IDNO

DG.144872.SHP


Description

"We met travellers on their way down from Gyantse.
Ken Shepheard talking to Hudson (a doctor) and Gould talking to O'Malley.
Between Gautsa and Phari. 13 August 38."


Place

S Asia; Tibet; Gyantse; Chumbi Valley Region; Gautsa; Phari


Cultural Affliation


Named Person

Ken Shepheard; Dr. Hudson; B. J. Gould; Dr A. H. O. O'Malley


Photographer

Jack, Archibald (Archie) Frederick Maclean (Leuit., R.E.)


Collector / Expedition


Date

13 August 1938


Collection Name

Shepheard Collection


Source

Shepheard Rogers, Patricia


Format

Album Print Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

Related Archive: Noted in Shepheard's diary 'Some Notes of Ken Shepheard on his expedition to Lhasa, Tibet, in September - October 1938' pp.13,
"13 August 1938
Left Gontsa 0700 and continued up the Chumbi gorge with Gould and H.H. and a long cavalcade. Road rather steeper (average 1/10) but line possible for M.T. road. Khuds steep and scrub covered but few trees. At mile 5 Dotag plain could camp up to 1 Bde and after crossing the river at Kamparab camp sites become unlimited but no fuel.
Saw Chomo Lhari in all its glory from above Dotag plain.
Met Hudson (1/15) and O’Mailey? (Dr) on their way down to Yatung with relief pl. from Gyantse.
On reaching Kamparab the others went on and Archie and I climbed about 1500 feet to R. of track hoping to follow the spur round towards Phari. Map V. inaccurate and lots of nullahs not shown and we had to descend to Phari plain again. Arrived V tired 1700 hrs.
Rummy, bath, bed." [JD 26/01/2020]

Named Person: "Sir Basil John Gould, CMG, CIE (29 December 1883 – 27 December 1956) was a British Political Officer in Sikkim, Bhutan and Tibet from 1935 to 1945.
Known as "B.J.", Gould was born in Worcester Park, Surrey, to Charles and Mary Ellen Gould. He was educated at Winchester College and Oxford University. He joined the Indian Civil Service in 1907.
Gould was a British Trade Agent in Gyantse, Tibet from 1912 to 1913. In 1912, the Dalai Lama asked that some "energetic and clever sons of respectable families" should be given "world-class educations at Oxford College, London". The Indian government decided that Gould, who was about to go on leave back to England, should guide the four young boys (known as the "Four Rugby Boys") on their journey to the United Kingdom and assist them during their first few weeks in England in April 1913.
In August 1936, Gould led a delegation to Lhasa to negotiate with the Tibetan government on the possibility of the 9th Panchen Lama's return to Tibet. Gould also discussed British military aid to Lhasa. Gould inquired about the creation of a British office in Lhasa, but the Tibetan government rejected this. Gould eventually departed Lhasa, but left behind his commercial representative, Hugh Richardson, who had been previously stationed in Gyantse. Richardson was equipped with a radio so Richardson could maintain contact with the British." [Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Gould, JD 06/06/2020]

Named Person: "Capt. A.H.O. O'Malley took up post as the Medical Officer Gyantse in July 1938 and kept it until July 1939. (Tibet and the British Raj, London Studies on South Asia, no. 14, London, Curzon Press, 1997, p. 236." [Source: http://tibet.prm.ox.ac.uk/photo_2001.59.7.74.1.html, JD 03/07/2020]


FM:282776

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