- Robert Warburton
Infobox Person
name = Robert Warburton
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birth_date =1842
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death_date = 1899
death_place =Kensington
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footnotes = Colonel Sir Robert Warburton (1842 -22 April ,1899 ), was an Anglo-Indian soldier and administrator.Early life
He was the son of Robert Warburton, an
Anglo-Irish officer of the Bengal Artillery who had been taken prisoner atKabul in 1842, and escaped through the good offices of an Afghan princess.Warburton senior married Shah Jehan Begum, a niece of the Amir
Dost Mahommed Khan . She transmitted to their son that power of exercising influence over the tribes of the north-west frontier which stood him in good stead during his long service in India. Warburton entered theRoyal Artillery in 1861, took part in theAbyssinian War of 1867-68, and then joined the Bengal Staff Corps. He served with distinction in the expedition against theUtman Khel in 1878 and in theSecond Anglo-Afghan War of 1878-80.Soon after the British government had made permanent arrangements for keeping open the
Khyber Pass , Warburton was appointed to take charge as political officer. This post he held, discharging its duties with conspicuous ability, between 1879 and 1882 with intervals of other duty, and continuously from 1882 until 1890. He turned the rude levies which formed theKhyber Rifles into a fine corps, ready to serve the Indian government wherever they might be required. He made the road safe, kept theAfridi s friendly, and won the thanks of the Punjab government, expressed in a special order upon his retirement, for his good work.When the Afridis began to cause anxiety in 1897, Colonel Warburton was asked by the government of India if he would assist in quieting the excitement amongst them. He declared himself ready to do so, but in the meantime the trouble had come to a head and control over the Khyber pass was lost. Colonel Warburton took part in the campaign which followed; at its close his active career ended.
Later life
He occupied his leisure in retirement by writing his memoirs, [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=6LUcAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA17&dq=Robert+Warburton&as_brr=1#PPA3,M1"Eighteen Years in the Khyber"] ] (1900). He died at
Kensington on 22 April 1899, and is buried inBrompton Cemetery .References
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