Lawrence Parsons (British Army officer) explained

Sir Lawrence Parsons
Birth Name:Lawrence Worthington Parsons
Birth Date:23 March 1850[1]
Birth Place:Parsonstown, King's County, Ireland
Death Place:Hatherton, Reigate, Surrey
Allegiance: United Kingdom
Branch: British Army
Serviceyears:1870–1909
1914–1916
Rank:Lieutenant-General
Commands:8th Division
6th Division
16th (Irish) Division
Battles:Second Boer War
First World War
Awards:Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath

Lieutenant-General Sir Lawrence Worthington Parsons (23 March 1850 – 20 August 1923) was a British Army officer who became General Officer Commanding 6th Division.[2]

Military career

Parsons was brought up in Parsonstown in King's County,[3] the only son of Lawrence Parsons.[2] He was commissioned into the Royal Artillery as a lieutenant on 23 July 1870,[4] then promoted to captain on 16 September 1880, to major on 1 July 1886, and to lieutenant-colonel on 1 October 1896.[5] He served in the Second Boer War and took part in the Battle of Colenso, the Battle of Spion Kop and the Relief of Ladysmith,[4] following which he was promoted to substantive colonel on 23 April 1900. After returning to the United Kingdom, he was in January 1901 appointed Colonel on the Staff Commanding Royal Artillery in the 2nd Army Corps on Salisbury Plain. In early 1903, he was appointed Inspector General of Artillery in India.[6] He was then appointed General Officer Commanding 8th Division in Ireland in 1906[7] and General Officer Commanding 6th Division also in Ireland in 1907 before retiring in 1909.[4] He was recalled as General Officer Commanding 16th (Irish) Division in 1914 at the start of the First World War and retired again in 1916.[4]

Family

In 1880, he married Florence Anna Graves, daughter of Dr. Robert Graves of Cloghan Castle, and had one daughter.[2]

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knighthood. Burke's Peerage & Gentry . Burke, Sir Bernard . Bernard Burke . 76th . 1914 . 2468 . Burke .
  2. News: Obituary: Lieutenant-General Sir Lawrence Parsons . . 22 August 1923 . 5.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=liCtA0XnqXUC&dq=%22Lawrence+Worthington+Parsons%22&pg=PA190 Irishmen or English soldiers?: the times and world of a southern Catholic By Thomas P. Dooley, p.191
  4. Web site: Sir Lawrence Parsons. Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives.
  5. Hart′s list, 1903
  6. Naval & Military intelligence . 9 January 1903 . 5 . 36973.
  7. http://www.gulabin.com/armynavy/pdf/Army%20Commands%201900-2011.pdf Army Commands