Sir Lepel Henry Griffin KCSI was a British administrator and diplomat during the British Raj period in India.
Background
Lepel Henry Griffin was born in Watford, England on 20 July 1838. His father, Henry, was a clergyman in the Church of England and his mother was Frances Sophia. His mother had been married previously and thus Griffin had ten half-siblings as well as two full sisters.
Education
Griffin was educated briefly at Harrow School, having also attended Malden"s Preparatory School, Brighton.
Career
He was also a writer He did not go to university but was privately tutored for the competitive examination for entry to the Indian Civil Service. He sat and passed those examinations during 1859 and 1860, being ranked tenth among the 32 successful candidates.
He reached India in November 1860 and was posted to Lahore.
The mannerisms of Griffin had attracted attention in India from the time of his arrival there, and in 1875 Sir Henry Cunningham satirised him in the novel, Chronicles of Dustypore, in which he was depicted as the character Desvoeux. Katherine Prior, the author of his entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, describes that, "He was a dandyish, Byronic figure, articulate, argumentative, and witty.
Anglo-Indian society was at once both dazzled by and scornful of his languid foppishness and irreverent tongue". In 1880 he became Chief Secretary of the Punjab.
He was sent as a diplomatic representative to Kabul, at the end of the Second Afghan War.
He was then Governor-General"s Agent in Central India and Resident in Indore. And Resident in Hyderabad. He collaborated with the pioneer Indian photographer Lala Deen Dayal.
He was a proponent of an Anglo-American union, he addressed a meeting on 15 October, 1898 in Luton, on the subject of the suggested Anglo-American union, Colonel
John Hay, the former United States Ambassador at London attended the meeting. Griffin died at his home - 4 Cadogan Gardens, Sloane Street, London - on 9 March 1908 after suffering from influenza.
He was cremated and his ashes were interred at a private chapel owned by Colonel Dudley Sampson in Buxhalls, Haywards Heath, Sussex. The Law of Inheritance to Chiefships.
Lahore: Punjab Printing Company.
1869.
The Rajas of the Punjab (1873)
Famous monuments of Central India (1886)
The Great Republic (Second ed). London: Chapman and Hall. 1884.
Ranjit Singh. Rulers of India series.
Oxford: Clarendon Press.