Frank Swettenham

Sir Frank Athelstane Swettenham
GCMG CH

Oil painting of Swettenham by John Singer Sargent
King of Arms of the Order of St Michael and St George
In office
1925–1938
Preceded by Sir Montagu Ommanney
Succeeded by Sir William Weigall
Majority British
Resident-General of the Federated Malay States
In office
1896–1901
Succeeded by William Hood Treacher
Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Straits Settlements
In office
1901–1904
2nd British Resident of Perak
In office
November 1875  March 1876
Preceded by James W.W. Birch
Succeeded by James G. Davidson
5th British Resident of Perak
In office
1889–1896
Preceded by Hugh Low
Succeeded by William Hood Treacher
3rd British Resident of Selangor
In office
September 1882  March 1884
Preceded by Bloomfield Douglas
Succeeded by John Pickersgill Rodger
Personal details
Born (1850-03-28)28 March 1850
Belper, England
Died 11 June 1946(1946-06-11) (aged 96)
London, UK
Spouse(s) Constance Sydney Holmes (Sydney Swettenham), m. February 1878, divorced May 1938
Vera Seton Guthrie, m. 22 June 1939
Residence King's House, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Occupation British colonial official

Sir Frank Athelstane Swettenham GCMG CH (28 March 1850 – 11 June 1946) was a British colonial administrator who became the first Resident general of the Federated Malay States, which brought the Malay states of Selangor, Perak, Negeri Sembilan and Pahang together under the administration of a Resident-General based in Kuala Lumpur. He served from 1 July 1896 to 1901. He was also an amateur painter, photographer and antique collector.

He was born in Belper, Derbyshire, the son of attorney James Oldham Swettenham, [1] and was educated at the Dollar Academy in Scotland and St Peter's School, York.[2] He was a descendant of Mathew Swetenham, Henry IV's bow bearer and the younger brother of the colonial administrator Sir James Alexander Swettenham.

He was one of close to forty former British Empire officials to oppose the Malayan Union.

Swettenham co-authored a "A Dictionary of the Malay Language" with Hugh Clifford. The dictionary, which was published in stages between 1894 and 1902, was abandoned after the letter 'G' as by then it had been made redundant by the publiciation of R.J. Wilkinson's "A Malay English Dictionary".[3]

He also published four books "Malay Sketches", "Unaddressed Letters", "Also & Perhaps" and "Arabella in Africa", the latter being illustrated by the famous mural painter and illustrator, Rex Whistler. The book was Whistler's first official commission.

Career between 1871 and 1901

Sir Frank Swettenham

Swettenham was a British colonial official in British Malaya, who was famous as highly influential in shaping British policy and the structure of British administration in the Malay Peninsula.

In 1871 Swettenham was first sent to Singapore as a cadet in the civil service of the Straits Settlements (Singapore, Malacca, and Penang Island). He learned the Malay language and played a major role as British-Malay intermediary in the events surrounding British intervention in the peninsular Malay states in the 1870s.

He was a member of the Commission for the Pacification of Larut set up following the signing of the Pangkor Treaty of 1874 and he served alongside John Frederick Adolphus McNair, and Chinese Kapitan Chung Keng Quee and Chin Seng Yam. The Commission was successful in freeing many women taken as captives during the Larut Wars (1862–73), getting stockades dismantled and getting the tin mining business going again.

More than a decade later, in 1882, he was appointed as resident (adviser) to the Malay state of Selangor. In Selangor office, the development of coffee and tobacco estates had successfully promoted by him, while in the meantime, helped boost tin earnings by constructing a railway from Kuala Lumpur (it was capital of Selangor at that time), to the port of Klang, which was later named Port Swettenham in his honour.

