DOUGLAS, SHOLTO (1795-1838), army officer, was born on 14 December 1795,
at Dinsworth, Chichester Supra, West Sussex, England, son of Major James
Sholto Douglas and his wife Sarah, née Dawes.
Lieutenant General Sir
James Douglas was Sholto's brother and their sister Sarah married a
family connexion, the 7th Marquess of Queensberry. In September 1811
Sholto was commissioned, by purchase, ensign in the 50th Regiment of
Foot. He served in Portugal, Spain and France in 1812-14, purchasing
promotion to lieutenant in July 1813. From December 1814 he was thrice
on half-pay. In 1819 representations by his brother succeeded in
cancelling Douglas's appointment to a regiment in the unhealthy West
Indies. Paying £166 1s., in 1820 he returned to full time duty with the
63rd Regiment. By 1827 he had purchased his majority and in 1826-28 he
served in Portugal.
Departing from England in June 1828 for Van Diemen's Land, he
administered command of the 63rd until superseded in March 1830. Apart
from guarding convicts, the regiment engaged in anti-guerilla operations
in the 'Black War' against Tasmanian Aborigines. In October-November
1830 Douglas led over 1000 soldiers and armed civilians in the 'Black
Line' sweep of the colony from north to south, to drive warlike tribes
into Tasman Peninsula. The operation was planned and commanded by the
lieutenant-governor George Arthur and not, as some historians have
claimed, by Douglas.
Douglas was also chairman of magistrates for Oatlands and Campbell
Town. On 25 March 1830 at St David's Church of England, Hobart, he
married Henrietta Patricia, second daughter of the colonial secretary
John Burnett, and granddaughter of Sir Henry Browne Hayes. Returning to
England with his family in November 1831, Douglas retired from the army
the following November. Although he disliked Van Diemen's Land, by next
year the family was back in Hobart Town. Arthur offered him a minor
post, which he declined in expectation of the appointment of sheriff.
This did not materialize and in January 1835 he settled on a developed
property of 160 acres (64.75 ha) at New Norfolk. In April he sold up and
in November returned to England with his son, but was back in the colony
by early 1837 and appointed ordnance storekeeper. Now in ill health, he
soon again returned to England, where his wife joined him in December
1838.
His voluminous correspondence with Arthur revealed Douglas as not
particularly efficient, feeling his honour was at stake whenever
criticized. He demanded an inquiry 'before a competent tribunal' when
Arthur pointed out an uneven distribution of troops and a lack of
vigilance in one of Douglas's sub-units. He also had deficiencies in
handling subordinates and lacked attention to his soldiers' wellbeing.
According to Arthur, prior to departing for England in November 1831,
Douglas had 'taken to his bottles and behaved exceeding ill'. On
his return, Arthur noted: 'Unfortunately he soon lapsed into gross
intemperance, associating with the lowest Company, by whom he was made a
complete Tool'. Douglas, in turn, complained to Arthur of his
'oppression' and 'persecution of power' in his treatment of those who
fell from favour. He was shamed and infuriated when the local press
reported in 1837 that his application to be placed on the jury list was
refused by the lieutenant-governor Sir John Franklin, because his
employment as ordnance storekeeper was only of warrant officer status.
As the proud young officer and gentleman with ready access to patronage
faded, it seems that Douglas failed.
He died on 24 December 1838 on the Isle of Man and was buried in
Fife, possibly on a property of his sister, the Marchioness of
Queensberry. His wife, who remarried in 1844, survived him, as did his
only son Edward Sholto (1831-1853), who served in the Royal Navy.
Source: Australian Dictionary of Biography