b. 1828-06-30
               		
               d. 1870-02-26
               		
               	
               
                  Captain Henry Reynolds Luard was the Executive Officer of the Department of Lands
                     and Works in the Colony of 
British Columbia from 
1858 to 1863.
1 He arrived in 
Esquimalt, after his departure from England on 
9 October 1858, aboard the 
Thames City on 
12 April 1859.
2 The majority of Luard’s appearance throughout the despatches is the result of a politically-fuelled
                     debate on whether or not Luard should be appointed as 
Col. Richard Clement Moody’s replacement as the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works.
3 James Douglas supported Luard’s appointment and suggested him as 
Moody’s successor in a 
letter to the 
Duke of Newcastle in 
September 1863.
4 Moody objected to 
Douglas’s recommendation; he believed that, while Luard was very well regarded within the
                     Colony, he did not have the necessary experience to fulfill the demands of the position.
5 Furthermore, 
Moody prevented 
Douglas from delaying Luard’s scheduled departure from the Colony, with the other Royal Engineers,
                     until 
Newcastle had decided whether or not he would become the new Chief Commissioner of Lands and
                     Works.
6 Ultimately, 
Newcastle appointed 
Sir Joseph William Trutch to the position in 
February of 1864 and Luard returned to England.
7 
                  		
                  		
                  Luard was born on 
30 June 1828, in Warwick, Warwickshire to a family of landed Gentry.
8 In 
1845, he attended the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich and graduated as a Royal Engineer.
9 From his graduation until 
1858, Luard was posted throughout England and the West Indies and achieved the rank of
                     2nd Captain.
10 After serving in the Colony of 
British Columbia for three and a half years, Luard was promoted to the rank of Captain on 
1 April 1862.
11 During this time, Luard also began a romance with his future wife Miss Caroline Mary
                     Leggatt of 
Victoria (b. 
1844).
12 They met while Luard and 
Moody were in 
Victoria during the extremely cold winter of 
1861-1862 that caused the 
Fraser River to freeze solid, which likely delayed their return to the mainland.
13 Luard and Leggatt were engaged one year later and married at Christ’s Church in 
Victoria on 
8 October 1863.
14 
                  		
                  		
                  Since Luard was denied permission to stay in 
BC, he and his new wife returned to England in the fall of 
1863.
15 For the duration of his life, Luard remained in the army and was posted at Portsmouth,
                     England and in Ireland.
16 He and Leggatt had two children, Henry Arthur (
1865-1901), born in Gosport, Southampton, died in Winburg, Orange River Colony, and Eleanor
                     Mary (
1868-?), born in Athlone, Ireland.
17 Luard died on 
26 February 1870 from a gastrointestinal illness in Ireland.
18 
                  		
                  		
                  
                     
                        - 1. Captain Henry Reynolds Luard, The Royal Engineers.
 
                        - 2. Ibid.; Douglas to Stanley, 19 August 1858. 10342, CO 60/1, p.86, footnote 6.
 
                        - 3. Douglas to Newcastle, 14 September 1863, 10453, CO 60/16, p.133; Douglas to Newcastle, 13 November 1863, 12534, CO 60/16, p.269.
 
                        - 4. Douglas to Newcastle, 14 September 1863, 10453, CO 60/16, p.133.
 
                        - 5. Moody to Under-Secretary of State, 19 December 1863, 12465, CO 60/17, p.494.
 
                        - 6. Douglas to Newcastle, 13 November 1863, 12534, CO 60/16, p.269; Douglas to Newcastle, 13 November 1863, 12535, CO 60/16, p.277.
 
                        - 7. Newcastle to Douglas, 16 February 1864, CO 398/2, p.203.
 
                        - 8. Captain Henry Reynolds Luard, The Royal Engineers.
 
                        - 9. Ibid.
 
                        - 10. Ibid.
 
                        - 11. Ibid.
 
                        - 12. Ibid.
 
                        - 13. Ibid.
 
                        - 14. Ibid.
 
                        - 15. Ibid.
 
                        - 16. Ibid.
 
                        - 17. Ibid.
 
                        - 18. Ibid.