J. K. Stanford

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John Keith Stanford OBE MC (1892–1971) was a British writer of the mid 20th century.[1]

He was educated at Rugby School and St. John's College, Oxford. Stanford was commissioned into the Suffolk Regiment in 1915 and was attached to the Tank Corps from 1917. He ended the First World War with the rank of Captain.

Appointed to the Indian Civil Service on 24 October 1919, he arrived in India on 24 December 1919. He married his second wife, Eleanor, née Davies, in 1927.

He held the following positions:

  • Deputy Director of Commercial Intelligence, Calcutta, January 1922.
  • Services replaced at the government of Burma’s disposal, June 1923.
  • Under Secretary Home and Police Department, December 1923.
  • Officiating Deputy Commissioner, June 1924
  • Registrar, High Court, Rangoon, June 1925
  • Officiating Deputy Commissioner, June 1927
  • District Commissioner of Prome District 1929
  • District Commissioner of Insein District 1930
  • Secretary Revenue Department, Burma, June 1932.
  • Deputy Commissioner for Myitkyina from 1932-36.

Following his time in Prome & Insein District he played a part in the Burma Rebellion 1930-31. He was awarded and O.B.E., 1932. He retired in 1938 and then took part in Vernay-Cutting’s expedition to the North-East Burma Hills.

Between 1927 and 1939 he did much ornithological work in Burma. Amongst his other publications: The Birds of Northern Burma, 1938.

In 1939, he was commissioned Lieutenant in the National Defence Companies. In 1940, Stanford transferred to the Royal Army Ordnance Corps. He retired in 1945 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.

Between the wars, Stanford was in the Indian Civil Service, for much of the time in Burma. He wrote 27 books, and was a regular contributor to The Field, Shooting Times, Ibis, the journal of the Bombay Natural History Society, and other magazines. He was, for a period, Vice-President of the British Ornithologists' Union (BOU).

Many of his books are about country sports (hunting and shooting), ornithology, or British colonial life between the wars.[2]

His granddaughter Melissa Stanford is the wife of William Pleydell-Bouverie, 9th Earl of Radnor.

List of works

(dates from Bodleian Library catalogue)

  • The Twelfth (1944, rev. 1964 as The Twelfth and After: being the life and death of George Hysteron-Proteron)
  • Far Ridges: a record of travel in north-eastern Burma 1938-9 (1946)
  • The Awl-Birds (1949)
  • Guns Wanted (1949)
  • Bledgrave Hall (1950)
  • Reverie of a Qu'Hai, & other Stories (1951)
  • Last Chukker (1951)
  • No Sportsman at All (1952)
  • House of Edward Stanford Ltd. 1852–1952", by Lt Col J. K. Stanford and E. G. Godfrey (1952)
  • Full Moon at Sweatenham: a nightmare (1953)
  • A Bewilderment of Birds (1954)
  • British Friesians: A History of the Breed (1956)
  • Fox Me: the story of a cub (1958)
  • Jimmy Bundobust (1958)
  • Death of a Vulpicide (1960)
  • Ladies in the Sun: the Memsahibs' India, 1790–1860 (1962)
  • Broken Lanterns (1962)
  • And Some in Horses (1965)
  • Tail of an Army (1966)
  • A Keeper's Country (1968, re-issued 1989)
  • The Complex Gun (1968)
  • Partridge Shooting

Sources

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