Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA)

 - Class of 1935

Page 15 of 148

 

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 15 of 148
Page 15 of 148



Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 14
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Page 15 text:

3 1 ' -1. .514 hail '1 . ..-af-. Shortly after the death of his father, who was a merchant and loyalist of Boston, David was sent to Byfield to complete his education. Here in study hours he must have mumbled his Latin aloud with many who were destined to build the American Republic. But the British Empire called him, for the Ochterlonys were loyal, and with the outbreak of the Revolution young David set out for India. Not long after his arrival he became a Cadet. His steady rise from this rank to that of Major-General is testimony enough to his military ability. Latin at Byfield might not seem to us a fit training for lancing in Bengal,yet the discipline and logicof his work with Samuel Moody must have left its mark, for he was noted also for that sound judgment necessary for high command. ln 1805, in the capacity ofl.ieutenant- Colonel, he was so instrumental in the famous capture of Delhi that General l.ake expressed the greatest regret that he would have to leave him there as Resident. But in this ofiice his diplomatic qualifications were found to be no less remarkable than his military. His tact and understanding made him very successful in keeping the native princes loyal to their British conquerors and protectors, and in all this he was one of the few who rose from obscurity to eminence who passed unspoiled through the perilous trial of sudden prosperity and irresponsible power. After his campaign of 1816 in Nepal he distinguished himself in a war against the Mahratta tribes. Shortly after this he was again British Resident near Delhi. In the last year of his life, 1815, occurred a trying episode. Cpon the death ofthe Rajah in one of his provinces, a native prince threatened to usurp the throne il- legally. Sir David, considering this an insult to British authority, at once ordered military operations against him. The Governor-General back in Calcutta, l.ord Am- herst, looked at the matter differently. Because of the rainy season and his perilous position in Burma, the Governor was reluctant to approve Sir David's action. Orders were countermanded, but Ochterlony took the opportunity to tell his chief exactly what he thought of a timid policy. Although he had acted without authority, he felt that his experience should have been trusted and that it was ridiculous to put of-'fthe avenging of an insult because of the weather. Wisely, he submitted his resignation, and to his chagrin it was accepted. Two months later he died of a broken heart. The interest in this incident is not in the question as to whether his decision was more culpable than Amherst's doubt. The interest lies in the fact that, despite this episode, the Fast India Company was not indifferent to his merits. The citation issued on his death bears witness: The confidence which the government reposed in an individual gifted with such rare endowments was evinced by the high and responsible situations which he successively filled, and the duties of which he discharged with eminent ability and advantage to the public interest. As a demonstration of sorrow, Amherst ordered that minute guns, to the number of 68 lhis agej be fired this evening from the ram- parts of Ft. William. It is interesting to find that he was praised not only for his performance of duty, but also for his admirably vigorous intellect and consummate address. Shades of Master Moody's teaching! On a monument to him near Calcutta is the inscription: He was educated in Dummer Academy in the State of Massachusetts. I 'A is 4 . .ik ' II

Page 14 text:

