Edward Keane (British Army officer) explained

Edward Keane
Death Date:2 November
Death Place:Worthing, West Sussex, England
Father:John Keane
Relatives:John Keane (brother)
Module:
Embed:yes
Allegiance:Great Britain
Branch:Army
Commands:7th Hussars
Grenadier Guards
Battles:Peninsular War
Waterloo Campaign
Rank:Colonel
Serviceyears:1803-1838
Awards:Silver Medal with clasps

Colonel Edward Keane (17852November 1866) was a British Army officer of the Napoleonic era who saw service during the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign.

Life

He was the third son of Sir John Keane, 1st Baronet by Sarah, daughter of John Kelly, and brother of John Keane, 1st Baron Keane.

Kene joined the British Army on the 1December 1803 and was promoted to lieutenant on 21November 1804. He served on the expedition to North Germany in 1805 and subsequently in the Peninsular War under Sir John Moore and from November 1813 under the Marquis of Wellington.

For his service during the Peninsular War he received the Silver Medal with clasps for Corruna, Nive, Orthes and Toulouse.[1]

During the Waterloo Campaign he was aide-de-camp to Sir Hussey Vivian whose wife was a relative of Keane.[2] At the Battle of Waterloo he was a captain in the 7th Hussars under Lord Uxbridge, being promoted to major after the battle.

He retired as a lieutenant-colonel on half-pay on 29March 1833.

Keane was subsequently reappointed to the Grenadier Guards and retired as a colonel in 1838.

He died aged 81 on 2November 1866 at Westerfield House, Worthing.[3]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Deaths: Arranged in Chronological Order . The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle . December 1866 . Edw. Cave.
  2. Book: Wildman, Thomas. The Young Hussar: The Peninsular War Journal of Colonel Thomas Wildman of Newstead Abbey. 2007. Book Guild. 978-1-84624-111-6. 67.
  3. News: Deaths . . 7 November 1866 . 21 July 2016 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription.