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Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley

Field Marshal Garnet Joseph Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley, KP, GCB, OM, GCMG, VD, PC (4 June 1833 – 25 March 1913), was an Anglo-Irish officer in the British Army. He became one of the most influential and admired British generals after a series of successes in Canada, West Africa and Egypt, followed by a central role in modernizing the British Army in promoting efficiency.

The Viscount Wolseley
Wolseley in 1895
8th Commander-in-Chief of the British Army
In office
1 November 1895 – 3 January 1901
MonarchVictoria
Prime MinisterMarquess of Salisbury
Preceded byPrince George, Duke of Cambridge
Succeeded byLord Frederick Roberts
Governor of Transvaal
In office
29 September 1879 – 27 April 1880
Preceded byOwen Lanyon
Succeeded byPosition abolished
The Viscount Milner (1901)
Governor of the Gold Coast
In office
2 October 1873 – 4 March 1874
Preceded byRobert William Harley
Succeeded byJames Maxwell
Personal details
Born
Garnet Joseph Wolseley

(1833-06-04)4 June 1833
Golden Bridge House, Inchicore, Dublin, Ireland[1]
Died25 March 1913(1913-03-25) (aged 79)
Menton, France
Resting placeSt. Paul's Cathedral, London
AwardsKnight of the Order of St Patrick
Member of the Order of Merit
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George
Volunteer Decoration
Mentioned in Despatches
Order of the Medjidie (Ottoman Empire)
Order of Osmanieh (Ottoman Empire)
Legion of Honour (France)
Military service
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Egypt
Branch/serviceBritish Army
Years of service1852–1900
RankField Marshal
CommandsCommander-in-Chief of the Forces
Commander-in-Chief, Ireland
Adjutant-General to the Forces
Quartermaster-General to the Forces
Battles/warsSecond Burmese War
Crimean War

Indian Rebellion of 1857

Second Opium War

American Civil War (observer)
Fenian raids
Red River Rebellion
Third Anglo-Ashanti War
Anglo-Zulu War
1879 Sekhukhune Wars
1882 Anglo-Egyptian War

Mahdist War

Second Boer War

Wolseley is considered to be one of the most prominent and decorated war heroes of the British Empire during the era of New Imperialism. He served in Burma, the Crimean War, the Indian Mutiny, China, Canada and widely throughout Africa—including his Ashanti campaign (1873–1874) and the Nile Expedition against Mahdist Sudan in 1884–85. Wolseley served as Commander-in-Chief of the Forces from 1895 to 1900. His reputation for efficiency led to the late 19th century English phrase "everything's all Sir Garnet", meaning, "All is in order."[2]

Early life and education edit

Lord Wolseley was born into a prominent Anglo-Irish family in Dublin, the eldest son of Major Garnet Joseph Wolseley of the King's Own Scottish Borderers (25th Foot) and Frances Anne Wolseley (née Smith). The Wolseleys were an ancient landed family in Wolseley, Staffordshire, whose roots can be traced back a thousand years.[3] Wolseley was born at Golden Bridge House, the seat of his mother's family. His paternal grandfather was Rev. William Wolseley, Rector of Tullycorbet, and the third son of Sir Richard Wolseley, 1st Baronet, who sat in the Irish House of Commons for Carlow.[4] The family seat was Mount Wolseley in County Carlow.[5] He had four younger sisters and two younger brothers, Frederick Wolseley (1837–1899) and Sir George Wolseley (1839–1921).[3]

Wolseley's father died in 1840 at age 62, leaving his widow and seven children to struggle on his Army pension. Unlike other boys in his class, Wolseley was not sent to England to attend Harrow or Eton, but was instead educated at a local school in Dublin. The family circumstance forced Wolseley to leave school at just 14, when he found work in a surveyor's office, which helped him bring in a salary and continue studying maths and geography.[6][7]

