Samuel Hennell

{{Short description|British Indian Army officer and Colonial Office administrator (1800–1880)}}

Colonel Samuel Hennell (c. 1800 – 13 September 1880) was a British Indian Army officer and Colonial Office administrator in the Middle East. He was the British Political Resident for the Persian Gulf from 1838 to 1852 and has been hailed as: 'without doubt the greatest Political Resident Britain has ever had in the Persian Gulf.'{{Cite journal|last=Yapp|first=M. E.|date=October 1968|title=Kelly J.B.: Britain and the Persian Gulf, 1795–1880. xvi, 911pp., 2 maps. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1968. £10 10s. - Cooper Busch Briton: Britain and the Persian Gulf, 1894–1914. xv, 432pp. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1967. $8.75. (English agents: Cambridge University Press. 83s.)|journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies|volume=31|issue=3|pages=623–625|doi=10.1017/S0041977X00125704|issn=0041-977X}}

Early career

Samuel Hennell was tutored preparatory to entering service with the East India Company by Mr Williams of Edmonton.{{Cite book|title=Creating the Arabian Gulf : the British Raj and the invasions of the Gulf|last=Rich, P. J. (Paul John)|date=2009|publisher=Lexington Books|others=Rich, P. J. (Paul John).|isbn=9780739127049|edition=[Lexington books ed.]|location=Lanham, Md.|pages=169|oclc=417435394}} He was appointed assistant resident for the Persian Gulf, based in Bushire, in 1826,{{Cite book|title=The Persian Gulf in history|date=2009|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|others=Potter, Lawrence G.|isbn=9780230618459|location=New York|pages=282|oclc=319175648}} taking up his post six years after the British punitive expedition against the Al Qasimi at Ras Al Khaimah of 1819 and the conclusion of the subsequent General Maritime Treaty of 1820. He was appointed Political Resident in the Persian Gulf in 1838.

Maritime Truce

In 1835, Hennell proposed a maritime ceasefire between the Gulf Sheikhdoms based on the terms already agreed upon in the 1820 General Maritime Treaty. The new treaty would run for the pearling season, between May and November and bind all of the Rulers to avoid hostilities at sea, give full redress for any infractions committed by their subjects and avoid retaliation but instead report incidents to the Resident. Additionally, they agreed to let the Resident know if they planned any hostilities at the end of the truce. This then obliged the Resident to enforce the truce and act to obtain reparations for any injuries inflicted by one Ruler's subjects on another's.Britain and the Gulf Shaikhdoms, 1820–1971: The Politics of Protection - James Onley

Center for International and Regional Studies Georgetown University School of Foreign Service

The treaty effectively made the British the chief broker of peace in the region and was received with enthusiasm during a meeting at Basidu on the island of Qeshm, between Sultan bin Saqr Al Qasimi, Ruler of Ras Al Khaimah and Sharjah and Shakhbut bin Dhiyab Al Nahyan, Ruler of Abu Dhabi. The two Rulers approved of the idea and Hennell invited Obeid bin Said bin Rashid of Dubai and Rashid bin Humaid Al Nuaimi of Ajman to join them. The Truce as proposed by Hennell was signed by all four Rulers in Bushire on the 21 August 1835. Umm Al Quwain at the time was subject to Ras Al Khaimah and so did not sign independently. Although it was signed in August 1835, the Treaty bound its signatories from May 1835 to November 1835.{{Cite book|title=Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf|last=Lorimer|first=John|publisher=British Government, Bombay|year=1915|pages=695}}

Hennell subsequently reported how news “came in from all quarters of the joy and satisfaction diffused amongst the inhabitants of the whole line of the Arabian Coast of the Gulf on the intelligence reaching them of the establishment of the Truce.”

= Trucial States =

Pronounced a great success, the Truce was to be renewed in subsequent years, becoming a year-round agreement from 1838 onwards. The series of truces led to the Sheikhdoms of the Lower Gulf becoming referred to as the 'Trucial States'. On 1 June 1843, a ten-year treaty was signed by the rulers.{{Cite book|title=Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf|last=Lorimer|first=John|publisher=British Government, Bombay|year=1915|pages=696}}

Hennell, buoyed by his success as a peacemaker between the Sheikdoms of the Lower Gulf, also concluded a treaty with Kuwait when, in 1841, Abdullah II of Kuwait signed a one-year naval truce with Hennell,{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gw4Jksk3uyYC|title=Kuwait By the First Photographers|last=Facey|first=William|last2=Grant|first2=Gillian|date=1999-01-01|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=9781860642715}} which however expired and was not renewed.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OZrnZpS84xoC|title=Shifting Lines in the Sand: Kuwait's Elusive Frontier with Iraq|last=Finnie|first=David H.|date=1992-01-01|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=9781850435709}} The truce prohibited Kuwait from undertaking any form of maritime offense as well as giving all mediation efforts in maritime disputes over to the British Empire.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i3o7AwAAQBAJ|title=All the Countries We've Ever Invaded|last=Laycock|first=Stuart|date=2012-02-29|publisher=The History Press|isbn=9780752483351}}

In 1853, the Perpetual Maritime Truce of 4 May 1853 prohibited any act of aggression at sea and was signed by Abdulla bin Rashid Al Mualla of Umm Al Quwain; Humaid bin Rashid Al Nuaimi of Ajman; Saeed bin Butti of Dubai; Saeed bin Tahnun Al Nahyan ('Chief of the Beniyas') and Sultan bin Saqr Al Qasimi ('Chief of the Joasmees').{{Cite book|title=From Trucial States to United Arab Emirates : a society in transition|last=Heard-Bey|first=Frauke|date=2005|publisher=Motivate|isbn=1860631673|location=London|pages=286|oclc=64689681}} This treaty was signed by Hennell's former deputy and now successor, Arnold Burrowes Kemball.

Marriage

On 28 November 1837, Hennell (then carrying the rank of captain) married Anne Inman Orton, the eldest daughter of James Orton, the surgeon and head of the Medical Board for the British East India Company in Bombay, at Bycullah.{{Cite journal|title=Register for Ceylon, Penang, Singapore Etc|journal=The Asiatic Journal|volume= XXV - Jan-Apr 1838|pages=264}}

They had two sons, James Bruce Hennell, born in 1843 at Bushire and William Frederick Hennell, born in Bushire on 27 October 1850.{{Cite web|url=http://www.isle-of-wight-memorials.org.uk/churches/ventnorholytrinity_hennell.htm|title=Memorials and Monuments on the Isle of Wight - Ventnor Holy Trinity Church Hennell memorial|website=www.isle-of-wight-memorials.org.uk|access-date=2019-07-22}} Soon after, in 1852, the Hennells returned to England, where Hennell, retiring as a colonel in the Grenadier Regiment of the Bombay Native Infantry, took up residence in Charlton Rings, Gloucestershire.{{Cite book|title=The Afghan Campaigns of 1878-1880|last=Shadbolt|first=Sydney|publisher=Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington|year=1882|location=London|pages=110}} Both of Anne and Samuel Hennell's sons travelled to serve in the Indian army and, in 1879, both were killed during the Afghan War. Hennell died, at the age of 80, the following year.

References