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Sir George Murray
Sir 'George Murray',
GCB (
February 6 1772,
Perth –
July 28 1846) was a
Scottish soldier and
politician, the second son of Sir William
Murray of Ochtertyre, 5th
Baronet.
After receiving an education at the
Royal High School,
Edinburgh, in
1789 Murray obtained a
commission into the
71st Foot, reaching the rank of
Captain in
1794, and seeing service in
Flanders (1794-95), the
West Indies,
England and
Ireland. In 1799 he was made a
Lieutenant-Colonel, entering the Quartermaster General's Department and making his considerable reputation as
Quartermaster General (1808-11) during the
Peninsular War, under the
Duke of Wellington, and receiving promotion to
Colonel in 1809.
After a brief period as Quartermaster General in
Ireland, Murray returned to the Peninsular Campaign as
Major-General (1813-14), and was invested with the
Order of the Bath in 1813. He was briefly in
Canada from December
1814 to May
1815 where he was appointed provisional
Lieutenant-Governor of
Upper Canada and reviewed the defences of Canada. He quickly returned to
Europe following
Napoleon's escape from
Elba, but arrived too late to take part in the
Battle of Waterloo.
After cessation of hostilities, Murray was based in
France as Chief of Staff to the Army of Occupation and, thereafter, he was appointed Governor of the
Royal Military College (1819). He was awarded an
honorary degree by the
University of Oxford in 1820 and was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1824. In 1825 he married Lady Louisa Erskine, widow of Sir James
Erskine of Torrie (1772 - 1825). Subsequently he was made Lieutenant General of the
Board of Ordnance, but in 1828 he resigned as Commander-in-Chief of the Army in
Ireland and became
Colonial Secretary.
He was the
Master-General of the Ordnance between
1834 to
1835 and between
1841 and
1846.
The
Murray River in
Australia and
Murray House in
Hong Kong are named in honour of him. He was
Member of Parliament for
Perthshire in
Scotland, and the city of
Perth, Western Australia is also (indirectly) named in his honour, as it was his birthplace.
He was a
Tory Party politician. The party was also known, increasingly from 1830, as the
Conservative Party. He was
Member of Parliament for
Pethshire from 1824-1832 and from 1834 until he retired in 1835. He also contested
Westminster in 1837 and
Manchester in both 1839 and 1841, with less success. Murray was also President of the
Royal Geographical Society (1833-5) and Governor of
Edinburgh Castle.
His substantial papers and maps were gifted to the
National Library of Scotland by a great-niece in 1913. He is buried in
Kensal Green Cemetery,
London.
Reference
★ ''Who's Who of British Members of Parliament: Volume I 1832-1885'', edited by M. Stenton (The Harvester Press 1976)
External links
★
Sir George Murray at electricscotland.com
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''