Early military career edit

Wolseley first considered a career in the church, but his financial situation meant that he would have needed a wealthy patron to support such an endeavor. Instead he sought a commission in the Army. Unable to afford Sandhurst or buying a commission, Wolseley wrote to his fellow Dubliner, Field Marshal The 1st Duke of Wellington, for assistance. Wellington, then the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, promised to assist him when he turned 16.[6] However, Wellington apparently overlooked him and did not respond to another letter sent when he was 17. Wolseley unsuccessfully appealed to his secretary, Lord Fitzroy Somerset. The British Army was then recovering from significant casualties in the latest war in South Africa, and Wolseley wrote to Somerset, "I shall be prepared to start at the shortest notice, should your Lordship be pleased to appoint me to a regiment now at the seat of war."[6] His mother then wrote to the Duke to appeal his case, and on 12 March 1852, the 18-year-old Wolseley was gazetted as an ensign in the 12th Foot,[8] in recognition of his father's service.[7]

Just a month after he joined the 12th Foot, Wolseley transferred to the 80th Foot on 13 April 1852,[9] with whom he served in the Second Anglo-Burmese War.[10] He was severely wounded when he was shot in the left thigh with a jingal bullet on 19 March 1853 in the attack on Donabyu,[3][10] and was mentioned in despatches. Promoted to lieutenant on 16 May 1853 and invalided home, Wolseley transferred to the 84th Regiment of Foot on 27 January 1854,[11] and then to the 90th Light Infantry,[12] at that time stationed in Dublin, on 24 February 1854.[10] He was promoted to captain on 29 December 1854.[13]

Crimea edit

Wolseley accompanied the regiment to the Crimea, and landed at Balaklava in December 1854. He was selected to be an assistant engineer, and attached to the Royal Engineers during the Siege of Sevastopol. Wolseley served throughout the siege, where he was wounded at "the Quarries" on 7 June 1855, and again in the trenches on 30 August 1855, losing an eye.[10]

After the fall of Sevastopol, Wolseley was employed on the quartermaster-general's staff, assisting in the embarkation of the troops and supplies, and was one of the last British soldiers to leave the Crimea in July 1856.[10] For his services he was twice mentioned in despatches, received the war medal with clasp, the 5th class of the French Légion d'honneur[14] and the 5th class of the Turkish Order of the Medjidie.[15][16]

Six months after joining the 90th Foot at Aldershot, he went with it in March 1857 to join the troops being despatched for the Second Opium War.[10] Wolseley was embarked in the transport Transit, which wrecked in the Strait of Banka. The troops were all saved, but with only their personal arms and minimal ammunition. They were taken to Singapore, and from there dispatched to Calcutta on account of the Indian Mutiny.[15][17]

Indian Rebellion of 1857 edit

 
Lieutenant-Colonel Wolseley in India, by Felice Beato, 1858–1859

Wolseley distinguished himself at the relief of Lucknow under Sir Colin Campbell in November 1857, and in the defence of the Alambagh position under Outram,[10] taking part in the actions of 22 December 1857, of 12 January 1858 and 16 January 1858, and also in the repulse of the grand attack of 21 February 1858.[7] That March, he served at the final siege and capture of Lucknow. He was then appointed deputy-assistant quartermaster-general on the staff of Sir Hope Grant's Oudh division,[7] and was engaged in all of the operations of the campaign, including the actions of Bari, Sarsi, Nawabganj, the capture of Faizabad, the passage of the Gumti and the action of Sultanpur. In the autumn and winter of 1858–59 he took part in the Baiswara, trans-Gogra and trans-Rapti campaigns ending with the complete suppression of the rebellion.[17] For his services he was frequently mentioned in dispatches, and having received the Mutiny medal and clasp, he was promoted to brevet major on 24 March 1858[15][18] and to brevet lieutenant-colonel on 26 April 1859.[19]

During the rebellion, Wolseley displayed strong views towards native peoples, referring to them as "beastly niggers", and remarking that the sepoys had "barrels and barrels of the filth which flows in these niggers' veins".[20]

