Thomas Bunbury (British Army general)

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Sir Thomas Bunbury, KH (1783–1857) was a British soldier and colonialist.

Career

Thomas was born in

8th West India Regiment
. He served in the West Indies from 1804 to 1808 by which time he had become a captain. He transferred to the 54th and then returned to Europe to participate in the Peninsular War. In April 1814 he attained the rank of major and was sent to America to serve with thein the Glengarry Light Infantry. In January 1827 he was dispatched to Portugal for 16 months.

He went on to serve first as Governor of

St Lucia (1837–1838). Responsible for running the colony following the emancipation of the enslaved Africans, he remarked "in no island I have visited, is there a more decided warfare carried on in local politics than here."[1] He retired as a major-general and settled down in Kingston, Jamaica
.

Family life

He married Jane Pearse on 3 February 1811, with whom he had four children:

  • Thomas Charles Bunbury (1812–1894) born in Cork, served in the
    60th Rifles
  • Stonehouse George Bunbury (1818–1880), born in Cork, also joined the 60th Rifles and subsequently served with the 67th in Jamaica where he married Georgina Vidal daughter of John Gale Vidal, a prominent Jamaican solicitor.
  • Harry Bunbury (born 1819) also served with the 60th Rifles
  • Catherine Bunbury, (1815–1838)

References

  1. ^ "Governing Without Consent: Political Resistance in St Lucia and the Emergence of the Social Improvement Association 1838-1848", St Lucia Country Conference Pre-Prints, University of the West Indies, 2005, retrieved 5 April 2012

External links