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Arrival Of Lord Ronaldshay— His Excellency the Right Hon’ble
Lawrence John Lumley Dundas, Earl of Ronaldshay, g.c.i .e.,
took his seat / as Governor of Bengal and President in Council on
the 26th March 1917 and vacated it on the 23rd March 1922. His
Excellency was President of the Executive Council and, nntil the
inauguration of the new Legislative Council under, the reforms
scheme in 1921, was aiso President of the Legislative Council. On the
Executive Council there were originally three members, two of whom
belonged to the Indian Civil Service.1 At the time \vhen Lcr'd
Ronaldshay assumed charge the Hon’ble Mr. P. C. Lyon, the Hon’ble
Sir (then Mr.) Nicholas Beatson-Bell and the Hon’ble Nawab Sir Syed
Shams-ul-Huda were on the Council, but, during the greater part, of
the period before the introduction of the reforms, the Hon’ble Sir
Henry Wheeler, the Hon’ble Sir (then Mr.) John Cumming and the
Hon’ble the •Maharajadhiraja Bahadur of Burdwan were the members.
The Right Hon’ble Lord (then Sir Satyendra Prasanna) Sinha and the
Hon’ble Sir Charles Stevenson-Moore were also members for part of
that period. When Lord Ronaldshay arrived the war had had a definite
effect in various directions. On the one hand it had seriously handicapped
the work of Government by making financial economy an imperative
necessity; on th^ other hand it had stimulated the industrial activities
of the provinc^o provide articles which could not be obtained overseas,
a stimulus which ultimately led to a remarkable industrial awakening.
It had led educated «Indians to hope that an advance would be
made in self-government, an aspiration which was recognised as *
legitimate by the subsequent materialization of the reforms schema. of Government. It had impelled the anarchical party to greater
activity and to commit more murders and dacoities which Government
were in the act of checking by means of the Defence of
India Act. It had made Muhammadans anxious regarding the fate
of Turkey, an anxiety which eventually found expression in the
Khilafat agitation and its sequel, the non-co-operation movement which
was so potent for violence, misery and the growth of a dangerous
spirit of lawlessness. It had increased the cost of living, owing to the
increased price of imported articles, which was later to develop into
a general depreciation of the value of money, misunderstood by the
people and vaguely ascribed by them to Government action or
inaction. At the same time the province was ready for improvement
in respect of such matters' as local self-government, sanitation, public
health, education and agriculture to which Lord Ronaldshay addressed
himself in a serious endeavour to promote the welfare of the people
despite the political preoccupations of the period. |
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