(1863-01-29)29 January 1863 Riverbank, Putney, London, England
Died
29 September 1923(1923-09-29) (aged 60)
Occupation
Civil servant
Sir Henry Babington Smith (29 January 1863 – 29 September 1923) was a senior British civil servant, who served in a wide range of posts overseas, mostly financial, before becoming a director of the Bank of England. He was related to the Babington family through his maternal grandmother Mary, a daughter of Thomas Babington, and his children took the double surname Babington Smith.
In 1894 he became private secretary to Lord Elgin on his appointment as Viceroy of India. This relationship was cemented when he married the Viceroy's eldest daughter, Lady Elisabeth Mary Bruce (1877–1944), on 22 September 1898 in Simla.[3] For his work in India, he was appointed Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI) in 1897.
In 1909, he went to Constantinople as president of the National Bank of Turkey, which he was instrumental in establishing. He turned down the post of Governor of Bombay, one of the most prestigious posts in the administration of India, because it was usually accompanied by a peerage. Smith explained to his children: "[n]o man is wise who burdens a large family with such trappings. I did without them and so can you."[3]
After the war, he chaired the Indian Finance and Currency Committee in 1919 and the Railway Amalgamation Tribunal in 1921. He was appointed a director of the Bank of England in 1920.
Babington Smith married Lady Elizabeth Bruce (1877–1944), the eldest daughter of Victor Bruce, 9th Earl of Elgin, the Viceroy of India. They had four sons and five daughters:
^Sir Henry Babington Smith, G.B.E, C.H.M, K.C.B., C.S.I, M.A., 1863-1923, Civil Servant & Financier, by George H Bushnell, St Andrews, 1942, p13, privately printed for the Lady Elisabeth Babington Smith