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By the retirement of Khan Bahadur Sher Jang on 15th June 1925, the
Survey Department lost a most distinguished officer of the Upper
Subordinate Service, who had been employed almost continuously during
his service of over 30 years in the Department either on or beyond the
Frontiers on India.
Sher Jang enlisted in Coke's Rifles in 1887. After taking part in the
1st and 2nd Miranzai Expeditions of 1890-91 and accompanying the Kurram
Column in 1892-93, he joined the Survey of India as a Soldier-Surveyor
in 1895. From 1895 to 1899 he served on the N.W.Frontier, taking part on
the Waziristan Expedition of 1894-95, in the Tochi, Tirah and Mohmand
Expeditions of 1897-98, and in Dir and Chitral in 1899, when he was
granted the title of Khan Sahib. From 1899 to 1901 he served with Capt.
Crookshank on Persia, visiting Bandar Abbas, Kerman, Shiraz, and
Bushire, and surveying an area of about 53,000 square miles. in 1901-02
he was attached to the Abyssinian Boundary Commission and was awarded
the title of Khan Bahadur at the early age of 32. In 1903-04 he
accompanied the Tibet Mission, being mentioned in dispatches, and in
1905-06 served under the Foreign Department in the Persian Gulf,
visiting Bushire, Muhammareh, Basrah and the Masqat frontier. He
returned to South Persia in 1907-08 where he surveyed an area of 25,000
square miles and travelled as far north as the frontier by Herat. He was
employed on the Baluchistan-Afghan frontier in 1909 and with the Afghan
Mission in 1910, when he was awarded the McGregor Memorial Medal. He
served with the Abor Expedition in 1911-12, when he was again mentioned
in dispatches, and with the Turco-Persia Boundary Commission in 1913-14,
for which he was awarded decorations by the Persian and Turkish
Governments.
When the Great War broke out in 1914, Khan Bahadur Sher Jang was engaged
on survey work with this Commission in the neighbourhood of Urumieh. He
brought the survey personal back through Persia by way of Mianeh,
Tehran, Qum, Isfahan and Sheraz to Bushire. After a short period of
service in India, Sher Jang returned to Persia, and in 1916-17 was with
the party surveying the road alignment between Bandar Abbas and Kerman.
In 1917-18 he served in Waziristan and on the Mahsud frontier, and
towards the end of the latter year proceeded again to Mesopotamia. Owing
to his intimate knowledge of conditions in Persian Kurdistan, he was now
employed under the Political authorities on an important diplomatic
mission.
At this time, the tribes of Central Kurdistan were in an appalling
condition of destitution as the result of the war, and their chieftains
were seeking the protection of the British. In the north, Sayyid Taha,
who was in a position to control the tribes under British
administration, had been invited to meet the Political Officer, but
being influenced by Turkish propaganda, had so far remained aloof. Khan
Bahadur Sher Jang received orders to go to Urumieh and to negotiate with
Sayyid Taha. He left Rowanduz with four Indian Khalasis on 9th March
1919, forced a way over the snow bound Guru-i-Shaikh Pass on the Persian
frontier, traversed the desolate Lahijan country, and reached Urumieh
after much hardship on 20th March. Sayyid Taha was six stages away at
Chahari, and owing to the attitude of the Persian Governor, Sher Jang
was unable to leave Urumieh. He wrote a letter to the Sayyid persuading
the latter to visit him in Urumieh, and they met five days later. All
through the night of the 25th March the tow men discussed the situation,
and as last dawn was breaking Sher Jang won he case and prevailed upon
Sayyid Taha to accompany him back to Baghdad. The success of this
mission had a large share in maintaining tranquility on the Rowanduz
district during the subsequent rising of Shaikh Mahmud in Southern
Kurdistan.
During this rebellion, Sher Jang served as a political officer in the
Sulaimani area. In 1920-21 he was appointed representative of Iraq in
the resettlement of the Iraq-Persian frontier, which had been disturbed
by war conditions. His work in this connection was highly appreciated by
the Right Hon.Sir Winston Churchill, Secretary of State for the
Colonies, in his dispatch dated 21st September 1921. He returned to
Persia in 1923 with a detachment of the Survey of India which was
employed in survey work for the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
The Khan Bahadur was promoted to the Upper Subordinate Service on 1st
August 1909. He is in possession of 12 war medals and decorations with 8
clasps; he has been awarded honoraria for his service on several
occasions, and has received an assignment of land revenue from the
Government of India. In 1902 the Royal Geographical Society awarded him
a Sword of Honour (the Black Memorial) in recognition of his valuable
services to geography, and in 1916 he was awarded the Kaisar-i-Hind
medal (2nd Class). During the visit of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales to
India in 1922, Sher Jang had the honour of being personally presented to
His Royal Highness, who evinced a keen interest in his services.
Khan Bahadur Sher Jang's unfailing tact and courtesy endeared him to all
with who he came into contact, and it was largely these qualities in
conjunction with his energy and resource in hazardous situations which
rendered his work so successful and his services so valuable,
politically and professionally, in the turbulent countries where so much
of his life was passed.
There was also another fine side of Sher Jang's character which was only
realised by those who knew him well, namely for his compassion for the
weak. When he was on sick leave at the end of 1918, the virulent
epidemic of influenza was ravaging the homes in his country. Sher Jang
devoted his three months' hard-earned rest to nursing the sick and
burying the dead; and he is recorded in a letter than he "regarded
this duty greater than his active service". On another occasion, in
Urumieh in 1919, when he was by no means in a pleasant situation
himself, he exercised all his personal influence in urging the
protection of the hapless Christian women and children, whose lives were
at times threatened by the fanatical Kurds.
It is not easy to summarize such varied services in a brief note of
appreciation. Sher Jang succeeded in winning the admiration and
affection of all officers with whom he served, both in the Survey of
India and outside it, and he carried with him the best wishes of all
ranks of the Department on his retirement.
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