Sir Frederic William Richards Fryer K.C.S.I., I.C.S: 1845 - 1922
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On the 20th February, 1922,
at the age of 77, Sir Frederic William Richards Fryer, first
Lieutenant-Governor of Burma, died in London. He was cremated and his ashes
were laid to rest alongside his wife of 50 years, Frances, in the churchyard of
St. Mary's, West Moors, Dorset.
Frederic Fryer was one of the most able servants of the British Crown in
the second-half of the nineteenth century. It is unfashionable now to dwell on
the role of imperial administrators of the Victorian age, but at a time in
history when the United Kingdom was responsible for the affairs of nearly
one-quarter of humanity and a fifth of the land surface of the globe, it was
important that the civil servants sent to administer disparate lands and
peoples were of the highest calibre: in my view, Frederic Fryer was such an
individual. |
Sir Frederic Fryer, 1917
© National Portrait Gallery, London |
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| Frederic was born in 1845, in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, the eldest
son (amongst five daughters and another son) of Frederick William Fryer &
Emily Frances Richards. His early years and education are something of a
mystery - mainly because the family seem to have spent several years living in
Switzerland and Belgium. However at the age of 13, Frederic was enrolled at
Bromsgrove Grammar School, close to his mother's family home and the education
he received there equipped him to progress to University College, London, where
he was to study Law as a student attached to the Middle Temple of the Inns of
Court. |
| In 1863 he sat the entrance examination for the Bengal
Civil Service and on being declared successful, set off for the Punjab taking
up his appointment as Assistant Commissioner and Settlement Officer in November
of the following year, at the age of 19; here was a man whose talents were
recognised at an early age! Only six years before, the troubles we know as the
'Indian Mutiny' (also 'the Rebellion') had engulfed the sub-continent and
tension was especially high in these tribal border areas on the western flank
of the Indus valley. As we will see, Frederic Fryer would prove to be an able
and sympathetic administrator. Meanwhile, in August 1870, he married Frances
Elizabeth Bashford in Westminster and she joined him in the Punjab: children
came along, three boys being born to the couple: Frederic Arthur Bashford
(known as Arthur), Francis Lyall (known as Frank) and Herbert Neville; the
latter sadly died at just 9 months old & Frank was killed in action in
South Africa in 1899 at the age of 26. The Indian Mutiny demonstrated to the
government in London that a more sympathetic approach to managing the varied
peoples of the vast sub-continent of India was required; in particular, active
attempts would be made to bring educated members of the community into
management, the law and administration of infrastructure such as railways etc.,
and this approach seemed to suit the skills of men such as Frederic Fryer. From
an appraisal of various reports on his work, it is obvious that he took a great
deal of trouble to become acquainted with the local people - for example
learning enough of the local language to be able to carry out negotiations on
behalf of the Chief Commissioner. |

I: the Indus valley area;
C: Calcutta;
R: Rangoon |
| This extract from the survey of land, resources and peoples of the
area (written 1877) illustrates how highly he was regarded:- ... (Mr J.B.
Lyall, the Settlement Commissioner) " ... expressed his concurrence in
the Officiating Financial Commissioner's high approval of Mr. Fryer's labours,
and remarked that he had spared no pains to acquire an intimate knowledge of
the district, and had evinced sound judgement in his assessments. I think he
has left a name which will be long remembered in Dera Gházi Khan. The
people liked him, as he was accessible, genial, and a good linguist. His
popularity and local knowledge made him a power in the district. Thanks to his
discretion . . . no disturbance, conflict of authority, or other avoidable
difficulty occurred in the five years during which Settlement operations were
in progress
" |
| Then as now, nearby Afghanistan was very much a problem for Britain.
In the latter years of the 1870s, British army units, together with Indian
native forces were deployed in that country to prevent Russia becoming the
dominant power in the region - Kipling's 'Great Game'. The military campaign
would prove inconclusive - indeed it was marked by serious reverses for British
Imperial forces. Frederic Fryer was not a soldier but he had demonstrated,
after 15 years of sympathetic administration in Punjab, that he was the obvious
choice to accompany the Quetta Field Force to act as a civilian liaison
officer: this was a difficult and dangerous mission - then as now, the British
were regarded with much suspicion, but he discharged his duty well. |
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The campaign in Afghanistan ended in 1880 and Frederic
returned to his wife and family in the Indus valley. However, events elsewhere
within 'British India' would draw Frederic Fryer away from the Punjab. In 1886,
the Viceroy, Lord Dufferin, having initiated the forcible annexation of the
nominally independent kingdom of Ava, (also known as 'Upper Burma') decided to
unite it with the British-dominated 'Lower Burma', thus creating a single
entity covering all of modern-day Myanmar; administration was devolved to local
British commissioners residing in that country. The task would require
administrators of considerable ability and finesse.
Frederic Fryer was by now renowned for his work elsewhere in Victoria's
'Raj' and was an obvious choice to take up the task. In succession, he was
appointed a District Commissioner (1886), Financial Commissioner (1888), then
after a short return to the Punjab, he was appointed Acting Chief Commissioner
of the entire province of Burma from May 1892 for two years, the most senior
colonial administrator in what became known as the 'eastern Indian Empire',
subordinate only to the Viceroy in Calcutta. |
Once again he was to have a short return to the Punjab as
Financial Commissioner to that important province, before settling back for the
final time in Rangoon in April 1895, initially with the title of Chief
Commissioner, but in 1897 it was decided that Burma, being an important (not to
say strategic) part of the Empire, should have virtual control of its own
administration with minimal reference to Calcutta or the India Office in
London. Sir Frederic (as he was, after being invested as Knight Commander of
the Order of the Star of India in early 1895) became the first
Lieutenant-Governor of Burma.
