding one commenced, > ... ::: ... ... ... MEMBERS OF THE SUPREME COUNCIL FROM 1788.* .. 1785 Hon'ble Charles Stuart, Ct. Rs. 1789 Peter Speke, Sa. Rs. 1787 John Shore, Ct. Rs. 1793 Thomas Graham, 1793 Sir Robert Abercromby, K. B. ... Sa. Rs. 1797 Lieut. General Alured Clarke, 1801 Thomas Graham, 1801 Right Hon'ble General Lord Lake, Per mer 9,441 10 % 8,139 5 10 9,441 10 8 9,441 10 8 8,139 5 10 8,139 5 10 8,139 5 10 8,139 5 10 • The date of the earliest record in the Civil Auditor's Ofice. VOL. II.) 51 Secretariut. ::::::: 27 99 97 1801 Hon'ble George Hilaro Barlow, Sa. Rs. 8,139 5 10 1801 George Udny, 8,139 5 10 1805 John Lumsden, 8,139 5 10 1807 Lieut. General George Hewett, 8,139 5 10 1807 H. T. Colebrooke, 8,139 5 10 1812 N. B. Edmonstone, 8,139 5 10 1812 Genl. Sir George Nugent, Bart. K.B. 8,139 5 10 1812 Hon'ble Archibald Seton, 8,139 5 10 1814 George Dowdeswell, 8,139 5 10 1817 James Stuart, 8,139 5 10 1817 C. M. Ricketts, 8,139 5 10 1819 John Adam, 8,139 5 10 1820 Sir J. E. Colebrooke, 8,139 5 10 1820 John Fendall, 8,139 5 10 1822 W. B. Bayley, 8,139 5 10 1822 J. H. Harington, 8,139 5 10 1823 Genl. Sir Edward Paget, G.C.B.... 8,139 5 10 1825 Lord Combermere, K. G. C. 8,139 5 10 1825 Hon'ble W. B. Bayley, 8,139 5 10 1827 Sir C. T. Metcalfe, Bart. 8,139 5 10 1828 George Swinton, * 8,139 5 10 1830 Earl of Dalhouse, G.C.B. 8,139 5 10 1830 W. Blunt, 8,139 5 10 1832 General Sir Edward Barnes, G.C.B. 8,139 5 10 1833 Hon'ble Alexander Ross, No Salary. 1833 Ditto ditto, Sa. Rs. 8,139 5 10 1834 Lieut. Col. W. Morrieson, C.B.f... Co.'s Rs. 8,360 0 0 1834 T. B. Macaulay, 8,360 0 0 1834 Edward Ironside, No Salary. 1835 H. T. Prinsep, 8,360 0 0 1835 Hy. Shakespear, 8,360 0 0 1835 T. C. Robertson, 8,360 0 0 1835 Genl. Sir Hy. Fane, G.C.B.S (13,689 8 9 1838 W. W. Bird, 8,360 0 0 1838 C. H. Cameron, 8,360 0 0 1838 Andrew Amos, 8,360 0 0 1839 Major General Sir W. Casement, K.C.B.... 8,360 0 1839 Lieut. Genl. Sir Jasper Nicolls, K.C.B. T 1840 Honºble H. T. Priusep, 8,360 0 0 9 99 ... 12 > 19 27 > SECRETARIAT. Department and date of Government Order constituting each office, and Establishment, existing on the 1st of May, 1839. General Department, 1752. Foreign re-annexed from the Political to the General Department, 5th June, 1818. Ecclesiastical, 1st Nov., 1815. Separate re-annexed from the late Territorial 20th Mar., 1828. to the General Department, Financial re-annexed on the departure from England of Mr. Holt Mackenzie, 4th Jany., 1831. } ... • Temporary Member. + Provisional Members. Fourth Ordinary Member. Extraordinary Members of the Council of India, and Commanders in Chief. 4 Salaries passed in the Military Departmcnt. 52 (PART UIL History of Offices. CHIEF SECRETARY. An appointment analogous to Chief Secretary existed in the very early period of Government, under the denomination of Secretary General, who with Deputies and Sub-Secretaries conducted the business of all Depart- ments. Sir George Barlow was the first who was called chief Secretary, and the office continued to be recognized, being assigned to the Senior of existing Secretaries, after the division of the Secretariat into depart- ments, till Mr. Lushington's departure for Europe. On that occasion, i. e. in 1827, Lord Amherst, with the concurrence of the council nominated Mr. G. Swinton, Chief Secretary, but proposed its abolition thereafter. On Mr. Swinton's departure and Mr. Shakespear quitting the Secretariat, the Governor General in Council passed the subjoined Resolution. • The office of Chief Secretary to Government having become vacant by the departure of Mr. Swinton to England, the Right Honorable the Gover- nor General in Council is pleased to resolve. That the additional salary 5,000 Rs. per annum heretofore attached to that appointment sball be abo- lished.' Subsequent to the introduction of the New Charter, Act. II. of 1834, was passed, as follows : • Be it enacted, that each of the Secretaries to the Government of India and to the Government of Fort William in Bengal, shall be competent to perform all the duties and to exercise all the powers which by any Act of Parliament or any Regulation now in force, are assigned to the Chief Se- cretary to the Government of Fort William in Bengal ; and that each of the Secretaries to the Government of Fort St. George and Bombay res- pectively, shall be competent to perform all the duties, and to exercise all the powers, which by any Act of Parliament, or any Regulation now in force, are assigned to the Chief Secretaries to the Governments of Fort St. George and Bombay respectively." PERSIAN OFFICE. After the late Mr. Stirling's death in 1830, the Persian Secretary's office was merged into the Secret and Political Secretary's duties, of which it still forms a branch. The mention of the Persian office in this place leads to a notice one of the most important matters connected with it, that is the Resolution on Grant of Titles of 30 May, 1829. Resolution, 30th May, 1829.— The question of conferring titles and other marks of distinction on the native subjects of the British Govera- ment in India, is one of acknowledged importance, and has long occupied the attention of the Governor General in Council. . The principle that this essential and peculiar attribute of sovereiga rule, should properly be exercised by the British Government direct, in- stead of, as formerly, through the medium of the Pageant Court of Delhi, was first asserted and established by the Marquis of Hastings, at an early period of his administration ; but the occasions for conferring rank upon inhabitants of the British Provinces were, from whatever cause, of rare oc- currence, during the government of that nobleman; and it was not until the accession of Lord Amherst, that the practice of granting titles, came actively and systematically into use. During Lord Amherst's administra- tion, titles, and various other honorary distinctions were bestowed on several respectable and meritorious individuals, both in acknowledgment of services, and good conduct during the prevalence of war on the Eastera 54 History of Offices. (PART I members of Society, to a participation in the honors and privileges of rank. · The titles to be conferred on the Mahomedan subjects of the British Empire in India, will be ordinarily those of Khan Behadoor, and Ne- wab, with the style and epithets appropriate thereto. Those which be- long to the Hindoos, are, Raee, Raja, Bahadoor, Maharaja Bahadoor, and certain designations peculiar to the mercantile classes, such as Sah, Seth, etc. etc. Titles of a still higher grade* should, generally speaking, be re- served for the Sovereigns of Feudatory and Dependent States, except in cases of extraordinary merit. * Honorary distinctions and rewards for services performed in the Field by Commissioned Native Officers of the Army, will be conferred as hereto- fore, on the recommendation of the Commander-in-Chief. • In order to give effect to the wish of His Lordship in Council, that the views and intentions of Government regarding the grant of titles to its Native subjects, should be more generally promulgated, copies of this Re- solution will be communicated to the several Commissioners, and Politi- cal Authorities named above, for their information and guidance ; and that they may cause its purport to be known and understood amongst the res. pectable classes of inhabitants within their respective divisions. • Ordered also, that copies be recorded, for information, in the Judicial and Territorial Departments. REVENUE, JUDICIAL, AND LEGISLATIVE DEPARTMENTS. The following establishment has been appointed as a part of the office of the Secretary to the Government of India in the Legislative Depart- ment, for the purpose of preparing translations into the Persian language of the legislative enactments of the legislative Government of India, of drafts of acts published for general information, and of all notifications or other official documents requiring translations into that language, belong- ing to any department under the Government of India, or to any public office in Calcutta under the Bengal Government. One Translator (Major J. W. J. Ouseley) Rs. 350 per month One Assistant ditto (Mr. L. Da Costa) 250 One Moulovee (Abdool Runeem) 70 One Moonshee and Mohurer (Mirza Kadir Beg). 50 One Transcriber (Taj Mahomed) 20 99 Rs. 740 The Government of Bengal has also been authorized to entertain an establishment for translating into the Bengallee language, legislative enaci- ments and drafts of acts, constructions of laws by the Sudder Courts, cir. cular orders of the Sudder Courts and of the Boards, and of all notitica- tions and other official documents requiring translations into that language, and the sum of Rs. 800 per mensem, is placed at the disposal of the said Government as the allowance for the establishment to be engaged on this duty. The Government of Bengal is also authorized to make arrangements for the publication of a Bengallee Government Gazette, on the principle of the *These are Maharaja Rajagun, Dhi Raj Roj, Adhi Raj Nurinder, Burjinde Nokinder etc, elc. VOL. 11.) 53 Indian Law Commission. Calcutta Government Gazette. Mr. Marshman has been appointed Ben- galee Translator and in charge of the Gazette. An Oordoo and English Gazette is published at Agra, under authority of the Lieutenant Governor of Agra. The routine of the duties of the Secretariat is performed in the following way: each delivery, daily (viz. 2), of the dâk and all other letters, are first opened and read by the Secretariat officers; then sent down to the office to be endorsed, registered, and circulated. They are considered and discussed on the first Council day after they may be returned from circu- lation, by the Members of Government, after which the Secretariat draft orders, and replies, which are circulated for approval; when approved by the Government, they are fairly copied and issued. In emergent cases this is sometimes dispensed with, and the matter disposed of without delaying it for the ensuing Council day. When intercommunication between the several Departments of the Secretariat is necessary, it is either made by what is called an “extract of proceedings,' which is forwarded for information or for orders,' as the case may require, or by a private memorandum. INDIAN LAW COMMISSION. This Commission was constituted under the following provisions of the New Charter Act:- * And whereas it is expedient that, subject to such special arrangements as local circumstances may require, a general system of judicial establishments and police, to which all persons whatsoever, as well Europeans as natives may be subject, should be established in the said territories at an early period, and that such laws as may be applicable in common to all classes of the inhabitants of the said territories, due regard being had to the rights, feelings, and peculiar usages of the people, should be enacted, and that all laws and customs having the force of law within the same terri- tories, should be ascertained and consolidated, and, as occasion may require, amended ; be it therefore enacted that the said Governor-General of India in Council, shall, as 800n as conveniently may be, after the passing of the act, issue a commission, and from time to time, commissions to such persons as the said Court of Directors, with the ap- probation of the said Board of Commissioners shall recommend for that purpose, and to such other persons, if necessary, as the said Governor General in council shall think fit, all such persons, not exceeding in the whole at any one time five in number, and to be styled The India Law Commission,' with all such powers as shall be necessary for the purposes hereinafter mentioned ; and the said commissioners shall fully in- quire into the jurisdiction, powers, and rules of existing courts of justice and police establishments in the said ierritories, and all existing forms of judical procedure, and into the nature and operation of the laws, whether civil or criminal, written or custo- mary, prevailing and in force, in any part of the said territories, and whereto any in. habitants of the said territories, whether European or others, are now subject; and the said commissioners shall from time to time, make reports, in which they shall fully set forth the result of their inquiries, and shall from time to time suggest such altera- tions as may in their opinion be beneficially made in the said couris of justice and police establishments, forms of judicial procedure and laws, due regard being had to ihe distinction of castes, difference of religion, and the manners and opinions prevailing among different ruces and in different parts of the said territories. LIV. And be it enacted, that the said commissioners shall follow such instructions with regard to the researches and inquiries to be made and the place to be visited by them, and all their transactions with reference to the objects of their commission, as they shall from time to time receive from the said Governor-General of India in 56 | PART III. History of Offices. council; nnd they are hereby required to make to the said Governor-General in council such special reports upon any matters, as by such instructions may from time to tirpe be required; and the said Governor-General in council shall take into cousideration the reports from time to time made by the said lodia Law Commissioners, and shall transmit the same, together with the opinions or resolutions of the said Governor General in council thereon, to the said Court of Directors; and which said reports, toget with said opinions, or resolutions, shall be laid before both houses of Par- liament in the same manner as is now by law provided concerning the rules and regu. lations made by the several Governmenis in India. LV. And be it enacte:t, that it shall and may be lawful for the Gorernor-General of India in council, to grant salaries to the said India Law Commissioners and their necessary officers and attendants, and to defray such other expences as may be in. cident to the said commission, and that the salaries of the said commissioners shall be according to the highest scale of remuneration given to any of the officers or servants of the India Company below the rank of members of council. The Commission is located in Calcutta, and has never moved out of it ; though it is perfectly notorious that their reports, &c., were originally in- tended to be based on local enquiries in different parts of India, which enquiries were to be by themselves, carried on. The Presidents of the Coinmission have been Mr. Macaulay, the late Fourth Ordinary Member of the Supreme Council, subsequently Mr. Cameron, one of the members of the Commission ; and more lately it has been ruled that the Fourth Ordinary Member of the Supreme Council is to be President of the Indian Law Commission. Mr. Amos is accordingly at present President. Mr. Anderson, of the Bombay Civil Service, Mr. McLeod of the Madras Civil Service, have both been members of the Commission ; and Colonel Young, late of the Bengal Military Service has acted in it. Mr. (now Sir W. H.) Macnaghten was offered, but declined a seat in it. The present members are Mr. C. H. Cameron, of the English Bar; Mr. F. Millett of the Bengal Civil Service ; Mr. Dan. Elliott of the Madras Civil Service, and Mr. Borradaile of the Bombay Civil Service. The first Secretary was Mr. F. Millett; the second (acting), Mr. J. P. Grant ; the third, and present Secretary, is Mr. J. C. C. Sutherland. The Commis- sion meet once or twice a week at the President's House. The salary of each of the Commissioners, per annum, is fixed at 52,052 Rs., and that of the Secretary at 36,000 Rs. Most of the more important reports of the Commission have been printed. We subjoin a statement, which we hope will give some information on the subject of the labors of this novel authority. The following is a list of the references which have already been specially answered Date of reference from Government. Date of the reply of the Commissioners. Subject. 4th July 1836. 30th May 1837 No. 4 Certain proposed changes in the Madras Judicial System. 18th Jan. 1836. 27th June 1837 No 2 The Law applicable to Suttees in the Bombay Provinces. 5th Mar. 1835.30th June 1837 No.4 Purchase of land under fictitious name. (The information called for on this subject has been received, and report made.) 1st Aug. 1836.30th June 1837 No. 1 Laws of the Tenasserim Provinces. 2nd May 1836. 4th July 1837 No. 2 Law applicable to Smugglers in the Town of Madras. 58 (PART II. History of Offices. Date of reference Date of the reply of the from Government. Commissioners. Subject. Į9th Sept. 1836.25th July 1837, No.21, Registration of Mooktearna- mahs and Vikalutnamahs, 2. Breaking up the matter of one suit into several actions. 3. Law for Seamen refusing to work, 4. Power of Zillah Courts to at- tach pay of officers in satisfac- tion of decrees. 31st July 1837. 22 Aug. 1837, No. 6 Submitting a Draft Act. (See 4th July 1837, No. 41.) 14th Aug. 1837.20 Sept. 1837 Submitting four Draft Acts. (See 14th July 1837, No. 53.) 7th Sept. 1835.9th Sept.1837 No.1 ? 1. Abolition of corporal punish- 2d Jan. 1838 No.2 S 2. Penalty for Prevarication (Ma- dras). 3. Madras excise laws about Gan- ja and Bhang. 4. Commissioners for the sale of distrained property in the Ma- dras Provinces, 7th Dec. 1835. 14th Sept. 1837, No. 1 Penalty of offences against the i public tranquillity, 14th Aug. 1837. 14th Sept. 1837, No. 7 Definition of ihe offence of House- breaking: 18th Jan. 1836. 10th Nov. 1837, No. 8 Summary Jurisdiction of the Com- missioner in the Tenasserim Provinces over convicts, in cases of life and death. 18th Apr, 1836. 10th Nov. 1837, No. 9 Law of 'Treasure trove in the Mad. ras Provinces. 7th Mar. 1836. 12th Dec. 1837, No. 1 Second trial of persons once ac- quitted for the offence of which they have been so acquitted. 8th Aug, 1836. 2d Jan, 1838, No. 3 Classification of the offence of (2d Packct.) Gang-robbery. 29th Aug. 1836. 2d Jan. 1838, No. 4 Powers of Session Judges and Ma- (1st Packet.) gistrates in Bombay Provinces For 2d Packet. to award fines to injured parties. See para. 7 No.27 25th Sept. 1837. 12th Jan. 1838, No. 2 Articles of War and matters con 12th Feb. 1838, No. 7 nected with Military Police, Mi- 21st Dec. 1835. 30th*Mar.1838, No. litary Courts, and Property in Ist Packet. Military Cantonments, 19th Dec, 1836. 3d Packet. 8th May 1837 9th Oct. 1837. 12th Jan. 1838 No. 4 Power to flog Christian Drummers and Musicians of the Natire Army. • This letter has been revised, and dated 15th June 1838. VOL. 11.) 59 Indian Law Commission. Date of reference Date of the reply of the from Government. Commissioners. Subject, 13th Nov. 1837.12th Jan. 1838, No.17 Law for illicit residence of British- born subjects in India. 10th Oct. 1836. 18th Jan. 1838, No. 3 Trial of offences of British-born subjects in the interior. (A law such as was required by Go- vernment letter of the 26th Feb- ruary, 1838, was under consi. deration. But the matter has since been provided for by the Penal Code.) 5th June 1837.23d Feb. 1838, No. 2 Direction of the future labours of the Commissioners. 16th Jan. 1827. 23d Feb. 1838, No. 2 Examination of witnesses by Re- (1st Packet.) gister of Sudder Dewanny Adaw- (For 2d Packet, lut, at Madras, on Commission See para, 4, from other courts. (Papers were asked for, and have been received and undergone consideration. A general act meeting all defects has been sent up.) 7th Aug. 1837. 2d Mar. 1838, No. 2 Fines under Bengal Regulations for contempts of courts and vexa- tious appeals. Toth Aug. 1835*30th Mar. 1838, No. Proceedings in the case of Mr. 12th Oct. 1835* Roots, in the district of Malda, 16th Jan. 18377 and Petitiont of Eduljee Fer- 2d Packet. dunjee of Bombay,—connected For 1st Packet, with general object of recipro, See para. 4, city of process, for which an Act No. 31. has been drafted. No. 33.) Statements of General Reports made by Indian Law Commission. Aug. 31, 1838.-Reporting on the subject of the revival of the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace. Nov. 9, 1838.—Reporting on the subject of the fee upon institution of suits in the Courts of Justice in Mysore. Feb. 1, 1839.- First Report on Slavery in M.S. Jan. 15, 1841.-Second final report on ditto. July 11, 1840.-Stating to Government that they are now preparing reports, viz., 2 arising out of the petition of East Indians. The ist as to Substantive Law. 2d. The judicatures by which the causes, civil and criminal, of those classes are to be decided. 3d. Report upon judicature and procedure, which will comprise the Court of Requests. Vivâ voce examination of equity cases, and upon the Recorder's Court in the Straits. Will submit a report upon the abolition of the Madras Provincial Courts. Commissioners have resumed consideration of the question of the powers to be confided to single judges of Sudder Courts, and requesting commu- nication of any reports before Government, bearing upon the business in the Sudder and Nizamut Adawlut, at Calcutta or Bombay. A short re- port under preparation on the legality or otherwise of the re-marriage of Hindoo Widows.' 62 [PART IIL History of Offices. ment. On 31st March, 1838, the Law Commissioners informed the Go- vernment that the subject had received their attention, and on the 14th September, 1838, they noticed that the matter was embarrassed by the existence of other classes, who were in the same predicament, and the ne- cessity of making any enactment applicable to all the different classes similarly circumstanced. The draft of a general law, proposed by the Law Commission, after due enquiry, was submitted to Government on the 22d May, 1841. Sept. 18, 1837.-This required from the Law Commission draft of % law for the protection of Public property. This was afterwards withdraws by the Government. Nov. 6.-By this Commissioners were instructed to prepare, if neces- sary, a law providing for appeals of an interlocutary character from the or. ders of Munsifs dismissing suits on default. This arose out of a commu- nication from the Madras Government, to whom a reference became neces- sary. The subject was afterwards recalled. Oct. 18, 1837, No. 475.- This conveyed correspondence which bad passed between the two Courts of Nizamut Adawlut, on the subject of the power of Magistrates to compel wives to return to their husband. The reference was made in connection with the Criminal Code. The Law Commissioners collected information as to the practice of the Criminal Courts, and, on the 18th January 1839, submitted to Government a Re- port. Jan. 25, and May 30, 1836, and Feb. 7, 1838. These have reference to the improvements proposed in the administration of Criminal Justice, and Municipal Rules within the Presidencies. On 31st May, 1838, Law Com- missioners submitted to the Government with a Report, a draft Act for the constitution of a Subordinate Criminal Court. BENGAL. SUDDER DEWANNY ADAWLUT. Constitution of the Court.—The Court of Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, as originally constituted, consisted of the Governor General, and the other Members of the Supreme Council. In 1801, one member of the Council sat in the court as chief judge, with whom were associated two puisne judges, appointed from among the covenanted servants. Further changes were subsequently made in the constitution of the court, but it was not till 1811 that a complete separation was effected between the judicial power, and the executive authority. At present the court consists of as many Judges as the Government may see fit to appoint, with reference to the state of the business, consisting of the inembers of the service, who have been employed for a certain time in the discharge of judicial functions. The official designation of chief, second, and third judge, was discontinued by Regulation III. 1829. Jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of the court extends over the whole of the districts, 26 in number, comprised in the provinces of Bengal, Behar, and Orissa, which are subject to the general regulations ; as well as over the provinces of the S. W. Frontier (Ilazareebagh, formerly under the VOL 11.] 63 Sudder Dewanny Adawlut Regulations,) Assam, Arracan, and Tenasserim, and the tract of country, comprising Cachar and the Cassya Hills, recently annexed to the British dominions, all of which are subject to special rules. The Sudder Dewanny Adawlut is a court of judicature, for the trial of original suits and appeals from the decisions of the lower tribunals. It exs ercises also a control over the proceedings of the district courts, and the officers who preside in them. The jurisdiction of the Court in original suits can only be exercised un- der certain limitations; but it is believed that there has never been occa- sion for the exercise of this power. All suits, therefore, which are tried in this Court, consist of appeals. Limit of Appeals.