Engagement & Return To India
After Lachlan Macquarie asked Elizabeth Campbell of Airds to become his wife on 26 March
1805 there were many uncertainties to be faced, as well as many questions
left unanswered. Why was he not taking her with him to India? What dangers would
he face on the voyage back to Bombay? How long would it take? How long would
he be away?
Macquarie departed for India on board the East Indiaman City of
London under the command of Captain William Landon on 25 April.
After a voyage of approximately 15 weeks he arrived again in Bombay on
12 August where he became acquainted again with many of his old
'India friends'. One week later he visited the gravesite of his first
wife, Jane, (nee Jarvis) who had died in Macao, China, in July 1796 (from
tuberculosis) and whose body Macquarie had arranged to be buried in the
European Cemetery in Bombay in January 1797.
In the latter months of 1805 Lachlan Macquarie's diary entries become
more sparse, with observations principally upon administrative and
political developments in the Presidencies of Calcutta, Bombay and
Madras. In particular, the illness of the Marquis of Cornwallis,
Governor-General of India, and the arrival of the Persian Ambassador in
Bombay. In November Macquarie describes his preparations for joining the
86th Regiment as part of the next British military expedition against
Holkar and the Maratha Confederacy in Gujerat. He records the death of
Cornwallis near Benares [on 5 October] and the subsequent public
mourning that took place in Bombay. He also makes reference to the
unconfirmed news he has received of his promotion to the
Lieutenant-Colonelcy of the 73rd. Regiment – now stationed in Britain.
Letter
To Sir James Henry Craig.
10 February 1805
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