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Henry Ramsay (Indian Army officer)

General Sir
Henry Ramsay
KCSI CB
SirHenryRamsay.JPG
Born 1816
Died 16 December 1893
Allegiance  United Kingdom
Service/branch Bengal Army
 British Indian Army
Rank General
Awards Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India
Companion of the Order of the Bath

General the Hon. Sir Henry Ramsay KCSI CB (1816 – 16 December 1893) was a British general in the Indian Army, who served as Commissioner of the Kumaon and Garwhal districts. He is regarded as one of the great soldier-administrators of British India and was dubbed "The King of Kumaon."

Ramsay was the son of Lieutenant-General the Hon. John Ramsey, fourth son of George Ramsay, 8th Earl of Dalhousie, and Mary Delise. His elder brother George was an admiral in the Royal Navy. Upon the death of his cousin, Fox Maule-Ramsay, 11th Earl of Dalhousie without issue in 1874, Queen Victoria issued a special allowance to allow Henry and his siblings the style and precedence as if their father had still been alive to inherit the earldom. Thus he was styled as The Honourable Henry Ramsey from 1874.

In 1840, Ramsay was appointed Assistant Commissioner of Kumaon, when a colonel in the Bengal Army. Ramsay was amongst the most able of the British officials posted to the Kumaon district, and came to enjoy the respect and support of the people. His modest and genial approach ensured the region remained loyal to the British. In 1856 Ramsay became Commissioner and worked another 28 years in the Garhwal and Kumaon.

The Commissioner was based in Almora, but moved the administration 23 km to the cooler Binsar during the summer. In 1866, Ramsay bought land measuring about 26 acres (110,000 m2) at Binsar from Sri Jai Sah of Almora. It was known as Binsar Estate, situated in Pargana Baramandal District, Almora (formerly called Kumaon District), now a heritage property named Grand Oak Manor. Here he built his residential bungalow having a ball room, a private chapel and staff quarters from which he used to administer the region. The civil and criminal courts were also held here. He also bought another property near Binsar known as ‘Khali’, meaning empty, where a bungalow was built along with orchards though he never lived there. Khali is now a resort. After retiring in 1884, Ramsay had hoped to live in Binsar, but had to return to England. In the 1930s Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru’s sister lived in the house at Khali.


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