—The cognizance of appeals from the decisions of the provincial courts was limited in 1793, to suits in which the amount, or the value of the property contested, exceeded one thousand sicca rupees, and at a subsequent date to suits for an amount or value exceeding tive thou- sand rupees. In 1814, the power of receiving appeals was extended to all regular suits decided in the first instance by the provincial courts. The same rule holds at present with regard to all suits originally decided by the Zillah Courts. Appeals from the decrees of the principal Sudder Ameens (appointed under Regulation V. of 1831) are also preferable to the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, whenever the amount or value of property in dispute exceeds five thousand sicca rupees. The Court are competent to admit second or special appeals from the judgments of the Zillah Courts, or appeals from the original decisions of the principal Sudder Ameens. The Court have also the power to authorise the zillah courts to review any judgment passed in those courts, where the discovery of an error in the proceedings, or of new evidence, not formerly attainable, may render the exercise of such power expedient. Similar permission may be granted to the principal Sudder Ameens, in cases which are appealable to the Court. Rules of Proceeding.–The sittings of the court were formerly held on fixed days, and there were occasional special sittings. But the increase of business has long since required daily sittings, except during the Dusserah and Mohurrum festivals, when all civil proceedings are suspended. On the receipt of a regular, or the admission of a special appeal, the whole of the proceedings of the lower tribunals are removed to the Court of Südder Dewanny Adawlut, except in certain cases, in which the court may see reason, from a perusal of the petition of appeal, and the decree appealed from, to confirm the judgment of the Mofussil Court, or to issue an injunction, pointing out apparent defects or irregularities, and requiring that the case be revised. The proceedings being received, and the requi- site securities furnished, are read before a single judge, in the presence of the parties; and the case argued by the Vakeels" or Mokhtyars engaged to conduct it ; witnesses are examined, if necessary, before the judge or the register of the Court, or the suit is remanded to the lower tribunal for fur- ther investigation or for re-trial. If the suit be ready for decision, and there appear no reason for interfering with the decision of the Court be- low, the judge confirms the decree, and execution thereof is ordered. But if the decree appear irregular, the proceedings are sent to a second judge, and to a third or fourth, if necessary, until there be a majority of voices for confirmation or reversal of the original decree. Occasionally two or more judges sit together, for the purpose of disposing of cases of more than ordinary importance. The judgments of the Court are carried into effect by the judge of the district in which the litigated property may be situated, or in which the cause of action may have arisen. In cases which 64 (PART 111. History of Offices turn upon the Hindoo or the Mahomedan Law, the expounders of those codes are called upon to furnish written opinions for the guidance of the Court. Finality of the Court's Decrees.-The decrees of the Court were, bereto- fore, final when the amount or value of suit exceeded five thousand pounds, equivalent to fifty thousand current rupees. On a petition of appeal to the Privy Council being filed in the Court, and security for costs being tendered, the proceedings were translated into English on the part of the Court ; and two copies of the translation engrossed on stampt paper, at the expense of the appellant, and forwarded to the Judicial Secretary for trans- mission to appellate authority. At present, all decisions of the Court in suits exceeding ten thousand Company's rupees may be carried by appeal before the privy council, without any cost to the parties for the translation and preparation of copies of the proceedings. Language of Proceedings. The proceedings of the court were formerly kept in the English language, and copied for transmission to the Governa ment and the Court of Directors; and the provincial courts were required to send translations in that language of proceedings in cases appealed to the superior Court. In 1801, the Persian was substituted for the English: since 1839, the Oordoo has been adopted as the language of record for the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut; but no translations are required of proceedings of the lower courts, recorded in the Verpacular languages of their respec- tive districts. Petitions may be presented to the Court in any language ; but translations either in Persian, Oordoo, or Bengallee, must accompany such as may not be drawn up in one of those three languages. This rule wholds in all the courts subordinate to the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut. Reports of Civil Cases. ---An annual report was prepared, heretofore, of all causes adjudged by the Sudder Court, and copies were forwarded to the Government and the Court of Directors. Cases of importance were selected by the judges, from those reports, and published for general infor- mation. The reports are no longer furnished, but reports of select cases are still prepared, and published at intervals. Report on Civil Justice.- Instead of the report of causes adjudged, a general report is annually submitted to the Government and the Ilonorable Court, on the adıninistration of Civil Justice in the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, and all the civil tribunals in subordination to them, in which the number of suits instituted and decided in every class of courts are compared, the merits of the several European and Native judges discussed, and such general questions considered as may arise in thq course of reviewing the proceedings of the various courts. Control of the Inferior Courts.- The Sudder Dewanny Adawlut possesses a general right of control over all the subordinate tribunals. It prescribes the forms of proceeding in all cases not specifically provided for in the regulations. Statements. The Zillah Judges are required to submit monthly state- ments calculated to exhibit the state of the files of all tlie courts, and the progress made in the trial of regular suits and appeals, the execution of decrees, and the disposal of petitions and processes in miscellaneous cases; on an inspection of which the Court issue such orders as may appear neces- sary to prevent the accumulation of arrears, or to facilitate the business of the lower Courts. In certain cases, a report is made to the Governmeut, accompanied with a recommendation for the temporary appointment of additional officers, or the removal of those whose services may vo longer be required. Similar statements are submitted to the Court at the close of the year, which exhibit the operations of the year, and form the bases of the Court's annual report on Civil Justice. VOL. 11.) 65 Sudder Dewanny Adawlut. Constructions of Law.—The Court is applied to by the zillah judges for opinions on points of law, which may not appear to be clearly set forth in the Regulation. These points are settled at present by mutual reference between the Calcutta and Allahabad Courts. The decisions of the two Courts are final, and are published from time to time for the guidance of the subordinate courts. Leave of Absence. The applications of the zillah judges for leave of absence on private affairs, are at present submitted in the first instance to the Court, who advise the Government, with reference to the amount of business pending in the court of the applicant, whether the application should be complied with or not. Charges against Functionaries.-When charges are preferred against any of the European judicial functionaries, the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut report to the Government their opinion, founded on the results of a pre- liminary, whether there are grounds for a formal, investigation. In the event of a commission being appointed to hold such investigation, the proceedings are submitted to the Court, who on a consideration of what has been adduced in the course of the inquiry, state their opinion whether the charges have been proved or not. The Court may also make inquiry into any irregularities of the European judges which may come under their notice, and report the same to the Government in serious cases, or admo- nish the party where the Court's admonition may be deemed sufficient. Proposed Laws. It is the province of the Court to submit to the Go- vernment drafts of enactments, either to explain existing laws or to pro- vide for cases heretofore overlooked ; and also to forward drafts of laws which may be proposed by any of the subordinate judicial authorities. The Court are also consulted by the Government on subjects which may be under its consideration. Uncovenanted Judges. The appointment and removal of uncovenanted judges of the lowest class, on the nomination or recommendation of the zillah judge, seconded by the commissioner of the division, rests with the Court. They have likewise the power of recommending to the Govern- ment, the appointment, promotion, and removal of the uncovenanted judges of the higher classes. Guardian to Miuors.-The Court, on the recommendation of the zillah judges, appoint guardians to minors who are co-proprietors of joint un- decided estates. Disqualified Landholders. The unfitness of landholders to manage their estates, being established by local inquiry, is certified to the Government by the Court, with a view to such estates being placed under the care of the Court of Wards. Administration to Estates. In the case of the claimants to an intestate not being able to arrange among themselves for its management, the district judge appoints an administrator, subject to the approbation of the superior Court. Civil Prisoners.—Returns are made to the Court, half-yearly, of all pri- soners in confinement in the jails under civil processes. PART III. VOL. II. K VOL. II.] 67 Nizamut Adawlut. ner, are concisely stated. These are laid before the Judges of the Court, sitting together on a fixed day; and the Register communicates to the Session Judge, the opinion of the Court regarding any trivial irregularities which may have been committed, or their authority for mitigating a severe sentence, for passing a fresh sentence, where the first may have been illegal, or for holding a new trial where any serious irregularity may have vitiated the first trial. In a case of acquittal, even if the prisoner have been acquitted by the Session Judge against evidence, or the trial have been marked by serious defects, the sentence is not interfered with, though the Session Judge is admonished. · But in cases, in which the prisoner has been sentenced inadequately to the offence, or there may be reason to question his guilt, or an appeal may have been preferred on his behalf to the Nizamut Adawlut, the whole of the proceedings are called for, and revised by a Judge of the Court, who may acquit the prisoner, or reduce the sentence passed by the lower tribunal. But if the case appear to require an enhancement of the punishment awarded by the Session Judge, the proceedings are forwarded to one or more of the Judges of the Court, and sentence passed in conformity to the opinion of the majority. The Session Judges are competent to enhance or reduce the punish- ment awarded by Magistrates in trials held in their own Court, and to direct the commitment of prisoners who may have been released by the Magistrate. But their sentences are not final, and may be reversed by the Nizamut Adawlut at discretion. The Court are restricted from interfer- ing with the orders passed by the Session Judges, in cases decided by the Magistrates which may not come under the denomination of criminal trials. Language of Proceedings.--Criminal trials are at present held in the language current in each district but depositions and confessions are recorded in the language best understood by the parties. The sentences. and orders of the Court are recorded in English. Reports of Criminal Cases.-Reports of criminal cases, decided by the Court, which involve any point of law or practice, or are otherwise remark- able, are prepared and published at intervals for general information. Report on Criminal Justice.-An annual report is submitted to the Government, on the administration of Criminal Justice, shewing the number of persons brought to trial, and acquitted or convicted in the various Courts, and the manner in which the criminal functionaries dis- charge their duties. Statements. This report is founded on the statements, annually received from the several districts, of the state of criminal business in the magiste- rial and sessions Courts. Monthly statements of the same description are also submitted, by which the court are apprised of the state of crime in every district, and the obstructions or facilities met with by suitors for justice, and by accused persons ; and on which orders are issued to the lower tribunals as occasion may require. Jails.—The Nizamut Adawlut have the superintendence of the jails. The district jails are visited by the Session Judges monthly, or oftener if need be. The Allipore jail, which is appropriated to the reception of criminals sentenced to perpetual imprisonment, both of the lower and the upper provinces, is visited by the Judges of the Nizamut Adawlut in rotation. The Court receive from every district half-yearly statements, calculated to shew the number of prisoners of various descriptions in con- finement, the works on which they are employed, and the degree in which sickness and mortality prevail among them ; on all which points reports are furnished to the Government, and orders and suggestions communi- cated to the local authorities. Pardon of Criminals. It is competent to the Nizamut Adawlut to remit or mitigate, on judicial grounds, the punishment awarded to criminals VOL. II.] 69 Sudder Board of Revenue. and four other of the most intelligent of the senior servants of the Company To this Board (subject to the control of the Superior Council) belonged the whole administration, settlement, collection, and superintendence of the land revenue, including the Sayer and Abkaree, together with the control of the several officers concerned therein; but they were to have no power of issuing any money for any purposes whatever, except in consequence of orders or warrants from the Board of Council, in whom this authority was exclusively vested. Between 1787, and the beginning of 1829, many changes in the revenue administration occurred. A few years after the acquisition of the ceded and conquered provinces, they were removed from the control of the Calcutta Board, and placed under the charge of a Board of Commis- sioners (1807). A Second Board of Commissioners for Behar and Be- nares, was established in 1817.* The designation of these Boards was changed in 1822, from which time till 1829, there were three · Boards of Revenue' for the Western, Central, and Lower Provinces. A separate jurisdiction had been established in Cuttack, in 1818. In 1829, Commissioners of Revenue and Circuit, acting in their Revenue capacity, under the direction and control of a Sudder (or Head) Board of Revenue, were substituted for the three existing Boards of Revenue. The said commissioners to exercise within their divisions the same power and authority as were formerly vested in the Boards of Revenue, and Courts of Wards, subject to the control and direction of the Sudder Board, which was to be ordinarily stationed at the presidency, unless otherwise directed by the Governor General in Council, or as the said Board, with his sanc- tion and authority, might prescribe. From the jurisdiction of the Sudder Board of Revenue, there was only one division excepted, viz. by the Com- missioner for the districts of the northern Dooab, Suharunpore, Moozaffer- nuggur, Meerut, and Boolundsbur, being placed under the authority of the Resident of Delhi. The superintendence of the Abkaree Mehal, toge- ther with the department of Stamps, was vested in the Commissioners of Revenue ; but they were made subject, in regard to those departments, to the control of the Board of Customs, .Salt and Opium. In July of the following year, viz. 1830, Lord William Bentinck took with him, in his tour to the Upper Provinces, the junior member of the Sudder Board, Mr. Fane, and the senior secretary Mr. Tilghman, for the following reasons. Because it was a main object of His Lordship's visit to the Western Provinces, to examine into the details of the revenue admin- istration, to ascertain the progress making in the settlements and surveys, and to enquire, whether the system of minute investigation, which had been under trial since 1822, was successful and complete, or required modi- fication in its adaptation to the circumstances of different parts of the country. That there were many revenue questions, local as well as general, that would be forced upon the consideration of the Governor General, in the course of his tour, and that he might be prepared to meet them, it seemed indispensable that he should provide for the presence of an au- thority, exercising the powers of the Sudder Board, within the Western Provinces; and as an instrument of investigation or control, as well as for advice and assistance, that the agency of such an authority would be equally essential. Such was the origin of the present Sudder Board of Revenue, North Western Provinces, which was established by law in 1831, as a branch of, or deputation from, the Presidency Board, to be stationed ordinarily at Allahabad. A single Commissioner for Behar and Benares had been appointed in the previous year. 70 [PART IIL History of Offices The jurisdiction of the Sudder Board stationed at the presidency, extends over the provinces of Bengal, Behar, and Orissa, including the divisions of the Revenue Commissioners of Patna, Bhaugulpore, Moorsbe- dabad, Dacca, Chittagong, Jessore, and Cuttack, and the settled dis- tricts under the Governor General's Agent at Hazareebaugh. It com- prises also the late Burmese provinces of Assam, Arracan, and Tenas. serim. The duties of the Board are most important, and their powers con- sequently extensive. The whole of the details of the Land Revenue administration are under their control; they take cognizance of the state of the collections, and are vigilant in checking delay in the realization of the revenue, the progress made in which is reported to them quarterly by the division commissioners. All settlements are revised by them, pre- vious to being submitted for the confirmation of Government. They exercise a general supervision over the proceedings of the Revenue Com- missioners, and their Subordinate Collectors, and receive appeals from the orders or decisions of the former authority; but no such order or decision can be reversed, or altered, except by the concurrent judgment of two members. It is their duty to refer, for the orders of the Governor, all matters of general interest and importance, which they may consider to require the orders of Government, and, on all occasions of such reference, they must collectively, state their sentiments. Whenever it may be deemed by Government advisable to empower a single member of the Sudder Board to exercise, either generally or locally, the duties, powers, and authority which are vested in the board collectively, it is competent to the Government to authorize such arrangement. If a difference of opinion arise between any two members of the Sudder Board, on any question which may have been considered by them jointly or separately, the case must be referred to a third member, and the majority of voices decide the question; or in the event of no two members con- curring in opinion, the case is referred for the orders of Government. All general questions, such as the enactment of new rules, the constructions of the provisions of the existing Code of Regulations, or the like; al matters involving new principles, or new mode of procedure ; and all mat- ters of general interest or importance, must be considered by the Board collectively, or at least by two members. In the execution of the duties vested in the Sudder Board of Reveune, and local Commissioners, they are to be guided by the rules, orders, or instructions, which they may from time to time receive from the Goverg. ment, to whom they are to apply, in all cases, which they may consider unprovided for by the Regulations. The Land Revenue demand from the provinces under the jurisdiction of the Sudder Board at Calcutta, amounted in 1838-39 to Rs. 3,26,95,974 This is exclusive of the unsettled revenue arising from resumed Lakhiraj, and other lands not yet brought on the public rent, the collections from which, in the same year, amounted to near Rs. 16,00,000. Of the 3,26,95,974 above stated, was collected within the year Rs. 2,75,08,904, leaving a ba- lance of Rs. 51,86,069, uncollected at its close. The gross revenne of the Lower Provinces (including Sayer and Abkaree), realized in 1838-39, amounted to Rs. 3,81,55,477, and the cost of collection to Rs. 48,88,635, or Rs. 12-12-11, and a fraction per cent. VOL. 11.) 71 Board of Customs. BOARD OF CUSTOMS, SALT AND OPIUM AND MARINE. The Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, was constituted by Regula- tion IV. of 1819. The charge of the Stamp and Abkaree Revenues was transferred from the Sudder Board of Revenue to the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, under the orders of Government, dated 26th February, 1829. The duties of the Customs, Salt and Opium are : In the Customs Department.— To supervise the collection of the Customs Revenue in Bengal and Orissa. To receive appeals against, or confirm the decisions of the Collectors of Customs, in cases of alleged infraction of the Custom Laws. To check the accounts and collections, audit the duties arged on Im- ports and Exports, to prevent over or under charges, and generally to control the expenditure of the several Custom Houses ; to advise Go- vernment in all matters relating to the commercial concerns of the coun- try, and the collection of the Revenue derivable therefrom. There are three Custom Houses under the control of the Board, viz. of Calcutta, Balasore and Chittagong. The gross collections in the Customs branch may be taken to average for the past three years about 39,65,000 Rupees per annum, and the expenditure Rupees 4,63,500 per annum. In the Salt Department.--To supervise and control all measures and expences connected with the manufacture, import, transportation, and custody of Salt stored for public consumption in Bengal and Orissa, under the monopoly: To realize the Salt Revenue through the sale of Salt from the Public Golahs ; to fix the selling prices at which Salt is available to the public, and which include the prime cost of the article and the tax on Salt pay- able to the State ; to control and direct the operations of the Preven- tive force in Bengal, Behar and Orissa, employed in checking the manufac- ture, transit, or sale of illicit Salt, and to devise and superintend whatever measures may be necessary for the security of the Salt Revenue ; to in- spect and revise periodical returns of the proceedings of Salt Agents and Superintendents of Salt Chokies in their judicial capacities. To advise Government in all matters connected with the maintenance of the Salt Revenue, or the Provision of Salt for public consumption. To check gen- erally the expenditure of the department in all branches. The Board is a Court of Appeal in the last resort for all cases connected with breaches of the Salt Laws, whether the same shall have been decided by the officers of the department or (when beyond the competency of such officers to decide) by the Courts of Judicature. There are four Salt Agencies, fifteen Superintendencies Chokeys, and the Superintendency of the Sul- kea Golaħs, immediately under the control of the Board, and three Agencies and three Superintendencies controled through the Commis- sioners of Revenue and Circuit for the Cuttack Division. There are also Chokeys in the Ilazarreebaugh Government Agency, controlled through the Governor General's Agent. The gross average revenue of the three past years ; realized in this department, may be taken in round numbers at 1,93,00,000 rupees per annum, and the expenditure for the same period, including cost of salt at 45,12,000 rupees per annum. In the Opium Department.—To supervise and control all measures and expenses connected with the Provision of Opium for sale at the Pre- VOL. 11.] 73 Board of Customs. Subordinate to the Board in this portion of its duties, is the superin- tendent of stamps, the collectors and deputy collectors of Bengal, Behar, and Orissa, through the several Commissioners of Revenue and Circuit, and the collector of the Calcutta stamp duty, especially appointed by a separate regulation. The average amount revenue realized in this department for the past three years, may be taken at about 20,05,000 rupees per annum, and the expenditure at about 1,18,000 rupees per annum. The closing of the Hon'ble Company's commercial affairs has been placed under the control of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium. In this branch of its duties it decides upon all tenders for advances upon goods, taking bills of exchange upon England, guarded by policies of insurance, and bills of lading, through which funds to meet the home expenditure are to a great extent transmitted. The Board further con- ducts all pending suits for the recovery of old commercial balances, and generally supervises the final adjustment of the commercial accounts. The Marine Board—was constituted on the 1st of May, 1795, by a letter from the Supreme Government, dated 6th April of that year, and annexed to the Board of Trade ; that is, the members of the Board of Trade were appointed members of the Marine Board, which however had a separate professional secretary, and it remained united to that Board, until the constitution of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, in 1819, when it was united thereto, having the same directors and the same secretary. The want however of professional assistance was early felt, and a pro- fessional assistant to the secretary was appointed under the orders of Government, and finally in February, 1818, the original constitution was re-adopted by the appointment of a separate professional secretary. The principal duties of the Marine Board consist in superintending and controlling the executive duties the master attendant, and the marine pay master and naval store keeper. As regards the former; all the transactions of his department bearing on the safe and secure navigation of the river, the state and condition of the different vessels, boats and buoys are reported to the Board, and no expense is incurred without their previous sanction being obtained. All supplies of stores required by the master attendant are issued on indents passed by the Board. They hear and determine on complaints preferred by the master attendant against members of the Pilot service, as also appeals from them against the acts of their superiors ; the Board also takes cognizance of complaints made by Commanders of vessels against Pilots or others, belonging to the Marine department, submitting such complaints, when necessary, to be investigated by marine committees of enquiry, and determining on the result, or referring to Government in extreme cases. As they receive direct reports of the arrivals of ships, they ascertain that due bills for pilotage and other dues are made out and forwarded to them for registry, and despatched to the marine pay master for collection, and by means of this registry they see all such bills are collected and brought to account. They take cognizance of all casualties that occur in the navigation of vessels, and are bound to do their utmost for the im- provement of the river. It is their duty to see that the pilotage establish- ment is maintained in full efficiency, reporting vacancies requiring to be filled up, and suggesting such improvements on its constitution and management, as may appear to them to be expedient. As regards the marine pay master, no sum can be paid or received by him without the Board's authority, in the former case evinced by registry and audit, and in the latter by registry; and as the marine pay master's cash accounts come up to the Board, they are examined by the registries, whence the PART 111, VOL. II, L 74 History of Offices. (PART ILL. Board ascertain that no more has been paid than they have passed, and that all bills sent for collection have been realized and brought to account. As regards the naval store keeper again, he cannot receive or issue any stores whatever, without any similar authority to the above. The Marine Board further engage vessels and tonnage for the various purposes required by Government, such as conveyance of Stores from Calcutta, to other ports and places : passage for officers : the transport home of Queen's Regiments and Invalids of both services. They adjust the claims of owners for freight on account of stores brought out from Eng. land as well for the passage of troops. The Board checks the expenditure of the several marine establish- ments from Chittagong down to Singapore, taking care that nothing berond the fixed establishment is drawn for, and reporting to Government on extraordinary contingent charges. They have management of the port funds of Chittagong, Akyab, and Tenasserim, with a view to their surplus being appropriated to the improvement of the respective ports. Finally they have the management and control of the Govern- ment steamers employed in sea and inland navigation. The duties in this branch are conducted by the Controller of Government Steam Vessels, acting under the Board's orders as the steam secretary, the expenditure and charges coming of course under the regular audit depart- ment of the Board. The average amount of marine collections from various sources, including pilotage, port dues, services of the Inland Steam department, &c. may be taken at about 7,18,520, rupees per annum for three years, ending 30th April, 1840. And the amount of annual expen- diture controlled by the Board during the same period, may be taken at about Rs. 18,68,018, per annum. The above are entirely cash transactions, limited to this presidency, and do not include the stores imported from England. They are also uncone nected with the control of accounts from the several out stations. The gross amount of revenue collected under the administration of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and Marine Board, may be taken at an average of 4,51,55,500 rupees per annum, and the total annual expenditure, subject to the check and control of the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and Marine Board, may be taken at 1,17,21,500 rupees per annum. The Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, and Marine Board, consists of two, and has at times been composed of three members. The ministerial officers' attached to the Board are,- 1. The Secretary to the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, his depu- ty, and his first assistant. 2. The Secretary to the Marine Board. 3. The Secretary in the Steam Department, who is Controller of Go- vernment Steamers. 4. The Secretary in the Commercial Department, who is esport ware- house keeper. 5. The Salt and Opium and Commercial accountant, who as recente accountant, holds his office at the General Treasury. The Principal Board days are twice in each week, viz., on Monday and Thursday, but the Board of Customs, Salt and Opium, is required by Law to sit daily (Sundays and Holidays excepted) for the transaction of business connected with the Customs. 1 76 (PART 111. History of Offices. The Hon'ble Court of Directors, when they find they have not sufficient funds to meet their own wants, as well as to pay the amount of bills drawn by the Indian Government either for interest (to those Resident in Eu- rope) or principal of loans when payable by the Hon'ble Court, send out directions to the several Governments, to make advances to Merchants and others, on security of goods, they repaying the Hon'ble Court such advances before the goods are delivered ; besides this, the Hon'ble Court open their Treasury, and invite the public that require remittances to India, to pay into their treasury such sums as they require, and for which bills are given (as required) on the several Governments. The duties of the financial department of this office at present con- sist in preparing at the earliest period of each year, that is after the 30th of April, a sketch estimate of the probable receipts and disbursements of Bengal, which estimate either ends with a surplus or otherwise ; with this, and those, received from the other Presidencies, a general sketeh estimate of all India is prepared, and this enables the accountant general to see his way in the financial affairs of India. accountant general in the financial branch, after the actual receipts and disbursements of each year are closed, frames a report in detail, shewing whether the estimate exceeded the actual receipts and disbursements, or otherwise, and giving such information of the cause of increase or decrease as he possesses. With the results on account of Bengal as above, are added those of the other Presidencies, and shewing, in one view, the results on account of India—and the cash balances on the 30th of April in each year. Date of Accounts.—The first general books in this office, are for the year 1750-51, whịch commences with letters Z Z; that is, meaning that books to these letters had originally been in the office, thereby making the first accounts as of the year 1700 2+25=50, I or J, being left out of the alphabet. GENERAL TREASURY. were On the 30th April, 1788, the Khalsa and Commercial Treasuries wer abolished, and the General Treasury established on the 1st May of that year, under orders of Government, dated 2nd April, 1788. The duties of the sub-treasurer are : To have the personal custody, (under joint keys with the atire treasurer, the Khuzanchee) of all monies at the General Treasury, except such as are required for the disbursements of the day. To examine the daily account of receipt and disbursements, and to furnish the accountant general daily with an abstract of it, appending thereto a memorandum of the balance of the day, particularizing descrip- tions of coins, and Bank of Bengal notes, &c., in store. To send to the Governor General , a weekly statement of the receipt and disbursements of the general treasury. To despatch to the Hon'ble Court of Directors, the General Treasury accounts, at the end of every quarter. To receive remittances from the collectors of revenue, in the Bengal Presidency, also from the mint master, collector of customs, collector and superintendent of stamps, post master general, police, court of requests, studs, ferry and canal-toll collections, abkarree, lotters, Government agents, Government saying's Bapk, fees for registry of VOL. 11.) 79 General Treasury. These deposits are delivered over under orders of Government on there. turn of the servants to India. Half yearly statements of deposits are fur- nished to Government. Estates of deceased European commissioned, non-commissioned, and warrant officers and soldiers, and of deceased Native officers and men, in the East India Company's Service, are deposited with the sub-treasurer, until claimed by legal representatives. The Government is furnished with a half yearly statement of deposits, on account of the estates of Euro- peans, with a duplicate of the previous half yearly statement, showing the sums remaining unclaimed in India, and an annual statement of deposits on an account of estates of Natives, with a Nagree translation thereof. All unclaimed sums in the hands of superintendents of family, money and pay masters of Native pensioners at Barrackpore, and elsewhere, are deposited with the sub-treasurer, repayable by drafts granted by the superintendents and pay masters. Prize money and unclaimed donation batta are deposited with the sub- treasurer. All sums belonging to the wards of the Lower Orphan School are lodged with the sub-treasurer, and returned on the requisition of the managers, through the secretary of the Military Orphan Society. Indemnity bonds, title deeds, leases and releases of houses, belong- ing to the East India Company, are lodged with the sub-treasurer for safe custody. All Government promissory notes, discharged at the Presidencies of Fort St. George and Bombay, are lodged with the sub-treasurer. THE CIVIL PAY OFFICE. The office was annexed to the General Treasury in 1797. Its duties are to pay salaries, allowances, pensions, and all extraordi- nary charges in the general, judicial, revenue, and commercial branches of the service, after deducting subscriptions to the different funds, re- trenchments, &c. All bills are audited by the Civil auditor ; but for every new or unusual payment, or increase of fixed charges, the sub-trea- surer requires special authority of Government. The monthly accounts of this department are furnished to the accountant general, and an annual set forwarded to the Hon'ble Court of Directors. Quarterly statements of payments made on account of the Presidencies of Fort St. George, Bombay and Agra, with attested copies of the vouchers discharged, are also fur- nished to the accountant general. Monumental fees are paid into this department, and quarterly state- ments furnished to Government. All disbursements on account of the College of Fort William are made in the Civil Pay Office. The account of the Government Agents, Military Fund, Medical Retiring Fund, Orphan Fund, and Uncovenanted Service Family Pension Fund, are kept in this department, and monthly statements furnished to the Secretaries of the respective funds. STAMPS. All stamped paper used both in the Mofussil and at Calcutta, are counter- stamped at the General Treasury, where three presses are at constant work. The sub-treasurer grants receipts for every chalan of stamps. He has the personal custody of all stamp dies; gives them out daily for counterstamping, and locks them up at the close of business. [80] [PART 11. CIVIL AUDITOR. Fixed and authorised charges.— The Civil Auditor is to pass all fixed and authorized charges without reference to Government, and to reject of his own authority, and without reference to Government, all charges not previously sanctioned. Accounts for Aulit.—2nd. Accounts submitted for audit, are not to contain any disbursements not duly sanctioned, but such are to stand, until sanctioned at the personal responsibility of the Officer by whom they are made. Extra charges.--3rd. In all practicable cases, previous sanction for extra charges is to be obtained. Previous sanctions of Government.—4th. When from necessity such charges are incurred without previous sanction, they must be reported with the least practicable delay, by the public officer incurring the charge to the secretary to the Government in the department to which he belongs. When sanctioned, notice is to be given by the Secretary, to the Civil Auditor, and to the public officer concerned, the latter then to insert the charge in the body of his account, submitted for audit, and the foriner to pass it without further reference to Government. Sanction of Courts, Boards, g c.--5th. With regard to the contingent charges within that amount, which the several courts of justice and boards of revenue are authorised to sanction, the bills for them must bear the countersignature of the authority sanctioning the charge, before they are transferred for audit to the Civil Auditor. Petty Contingencies .--6th. The petty monthly office contingencies of several departments at the Presidency will be brought to notice of Govern. ment by the Civil Auditor, as heretofore. Civil Auditor's Responsibility.—7th. The Civil Auditor is to be respon- sible for all charges passed by him without due authority. Officers of Accountant.--8th. The officers of accounts are to be care- ful, that no charge requiring an audited voucher, is admitted on the pub- lic account, without such sanction, that every charge not duly sane- tioned, be kept in an inefficient balance, at the responsibility of the officer by whom it was incurred. Miscellaneous Responsibility:—9th. The officers of accounts are to re- quire explanations of any items, which may remain in the inefficient balance, after the lapse of a sufficient period, for report and sanction, and to report to the accountant general, for the information of Government, on the inefficient balances of the account under adjustment as soon after the 30th April in each year, as practicable. Special Reports.- 10th. The Civil Auditor is to be at liberty, and to consider it as his duty to submit to Government, any observations on the accounts submitted for audit, which may occur to him, as likely to promote the good of the service, whether regarding fixed charges, which ought to be discontinued, or contingent charges, which might be avoided. Extract of a Letter to the Civil Auditor from the Judicial Department, and dated 31st December, 1819. Para. 2.-I am likewise directed to observe, that expences of the na- ture described in the letters and statements abovementioned, are evidently of necessary, and indispensable occurrence, and they must vary in their amount according to the number of prisoners in Prisoner's charges when gaol, and various other circumstances ; so that it usual and unobjectionable' to be passed. is quite unnecessary to obtain the sanction of Government for them in the first instance, and VOL 11.] 81 Civil Auditor. when they are usual and unobjectionable, they should be passed by you in the contingent bills, and they need only be Unusual or extraordinary brought to the notice of Government, when they in amount to be brought to the notice of Government. are of an unusual nature, or extraordinary amount. 45, 46.-Modification of the rules relating to the contingent charges of the office of Civil and Session Judge and Commissioner of Circuit. The fol- lowing is the new rule adopted by you, with respect to the sanction of con- tingent charges incurred by the civil and session judges, and by the commissioners of circuit. 1. In modification of the existing rules on the subject of the contin gent charges of the office of civil and session judge, and commissioner of circuit, the honorable the Vice President in Council is pleased to deter mine, that monthly statements of such charges incurred by them, shall in future be forwarded by the civil and session judges, and by the com- missioners respectively to the Civil Auditor, the duty of examining and checking the statements being vested in that officer, who will possess authority to pass, without further reference, all such items of charge as he may think usual and unobjectionable, whatever their amount, reporting those which may not be of that character in quarterly statements, for the consideration and orders of Government. 2. It is to be understood, that it will not be necessary to apply for the sanction of the Civil Auditor, previously to incurring any contingent charge. Disbursements may be made in the first instance ou the responsibility of the civil and session judges, or the commissioners, as the case may be. 3. The present rule also is not, in any way, to affect or interfere with the established rules in regard to the contingent charges of the offices of commissioner of revenue. 19. We are aware that it is an object of importance to relieve the Go- vernment from unnecessary details of business, and still more so to provide effective, instead of nominal checks over the public expenditure. Never- theless we cannot assent to the proposition that any subordinate officer of the Government shall possess authority to pass, without further reference, all such items of charge as he may think usual and unobjectionable, what- ever their amount. The Civil Auditor too is not competent, we appre- hend, to form a correct judgment, whether any charges incurred by the judges and commissioners, are liable to objection, or not, and the designa- tion of contingent charges is so indefinite, as to leave a latitude for almost any description, as well as avowedly for any amount, of disbursement. The operation of the new rule in checking public expenditure, as it seems to us, must depend entirely upon the discretion of the Civil Auditor, while he is not furnished with the means of exercising it satisfactorily, and while its exercise may prove either lax or rigid according to the particular views of the individual holding the office. Amongst other evil consequences to be anticipated, is that of the officers by whom contingent charges are in- curred, feeling themselves absolved from responsibility, for restricting their amount, so long as they are passed by the Civil Auditor. 20. Under these considerations, we desire that you will ascertain in what manner the new rule has been carried into effect, both in the Lower and Western Provinces, whether the term "contingent charges" has not in practice embraced items of expenditure ; for which the special sanction of Government was intended still to be requisite, and what amount of ex- penditure has annually been passed under this rule, upon no other autho- rity than that of its having been considered by the Civil Auditor, to be usual and unobjectionable. When this information has been obtained, we trust that you will have no difficulty in placing the duty of annually passing the contingent charges in the Judicial Department upon correct M VOL. 11.) 83 Civil Auditor. 4. In the particular bills, now under consideration, the several items, which are considered by Government to fall under the foregoing heads, are marked off : you will accordingly direct the several commissioner of re- venue and circuit, to draw the regulated allowance of rupees 50 per mensem, where it has not already been drawn, and to defray such charges from that allowance, with reference to the general remark in the pre- eeding paragraph. The 56th clause of the rules of practice, for the guidance of the commissioners of revenue and circuit, sanctioned on the 17th February 1829, authorizes those officers to order contingent disburse- ments as far as 500 rupees; but the rule is declared to be subject to such restrictions as the Government may see fit to impose : The 57th clause authorizes the Sudder Board of Revenue to pass charges as far as 500 rupees. 6. The following items are extracted from the bills now submitted, and noticed as charges, which should have place in quarterly contingent bills of commissioners, with reference to the annexed orders, applicable to each. Personal allowance to Officers, E.ctra-Writers, Mohurers, &c. Extra Dufterries, ditto Bhiesties, ditto Classies, ditto Peons.-7. The charges can only be passed, where the express sanction of the Sudder Board, or of Go- vernment, as the amount, has been obtained for incurring the expense. Section Writing.-8. Wholly disallowed under orders already commu- nicated to Civil Auditor. Travelling charges to Officers of the establishment.-9th. To be autho- rized by the commissioners, and recommended by the auditor, to be passed under, in conformity to the rates laid down in the orders of the 20th May last. Carriage by land or water of Public Records, Office Tents, Furniture, &c. -10th. To be recommended to be passed, when authorized by the com- missioner. Feeding Dromedaries, Camels, Elephants, or other public cattle. - 11th, To be passed, when such cattle are authorized to be placed at the disposal of the officer, and the rates usual. Construction of Sheds, and other temporary Out-offices.--12th. To be passed only when previous authority has been given to incur the expence. ' Repair of Publie Buildings, and repair of Office Tents, and Treasure Tumbrils and Furniture.-13th. As above. Rent of Cutcherries or other Public Offices.-14th. . To be passed only, when the express authority of Government, for the hire thereof, has been granted. Purchase of Office furniture of every description, also of Badges for Peons.—15th. To be passed when authority of the Sudder Board, or of Government, according to the amount, to incur the expense, has been given. 16. The foregoing orders are to be considered of general application to all future quarterly contingent bills of commissioners of revenue and circuit, and the Governor General in Council approves your proposition, that the commissioners shall send their quarterly bills in the first instance, for the counter signature of the Sudder Board. Extract from the proceedings of the honorable the Vice President in Coun- cil in the Political Department, un:ler date the 11th March, 1831. 