Hugh Cleghorn of Stravithie and Cleghorn family
Hugh Cleghorn LLD of Stravithie, Dunino, by St Andrews (1752-1837), Professor of Civil and Natural History in the United College of the University of St. Andrews. He has a reputation as a gentleman spy and is said to have worked with Charles Daniel de Meuron to facilitate the British conquest of Ceylon.
In 1796 the capture of Ceylon's maritime regions was completed by the British who drove the Dutch out of the country. Initially, the captured region was administered by the British East India Company but when the British Government took over the government under a secretary of state, Frederic North was appointed as the first king's governor, with Hugh Cleghorn as first colonial secretary. Cleghorn, who had been present at the time of the siege and capture of Colombo, toured the island and returned to England to report. He wrote a memorandum on the Dutch system of administration of justice in the maritime regions which the British had just conquered. On January 1, 1802, Ceylon became a British Crown Colony. Cleghorn's work remains of significance in that he minuted the area constituting the traditional homeland of the Tamils.
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