He attended the federation, along with the title of resident-general after he secured an agreement of federation from the states of Perak, Selangor, Negri Sembilan, and Pahang in 1895, when he was a resident of Perak state. In 1897 he was knighted by Queen Victoria, and in October 1901, three years before his retirement, he was appointed Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Straits Settlements.[4]

Swettenham had long been critical of the influence of Siam in the northern Malay states of Kelantan and Trengganu, which had traditionally recognised the suzerainty of Siam by sending a tribute of a golden flower to the King of Siam every three years. After his appointment as Governor of the Straits Settlements, he attempted to negotiate with Siam for greater British influence over the affairs of these states. Siam reluctantly agreed to appoint British advisors, but only on the condition that they were appointed by Bangkok, not by the Foreign Office as he had hoped. However, the process had been initiated whereby these two states and eventually Kedah would eventually accept British Residents. Swettenham was disappointed in his ultimate goal of bringing the southern Thai region of Patani under British control.[5]

Personal life

While on home leave in England in the summer of 1877, Swettenham met and became engaged to Constance Sydney Holmes (b. 1858), daughter of Cecil Frederick Holmes, a housemaster at Harrow School. They married in England in February 1878 and returned together to Singapore, where the nineteen-year old Sydney Swettenham attempted to come to terms with her new role as the wife of a colonial official. Their marriage, which was strained from the beginning and marked by long periods of separation, lasted until 1938, when Frank Swettenham successfully sued for divorce on the grounds of his wife's insanity.[6]

Swettenham became friends with Gertrude Bell when she visited Singapore in 1903 and maintained a correspondence with her until 1909.[7] They are thought to have had a "brief but passionate affair" with after his retirement to England.[8]

Frank Swettenham remarried at the age of 89, this time to Vera Seton Guthrie (1890–1970), daughter of John Gordon, a successful merchant, and widow of John Neil Guthrie, who had been killed in action in France during World War I.[9]

While in India in 1883 preparing for the Colonial Exhibition in Calcutta, Swettenham met and had a child with an Anglo-Indian woman from Bangalore (known only as Miss Good). To avoid a scandal, the mother of Swettenham's son was married to an English clerk in the Perak civil service, Walter McKnight Young, and his son was raised as Walter Aynsley Young.[10]

Chronology

Perak Cricket Team in 1895 including Swettenham (middle row, 2nd left) and Col. Robert Sandilands Frowd Walker (Middle row, centre)
A statue of Swettenham within the compound of Muzium Negara at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Legacy

A number of places and roads in Malaysia and Singapore were named after Swettenham, including Swettenham Pier in George Town, Penang Island[11][12] and Swettenham Road (near the Botanic Gardens) in Singapore.

Before 1972, Port Klang in Selangor was known as Port Swettenham.

Publication

See also

Corresp: Actions of Perak Expeditionary Force post-murder of Birch

References

  1. Frank Swettenham at biography.com
  2. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene. p. 4.
  3. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene. p. 477.
  4. "No. 27360". The London Gazette. 1 October 1901. p. 6395.
  5. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). "Chapter 39 The Problem of Siam: Reality of Failure". Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene.
  6. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene. p. 186.
  7. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene. pp. 654–5.
  8. Barlow, Henry S. (1997). "Malaysia: Swettenham's Legacy". Asian Affairs. 28 (3): 333.
  9. Barlow, Henry S. (1995). Swettenham. Kuala Lumpur: Southdene. p. 721.
  10. Williams, Stephanie (2011). Running the Show: the extraordinary stories of the men who governed the British Empire. London: Penguin. p. 254.
  11. Wright, Arnold; Cartwright, H. A. (1908). Twentieth Century Impressions of British Malaya: Its History, People, Commerce, Industries, and Resources. Lloyd Greater Britain Publishing. p. 730.
  12. "Swettenham Pier". Penang Global Tourism.
  13. Cambridge University Library 2003: from , dated 10 May 2004.
Heraldic offices
Preceded by
Sir Montagu Ommanney
King of Arms of the
Order of St Michael and St George

1925–1938
Succeeded by
Sir William Weigall
Political offices
Preceded by
James W. W. Birch
British Resident of Perak
1875–1876
Succeeded by
James G. Davidson
Preceded by
Hugh Low
British Resident of Perak
1889–1896
Succeeded by
William H. Treacher
Preceded by
William Bloomfield Douglas
British Resident of Selangor
1882–1884
Succeeded by
John Pickersgill Rodger
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