Overall, Sir Frederic spent some 17 years in Burma, and as Chief Commissioner
then Lt. Governor, his term of office covered 8 of those years - the longest
serving senior civil commissioner in the history of the British in Burma.
Indeed, it appears that in 1899 the Viceroy, now Lord Curzon, prevailed upon
Fryer to extend his service beyond the normal length such was his standing in
the country & British India. |
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Although it was a difficult time in Burma with many problems to be
faced, it appears that Sir Frederic, together with a team of able civil
servants, handled the tensions between London, Calcutta and Rangoon with tact
& managed to achieve a certain level of rapport with the Burmese
population; for example, he was sympathetic to the Buddhist tradition in the
country - supporting the case for the establishment of a Buddhist Archbishopric
for Upper Burma. He also lent his weight to the gathering of funds for the
foundation of a leper hospital in Mandalay - this opened in 1901. This
photograph was published in the following year in the United Kingdom.
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For Europeans, the humid, hot climate & alien culture can be
trying, but it appears that the Fryers bore the conditions with true English
fortitude! However, his colonial service over, in 1903 Sir Frederic departed
south Asia for the last time for retirement in London. The Fryers settled in
South Kensington, not far from Imperial College and the great museums of
London. Far from dropping out of public life, Sir Frederic became very active
in societies that specialised in Asian affairs - contributing to papers that
found their way to the governments of the day; he was also the sole author, in
1907, of "Tribes on the Frontiers of Burma", a work of
some note, not only at the time but it is also 'required reading' for modern
scholars wishing to trace the history of Burma.
... And of course he was able to actively administer the lands in east Dorset
that he and his wife owned. |
The Fryer link with West Moors began in a tangible way in
1842 when a parcel of land along what we now call Station Road (it was just a
parish-maintained trackway linking the local farms at the time) was gifted to
the National School society (full name ... National Society for Promoting
Religious Education) by the Fryer family. These schools provided a very basic
education to those children in each parish whose family could not afford to
send them to fee-paying establishments. In 1843, the school opened, with a
small chapel and although the original building is long gone, a sound
foundation was laid for the education of many generations of West Moors
children by this action.
[ The map to the right is a copy of the early Ordnance Survey edition of the
early part of the 19th century (pre-railway): the first school in West Moors
would have been somewhere within the area marked in yellow. ] |
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By the mid-1890s, the village was growing, albeit in a rather
haphazard manner. The population of the area approximating to modern-day West
Moors was around 150-250 (depending upon how the area is defined) with circa
45-50 scattered dwellings. It was clear that a separate place of worship and a
larger school were required. To facilitate this, Sir Frederic & Lady Fryer
conveyed a piece of land along Station Road for the sum of £37 10s
(£37.50) or roughly £2000=at modern prices. On this site was built
the present-day church and a school, together with a house for the schoolmaster
& residence for a curate. All these buildings were funded solely by Claud
Brown, who was Vicar of Verwood (that parish included West Moors): a truly
magnificent gift. To read more on this, follow this
link.
Both the school and church have been extended - the latter quite
recently; the school house & curacy (later the vicarage) are now in private
ownership. However, these buildings can be seen today and are notable examples
of late Victorian architecture. Finally, in 1914, the family offered land
opposite the church and school for the erection of a village hall &
provision of playing fields. The Great War prevented any progress on this
project, but after the war, funds were raised by public appeal and the Memorial
Hall was erected on this plot of land, opening in 1929. Neither his wife, who
died on Christmas Day 1920, nor Sir Frederic lived to see the Hall brought into
use. |
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| Gates (from inside): entrance to Fryer Field |
Children's play area, Fryer Field |
Approach to Fryer Field, off Station Road |
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| Pathway to Fryer Field from Station Road (opposite the
Church) |
The school, school-master's house and beyond, the
church |
Fryer Mews ... on site of former 'Fryer Arms': land
formerly owned by the Fryer family |
More images of the facilities on and around Fryer Field can be seen
HERE
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As far as I can determine, at no time did either Sir
Frederic or his father Frederick William Fryer, actually live within the parish
of West Parley, let alone the small hamlet of West Moors, yet through
considerable landholdings inherited from Frederick William's grandfather, the
'reformed' smuggler Isaac Gulliver, the Fryer family had always regarded this
small community as their 'home'. Sir Frederic & Lady Frances, along with
their son, Frederic Arthur and four of their five grandchildren, have a final
resting place in a quiet corner of the churchyard of St. Mary's, here in West
Moors - not far from the playing field that carries their family name. |
I am grateful to the staff of Bromsgrove Grammar School for
information on Sir Frederic's years there and I also acknowledge the
considerable help and encouragement from Andrew Rowland, vicar of West
Moors. The image of Sir Frederic in 1917 at the head of this page was sourced
from the collection of the National Portrait Gallery and I thank them
for their help.
I can recommend the following site which has more information on the
wider Fryer family, with a family tree ...
[ St. Mary's
church web site / parish history ]
Also my own page dealing with the links between the Fryers, the Castlemans
& the Gullivers ...
[ West
Moors and the Fryer family ]
West Moors parish council are responsible for maintaining many of the public
facilities linked to the Fryer name (e.g., Fryer Field) and their web site is
here ...
[ West Moors
Parish Council ]
Martin Rowley, West Moors, Dorset.
December 2011
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