Josceline Wodehouse Explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
Josceline Wodehouse
Birth Date:17 July 1852
Allegiance: United Kingdom
Branch: British Army
Rank:General
Battles:Anglo-Zulu War
Second Anglo-Afghan War
Awards:Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George

General Sir Josceline Heneage Wodehouse (17 July 1852 – 16 January 1930) was a senior British Army officer.

Military career

Born the elder son of Vice-Admiral George Wodehouse[1] and educated at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Wodehouse was commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1873. He fought in the Anglo-Zulu War in 1879.[2]

He became Commandant of the Frontier Field Force in Egypt in 1888. When Kitchener was promoted over him to be Sirdar (Commander-in-Chief) of the Egyptian Army in 1892, he retired from the Egyptian Army and went to India where he was made Commander of the 3rd Brigade of the Malakand Field Force during the Siege of Malakand in 1897[3] and appointed General Officer Commanding the Presidency District of Bengal in 1898. He was a district commander in Sindh, when on 13 January 1900 he was temporary appointed in command of the Secunderabad district.[4] A year later, on 11 April 1901, he was appointed in command of a First Class District in India (possibly Secunderabad or Lahore).

He went on to be Governor of Bermuda in 1907 and General Officer Commanding the Northern Army in India in 1908.[5]

Family

In 1885 he married Constance D'Aguilar and in 1901 he married Mary Joyce Wilmot-Sitwell.

Notes and References

  1. For more on George Wodehouse see: Wodehouse, George.
  2. http://samilitaryhistory.org/vol072sd.html Keeping the flag flying
  3. Web site: Non-Australian ex-military Birdwood connections. Australian War Memorial. 15 August 2017.
  4. Hart′s Army list, 1901
  5. http://thepeerage.com/p5675.htm The Peerage.com