Arthur Dorward (British Army officer)

Major-General Sir Arthur Robert Ford Dorward, KCB, DSO (13 July 1848 – 25 March 1934) was a British Army officer who commanded the Troops in the Straits Settlements and served as the first Commissioner of British Weihaiwei.

[3] He was appointed Commander, Royal Engineers in Jamaica in 1897 and then took part in the capture of Tientsin following the Boxer Rebellion in China in 1900, for which he was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB).

[4] Dorward then served as Commissioner of Weihaiwei from September 1901,[5] and went on to be Commander of the troops in Shanghai later the same year.

In October 1902 it was announced he would vacate his command in Shanghai as the British reduced their forces in China,[6] and he returned home where he was received by King Edward VII and invested with the KCB at Buckingham Palace on 24 October 1902.

[7] Dorward was subsequently appointed General Officer Commanding the Troops in the Straits Settlements with the rank of brigadier-general on 13 November 1902,[8][9] and left the UK for Singapore the same month,[10] taking up the post on arrival in 1903.