Henry Cockburn (consul)
Henry Cockburn was a British diplomat.
Family
Cockburn was born in Calcutta in 1859. He was a son of Francis Jeffrey Cockburn, a Judge in India and with the Bengal Civil Service, and wife Elizabeth Anne Pitcairn. His paternal grandparents were Henry Cockburn, Lord Cockburn, and his wife Elizabeth Macdowall, while his maternal grandparents were Robert Pitcairn and his wife Dorothy/Dorothea Jessy Dumas.Claud Cockburn, the journalist, was his son and the journalists Alexander Cockburn, Andrew Cockburn and Patrick Cockburn are his grandsons.
Biography
Cockburn served in China for 25 years from 1880 as British Consul-General to Beijing and Vice-Consul in Chongqing, China. In late 1901, Cockburn was appointed to assist Sir James Lyle Mackay, who had been appointed His Majesty's Special Commissioner to conduct negotiations with representatives of China, The negotiations resulted in the Sino-British "Mackay Treaty," which anticipated the abolition of extraterritoriality in China.In 1905, Cockburn was appointed Consul-General in Seoul, Korea, at the beginning of the Japanese occupation.
He was invested as a Companion of the Order of the Bath.
Marriage and issue
He married at Totlands Bay, Hampshire, on 9 October 1899 Elizabeth Gordon Stevenson, daughter of Colonel James Francis John Stevenson and wife and wife Louisa Cameron Ross, by whom he had one daughter and one son:- Louise Margaret Cockburn, married to George Raleigh Parkin, and had two daughters:
- * Elizabeth Stevenson Parkin, married to Omar Shakespear Pound, and had issue
- * Jane Parkin
- Francis Claud Cockburn of Brook Lodge, Youghal, County Cork, Munster, Ireland