Wolseley continued to serve on Sir Hope Grant's staff in Oudh, and when Grant was nominated to the command of the British troops in the Anglo-French expedition to China of 1860,[10] accompanied him as the deputy-assistant quartermaster-general. He was present at the action at Sin-ho, the capture of Tang-ku, the storming of the Taku Forts,[10] the Occupation of Tientsin, the Battle of Pa-to-cheau and the entry into Peking (during which the destruction of the Chinese Imperial Old Summer Palace was begun).[10] He assisted in the re-embarkation of the troops before the winter set in. He was Mentioned, yet again, in Dispatches, and for his services received the medal and two clasps. On his return home he published the Narrative of the War with China in 1860.[15][21] He was given the substantive rank of major on 15 February 1861.[22]

American Civil War and Canadian Service edit

 
Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley

After the outbreak of the American Civil War, Wolseley was one of the special service officers sent to the Province of Canada in November 1861, in connection with the Trent incident.[7]

In 1862, shortly after the Battle of Antietam, Wolseley took leave from his military duties and went to investigate the American Civil War. He befriended Southern sympathizers in Maryland, who found him passage into Virginia with a blockade runner across the Potomac River. There he met Generals Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet and Stonewall Jackson.[10] He also provided an analysis on Lieutenant General Nathan Bedford Forrest. The New Orleans Picayune (10 April 1892) published Wolseley's ten-page portrayal of Forrest, which condensed much of what was written about him by biographers of the time. This work appeared in the Journal of the Southern Historical Society in the same year, and is commonly cited today. Wolseley addressed Forrest's role at the Battle of Fort Pillow near Memphis, Tennessee, in April 1864 in which black USCT troops and white officers were alleged by some to have been slaughtered after Fort Pillow had been conquered. Wolseley wrote, "I do not think that the fact that one-half of the small garrison of a place taken by assault was either killed or wounded evinced any very unusual bloodthirstiness on the part of the assailants."[23]

Following the end of the Civil War in the United States, Wolseley returned to Canada, where he became a brevet colonel on 5 June 1865[10] and Assistant Quartermaster-General in Canada with effect from the same date.[24] He was actively employed the following year in the defence of Canada from Fenian raids launched from the United States. He was appointed Deputy Quartermaster-General in Canada on 1 October 1867.[25] In 1869 his Soldiers' Pocket Book for Field Service was published. In its pages Wolseley gave his opinion on the fitness of the officer corps of his time and other sensitive subjects. For that he was put on half-pay, according to one source.[26][27]

In 1870, he successfully commanded the Red River Expedition to establish Canadian sovereignty over rebellious subjects in the North-West Territories (in present-day Manitoba).[26] Manitoba, as part of the North-West Territories, entered Canadian Confederation in 1870 when the Hudson's Bay Company transferred its control of Rupert's Land to the government of the Dominion of Canada. British and Canadian authorities ignored the pre-existing Council of Assiniboia and botched negotiations with its replacement, the Métis' rebel provisional government headed by Louis Riel.[26]

The campaign to put down the rebellion was made difficult by the poor communications at the time, Canada not yet having a transcontinental railway line. Fort Garry (now Winnipeg), the capital of Manitoba, was a small centre separated from eastern Canada by the rocks and forests of the Canadian Shield region of western Ontario. The easiest route to Fort Garry that did not pass through the United States was through a network of rivers and lakes extending for 970 kilometres (600 mi) from Lake Superior, infrequently traversed by non-aboriginals, and where no supplies were obtainable.[26] The admirable arrangements made and the careful organization of the transport reflected great credit to the commander (Wolseley), who upon his return home was made a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George on 22 December 1870,[28] and a Companion of the Order of the Bath on 13 March 1871.[29]

