Like Britain’s present politics, where Rishi Sunak’s name is back in contention for the top job, Canning, too, had an Indian connection. The youngest of his four children, Charles John Canning, was the British Governor-General who quelled the Revolt of 1857 and thereafter became the first British Viceroy of India.
But first, the elder Canning, whose record Liz Truss just broke. He was the son of an impecunious Anglo-Irish gentleman who abandoned his family when George Canning was a year old, forcing his widow to become a stage actress, which was not a respectable job to do in the England of his time.
George Canning, however, turned out to be a bright child, which inspired his uncle, a London merchant named Stratford Canning, to raise and educate him. Thanks to his uncle’s generosity, Canning was able to join such elite institutions as Hyde Abbey School, Eton College and Christ Church College, Oxford, where he was considered quite a whizkid, especially because of his knowledge of Latin and the classics.
Of course, no amount of education would have helped Canning grow beyond becoming a lawyer, perhaps, but he was quick to align with the rising ‘Tory’ leader, William Pitt the Younger, who eventually became a respected Prime Minister.
With Pitt’s backing, Canning became an MP and went on to hold several diplomatic and cabinet posts, including Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer, before becoming Prime Minister on April 12, 1827, ahead of more formidable candidates, notably, Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington, who had defeated Tipu Sultan and the Maratha Confederacy during his tenure in India, and Sir Robert Peel.
When Canning became Prime Minister, his mother’s profession was raised by the blue-blooded Lord Grey, after whom the Earl Grey tea blend is believed to be named, who sneeringly remarked, “the son of an actress is, ipso facto, disqualified from becoming Prime Minister”.
Nevertheless, George Canning did get invited by George IV to become Prime Minister, but his health was declining steadily and he died from tuberculosis on August 8, 1827, after completing 119 days in office.
He, like Liz Truss, left behind a badly divided Tory party, split on the question of parliamentary reforms, which Canning opposed.
Canning’s son, Charles, was 15 years old when his father died. He graduated from Christ Church College, Oxford, with a first in classics and a second in mathematics, in 1833 and became an MP three years later.
Charles Canning entered the government of Sir Robert Peel, an opponent of his father, as the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in 1841, and then went on to hold a succession of unimportant positions — First Commissioner of Woods and Forests, member of the Royal Commission on the British Museum, and Postmaster General — till he was despatched to a rebellious India in 1856.
In his new job, he first had to put down the rebellion with a firm hand and then pursued the line of reconstruction and reconciliation, which earned him the sobriquet ‘Clemency Canning’.
It was during his stint that the three principal universities — Calcutta, Bombay and Madras — were established even as the rebellion was raging, the Hindu Widows’ Remarriage Act was passed, and the Indian Penal Code was drafted and enacted.
He and his artist-photographer wife, Charlotte, who was the Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Victoria and corresponded most copiously with her, greenlighted the ground-breaking project of photographing the many communities and tribes of India, which resulted in the encyclopaedic eight-volume work, ‘The People of India’.
Interestingly, it was in honour of Lady Canning, who was one of British India’s early photographers and a talented watercolourist, that the popular Bengali sweetmeat ‘ladykeni’ is named.
And it was her premature death from malaria in 1861 that left the then Viceroy of India so heartbroken that he retired to London, where he succumbed to liver disease in 1862 at the age of 49.
Charlotte Canning lies buried at St John’s Church, Kolkata, and her husband’s memory has been kept alive in the sub-division named after him in the South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal.
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