Arthur Robert Adams
British lawyer and colonial administrator (1861-1937)
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Sir Arthur Robert Adams KBE (13 December 1861 – 3 April 1937) was a British lawyer and colonial administrator who spent his career in the Straits Settlements.
Early life and education
Adams was born on 13 December 1861, the son of Robert Adams of Sherborne, Dorset. He was educated at Sherborne School and Foster’s School, Sherborne. He was admitted as a solicitor in England in 1884.[1][2][3]
Career
Adams went to Penang to practise as a lawyer and advocate, and was admitted to the Bar of the Straits Settlements in 1887. Later, he was also admitted to the Federated Malay States Bar in 1898, and the Johor Bar in 1917. From 1891, he was the Municipal Commissioner in Penang.[2] He served as Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council, Straits Settlements from 1907-1919 and Senior Unofficial Member from 1915-1919. On several occasions he acted as Solicitor-General of the Colony.[4] He acted as legal counsel for the government in Tanjong Pagar Arbitration in 1905.[1]
Adams was Commandant of the Penang Volunteers from 1899-1919. He was mobilised in 1914 and during the First World War was mentioned in despatches. He rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel commanding troops in Penang, and was Second in Command, Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States.[5][6] Adams was a Fellow of the Royal Colonial Institute. In 1920, he became a founder member of the Association of British Malaya,[7] successor to the Straits Settlements Association.[1]
In 1923, Adams retired to Swanage, England where he served as a magistrate and legal adviser. He served as vice-chairman of the Swanage Urban District Council and vice-president of the R.N.L.I.[8]