Cardwell reforms edit

Appointed assistant adjutant-general at the War Office in 1871, he furthered the Cardwell schemes of army reform.[26] The reforms met strong opposition from senior military figures led by the Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in-Chief of the Forces.[30] At their heart was the intent to expand greatly the Army's latent strength by building reserves, both through introducing legislation for 'short service',[31] which allowed soldiers to serve the second part of their term on the reserve, and by bringing militia (i.e. non-regular) battalions into the new localised regimental structure. Resistance in the Army continued and, in a series of subsequent military posts, Wolseley fought publicly as well as inside the Army's structure to implement them, long after the legislation had passed and Cardwell had gone.[32][33]

Ashanti edit

 
Wolseley in 1874, from the Illustrated London News

On 2 October 1873, Wolseley became Governor of Sierra Leone British West African Settlements, and the Governor of the Gold Coast. As Governor of both British Territories in West Africa he had charge over the Colonies of Gambia, Gold Coast and Western, Eastern, and Northern Nigeria, and in this role, commanded an expedition against the Ashanti Empire. Wolseley made all his arrangements at Gold Coast before the arrival of the troops in January 1874. At the Battle of Amoaful on 31 January, Wolseley's expedition defeated the numerically superior Chief Amankwatia's army in a four-hour battle, advancing through thick bush in loose squares. After five days' fighting, ending with the Battle of Ordashu, the British entered the capital Kumasi, which they burned. Wolseley completed the campaign in two months,[26] and re-embarked his troops for home before the unhealthy season began. This campaign made him a household name in Britain. He received the thanks of both houses of Parliament and a grant of £25,000, was promoted to brevet major-general for distinguished service in the field on 1 April 1874,[34] received the medal and clasp, and was made Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George on 31 March 1874,[35] and a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath. The freedom of the city of London was conferred upon him with a sword of honour, and he was made honorary DCL of Oxford and LL.D of Cambridge universities.[36]

Service at home, and in Natal, Cyprus, and South Africa edit

On his return home he was appointed inspector-general of Auxiliary Forces with effect from 1 April 1874.[37] In his role with the Auxiliary Forces, he directed his efforts to building up adequate volunteer reserve forces. Finding himself opposed by the senior military, he wrote a strong memorandum and spoke of resigning when they tried to persuade him to withdraw it.[32] He became a lifelong advocate of the volunteer reserves, later commenting that all military reforms since 1860 in the British Army had first been introduced by the volunteers.[33] Shortly after, in consequence of the indigenous unrest in Natal, he was sent to that colony as governor and general-commanding on 24 February 1875.[15][38]

Wolseley accepted a seat on the Council of India in November 1876 and was promoted to the substantive rank of major-general on 1 October 1877.[39] He was promoted to brevet lieutenant-general on 25 March 1878.[40] On 12 July 1878, he was appointed the first High Commissioner to Cyprus, a newly acquired possession.[41]

In the following year, he was sent to South Africa to supersede Lord Chelmsford in command of the forces in the Zulu War,[26] and as governor of Natal and the Transvaal and the High Commissioner of Southern Africa. Wolseley with his 'Ashanti Ring' of adherents was sent to Durban. But on arrival in July, he found that the Zulu War was practically over.[26] After effecting a temporary settlement, he went on to the Transvaal. While serving in South Africa, he was promoted to brevet general on 4 June 1879.[42] Having reorganized the administration there and reduced King Sekhukhune of the Bapedi to submission, he returned to London in May 1880. For his services in South Africa, he was awarded the South Africa Medal with clasp, and was advanced to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on 19 June 1880.[43] Finally, as if to signify a meteoric rise in Imperial esteem, he was appointed Quartermaster-General to the Forces on 1 July 1880.[15][44] He found that there was still great resistance to the short service system and used his growing public persona to fight for the Cardwell reforms, especially on building up reserves, including making a speech at a banquet in Mansion house in which he commented: '...how an Army raised under the long service system totally disappeared in a few months under the walls of Sevastopol.'[32]

