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Maj. Harry Blaikie BROWNLOW
(1861-1932) |
Maj. Harry Blaikie BROWNLOW 1
General Notes: Born 1861, in India, son of Capt. Henry Richmond Brownlow and Jane "Jeannie" Blaikie (daughter of Sir Thomas Blaikie, Lord Provost of Aberdeen). Like his father, Harry joined the Royal Artillery as a young officer. He was a 2nd Lieutenant by 1881, was promoted to First Lieutenant in 1888, and to Second Captain by 1889. On May 31, 1889 he was seconded to the Punjab Field Force, and ordered to India. Arriving at Abbotabad, he immediately became friendly with the Gaselees. Lt-Col. Alfred Gaselee, an officer with the India Staff Corps, and later in command of the 5th Gurkhas, had married Alice Jane Baxter in Calcutta, on Jan. 26, 1882, and they were as happily married as any couple could be under the circumstances. This all changed when the dashing Captain Brownlow arrived on the scene. He was at the Gaselee bungalow all the time, sipping Darjeeling tea, smoking cigars and engaging in social intercourse with a passionate intensity. Colonel Gaselee tended to look upon him as a son, perhaps as a younger brother, and never suspected what might be lurking in the forefront of young Brownlow's mind. Early in 1891 Gaselee and Harry left Abbotabad with the Black Mountain Expedition, attached to the Hazara Field Force, and were away for some time, although they both came home for leave occasionally. Harry commanded the No. 2 Mountain Battery (the Derajat Battery) during this expedition. With the knowledge and consent of the Colonel, Harry began writing to Alice Gaselee on a regular basis. Gaselee felt that Harry, as a young man, lonely and unattached in India, would benefit spiritually from such a correspondence. His wife showed him all the letters, and they were quite proper. In July 1891 Harry went on leave, alone, returning to Abbotabad. With the Colonel's knowledge, the young Artillery Captain visited the lonely Mrs Gaselee, and (without the Colonel's knowledge) demonstrated to the Memsahib his extraordinary prowess with a cannon. She became pregnant, and wrote her husband to that effect. The Colonel found this odd, as there had never been any children before, at least none that he could remember. Yet, even then, he was not suspicous. In the October Harry was commended in action (presumably in the field). On April 7, 1892 Alice gave birth, but the child died the following month. Harry married Maude Gertrude Annesley WEBSTER-WEDDERBURN, daughter of Maj. George Gordon Gerard WEBSTER-WEDDERBURN and Caroline DIXON, on 2 Oct 1915. (Maude Gertrude Annesley WEBSTER-WEDDERBURN was born on 11 Jan 1871 in Newccastle under Lyme, Staffordshire, England and died on 6 Nov 1930 in Camberwell House, Camberwell, Surrey, England.) Marriage Notes: The Times, Monday, Oct 4, 1915 MARRIAGE |
1 <i><i>The Thompsons, Shipbuilders of Sunderland</i>.</i> (http://www.ghgraham.org/), ).
2 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, <i>"FamilySearch," database, <i>FamilySearch</i> </i> (http://new.familysearch.org), ); Indexing Project (Batch) NumberC49324-2.
J. Ferran 15/01/2021
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