2. With reference to the remark in the 2nd paragraph of your letter, that you had yourself sanctioned the charge under the authority vested in you to pass bills for sums not exceeding 500 rupees on the public service, I am directed to observe to you, that the authority alluded to does not ex- tend to contingent expenses incurred in the Political Department, either by yourself, or by the subordinate authorities, which should always be re- ported by you, for the information and sanction of Government. ( [PART IH. 84 ] SPECIAL COMMISSIONER. The office of Special Commissioner was constituted by Regulation III. of 1828, for the purpose of finally determining all cases investigated by collectors, deputy collectors, or other officers exercising the powers of collectors under Section 5, and the fifteen subsequent Sections of Regula- tion II. 1819, and Section 5, of Regulation IX. of 1825 ; and also for decid- ing all suits contesting the demand of the revenue officers brought on the plea of the annual rent or assessment, upon which the demand is founded, being in excess of what the party is bound to pay, and thereby involving a consequent permanent increase or reduction of the public revenue. The jurisdiction of a Special Commissioner extends to such districts or portions of districts as the Government directs, notice of which is pub- lished by proclamation at the Cutcherries of the Magistrate and collector of such district, and communicated through the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut to the provincial and zillah courts concerned, and also to the Board of Revenue or other Boards exercising revenue control. The duties of a Special Com- missioner are : To take cognizance of all cases requiring his interference within any zillah or other local division ; to announce to the courts .of such divisions the cessation of his local jurisdiction : to require the records of all cases which are declared cognizable by him from the Courts before which such cases depend ; to receive appeals from the decision of the Board of Reve- nue given before his jurisdiction had been declared, to extend to the dis- trict in which the cases have arisen, and in which the parties would, but for the extension of such jurisdiction, have been entitled to appeal to the ordinary courts of justice under the Sections 22 and 24 of Regulation II. of 1819, and Section 5 of Regulation IX. of 1825, and to hear and deter- mine such cases in the same manner as appeals preferred to Board of Revenue from the decisions of collectors under Regulation III, 1828. Further, on deciding suits to determine the amount of remuneration to be assigned to the vakeels employed by parties in conducting such suit before the Court or Board, whence the case has been trapsferred, and gell. erally the manner in which any costs previously incurred, shall be borne. To admit appeals within, and after iwo months from the date of a col- lector's decision, sufficient cause in the latter instance, being shown by the appellant for not sooner preparing it ; to admit also petitions of apo poal; to stay execution of a collector's decree, and to cause the attach- ment of the land, to be suspended or withdrawn on due security, being tendered by the appellant for payment, from the date of the collector's decision, of the revenue alternately to be assessed on the land. To revise and pass final orders, on all cases transferred to him from the Board of Revenue, submitted to that authority by a collector; to require the ate tendance of parties in whose favor the decision is given by the collector, and to hear and decide such cases ex parte, on the party Deglecting to attend and defend the appeal. To review any judgment passed by him, on sufficient cause being shewn for a new appeal. In cases of disagreement of opinion, to record opinion for submission to Other Commissioners, so that the final award may be concurred in by at least two Special Commissioners. To be guided by rules prescribed by Government in regard to the forms and nature of proceedings. To issue instructions for the guidance of col. lectors of districts within jurisdiction, regarding cases investigated under Regulation II. of 1819, and Regulation ix. of 1825, and to refer cases VOL 11.] 85 Civil Judge. back to those officers for further trial. To possess all the powers of the ordinary courts of justice, in regard to contempts, the summoning and examination of witnesses, and the administration of oaths. To require the zillah courts to carry into execution, when necessary, the decisions passed by him. To determine, with the sanction of Go- vernment, rules and provisions applicable to Native officers employed by him. To commit for trial before the Court of Circuit, persons guilty of perjury or subordination of perjury. To require every aid and information from the courts and the revenue officers. Further, to require, zillah courts or collectors to examine witnesses, either on written interrogato- ries or otherwise, on points requiring that mode, and generally to enquire and report on particular points upon which further information is desirable. To furnish to Government such periodical statements and reports, as Go- vernment may prescribe. Before entering on the performance of functions to take and subscribe the following oath. I A. B. appointed a Special Commissioner, under the rules of Regula- tion III. A. D., 1828, solemnly swear, that I will investigate and determine in equity and good conscience, to the best of my ability, knowledge, and judgment, without fear, favor, promise, or hope of reward, all matters which by the said Regulation or any other Regulation in force, I may be tequired to investigate and determine ; that I will not receive directly or indirectly any present or nuzzeer or money or effects of any kind from any party whomsoever, on account of any matter to be reviewed, investigated, or determined by me, or which may be depending or have been investi- gated or determined under the above Regulation : that I will not know- ingly permit any person or persons under my authority to receive directly or indirectly any present or nuzzeer in money, or effects of any kind from any party or person whatsoever, on account of any matter, as aforesaid and that I will not derive directly or indirectly any emoluments or advantages from my office, excepting such as the orders of Government do, or may authorize me to receive. So help me GOD. By G. O. the Governor of Bengal, dated the 27th of July, 1841, the Special Commissioners, under Regulation III. of 1828, for the divisions of Calcutta and Moorshedabad respectively, were invested with conjoint ju- risdiction in those divisions. CIVIL JUDGE. The duties of the Civil Judge, are to supervisc and control the adminis- tration of Civil justice dispensed throughout the zillah by his subordinate officers, consisting of principal sudder ameen, 'sudder ameen and moon- siffs. To receive plaints of original suits (under Regulation IV. of 1793), register and distribute them to the Native Judges for trial, regard being had in such distribution to the nature and amount of suit cognizable by the respective lower Courts (vide Cl. 2, Sec. 5, Reg. 5, 1831, Act 25, 1837, cir, order dated 23d of Feb., 1808.) To retain on his own file, and decide those which involve complicated points, and questions of English law, and in which there are English exhi- bits, the meaning and spirit of which cannot be faithfully rendered by translation into the native languages (vide cir, order 18th October, 1839) To entertain and decide appeals against the decision of collectors, pre- ferred under Regulation 2, of 1819. 88 History of Offices. (PART II. 1 1. Abstract statement of regular suits pending, instituted, and disposed of by the civil courts, including those referred to the collector, and returned by him, those received back for retrial, from the Sudder Dewanny Adaw. lut, and under Sec. 3, Reg. 26, of 1814, and Act. 29, of 1838, those received by transfer from, and those transferred to, other zillahs, noticing the parti . culars of appeals referred to the principal sudder ameen by the judge, with the sanction of the superior court, under provisions of Cl. 2, Sec. 16, Reg. 5, 1831, and separating those referred after perusal of the record from those referred without perusal, detailing the number of days the judge was employed in the civil court, and the number in the session court, and noticing Sundays, and Christian and Heathen holydays, and stating the number of suits, tried, and decided, under Reg. 6, of 1832. Abstract statement of original and appeal cases on the file of the prin- cipal sudder ameen, sudder ameens and moonsiffs, with an opinion of the sufficiency or otherwise of the explanation of the causes of paucity of de- cisions given by each officer. Statement showing the periods in which the pending original suits, and appeals were instituted, with an explanation of the causes of their remain- ing undecided beyond one year. Classification according to amount or value of original suits pending before the civil courts, with an explanation of the causes for which suits for small amounts have been retained on the files of the higher courts. A supplement specifying the dates when the records of cases disposed of by the lower courts were received and deposited in the judge's record office. An abstract statement of all the summary suits and miscellaneous business, pending, instituted, and disposed of, by the judge and principal sudder ameen. An abstract statement of all the miscellaneous business pending, insti- tuted, and disposed of, by the sudder ameen, and moonsiffs, and a return of the judgements sent back for revision under the provisions of Act 7, 1838. The following registers are required to be kept up in the judge's court. 1. Register of all cases decided throughout the zillah. 2. A diary containing a brief summary of each case, heard, and dis- posed of. 3. Register of deeds of sale. 4. Register of miscellaneous agreements. 5. Register of bonds. 6. Register of gifts and endowments. 7. Register of mortgages. 8. Register of wills and testaments. 9. Register of engagements, and releases. 10. Register of fees for registering deeds. 11. Register of fines. 12. Register of stamps refunded on compromise or withdrawal of plaints The following accounts sent monthly to the Accountant in the judicial department and Civil Auditor. 1. Register of receipts and repayments on account of wakeels' fees. 2. Register of receipts and repayments on account of judicial deposits . 3. Abstraet of the salary of the establishment. 4. Diary of cash accounts. 5. Register of cash accounts. 6. Register of contingent charges. 7. Register of establishment, Statement of the aggregate amount or value of stamps filed in the several courts in the zillah. 8. 90 (PART II. History of Offices. To supervise and control the management of the division Insane Hospi- tal, if situated within his zillah, and to report all matters connected there- with, for the information of the superior court, in communication with the magistrate and civil surgeon in charge of the institution. To examine and revise the magistrate's monthly statements, No. 1 to 10, of crimes committed ; the number of persons under trial, acquitted and convicted by that officer, and his subordinates; the number committed to take their trial at the sessions, &c. &c. &c. To submit an annual report on the administration of criminal justice in the zillah and division, subject to his superintendence; to detail the work performed by his subordinates, and the manner in which they have acquitted themselves; to notice the habits of application to business sever. ally possessed by them, and to bring prominently forward, the credit due to each, without losing sight of the deficiency with which any are charg. able. Besides the monthly returns already mentioned, he is required to state for the information of the superior court, the number of days he has held sittings in the sessions court, and the number of prisoners examined by him during that period, and to submit the following statements connected with those sessions. 1. Statement of prisoners punished without reference to the Niza- mut Adawlut. 2. Ditto of prisoners acquitted. 3. Calendar of postponed trials. 4. Register of trials referred to Nizamut Adawlut. 5. Register of trials, for the submission of which, to the superior court, orders have been received during the month. 6. Statement of prisoners acquitted, convicted, and referred. 7. Copy of the futwa of the law officer, or verdict of the punchayet, assessors, or jurors. To be submitted half yearly. 1. Statement of security prisoners, whose cases were revised. 2. Report of criminal prisoners confined in jail. 3. Ditto ofcivil prisoners. 4. Return of prisoners in jail, under the direct orders of Gorernment, for reasons of state, &c. 5. Civil Surgeon's report on the state of the prisoners in jail. To be submitted annually. 1. Statement of crimes committed, and persons punished, &c. during the year. 2. Statement of persons brought to trial before the session judge with a memorandum of trials held with aid of natives under Regulation 6, of 1832. MAGISTRATE. The duties of a magistrate are to direct, superintend, and control the police operations of his district; to select fit and able men to perform the various avocations of policemen ; to appoint, suspend from office, and re- move from one station to another, the daroghas and other subordinate officers; to receive from the zemindars, and other landholders, their best VOL. 11.) 91 Magistrate. co-operation in the suppression of crime, under the penalties to which they are liable by law (vide regulation VI. of 1810), for neglecting to give in- formation of robberies, and for harbouring robbers; to enforce diligence, and activity, on the part of his police officers; to prevent crime ; and to be prompt, and energetic, in his endeavours to detect it, when committed ; and to bring the offenders to punishment. He is required to take cogni- zance of all murders, homicides, gang-robberies, burglaries, thefts, affrays, arsons, forgeries, perjuries, and their subordinates, assaults, and criminal offences of every nature. The law provides for his punishing the lesser offences, according to their magnitude in his estimation, leaving the exact amount of punishment discretionary with him; but limits the extent of his power to three years'imprisonment, with labor in irons, in cases of petty burglary, theft, and jail breaking. All persons charged with the graver crimes, requiring greater punishment than he is competent to inflict must be committed by him to take their trial before the session court, provided he be satistied that the evidence adduced against them in his court, is sufficient to lead to their eventual conviction. He is required to try and sentence all persons sent in by the police officers on proved charges, taking all depositions and examinations de novo, and detaining the accused either in jail or on bail, and the prosecutor and witnesses in attendance, until the completion of the case. Should any of these prisoners be released on trial, and the fault of the police be evident, to hold the police officer, sending up the case, responsible for unnecessarily subjecting an innocent individual to the hardships of custody, and absence from his home and family, and to punish him for the same by reprimand, fine, or otherwise. To receive petitions on stampt paper at least once a week, praying for redress for assaults, and other personal injuries, to summon evidence, and punish the delinquents. He should register these petitions in English, and never pass orders on any of them, which have reference to cases pending in court, without going over the record of such cases. Petitions of an urgent nature should at all times be received by him, whether presented on the fixed day for taking petitions or not. To hear reports from the several thannahs, or police stations in the interior of his district, and to pass orders thereon, disposing of the subject matter of each representation so made. To require security for good conduct from any person, whose notoriously flagitious habits render him a dangerous subject to be at large without such restraint, and on his failing to furnish the same, to detain him in custody for a specific period, such period liable to be extended by the orders of the session judge on his concurring with the magistrate as to the necessity of the measure. To forward to the superintendent of police, an English abstract of all heinous offences occurring in his district the moment they are reported, informing him of the measures he has adopted on the occasion. To report to the above named functionary every instance of dismissal of a police officer of what grade soever he may be. To commit for trial at the sessions of Oyer and Terminer in the Supreme Court of Calcutta, in his capacity of justice of the peace, every British subject found guilt of felony, or other criminal offence. To apply the provisions of Act IV. of 1840, to summary suits for dis- puted possession of landed property, watercourses, roads, and the like. To apprehend and bring to punishment, all proclaimed offenders and those persons convicted of crimes, who have evaded the course of justice by flight, or concealment, or otherwise. To give every support and assistance to the neighbouring magistrates in their endeavours to seize offenders, and search for plundered property, by effectually backing their writs and processes. VOL. II.) 93 Special Deputy Collectors. interests, on application of the parties. To put in force the coercive measures as laid down in the general law, against all Government de- faulters. To defend or institute suits wherein Government was a party, in all cases involving the usufract of the soil. To conduct the settlement of the Abkaree Mehal, or granting licenses for the vend and manufacture of country spirits. Also the Stamp Muhal, when stamps were introduced at a subsequent date. In the present day, in addition to the foregoing duties, he has to act in conformity to the provision of the new Sale Law Act XII. of 1841 ; (see part I., vol. I.) he has the charge of conducting periodical sales, prescribed by Regulation 8, of 1819, wherever that description of tenure has been in- troduced. He also has very extensive business, responsible and important as a judicial officer. He is required to be au fait at the whole law, and to settle according to it, by a summary process, all disputes amongst the agri- cultural community, regarding rents, from the zemindar downwards. He must execute all his own decrees. He holds an original court at the option of the parties, and is a reference from the courts in suits instituted under Regulation 2 of 1819, touching the validity of rent-free tenures. His chief ministerial officers are, A sheristadar, formerly known under the title of deewan, since abol- ished, partly as too expensive, he having double the pay of the officer, and partly because he was supposed to exercise an inconvenient and pernicious influence. A Treasurer. A Meer Momthee. A Head Mohurrer. SPECIAL DEPUTY COLLECTORS. The object in the appointment of these officers was, far more expedi- tiously disposing of suits instituted on the part of Government, or liable to be so, for the assessment of lands excluded from the operation of any settlement of the claims of the state. The Regulations under which they act, are principally 19 and 37 of 1793, 2 of 1819, and 3 of 1828 ; and those connected with, and extending such regulations throughout the countries, subject to the Governments of Bengal and Agra, according to the local circumstances and peculiarities of each. The duties now entrusted to these officers were previously in the hands of the Collectors. It being found, however, that their progress was in- juriously protracted, owing to the manifold duties which the latter had to perform, Government came to a resolution in October, 1833, to appoint, in certain specified districts, covenanted officers to relieve the Collectors wholly of this branch of their duty. In 1836, this system was rendered general, and officers from the covenanted service, under the denomination of Special Deputy Collectors, were appointed throughout the country, in pro- portion to the exigencies of each district, according to which also, the juris- dictions of the new functionaries were portioned out,--some, as will be perceived from the directory, comprizing several zillahs, whilst others are limited to one. The description of cases then, thus coming within the cognizance of Special Deputy Collectors, are those where Government demand a right to assess, de novo, estates held free of rent, or at an inadequatc rate, on 94 (PART IIL History of Offices. grants to that effect; also alluvial lands formed as an increasement to any estate for which a settlement has been concluded, and simple towfeer, or land of whatever kind, held in excess of any settled or free estate, but alleged by the occupants to be included in their rightful possession. The officers under notice, subject to the control of the Sudder Board and Commissioners of Revenue, and under provisions of the Regulations before referred to, have to institute suits for lands apparently liable to assessment of the description above given. Having issued the requisite notices for this purpose, and taken all necessary evidence on the part of the Government and the defendants, the Special Deputy Collector has to record his judgment for or against the claim of the Government, and, having done so, to deliver a copy to the parties, who, if dissatisfied, are at liberty to appeal to the court of special commissioners, acting under Regulation 3, of 1828. Should the decision be against Government, the Commissioner of Revenue, who, in either case, is furnished with a copy, is at liberty to appeal to the same tribunal; but neither that authority, or the Sudder Board, can otherwise interfere with any judicial order of the kind. In all other respects these officers are equally subject to the Board, and Commissioners, with collectors. A special deputy collector has also, in the progress of a suit, to act in some degree in the capacity of Government advocate ; but this consists of nothing more than equitably guarding its rights against mis-statement and false testimony, advanced by the defendants. This protection is extended equally to the defendants, and it is the duty of an officer of the kind, in adjudicating suits, if he be aware of any evidence in favor of tbe defendant, of which that party may be himself ignorant, to apprize him of it, and to give it his full consideration. It requires the voice of two special commissioners to reverse or upset the order of a special deputy collector; but except in suits for such a value (which have never yet occurred) as would be capable of appeal to the Privy Council, from the ordinary courts, the order of the Special Com- missioners is final, whether Government or other parties be the appellants. In case of appeal against their orders for assessment, the Special Deputy Collectors have to furnish the Board of Revenue, with a draft of rejoinder to the appellant's petition, and in support of their own decision. They have also to execute such orders, during the progress of an appeal , as by the Regulations, the Special Commissioner is warranted in giving them, and they have always to transmit the petitions of appeal, of those dissatis- fied with their judgment, to the special commissioner, should they be applicd to, so to do. For the purposes of local enquiry, and other preliminary matters in these suits, a number of uncovenanted deputy collectors, under Regulation 9 of 1833, are employed, subordinate to the Special Deputy Collectors. In some few cases Special Deputy Collectors hold the office of superir- tendent of settlements, in addition to that, the principal duties of which are above sketched. It is also to be noticed, that Special Deputy Collectors do not interfere with suits for land situated in the limits of estates, of which the Government is the immediate proprietor, the conduct of such suits remaining with the ordinary revenue authorities. 1 VOL. 11.) [ 95 ] COMMISSIONER OF SUNDERBUNS. The Sunderbuns commission was constituted by Reg. 9, of 1816, and the Commissioner is vested with the powers of a collector, within the circle of his jurisdiction. The duties of the commissioner, are : 1. To forward to Government applications from the public for grants of jungle in the Sunderbuns. 2. To enquire into the progress of cultivation, and to report for resump- tion, grants of which the grantees have failed to bring a fourth of the gross area under cultivation within the period specified in their pottahs ; i. e. 5 years. In the Resumption Department. To enquire into all encroachments made by the border zemindars, on other landholders, in the Sunderbuns. To institute suits, and to resume lands which may be proved to have belonged to the great waste, and to have been brought into cultivation, subsequent to the perpetual settlement. In the Settlement Department. To settle such lands as may be resumed, and to superintend and check the management and collections of the tehseeldars. The gross collec- tions in the Sunderbuns last year, announted to Rs. 1,27,910. The ex- pences of management, and the establishment, including the cominissioner's salary and boat hire, to about Rs 24,390. UNCOVENANTED DEPUTY COLLECTORSHIP. 1. The appointment of the deputy collectors was constituted by Re- gulation IX. of 1833. The duties now entrusted to them were formerly performed by ameens, canoongoes, tehseeldars, and occasionally by the col- lectors, or by their assistants. 2. There are five departments, in which these officers are at present employed, namely : 1. Settlement of khas mehals, the properties of Government, or of other individuals, under khas management. 2. Disposing of the cases connected with the rent-free lands, and as- certaining, and identifying the resumed rent-free lands, scattered over va- rious parts of the district. 3. Management of khas mehals. 4. Performance of particular duties in the collector's office, assigned to them. 5. Laying down boundary demarcations, for the facility of professional survey: 3. In the settlement duty, deputy collectors have to examine the chit- tahs or field books, with khutteans of each plot of land, number by number; to visit the spot, to check and test the chittahs by remeasuring, partly or wholly, the villages under settlement, in order to satisfy themselves of the correctness of the measurement papers. The various description of lands 98 (PART IIL History of Offices. fications, character, and past employment of the persons nominated, and they will summon any of them before them, if they think proper. After completing these enquiries, the Board will submit the recommendation of the local officers, with a report of their own opinion, for the consideratioa and orders of Government; and further, if any member of the Board should consider any candidate for the appointment, who had been rejected by the local authorities, better qualified than any person recommended by those officers, he should submit a recommendation of such person, drawn up in the form of the prescribed statement, with his colleague's remarks thereon. 5. Under the 11th head of the statement, it should be noticed whether the nominee was related to, or connected with, any and what persons in office, or of rank, or influence, or possessing extensive property in the district to which he may be nominated, or in any other district . Also the degree of estimation in which the nominee was held in the district in which he had been employed or had resided. 6. Under heads 12 and 13, the collector, commissioner, and members of the Board, should distinctly state, what opportunities they have had of making themselves acquainted with the character and qualifications of the person nominated. 7. It is expected that the collector and commissioner will seek and select persons, otherwise duly qualified, who may be known and generally respected as men of integrity and high character. 8. The particular attention of the local authorities and the Board should be directed to Section XXV. of the Regulation, it being of the greatest consequence to the attainment of the objects of the present enactment, persons wh may be appointed to the office of deputy collector, should be removed immediately after their disqualification, by neglect of duty, incapacity, corruption, or other misconduct ; and His Lordship in council is of opinion that such disqualification cannot be concealed from the collector, commissioner, and the Board, if they adopt the ordinary means within their power, of ascertaining the sense of the community respecting the character and conduct of every individual filling these offices. 9. With respect to salaries, His Lordship in council has been pleased to determine, that persons appointed to the office, shall ordinarily receive , in the first instance, the same allowance as sudder ameens, appointed under Regulation V. 1831, viz. Rs. 300 a month, including 50 Rs. for establishment; and that there shall be two more grades of salary, viz. Rs. 400 and Rs. 500 a month, to which the deputy collectors shall be entitled to rise after intervals of five years, provided the Government should be satisfied, on report from the Board and local officers, or from other information, that the individuals merit the indulgence. 10. The above scale, however, is not to be understood as precluding Government, in special cases, from bestowing the higher rates of salary, previously to the expiration of the periods specified, on persons who may have distinguished themselves particularly, and also in favor of persons such as tehseeldars, principal sudder ameens, or sudder ameens, who may be peculiarly qualified for revenue duties, and whose present allow ances may exceed or equal the lowest rate of 300 Rs. per mensem. 11. These Rules are to apply to all persons, whether temporarily or permanently appointed to the office of Deputy Collector under the regu- lation. VOL. 11.) 99 Sudder Ameen. Form of the Nomination of Deputy Collectors. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. ST! Name of the person nominated, with the name of his father. Age. Family Residence, Town or Religion and Caste. Village, Pergrinnah and Zil- Statement of past Employ- ment, whether in the Ser- vice of Government or In- dividuals-if in the Service of Government by what Oflicer originally appointed and by whom subsequently Statement of Land or other property belonging to, and of Qualifications Proposed Residence and Juris- where situated. and Knowledge of the Per- sian, Bengallee or English Certificate that the Nominee Languages, &c. &c. is not disqnalified by any Regulation, and General Re- Remarks by the Collector. promoted. Remarks by the Commis- lah. diction. Statement marks. sioner. 40 Vacant Office. How Vacant. SUDDER AMEEN. JUDICIAL AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT, THE 30TH JULY, 1836. With a view to the improvement of the scheme at present in force, with regard to the nomination of sudder ameens, and principal sudder ameens, and to the introduction of a system of promotion throughout the subordi- nate classes of judicial functionaries, which by giving advantages to merit, and by exciting honorable emulation, shall tend to encourage exertion and uprightness of conduct, and to connect the faithful discharge of duty with its legitimate rewards, the right honourable the Governor of Bengal has been pleased to prescribe, and to publish for general information, the following rules of nomination and promotion :- 1. That the zillah judges nominate, as at present, through the com- missioners of the division, to the court of Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, all individuals proposed for the situation of moonsiff. 2. That the judge of each district furnish annually to the court of Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, a list, containing the names of the three most zealous, capable, and trustworthy moonsiffs within his jurisdiction, and that the names in such list be entered, if possible, in the order of estimated merit, or the names of those whose claims to promotion are considered equal, inserted in a bracket. 3. That on any vacancy occurring in a sudder ameenship, by death, re- moval from office, or other cause, the court of Sudder Dewanny Adawlut shall select, from the several district lists (after calling for any information which they may deem requisite, with respect to any of the nominees, and referring to the records of their own office), and submit for the consideration of 100 (PART IIL. History of Offices. Government the names of the three moonsiffs, best qualified in their, judgment to fill the vacant appointment. 4. That on any vacancy occurring in a principal sudder ameenship, the court of Sudder Dewanny Adawlut shall re-elect and nominate to Government, the three sudder ameens, best qualified, in their judgment, to fill the vacant appointment. 5. That in every practicable case, the rule with regard to order of nomination, or indication of estimated equality by brackets laid down at the close of the second article, be observed by the Sudder Court. Note.-With reference to the 3rd article, it must be understood, that the the Governor reserves to himself the power of appointing any duly quale fied individual, although he have not been recommended by the court nor have served as a moonsiff, to a vacant sudder ameenship. But no person, who has not served in the grade of sudder ameen, will be coasi- dered eligible for a principal sudder ameenship. MOONSIFF. Extract from the rules for the examination of candidates for moorsiff- ships, dated 4th August, 1840. 11. That in future no sudder ameen be appointed, except he be one of three moonsiffs, recommended for promotion by the Sudder court, and unless he have served as a moonsiff for at least twelve months, previous to the date of recommendation.* Firstly. That at each of three zillah stations in the North Western Provinces, and four in Bengal, to be selected by the Governments of those presidencies respectively, there shall be appointed a divisional committee of examination, consisting ordinarily, besides such persons as the Govern- ment may think fit, of 1. The commissioner of the division in which the station is situated. 2. The zillah judge. 3. The magistrate. 4. The principal sudder ameen or principal sudder ameeds of the stations. Secondly.—That all candidates for moonsiffships be required to send in their applications for exainination to a zillah judge of the division withia which they desire to be examined, at least two months before the examination is to be held; but that no such applications shall be presented to the judge who is a member of the examining committee. Thirdly.—That the zillah judge, after making such enquiries as he may deem proper, in order to ascertain that nothing exists against the charac: ter of the applicant, to render him unfit to enjoy the privilege of examina. tion, shall certify on the face of the application, that the applicant may be examined. Fourthly.—That the divisional committee shall meet at least twice in each year, forthe purpose of examining candidates certified to them for examin- ation during the preceding six months, by zillah judges within their divisions. Fifthly. That the examination shall be conducted by the committee in such manner, as shall be from time to time prescribed to them by the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut. Sixthly.—That at the conclusion of the examination, the committee shall grant to such candidates, as they may deem proper, diplomas of fitness for An exception is made, in favor of persons who were Sudder Ameens, previous 19 the promulgation of Regulation V. 1831, by the Government orders of the stb December, 1840. These persons are to be appointed to vacancies, in preference to moun- sitis, autil the wbole oumber considered eligible by the Sudder court is absorbed. VOL. 11.) 101 Judge Advocate General. employment as moonsiffs after such form, as the Sudder court may prescribe, and at the same time forward duly certified lists of such can- didates to the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut. Seventhly. - That the possession of such diplomas shall entitle candidates on application, to be recommended by zillah judges and commissioners for vacant moonsiffships, and to be appointed to such vacant moonsiffships by the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut, before any candidates, not possessing such diplomas. Eighthly.—That in case any zillah judge shall, by reason of having received no application from a candidate with a diploma, nominate to the Sudder, to fill an existing vacancy, a candidate without a diploma, the Sudder Court shall appoint to the vacancy any one from among the lists of passed candidates, who may be willing to accept the vacant appointment, for the purpose of making enquiry as to the willingness of any individual not on the lists. On the contrary, if no application should be before them from any such person when the judge's nomination may be taken into con- sideration by the Court, they shall , unless they be aware of other objec- tions, appoint provisionally the candidate recommended by the zillah judge, subject to his obtaining a diploma in due course under the following rule: Ninthly.— That in case any person, not possessing a diploma, be here- after appointed a moonsiff, under the last rule, he be required to present himself for examination to the divisional committee, at the first examination held after the expiration of six months from the date of his appointment, and that if he then fail in obtaining a diploma of fitness, his appointment be deemed vacant. Tenthly.—That after effect has been given to these rules, if the judge of a district have good and sufficient grounds to believe, from any pro- ceeding or other information officially before him, that any moonsiff under his control, not previously examined, is not sufficiently qualified to dis- charge, in a proper manner, the duties of his situation, he may, with the concurrence of the commissioner, require such moonsiff to present himself for examination before the divisional committee at their next meeting, and any moonsiff, who being so required, may refuse to submit to examination, or being examined may fail to obtain a diploma, shall forfeit his appoint- ment, and shall not be re-appointed to a moonsiffship until he obtain a diploma of fitness. Eleventhly:- That in future no sudder ameen be appointed, except he be one of the three moonsiffs, recommended for promotion by the Sudder court, and unless he have served as a moonsiff for at least twelve months previous to the date of recommendation. JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. The first constitution of the office of judge advocate general does not appear in any document to which we have had access; but the department must have been constituted soon after the passing the first Mutiny Act for the Company's troops, viz., 27th George II., Cap. 9. The holders of the appointment at the outset were generally civilians, but since 1788 it has invariably been held by military officers. The following is the order of succession : -Johnston, Esq., Date of appointment unknown. Stephen Sullivan, Esq., Appointed 30th Oct. 1780. Thomas Martin, Esq., Date of appointment unknown. Lieut. H. P. Mouch, 28th March 1786. The Hon'ble Lockhart Gordon, 9th Aug. 1787. Lieut. A. Apsley, 26th March 1788. ... ... 22 VOL. II.) 103 Judge Advocate General. >> 5 W. G. Maxwell. Captain N. Jones. Lieutenant C. Fagan. C. Rogers. S. Tickell. 15 J. Dyson & Captain E. B. Craigie . 16 W. Martin. No. III., or Meerut Division. 1 Captain W. G. Patrickson. 4 Captain J. S. H. Waston. W. P. Cooke. 5 W. MacGeorge. 3 Lieutenant R. J. H. Birch. No. IV., or Western Division. i Captain J. Stuart. 3 Lieutenant C. G. Ross. 2 Lieutenant C. J. Cornish. No. V., or Saugor Division. 1 Lieutenant J. S. H. Weston. 6 Major W. Hough.* Captain C. Rogers. Captain F. Wheler.* R. G. McGregor.* W. Martin.* W. MacGeorge. H. Moore.* J. S. H. Weston.* No. VI., or Presidency Division. 1 Lieutenant R. A. McNaghten 3 Lieutenant R. J. H. Birch. 2 G. H. Dally. 4 Bt. Major W. Mactier. No. VII., or Sirhind Division. 1 Lieutenant W. Palmer. 4 Captain F. Wheler. 2 Captain W. Hough. 5 K. Young 3 F. Angel. No. VIII., or Affghanistan Division. 1 Bt. Major W. Hough. 3 Captain G. E. Westmacott. 2 Captain F. Wheler. No. IX., or Eastern Expedition. 1 Captain H. Moore. 99 all List of present Incumbents, with dates of being appointed temporarily and permanently, and to their present Divisions. Appointed tAppointed perma. Present Appointed to di- Names. officiate to a nently to the de- division. division vision, partment. Judge Advocate Genl. Major R. J. H. Birch, May 1, 1828 May 8, 1829 ud. Qrs. March 10, 1841, As a deputy and As Judge Advo- so continued till cate General, the 17th June 1839, when he quitted the de Permanent Deputies. partment. Capt. C. G. Ross, September 16, 1830 IV. Sept. 20, 1830 W. MacGeorge Aug. 17, 1835 January 11, 1836 III. Oct. 6, 1838 Bt. Major W. Mactier Feb. 28, 1838 March 11, 1839 VI. June 25, 1839 Capt. H. Moore, June 25, 1839 IX. March 11, 1840 J. Dyson, Oct. 11, 1838 January 20, 1841 I. March 16, 1841 W. Martin, Feb. 22, 1840 February 3, 1841 II. March 16, 1841 K. Young, June 2, 1841| VII. June 5, 1841 Officiating Deputies. Capt. H. Cotton, ... Oct. 24, 1840 V. [Oct, 24, 1840 G.E. Westmacott Dec, 16, 1840 VIII. Dec. 16, 1840 ... 99 1 104 (PART III. History of Offices. The duties of a Deputy Judge Advocate General, are: To conduct the proceedings of General Courts-Martial within his divi- sion ; to advise officers in command of the division, of stations and corps on any point of practice connected with the administration of military law; to register all trials by Courts-Martial inferior to General ones, and to submit them to the Officer commanding the division for approval or otherwise, with such remarks on the merits or law of the cases as may be considered necessary; to frame charges, or revise those preferred against offenders when called upon by due authority, and to advise generally as to the probability of conviction on the evidence available on a prosecution; to forward monthly to the head of the department a copy of the register of trials by inferior Courts-Martial for the month just expired (a second copy prepared by him being transmitted to the Adjutant General of the Army by the Officer commanding the division) and yearly a copy of the register of minutes of General Courts-Martial, or proceedings of Courts of inquiry that may have been lodged as records in his office during the year. The duties of the Judge Advocate General, are : To superintend the administration of military law throughout the army; to check any irregularity of procedure of which he may become cognizant and point out the course that should be adopted; to prevent deviation from established rules, and adoption of new ones without proper authority ; to ensure, as far as lies in his power, uniformity of practice throughout the different divisions of the army. To submit to the Commander-in-Chief the proceedings of all General Courts-Martial received from the various deputies, or officiating judge advocates; to report on the merits of each case and the regularity of proce- dure ; and generally to advise on every point connected with the trial and its disposal. To advise the Government and the Commander-in-Chief on all subjects connected with military law, and under their authority, to give opinions to other parties; to frame or revise charges as may be necessary ; to pre- serve the proceedings of all General Courts-Martial; to furnish copies to the Judge Advocate General of the British Army or to the Court of Directors as the culprit may belong to the Queen's or Company's service ; to supply copies of trials to the individuals tried, or to other parties in their behalf. To keep the different deputies cognizant of all important alterations of the law, or practice; to give them opinions on all points connected with the divisional duties, and to notice all irregularities. The staff salaries of the department are Co.'s Rs. 57,120 per annum. The salaries of the Judge Advocate General's Clerk, are... 7,092 The allowance for writers and stati- onery to the deputies is, 5,400 Stationery for the Judge Advocate General's Office is supplied from the Company's warehouse, and an office supplied at the public expence. ... CAPTAIN BOILEAU'S * OFFICES. 1st. As Agent for Iron Suspension Bridges, to give designs, if required, or to construct after the designs of other executive engineers and officers, the iron work of all Suspension Bridges erected within the presidencies of Ben- gal and Agra ; the required span and breadth of roadway being almost the As this officer's position is not very generally well understood, we gire a Sketch of it, though our heading will shew that we cannot gire it a compact name or title. VOL. 11.) 103 Captain Boileau's Offices. only data necessary for this purpose. The iron yard is on the north bank of Tolly's nullah immediately to the eastward of the Alipoor bridge, where there are 20 forges with conveniences for turning and finishing the finer parts of the iron work, together with a powerful proving machine for testing the links of every chain bridge constructed there. The office is at Brijce Talao, Bhowaneepoor, and the agent for Iron Suspension Bridges is subor- dinate in the department of Public Works, to the Superintending Engineer south eastern provinces. The salary is (100) one hundred rupees per mensem. 2d. As Superintendent of Canals, to excavate any new, or to clear out. any old, canals existing between Husunabad on the Èeshamutee or Juboona river, 50 miles East of Calcutta, and the city, including at present the Husunabad, Bayleygunj or Soolkoonia, Bhowaneepore, Chytul, Chultabaria and Bhangor, Ghuoneemagee, Bhojdigee, and Bamungliata, Baliaghata, Entalee, and Circular Canals; as well as the Eastern canal conimonly called Tolly's nullah :—to superintend the locks at Cheetpore and the docks at Balingbata; to keep in repair the 14 large bridges in the immediate vicinity of Calcutta; to raise all boats wrecked in the canals, and to keep the banks, roads, towing paths, &c., in order. The office is at Brijee Talao, Blowanee- pore, and is under the control of the Superintending Engineer, S. W. pro- vinces, the amount of Security given to Government, being 10,000 Rupees, and the Salary (500) five hundred rupecs per mensem. 3d. As Magistrate, to employ the Conservancy Police establishment in maintaining order in the canals; in preventing boats from forcing the toll stations, or obstructing the free water-way; to give notice of sunken boats; to prevent nuisances or damage to the banks; to detain boats which have no toll tickets; and to enforce all orders issued by the Superintendent of Canals. The particular powers of this' office are specified in Aet XXII. of 1836, and its troublesome nature may be guessed from the fact that 2,01,605 boats and canoes passed either into, or out of the canals, during the year ending 31st October, 1840. The office is held at Brijee Talao, Bhowaneepore, and no salary is attached to it. 4th. As Collector of Tolls, to tax all boats entering the canals between Panspota near Guria Hath, and the mouth of Tolly's nullah; or between the Salt-water Lake and the Cheetpore Lock; to take rent upon all boats incurring demurrage by remaining in the canals beyond the prescribed time; and to superintend the leasing of all ferries and fisheries within the canal jurisdiction. As only one-seventh of the boats entering the canals escape paying toll, about 1,70,000 tickets must have been issued or received by the collector of tolls during the past year. The collections amount to more than 1,20,000 rupees per annum, but no security is given to Government by the collector of tolls ;-the office is held at Brijee Talao, Bhowaneepore, and is entirely under the control of the Military Board. No salary is attached to this Office. 5th. As Superintendent of the Mathematical Instrument Maker's Estab- lishment, to make and to repair all Mathematical, Astronomical, Survey- ing, and Philosophical Apparatus required by any of the scientific depart- ment, as the Surveyor General's, Quarter Master Generals, Revenue Survey, Marine Department, &c. With the exception of Optical Instru- ments nearly all the ordinary Surveying and Drawing Apparatus can be made in these workshops which are within the canal office at Brijee Talao, Bhowaneepore, and are under the control of the Military Board. Hundreds of Instruments are annually sent for repair to this office. PART III. VOL. II, P 106 (PART III. History of Offices. LITHOGRAPHIC PRESS. RESOLUTION.–GENERAL DEPARTMENT, 17TU JUNE, 1840. The right hon'ble the Governor is pleased to adopt the following ar. rangements, for the conduct of the Government Lithographic Press, con- sequent on the death of Dr. Rind, late superintendent. The copying and the map-drawing departments to be separated. The copying of papers and forms to be attached to the office of the Superintendent of Stationery and to come under the control of the Mik- tary Board. Mr. Carnie to be head lithographic printer under the Superintendent of Stationery, with a salary of 400 Rs. a month, the additional 100 Rs. a month being granted on account of his merit and service. The map-drawing branch of the office to be transferred to the Surveyor General's Department, and to be conducted by Lieutenant A. Sanders, with a salary to that officer of 100 Rs. a month. These arrangements will leave 200 Rs. a month besides the 200 Rs. a month ordered under date the 22nd of April, to be appropriated to the im- provement of the map department of the Lithographic Press, as a further portion of the salary of the late superintendent, available towards con- pleting the efficiency of the drawing and mapping branch of the press. Ordered that the necessary communication be made to the present Li- thographic Committee, and to the Military Department. Ordered that these arrangements be noticed to the Military Board for their information and guidance, and for communication to the Superin- tendent of Stationery, and also to the officers of Pay, Audit and Account . Ordered that the committee, recently_appointed in the Revenue Department, of which the Hon'ble H. T. Prinsep, Esq. is president, be informed of the transfer of the map-drawing department to the Lithogra- phic Press to the Surveyor General's Office, and of the appointment of Lieut. A. Sanders to conduct the same, with a salary of 100 Rs. per month, and that the Committee of Stationery be subject to the control of the Military Board, and that measures may be taken to place the map-drawing branch of the establishment under the conduct of Lieut. A. Sanders, as a branch of the Surveyor General's Department. No. 167.—The right hon'ble the Governor has been pleased to attach tbe copying department of the Government Lithographic Press to the office of the Superintendent, who is apprized that the saving of 400 Rs. a month including the 200 Rs. made under date the 22nd of April, is authorized to be appropriated to improving the drawing branch of the Lithographic Press, the salary of the office of superintendent being abolished. AGRA. COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE AND POLICE. This office comprises the fiscal and police superintendence of a certain number of districts, called a division. In the territories subject to the Government of the North Western Provinces, there are eight Commis- sionerships as follow : VOL. 11.] Commissioner of Revenue and Police N. W. P. 107 Delhi Division Subathoo, Umbala, Bhuttee Territory, District of Paneeput, District of Hurriana, Delhi, Rohtuk, Goorgaon. Meerut Division. District of Deyrah Doon, Seharunpore, Mozuffernugger, District of Meerut, Boolundshuhur Allyghur. Kumaon Division. District of Kumaon Proper, 1 District of Gurhwal. Rohilcund Division. District of Bijnour, District of Pillibheet, Moradabad, Bareilly, Budaon, Shajehanpore. Agra Division. District of Muttra, Agra, Furruckabad, District of Mynpoorie, Etawa. Allahabad Division. District of Cawnpore, District of Banda, Futtehpore, Allahabad. Humeerpore, Benares Division.* District of Goruckpore, Azimghur, Jounpore, District of Mirzapore. Benares, Ghazeepore. Saugor Division. District of Saugor, Jubbulpore, District of Hoshungabad. 1 • Statistical Memorandum of the 5th or Benares Division, Customs No. of Dis. Area in Estimated Land excise &c. tricts com- square including Abkaree. Stamps. prised in. Miles. Population. Revenue. Stone Mehal. Total 23,606 5,255,578 78,58,175 30,246 5,03,029 3,49,228 1,40,16,863 108 [PART IL History of Offices. In the Revenue Department, commissioners possess and exercise, withis the districts comprised in their respective divisions, the powers and authority, formerly vested in the Boards of Revenue, and Courts of Wards, subject to the control and direction of a Sudder or Head Board, stationed at Allahabad. Reg. 1. 1829. Sec. 4, and Reg. X. 1831. In regard to the form of their proceedings, the commissioners are guided by such orders as the Sudder Board, with the authority and sanction of Government, may from time to time, be pleased to preseribe. The commissioners are bound to see that the officers under their author- ity perform their assigned duties with regularity, and integrity, and assiduity, and they are held responsible for reporting to their immediate superiors every case in which they may be of opinion that a covenanted officer, subor. dinate to them, is decidedly disqualified to discharge efficiently the duties entrusted to him. The duties of the Commissioners are, in the Collection of the Land Retena, To inspect the monthly returns of collections and balances, and enquire into the cause of any unusual arrear. To maintain a watchful eye over the summary suit department, and the issue of revenue dustacks, 'to louš after the collections of every kist, and see that proper measures are taken to enforce punctuality. At the close of the last instalment, to examine the annual balance statements, prepared by the collectors, and after passing such orders, as may be necessary for the enforcement, through ihe different coercive processes by law enjoined, of any demand re- maining unpaid, to forward the statements with their own resolutions, for the consideration and orders of the Sudder Board ; accompanied by a list of any items recommended for remission as A similar course is also pus. irrecoverable. To superintend and control sued with regard to all outstand- ing balances of former years. the exercise of the coercive powers vested in the collector ; to approve and recommend for confirmation, arrangements made by the collector, for the realization of balances, such as transfers, farms and sales ; to receive, hear, and decide upon all appeals connected with the application of coercive measures, and generally to enforce and cause to be maintained, the uniform system for the realization of the Government dues, which has been lately estab- lished by the Sudder Board of Revenue, and is set forth in their printed circular No. 2. Current Duties of the Officers. Detailed rules having been laid down by the Sudder Board of Rerende for the guidance of collectors, among other things, Sce Printed Circular 8. B. R. No. 9 See. v. the arrangement of records, and the distribution of business, the utmost importance is attached to the commissioners carrying on their own duty of control, on system and prin- ciple. Their attention is to be constantly on the alert, to correct anuma- lies and irregularities, which the collector of any district may introdute, or suffer to remain unattended to. In carrying through this object, they may confidently reckon on the support of the Board. Among the rules to be enforced, the following may be noticed. All correspondence between commissioners and their subordinates to be carried on in English, with as little prolixity as possible, accompanied where necessary, with a vernacular proceeding. From these materials a VOL. 11.] Commissioner of Revenue and Police N. W. P. 109 quarterly index of correspondence is drawn out, and submitted periodical- ly to the Board, who thus have an opportunity of inspecting every order passed by a commissioner. So complete a system of control as this affords, is obviously productive of the happiest effect, not only in keeping the com- missioner to his work, but also in enabling the Board to form a correct estimate of his character and usefulness as a public officer. In applying the vernacular idiom to the transaction of public business, all officers, European as well as Native, are enjoined to record their meaning in brief and simple terms; such for instance as a well, spoken, res- pectable manı, altogether unacquainted with Persian, would express him- self in. All orders which a collector may pass, except those below mentioned, are appealable to the commissioner, provided a petition to that effect, engrossed on stamp paper, value 1 rupee, accompanied by an authenticated copy of the order complained against, be presented, or forwarded, through the police dak, within 3 months tiom the date of the order. Every party in a case is entitled to an authenticated copy of the final order passed in his case ; and every petitioner to an authenticated copy of the order pas- sed on his petition, on the sole condition of his lodging within one month, a sufficient quantity of the prescribed stamp paper, on which the copy may be engrossed. Summary awards for rent and replevin, passed by collectors and deputy collectors, under the provisions of Regulation VIII. 1831, are only appealable on the ground of irrelevancy. The arrangement of records in the collector's office, according to pergunnahs and mouzas in alphabetical order, has been nearly brought to a close in most districts. It is the special duty of the commissioner, on visiting any district of his division, to ascertain by personal inspection, the degree of attention that is paid to this important subject, and also to the distribution of business into separate departments, independently of the check which he is at all times required to maintain, by an examination of the monthly returns of business pending In the settlement department, the commissioner's superintendence is thus described : in Section X. of the Board's printed circular, No. 1. The mode in which the settlements are reported to the commissioner, affords him ample opportunity of controlling the acts of the collector. The object of the Board's system is to bring the settlement of each mouza as it is in itself, and by comparison with many other villages, in prominent relief under the eye of the commissioner ; and they expect from him that wherever prima facie cause of doubt appears, he shall test the correctness by reference to detail, and shall require of the collector, by induction from details, to prove the accuracy of his proceedings. This is the object of the system, and the scope of his duty. That this mode of bringing variations and apparent inequalities of as- sessment into striking light, for the purpose of having their propriety tested not been pointed out, the controlling officer puzzled between the exag- gerated estimates of the tehsildars, and the fabricated rent-rolls of the putwarries, would have no means of ascertaining the goodness of the set- tlement, but by going over every case after the collector, incurring a degree of labor, which might allow of the settlement of one pergunnah a year, and would require a century to settle the North Western Provinces. But the commissioner has by the system now in use, the discrepancies forced on his attention. He has only, therefore, if he entertains doubt, to take up a few, and require from the collector demonstration of their correctness : if he obtains full and satisfactory explanations of details, VOL. 11.] Commissioner of Revenue and Police N. W. P. 111 collector's office, whether he should grant the redress, or defend the threatened action. If he decides upon the former, the collector is forth- with instructed accordingly, and information sent to the Court. If the complainant be not entitled to redress, and it be determined to contest his claim, the Court is apprised of the same, and proper measures are taken for conducting the defence, through the officer complained against, at the public expense, except where it appears that the collector's act was con- trary to the law or the principles of justice, in which case, the suit is to be defended by that officer in his own individual capacity: Annual state- ments of all suits depending in the Civil Courts, to which Government may be a party, are submitted by the commissioner to the Sudder Board of Revenue, with any explanations that may be required. Pleadings in suits appealed to the Sudder Dewanny Adawlut are pre- pared by the local officers, and transmitted for final approval to the Sudder Board of Revenue. Pauper Suits. It is the duty of the commissioner to superintend the assertion of the claims of Government on account of stamp duty in pauper cases; and with this view registers are in course of preparation, and monthly reports of progress are furnished by the collectors to the commissioners. Rent Free Tenures. The investigations into the validity of all claims under this head having now been concluded, there is no longer any room for the exercise of the Revenue Commissioner as defined in Regulation III., 1828. The few cases still pending in appeal before the special commissioner, are being speedily disposed of, and the adjustment of all internal rights in such properties in conformity to Section 17, Regulation VII., 1822, keeps pace with the revision of settlement. Pension. A general revision of all claims to pensions having taken place under the provisions of Regulation XI., 1813, no payment is now made until each case is reported to and contirmed by Government. The Sudder Board of Revenue have laid down specific rules for the guidance of local officers in Section XVI. of their printed Circular No. 4, in conformity to which all investigations are made. It is the commissioner's duty before reporting claims to Pensions under the different Regulations in force, to satisfy him- self that such claims have been properly investigated, that the reports are full and clear on the points, which are declared by the Regulations to be essential to the recognition of such rights ; particularly the following. 1st. The identity and age of the claimant. 2nd. His existence at the time of the accession of the British Govern- ment, and his having drawn the amount of the pension for 3 years previ- ously by warrant of a competent authority. 3rd. The sufficiency of the authority under which the original pensions were granted or continued. 4th. The authenticity of the documents produced in proof, &c. 5th. The fact of their having been properly registered and admitted. No payment of pensions to the heirs or successors of pensioners, on the ground that they are hereditary or perpetual for any period after the death of the pensioner must be made without the sanction of Government, to be 112 (PART OL History of Offices. obtained after a revision by the local officers. All lapses in the pension list to be promptly reported to the commissioner for communication to the Civil Auditor. The commissioner is empowered to authorise the pat- ment of arrears due to the estates of deceased revenue pensioners, pro- vided the arrears due may not be for a period exceeding. 6 months. The sanction of the Board is required for any period above that. In the Abkaree Department. The duties of the commissioner are, as follow :- To superintend and controul the local revenue officers entrusted with the charge of the Abkaree Mehal. To modify, confirm or disallow the periddical settlements made by those officers for the realization by farm or otherwise of the Abkaree Revenue, provided that no lease for more than one year be granted without the sanction of the Sudder Board of Revenue. To receive from the district officers at the close of the season, the annual statements of demands receipts and balances ; to provide for the realization of the latter, and ultimately to submit the whole, to the Sudder Board of Revenue, accompanied by explanatory remarks and re- commendations for remission, &c. where necessary. To correspond with the Board on all matters relating to the Abkaree Mehal, and to exercise generally, subject to the authority and control of the Board, the powers and functions vested in the Board of Revenue by Regulation X., 1813; XIII. 1816, XI. 1818, VII. 1821, and VIII., 1826, provided that local commissioners do not in any way interfere with opium agents and their deputies. In the Stamp Department. The duties of the commissioner are :- To control the appointment of the venders or distributors of Stamp Paper or the Stamp darogahs stationed at the Sudder office of the collec- tor. To receive reports from the collectors of all cases in which a darogah or vender of Stamp Paper may become liable to any fine or penalty, for any breach of the rules prescribed by the Regulations in force, and either to confirm, mitigate or remit such penalty as may appear proper. To decide upon applications from individuals who may be desirous of baving a proper Stamp affixed to any document inadequately stamped, or through inadvertence executed on plain paper, on payment of the penalty prescribed by Regulation X., 1829, and to cause Stamp Paper accidentally injured or destroyed to be replaced under the Rules in force. To adopt in concert with their subordinates all legal and proper measures for bringing to trial before the Court of Session, and for the conviction and punishment of persons who may be guilty of forging or selling Stamp Paper, or uttering it knowing the same to be forged : as well as for the punishment of any authorized vender, who may be guilty of exacting more than the prescribed duty. Customs. The immediate superintendence of the Custom Houses and Chokees established on the line of the Jumpa, the Deccan and other frontier lines within the limits of the N. W. provinces, is vested in officers specially appointed to that duty, subject to the direct control and supervision of the Sudder Board of Revenue. Regulation I. 1833, and Act No. XIV. of 1836. The duties of the Local Commissioner in this department are limited to the exercise of the 114 History of Offices. (PART II. commissioner, on the recommendation of the committee, is competent to sanction establishments to the amount of 150 Rs. per mensem, and estimates for works to the extent of 500 on any one work. He has also : casting votę, whether absent or present, when opinions are divided. In the Police Department. Commissioners perform the duties, and exercise the powers formerly belonging to the superintendents of police, in their respective divisions ; subject to the general authority of the Court of Sudder Nizamut Adawlut . They examine the monthly statements of crime, furnished by each magistrate, as well as the returns, forwarded direct by the police tannadars, and comparing these with what they learn from personal intercourse with Native and European residents, as well as from other sources of informa- tion, they discover in what respect the police management of any part of the country is defective, and endeavor to apply a remedy in some of the following ways : By directing farther enquiries to be made where necessary; by authoriz. ing the offer of rewards for the discovery and apprehension of beinous offenders ; by calling the attention of the magistrates to any falling off in the efficiency of their establishments, or of the subsidiary village police; by enquiring into the cause of the prevalence of any particular crime, and by suggesting, from time to time, rules for the improvement of whatever may appear defective in the system of their subordinates. It is their object to encourage and promote, by conciliatory behaviour both in their own persons and in the magistrates, the co-operation and good offices of the landed gentry and nobility, in the suppression of crime, and the prevention of abuses. They provide for the preservation of the peace on any sudder emergency; regulate the occasional relief of outposts where necessary, and exercise a supervision on the appointment, suspension, and removal of all ministerial and police officers. The Commissioner of Police is the medium of communication between the district magistrates, and the local government, on all questions relating to the strength, distribution, or expence, of the police or jail establish- ments; or respecting any proposed alteration of police stations, or of their local boundaries, and, generally, on all arrangements connected with police. They exercise a general control over the public roads, bridges, (except when the latter have been specially entrusted to the executive department) surraees, and kuttras, within the limits of their respective jurisdictions Also over the public ferries, established under the provisions of Regulation XXII., 1816. An annual report on the general police administration of every district, accompanied by figured statements, embracing full remarks on the prevail- ing crimes, the state of the police, the success or otherwise of the measures adopted by the local magistracy, the efficiency of their management, and all other topics connected with the subject generally, is submitted to the lieutenant governor. REVENUE SURVEYOR. The duties of a revenue surveyor are, generally,- To survey such lands as shall be pointed out to him by the Board of Revenue ; and from such survey to compile maps of the village lands and of the pergunnahs ; and correct estimates of the quality of the land, facilities of irrigation, number and race of the inhabitants, staple products area, cultivated or fallow, &c. waste area, extent of forests, &c. VOL 11.) 115 Revenue Surveyor, N. W. P. When, as is the case in the North Western Provinces, a kusruh or Persian Survey is attached to his establishment, his duties become much more oner- ous. He must then furnish a second map of each village, called the field, or kusruh map, containing, in addition to an accurate outline of the village, its bounds and landmarks, a plan of each field, and feature in the village : showing the area of each field ; the quality of its soil ; the nature of its irrigation, and of its last crop; amount of its last assessment; names of the jemadars and putteedars of the village; the number of its houses ; posi- tion, and number of its wells, depth of springs from the surface, quality of water, &c. The establishment formerly placed under orders of the revenue survey, or for those purposes, was calculated for the survey yearly of 1,000 square miles, and consisted of 1 assistant, 2 senior sub-assistậnts, and 1 junior sub-assistant. About 15 native surveyors for the European survey, with an establishment of flag and chain men, and about 30 kusruh surveyors ; but lately several of the surveys have been increased threefold, and a proportionate quantity of work is required at the surveyor's hand, viz., 3,000 square miles yearly. The duties which devolve personally upon the surveyor are the efficient control and supervision of the work of these extensive establishments, and the allotment of labour to each individual thereof; not to mention the intro- duction, in the first place, requisite to break in natives to duties utterly un- known amongst themselves. Each surveyor has his own system, for which each has his reasons to assign ; but generally it may be declared indispen- sible that the surveyor himself should visit the lands under measurement daily, and test, with his own eye, the work of the kusruh.' Also that he should himself compare the kusruh and English maps, and ascertain where the error lies, in case of difference, taking proper precautions for the pre- vention of collision between the two establishments. And in order to render this overseeing the more effectual, it is expedient that he give no general clue to his movements ; so that no portion of the land under sur- vey should be deemed safer from his inspection, than any other. Should it be (as it is,) manifestly impossible that any individual should so multiply his presence, as to hold in check a body of 350 surveyors, scattered over a space of about 260 square miles, this most important duty must be shared by him, with all the European assistants of the establishment. The revenue surveyor is expected to keep the field during eight months each year, viz. from 1st October to 1st June. During that period are compiled the first copies of village maps, the outlines of pergunnah maps, the kusruhs' or field maps. During the four months of his residence at any station, a second copy of village maps is made for the use of the collector, the originals being bound, and deposited at the Deputy Surveyor General's office. The per- gunnah maps also are completed, and a general map of the year's work is compiled therefrom. Recruits for vacancies in the establishment are in- structed, and surveying instruments, &c. are placed in repairs. From some surveyors is required a report upon the statistics, and geography of the district last surveyed. To some of the revenue surveyors, the office of deputy collector has been added to that of revenue surveyor, in order that the surveyor may settle the boundaries of the lands he is about to survey. But in the North Western Provinces, the boundaries of villages are settled either by the collector or by an officer especially deputed for the purpose. The latter arrangement gives great freedom and facility to the operations of the survey; for it is manifest that both collectors and revenue surveyors have at least as much work upon their hands as they can conscientiously per- form; and the settlement of village bounds often involves the most tedious and intricate investigation. . VOL. IL 117 Settlement Officer, N. W. P. RETURN OF THE REVENUE KUSRUH SURVEY OPERATIONS, COMMENCING IN 1833 to 1838-39 INCLUSIVE. Seasons. Expense of Survey. Square Miles. Expense per square mile. ... 1833-34, 1834-35, 1835-36, 1836-37, 1837-38, 1838-39, Rs. As. P. 41,840 4 3 41,851 8 1 41,718 92 43,075 96 90,968 10 3 1,07,926 98 Kusruh. 2,079 2,543 2,657 3,175 8,021 8,487 Rs. As. P. 20 20 16 7 3 15 11 2 13 90 12 4 11 11 8 7 SETTLEMENT OFFICER. The duties of a settlement officer in the North West Provinces are so purely temporary, that they hardly require to be noted here. The boundaries of every village having been marked off by the settle- ment officer, each village and field is measured in detail (the first by com- pass, the second by chain) under the superintendence of scientific officers, appointed for that purpose. The primary object of the survey being to aid the settlement officer in his operations, he is expected to test and ve- rify it by every means in his power. When the maps and kusrubs are complete, they are made over by the surveyor to the settlement officer, when they are arranged, and each point of consequence put into a shape, ad- mitting of the earliest possible reference. The settlement officer then pro- ceeds to dispose of all the heterogeneous rights, usages, &c., appertaining to zemindar, mokuddum, ryots and other persons affected by his operations. In these matters he exercises the judicial powers of a collector, under Regu- lation VII. of 1822, and IX. of 1833. He also disposes of all the unregis- tered maafee-land which, from want of a proper survey, has hitherto been hidden from the collector. Finally he fixes the juma of each estate, takes an engagement from the engaging parties (settling, at the same time, with the consent of the parties concerned, every possible question which may hereafter be mooted, including those of the fields, with the rents held by each cultivator,) and concludes by reporting his proceedings in English, for each estate to Government. His operations closed, the settlement officer makes over all his papers to the collector, who retains them in his office, as a guide upon all questions which may hereafter arise between Government, and the landholders of the district. From the collector therefore all papers or information, connected with the recent settlements in the North Western Provinces, must be obtained, and upon those papers all future proceedings of that officer will be based. If any of our readers require fuller information, we beg to refer them to the printed instructions of the Board of Revenue, for the North Western Provinces, on the subject of settlements, apted the 1st of April, 1839, and published at the Agra press, price one rupee. In it they will find the fullest instructions detailed in the clearest language. The settlements of the North Western Provinces being now almost finished, it is probable that, in the course of a few months, no such situ. ation as that of settlement officer will be in existence. [ 118 ] [PART 111. NOTE ON THE NORTH WESTERN PROVINCES SETTLE- MENTS IN CONNECTION WITH BOMBAY SYSTEM. they go. The essential principles of the survey and settlement in the North West- ern Provinces, as these may be compared with those of similar operations in the Bombay districts, may be stated in a few words. The first great distinction between the two classes of proceedings ap- pears to be that in the North Western Provinces the survey and the as- sessment, are quite distinct operations, conducted by separate officers; while in Bombay, the officer superintending the survey, determines also the classification, and fixes the rate of assessment upon the land. The danger of the latter mode of assessment is, that it tends to fis the demand of revenue too much upon speculation, and very uncertain grounds. The result by this mode has been usually found to be that worst one-over-assessment. In the North Western Provinces the endea- vour has been to regulate the assessment, as much as possible, by practi- cal and safe considerations. By the method there observed, the Govern- ment may not always obtain its fair revenue, but it is thought that the loss on this account, is far over-balanced by the prospect of escaping the con- trary, and greater evil. The process in those provinces, as it is at present matured, and estab- lished, is, that a professional survey establishment, furnishes to the colo lector or settling officers, returns upon scientific survey data, of the area of every village, and of the extent and character of the principal divi. sions of soil and surface comprised in that area. These returns, under good officers, are correct grounds for the further proceedings, so far as The fields of every village are measured by native ameens, under the general superintendence of the surveyor; but as these measurements are not subjected to any check, excepting as to the total area, in the extent of its principal subdivisions, by the professional survey, it is said that this part of the work is often of little value, and that these interior village, or field measurements have in fact to be done afresh, at a time to be ex- plained in the sequel, by the collectors' establishments, headed by the tehseeldars, who answer to the mamlutdars of Bombay. The settling officer, on receiving from the surveyor the professional re- turns of general area, &c. proceeds to fix a general amount of assessment for the whole pergunnah, or other revenue division in which the villages are situated. If all the pergunnahs of the district have been surveyed, he fixes in the first place, within some general limits, the entire assessment. which he proposes to levy on it as a whole. Here his great guide is the sum actually previously realized for a series of years, without arrear or difficulty. Where an increase above such previous easy and regular collec- tions is admitted, it is only to a clearly moderate extent, upon notorious consideration of the capability of the district to pay some higher reve- nue. Allahabad and Goruckpore, are, in the North Western Provinces, examples of districts, from which without supposed apprehension of injury, a certain amount of enhanced revenue has been taken. Where the course of previous collection has shown that a reduction of assessment is called for, such reduction is granted with liberality, so as manifestly rather to exceed than to fall short of the necessity. The whole sum to be assessed upon a district, or rather tract of country, being thus arranged, the settling officer proceeds to distribute this sui, over the several minor divisions and villages, founding such distribution VOL 11.) 121 Accountant's Office, N.W.P. 6,680, and that the amount credited corresponds with the amount charged by the office drawn upon. This again is a separate duty of the bill checker, of whom there are five. When the credits have all been duly examined and checked, and the summing up tested, the examiner's initials are signed in red ink opposite each item, and the disbursement side taken up in a similar manner ; but this is far more laborious and critical, as each item of expenditure must be accompanied by a proper voucher for the payment. These, in many collectorships, are numerous ; for the past year they • Delhi Nos. 5,018. were as per margin*, in the zillahs named. Benares 4,360, These vouchers consist principally of bills Agra Cawnpore 5,710. drawn by officers duly authorized, and of bills Allahabad 4,914. passed by the auditors, Civil and Military, for pay and other authorized charges; all items, not borne out by a proper voucher, are noticed in a letter to the party furnishing the account, calling for explanation, and the amount retained against the per- sonal responsibility of the disbursing officer. There are many charges a public officer is necessarily called upon to make, before he can receive due authority for disbursing the exact sum he expends. Such as charges of remitting money from one zillah to ano- ther; country stationery ; extra establishments for extraordinary purposes; feeding prisoners; the number of whom varies month by month, &c. &c. All such charges, till duly passed and audited, are thrown into one account under the head • Inefficient Balance,' and retained as cash in the account, at the responsibility of the officer in charge, till cleared out by audited bills. When the account has been duly examined, it is then made over to the 'abstracter,' of whom there are four ; whose duty consists of abstracting the several items shewn in the accounts, under certain heads, according to the form annexed. This form comprehends all the heads into which the yearly accounts are thrown, and the aggregate of twelve months of these abstracts will of course shew the entire transactions for that particular district for the year, under every head of account. As each month is drawn out, the totals are carefully compared with the totals in the treasury accounts, as, unless they tally, there must be some mistake either passed over by the examiner, or made by the abstracter. At the end of the year, the abstracter adds up each column at the bottom of the page, and each line horizontally or length ways, and the total of both, in the right hand corner, at the bottom of the abstract, should tally ; if it does not, some mistake has been committed, and the work must be gone over till the error is discovered. All collectors also send in an account at the end of the year, called the • General Treasury Account.' This is compared with the result of the twelve months' abstracts, and differences noted, and written about. As each abstract for any zillah for the year is closed, and proved, it is passed over, duly signed to the adjuster.' Of these there are four. This duty consists of throwing the abstracts into the shape of a Dr. and Cr. account, under the several heads shewn in the abstracts, in which receipts and charges have occurred; to do this he has frequently to refer to the treasury accounts and vouchers, and to write to the local officers, for further explanation of certain receipts and charges, which may have been ranged under improper headings. In order to shew the receipts and charges actually incurred under each head of account, the adjuster also prepares an account called a “subsidiary adjustment' form. PART III, VOL. II. R VOL. 11.] [ 125 ] APPENDIX TO HISTORY OF BENGAL AND AGRA OFFICES. List of Secretaries, Deputies and Assistants, in the Secret and Political Departments, from 1788. (The earliest record of the Civil Auditor's Office.) Name. Per Month. Designation. Year. E. Hay G. H, Barlow G. H. Barlow N. B. Edmonstone J. Lumsden T. Brown N. B. Edmonstone G, Dowdeswell J. Adam C. M. Ricketts J. Adam G. Swinton 19 W. B. Bayley C.T. Metcalle G. Swinton H, T. Prinsep A, Sterling 91 C. Lushington G. Swinton Sa. Rs. 4,833 Secretary General to the Govt. 1787 4,166 Ditto 1 796 4,583 Chief Secretary to Government 1799 4,166 Secretary General to Government 1801 4,583 Chief ditto 1801 4,583 Ditto 1 806 4,583 Ditto 1809 4,583 Ditto 1812 4,166 Secretary to Government 1212 4,583 Chief Secretary to Government 1815 4,583 Ditto ditto 1817 3,250 Secretary to Government, Persian Department 1817 4,383 Chief Secretary to Government 1819 4,166 Secretary to Government 1819 4,166 Ditto ditto 1820 3,250 Ditto ditto, Persian Department 1820 4,000 Ditto ditto and Deputy Secretary, Secret Department 1824 4,583|Chief Secy to Govt., and Secy. Genl. Dept. 1825 4,583 Chief Secy. to Govt. and Secy. Se. cret and Pol. Dept. 1827 4,166 Officiating Secretary to Government 1828 St. Rs. 4,350 Secretary to Government 1833& 1834 Secretary in charge of the several Civil Departments proceeded with Governor General 1837 C.'s Rs 4,500 Ditio ditto ditto 1838 1,160 Sub-Secretary to Government *1,320 Ditto ditto 1789 *2,800 Ditto ditto Examiner and Reporter, Sudder Dewany Adawlut 1793 1,211 Sub-Secretary to Government 1796 1,500 Sub.ditto 1797 2,500 Deputy Secretary 1804 1,500 Ditto ditto, Persian Department 1804 2,000 Ditto ditto and General and Foreign Department 1809 2,000 Ditto ditto 1812 1,000 Ditto ditto, Persian Department 1812 Sa. Rs. 1,000 Ditto ditto 1814 1,500 Ditto ditto, Secret and Political De- partment 1817 A. Sterling W.H. Macnaghten W. H. Macnaghten 1788 . T. H. Maddock. T. Philpot J. Fombell J. H. Harington J. Thornhill J. Strachy J. Adam J. Monckton C. Lashington - 37 G. Swinton R. Alexander C. A. Molony Ditto * Including fees. 130 (PART TIL History of Offices. Names. Per Month Designation. Year. - 1) J. R. Hutchinson C.’sRs. 3,750 Temporary Judge, Presidency 1838 W. Money 4,350 Judge ditio IRIS C. Tucker 3,500 Ditto ditto 1:39 C. Tucker 4,350 Ditto ditto 18.39 E. Lee Warner 4,350 Ditto ditto 1839 A. Dick 3,500 Temporary ditto 1839 J. F. M. Reid 3,500 Dillo dini 1839 Registers and Deputy Registers. B. Crisp -Ct. Rs. 1,528 Register 1785 G. H. Barlow 3,866 Ditto 1793 J. H. Harington 3,750 Ditto 1796 J. Lumsden 3,750 Ditto 1799 T. Goad. 2,000 Ditto 1804 J. 1. Shakespear 2,000 Ditto 1809 M. H. Turnbull 2,000 Ditto 1812 W. Dorin 2,000 Ditto 1918 W. H. Macnaghten 2,000 Dillo 1822 J. F. M. Reid St. Rs. 3,000 Ditto 16,1 W.B. Jackson 2,000 Ditto, Allahabad 1531 J, A. F. Hawkins c.'s Rs. 2,666 Officiating ditto, Presidency 1837 J. A. F. Hawkins 2,500 Dillo 1838 Deputies. H St. G. Tacker -ICt. Rs. 400 Deputy Register 1794 J. Stuart 500 Ditto 1794 J. Stuart 1,750 Ditto E. Strachey 1,750 Ditto J. Sinart 2,000 Ditto 1801 W. B. Bayley 1,000 Ditto 180S W. B. Bayley 1,300 Ditto 1903 M. H, Turnbull 1,300 Ditto W. Dorin 1,300|Ditto 1812 H. Mackenzie 1,300 Ditto 1813 P. Wynch 1,300 Ditto 1817 E. Molony 1,300 Ditto 182) W. H. Macnaghten 1,300 Ditto 1823 G. J. Morris 1,300 Ditto 1872 J. F. M. Reid 1,300 Ditto 1823 J. R. Best 1,300 Ditto 1925 J. Thomson 1,148 Ditto 1899 C. G. Udny 1,148 Ditto 1851 A. F. Donnelly St. Rs. 1,220 Ditto 1835 P. G. E. Taylor 1,200) Ditto 1837 List of Members and Secretaries to the Sudder Board of Revenue from 1788. W, Cowper Ct. Rs. 5,316|61st Member 1758 T. Graham 4,350|2nd ditto 1785 J. Mackenzie 4,350|3rd ditto 1785 R. Johnson 2,900 Supernumerary ditto 1788 J. Evelyn 4,350 4th ditto T. Graham 5,316 1st ditto 1:90 D. Vanderheyden 4,35mith ditto 1750 C. Chapman 4,3.50|2nd ditto 1790 J. Buller 4,350|3rd ditto 1791 G. Hatch 5,316 Ist ditto 1783 T. Graham 4,583 Senior ditto 1793 J. Buller 3,750 3rd ditto 1794 D. Vanderheyden 3,750 4th ditto 1794 S. Davis 3,750 3rd ditto 1801 2) 13 VOL. 11] 131 Appendix. Names. Per Month Designation. Year. ) T. Graham Ct. Rs. 5,000 Senior Member R. W, Cox 3,730 2nd ditto J. Buller 3,750 3rd ditto Mathew Leslie 3,750 3rd ditto H. St. G. Tucker 4,583 3rd ditto H. St. G. Fucker 0 Supernumerary ditto J. E Colebrooke, Sa, Rs. 4,583 President and Senior ditto B. Crisp 4,583 Senior ditto R. Rocke 4,583 Ditto ditto J. Richardson 3,750 2nd ditto J. Lumsden 3,750 3rd ditto H. T. Colebrooke 4,583 1st ditto C. Buller 3,750 officiating ditto ditto A. Rogs 4,583 Senior Ditto, Western Board 4. Pattle 4,583 Ditto ditto W. B. Martin 3,750 Junior ditto W. 0. Salmon 4,583 Senior ditto, Central Board C. F. Fergusson 4,166 2nd ditto, Central ditto W. Fraser 4,166 2nd ditto Western ditto J. Majoribank 3,333 3rd ditto Central ditto W. Trower 3,333 3rd ditto Lower ditto W. Paton 3,7502nd ditto ditto ditto J. H, Harington 4,583 Senior ditto Western ditto Hon. J. R. Elphinston 4,583 Dillo ditto Central ditto H. B.tson 3,333|3rd ditto Western ditto W. Money 3,750 2nd ditto Lower ditto F. Hawkins 4,784 Senior ditto Western ditto H. G. Christian 3,333 3rd ditto Lower ditto Sir J. E. Colebrooke 3 500|Officiating ditto E, R. Barwell 3,333 3rd ditto Lower Board J. Puttle 4,583 Member W, Blunt 4,583 Ditto F. Hawkins 4,184 Senior Member W. W. Bird 4,162 3rd ditto W. Fane 4,162 Member, Allahabad R. M. Bird St. Rs. 4,050 Ditto ditto C. W. Smith 4,350 Junior Member, Presidency J. Lowis 8,333 Register & Reporter of Settlement R. D. Mangles 3,750 Temporary Member, Presidency J. Lowes 3,500 Ditto ditto ditto R. Trotter 1,500 Employed in Settlement duties H. Ricketts 3,500'Powers of Member Secretaries. B. Aplin St. Rs. 1,740 Secretary J.H. Harington *2,538 Ditto J. Rawling *3,041 Ditto G. Dowdeswell *2,405 ub-Secretary G. Dowdeswell *2,622 Secretary J. Deane 800 Sub-Secretary J. Deane 1,000 Ditto ditto C. Buller Sa, Rs. 1,600 Ditto ditto C. Buller 2,622 Secretary T, Balfour 800/Sub-Secretary J. W. Laing 800 Ditto ditto J. W. Laing 2,500 Secretary R Thackeray 2,000 Ditto D. Campbell 800 Sub-ditto J. T. Shakespear 800 Ditto ditto A. Campbell 800'Ditto ditto 1801 1801 1801 1803 1 806 1808 1808 1803 1811 1812 1812 1813 1817 1820 1821 1821 1821 1821 1821 1822 1823 1823 1823 1823 1823 1824 1826 1826 1827 1828 18:28 1828 1828 1830 1832 1834 1835 1837 1838 1839 1841 1841 9 9) 99 » 12 1786 1788 1793 1793 179 1794 1796 1797 1801 1801 1802 1902 1807 1 807 1808 1809 * Including fees, &c. 132 (PART III. History of Offices. Names. Per Month. Designation. Year. ) G. Warde Sa. Rs. 800 Sub-Secretary 1811 W. H, Trant 2,000 Secretary 1811 G. Warde 2,000 Ditto 1815 H. Newnham 2,000 Ditto Western Board 1616 A. F. Lind 800 Ditto 1820 R. Hunter 2,000 Ditto 1820 W. H. Valpy 1,200 Sub-ditto Western Board 1821 R. Tilghman 2,000 Secretary Central Board 1822 J. Dunsmure 800 Sub-ditto ditto ditto 1822 H. J. Middleton 2,000 Secretary 1825 H. Fraser 1,200 Sub-ditto 1893 W. H. Valpy 2,000 Secretary 1823 A. Tutter 2,000 Ditto 1896 G. A. Bushby 800 Sub-ditto 1836 H. Fraser 1,913 Secretary Western Board 1896 J. Davidson 1,148 Sub.Secretary ditto ditto 1826 H. S. Boulderson 1,913 Ditto ditto ditto 1826 G. A. Bushby, 2nd 2,000 Ditto 1828 W.J. Conolly, 1st 1,148 Sub-ditto Central Board 1836 H. Loshington 800 Sub-ditto 1328 R. M. Telghman 2 966)Secretary 1898 G. A, Bushby 2,009 Junior ditto 1899 R. M. Tilghman 2,966 Senior ditto 1852 J. G. Deedes 2,400 Secretary, Allahabad 1853 R. D. Mangles 2,500 Secretary - 1854 J. R. Colvin 2,500 Ditto 1855 F.J. Halliday 2,500 Ditto 1856 E. Currie 2,500 Ditto 1833 List of Members and Secretaries to the Board of Customs Salt and Opium, and Marine Board, from 1788. S. Swinton Sa. Rs. 4,583 Senior Member 1819 J. P. Larkins 4,186 Junior ditto 1819 Hon. C, R. Lindsay - *4,050|3rd ditto 1899 Hon. C, R. Lindsay 4,66 2nd ditto 1823 H. Sargent 3,333 3rd ditto 1823 J. P. Larkins 4,580 Senior ditto 1823 G. Chester 4,166 2rd ditto 1924 G. Chester 9,583 Senior ditto 1896 H. Sargent 4,166 2nd ditto 1926 Sir C. D’Oyly, Bart. - St. Rs. 4,850 Senior ditto 1835 H. M. Parker 4,85C|Junior ditto 1834 W, W. Bird C.Rs. 4,350 Extra ditto 1837 J. Trotter 4,350 Temporary ditto 1838 H. M. Parker 4,350 Senior ditto 1888 J. Trotter 4,350 Junior ditto 1838 Secretaries. 19 99 1819 1821 1823 1896 H. Sargent Sa. Rs. 2,000 Secretary H. Sargent +2,600 Ditto R. Saunders 2.600 Ditto J. Trotter 2,850 Ditto C. B. Greenlaw (un- covenanted) 1,200 Ditto Marine Board H. M. Parker 2,487 Secy.Bd. of Customs Salt & Opium W.R. Young 2,500 Ditto ditto ditto S. G. Palmer 2,000 Deputy ditto 9 1827 1 828 1884 1836 Including Personal allowance, + Including fees, &c, 134 (PART III. History of Offices. Assistants. Names, Per Month. Designation. Year. 9) F. Smyth W. W. Massic W. Egerton H. J. Darell W. Spedding J. W. Sherer J. W. Sherer R, Turner H. Wood H. Wood C. Morley C. Morley W. H. Oakes W. HI, Oakes C. T. Glass C. T. Glass J. A. Dorin J. A. Dorin R. Udny J. W. Alexander J, W, Alexander G. F. McClintock G. F. McClintock H. R. Alexander R. A Snell H. R, Alexander H. R. Snell F. A. Lushington Ct. Rs. 580 Assistant 232 Ditto 29 Ditto 300 Ditto Soo Dutto 300 Ditto 600 Head ditto 600 Ditto ditto Sa. Rs. 300 Assistant 600 Head Assistant 400 Assistant 600 Head Assistant 400 Assistant 600 Head Assistant 400 Assistant 900 Head Assistant 400 Assistant 1,000 Head Assistant 400 Assistant Accountant General 956 Ditto St. Rs, 1,000 1st ditto 700 2nd ditto c.'s Rs. 1,0001st ditto 700 2nd ditto 700 2nd ditto 1,000 1 st ditto 1,000 1 st ditto 700|2nd ditto List of Civil Auditors from 1788. 3788 1791 1792 1796 1797 1793 1802 1803 1804 1807 7819 1815 1815 1816 1816 1829 1529 1899 1828 1851 1854 1855 1856 1836 1839 1810 1840 1891 59 > A. Caldecott W. Cumming J. Miller T. Dashwood W. Egerton J. W. Sherer W. Morton H. Wood C. Morley C. Morley W. H. Oakes W. H. Oakes C. T. Glass P, M. Wynch R. H. Tulloh C. Trower - Ct. Rs. 1,740 Civil Auditor 1,740 Ditto 1,740 Ditto 1,740 Ditto 2,300 Ditto and Accountant 2,300 Ditto ditto 2,570 Ditto ditto 2,800 Ditto ditto 1,200 Commercial ditto ditto 2,300 Civil Auditor and Accountant 1,200 Commercial ditto ditto *2,500 Civil ditto ditto 2,487 Ditto ditto ditto - St. Rs. 3,000 Civil Auditor 9,000 Ditto Jco Rs.t3,382 Ditto List of Sub-Treasurers from 1788. Ct. Rs. 2,416/Sub Treasurer 2,736 Ditto 2,456 Ditto 2,620 Dilto 2,633 Ditto 2,500 Ditto C.'s Rs. 3,600 Ditto 1785 1789 1791 1792 1800 1902 1815 1816 1516 1822 18 1829 1899 182 " 1896 93 T. Mure C. Benezet R. Parry M. Campbell H. Stone J. R. Barwell W. H. Oakes 1785 1793 1800 1804 IS06 1827 1833 • Including fces. &c. + Personal allowance. VOL. 11:] 135 Appendix. List of Commissioners of Revenue and Circuit. Names, Per Month. Designation. Year. 1828 1828 1828 1928 9 99 1828 1828 99 9) 9 W. 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 1828 37 95 . > C. F. Fergnsson St. Rs. 4,160 Commr. 11th div. Sarun, &c. W. Money 3,75 Ditto 14th div. Moorshedabad W. Fraser 4,160 Ditto 1st div. Dehli W. Gorton 3,57: Ditto 9th div. Benares D. Scott, Senior 4,333 Ditto 18th div. Assam and Agent to the Governor General W. Ewer 3,500 Comm. 2nd div. Sahurunpore H. Newnham 3,689 Ditto Ist div. Furruckabad, and Assistant to theGovernor General E. R. Barwell 3,572 Commissioner div. Backergunge M. Moore Sa. Rs. 5,349 Ditto div. of Agra C. Tucker 3,349 Ditto div, of Dacca N. J. Halhed 3,58-Ditto div, of Arracan E. Lee Warner 3,319 Ditto div. Bhaugulpore Lambert 3,349 Ditto 12th div. Patna R. Barlow, Senior 3,349 Ditto div. Allahabad W. F. Dick 3,349 Ditto div. of Shajehanpore W. Braddon 3,349 Ditto 21st of Burdwan R. M. Bird 3,349 Ditto 10th div. Goruckpore J. S. Boldero 3,349 Ditto 5ih div. Cuttack G. Stockwell 3,668 Ditto 19ih div. Cutiack W. Fane 3,349 Ditto 7th div. of Cawnpore F. C. Smith 3,349 Ditto 14th div. Dinagepure M. Ainslie 3,500 Ditto 7ih div. Buddelcand Agent Governor General R. P. Nisbet 3,349 Ditto 13th ditto Bauleah T. C. Robertson 3,319 Ditto 5th div. Bareilly Hon. W. J.L Melvili 3,349 Diito dito C. Macsween 3,349 Ditto 2nd div. Agra W. Fane 3,319 Dilto Ist div. Muerut R. H. Tulloh 3,319 Ditto 3rd div. Furruckabad W. Ewer 3.50 Ditto 10th div. Saurun A. Campbell 3,349 Ditto 5th div. Bareilly R. H. Tulloh 3,319 Ditto 13th div. Bauleah R. M, Bird 3,349 Dillo 3rd Furruckabad H. J. Middleton 3,349 Dillo 15th div. Dacca J. R. Hutchinson 3,349 Ditto Ist div, Meerut S. B. Boulderson 33,49 Ditto 9th div. Goruckpore R, Hunter 3,349 Ditto 19th div. Cutiack G, Stoci well 3,349 Ditto 6th div. Allahabad R. H. Boddam 3,349 Ditto 2nd div. Agra G. Stockwell ca. Rs. 3,500 Ditto 4th div. Moradabad R. Lowther 3,500 Ditto oth div. Allahabad T.C. Robertson 4,166 Ditto 19ih div. Cuttack P. E. Patton 5,155 Ditto 13th div. Bauleah G. Mainwaring St. Rs. 3,000 Surg. Comr. 8th div. Benares C. W. Smith 3,000 Commissioner 11th div, Patna H, Walter's 3,500 Ditto 16th div. Chittagong R. M. Tilghman 3,000 Ditto 7th div. Humeerpore C. W. Steer 3,750 Officiating ditto 12th div. Monghyr S, T. Cuthbert Sa Rs. 3,000 Ditto 11th div. Patna H. Swetenham st. Rs. 3,000 Ditto 3d div, Furruckabad* C. W. Steer Sa. Rs. 3,750 Ditto 13th div. Bauleah J. Master St. Rs. 3,000 Ditto 19th div. Cuttack H. Walters 3,60 Ditio 141h div, Moo shedabad C. Harding 3,000 Ditto 12th oliv, Bhaugulpore H, M. Pigou Co. Rs. 3,000 Ditto 18th div. Jessore W. Dampier 3,000 Ditto 16th div. Chittagong C. Tucker 3,000 Ditto 11th div. Patna * After this only Bengal is refered to. 1829 1829 1830 1880 1830 1831 1831 1831 1831 1832 1832 1832 1832 1832 1832 1833 1833 1833 *1833 1834 1834 1834 1833 1833 1833 1333 1834 1854 1835 1835 1835 1855 1835 1835 1835 9) 9 22 136 History of Offices. [PART IIL List of Commissioners of Revenue and Circuit.- (Continued.) Names. Per Month. Designation. Year. >> 19 > J. A. Pringle C.'sRs. 3,000 Ditto 15th div. Dacca 1835 J. Lowis 3,250 Ditto dillo 1836 H. Ricketty 3,250 Ditto 19th div. Cuttack 1836 T. H. Maddock 3,000 Ditto 11th div, Patna 1896 T. R. Davidson 2,916 Ditto ditto 1855 E. M. Gordon 3,166 Ditto 15th diy. Dacca 1896 J. Lowis 3,250 Ditto 14th div, Moorshedabad 1836 J. A. F. Hawkins 2,916 Ditto 13th div. Bauleah 1836 W. Dampier 3,250 Ditto 14th div. Moorshedabad 1837 J. I. Harvey 2,916 Ditto 16th div. Chittagong 1837 W. Dampier 3,250 Commissioner 18th div. Jessore 1933 W. B. Jackson 3,166 Ditto 14th div, Moorsbedabad 18.33 G. F. Brown 3,166 Ditto 12th div. Bhaugulpore 18.3 A. J. M. Mills 3,166 Ditto 19th div. Cuttack 1539 E. C. Ravenshaw 3,166 Ditto 11th div. Paina IS10 T. R. Davidson 3,166 Ditto 18th div. Jessore 1840 H. Ricketts 3,500 Ditto 16th div. Chittagong 18u List of Secretaries, Deputies and Assistants in the Public Department from 1786. E Hay C.'sRs. 4,833 Secy. Genl., Secret and Genl. Dept. 1787 J. L. Chauvet 1,657 Sub-Secretary, Public Department. 1791 C. Shakespear 1,160 Ditto, ditto 1793 H. Macleod Ditto, ditto 1796 D, Campbell 1,813 Ditto, ditto 1797 C. R Crommelin 3,750 Secretary, ditto 1799 T. Pliilpot 4,168 Ditto, ditio 1802 T. Brown 4,168 Ditto, ditto 1804 H. St. G. Tucker 4,166 Ditto, ditio 1809 C. M. Ricketts 4,166 Ditto, ditto 1811 A. Trotter Officiating ditto, ditto A. Trotter 800 Ditto ditto, ditto C. Lushington 4,166 Secretary, ditto 1817 S. Fraser 300 Officiating ditto, ditto E. Molony 1,000 Ditto ditto, ditto 1926 E. Molony Ditto ditto, ditto 1827 H. Prinsep Sa. Rs. 4,166 Secretary, dillo 1927 H. M. Parker Offig. Secretary, General Dept. 1329 H. M. Parker Ditto ditto, diilo G, Saunders Ditto ditto, dicto 18.00 J. Pattullo Deputy ditto, ditto 1630 G. A. Bushby Officiating ditto, ditto 1830 C. E. Trevelyan 1,500 Ditto ditto, ditto 18$1 R, D, Mangles 1,500 Ditto ditto, ditto 1832 G A, Bushby Officiating ditto, ditto 1832 G, M. Batten Ditto Deputy ditto, ditto 1932 H. M. Parker 1,500 Officiating Secretary, ditto 1832 G. Alexander Deputy dilto, ditto 1833 G. M. Batten Officiating Deputy ditto, ditto 1836 J. P. Grant Ditto ditto ditio, ditto 1831 H. W. Torrens Ditto ditto ditto, ditto 1935 G. A, Bushby 4,350 Secretary, ditto 1835 H. Torrens . Officiating Secretary, ditto 1835 H. T. Prinsep C.'s Rs.4,354 Secretary, ditto 1835 H. W. Torrens Officiating ditto, ditto 18.6 J. P. Grant Ditto Deputy ditto, ditto 1838 H. V. Bayley Ditto ditto ditto, ditto 1897 H. V. Bayley Ditto ditto ditto, ditto J. P. Grant 1,500 Deputy Secretary, ditio, 1899 H. V. Bayley Officiating ditto, dtto 1839 * See Political Department, 1814 IS16 9) 1836 1530 1 VOL. 11.) 137 Appendix. List of Secretaries, Deputies and Assistants in the Public Department. (Continued.) Names. Per Month. Designation. Year. O G. A. Bushby H. W. Torrens J. P. Grant C. G. Mausel. C.’sRs. 4,350 Secretary General Department 375 Officiating ditto Ex. officio. Junior ditto Diuo. Ditto ditco 1810 1840 1840 1841 Assistants. 300 Ditto 99 C. Roberts .Ct. Rs. 5801 st Assistant 1788 A. Gardiner 580 Ditto 1789 F. Pierard 580 Ditto 1789 C. Shakespear 464 Ditto 1791 A. Seton 232) Assistant 1791 R. Ahmuty. 232 Ditto 1791 R. Ahmury: 500 Head Assistant 1793 J. Sandford 300 Ditto 1794 J. H. Darrell 300 Ditto 1791 D. Seton 300 Ditto 1 796 J. S. Frances 300 Ditto 1795 R. Brooke 1797 A. P. Johnstone 500 Head ditto 1798 E. S. Waring 301 Ditto 1798 W. H. Sealy 304 Ditto 1798 E. W. Blunt 300 Ditto 1798 C. Elliot Ct. Rs. 300 Ditto 1802 G, Todd 600 Ditto 1810 A. Trotter 500 Ditto 1811 J. Trotter 500 Ditto 1811 A. Trotter 80 Ditto 1812 J. D'Oyly 400 Ditto 1813 G. E. Law Sa. Rs. 750 Ditto 1819 E, C. Karenshaw 750 Ditto 1824 H. V. Bayley :com's Rs.7ou Special ditto 1838 List of Special Commissioners under Regulation III. of 1828. J. B. Elliot ./Sa. Rs. 3,750 Special Commissioner Patna div. 1828 R. Walpole St. Rs. 3,750 Ditto Calcuta division 1828 W. W. Bird 3,750 Ditto Moorshedabad division 1828 C. R. Barwell Sa. Rs. 4,000 Ditto ditto 1830 N. J. Halhed St. Rs. 3,750 Ditto Calcutta division 1833 W. Money Sa. Rs. 3,750 Ditto Moorshedabad division 1836 W. Blunt, Co. Rs. 3,750 Ditto Calcutia division 1836 T. H. Maddock 3,750 Ditto Moorshedabad division 1836 J. Curtis 3,750 Dillo Calcutta division 1839 H. Moore 3,750 Ditto Moorshedabad 1839 T. A. Shaw 3,000 Ditto Cuttack division 1839 T. W. Templer 3,000 Ditto Chittagong division 1839 G. J. Morris 3,000) Ditto ditto 1840 9) PART III, VOL. II. T [ 138 1 (PART II. NOTE ON OFFICE OATHS. Notwithstanding the passing of Act XXI. of 1837, it appeared to Oaths of Offices to the servants of Government continued to be adminis tered at the Madras and Bombay Presidencies. This has now been probie bited, and declarations ordered to be substituted instead, in the mapper prescribed by that Act. The Madras Government enquired whether oaths prescribed by Acts of Parliament, should also be dispensed with under the Act referred to. The answer was in the negative. MADRAS. MARINE BOARD. The Madras Marine Board is constituted as follows, consequent on the orders of Government, which appointed 1st. A Member of Council. President. 2nd. The Quarter Master General. 3rd. The Commissary General. 4th. A Stipendiary Member of the Military Board. 5th. The Master Attendant. The principal duties of the Marine Board are very similar to those which devolve on the Marine Board at Calcutta ; viz. comprising the con- duct of the Master Attendant's Department, and the security of the ship- ping in the Roads. The Roard ascertain and inspect the bills for port dues ; invite and receive tenders for the hire of shipping ; receive all bills of lading for Government stores, and on the due discharge of such stores, they receive the Master Attendant's report thereon, deducting from such accounts for loss or damage, in such way, as may on the report of a com- mittee appointed to survey the goods by the Master Attendant, under the rules of Government, be declared fit. The Board control the boat depart- ment; and the boat pay master submits all accounts of boat hire to the Marine Board, which are adjusted according to prescribed rules and regu- lations ; and finally passed by the Board, who pay a monthly pension to decayed and infirm boatmen, and their respective families. And it is the duty of the Marine Board to ascertain that the boat establishment is maintained in full efficiency under the care and superintendence of the Master Attendant. The Master Attendant is also the marine store-keep er; and he cannot receive or issue any stores without the sanction and au- thority of the Marine Board. All the Marine establishments on the coasts of Malabar and Coromag- del, and within the presidency, are subordinate to the Marine Board ; and are bound to submit every official statement, whether relating to port dues, shipping affairs, or contingent expences through the Marine Board. Marine Board days are on Thursdays; but the members are not sum- moned, or do not meet, unless some especial duty requires their attend- Until the present constitution of the Marine Board at this presidency, it had undergone various changes, but we cannot find any usefully correct version of the details. ance. VOL. 11.] [141 BOMBAY. LOWER SCINDE POLITICAL AGENCY. The Scinde Residency was constituted under Colonel Pottinger, in Au- gust 1838. Previous to that period, the political duties were conducted by that officer, resident in Cutch, as Governor General's Agent for Scinde, a Native Agent managing the local duties at the Court of Hyderabad. Early in 1840, the office of Resident' was changed into that of • Political Agent,' and Major Outram assumed charge as such, in March 1840. The chief duty of the Political Agent is to act as representative of the Governor General of India, at the court of the Ameers of Hyderabad, and with the Ameer of Meerpoor, Meer Sher Mahomed Khan, (with whom a treaty has just been concluded,) and with the neighbouring chieftains. An article of the Treaty of 1839 provides, that the British Government shall not interfere, unless called upon, by both parties, in disputes between the Ameers, or between the Ameers and their subjects; but in every other respect the power of the Political Agent extends to the maintenance of peace within the territory of Scinde; the protection of commerce on the river Indus; and the regulation of affairs in general for upholding the dignity and supremacy of the British Government. The Ameers of Scinde pay an annual tribute of three lacs of rupees, and Meer Sher Mahomed Khan of Meerpoor, 50,000 Company's rupees for British protection. No other revenue is derived from Scinde. The disbursements from the treasury of the Political Agency are : 1st. For the maintenance of the troops in Lower Scinde, and their commissariat. 2ad. The expenses incurred on account of the Indus Steam Flotilla, and dis- bursements on account of the various fuel depôts on the banks of the Indus. 3rd. The hire of boats for the conveyance of stores, &c. on the river Indus. 4th. The expenses of the Post Office department. And, lastly, those be- longing immediately to the Political Agent's office. Besides these duties, the Political Agent regulates all movements of troops throughout Scinde, fixing on the most practicable routes, aiding commanding officers with his advice, and obtaining Mhemendars from the Ameers, in order to provide for their obtaining supplies as they pass through the country: and, as an official means of communication be- tween the commanding officers, and the heads of towns and villages. The general control, and movement of the troops permanently stationed in Lower Scinde, is also under the Political Agent,--the officer commanding at his requisition complying with every demand for troops, whilst the Po- litical Agent assists the commanding officer to obtain carriage, commis- sariat supplies, and every thing Scinde produces, requisite either for the movement of troops, or their support, when stationary. The Political Agent also regulates the movements of the Steam flo- tilla, receives reports from the officer commanding, and aids him in keeping up an efficient supply of fuel on the banks of the Indus. British commercial interests are protected by the Political Agent, and for their furtherance, a Native assistant is permanently stationed at the INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. iii 252.* 75. 75. Ambassadors, Foreign, in England, V. ii. P. ii. 4. America, exchange with, V. i. P. i. 40. Annuity fund, civil ; rules, V. i. P. i. 341. Office ; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 160. Antimony, note on, V. i. P. i. 81. Archdeacon ; rank, pay, &c. V. i. P. i. 428. Armenian Philanthropic Institution, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 106. Army attached to the Bengal Presidency, V. ii. P. ii. 77. Madras, ditto 222. Bombay, ditto 330. in the Nizam's service, ditto 65. in Ceylon, ditto 381. H. M. in India and China, ditto 77. Shah Soojah's service, ditto 63. Agents in London, V. ü. P. ii. 12. Arracan, local battalion, ditto Political Agency, ditto 58. Arsenic, note on, V. i. P. i. 80. Articles of War, V. i. P. i. 161. Artillery attached to the Bengal presidency, V. ii. P. ii. 144. Madras, ditto 228. Bombay, ditto 331 Royel, in Ceylon, ditto 385. Artists in Calcutta, V. I. P. ii. 48. Asia, Central, notes on, V. ii. P. i. 267. Asiatic Society, Calcutta, V. i. P. ïï. 122. Asphyxia, note on, V. i. P. i. 89. Assam Light infantry, V. ii. P. ii. 251.* Local Artillery, ditto Militia, ditto Political Agency, ditto 64. Receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 252, 253,255,256. Sebundy corps, V. ii. P. ii. 253* Tea company, V. i. P. iii. 31. Weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 56. Assay department; note regarding its officers, V. i, P. i. 314. Asseerghur, road to, from Chittarpoor, V. ii. P. i. 245. Hoshungabad, ditto 163. Assessed estates ; act concerning the purchase of, V. i. P. i. 227. Assessment department, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 68. Assistants in government offices, V. i. P. iii. 150. Assurance Societies, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 15. Astrabad on the Caspian Sea ; note on, V. ii. P. i. 268. Asylums, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 109,133. Attorney, power of, conferred in letters, V. i. P. ii. 219. Attorneys in Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 62. Auctions in Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 48. Audit department, marine ; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 157. Military V. ii. P. ii. 134. Audited Salary Bills, V. i. P. ii. 221. Auditor, Civil, V. ii. P. iji. 80. Auditors, Civil, list of; V. ii. P. iii. 134. Office ; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 160. Auditor General's office, military; assistants V. i. P. iii. 162. Australasian Life Assurance Company, V. i. P. iii. 21. Ava, road to, from Kyouk Phyoo, V. ii. P. i. 179. Azimghur ; receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 247. road from, to Ghazeepoor, V. ii. P. i. 66. Goruck poor, ditto 66, 67. Juanpoor, ditto 67. Secrora, ditto 68. Sultappoor, ditto 68. INDEX TO THB SBCOND SERIES. Barristers in Calcutta, V. i. P. ii. 61. Basoda, note on, V. ii. P. i. 367. Bathing establishments in Calcutta, V. i, P. iii. 48. Batta ; rules, V. i. P. i. 376. to Navy, V. i. P. ii. 13. Bauleah School, V. i. P. iii. 84. Beawr, road to, from Nusseerabad, V. ii. P. i. 216, 217. Beerbhoom, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 249. statistical notice of, V. ii. P. i. 434. weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 58. Behar Opium agency, V. i. P. ii. 200. Receipts and disbursements. V. i. P. ii. 249. Weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 58. Belgaum, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. Beloochistan, political agency, ditto 58. Benares College, V. i. P. iii. 84. Political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. Road from, to Allahabad, V. ij. P. i. 21, 27. Chunarghur, ditto 91. Ghazeepoor, ditto 91. Juanpoor, ditto 91. Mirzapoor, ditto 92. to, from Hazareebaugh, ditto 21. Benevolent institutions, Calcutta, V. i, P. iii. 111, 114. Bengal Army, V. ii. P. ii. 132. List of Governors in, V. ii. P. iii. 48. Fire insurance company, V. i. P. iii. 24. Medical retiring fund ; report on, V. i. P. i. 454. Military fund ; its state in 1840, V. i. P. i. 402. Salt Company, V. i. P. iii. 32. Berhampoor, road from, to Bancoorah, V. ii. P. i. 92. Burdwan, ditto 92. Dacca, ditto 93. Dinapoor, ditto 94. Hazareebaugh, ditto 95. Jumalpoor, ditto 96. Mullye, ditto 97. Purneah, ditto 98. Rungpoor, ditto 98. to, from Barrackpoor, ditto 87, 88. Bethel society, V. i. P. iii. 139. Bhang; act regulating its sale, V. i. P. i. 209. Bhaugulpoor Institutions, V. i P. iii. 85. Receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 250. Road to, from Purneah, V. ii. P. j. 223. Weights aud measures ; V. i. P. i. 58. Bhawulpoor, road to, from Hansi, V. ii. P. i. 156. Bhilsa, vote on, V. ii. P. i. 370. Bhopal, Contingent, V. ii. P. ii. 73. Political Agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. statistical note on, V. ii. P. i. 367. Bhopawar, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 60. Corps, ditto. 73. Road to, from Mhow. V. ii. P. i. 192. Bhurtpoor, road to, from Agra, V. ii. P. i. 31, 32. Bhuttee territory, political agency, V. ii, P. ii. 58. Bible associations, V. i. P. iii. 136. Bijooor, road to, from Meerut, V. ii. P. i. 191. Weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 58. Bills, audited, salary, V. i. P. ii. 221. Bank of Bengal post, V. i. P. ii. 221, , Copies of; their force, V. i. P. ii, 218. 7 INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. vii (Burdwan East). Road from, to Kishnagur, V. ii. P. i. 103. Midnapoor, ditto 103. · Sooree, ditto 104. Burdwan (East), Road to, from Bacoorah, V. ii. P. i. 75. Berhampoor, ditto 92. - Statistical notice of, V. ii. P. i. 412. Burodia, note on, V. ii. P. i. 370. Bushire, in the Persian Gulf, notice of, V. ii. P. i. 270. Political agency, V. ii. P. ii, 58. Bye-laws, committee of, V. ii. P. iii. 24. CABOOL, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 59. Cachar political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. Cachary militia, V. i. P. ii. 76. Cabinet makers, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 49. Calcutta Docking Company, V. i. P. iii. 34. Municipality ; act respecting it, V. i. P. i. 237. Native militia, V. ii. P. ii. 250*. Police, schools, &c. v. these words. Road from, to Bancoorah, V. ii. P. i. 20. Delhi, ditto 26. Diamond Harbour, ditto 141. Loodiana, ditto 20. Midnapoor, ditto 141. Tide table, V. i. P. i. 28. Calpee, road from, to Cawnpoor, V. ii. P. i. 104. Etawah, ditto 104. Futtehghur, ditto 105. Goonah, ditto 106. Gurrawarah, ditto 109. Gwalior, V. ii. P. i. 108. Jubbulpoor, ditto 107. Kotah, ditto 110. Pertabghur, ditto 111. Saugor, ditto 111. to, from Allahabad, ditto 47. Weights and Measures, V. i. P. i. 59. Canal Office; contributions, &e. V. ï. P. iii. 104. Canal Department; Superintendents, V. ii. P. ii. 137. Assistants V. i. P. iii. 161. Candahar, Political Agency, V. ii. P. ii. 59. Carnatic Commissioners; their Salary, V. i. P. i. 291. Carvers and Gilders, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 49. spian Sea ; its ports and navigation, V. ii. P. i. 268. Casualties; note respecting them, V. i. P. i. 311. Catholic Free School, V. i. P. iii. 112. Cavalry in the Madras Presidency, V. ii. P. ii. 222. irregular, serving in India, ditto 254*. Cawnpoor, road from, to Allyghur, V. ii. P. i. 27. Etawah, ditto 111. Futtehghur, ditto 112. Lucknow, ditto 112. Mynpooree, ditto Pertabghur, ditto 112. Sultanpoor, ditto 113. to, from Allahabad, ditto 21,27. Calpee, ditto 104. Ceylon; some rules of its Government, V. ii. P. iii. 139. Chamber of Commerce, Bengal; Committees, V. i. P. iii. 3. Chandernagore ; its administration, V. ii. P. ii. 15. Chaplains ; rank, pay, &c., V. i. P. i: 430. in Bengal, list of, V. ii. P. ii. 272*. 22. viji INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIKS. Hazaferditto 116. Chaplains in Madras, V. ii. P. ii. 217. Charitable Societies, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 131. Charter of the Company in 1813, V. i. P. i. 99. Charwa, note on, V. ii. P. i. 370. Chemists in Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 50. Chepauk political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. Chief Engineer's office; assists. V. i. P. iii. 164. China Exchange with, V. i. P. i. 41, 42. Passage allowances, V. i. P. ii. 20. Political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. -Servants ; resolution respecting them, V. i. P. i. 301. Chittagong, receipts and disbursements, v. i. P. ii. 251. road from, to Dacca, V. ii. ; P. i. 114. Sylhet, ditto 114. to, from Akyab, ditto 45. School, V. i. P. iii. 86. Weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 59. Chettarpoor, road from, to Asseerghur, V. ii. P. i. 245, Chop houses, Calcutta, V. i. P. ii, 50. Christian instruction society, V. i. P. iii. 140. tract and book society, V. i. P. iii. 141. Chunar, the same as Chunarghur. Road from, to Allahabad, V. ii. P. i. 115. Dinapoor, ditto 116. 117. to, from Benares ditto 91, Church missionary societies, V. I. P. iii. 117. Churches in Calcutta, V. i.; P. iii, 125. The diocese of Calcutta, V. i. P. i, 443. Circuit commissioners ; list of, V. ii. P. iii. 135. Civil annuity fuod ; its institution, V. ii. P. iii. 78. ; Assistants. V. i. P. ii. 160. Civil Auditor ; his duties, V. ii. P. iii, 80. ; List of, V. ii. P. iii. 134. ; Office; assists. V. i, P. iii, 160. Fund rules, V. i, P. i. 314. ts institution, V. ii. P. iji. 78. Office ; assists, V. i. P. iii, 160. Judge; his duties. V. ij. P. iji. 85. l'ay office; its institution, V. ii. P. jii. 79. ; Assistants, V. i, P. iii. 160. Servants charged with corruption ; how to try, V. i. P. i. 305. Are not to have borrowing. lending or selling transactions with native land-holders. V. i. P. I. 306, 307. Service ; Bengal and Agra, general list of members, V. Ü. P. ï. 17. in Bombay, ditto 312 in Ceylon, ditto 373. in Madras, ditto 201. ; conditions of admission in. V. i. P. i. 243. ; its status since 18.35. V. j. P. i. 302. ; how to fill vacancies in, V. i. P. I, 302. in relation with Military, V. i. P. i. 309. Annuity fund rules, V. i. P. i. 341. Coachmakers, (alcutta, V. i, P. iii. 50. Coins, foreign, V. i. P. i. 40. Indian, ditto 38. Colaba political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 58. Collector ; institution of that office, V. ii. P. üi. 92. Collectors; their Salary, V. i. P. i. 289. of Tolls, V. ii. P. ii. 105. Colleges, Agra, V. i. P. iii. 81. ; INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. xi . Dawk bearers in Agra, V. i. P. ii. 110. Bengal, ditto 109. Bombay, ditto 130. Madras, ditto 119. - travelling for military, V. i. P. i. 378. Dehra, road from, to Landour, V. ii. P. i. 122. Meerut ditto 123. Moradabad ditto 123. Mussooree ditto 124, Sebarunpoor ditto 121. Simla ditto 125. Sabathoo ditto 126,127. to, from Almorah, ditto 61. Delhi Colleges, V. i. P. iii. 88. Political agency, V. ii. P. ii, 59. Road from, to Alwur, v. ii. P. i. 128. Hansee, ditto 128. Kurpaul, ditto 22. Meerut, ditto 129. Mhow, ditto 129. Muttra, ditto 132. Neemuch, V. ii. P. i. 132. Nusseerabad, ditto 133. to, from Allyghur, ditto 22, 27. Bareilly, ditto 82. Calcutta, ditto 26. weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 59. Dentists in Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 54. Depots for the H. Company, V. ii. P. ii. 10. Deputation Allowance ; Rules, V. i. P. i. 260, 291, 313. - political ; allowance for tentage, V. i. P. i. 313. Deputy Collector, Special, V. ii. P. iii. 93. Uncovenanted, V. ii. P. iii. 95. Desertion acts, V. i. P. i. 142, 161, 217. Detaclıment Staff; Orders, V. i. P. i. 365. Deyrah Dhoon, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 59. v. Dehra. Diamond Harbour, road to, from Calcutta, V. ii. P. i. 141. Dinajepoor School, V. i. P. iii. 89. Weights, V. i. P. i. 60. Dinapoor, road from, to Ghazeepoor, V. ii. P. i. 133. Goruck poor, ditto 134. Hazareebaugh, ditto 134. Jumalpoor, ditto 135. Kathmandoo, ditto 135. Muilye, ditto 137. Purneah, ditto 137. Sheerghotty, ditto 138. to, from Berhampoor, ditto 94. Chunar, ditto 116. Diocesan Committee, V. i, P. j. 136, Directors, Court of. V. i. P. iii. 14. Dispensary of the H. Company; assists. V. i. P. iii. 165. Disputes on public service, v. I. P. i. 310. District Charitable Society, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 131. Doab, statistical list of its districts, V. ii. P. i. 458. Docking Company, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 34. Dog, note on the saliva of rabid, V. P. i. 88. Druggists, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 50. Dum-Dum, road to, from Barrack poor, V ii. P. i. 90. Durrung, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 252. INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. Foreign ministers in England, V. ii. P. ii. 4. Fort St. George, Staff, &c. V. ii. P. ii. 220. William, road to, from Barrackpoor, V. ii. P. i. 90. Dacca, ditto 121. France, exchange with, V. i. P. i. 40. Free School, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 106. Freight for Treasure, V. i. P. ii. 14. French Settlements in India ; their Governments, V. ii. P. ii. 12. Frontier, North-East ; political agency, V. ii. P. ii, 63. ---, South West; ditto ditto 64. of Turkistan, ditto ditto 64. Fund, Civil ; rules, V. i. P. i. 314, V. ii. P. iii. 78. Annuity, V. ii. P. iii. 78. Office, V, i. P. iii. 160. Bengal Medical retiring; rules, V. ii. P. iii. 78. ; report. V. i. P. i. 454. Military ; its state in 1840, V. i. P. i. 402. , un covenanted family pension, V. ii. P. iii. 78. Medical, Military, &c. Fureedpoor, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 252. Furlough to Pilot service, V. i. P. ii. 15. v. Leave of absence. Furruckabad, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 59. receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 262. school, V. i. P. iii. 90. weights, V. i. P. i. 60. Futtebghur, road from, to Lucknow, V. ii. P. i. 141. Meerut. ditto 142. Mynpooree, , ditto 143. -, Seetapoor, ditto 143. Shabjehanpoor, ditto 143. to, from Bareilly, ditto 83. , Calpee, ditto 105, Cawnpoor, ditto 112. Etawah, ditto 138. Futtehpoor, receipts and disbursements V. i. P. ii. 262. GANJA ; act regulating the sale of V. i. P. i. 203. Ganjam, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 59. road to, from Cuttack, V. ii. P. i. 117. Gardener's calendar, V. i. P. i. 90. Gazetting Military-Civil, V. i. P. i. 312, General Assembly's Institution, Calcutta, V. i. P. iij. 103. department; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 151. Staff, V. ii. P. ii. 132, 143. v. Staff. Treasury ; its establishment, V. ii. P. iii. 76. office ; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 160. Geographical discoveries, V. ii. P. i. 12. Ghazeepoor, road from, to Goruck poor, V. ii. P. i. 144. Hazareebaugh, ditto 144. Juan poor, ditto 145. Mullye, ditto 145. Ghazeepoor, road to, from Azimghur, V. ii. P. i. 66. Benares, ditto Dinapoor, ditto 133. school, V. i. P. iii. 90. - weights and measures, V. i, P. i. 61. Ghorabaree, abstract of imports and exports, V. ii. P. ii. 143. Gokool Chuppra, note on, V. ii. P. i. 368. Goomsoor, v. Gumsoor. Goonah, road from, to Mhow, V. ii. P. i. 146. Neemuch, ditto 147. 9 91. INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. XXV QUARTER MASTER General's department, V. ii. P. ii. 134. assistants, V. i. P. ii. 164. QUEEN'S The, regiments serving in India, V. ii. P. ii. 77. Quetta, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 61. RAJGUR, note on, V. ii. P. i. 369. Rajpootana, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 62. -, on the removal of images in, V. ii. P. i. 312. Rajshye, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 260. weights, V. i. P. i. 64. Ramghur light infantry battalion, V. ii. P. ii. 250. Ramree School, V. i, P. iii. 91. Rank rules V. i. P. i. 292. Rates of commercial agency in Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 3. store rent in the Bonded Ware-house, ditto 5. Recruiting officers for the H. Company V. ii. P. ii. 10. Regiments attached to the Bengal service, ditto 77. Registers and deputy registers in Sudder Dewannee Courts ; list of, V. ii. P. iii. 129. Registry of vessels, V. i. P. i. 178, 195. Rejoining, note on the subject, ditio 229. Religious edifices, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii, 115. Remittances from or to government; note on, V. i. P. i. 35. Rent of office, ditto 313. Requests, court of; assistants, V. i. P. iii. 167. military, V. i. P. i. 176. Resht on the Caspian Sea, V. ii. P. i. 269. Residents in Calcutta, V. i. P. ii. 179. the Mofussil, ditto, 170. Revenue department; its institution, V. ii. P. ii. 54. list of members, ditto 127. assistants, V. i. P. iii. 151. commissioners of, V. ii. P. iii. 135. rule for commissions of, ditto 82. Sudder Board of, ditto 68. members, ditto 130. assistants, V. i. P. iij. 15.3. 1 Revenue and Police in the N. W. Provinces ; commissioner of, V. ii. P. iii. 106. Surveyor in the N. W. Provinces, V. ii. P. iii. 114. Rewah, road to, from Banda, V. ii. P. i. 81. Rewaree, road to, from Karnaul, V. ii. P. i. 177. Riding masters in the Company's Service, V. ii. P. ii. 270.* River Insurance Societies, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 43. Road Book of India, V. ii. P. i. 20. department, superintendents, V. ii. P. ii. 137. -, Military ; assistants, V. i. P. ii. 161. Roopur, road to, from Kurnaul, V. ij. P. i. 178. Rope makers, Calcutta, V. i. P. jii. 53. Royal family of Great Britain. V. ii. P. ii, 2. Rum, act prohibiting its importation, V. i. P. j. 210. Rungpoor, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 260. weights and measures, V. i. P. i. 64. ia Assam, road to, from Bishnath, V. ii. P. i. 101. in Bengal, road to, from Berhampoor, V. ii. P. i. 98. Bishnath, ditto 102. Russia ; its communications with Persia, V. ii. P. i. 267. SABAT800, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 62. ---, road from, to Malown, V. ii. P. i. 231. to, from Dehra, ditto 126, 127. Kurnaul, ditto 179. INDEX TO THE SECOND SERIES. xxvii 1:1 2 9 92. 93. 9 253.* School, Free, Calcutta, ditto 106. Furruckabad, ditto 90. Ghazeepoor, ditto 90, Goruckpoor, ditto 91. Gowhatty, ditto 90. Jessore, ditto 91. Jubbulpoor, ditto 92. Meerut, ditto Midnapoor, ditto Moulmein, ditto 92. Orphan, Calcutta, ditto 105. Patna, ditto 93. Ramree, ditto 94. Saint James', Calcutta, ditto 111. Saugor, ditto 94. Union, Calcutta, ditto 113. v. Colleges, Institutions. Society, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 140. Book Society, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 124. Scientific Societies, Calcutta. V. i. P. iii, 122. Scinde, lower, note on the political agency in, V. ii. P. iii. 141. irregular horse, V. ii. P. ii. 75. political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 62. v. Indus. Scindhia terrritory, statistical account of, V. ii. P. i. 371. Seamen's Friend Society, V. i. P. ii. 139. Hospital, Howrah, V. i. P. ii. 131. Sebundy corps, V. ii. P. ii. 174. Assam, V. ii. P. ii. 253.* Nerbudda, ditto Secret department; list of members, V. iii P. iii. 125. assistants, V. i. P. iii. 150. Secretariat to Government ; its institution, V. ii. P. jii. 51. Secretary, Chief; his duties, V. ii. P. iii. 52. Secretaries in the different departments, V. ii. P. iii. 125. Secrora, road from, to Sultanpoor, V. ii. P. i. 225. to, from Azimghur, ditto 68. Goruckpoor, ditto 153. Lucknow, ditto 189. Seetapoor, ditto 225. See of Calcutta; members, V. ii. P. ii. 271.* Seebpoor, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 62. Seeonee, political agency, V. ii. P. ii. 62. Seetapoor, road from, to Secrora, V. ii. P. i. 225. Shahjehanpoor, ditto 226. to, from Bareilly, ditto 86. Futtehghur, ditto 143. Lucknow. ditto 190. Segar manufacturers, Calcutta, V. i. P. üi. 53. Seharunpoor, v. Saharunpoor. Sehora, road to, from Jogehi, V. ii. P. i. 247. l'anda, ditto 241, 247. Saugor, ditto 225. Seminary, Oriental, Calcutta, V. i. P. iii. 113.—v. Schools. Seminaries in Calcutta, V. i, P. iii. 53. Seronge, note on, V. ii. P. i. 368. Serpents, note on their poison, V.I. P. i. 88. Service, public, private disputes on, V. i, P. i. 310 Session judge ; his duties and office, V. ii. P, iji. 89. Settlement officer in the N. W, Prov. V. ii. P. iii. 117. Shahabad, receipts and disbursements, V. i. P. ii. 261. weights and measures, V, i. P. i. 65,