Stuart Fraser (diplomat)


Sir Stuart Mitford Fraser, was a distinguished officer of the Foreign and Political Department of the Government of India. Five years after joining the Indian Civil Service, he was appointed tutor to the Maharajas of Kolhapur and Bhavnagar, and later was tutor and guardian to the Maharaja of Mysore. The Fraser Town locality in Bangalore was named after Sir Stuart Fraser.

Early life

Stuart Mitford Fraser was educated at Blundell's School and Balliol College. He passed the examination for the Indian Civil Service in 1882 and was allocated to the Bombay Presidency.

Tutoring of princes

Within 5 years Fraser was selected as guardian and tutor to the Raja of Kolhapur, later to become after being educated at Rajkumar College, Rajkot.
He later had responsibility for the leadership preparations of the Maharajah of Bhavanagar, Shri Bhavsinhji II after schooling at Rajkumar College, Rajkot like his father, Takhtsinhji and son, Krishna Kumarasingh Bhavasingh the last Maharaja of Bhavnagar.
In 1896 Fraser was appointed as governor and tutor to the young Krishna Raja Wadiyar IV, Maharaja of Mysore, who was later to become known as a beneficent ruler who enhanced the reputation of Mysore as a model state.
SIR STUART FRASER - TRAINING INDIAN PRINCES
Sir Stuart Fraser, K.C.S.1., C.LE., died
at Christchurch on Sunday in his one-
hundredth year.
The outstanding feature of his career
was that of his guidance of and friendship
to a number of important rulers of Indian
princely states, Thereafter he was for
more than a quarter of a century a diligent
member, and sometime alderman, of the
Hampshire County Council, and engaged
in much philanthropic work in the county.
Stuart Mitford Fraser was born on June.
2, 1864, the son of J.D. Fraser, and was
educated at Blundell’s School, Tiverton, and
Balliol College, Oxford. He passed the
LCS. examination in:
1882 and was
allotted to the Bom-
ay _ presidency.
Within five years he
was selected to be
guardian and tutor
to the minor Raja of
Kolhapur, afterwards Maharaja Shri
Shau Chatrapati
. Fraser
also had charge of
the preparation for
rulership of the
Chief of Kagal
and the progressive
Maharaja of Bhavanagar. Shri Bravasinhji
II, who died in 1919, Fraser’s notes for
his own guidance on the training of the
princes-were so wise that they were subse-
quently sent to the principals of all Chief
Colleges in India and came into official use.
In 1896 Fraser was selected to be tutor
and governor to the minor Maharaja of the |
important State of Mysore, then a boy of
12. During the formative six years. which
elapsed before the Maharaja was invested
with full powers by Lord Curzon he. had
a thorough, if sometimes exacting, preparation for his life’s work. Throughout the
38 years of his beneficent rule he entertained a profound affection for his mentor.
Aided by a succession of able Dewans and
notably, during the last 15 years, bv the
tenure of his old classmate Sir Mirza
Ismail, the Maharaja enhanced the reputation of Mysore as a model state...
In 1903 Fraser went to the Foreign
Department at Calcutta and Simla as
deputy secretary and later officiating. secretary. In the following year Lord Curzon
sent him to Peking as H.M. Commissioner
to negotiate with the Chinese Government
about the Anglo-Tibetan Convention of
that year. In 1905 he returned to Mysore
as Resident and ex-officio Chief_ Commissioner of the small province of Coorg.
in 1911 Fraser was appointed Resident
in Kashmir. In Srinagar, as elsewhere,
Fraser was on terms of warm friendship
with the ruler and steadily encouraged
progress and reform. For a few months
in the summer of 1914 Fraser acted as
Resident in Hyderabad. Almost at the
outset of the war Turkey was drawn to
the German side, which had a serious effect
upon Mushm subjects of the Crown, and
not least in India. The Nizam of Hyderabad took a defeatist view, and it was only
the firm and confident persuasiveness of
the acting Resident which led him to recog-
nize how fatal would be the effect if he
failed to follow the traditions of his father
as friend and helper of the British Raj
At the three important Residencies he
occupied Fraser was greatly assisted by the
comradeship and understanding help of his
wife, Constance, daughter of Colonel
Edwin Maude, whom he married in 1888
and who died in 1937. She was made
C.B.E. in 1918 for war work in Hyderabad.
They had a son and two daughters.

Anglo-Tibetan Convention 1904

In 1903 Fraser went to the Foreign Department at Calcutta and Simla as deputy secretary and in 1904 was sent by Lord Curzon as H.M Commissioner to negotiate with the Chinese about the Anglo-Tibetan Convention.

Later career

Fraser returned to India in 1905 as Resident in Mysore and Chief Commissioner of Coorg. In 1911 Fraser was appointed Resident in Kashmir and for several months in 1914 was acting Resident in Hyderabad.
At the commencement of the First World War, with Turkey taking the side of Germany, it was Fraser’s resolute and confident approach that persuaded Osman Ali Khan, Asaf Jah VII, the Nizam of Hyderabad, to resist defeatist view and ensure continued support for the British Raj.

Fraser Town, Bangalore, India

Fraser Town is a suburb of Bangalore Cantonment, in Bangalore North-East, spread over 4 km2. It was established in 1906 and is named after Stuart Mitford Fraser. Fraser Town was established to de-congest the growing Bangalore Civil and Military Station. The foundation of Fraser Town was laid in August 2010 by Mrs. F J Richards, with a commemorative plaque on the corner of Coles Road and Mosque Road . Fraser Town is a residential and commercial suburb, the prominent roads being Promenade Road, Netaji Road, Madhavraya Mudaliar Road, Haines Road, Spencer Road, Wheeler Road, Mosque Road, etc. The suburb is known for its communal harmony with Hindus, Muslims and Christians living side by side in peace.