Warren Delabere Barnes
Warren Delabere Barnes
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Warren Delabere Barnes

Warren Delabere Barnes (Chinese: 班士; pinyin: bān shì; Jyutping: baan1 si6; 22 September 1865 – 28 October 1911) was a British colonial administrator.

He was a member of the Malayan Civil Service from 1888 to 1910 and was Colonial Secretary of Hong Kong during five months in 1911, until his sudden death.

Warren Barnes attended King's College School and Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 1887.

He was appointed to the Straits Settlements Civil Service as a Cadet by the Secretary of State in 1888, and was sent a year later to study the Teochew dialect in Shantou. He returned to Singapore in 1890 and passed his final examination in Teochew in November 1891.

He was then appointed 3rd Magistrate in Penang, 1893; acting Protector of Chinese in Perak later in the same year; Warden of Mines, senior magistrate, and Protector of Chinese in Pahang, January 1899; Assistant Protector of Chinese, Penang, 1901; acting Commissioner of Lands and Mines, Federated Malay States, August 1903; acting British Resident, Pahang, November 1903; acting Protector of Chinese Straits Settlements, 1904.

In May 1904, he was appointed Secretary for Chinese Affairs, Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States. In February 1909, he attended the International Opium Commission in Shanghai. In January 1910, he returned to Pahang as British Resident.

In 1900, Barnes conducted an expedition to Gunung Benom in Pahang, with the main purpose of erecting a trigonometrical beacon on the mountain. Leaving Raub on 31 August, he reached a subsidiary summit of Gunung Benom, which he supposed to be Gunung Kluang Terbang. He was back at Raub on 21 September. During the expedition, he collected plants, of which 122 species collected at an altitude of 5,000 feet (1,525 m) were listed by Henry Nicholas Ridley. By 1913, Elytranthe barnesii Gamble of the family Loranthaceae, a plant that he had collected, had been named after him. The plant has been described as a parasite of Durio zibethinus (durian).

Barnes was appointed Colonial Secretary of Hong Kong on 7 June 1911, taking up the office vacated on 21 January by Sir Francis Henry May, who had been appointed Governor of Fiji. Barnes became an ex officio member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong on 8 June 1911. On 4 October 1911, he represented the British Government, together with J. W. Jamieson, HBM Consul-General at Canton, at the opening of the Chinese Section from Shenzhen to Guangzhou of the Kowloon–Canton Railway.

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