Egypt, the Nile Expedition and Commander-in-Chief edit

 
1882 caricature from Punch
 
Queen Victoria's funeral procession
 
Edward VIIs coronation procession London 9 August 1902

On 1 April 1882, Wolseley was appointed Adjutant-General to the Forces,[45] and, in August of that year, given command of the British forces in Egypt under Khedive Tewfik to suppress the Urabi Revolt.[46] Having seized the Suez Canal, he then disembarked his troops at Ismailia and, after a very short campaign, completely defeated Urabi Pasha at the Battle of Tel el-Kebir, thereby suppressing yet another rebellion.[46] For his services, he was promoted to the substantive rank of general on 18 November[47] and raised to the peerage as Baron Wolseley, of Cairo and of Wolseley in the County of Stafford.[15] He also received the thanks of Parliament and the Egypt Medal with clasp;[48] the Order of Osmanieh, First Class, as bestowed by the Khedive;[49] and the more dubious accolade of a composition in his honour by poetaster William Topaz McGonagall.[50]

On 1 September 1884, Wolseley was again called away from his duties as adjutant-general, to command the Nile Expedition for the relief of General Gordon and the besieged garrison at Khartoum. Wolseley's unusual strategy was to take an expedition by boat up the Nile and then to cross the desert to Khartoum, while the naval boats went on to Khartoum.[51] The expedition arrived too late; Khartoum had been taken, and Gordon was dead.[46] In the spring of 1885, complications with Imperial Russia over the Panjdeh Incident occurred, and the withdrawal of that particular expedition followed. For his services there, he received two clasps to his Egyptian medal, the thanks of Parliament,[15] and on 28 September 1885 was created Viscount Wolseley, of Wolseley in the County of Stafford,[52][53] and a Knight of the Order of St Patrick.[7] At the invitation of the Queen, the Wolseley family moved from their former home at 6 Hill Street, London to the much grander Ranger's House in Greenwich in autumn 1888.[54]

Wolseley continued at the War Office as Adjutant-General to the Forces until 1890, when he became Commander-in-Chief, Ireland.[46] He was promoted to be a field marshal on 26 May 1894,[55] and appointed by the Conservative government to succeed the Duke of Cambridge as Commander-in-Chief of the Forces on 1 November 1895.[56] This was the position to which his great experience in the field and his previous signal success at the War Office itself had fully entitled him, but it was increasingly irrelevant. Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley's powers in that office were, however, limited by a new Order in Council, and after holding the appointment for over five years, he handed over the command-in-chief to his fellow field marshal, Earl Roberts, on 3 January 1901.[15][57] He had also suffered from a serious illness in 1897, from which he never fully recovered.[46]

The unexpectedly large force required for the initial phase of the Second Boer War, was mainly furnished by means of the system of reserves Wolseley had originated. By drawing on regular reservists and volunteer reserves, Britain was able to assemble the largest army it had ever deployed abroad.[58] Nevertheless, the new conditions at the War Office were not to his liking. The fiasco now called Black Week culminated in his dismissal over Christmastide 1900. Upon being released from responsibilities he brought the whole subject before the House of Lords in a speech.[15][59]

Lord Wolseley was Gold Stick in Waiting to Queen Victoria and took part in the funeral procession following the death of Queen Victoria in February 1901.[60] He also served as Gold Stick in Waiting to King Edward during his coronation in August 1902.[61]

Honorific and royal appointments edit

 
Arms of Viscount Wolseley: Argent, a talbot passant gules, a mullet, for difference

In early 1901, Lord Wolseley was appointed by King Edward to lead a special diplomatic mission to announce the King's accession to the governments of Austria-Hungary, Romania, Serbia, the Ottoman Empire and Greece.[62] During his visit to Constantinople, the Sultan presented him with the Order of Osmanieh set in brilliants.[63]

