Henry Lowther (diplomat)

Sir Henry Crofton Lowther GCVO KCMG (26 March 1858 – 23 November 1939) was a British diplomat, ambassador to Chile and Denmark.

Career

Henry Crofton Lowther was educated at Harrow School and Balliol College, Oxford. In 1879 he rowed in the Balliol VIII which went to the Head of the River.[1] He joined the Diplomatic Service with the rank of Attaché in 1883. He was posted to The Hague in 1884, promoted to 3rd Secretary in 1885,[2] and posted to Stockholm in 1886 and Berlin in 1888. He was promoted to 2nd Secretary[3] with a posting to Rio de Janeiro, then moved to Constantinople in 1892, Madrid in 1894 and Bern in 1897.

Lowther returned to Rio de Janeiro as First Secretary of Legation in 1901,[4] was posted to Tokyo as Councillor of Embassy in 1906,[5] and served as Chargé d'Affaires at Madrid, Bern, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo before being appointed Minister to Chile 1909–13[6] and finally Minister to Denmark 1913–16[7] "where he did good work and was a popular member of the Diplomatic Corps of that capital".[1]

Henry Lowther was knighted KCMG in 1913 on appointment to Copenhagen,[8][9] and GCVO in 1914.[10] The Danish government awarded him the Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog.

gollark: Broadly speaking, yes.
gollark: ++remind "september 24" it is already too late
gollark: Nobody needed those environment variables anyway, because it didn't crash.
gollark: Apparently you used to be able to use some internal Python API to get the location of argv/argc but they broke it.
gollark: I read somewhere that the environment list thing was near argv in memory, so it finds a common environment variable's location using `getenv`, scans backward until it finds `python3`, then randomly overwrites things.

References

  • LOWTHER, Sir Henry Crofton, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007, accessed 16 April 2012
  1. Obituary, The Times, London, 27 November 1939, p.8
  2. The London Gazette, 4 September 1885
  3. The Times, London, 9 January 1889, p.12
  4. "No. 27373". The London Gazette. 8 November 1901. p. 7221.
  5. The London Gazette, 6 April 1906
  6. The London Gazette, 19 February 1909
  7. The London Gazette, 25 April 1913
  8. The Edinburgh Gazette, 3 January 1913
  9. The Times, London, 19 April 1913, p.11
  10. The London Gazette, 15 May 1914
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Henry Bax-Ironside
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Republic of Chile
1909-13
Succeeded by
Sir Francis Stronge
Preceded by
William Conyngham Greene
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to His Majesty the King of Denmark
1913–16
Succeeded by
Ralph Spencer Paget
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.