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Go to record Graves and monuments Graves and monuments
 Inscriptions Volume 2

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Date transcribed2013-04-15
Transcribed byRobert Charnock

View all other items of "Surname" with value "BRUCE" in "Inscriptions Volume 2" Surname  BRUCE    
Given Names  Richard Isaac    
Degrees/ Honours  CIE    
Relationship  youngest son    
Wife/husband/ parents  Mr Jonathan Bruce    
Death Date  29 January 19??    
Age  83 yrs    
Inscription  Mr Richard Isaac Bruce, CIE, died at Teddington (Middx) on January 29th in his 84th year. He belonged to a branch of the family of Bruce of Earlshall, Fife who settled in Co. Cork in the 17th century. He was the youngest son of Mr Jonathan Bruce of Prohurst and grandson of Mr Jonathan Bruce of Miltown Castle Charleville Co. Cork. His great uncle Major Gen Eyre Evans Bruce served in the Company's Army and his elder brother, the late Canon Robert Bruce, was for many years a missionary in Persia. In 1863 Richard Bruce was appointed an extra-assistant -commissioner in the Punjab and 30 years later attained the distinction, very unusual for an Uncovenated officer, of becoming Commissioner of Derajat. Those 30 years were spent in continuous service on the North West Frontier, the story of which is given in his book 'The Forward Policy and its Results' pub. 1896. Mr Bruce was a devoted Lieutenanat of Sir Robert Sandeman, with whom he went to Kelat in 1876, whose personal assistant he became and whose views on Frontier Administration he upheld staunchly. In the Baluchi tribal lays collected and translated by the late Mr Longworth-Danes, Mr Bruce appears with Sandeman as a sturdy fighter and ruler. He acquired an unequalled knowledge of the Mahsuds and Waziris. It fell to him to take over and occupy the Baluch stronghold of Quetta and his wife was the first European lady to enter the Baluch village which has grown into a great station. His varied service somewhat grudgingly recognised by the CIE awarded him in 1881 included the delimitation of the Afghan-Waziri boundary in 1894 and military expeditions in Afghanistan (1879-80), Zhob Valley (1884 and 1890), and Waziristan (1894-95). He married in 1871 Lilla, daughter of Rev J. Beaver Webb, of Dunderrow Co. Cork who died in 1911. She shared her husbands life on the Frontier in primative and uncomfortable conditions. They had 6 sons and a daughter. Three sons entered the Army: Major Maxwell Bruce, 107th Pioneers, killed in action in France. Lieut Col Charles Bruce, CIE OBE is deputy Commissioner of Kohat and Major G. Eyre Bruce, MC, 12th Frontier Brigade. Another son Richard Bruce obtained his commission in the Royal Engineers, won the MC on active service in France. Mr Bruce is survived by 5 sons and his only daughter     
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The data reproduced here was accumulated over many years by the late genealogists Lt.-Col Hubert Kendall Percy-Smith, FSG, and Brigadier Humphry Bullock, CIE, OBE, who realized the need to gather records of persons who served in British India as gravestone inscriptions were already subject to damage and erosion. They gathered them from a variety of sources published about the sub-continent, from church records, by transcribing records of gravestones, etc. The co-operation between these two gentlemen was very close and it is difficult, on many occasions, to determine which of them was responsible for the differing details of their work.

On his death, Lt.-Col. Percy-Smith bequeathed his work to the National Army Museum who subsequently made a gift of it to BACSA, the 'British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia'. BACSA have most kindly licensed us to reproduce their holdings here. Brigadier Bullock's daughter, Mrs Anne Macdonald, has generously given us to permission to publish his work.

It may be pointed out that Percy-Smith and Bullock endeavoured to compile service histories and even pedigrees using their source material. Their data in this respect is included in our transcriptions but it should be understood that it represents deductions made by these two gentlemen.

It should also be pointed out that some of their data may have been obtained directly, or otherwise, from the same sources that we present elsewhere. This may, of course, result in duplication which we trust will be acceptable to researchers
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