He was among the original recipients of the Order of Merit in the 1902 Coronation Honours list published on 26 June 1902,[64] and received the order from King Edward VII at Buckingham Palace on 8 August 1902.[65][66] For his service with the Volunteer Force, he was awarded the Volunteer Officers' Decoration on 11 August 1903.[67] He was also honorary colonel of the 23rd Middlesex Regiment from 12 May 1883,[68] honorary colonel of the Queen's Rifle Volunteer Brigade, the Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) from 24 April 1889,[69] colonel of the Royal Horse Guards from 29 March 1895[70] and colonel-in-chief of the Royal Irish Regiment from 20 July 1898.[71]

In retirement, he was a member of the council of the Union-Castle Steamship Company.[72]

Channel Tunnel edit

 
General Wolseley riding on the fleeing lion. Published in the American Humor Magazine "Puck" (approx. 1885).

Wolseley was deeply opposed to Sir Edward Watkin's attempt to build a Channel Tunnel. He gave evidence to a parliamentary commission that the construction might be "calamitous for England", he added that "No matter what fortifications and defences were built, there would always be the peril of some continental army seizing the tunnel exit by surprise." Various contrivances to satisfy his objections were put forward including looping the line on a viaduct from the Cliffs of Dover and back into them, so that the connection could be bombarded at will by the Royal Navy. For a combination of reasons over 100 years were to pass before a permanent link was made.[73]

Personal life and death edit

 
Ex libris with his coat of arms

Wolseley was married in 1867 to Louisa (1843–1920), the daughter of Mr. A. Erskine.[10] His only child, Frances (1872–1936) was an author and founded the College for Lady Gardeners at Glynde. She was heiress to the viscountcy under special remainder, but it became extinct after her death.[74]

In his later years, Lord and Lady Wolseley lived in a grace-and-favour apartment at Hampton Court Palace. He and his wife were wintering at Villa Tourrette, Menton on the French Riviera, where he fell ill with influenza and died on 26 March 1913.[3]

He was buried on 31 March 1913 in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral, to music played by the band of the 2nd Battalion Royal Irish Regiment, of which he was the first Colonel-in-Chief.[74][75]

Legacy edit

 
Equestrian statue of Field Marshal Lord Wolseley by Goscombe John, Horse Guards Parade (2008)

There is an equestrian statue of Wolseley in Horse Guards Parade in London. This was sculpted by Sir William Goscombe John R.A.[76] and erected in 1920.[77]Wolseley Barracks, at London, Ontario, is a Canadian military base (now officially known as ASU London), established in 1886. It is on the site of Wolseley Hall, the first building constructed by a Canadian Government specifically to house an element of the newly created Permanent Force. Wolseley Barracks has been continuously occupied by the Canadian Army since its creation, and has always housed some element of The Royal Canadian Regiment. At present, Wolseley Hall is occupied by the Royal Canadian Regiment Museum and the regiment's 4th Battalion, among other tenants.[78] The white pith helmet worn as part of the full-dress uniform of the RCR and many other Canadian regiments is known as a Wolseley helmet.[79] Wolseley is also a senior boys house at the Duke of York's Royal Military School.[80]

 
Lord Wolseley memorial at St Michael and All Angels Church in Colwich, Staffordshire

Field Marshal Lord Wolseley is commemorated by a tablet at St Michael and All Angels Church in Colwich, Staffordshire, a short distance from Shugborough Hall and Wolseley Park at Colwich, near Rugeley. The church was the burial place of the Wolseley baronets of Wolseley Park, the ancestral home of the Wolseley family.[81]

W. S. Gilbert, of the musical partnership Gilbert and Sullivan, may have modelled the character of Major-General Stanley in the operetta The Pirates of Penzance on Wolseley, and George Grossmith, the actor who first created the role in the opening theatrical run, imitated Wolseley's appearance.[82] In another of Gilbert and Sullivan's operettas, Patience, Colonel Calverley praises Wolseley in the phrase: "Skill of Sir Garnet in thrashing a cannibal".[83]

