- Frederick Marshman Bailey
Lt. Colonel Frederick Marshman Bailey (February 3, 1882 - April 17, 1967) was a British intelligence officer and one of the last protagonists of "
The Great Game " - the fight for supremacy between the Russians and the British Empire along the Himalayas. His clandestine work gave him many opportunities to pursue his hobby of butterfly collecting and trophy hunting in the high Tibetan region. Over 2000 of his bird specimens were presented to The Natural History Museum, [Warr, F. E. 1996. Manuscripts and Drawings in the ornithology and Rotschild libraries of The Natural History Museum at Tring. BOC. (BMNH 1938 7-15)] although his personal collection is now held in theAmerican Museum of Natural History , New York.Born in
Lahore onFebruary 3 ,1882 , F.H.M. Bailey was the son of an officer in theBritish Army (who was also named Frederick, resulting in the younger Bailey usually being called just Eric). He studied in Sandhurst before returning toIndia as a member of the32nd Sikh Pioneers . During a mission inSikhim he began to study Tibetan, and became so proficient that he accompaniedFrancis Younghusband in his 1904 invasion ofTibet .He later traveled in unknown parts of
China and Tibet, eventually earning the Gold Explorer's Medal from theRoyal Geographical Society for his discoveries. He also contributed notes on big-game to the Journal of theBombay Natural History Society .Bailey served on the western front during
World War I , where he was shot in the arm. At the time he was serving in theIndian Expeditionary Forces as one of the fewUrdu -speaking officers on the front. When his wound continued to worsen, he returned to England, but later joined the fight again at Gallipoli, where he was wounded twice more.Having heard about rumours of a large waterfall, Bailey transferred himself from the Indian Army to the Political Department to get appointments on the Tibetan frontier. In 1911-12 he made an unauthorized exploration to the Tsangpo Gorges with Captain Henry Morshead of the Survey of India . Morshead was later a surveyor for the 1921 Reconnaissance of Mount Everest along with Sir George Leigh-Mallory. Their adventures led them to the Rong Chu valley a gorge on the upper Tsangpo. It was in this valley that Bailey spotted a tall blue poppy at the margin of the forest and pressed it in his notebook - now called "
Meconopsis baileyi ". They got to Kintup's falls at the monastery of Pemakochung and were greatly disappointed to find the falls to be about thirty feet.One of Bailey's more well-known adventures occurred in 1918, when he traveled to
Tashkent inCentral Asia on a mission to discover the intentions of the newBolshevik government, specifically in relation to India. During this mission he also shadowedRaja Mahendra Pratap , an Indian nationalist who had established theProvisional Government of India in Kabul in 1915. Pratap was at the time liaising with Germany and Bolshevik authorities for a joint Soviet-German assault into India through Afghanistan.Harvnb|Bailey|Hopkirk|2002|p=224-227] It was at this time that the first plans for the Soviet "Kalmyk Project " was first considered. Bailey eventually had to flee for his life from the city, and only escaped after taking on the guise of an Austrian POW [Bailey, F. M.; A Visit to Bokhara in 1919; The Geographical Journal > Vol. 57, No. 2 (Feb., 1921), pp. 75-87] and joining theCheka , with an assignment to find a rogue British agent - that is, himself. Upon his return to England, he was a national hero. Bailey later recorded his exploits in his book "Mission to Tashkent". He was also instrumental in organising support for theBasmachi Revolt .He helped
Frank Kingdon-Ward and Lord Cawdor in 1924 when he was a Political Officer in Gangtok, Sikkim. Bailey arranged passports and encouraged them to search the fifty-mile unexplored gap of the river to solve the "riddles of the Tsangpo Gorges". Kingdon-Ward wrote a book by the same name documenting that expedition.He was among the earliest to import the
Lhasa Apso breed of dog into Britain. [Bailey, Eric (1937) Dogs from the Roof of the World : Many unusual Breeds Found in Tibet the Strange Land That Lies in the Clouds. AMERICAN KENNEL GAZETTE 25(3) [http://www.lhasa-apso.org/articles/bailey.htm] ] He was in contact with others interested in Central Asia includingRichard Meinertzhagen .References
Further reading
*Anon. Obituary. Ibis 1967:615-616
*Anon. (1967) Obituary: Lt.-Col. F. M. Bailey, C. I. E. 1882-1967. The Geographical Journal 133: 427-428.
*Bailey, F. M. "China, Tibet, Assam" (London: Cape, 1945)
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Bailey
Given1 = F.M
Surname2 = Hopkirk
Given2 = Peter
Year = 2002
Title = Mission to Tashkent
Publisher = Oxford University Press
ISBN = 0192803875.(1946, republished 1992 and 2002).
*Bailey, F. M. "No Passport To Tibet" (London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1957)
*Brysac, Shareen Blair and Karl E. Meyer. "Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia". (Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint Press, 1999).
*Cocker, Mark. "Loneliness and time: the story of British travel writing". (London: Secker & Warburg, 1992).
*Hopkirk, Peter. "Setting the East Ablaze: Lenin's Dream of an Empire in Asia". (London: Kodansha International, 1984).
*Swinson, Arthur. "Beyond the Frontiers. The Biography of Colonel F.M.Bailey Explorer and Special Agent" (London: Hutchinson of London, 1971)External links
* [http://www.roll-of-honour.com/Norfolk/Wiveton.html Memorial plaque at Wiveton church]
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