Prinsep was one of the most distinguished East Indian civil servants of the first half of the nineteenth century, who worked closely with a succession of governors-general.
He was the fourth son of John Prinsep, who had originally gone out to India in 1771 as a military cadet before resigning to become a free merchant. Thereafter Prinsep’s father pioneered the cultivation of indigo in Bengal and the printing of cotton fabrics, amassing a considerable fortune in the process. He returned to England in 1788, purchasing Thoby Park in Essex, and sat for Queenborough from 1802 to 1806 as a supporter of the Grenville ministry, though he often dissented on East India matters.
Prinsep swiftly established a reputation as an extremely able and knowledgeable civil servant and was appointed Persian secretary to the government in 1820. For the following three years he served under Hastings, whose tenure as governor-general he came to view as a ‘glorious one’, which established the East India Company’s diplomatic influence throughout the Indian peninsula. Staunchly conservative in his political instincts, however, he viewed Hastings’ successors in a less positive light. His opposition to the policy of imposing English as the language of instruction in the courts and schools saw him clash with the modernising Lord William Bentinck, governor-general, 1833-35. He also doubted the wisdom of giving freedom to the press of India, a measure introduced by Bentinck’s successor, Sir Charles Metcalfe. Despite his apparent obstinacy to reform, his career continued to flourish. In 1835 he served temporarily as a member of the council of India, a body of four formal advisors to the governor-general, and secured a permanent appointment to the council in 1840.
With parliamentary ambitions in mind, Prinsep returned to England in 1843. His first three attempts to enter the Commons, however, ended in failure. Standing for a vacancy at Kilmarnock (where he had no connections) in May 1844, he issued grave warnings about the dangers of free trade, asserting that a repeal of the corn laws would plunge the working classes ‘into a state of starvation’. He was defeated by ten votes.
Prinsep made an immediate impact at Westminster with a series of forceful interventions to debates concerning economic policy. In one lengthy contribution, he poured scorn on the Russell ministry’s failure to abolish the income tax, characterising Sir Charles Wood as a chancellor who was unable to cope with having a surplus. Distinctly unimpressed, Wood interjected, to stop Prinsep ‘from blundering on’, but he persisted, questioning the wisdom of reducing duties on coffee when those on tea, sugar, beer and tobacco remained, making articles of consumption too expensive for ‘the working man’.
After a promising start, Prinsep’s parliamentary career was brought to an abrupt halt when the Harwich election committee ruled, by three votes to two, that as the annual rent on his London home was only £300, he did not meet the property qualification. His election was declared void, 19 May 1851.
Prinsep enjoyed far greater successes in his canvass for a seat on the court of directors of the East India Company, arguably a more natural home for his administrative talents than Westminster. He was elected a director in 1850 and following the Charter Act of 1853, he retained his seat following a vote by ballot. When the East India Company’s rule was abolished by the 1858 Government of India Act, he was one of the seven directors appointed to the new council of India, from where he staunchly opposed the government’s decision (made without consulting the council) to transfer the East India Company’s European regiments to the British army. He continued to be an active member of the council until his retirement in 1874.
Beyond his official life, Prinsep was also an established scholar of Indian history, publishing a variety of works including Origin of the Sikh Power in the Punjab (1834) and Tibet, Tartary, and Mongolia: their Social and Political Condition (1851). He also wrote verses and translated classical texts. His wife Sara, one of seven daughters of James Pattle, of the East India Company, who were known for their beauty and talents, hosted a salon at their London home at Little Holland House, which became an important artistic and literary centre, welcoming figures such as Tennyson, Browning, Thackeray and Ruskin, along with the artist George Frederic Watts, to whom the Prinseps gave their patronage.
Prinsep died at Watts’ house at Freshwater on the Isle of Wight in February 1878.
