Robert Duncan Bell
Sir Robert Duncan Bell, KCSI, CIE (18 May 1878 – 14 January 1953) was a Scottish civil servant who was the Acting Governor of Bombay during the British Raj, from 30 May 1937 to 18 September 1937.[1]
Life
[edit]Bell was the son of William Bell, a typesetter with the Edinburgh Evening News, and his wife, Christina Beveridge Malcolm. The family lived at 3 Gladstone Terrace in the Grange, Edinburgh, close to The Meadows.[2] In 1905, Bell moved to India as a junior civil servant.[3] He was a member of the Bombay Legislative Council in the 1920s and present during the Bombay Riots of 1928/29.[4]
Bell became Acting Governor of Bombay on 30 May 1936, after Governor Lord Brabourne went on leave with his wife, Lady Brabourne. Bell was sworn in with a 17-gun salute.[5]
Bell is buried with his parents in Grange Cemetery in south Edinburgh. The grave lies just to the west of the north face of the central vaults.
References
[edit]- ^ Who Was Who. A. & C. Black. 1961. p. 28. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
- ^ Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1878–9
- ^ The India List and India Office List, 1905
- ^ State Violence and Punishment in India, Taylor Sherman
- ^ "Social and Personal", Great Britain and the East (1936), p746. Accessed 2 May 2018.
External
[edit]- "Colonial administrators and post-independence leaders in India (1616–2000)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)