Charles Dallas


Charles Dallas was born about 1767, in Edinburgh, was the last East India Company Governor of St. Helena.
His father was William Dallas of North Newton, by his second wife, Davidona Haliburton. William Dallas, third son and heir to James Dallas of ST. MARTIN’S by his second wife, Barbara Cockburn, daughter of William Cockburn, merchant in Edinburgh, and his spouse Jean Clerk, and sister of Henrietta Cockburn, wife of William Dallas, W.S. of Budgate.
His mother was Davidona Haliburton, born about 1730, daughter of George Haliburton of Muirhouseland, "late" Provost of Edinburgh, of the family of Muirhouseland; she was served as co-heiress of provision general to her sisters Ann and Elizabeth Haliburton, 3 July 1787.

Military career

Dallas spent many years in the service of the Honourable East India Company.
During the Napoleonic Wars he joined the Shropshire Corps of Yeomanry, Captain of the Troop, 15 January 1804, promotion granted by Lord Berwick.
He became Colonel of the St. Helena Regiment of Infantry, granted 11 August 1827. Dallas achieved the rank of Brigadier-General at St. Helena and eastward of the Cape of Good Hope on 14 February 1828.

Marriage

Dallas married, on 9 January 1801, at Edinburgh, Janet, only surviving child of George Cockburn Haldane 18th of Gleneagles by his first wife, Bethia, daughter of Thomas Dundas of Fingask And Carronhall, M.P. for Orkney & Shetland, Burgess of Edinburgh, Deputy Lyon King of Arms and Commissioner of Police, by his wife Lady Janet Maitland, daughter of the Earl of Lauderdale.

Governor of St. Helena

Brigadier-General Charles Dallas was the last East India Company Governor of St. Helena, a position he held from 1828–1834.

Death and family

Dallas died on 26 April 1855, at Trefusis House in Exmouth 'in his 88th year', having survived his wife Janet and his three youngest sons. His eldest son, Captain Thomas Dallas Haldane, drowned at sea in 1857. His three daughters, Bethia, Davidona Eleanor and Caroline, all had issue.