Wilfred Bennett Davidson-Houston

Wilfred Bennett Davidson-Houston CMG (3 January 1870 – 18 September 1960) was a British army officer who fought in the Anglo-Ashanti wars and later became a colonial administrator in the British West Indies.


Wilfred Bennett Davidson-Houston
Commissioner of Montserrat
In office
1906–1918
Preceded byFrederick Henry Watkins
Succeeded byClaude Forlong Condell
Administrator of Saint Lucia
In office
1918–1927
Preceded byGideon Oliphant-Murray
Succeeded byCharles William Doorly
Acting Governor of Nyasaland
In office
30 May 1929  7 November 1929
Preceded byCharles Calvert Bowring
Succeeded byShenton Thomas
Personal details
Born3 January 1870
Died18 September 1960 (1960-09-19) (aged 90)

Background

Wilfred Bennett Davidson-Houston was born on 3 January 1870, the second son of Reverend B.C. Davidson-Houston of County Cork and Dublin. He attended Corrig School, Monkstown, County Dublin in Ireland and St Edward's School, Oxford.

Military career

In 1887 Davidson-Houston was commissioned a second lieutenant with the 5th (Militia) battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1889, captain on 26 November 1892, major on 11 October 1902[1] and lieutenant colonel in 1906.[2] Davidson-Houston was assigned to the British South Africa Company Police, and was assistant commissioner in Mashonaland (1890–1892). He was assistant inspector of Gold Coast Hausas (1894) and captain of the West African Frontier Service, Kwahu (1894–1895). He served in the Fourth Anglo-Ashanti War (1895–1896), and in subsequent operations in the Gold Coast (1897–1898), and was acting resident Ashanti (1899–1900). He served in the Ashanti Campaign (1900) and the Second Boer War (1901–1902).

Colonial administrator

In August 1902, he was seconded for service under the Colonial Office,[3] and appointed commissioner of Ashanti (1902) and acting chief commissioner of Ashanti (1903–1905).[2]

In 1906, Davidson-Houston was appointed commissioner of Montserrat in the British West Indies. During the First World War he was D.A.Q.M.G. Central Force (1915), Eastern Command (1916), Headquarters 1st Army, B.E.F. (1917) and Deputy Controller of Labour, France (1918). He was administrator of Saint Lucia, British West Indies (1918–1927). During this period he was several times acting governor of the Windward Islands. Davidson-Houston was chief secretary, Nyasaland (1927–1930), and was twice acting governor, Nyasaland.[2]

Davidson-Houston married Annie Henrietta, oldest daughter of land agent Colonel Edmond Langley Hunt, C.M.G., of Curragh Bridge House, County Limerick (of a landed gentry family of Friarstown and Ballysinode),[4][5][6][7] and they had two sons. He retired in 1930. He died on 18 September 1960, aged ninety.[2]

gollark: Pick a random number with more zeroes than usual?
gollark: https://www.theregister.com/2019/03/05/ai_gaydar/ (headline is vaguely misleading)
gollark: I blatantly stole it from helloboi.
gollark: I may be referred to as car/cdr if desired.
gollark: The problem with spaces is that you can’t actually see them. So you can’t be sure they’re correct. Also they aren’t actually there anyway - they are the absence of code. “Anti-code” if you will. Too many developers format their code “to make it more maintainable” (like that’s actually a thing), but they’re really just filling the document with spaces. And it’s impossible to know how spaces will effect your code, because if you can’t see them, then you can’t read them. Real code wizards know to just write one long line and pack it in tight. What’s that you say? You wrote 600 lines of code today? Well I wrote one, and it took all week, but it’s the best. And when I hand this project over to you next month I’ll have solved world peace in just 14 lines and you will be so lucky to have my code on your screen <ninja chop>.

References

  1. "No. 27481". The London Gazette. 10 October 1902. p. 6414.
  2. "Governor General - Lt.Col. Wilfred Bennett Davidson- Houston". Government of Saint Lucia. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  3. "No. 27469". The London Gazette. 29 August 1902. p. 5606.
  4. The peerage, baronetage, and knightage of the British Empire for 1881, ed. Joseph Foster, p. 624
  5. Burke's Landed Gentry, 1969, ed. Peter Townsend, p. 319
  6. Burke's Landed Gentry of Ireland, 1899, p. 213
  7. http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/estate-show.jsp?id=2256
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