H. E. M. James Explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
Birth Name:Henry Evan Murchison James
Office:Commissioner in Sind
Term Start:1891
Term End:1900
Predecessor:Arthur Charles Trevor
Successor:Robert Giles
Birth Date:20 January 1846
Birth Place:Cumberland, England
Death Place:London, England

Sir Henry Evan Murchison James (20 January 1846 – 20 August 1923) was a British civil servant in the Indian Civil Service from 1865 to 1900.[1] [2]

He was the Commissioner in Sind from 1891 to 1900.[3]

Official duties

He formally opened Dayaram Jethmal Sind College on 15 October 1893 in Karachi.[4]

After stepping down as commissioner, he was knighted as a knight commander of the Order of the Indian Empirein the 1901 New Year Honours List.

Travel to China

In 1886–1887, James used a two-year leave to travel to China. Together with two younger Britons, the officer Francis Younghusband and the diplomat Harry English Fulford, he explored Manchuria, travelling through the frontier areas of Chinese settlement in the region and to the Changbai Mountains. He published his travel notes, and a solid dose of background information, in a book, The Long White Mountain, or, A journey in Manchuria.... Over a century later, the factual material contained in a work still served as a major source for the historians of the region.[5]

Named after

The town of Jamesabad in Thar and Parker District of Sind was named after him.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Book: Desmond . Ray . Dictionary Of British And Irish Botantists And Horticulturalists Including plant collectors, flower painters and garden designers . 787 . CRC Press . 978-1-000-16286-8 . 2020 . 4 February 2021 . en.
  2. Book: Addison . Henry Robert . Oakes . Charles Henry . Lawson . William John . Sladen . Douglas Brooke Wheelton . Who's Who: An Annual Biographical Dictionary . 1906 . A. & C. Black . 896 . 4 February 2021 . en.
  3. http://rulers.org/indprov.html Rulers
  4. J.W. Smyth, Gazetteer of the Province of Sind B Vol 1 Karachi District, Government Central Press, Bombay 1919. Reprinted by Pakistan Herald Publications Ltd, Karachi Pg 41
  5. . See numerous citations of Henry James' work throughout this book.