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II. Governor Sir Robert Wilmot Horton and the Reforms of 1833 in Ceylon
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
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Robert John Wilmot Horton became associated with colonial affairs in an official capacity at a time when the Colonial Office was in the throes of a reorganization. He did not bring any previous experience to his new office, and his ability was not highly rated - ‘He had always appeared to me a particularly silly fellow’, Lord Melbourne, the prime minister, was to remark later - but his tenure as the Under-Secretary of State for War and Colonies was not devoid of success. The role he played in the reorganization of the Colonial Office, for instance, was noteworthy. He proved to be an able lieutenant to Earl Badiurst, the Secretary of State. Yet Horton attained only a limited success in his political life. By the year 1828 he was out of office, and by 1830 was out of parliament. Having reached an impasse in his political life, Horton was led to seek a colonial appointment, a decision which was also partly strengthened by his pecuniary embarrassments. He staked a claim to the Governorship of Canada, and later to the Governorship of Madras, but what he was to receive was a less coveted position, the Governorship of Ceylon.
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1 Horton (1784–1841) was educated at Eton and Oxford. He entered parliament in 1819 and assumed office as the Under-Secretary of State for War and Colonies in 1821. Horton was known as Wilmot until May 1823, when in accordance with the terms of the will of his father-in-law he added the name Horton by deed-poll. Before he left for Ceylon as the Governor in 1831 a knighthood was conferred upon him in recognition of his past services, and to suit the new office. For further biographical details, see Jones, E. G., Sir Robert Wilmot Horton, Bart., Politician and Pamphleteer (Bristol University, M.A. thesis, 1936).Google Scholar
2 Jones, , op. cit. pp. 29–37 and 340.Google Scholar
3 See Murray, D. J., The West Indies and the Development of the Colonial Government (Oxford, 1965), pp. 119–126Google Scholar and Young, D. M., The Colonial Office in the Early Nineteenth Century (London, 1961), pp. 53–8.Google Scholar
4 The reasons that led to the change in Horton's political fortune have been often recounted. With the fall of Wellington's ministry in April 1827, instead of resigning with his Tory friends Horton joined the Canningites. Consequently, when the Tories came back into power in January 1828, Horton found himself isolated. See Adams, W. F., Ireland and Irish Emigration to the New World from 1815 to the Famine (London, 1935), pp. 275–96Google Scholar and Black, R. D. C., Economic Thought and the Irish Question 1817–1870 (London, 1960), ch. VII.Google Scholar
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6 Ibid. p. 58. Horton wrote and lectured incessantly on these issues, and became a widely known pamphleteer. See, for example, The West India Question Practically Considered (London, 1826)Google Scholar; Protestant Safety Compatible with the Remission of the Civil Disabilities of Roman Catholics (London, 1829)Google Scholar; and An Enquiry into the Causes and Remedies of Pauperism (London, 1836).Google Scholar
7 See particularly Second and Third Reports from Select Committee on Emigration from the United Kingdom: 1827 (London, 1828). Horton acted as the chairman of this committee.Google Scholar
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12 Royal commissions of inquiry were often utilized by the imperial government to inquire and report upon many colonial questions of importance during the 1820s and the 1830s. The Colonial Office took the opportunity of the appointment of the Commission of Eastern Enquiry to inquire into the Cape of Good Hope and Mauritius to investigate the Colony of Ceylon too; the commission's scope was extended to cover Ceylon. The inquiry was not limited to finance but covered the ‘whole state’ of the colony. The commissioners of inquiry who went to Ceylon, William Colebrooke and Charles Cameron, made a careful division of labour, Cameron concentrating upon the judicature, while Colebrooke undertook the investigation into the other branches of the administration. See Samaraweera, V. K., The Commission of Eastern Enquiry in Ceylon, 1822–1837: A Study of a Royal Commission of Colonial Inquiry (Oxford University D.Phil, thesis, 1969). The Maritime Provinces of Ceylon were captured from the Dutch by the British in 1795–6, and the independent Kandyan kingdom in the interior in 1815.Google Scholar
13 The role Horton played in the appointment of the Commission of Eastern Enquiry has been examined in ibid. p. 19.
14 Public Record Office, C[olonial] O[ffice], 54/118: Horton, to Goderich, , 12 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
15 C.O. 54/121: Colebrooke, to Hay, , 21 Dec. 1832.Google Scholar
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19 See his Reform in 1839 and Reform in 1831 (London, 1839).Google Scholar This work was published, according to Horton, ‘to point out and refute the fallacies of the Levellers of the day, … and to explain the principle upon which I considered those fallacies ought to be refuted within the walls of Parliament ’, ibid. p. iii.
