ANNUAL REPORT, 1893 - 94 . 
309 
Col. R. D. E. Lockhart 
G. J. Burgmann 
„ C. II. Spragge 
Lt.-Col. J. C. Dalton 
„ E. M. Baker 
„ E. T. Browell 
Major C. F. Hadden 
„ A. C. Hansard 
Major H. C. Sclater 
„ E. S. May 
Capt. J. M. Grierson 
„ H. J. DuCane 
„ A. Crawford 
„ G. R. Darley 
Lieut. A. S. Buckle 
Bankers. 
Messrs. Cox & Co., and London & County Bank. 
Solicitor. 
E. W. Sampson, Esq., Woolwich. 
Trustees. 
General Sir C. Dickson, G.C.B. 
„ Sir H. A. Smyth, K.C.M.G. 
Lieut.-General R. P. Radcliffe. 
Secretary —Major A. J. Abdy. 
The Report as above having been adopted, the following propositions change of Rule 
were brought before the meeting and carried :— 
Par. 3 of Rule II. on page 2 to read :— 
“ The Committee shall have power to elect as Honorary Members 
such Gentlemen connected with military or naval arts and 
sciences as they from time to time think fit ; and for short 
periods, Officers of the army and navy who may be temporarily 
in the garrison or neighbourhood,” instead of as it now stands. 
The meeting then elected as a Special Honorary Member : 
Field-Marshal Sir J. L. A. Simmons, 
Election of 
Special Hon’ary 
Member. 
G.C.B., G.C.M.G., Hon. M.Inst. C.E., R.E., 
Two subjects were then chosen for submission to H.R.H. the p^^eSi 
C ommander-in-Chief, the one selected by him will be announced as 1895 . 
that for the Duncan Gold Medal Prize Essay, 1895. 
The Chairman having asked if anyone wished to make any remarks 
on the Report, or on the Institution generally, and receiving no reply, 
spoke a few words on the loss the Regiment has sustained by the 
deaths of Sir E. B. Hamley, Sir G. Balfour, Sir C. Teesdale, Sir 
F. Campbell ; and speaking of Sir E. B. Johnson, said : “ he is one that 
I can speak about as having been a friend of my own for nearly forty years 
—a man of great ability, a most delightful companion, and an Officer who, 
in his younger days, did a good deal for the Mounted Bengal Artillery. 
He was Assistant-Adjutant-General when he first moved up to Meerut, 
and Assistant-Adjutant-General during the Siege of Delhi, and was of 
the greatest use to Sir Arch dale Wilson ; he was afterwards Adjutant- 
General of the Army in India, which, at that time, was a post seldom 
held by an Officer of his standing—he was then not twenty years’ 
service—and only gave it up on the amalgamation of the British and 
Indian Service, on which one Adjutant-General was appointed. After 
that he was Quarter-Master-General in India, and Adjutant-General in 
