Henry Maxse Explained

Honorific Prefix:Lieutenant-Colonel
Sir Henry Maxse
Birth Name:Henry Berkeley Fitzhardinge Maxse
Birth Date:1832 1, df=y
Resting Place:Brookwood Cemetery, Surrey, England
Mother:Lady Caroline FitzHardinge
Spouse:Auguste von Rudloff
Relatives:Frederick Maxse (brother)
General Ivor Maxse (nephew)
Leopold Maxse (nephew)
Violet Maxse (niece)
Module:

Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Henry Berkeley Fitzhardinge Maxse (1 January 1832  - 10 September 1883) was a British Army officer of the Crimean War and colonial official who was Governor of Newfoundland.

Biography

Maxse was the son of James Maxse and Lady Caroline Fitzhardinge, daughter of the 5th Earl of Berkeley (pronounced Barkley).[1]

Maxse was commissioned lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards in 1849 and transferred to the 13th Light Dragoons and then the 21st Foot in 1852. He was promoted captain in 1854 and transferred to the Coldstream Guards in 1855. He was promoted major in 1855 and lieutenant-colonel in 1863.

He was wounded at the Battle of Balaclava and received medals of honour for his service. He was lieutenant-governor of Heligoland in 1863 and appointed as governor the following year. Maxse became governor of Newfoundland in 1881.

Maxse was instrumental in the construction of the Newfoundland Railway. Most of his term as governor was spent in Germany with his wife, Auguste von Rudloff (d.1915). A noted German-language scholar, he published an English translation of Bismarck's Letters to his Wife and Sisters.

Maxse died as a result of the injuries he suffered at the Battle of Balaclava. He is buried in Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Debrett's Peerage, and Titles of Courtesy: In which is Included Full Information Respecting the Collateral Branches of Peers, Privy Councillors, Lords of Session, Etc . 1921 . Dean . 112 . 23 September 2024 . en.