Thomas Lewis Ingram

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Lewis Ingram
Acting Governor of the Gambia
In office
19 April 1847  22 December 1847
Preceded byCharles Fitzgerald
Succeeded byRichard Graves MacDonnell
In office
1 March 1844  7 August 1844
Preceded byEdmund Nash Norcott
Succeeded byJohn Isles Mantell
In office
26 August 1843  1 October 1843
Preceded byHenry Froude Seagram
Succeeded byEdmund Nash Norcott
Acting Lieutenant Governor of the Gambia
In office
31 May 1841  1 April 1843
Preceded byHenry Vere Huntley
Succeeded byHenry Froude Seagram
In office
17 September 1839  9 April 1840
Preceded byWilliam Mackie
Succeeded byHenry Vere Huntley
Personal details
Born1807
Died1868 (aged 6061)

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]

Merchant and government career

Personal life and life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI