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'Ghost view', North West Frontier, India, 1936

Photograph, India, North West Frontier, 1936.

From a page captioned, 'A Coy on "gusht" to John Coke's bungalow'. A 'gusht' refers to a frontier patrol.

Sir John Coke (1806-1897) was a veteran of the East India Company Army. After his participation in the 2nd Sikh War (1848-1849) he raised the 1st Punjab Infantry to serve on the frontier between the annexed state of Punjab and Afghanistan. In 1850 he was appointed Deputy Commissioner of Kohat, and was responsible for security in what was a particularly unstable frontier territory.

In late 1936 there was growing agitation against British rule in Waziristan, led by the Waziri leader Ghazi Mirzali Khan Wazir, 'the Fakir of Ipi'. In response the British launched a military operation into the Khaisora Valley, hoping that a show of strength alone would suffice to reduce unrest. However, the two main columns of troops met stiff resistance and their supply lines were disrupted, forcing them to retire. The operation's failure triggered a wider insurrection and the ensuing guerrilla war drew in more British and Indian forces. Over 30,000 troops, together with aircraft and armoured cars, were deployed to the region. Violence subsided in late 1937 and after brief flare-ups in 1938 and 1939 the North West Frontier was relatively quiet until India became independent in 1947.

From an album of 347 photographs compiled by Captain (later Major) Wynne Howes-Roberts, 1st Battalion 13th Frontier Force Rifles, India and UK, 1936-1937.

NAM Accession Number

NAM. 1997-12-12-34

Copyright/Ownership

National Army Museum, Out of Copyright

Location

National Army Museum, Study collection

Object URL

https://collection.nam.ac.uk/detail.php?acc=1997-12-12-34