From Luton Road to H.M. Abassador
Frank Smitherman (1913-1993) was, I'm told, my mother's favourite cousin.
His father was Harold Clifton Smitherman (1891-1981), one of the seven children of Francis Thomas and Jane Smitherman, who lived at 152 Luton Road, Chatham. This house is the one next to the empty space on the corner of Castle Road, that was the family's woodyard at the time of his birth and for many years after.
Harold went into the army, and in the 1911 Census was a Sapper (electrician) stationed on Malta.
He married in 1912, and Frank was born in Bombay in 1913.
During his service in WW1 Harold went first to Mesopotamia and then India, being promoted through the ranks and then being commisioned as a second Lieutenant in 1917.
He and his wife and two younger children went back to India in 1924, leaving Frank living with his Grandparents. On the passenger list they gave their home address as 152 Luton Road. Frank attended the Math School – the fees a perk of Harold's Indian Army posting?
In 1933 Frank left for Rangoon to join the Indian Police. He married Frances Calvert.
As yet it is unclear to me what his movements were after the war, but his wife and two children returned from Bombay in 1945, and then travelled to Hong Kong in 1949 probably to meet him, as he was appointed The King's Vice Consul to Amoy in early 1949.
His MBE is mentioned in the Confirmation by the Queen of his 1949 posting taken from the London Gazette of 1953.
Another gap in my knowledge is when and why he was awarded the MBE – any help out there?
His subsequent postings include Rome (1955), Khartoum as Consul to the Republic of Sudan (1958), Consul-General for parts of France, based at Bourdeaux (1967), a spell of Admin at the Embassy to USSR (1969), and finally Ambassador to Togo and Dahomy (West Africa) in 1970.
His daughter Ann Frances married in Sudan in 1960 to Sir Jocelyn Charles Roden Buxton. They went on to have three daughters.
Harold retired from the Indian Army as a Lt-Colonel.