Sturrock acted as tutor to
Daudi Cwa II of Buganda, a government appointment, and accompanied him to England in 1913. He was appointed a District Commissioner in
Uganda in 1914; and Provincial Commissioner in 1922. Described as "progressive" by Gill, Sturrock began a programme of reform in what is now
Lesotho in the 1920s. He made a good impression on
Margery Perham, a visitor to Basutoland around the end of 1929. He took the view that
indirect rule had not been applied effectively; and initiated judicial and administrative reform measures that were applied over a period of a dozen years. In 1935, Sturrock was replaced as Resident Commissioner by
Edmund Charles Smith Richards. ==Family==