Quick Search
Advanced
Browse Records
Publications > Book indexes
Share this page 
Go to record Schools and Colleges Schools and Colleges
 Memorials of Old Haileybury College

click to hide Data table details
Date transcribed2000-00-00
Transcribed byBenda Cook
CommentPublication Date: 1894
Author: F. C. Danvers, Sir M Monier -Williams, Sir S. C. Bayley, P. Wigram, the late Brand Sapte, and many contributors.
Publisher Constable & Co.: Westminster
British Library: OIR 354.54 Held in the Asia, Pacific and Africa Collections.
This book can be found online. To find out more visit our fibiwiki page on Books online containing strong Biographical Interest

No.  611    
View all other items of "Surname" with value "Tucker" in "Memorials of Old Haileybury College" Surname  Tucker    
Christian Names  Robert Tudor    
Dates at Haileybury  1833-35    
1st Term  Classics, Mathematics, Essay Prizes    
2nd Term  Classics, Law, Mathematics, Hist & Pol Econ, Essay Prizes    
3rd Term  Classics, Mathematics, Hist & Pol Econ, Hindustani Prizes    
4th Term  Classics, Mathematics, Hist & Pol Econ, Sanskrit Medals; Hindustani Prize    
Presidency  Bengal    
Career in India  1835-57    
Place of Death  Killed at Fatehpur    
Date of Death  1857 [Jun 9]    
Final Appointment 1  Judge of Fatehpur    
Mutiny Service  Judge of Futtehpore. On June 9 the storm burst at this Station, halfway between Allahabad and Cawnpore. The mob plundered the Treasury, let loose the prisoners and destroyed the Government offices, and the officials had to escape as best they could. But Tucker refused to stir. He took up his post on the roof of the Magistrate's office and there held the rebels at bay till he was shot down, not before several had fallen to his rifle. Not one member of the Service behaved more gallantly than Robert Tucker, one brave Englishman alone and unsupported, not hesitating to face an infuriated mob of ruffians and sacrificing the life which he might well have saved a to noble, if exaggerated, sense of duty. So much had he endeared himself to all that after his death two Hindus stood out and cursed his .murderers in public, for which honest and brave speech they lost their lives.    
  << first    < previous   next >    last >>  

click to expand  More details

© Families in British India Society. Unless stated otherwise, all rights including those in copyright in the content of this website are owned by or controlled for these purposes by the Families in British India Society.The content of this site may not be copied, reproduced, republished, downloaded, posted, broadcast or transmitted in any way without first obtaining written permission from the Families in British India Society or that of the copyright owner.
If you found this useful then why not join FIBIS to get all the benefits from membership and help this work to continue. You can now join on-line in the FIBIS Shop...
Frontis V4.20.04.06 Rev: 217. Web site engine code is Copyright © 2005-2020 Frontis. All Rights Reserved.
Decrease text size text size  Increase text size
Powered by Frontis, The Archive Publishing System