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| birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name -->Walter Henry Medhurst
| birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name -->Walter Henry Medhurst
| birth_date = 1822 <!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} for living people - supply only the year unless the exact date is already widely published, as per WP:DOB. For people that have died, use {{Birth date|YYYY|MM|DD}}. -->
| birth_date = 1822 <!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} for living people - supply only the year unless the exact date is already widely published, as per WP:DOB. For people that have died, use {{Birth date|YYYY|MM|DD}}. -->
| birth_place = [[Batavia, Dutch East Indies]](modern day [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]])
| birth_place = [[Batavia, Dutch East Indies]] (modern day [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]])
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->1885
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->1885
| death_place = [[Torquay]], [[United Kingdom]]
| death_place = [[Torquay]], [[United Kingdom]]

Latest revision as of 02:21, 26 December 2023

Walter Henry Medhurst
Born
Walter Henry Medhurst

1822
Died1885
NationalityBritish

Sir Walter Henry Medhurst (1822–1885) was a British diplomat in China.

Being the son of the prominent British missionary Walter Henry Medhurst, the younger Medhurst was educated at Blundell's School and in Macau. There he acquired a good command of Chinese, Dutch and Malay. In October 1840, he was appointed Chinese secretary to the British superintendent of trade in China. He was sent along with other to inspect the newly-acquired colony of British Hong Kong in early 1841.[1] During the Opium War, he worked under Rear-Admiral George Elliot and Sir Henry Pottinger.

In the following years, he held a number of important consular positions in Chinese treaty ports such as Fuzhou, Shanghai (as H.M. Consul), Hangzhou and Hankou. Medhurst distinguished himself as a prominent advocate of gunboat diplomacy to defend what he considered to be British interests in China.

Medhurst married three times, his third wife being Juliana Tryphena Burningham (1836-1881) whose son Walter Nowell Medhurst died of poisoning on Guernsey in 1880, at 17 years of age.[2]

In 1868, Rutherford Alcock sent him to resolve the Yangzhou riot. He was criticized in Britain for his efforts.

Medhurst retired from consular service on 1 January 1877 and was knighted on 20 March the same year.[3]: 369 [1] In 1881, he took part in founding the British North Borneo Company and subsequently organized coolie trade to Borneo on behalf of the company, having moved back to Hong Kong in 1882, residing there for 18 months.[1]

He moved back to England in 1884,[1] and died at Torquay on 26 December 1885, leaving another son and at least two daughters.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d  "Medhurst, Walter Henry (1822-1885)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  2. ^ a b "The mystery of the pupil and the poison". Guernsey Press. 18 December 2004. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  3. ^ Shaw, William Arthur (1906). The Knights of England. A complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England, Scotland, and Ireland, and of knights bachelors, incorporating a complete list of knights bachelors dubbed in Ireland.

Sources

[edit]
  • C. A. Harris, "Medhurst, Sir Walter Henry (1822–1885)," rev. T. G. Otte, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2007, accessed 3 Aug 2007.
  • F.J Snell, "The chronicles of Twyford, being a new and popular history of the town of Tiverton in Devonshire: with some account of Blundell's School founded A.D. 1604", Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co, Limited, 1892.