20 C.O. 54/114: Horton's minute, enclosed in Horton, to Goderich, , 10 Nov. 1831.Google Scholar
21 SirHorton, R. J. Wilmot, Reform in 1839 and Reform in 1831, p. v and 5.Google Scholar
22 C.O. 537/136: Horton, to Stanley, (secret and confidential), 27 Apr. 1834.Google Scholar
23 In the opinion of S. M. Hardy, in formulating these proposals Horton was ‘led to a new vista of colonial thinking. He refused to consider tropical colonies as basically unfit for development and thus distinct from colonies suitable for white settlement. The active role of government and the use of investment had already been reduced to applied principles when he managed the Colonial Office. Now his government of Ceylon, both in his hopes and difficulties, produced the first application of such principles to tropical colonial development; this exceeded any accomplishment of the Radical Imperialists’, ‘Wilmot-Horton's Government of Ceylon 1831–1837’, U[niuersity of] B[irmingham] H[istorical] J[ournal], VII (1960), 181–2.Google Scholar A critique of this study will not be attempted here, but it is important to point out that Hardy has failed to take into account the actual measures adopted by Horton during his Governorship; Horton's policies often did not conform to the principles he himself enunciated earlier, particularly in his Letters on Colonial Policy. It is worth noting that Ceylon was not the type of colony in which Horton could have worked out his views on emigration with any success. He ‘realized that Ceylon was a tropical colony where European settlement could never be extensive’, de Silva, K. M., ‘The Third Earl Grey and the Maintenance of an Imperial Policy on the Sale of Crown Lands in Ceylon, c. 1832–1852’, Journal of Asian Studies, XXVII (1967), 10 fn.Google Scholar
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27 C.O. 54/114: Horton, to Goderich, , 14 Dec. 1831, encl.Google Scholar
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33 C.O. 54/130: Horton, to Stanley, (private and confidential), 25 Oct. 1833.Google Scholar
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37 C.O. 54/130: Horton, to Stanley, (private and confidential), 25 Oct. 1833. Bathurst was the Secretary of State between June 1812 and Apr. 1827, Goderich between Apr. and Sept. 1827 and Nov. 1830 and Mar. 1833, and Stanley between Mar. 1833 and June 1834.Google Scholar
38 Ibid.
39 Ibid.
40 Ibid. Horton quoted from Lucan's Pharsalia, book 1, lines 126–8. For a complete version of the quotation, see the edition by C. E. Haskin (London, 1877), p. 9. Lucan referred here to the victory of Caesar over Pompey, as a result of which Cato, the Stoic, committed suicide. I am indebted to Dr Roger Highfield of Merton College, Oxford, for the location of the original source.
41 Jones, Cited, op. cit. p. 98.Google Scholar
42 C.O. 54/118: Horton, to Goderich, , 15 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
43 Ibid.Horton, to Goderich, , 13 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
44 C.O. 54/114: Horton, to Goderich, , 21 Nov. 1831.Google Scholar
45 Ceylon Government Gazette, 6 Oct. 1832. With these reductions, introduced mainly as a measure of economy, there remained only those who did not constitute a charge on the public, British Parliamentary Papers, 1834 (570), vi, 139.Google Scholar
46 C.O. 54/114: Horton, to Goderich, , 13 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
47 Ibid. Gogerly acted as a confidant of Horton, and espoused Horton's cause with great zeal.
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49 CO. 54/118: Horton, to Goderich, , 1 and 13 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
50 Particularly after the acceptance of the recommendations of a royal commission of inquiry of 1830, all colonial expenditures were subjected to the approval of the Treasury Lords. See British Parliamentary Papers, 1837 (516), VII, 325.Google Scholar
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52 C.O. 54/118: Horton, to Goderich, , 13 and 23 Oct. 1832.Google Scholar
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54 C.O. 55/72: Royal Instructions, 30 Apr. 1831.Google Scholar
55 C.O. 55/61: Revised Royal Instructions, 18 Apr. 1801.Google Scholar
56 C.O. 54/153: Horton's memorandum, no date.
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74 According to Horton, the Indian newspapers were ‘consciously read in Ceylon’, C.O. 54/146: Horton, to Stanley, (private and confidential), 17 Apr. 1834.Google Scholar
75 Addresses Delivered in the Legislative Council …, 1, 9.
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94 Three years after the implementation of the reforms, for example, Horton reported that ‘owing to the inadequacy of their means to return to Europe with their families, and their inability to relinquish the emoluments of the situations they had attained by a long period of service’, there was stagnation at the top among the civil servants, resulting in frustration at the lower levels. He recommended substantial increases in their salaries to remove this adverse position. See C.O. 54/148: Horton, to Glenelg, , 1 July 1836.Google Scholar
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137 See ibid. pp. 308–9.
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