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Auction archive: Lot number 7

The Ron Penhall Collection The Indian

Estimate
£1,800 - £2,200
ca. US$3,394 - US$4,148
Price realised:
£3,500
ca. US$6,600
Auction archive: Lot number 7

The Ron Penhall Collection The Indian

Estimate
£1,800 - £2,200
ca. US$3,394 - US$4,148
Price realised:
£3,500
ca. US$6,600
Beschreibung:

The Ron Penhall Collection The Indian Mutiny C.B. pair awarded to Colonel J. W. Osborne, late Indian Army, who in his capacity as political agent at Rewah was responsible for raising a force that prevented the mutineers’ cutting our communications between Calcutta and Bombay - ‘it is not too much to say that he contributed more than almost any officer of his rank to the preservation of the Empire’: twice wounded in these operations, his life was saved on the second occasion by Private Henry Addison, 43rd Regiment, who was awarded the V.C. The Most Honourable Order of The Bath, C.B. (Civil) Companion’s breast badge, gold, hallmarks for London 1857-58, complete with gold swivel-ring suspension and riband buckle; Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Central India (Captn. Willoughby Osborne, C.B., Rewah), this last with contact marks, otherwise generally very fine or better (2) £1800-2200 Footnote C.B. London Gazette 18 May 1860. John Willoughby Osborne was born in Madras in October 1833, the son of an officer serving in the19th Madras Native Infantry. Recommended for a cadetship in the H.E.I.C’s forces by Sir Henry Willcock, he gained appointment as an Ensign in his father’s old regiment in April 1850, but transferred to the 24th Native Infantry later that year. Advanced to Lieutenant in November 1856, shortly after having been placed ‘at the disposal of the Government of India for civil employment’, he was appointed Political Agent to the Court of the Maharajah of Rewah in July 1857. And, as the historian T. R. E. Holmes would have it, he was more than capable of facing the challenges ahead: ‘He was a noble type of the rough and ready soldier-statesman of the old East India Company, zealous, brave, clear-headed and self-reliant. He saw that upon his keeping a firm grasp of Rewah depended not only the conduct of the wavering chiefs of Bundlecund, but what was even more important, the security of the line of communication between Calcutta and Central India, the Deccan and Bombay; and, though his resources seemed wretchedly inadequate, he applied himself cheerfully and confidently to his task.’ The severity of Osborne’s predicament at Rewah is well illustrated by the following extract taken from The Times of 30 November 1857, the report stemming from information received from Calcutta in the previous month: ‘The Rewah Rajah, it is reported, though still faithful, has fled from his palace to some fort. The Political Agent, Lieutenant Osborne, is therefore left alone. His position and conduct are an excellent illustration of the scenes taking place all over India. He is a young Madras officer, and till this outbreak but little known by anyone. He is now living in Rewah in a tent without a single companion, without a friend within a hundred miles. He is so ill with a liver complaint that he cannot lie down, taking rest only in a chair. He has no guard, no soldiers, sentries or reliable servants. Every day the soldiery surround his tent, threatening to put him to death by torture. He admits their power, but tells them that he can take at least six of their lives before he dies. And so, day by day, there he lives, sick almost until death, all alone, and with murderers all round, confident only that his duty is to remain at his post, and that God is above him still. It is not such much men as these that Sepoys can subdue. So magical, indeed, is the influence of character, that to this moment Lieutenant Osborne, the sole European alive in Rewah, is felt by the natives to be at least a match for the regiment around him. To this hour, therefore, they are willing, when not stopped by force, to convey his messages and obey his commands ... ’ A similar picture is painted by T. R. E. Holmes, although when the crisis came, he appears to have enlisted some form of local support: ‘It was announced that the 50th at Nagode and the 52nd at Jubbulpore had mutinied. The news stimulated the rebellious passions of the disaffected at Rewah. They openly talked

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
22 Sep 2006
Auction house:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
United Kingdom
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
Beschreibung:

The Ron Penhall Collection The Indian Mutiny C.B. pair awarded to Colonel J. W. Osborne, late Indian Army, who in his capacity as political agent at Rewah was responsible for raising a force that prevented the mutineers’ cutting our communications between Calcutta and Bombay - ‘it is not too much to say that he contributed more than almost any officer of his rank to the preservation of the Empire’: twice wounded in these operations, his life was saved on the second occasion by Private Henry Addison, 43rd Regiment, who was awarded the V.C. The Most Honourable Order of The Bath, C.B. (Civil) Companion’s breast badge, gold, hallmarks for London 1857-58, complete with gold swivel-ring suspension and riband buckle; Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Central India (Captn. Willoughby Osborne, C.B., Rewah), this last with contact marks, otherwise generally very fine or better (2) £1800-2200 Footnote C.B. London Gazette 18 May 1860. John Willoughby Osborne was born in Madras in October 1833, the son of an officer serving in the19th Madras Native Infantry. Recommended for a cadetship in the H.E.I.C’s forces by Sir Henry Willcock, he gained appointment as an Ensign in his father’s old regiment in April 1850, but transferred to the 24th Native Infantry later that year. Advanced to Lieutenant in November 1856, shortly after having been placed ‘at the disposal of the Government of India for civil employment’, he was appointed Political Agent to the Court of the Maharajah of Rewah in July 1857. And, as the historian T. R. E. Holmes would have it, he was more than capable of facing the challenges ahead: ‘He was a noble type of the rough and ready soldier-statesman of the old East India Company, zealous, brave, clear-headed and self-reliant. He saw that upon his keeping a firm grasp of Rewah depended not only the conduct of the wavering chiefs of Bundlecund, but what was even more important, the security of the line of communication between Calcutta and Central India, the Deccan and Bombay; and, though his resources seemed wretchedly inadequate, he applied himself cheerfully and confidently to his task.’ The severity of Osborne’s predicament at Rewah is well illustrated by the following extract taken from The Times of 30 November 1857, the report stemming from information received from Calcutta in the previous month: ‘The Rewah Rajah, it is reported, though still faithful, has fled from his palace to some fort. The Political Agent, Lieutenant Osborne, is therefore left alone. His position and conduct are an excellent illustration of the scenes taking place all over India. He is a young Madras officer, and till this outbreak but little known by anyone. He is now living in Rewah in a tent without a single companion, without a friend within a hundred miles. He is so ill with a liver complaint that he cannot lie down, taking rest only in a chair. He has no guard, no soldiers, sentries or reliable servants. Every day the soldiery surround his tent, threatening to put him to death by torture. He admits their power, but tells them that he can take at least six of their lives before he dies. And so, day by day, there he lives, sick almost until death, all alone, and with murderers all round, confident only that his duty is to remain at his post, and that God is above him still. It is not such much men as these that Sepoys can subdue. So magical, indeed, is the influence of character, that to this moment Lieutenant Osborne, the sole European alive in Rewah, is felt by the natives to be at least a match for the regiment around him. To this hour, therefore, they are willing, when not stopped by force, to convey his messages and obey his commands ... ’ A similar picture is painted by T. R. E. Holmes, although when the crisis came, he appears to have enlisted some form of local support: ‘It was announced that the 50th at Nagode and the 52nd at Jubbulpore had mutinied. The news stimulated the rebellious passions of the disaffected at Rewah. They openly talked

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
22 Sep 2006
Auction house:
Dix Noonan Webb
16 Bolton St, Mayfair
London, W1J 8BQ
United Kingdom
auctions@dnw.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7016 1700
+44 (0)20 7016 1799
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