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Claude Martin Wade

Claude Martine Wade
Born (1794-04-03)3 April 1794
Bengal
Died 21 October 1861(1861-10-21) (aged 67)
Bath
Occupation Soldier
Spouse(s) Jane Selina Nicholl
Parent(s) Lt. Col. Joseph Wade and Maria Ross

Colonel Sir Claude Martine Wade CB was Agent to the Governor-General for the Affairs of the Punjab and North-West Frontier, 1823-1840. He managed relations between the British and important rulers in India such as Maharaja Ranjit Singh and Shah Shuja, King of Afghanistan. He was one of the first to "force the Khyber pass."

Claude Martin Wade was born in 1794 to Joseph Wade and his wife in Bengal. He was named after a childless French adventurer and "renaissance man" Claude Martin. The reason for this is not known and Claude died leaving his immense fortune, in the manner of a childless man, to charity.

Wade was appointed a cadet in the Bengal army in 1809 and became an Ensign posted to the Bengal Native Infantry in 1812 He served in Bundelkund in 1812, and in operations in Sindia and Holkar in 1815. He fought in the Third Maratha War between 1817-19. In 1823 he was diplomatic agent at Ludhiana, taking over from a Captain Murray In 1835, Claude was in charge of relations with Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Col. C. M. Wade, was able to win the confidence of Maharaja Ranjit Singh through mutural regard and understanding which greatly helped to change the relations between the two Governments from undisguised hostility to close friendship and accord.

In the 1830s, the British decided to replace Dost Mohammad Khan by Shah Shuja on the Kabul throne. A tripartite Treaty of 1838 was drafted between the British, Shah Shuja and Ranjit Singh. The Lahore ruler signed the treaty on 26 June 1838, but the Governor-General, Lord Auckland, before signing it sent the draft to Shah Shuja at Ludhiana through Macnaughten, Wade and Mackeson. The Shah objected to various articles, but he secured various assurances from the British Government, and on 17 July 1838, the mission left Ludhiana with the signed treaty. Shah Shuja raised his contingent of 6,000 at Ludhiana, and through the combined help of the British and the Sikhs he was placed on his ancestral throne on 7 August 1839.


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