Charles John Irving

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Preceded byMajor Samuel Dunlop (Acting)
Succeeded byAllan Maclean Skinner
Preceded byMajor General Edward Anson
Succeeded byMajor General Edward Anson
Charles John Irving
Resident Councillor of Penang
In office
1885–1887
Preceded byMajor Samuel Dunlop (Acting)
Succeeded byAllan Maclean Skinner
Acting Lieutenant-Governor of Penang
In office
10 February 1879  16 May 1880
Preceded byMajor General Edward Anson
Succeeded byMajor General Edward Anson
Acting Colonial Secretary of Straits Settlements
In office
1875  17 February 1876
MonarchQueen Victoria
GovernorSir William Jervois
Preceded byWilliam Willans (Acting)
Succeeded bySir John Douglas
Auditor-General of Straits Settlements
In office
1867–1879
Personal details
Born7 February 1831
Isabelle Place, Camberwell, London
Died23 February 1917(1917-02-23) (aged 86)
Sarlsdowr, Exmouth
SpouseMary Jane Tompkins
Parents
  • Charles Mitchell Irving (father)
  • Anne Dorothea Madgwick (mother)

Charles John Irving, CMG, (7 February 1831 – 23 February 1917)[1][2] was a British civil servant in the Malay Peninsula.

He was with the Colonial and Immigration Office from 1852 to 1853 and a clerk in the Audit Office at Mauritius from 1853 to 1864. He was one of the very few Straits officials who had studied the Malay political and social systems. He was an expert on native affairs on the Malay Peninsula whom Governors Ord and Anson used in different negotiations. In 1871 Anson sent James W. W. Birch, then Colonial Secretary, together with Auditor-General Irving to see Sultan Abdul Samad at Langat to re-establish order there.[3][4][5][6][7]

He was acting Lieutenant-Governor of Penang from 1879 to 1880, Resident Councillor of Penang from 1885 to 1887, Colonial Auditor General to the government of the Straits Settlements at Penang from 1867[8] to 1879 and acting Colonial Secretary of Straits Settlements from 1875 to 1876 under governors Sir Harry Ord, Edward Anson and Sir William Jervois.

He was a member of the newly formed Straits Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society in Singapore, acting as the society's president around 1883.[9]

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