Sir John Francis Davis | |||||||
Honorific Suffix: | Bt KCB | ||||||
Order: | 2nd | ||||||
Office: | Governor of Hong Kong | ||||||
Lieutenant: | Sir George D'Aguilar William Staveley | ||||||
Term Start: | 8 May 1844 | ||||||
Term End: | 21 March 1848 | ||||||
Predecessor: | Sir Henry Pottinger | ||||||
Successor: | Sir George Bonham | ||||||
Office2: | Chief Superintendent of British Trade in China | ||||||
Term Start2: | 8 May 1844 | ||||||
Term End2: | 21 March 1848 | ||||||
Predecessor2: | Sir Henry Pottinger | ||||||
Successor2: | Sir George Bonham | ||||||
Term Start3: | 11 October 1834 | ||||||
Term End3: | 19 January 1835 | ||||||
Predecessor3: | Lord Napier | ||||||
Successor3: | Sir George Robinson | ||||||
Birth Date: | 1795 7, df=yes | ||||||
Birth Place: | London, England | ||||||
Death Place: | Henbury, United Kingdom | ||||||
Restingplace: | All Saints Church, Compton Greenfield, England | ||||||
Spouse: | Emily Humfrays (1822–1866) Lucy Locke (1867–1890) | ||||||
Children: | 6 daughters, 2 sons | ||||||
Module: |
|
Sir John Francis Davis, 1st Baronet (16 July 179513 November 1890) was a British diplomat and sinologist who served as second Governor of Hong Kong from 1844 to 1848. Davis was the first President of Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong.
Davis was the eldest son of East India Company director and amateur artist Samuel Davis while his mother was Henrietta Boileau, member of a refugee French noble family who had come to England in the early eighteenth century from Languedoc in the south of France.[1]
In 1813, Davis was appointed writer at the East India Company's factory in Canton (now Guangzhou), China, at the time the centre of trade with China. Having demonstrated the depth of his learning in the Chinese language in his translation of The Three Dedicated Rooms ("San-Yu-Low") in 1815,[2] he was chosen to accompany Lord Amherst on his embassy to Peking in 1816.
On the mission's return Davis returned to his duties at the Canton factory, and was promoted to president in 1832. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society the same year.[3]
Davis was appointed Second Superintendent of British Trade in China alongside Lord Napier in December 1833, superseding William Henry Chicheley Plowden in the latter's absence.[4] After Napier's death in 1834, Davis became Chief Superintendent then resigned his position in January 1835, to be replaced by Sir George Robinson.[5] Davis left Canton aboard the Asia on 12January.[6]
In 1839, Davis purchased the Regency mansion Holly House, near Henbury, Bristol, where he built an observatory tower built housing a clock installed by Edward John Dent, who would later be responsible for building Big Ben. It remained the Davis family home for seven decades thereafter.[7]
Having arrived from Bombay on HMS Spiteful on 7 May 1844, he was appointed governor and commander-in-chief of Hong Kong the next day.[8] During his tenure, Davis was unpopular with Hong Kong residents and British merchants due to the imposition of various taxes, which increased the burden of all citizens, and his abrasive treatment of his subordinates. Davis organised the first Hong Kong Census in 1844,[9] which recorded that there were 23,988 people living in Hong Kong.
In the same year, Davis exhorted China to abandon the prohibition on opium trade, on the basis of its counter productiveness, relating that, in England,
... the system of prohibitions and high duties ... only increased the extent of smuggling, together with crimes of violence, while they diminished the revenue; until it was a length found that the fruitless expense of a large preventive force absorbed much of the amount of duty that could be collected, while prohibited articles were consumed more than ever.[10]
Weekend horse racing began during his tenure, which gradually evolved into a Hong Kong institution. Davis founded the China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1847[11] and he was its first president.
Davis left office on 21March 1848, ending unrelenting tensions with local British merchants who saw him as a stingy, arrogant and obstinate snob. His early decision to exclude all but government officials from the Executive and Legislative Councils on the basis that "almost every person possessed of Capital, who is not connected with Government Employment, is employed in the Opium trade" could not have made co-operation any easier. He departed the colony on 30 March via the P&O steamer Pekin.[12] He returned to England, where he rejoined Emily, who had stayed there throughout his governorship.[13]
Davis married Emily, the daughter of Lieutenant Colonel Humfrays of the Bengal Engineers in 1822. They had one son and six daughters:[14]
In 1867, a year after the death of his wife Emily, Davis married Lucy Ellen, eldest daughter of Reverend T. J. Locke, vicar of Exmouth, in 1867. A son, Francis Boileau, was born in 1871.[16]
He was a created a baronet on 9 July 1845 and appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) on 12 June 1854. Having retired from government, Davis engaged in literary pursuits. In 1876, he became a Doctor of Civil Law of the University of Oxford after a donation of £1,666 in three per cent consol bonds to endow a scholarship in his name for the encouragement of the study of Chinese.[17]
Davis died on 13November 1890 at his residence, Hollywood House in the Bristol suburb of Henbury, England at the age of 95 and was interred in the graveyard of Compton Greenfield Church on 18 November.[18] As his surviving son Francis Boileau left no surviving male heirs, the Davis baronetcy died with him.
In 1829, Davis, a member of the Royal Asiatic Society,[19] translated the 17th-century Chinese novel Haoqiu zhuan under the title The Fortunate Union.[20] This was translated into French by Guillard D'Arcy in 1842.[19]
Davis also wrote an account of the events surrounding the attack on his father's house in Benares, India, in Vizier Ali Khan or The Massacre of Benares, A Chapter in British Indian History, published in London in 1871.
Other works include: