Hugh Low
Hugh Low
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
AI Council 1894 Member
AI Council 1895 Vice President
AI Council 1896 Vice President
AI Council 1897 Vice President
AI Council 1898 Member
AI Council 1899 Member
AI Council 1900 Member
House Notes
1891.11.24 proposed for election at the next meeting
may be duplicate
death noted in the report of the council for 1905: Sir Hugh Low, G.C.M.G., who had seen service in Labuan and Perak, and who succeeded to the Residency on Mr. Birch's murder, was the author of " Sarawak and its Inhabitants." His death, which occurred in April, will be universally regretted. He was elected a Fellow of the Institute in 1891.
Notes From Elsewhere
Sir Hugh Low, GCMG (10 May 1824 – 18 April 1905) was a British colonial administrator and naturalist. After a long residence in various colonial roles in Labuan, he became the first successful British administrator in the Malay Peninsula. His methods became models for future administrators. He made the first documented ascent of Mount Kinabalu in 1851. Both Kinabalu's highest peak as well as the deep gully on the other side of the mountain are named after him.[1][2]
GCMG (1883). Served in Sarawak and Resident in Perak
Publications
External Publications
Sarawak, Its Inhabitants and Productions: Being Notes During a Residence in that Country with His Excellency Mr. Brooke By Hugh Low (1848)
A Botanist in Borneo: Hugh Low's Sarawak Journals, 1844-1846 By Hugh Low, Bob Reece, Phillip Cribb Contributor Bob Reece, Phillip Cribb Published by Natural History Publications (Borneo), 2002; ISBN 983-812-065-0, ISBN 978-983-812-065-4
Sĕlĕsǐlah (book of the Descent) of the Rajas of Brunei By Hugh Low Published by [s.n.], 1880 The Journal of Sir Hugh Low; Perak, 1887: Perak, 1887 By Hugh Low, transcribed and edited by Emily Sadka Published by Govt. Print. Off., 1955
House Publications
Related Material Details
RAI Material
Other Material
PRM field collector