, whom Lawrence served under in the
First Anglo-Burmese War On passing out from Addiscombe in 1822 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the
Bengal Artillery, arriving in India the following year. He was based at the
Calcutta suburb of
Dum Dum, where
Henry Havelock was also stationed about the same time. He soon saw action in the
First Anglo-Burmese War, and at the age of 18 Lawrence commanded a battery forming part of the
Chittagong column which General
Joseph Wanton Morrison led over the jungle-covered hills of
Arakan. He served for two years in Burma, until the expedition was decimated by fever, and Lawrence nearly perished of the illness. He returned to Dum Dum, before being sent first to
Penang and then
Canton to convalesce. As these changes in climate failed to affect his health for the better, he was invalided back to England. Lawrence set sail for India on 2 September 1829 with his brother John, who had recently completed his studies at the
East India Company College. The brothers parted company in Calcutta, and Lawrence rejoined his regiment in
Karnal on the Sikh frontier, where his elder brother George was now stationed.
Revenue Survey of India In 1833 he was appointed an assistant to the Revenue Survey of India by
Lord William Bentinck based at
Gorakhpur. He was tasked with mapping out and marking the boundaries of villages and fields in certain large districts, classifying them in accordance with the quality of soil and extent of holdings and to investigate and record the rights of claimants. He soon perceived the urgent need for more canals, and more and better roads, urging that "the farmer, the soldier, the policeman, the traveller, the merchant, all want more roads. Cut roads in every direction." Lawrence went on to successfully accomplish this guarantee, and earned the nickname "Gunpowder" from
James Thomason for his "explosive force which shattered all obstacles". In 1835 his father died, and as such his military pension also ceased, leaving his mother Letitia penniless. Lawrence, along with his brothers, took on the responsibility of remitting allowances for their mother. In July 1837, his sweetheart Honoria Marshall arrived in
Hooghly and they married at the Mission Church in Calcutta on 21 August. Honoria accompanied Lawrence to Gorakpur where she became an enthusiastic assistant in his work. By the close of 1837, Lawrence had completed his work in Gorakpur and set out for
Allahabad the next district on his list. He continued with the survey until August 1838 when he was ordered to stand ready to rejoin his troop amid talk of war with
Afghanistan.
Ferozepore In October 1838, in the run up to the
First Anglo-Afghan War, Lawrence departed Allahabad to join
Alexander Burnes's Horse Artillery, part of an 'Army of the Indus.' At the time he received an offer of a hundred rupees a month from a Calcutta paper to act as a correspondent during the war, agreeing on the condition of anonymity, that he would not supply any information that was not above board, and that the money would be divided between the Calcutta Orphan Asylum and the Benevolent Institution. When the army was ordered to stand fast, he instead became assistant to Sir
George Russell Clerk, adding to his political experience in the management of the district of
Ferozepore. In June 1839
Maharaja Ranjit Singh died and talk of war with the
Sikh Empire began. Lawrence, spent much of the period acquainting himself with knowledge of the history and culture of the
Sikh Empire, and penned a romance of the Punjab to aid those who cared to learn more about the region.
Peshawar When news of disaster came from
Kabul in November 1841 he was at first tasked with pushing up supports for the relief of Sir
Robert Sale and the garrison of
Jalalabad. He was to prepare the way for a relief force through the four hundred miles between Ferozepur and the Khyber. He requested the assistance of guns from the Sikh authorities, who agreed on the condition of the willingness of the gunners themselves, who at first proved unwilling. He relocated to
Peshawar where he was responsible for getting the Sikh allies in hand, and helping to prepare the army of
Sir George Pollock. He had hoped to accompany Pollock in the
Kabul Expedition in 1842, however his fellow agent
Frederick Mackeson was preferred. Instead he was allowed to remain with his old corps until the Khyber Pass was won. At the conclusion of the war, he returned to Ferozepur where the
Governor General of India met the armies of Pollock, Sale and
Nott. In January 1843, Lawrence left Ferozepur when he was appointed superintendent of
Dehradun. It soon emerged that military officers were barred from this post, and so he was instead transferred to
Ambala as the assistant to the envoy at
Lahore. Soon after taking charge, he was instructed to lead a military expedition in Khytul and was thereafter ordered to administer the region. Despite his short time in Khytul, Lawrence introduced a number of reforms including reduced taxes, the abolition of forced labour, a prompt system of justice and punishing bribery and corruption. In addition where required he remitted the land tax owed by a cultivator until he could improve his condition, and made the cultivator undertake public works such as digging wells in lieu of payment. Lawrence soon became somewhat disappointed by his lack of recognition for his contribution in the war and constant moving between jobs. Later that year however he was elevated to the rank of Major and appointed to the well-salaried and prestigious post of the
Resident of
Nepal. ==Resident at Nepal==