Robert Calder Campbell Explained

Robert Calder Campbell
Birth Date:1798
Death Date:13 May 1857 (aged 58/59)
Birth Place:Ardersier, Scotland
Death Place:London, England
Allegiance: East India Company
Branch:Madras Army
Serviceyears:1818–1839
Rank:Major
Battles:First Anglo-Burmese War
Awards:Indian War-Medal

Major Robert Calder Campbell (1798–1857) was a British soldier and miscellaneous writer. He was made a cadet in the East India Company's service in 1817; promoted to captain in 1826; served in Burma from 1826–27; was invalided home in 1811; settled in London; promoted to major in 1836; and retired in 1839. He published verse and prose from 1831–1857.

Life

Campbell was born in Scotland in 1798, the son of Rev. Pryce Campbell, the Presbyterian minister in Ardersier.[1] In 1817 he obtained a cadetship in the service of the British East India Company, and was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Madras Army on 2 October 1818. Promoted to captain on 3 October 1826 during the First Anglo-Burmese War, Campbell served in the 43rd regiment of Madras native infantry from 1826–7, and was decorated with the Indian war-medal for services rendered. He was invalided out of active service in 1831 and promoted to major in 1836, before retiring from the army in 1839.[2]

Upon returning from India, Campbell was introduced by the sculptor Alexander Munro to Dante Gabriel and William Michael Rossetti, with whom he became good friends. He subsequently published short stories, prose sketches and poetry in numerous periodicals and assisted with the publication of the Germ in 1850.[3] [4] [5] Campbell contributed a sensuous love sonnet in the style of Keats.[6]

Campbell died at his residence in University Street, London, on 13 May 1857. He was eulogised by the Athenæum as "a graceful writer of the minor prose and poetry of his time, and a kind-hearted scholar and gentleman."[7]

Works

Sources

Attribution:

Notes and References

  1. Fhlathúin 2016.
  2. Chichester 1886, pp. 391–392.
  3. Feldman and Robinson 1999, p. 211.
  4. Hosmon 1969, p. 44.
  5. Calcutta Review, XIX, p. xxix.
  6. Rossetti 1901, p. 68.
  7. Chichester 1886, p. 392.