Brigadier Rodolph Ladeveze Adlercron, CMG, DSO*, JP, DL (5 July 1873 – 12 June 1966) was a British Army officer and local politician.
Rodolph Ladeveze Adlercron was born on 5 July 1873, the second son of George Rothe Ladeveze Adlercron (died 1884), of Moyglare, County Meath, and his wife Aloÿse Blanche Lilias, second daughter of Baron Godefroi de Blonay, of Vernand, Lausanne.[1] [2] In 1910, Adlercron married Hester (died 1939), younger daughter of John Chandler Bancroft (died 1901), of Boston in the United States, and had four daughters:[3] [4] Lillias Nina Aloyse (born 1911), Meliora Lavinia (born 1912), Hester Elizabeth (born 1913) and Pauline Aymee Margaret (born 1915).[5] Meliora died in 1930 from injuries sustained in a motoring accident;[6] in 1936, the youngest daughter, Pauline, married John Christopher Morrell Blackie, son of Ernest Blackie, Bishop of Grimsby.[7]
After schooling at Eton,[1] Adlercron was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the 5th Battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles on 12 February 1892.[8] Following a promotion to Lieutenant in 1893,[9] he was transferred at that rank to The Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders on 2 June 1894 after Lt F. A. MacFarlan was appointed Adjutant.[10] He took part in the Nile Expedition and Second Boer War, being mentioned in dispatches in both conflicts.[1] Promotion to Captain followed in 1899,[11] before Adlercron was seconded to be an Adjutant in the 4th Battalion of the Lincolnshire Regiment, part of the Territorial Force.[12] [13] He was appointed a Brigade Major that October,[14] before promotion to Major two years later.[15]
Adlercron served in Europe during World War I.[1] He was made a Brigade Major in The Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders in August 1914,[16] and the following October was promoted to temporary Lieutenant Colonel, commanding a territorial unit,[17] the 6th West Riding Regiment. He subsequently commanded 148th and 124th Infantry Brigades.[1] By 1916, he was a temporary Brigadier General and was promoted that December to Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel.[18] By the time the war was over, he had been mentioned in dispatches seven times, received the Distinguished Service Order (and bar), and been appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George.[1] He was placed on the retired list in March 1920 and granted the honorary rank of Brigadier.[19] He was Honorary Colonel of the 6th Battalion of the Duke of Wellington's Regiment.[1]
Adlercron was a Justice of the peace and Deputy Lieutenant for Lincolnshire.[1] In 1946, he was elected onto Kesteven County Council for the Welby division;[20] he was returned again in 1949,[21] and 1952.[22] He died on 12 June 1966.[1]
Adlercron bore the following coat of arms: Quarterly 1 and 4 Argent and eagle displayed wings inverted Sable langued Gules membered and ducally crowned Or; 2 and 3 Argent a chevron in point embowed between in chief two mullets and in base a lion rampant all Gules. Quarters 1 and 4 represented the family of Adlercron, while the other two were for Trapaud.[3]