General Sir Henry Augustus Smyth, K.C.M.G.
by
Francis Smyth Baden-Powell
Sir Henry Augustus Smyth (1825-1906), FSA,
FRGS, Governor of Malta, general and colonel commandant Royal
Artillery, born at St James’s Street, London, on 25 Nov. 1825, was
third son in the family of three sons and six daughters of Admiral
William Henry Smyth (1788-1865) by his wife Annarella, only daughter
of Thomas Warington, British consul at Naples. His elder brothers
were Sir Warington Wilkinson Smyth (1817-1890) and Charles Piazzi
Smyth (1819-1900). Of his six sisters, Henrietta married Prof.
Baden-Powell, and Rosetta married Sir William Henry Flower.
Educated at Bedford school from 1834 to 1840,
Smyth entered the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich on 1 Feb. 1841.
Receiving a commission as second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery
on 20 Dec. 1843, and being promoted lieutenant on 5 April 1845, he
was on foreign service in Bermuda from 1847 to 1851. Promoted second
captain on 11 Aug. 1851, he was quartered at Halifax, Nova Scotia,
till 1854, and at Corfu from February 1855. On becoming first
captain on 1 April, he was sent in May to the Crimea to command a
field battery of the second division of the army which supported the
right attack on Sevastopol. Smyth and his battery did arduous work
with the siege train in the trenches. He took part in the third
bombardment, was present at the fall of Sevastopol, and remained in
the Crimea until July 1856. For his services he received the British
war medal with clasp for Sevastopol and the Turkish medal.
After he had spent over five years at home
stations, principally at Shorncliffe, hostilities threatened with
the United States over the Trent affair, and Smyth took his field
battery of the Crimea out to New Brunswick in December 1861, landing
his horses fit for service after an exceptionally tempestuous
voyage. While still in Canada Smyth obtained a brevet majority on 12
Feb. 1863, and on promotion to a regimental lieutenant-colonelcy on
31 Aug. 1865 he returned home. While on ordinary leave of absence in
Canada he visited the scenes of the American Civil War, saw the
capture of Richmond, and was the only foreigner present in the
subsequent pursuit of the southern army. At a later period he
attended, while on leave from India, some of the operations of the
Franco-German war. His observations in both cases were commended by
the authorities and partly published in the Proceedings of the Royal
Artillery Institution.
From 1867 to 1874 Smyth served in India. He
became a brevet colonel on 31 Aug. 1870. In 1872 he presided over a
committee at Calcutta which condemned the bronze rifled guns then
proposed for adoption for field service and conducted valuable
researches into the explosive force of Indian gunpowders. His
services were eulogised by the governor-general in council in May
1874. On 16 Jan. 1875 Smyth succeeded to a regimental colonelcy and
was deputed to attend the German army maneuvres in the autumn. He
commanded the artillery at Sheerness in 1876, and from 1877 to 1880
the artillery in the southern district. He served on various
professional inquiries, such as the revision of siege operations in
view of the adoption of more powerful rifled guns and howitzers. In
1876 and 1887 he was awarded the gold medal of the Royal Artillery
Institution for essays respectively on Field Artillery Tactics and
Training of Field Artillery.
From 1881 to 1883 Smyth served on the
ordnance committee at Woolwich. During that time steel was
introduced into the service on the recommendation of the committee
as the material for rifled guns. Promoted major-general on 1 Nov.
1882, Smyth was commandant of the Woolwich garrison and military
district from 1882 to 1886. He became lieutenant-general on 1 Nov.
1886, and went out the next year to command the troops in South
Africa.
Soon after his arrival at the Cape he rapidly
crushed a rising in Zululand, which had been formally annexed in May
1887. The Zulus fled into the territories of the South African
republic, where they dispersed. Dinizulu and his chiefs ultimately
surrendered to the British, and were banished to St. Helena. For
some eight months in 1889-90 Smyth acted as governor of Cape Colony
between the departure of Sir Hercules Robinson, afterwards Lord
Rosmead, and the arrival of Sir Henry Brougham Loch, afterwards Lord
Loch. Smyth was created C.M.G. in January 1889, and K.C.M.G. in
1890, when he was appointed governor of Malta. He was promoted
general on 19 May 1891, and on 20 Dec. 1893 his jubilee in the Royal
Artillery service was celebrated at Malta. He left the island at the
end of the year on retirement, and settled at his father’s house,
which he had inherited, St. John’s Lodge, Stone, Aylesbury,
Buckinghamshire.
Smyth became a colonel commandant of the
royal artillery on 17 Oct. 1894. He was honorary colonel of the
royal Malta militia, a J.P.for Buckinghamshire, and fellow both of
the Society of Antiquaries and of the Royal Geographical Society. He
died on 18 Sept. 1906 at his own house, and was buried in Stone
churchyard. He married at Lillington, near Leamington in
Warwickshire, on 14 April 1874, Helen Constance, daughter of John
Whitehead Greaves, of Berecote, near Leamington. His widow survived
him without issue. A portrait painted by Lowes Dickinson is in Lady
Smyth’s possession. Memorial tablets have been erected in the
garrison church at Woolwich and in the church at Stone.
Adapted from: "Descendant
Report for Benjamin Smyth" prepared by Robin Baden Clay (11th July
2002):