- Henry Wray
Lieutenant-General Henry Wray (
1 January 1826 –6 April 1900 ) Demerara (Ireland) 20th CompanyRoyal Engineers . Arrived in Fremantle12 December 1851 and was responsible for carrying out the construction plans forFremantle Prison forEdmund Henderson . Henry Wray was born inDemerara ,Ireland on1 January 1826 . The son of Charles Wray,Chief Justice of Demerara, Wray graduated from theRoyal Military Academy at Woolwich as Second Lieutenant in 1843. Postings inIreland andGibraltar followed, and Wray's abilities as an engineer soon saw him promoted to First Lieutenant in 1846. Married in 1848 to Mary Drinkwater, the daughter of eminent historianThomas Drinkwater , Wray then moved back to Woolwich in 1850.In 1851 he was selected to travel to
Western Australia along with other married soldiers of 20th CompanyRoyal Engineers . After arrival he was appointed as amagistrate to the colony, and given responsibility for the construction of the Convict Establishment (nowFremantle Prison ), based upon designs byEdmund Henderson .Wray personally designed many buildings, bridges and roads in the Perth area, and in April 1854 was promoted to rank of Second Captain. Around this time The Royal Engineers left to serve in the
Crimean War , but Wray remained and was promoted to First Captain.After Henderson's departure in 1856, Wray succeeded him as Acting Comptroller General of Convicts. After serving in the position for two years, he was described in a letter from the
Governor of Western Australia Arthur Edward Kennedy as “a most exemplary and industrious officer who has for many months done the work of several”.Henry Wray left Australia on
2 January 1858 to return to England. In 1860 he was commissioned to help determine the boundaries between theBritish Honduras (Belize ) andGuatemala . This was a difficult undertaking that saw him injured several times by both nature and natives. By this time he had been promoted to the local rank of Major. After the signing of theAnglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty , he was then posted toJapan with a company ofsapper s.Wray returned to England in 1865 becoming Chief Royal Engineer at Chatham. He published several works on Engineering that were to reform teaching methods in the field. After several years he became Chief Royal engineer in
Malta , and was involved in several military and civil engineering projects before moving toIreland in 1879 for 7 years. Promoted to Major-General in 1882, Wray became Lieutenant-Governor of the Bailiwick ofJersey until his retirement in 1887. He died frompneumonia atBournemouth on6 April 1900 , aged 75.References
*cite news|pages=129–134|title=Obituary Notice: The Late Lieut.-General H. Wray, C.M.G., R.E.|date=
June 1 1900 |publisher=The Royal Engineers Journal
*cite web|title=Fremantle Prison - History|url=http://www.fremantleprison.com.au/history/history25.cfm|accessdate=2006-03-14
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