-u 1' 'C ' . 1 -' N T if ' FZ'-A , Ie- . -. ' , ' .- - ' ' , ' 4,3,.-Lge r-.LW . yr., 'v.i Y ri 1 5 A 7 l 1 ,l , J fl. gg c N all , all wily i l I I ll il ll l ,J Cai-T., c, .L A ,A . , , . , n6Qs.Si2i'Z4.:.f' - 3 A 'I . Q David Ochterlony - Major-General They had been trudging for days through the forest. It was so dense that only an occa- sional ray oflight seeped through to remind and British and native soldiers struggled on. Then one day all was bright again. They had ern slopes of the Himalayas stretched out mahiestically before them in the distance. They knew that somewhere in the passes ahead the enemy lay in wait for them. YYould they turn back, or would they be cut to pieces storming the narrow deliles? Major-General David Ochterlony, a lighter who had a record of forty years ofde- voted service to the Fast lndia Company, was not one to turn back before his work was i done. lfor some years the native robber bands of Nepal, the Ghurkas, had been open- ly defying the British. Several expeditions had been undertaken, but because of the fighting skill of these brigands and the natural defenses of their country, all had failed. Ochterlony had commenced a final drive in llilfl and now found himself before their mountain fortresses. l'nwilling to sacrifice his men, but equally unwilling to retreat, he dispatched his quartermaster to reconnoiter. The latter, having fallen in with a party of smugglers, was able to persuade them for a consideration to lead the British force through a secret pass. Single file, the General, at the head of his Royal lrish lfusiliers, led the army up through the deep ravine in the dead of night. He had many misgivings about the trustworthiness of his guides. At any minute the enemy might fall upon them. Suddenly a perpendicular wall of solid rock blocked their way. :X trapl You have risked the destruction of my whole armyln the Gen- eral blurted to the quartermaster. After scaling the rock with some of his oflicers' sashes, he found to hishioy that his fears were not justified. He had been led around his enemy. Soon after, he was able to attack the unfortunate Ghurkas in the rear as they lay in waitin the passes. ln a brilliant charge their strongholds were taken, and with an unconditional surrender Ochterlony seized their lands in the name ofKingGeorge. For these exploits against Nepal he received from the Company a special and substantial reward , from both Houses of Parliament, expressions of admiration and applauseug and from his Sovereign, the title of Knight Commander ofthe Bath. Master Moody could hardly have divined the fame this pupil was to acquire. Q' A Allie ., TQg,gfi,,, f tflwl -,WL V 4.,fl'.42. p A A W, , 'A -f 1 '- --arm. IO them that there was a sun. Nineteen thous- reached the end of the forest, and the south-



Page 16 text:

-' ,I . ' V , L , A , V . V 4 . 'I A 'fx' 4. I H 01 it R xr jg- x , Q 7 ., ,ni 1 ' . Xi r' I' tm., V : , ..'- 'Ta , 703 . , , .. -' ' ,- ' ' l 94,5 ci. V .. , , ,M - . - Ni . ...W ' , ' , f-I., . ' - - ..-, Samuel Phillips e-A Public Servant It is interesting and inspiring in these days, when we seem to meet graft and cor- ruption, selfishness and greed at every turn, to contemplate the lives of some of those men who shaped our nation and its institutions in the early days before an industrial age and a decline in the old Puritan virtues began to warp values and cheapen motives. A glance at the record of the Dummer family, or a study of the roster of this School during the regime of hir. Moody ' furnishes examples enough of those giants who were to spend their whole lives and energies in the public and national service. lf some of these men-King, Parsons, Sewall, Wentworth-had the public spirit to a remarkable degree, certainly none of them was more passionately devoted to the wel- fare of his fellows than Samuel Phillips of .-Xndover. He was at once a leader of great in- fiuence in Nlassachusetts politics during and after the Revolution, a business man who managed two stores, a saw mill and grist mill, and manufactured paper and powder, as well as the founder and benefactor of a great school. The year of the famous Stamp .-Xct, 1765, found Samuel Phillips, liisquire, taking his son, the only survivor of seven children, to Dummer School at Byfield, as it was the only institution ofits kind in the country and seemed to afford the best opportunity for a boy who had a natural taste for learning. Samuel Jr. was an ex- tremely frail youngster, and his weakness frequently interrupted his work. He wrote his mother in june ofhis first year, Mr, Moody. . .thinks that it is very nec- essary that I should have a horse here, considering my health, and the heat of the season. The exercise he derived from riding evidently helped him, and though he was never strong, he was able in later years to commute'i by horseback between Boston and .-Xndover. Despite his physical difficulties, he worked faithfully and graduated two years later to enter Harvard, not with his credits duly counted and accepted, but with a habit ofapplication and order, and with a high sense of moral feeling and love of learning. He was now fifteen. Before his graduation from Harvard in 1771 he had caught the spark of liberty, and when the time came for action, he became a patriotic leader first in Andover and then in ijjg at the Provincial Congress at YYatertown'. Samuel was later a member lr its ' ,i,ifas..Q fs. - 1 'fe f--fr' t-Q Q 1' :iss few .s 12

Suggestions in the Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) collection:

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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