Samuel Dunlop
Col. Samuel Dunlop, Companion of the [Order of St Michael and St George|CMG] was a British civil servant and officer in the Royal Artillery. He served in several capacities as a member of the Straits Settlements civil service but is perhaps best known as the Inspector-General of Police, in Singapore.
Dunlop was born in Derriaghy, County Antrim, the son of Samuel Dunlop. He was the father of Sir Thomas Dacre Dunlop. He died in Highgate, London, aged 79.
Pangkor Treaty 1874
The Pangkor meeting took place in the middle of January 1874 on board the Colonial Steamer Pluto moored off the picturesque Island of Pangkor, off Perak state – the oldest Sultanate of the three Western states.The three parties involved in the fateful engagement were the British, the Malay rulers, and the Chinese.
British Officials Present were:
- Major-General Sir Andrew Clarke, the Governor, Commander-in-Chief, and Vice-Admiral of the Straits Settlements
- Mr. Bradell, the Attorney-General
- Major J.F.A. McNair, the Colonial Engineer
- Colonel Samuel Dunlop, the Inspector-General of Police
- Mr. A.M. Skinner of the Secretariat
- William A. Pickering, officer in charge of Chinese affairs
- Frank A. Swettenham, interpreter of Malay from the Land Revenue Office
- Raja Abdullah
- Raja Idris
- Raja Bendahara
- the Mantri Ngah Ibrahim
- the Temenggong
- the Shahbandar
- the Raja Mahkota
- the Laxamana
- the Dato Sagor