| 1811. | Born at Richmond, Yorkshire, March 4. |
| 1823. | School at Londonderry. |
| 1827. | Haileybury I.C.S. College. |
| 1829. | Goes out to India as a member of Civil Service. |
| 1831. | Delhi. |
| 1834. | Pānīpat. |
| 1836. | Etāwa. |
| 1840-2. | Furlough and marriage to Harriette Hamilton. |
| 1844. | Collector and Magistrate of Delhi and Pānīpat. |
| 1845. | First Sikh War. |
| 1846. | Governor of Jālandhar Doāb. |
| 1848. | Second Sikh War. |
| 1849. | Lord Dalhousie annexes Punjab. Henry and John Lawrence members of Punjab Board. |
| 1852-3. | New Constitution. John Lawrence, Chief Commissioner of Punjab. |
| 1856. | Oudh annexed. Henry Lawrence first Governor. |
| 1857. | Indian Mutiny. Death of Henry Lawrence at Lucknow (July). Punjab secured. Delhi retaken (September). |
| 1858-9. | Baronetcy; G.C.B. Return to England. |
| 1864. | Governor-General of India. Irrigation. Famine relief. |
| 1869. | Return to England. Peerage. |
| 1870. | Chairman of London School Board. |
| 1876. | Failure of eyesight. |
| 1879. | Death in London, June 27. |
JOHN LAWRENCE
Indian Administrator
The north of Ireland and its Scoto-Irish stock has given birth to some of the toughest human material that our British Isles have produced. Of this stock was John Wesley, who at the age of eighty-five attributed his good health to rising every day at four and preaching every day at five. Of this was Arthur Wellesley, who never knew defeat and 'never lost a British gun'. Of this was Alexander Lawrence, sole survivor among the officers of the storming party at Seringapatam, who lived to rear seven stout sons, five of whom went out to service in India, two at least to win imperishable fame. His wife, a Miss Knox, came also from across the sea; and, if the evidence fails to prove Mr. Bosworth Smith's statement that she was akin to the great Reformer, she herself was a woman of strong character and great administrative talent. When we remember John Lawrence's parentage, we need not be surprised at the character which he bore, nor at the evidence of it to be seen in the grand rugged features portrayed by Watts in the picture in the National Portrait Gallery.
lord lawrence
From the painting by G. F. Watts in the National Portrait Gallery]
Of these parents John Laird Mair Lawrence was the fourth surviving son, one boy, the eldest, having died in infancy. He owed the accident of his birth in an English town to his father's regiment being quartered at the time in Yorkshire, his first schooling at Bristol to his father's residence at Clifton; but when he was twelve years old, he followed his elder brothers to Londonderry, where his maternal uncle, the Rev. James Knox, was Headmaster of the Free Grammar School, situated within the walls of that famous Protestant fortress. It was a rough school, of which the Lawrence brothers cherished few kindly recollections. It is difficult to ascertain what they learnt there: perhaps the grim survivals of the past, town-walls, bastions, and guns, made the deepest impression upon them. John's chief friend at school was Robert Montgomery, whom, many years later, he welcomed as a sympathetic fellow-worker in India; and the two boys continued their education together at Wraxall in Wiltshire, to which they were transferred in 1825. Here John spent two years, working at his books by fits and starts, and finding an outlet for his energy in climbing, kite-flying, and other unconventional amusements, and then his turn came to profit by the goodwill of a family friend, who was an influential man and a director of the East India Company. To this man, John Huddlestone by name, his brothers Alexander and George owed their commissions in the Indian cavalry, while Henry had elected for the artillery. John hoped for a similar favour, but was offered, in its place, a post in the Indian Civil Service. This was a cruel disappointment to him as he had set his heart on the army. In fact he was only reconciled to the prospect by the influence of his eldest sister Letitia, who held a unique place as the family counsellor now and throughout her life.