Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable Sir |
Harry Charles Luke | |
Order: | Acting |
Office: | High Commissioner for Palestine |
Term Start: | 31 July 1928 |
Term End: | 6 December 1928 |
Predecessor: | Herbert Onslow Plumer |
Successor: | John Chancellor |
Order1: | 14th |
Office1: | High Commissioner for the Western Pacific |
Term Start1: | 16 September 1938 |
Term End1: | 20 July 1942 |
Monarch1: | George VI |
Predecessor1: | Arthur Richards |
Successor1: | Philip Euen Mitchell |
Order2: | 15th |
Office2: | Governor of Fiji |
Term Start2: | 16 September 1938 |
Term End2: | 20 July 1942 |
Monarch2: | George VI |
Predecessor2: | Arthur Richards |
Successor2: | Philip Euen Mitchell |
Birth Date: | 4 December 1884 |
Birth Place: | London |
Death Place: | Cyprus |
Restingplace: | Conventual church of the Order of St John of Jerusalem in Clerkenwell, London. |
Birthname: | Harry Charles Lukach |
Nationality: | British |
Relations: | Peter Luke (son) |
Children: | 2 sons |
Alma Mater: | Trinity College, Oxford |
Occupation: | Naval officer, author, colonial administrator |
Battles: | World War I |
Sir Harry Charles Luke (born Harry Charles Lukach; 4 December 1884 – 11 May 1969[1]) was an official in the British Colonial Office. He served in Barbados, Cyprus, Transcaucasia, Sierra Leone, Palestine, Malta, the British Western Pacific Territories and Fiji. He is the author of some books on several of these countries.
Luke was born in London in 1884. His father, J.H. Luke (né Lukács)[2] was an Austro-Hungarian, but later acquired American citizenship; his mother was a Polish Catholic of the minor nobility. Luke was educated at Eton College and at Trinity College, Oxford, of which he became an Honorary Fellow in 1952, and converted to Anglicanism.
Luke's first official appointment was as private secretary in Sierra Leone in 1908. He became aide-de-camp the following year, and briefly acted as Colonial Secretary for a few months. In 1911 he moved to Barbados to become private secretary to the Governor.[3] He subsequently served as private secretary to the High Commissioner of Cyprus (1911–1912) and as commissioner of Famagusta (1918–1920). From 1909 to 1911 he was also a second lieutenant in the London Yeomanry.
During World War I, Luke served as Commander of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on the Syrian Coast, and as a Political Officer on the staff of Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss; for his services he was awarded the Italian Silver Medal of Military Valor.
In 1919 Luke was appointed Political Officer to the Admiral of the Fleet, Sir John de Robeck. In 1920 he spent six months (from April to September) as British Chief Commissioner in Transcaucasia (Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan).
In 1921, he was assistant Governor of Jerusalem and was appointed a member of the Haycraft Commission, which was established by Sir Herbert Samuel to investigate the cause of the riot which started in Jaffa on 1 May that year, and into the affairs of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem.[4]
From 1924 to 1928 Luke held the post of Colonial Secretary of Sierra Leone. He was subsequently appointed to be the acting High Commissioner to the Government of Palestine. He assumed this position on 19 July 1928 and held it until 6 December 1928.
In August 1929, acting as deputy to Sir John Robert Chancellor, Luke attempted to mediate an agreement between Jewish and Arab leaders, without success. Later he was Lieutenant Governor of Malta (1930–1938) and Governor of Fiji and High Commissioner of the British Western Pacific Territories from 1938 to 1942. He left Fiji on 20 July 1942.[5]
On his retirement from the Colonial Service in 1943, Luke served for three years as chief representative of the British Council in the Caribbean. He died in Cyprus, where he often spent the winter, on 11 May 1969.
A Freemason of the United Grand Lodge of England, in 1919–1920 he served as the 28th First Principal of the St. Paul's Royal Arch Chapter N. 2277 E. C. in Cyprus.[6] [7]
In 1918 Luke married Joyce Evelyn Fremlin, the daughter of Henry James Leigh Fremlin and his wife, Maud Evelyn Deane (divorced 1949). They had two sons, Peter Ambrose Cyprian Luke, born in 1919, and Michael Charles Deane Luke, born in 1925.[8]
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