Algar Howard Explained

Honorific Prefix:Major General
Sir Algar Howard
Office:Garter Principal King of Arms
Term Start:2 June 1944
Term End:6 December 1950
Predecessor:Sir Gerald Wollaston
Successor:George Bellew
Birth Name:Algar Henry Stafford Howard
Birth Date:7 August 1880
Nationality:British
Education:Harrow School
Alma Mater:King's College London
Occupation:Herald
Years Active:1911 - 1950
Employer:His Majesty The King
Organization:College of Arms
Spouse:Lady Rachel Campbell
Violet Ethel (m. 1921)
Children:2
Father:Sir Stafford Howard
Family:House of Howard

Sir Algar Henry Stafford Howard (7 August 1880 – 14 February 1970) was a senior British Army officer and long-serving officer of arms at the College of Arms in London. He served as the Garter Principal King of Arms from 1944 to 1950 before retiring. He was the third consecutive Fitzalan Pursuivant of Arms Extraordinary to attain the highest rank at the College of Arms.

Early life and family

Algar Henry Stafford Howard was born on 7 August 1880. He was the eldest son of Sir Edward Stafford Howard, KCB, JP, DL (1851–1916), of Thornbury Castle and Cilymeanllwyd in Carmarthenshire, and his first wife, Lady Rachel Campbell (died 1906), youngest daughter of John Campbell, 2nd Earl Cawdor.[1] He married Violet Ethel, daughter of Sir Henry Meysey Meysey-Thompson, 1st and last Baron Knaresborough, on 11 October 1921. She was the widow of Captain Alexander Moore Vandeleur, 2nd Life Guards, who was killed in action at Zandvoorde during the First Battle of Ypres on 30 October 1914.[2]

The couple had two daughters: Anne Violet (born 1923), who married John Cahill, son of John Cahill, of Knockrom West in Scartaglen; and Elizabeth Helen (born 1924), who married Harold William Norman Suckling Walker, eldest son of Colonel James Coulthard Walker of the Indian Army.[1]

Military career

Howard was appointed a Second lieutenant of the Carmarthen Militia Artillery on 31 January 1900, and was promoted to Lieutenant on 6 September 1900. In the First World War Howard served with the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars. He won the Military Cross and attained the rank of Major.

Heraldic career

Howard was educated at Harrow School and King's College London. Howard began his heraldic career on 23 May 1911 with an appointment as Fitzalan Pursuivant of Arms Extraordinary for the coronation of King George V. This was followed in October of that year with an appointment to the office of Rouge Dragon Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary.

In 1919, Howard was promoted to the office of Windsor Herald of Arms in Ordinary and he held this position until 1931. In that year he was made Norroy King of Arms when Sir Gerald Woods Wollaston was promoted. Howard was also appointed Registrar of the College of Arms in 1928, and during the Second World War the records of the college were stored at his home of Thornbury Castle in Gloucestershire for safekeeping.

In 1943, the office of Ulster King of Arms was merged with that of Norroy and Howard became the first Norroy and Ulster King of Arms. He remained in this office until 1944 when he was promoted to Garter Principal King of Arms. He retired from this office, and from the College of Arms, in 1950.

Howard was created Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (CVO) in 1935, Companion of the Bath (CB) in 1937, Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO) in 1944, and Knight Commander of the Bath (KCB) in 1951.

Arms

Algar Howard, Garter king of arms (1944-1950)
Coronet:King of Arms
Crest:On a chapeau gules turned up ermine a lion statant gardant, tail extended.
Escutcheon:His arms of office, impaling Howard arms, viz. Gules, on a bend between 6 crosses crosslet fitchy argent a scocheon or charged with a demi-lion rampant pierced through the mouth with an arrow in a royal tressure gules..[3]
Motto:Sola Virtus Invicta ("Virtue alone is invincible")
Orders:the circlet of the Royal Victorian Order and Order of the Bath. Collar of Esses.
Badge:A slip of oak vert fructed or charged on the stem with a crescent sable (granted 1913).
Symbolism:Arms derived from the House of Howard and the Dukes of Norfolk.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 2007, vol. 2, p. 2909
  2. Burke's Irish Family Records
  3. Web site: arms as Norroy King of arms in 1934..