John Pope HENNESSY [1834-1891]

Submitted by David on Fri, 11/30/2012 - 17:27
Names
Given
John Pope
Family
Hennessy
Sex
Male
Status
Deceased
Born
Date
Died
Date

DoB & DoD from the Wikipedia page about Hennessy, which starts:

Sir John Pope Hennessy, KCMG (Chinese: 軒尼詩; 5 April 1834 – 7 October 1891), was an Irish and British politician and colonial administrator who served as the eighth Governor of Hong Kong.


Notes from Paul Harrison in May 2010:

The eighth governor of HK. He was a far from popular figure, because of his name of Pope Hennessy his nickname was ‘his holiness’ and the road was named after him 46 years after he had left. His wife was a half Malay, Eurasian, so the racism, that was common at the time, would have affected him too, personally, had not his wife been the governor’s wife. Other key parts of his reforming nature come from his background of being a military medical officer and lawyer.

He was incidentally the fourth of a run of 5 Irish governors. He was put in place with the mission to improve the lot of the Chinese community. He had been a conservative mp for an Irish consistency at Westminster and was now working his way up the Empire colonial governorships. But it is claimed he lacked common sense and was inefficient, one critic wrote he has muddled the finances of every colony he had ever governed. His colonial secretary was so frustrated with him he leaked to the press a list of 39 things that he was yet to act on. Even his father in law hated him.  He was Sir Hugh Low, the father of the Malaysian rubber industry, he was such an eccentric, he had a pet gibbon called Elbis who opened and pretended to read his mail.

Hennessy introduced a Chinese representative to Legco, the first. He was Ng Choy a barrister and magistrate, he was maybe more acceptable to the racist Brits as he was Singapore born and had been educated in the UK.

Hennessy also reformed the prison system, including stamping out public flogging and branding on the neck that tended to force victims to become permanent unemployable criminals. But his leniency led to an upturn of crime. So much so that a public protest was held at the cricket ground.

He was in two minds over the mui tsai system, (the adoption of unwanted Chinese girls as servants) as he wanted to respect Chinese customs but was against the human trafficking that could be described as slavery, he wanted the Chinese to solve the issue themselves and hence the Po Leung Kuk children’s charity was set up, it still exists to protect children. Their museum is in nearby Causeway Bay.

Previously land areas were segregated. Hennessy as a reformer was against this, Ng Choy, his native appointment speculated wildly which led to Ng’s bankruptcy.  He had to flee HK and joined the Chinese civil service as an advisor on the world outside China.

There was a museum in city hall, it though practiced apartheid, Chinese women were allowed 1 morning a week, Europeans Sunday and set hours each day, Hennessy threatened to withdraw the govt. grant if segregation continued.

Hennessy set up the cadet scheme for the elite of the civil service, a few of the civil service would be groomed for higher positions and they would be fluent in Chinese. Researching Hennessy’s cabinet is like reading an Agatha Christie novel, each of them seems to have had their cause to stab Hennessy in the back, with a pair of scissors in his study.

Marsh (who is remembered by Marsh road in Wanchai) his colonial secretary asked to be transferred as he could not work with Hennessy.

Hong Kong could have had the telephone earlier , but as he was not technologically inclined he choose to ignore it and having turned a blind eye a chaotic system developed.

Stewart became a police magistrate as it would mean less work with Hennessy, Stewart was totally dedicated to the education system but Hennessy attacked Stewart through his school, so he felt the best thing was to leave the education system.

General Donovan, commanding the armed forces, refused to sit on Legco, he did not want houses built so close to his barracks, for the queen’s birthday they organised rival parties, Hennessy telegrammed the war office and they ordered the general to cease his preparations. There was nearly an international incident as a visiting German navy band had offered to play, in their stead, for Hennessy.

Public works were slow under his rule practically nothing was done, the Tai tam reservoir was delayed, he felt dams were not particularly Chinese, but traditionally the Chinese are expert water engineers. Central school was delayed as he did not like the style of English teaching, observatory delayed, the Causeway Bay typhoon shelter to be funded by gambling tax. All delayed, as he had to micromanage each project.

He left to become the governor of Mauritius, when he left none of the business community were there to see him off. Many of the Chinese community did though presenting him with gifts and silken banners embroidered with tributes to his humanity to them, amongst the poor and downtrodden of HK his nickname in pidgin English was #1 good friend, he was replaced by Sir Hercules Robinson whose first job was to calm the unsettled waters.

Thomas Hayllar a lawyer was the one who brought down his downfall armed not with a pair of scissors in Hennessy study but with a museum catalogue in the governor’s residence:

The Battle of Mountain Lodge,

Thomas Hayllar arrived in 1867 from Bombay, when he finally left HK he was called painstaking and conscientious, respected by the Chinese and Legco, he was able and public spirited, I wonder though how many of these adjectives were applied as it was he brought down the unpopular governor aided by of all things an allegedly pornographic museum catalogue and an umbrella.

Hennessy is the only governor to have resorted to personal violence. He was 17 yrs older than his wife who he married, when she was as a teenager; he suspected that she was having an affair with Judge Hayllar. After all he had a reputation as a ladies man, suspicions rose when the judge cancelled going on the governor’s favourite weekend activity of sailing, Hennessy guessed that this was because his wife was with the judge. So he rushed home, stormed into his wife’s boudoir and found the judge together with his wife…he was showing her a museum catalogue from the museum Borbonica, Italy. Hennessy complained that some of the images were of classical nudes; later it was found that there was only one nude image in the whole catalogue.

But the battle lines were drawn, Hennessy was due to leave HK on a business trip to Peking he arranged for his secretary the German Eital, a former missionary and the first historian of HK, to let on what a cad the judge had been by spreading the story of the incident.

Soon after Hayllar and Hennessy met by accident on the Peak, Hennessy was holding on to his young son with his one hand and an umbrella in his other hand

Hennessy report of what happened next, is that the judge insulted his wife so he struck him with his umbrella.

Hayllar reported Hennessy was violent and committed a felonious assault, he was distraught, he had hit near the judge’s left eye and his chin was left bleeding, Hayllar wrestled the broken umbrella from the governor and hung it as a trophy over his mantelpiece. To Lord Kimberly, Hayllar wrote “. He tried to take out my eye, the sharp end of an umbrella but not much harm was done as he has an insignificant physique and is feeble.”

Kitty wrote to her father sir Hugh Low who came over from Malaya to comfort her, as he loathed Hennessy he stayed in the HK Hotel, now the Landmark in Central, rather than govt. house. He instantly hit it off with Hallyer and persuaded him to drop the case against the governor.

Johnson of Exco, the governor’s closest advisors though, had lots of questions on the incident for the governor.

Hayllar sued Eitel for slander, the Governor did not support Eitel, so Eitel withdrew the story, Eitel was disgusted at being used as an unsupported pawn and resigned. Up to this point he had been one of the few western Hennessy supporters and returned to the education system. Hennessy then complained to Whitehall about Eitel, and then sent another letter cancelling the whole subject of the Hayllar incident.

ADAPTED from my Walk the Talk Article which will be commercially available soon

Hope David does not mind this advert, its the only one i'll do, Hennessy as I wrote before is one of my fave personalities



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