Thomas Lewis Ingram
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Preceded byCharles Fitzgerald
Succeeded byRichard Graves MacDonnell
Preceded byEdmund Nash Norcott
Succeeded byJohn Isles Mantell
Thomas Lewis Ingram | |
|---|---|
| Acting Governor of the Gambia | |
| In office 19 April 1847 – 22 December 1847 | |
| Preceded by | Charles Fitzgerald |
| Succeeded by | Richard Graves MacDonnell |
| In office 1 March 1844 – 7 August 1844 | |
| Preceded by | Edmund Nash Norcott |
| Succeeded by | John Isles Mantell |
| In office 26 August 1843 – 1 October 1843 | |
| Preceded by | Henry Froude Seagram |
| Succeeded by | Edmund Nash Norcott |
| Acting Lieutenant Governor of the Gambia | |
| In office 31 May 1841 – 1 April 1843 | |
| Preceded by | Henry Vere Huntley |
| Succeeded by | Henry Froude Seagram |
| In office 17 September 1839 – 9 April 1840 | |
| Preceded by | William Mackie |
| Succeeded by | Henry Vere Huntley |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1807 |
| Died | 1868 (aged 60–61) |
Thomas Lewis Ingram (1807 – 1868) was a British merchant who served as the acting colonial governor of the Gambia on five occasions.
Ingram was born in Dublin, Ireland, the son of a linen draper, and brought up in London. He first traveled to West Africa in 1822, working in Senegal as a shop boy before moving to Bathurst, the Gambia.[1]