 
The Sir Garnet pub in 1883

The residential areas of Wolseley in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, located in the west central part of the city[84] and of Wolseley, Saskatchewan, Canada, are named after him[85] The town of Wolseley, Western Cape, South Africa, is named after Sir Garnet Joseph Wolseley. It was established on the farm Goedgevonden in 1875 and attained municipal status in 1955; prior to this it was known as Ceres Road.[86]

The Sir Garnet pub in the centre of Norwich, overlooking the historic market place and city hall, is named after Field Marshal Lord Wolseley. The pub opened in about 1861 and adopted the name Sir Garnet Wolseley in 1874, changed after a brief closing (2011–2012) to Sir Garnet.[87][88][89][90]

In Ghana, Wolseley is known by the name of "Sargrenti".[91] He is portrayed as a villain in the 2014 novel The Boy Who Spat in Sargrenti's Eye by South African author Manu Herbstein. The story is a fictitious account of the Anglo-Ashanti war told from the perspective of an Ashanti boy named Kofi Gyan.[92]

Wolseley's uniforms, field marshal's baton and souvenirs from his various campaigns are held in the collections of the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Wolseley maintained a deep interest in notable individuals in early modern European history, and collected items related to many of them (for example, a box from Sir Francis Drake, a watch related to Oliver Cromwell, a funerary badge for Admiral Horatio Nelson and General James Wolfe's snuff box). These are also held in the collection.[93]

In recognition of his success, an expression arose: "all Sir Garnet" meaning; that everything is in good order.[94][95]

Selected publications by Viscount Wolseley edit

  • The Story of a Soldier's Life. Vol. I. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1903.
  • The Story of a Soldier's Life. Vol. II. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1904.
  • "General Lee". Macmillan's Magazine. 55 (329): 321–331. March 1887.
  • Narrative of the war with China in 1860. Longman, Green. 1862.
  • The soldier's pocket-book of field service. Macmillan and Co. 1874.
  • The life of John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, to the accession of Queen Anne. R. Bentley and Son. 1894.
  • The decline and fall of Napoleon. Pall Mall magazine library. Roberts Bros. 1895.[96]
  • The story of a soldier's life. A. Constable & Co. 1903.
  • General Lee. Press of C. Mann printing company. 1906.
  • Letters of Lord and Lady Wolseley, 1870–1911, ed. by Sir George Arthur. 1922.
  • American Civil War, an English view, writings of Viscount Wolseley, selected & ed. by James A. Rawley. 1964.
  • Preston, Adrian W., ed. (1967). In relief of Gordon: Lord Wolseley's campaign journal of the Khartoum Relief Expedition, 1884–1885.
  • Preston, Adrian W., ed. (1973). South African journal of Sir Garnet Wolseley, 1879–1880.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Montgomery, Bob (23 July 2003). "Past Imperfect". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  2. ^ Farmer & Henley 1903, p. 215.
  3. ^ a b c d "Death of Lord Wolseley". The Times. London. 26 March 1913. p. 7.
  4. ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage. Burke's Peerage Limited. 1885. p. 1425. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  5. ^ Complete Baronetage: Great Britain and Ireland, 1707–1800, and Jacobite, 1688–1788. W. Pollard & Company, Limited. 1906. pp. 356–357.
  6. ^ a b c "Field Marshal Garnet Joseph Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley, KP, GCB, OM, GCMG, VD, PC". Irish Masonic History and the Jewels of Irish Freemasonry. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36995. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ "No. 21300". The London Gazette. 12 March 1852. p. 768.
  9. ^ "No. 21309". The London Gazette. 13 April 1852. p. 1058.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Heathcote 1999, p. 311.
  11. ^ "No. 21515". The London Gazette. 27 January 1854. p. 232.
  12. ^ "No. 21526". The London Gazette. 24 February 1854. p. 642.
  13. ^ "No. 21645". The London Gazette. 29 December 1854. p. 4259.
  14. ^ "No. 21909". The London Gazette. 4 August 1856. p. 2699.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Wolseley, Garnet Joseph Wolseley, Viscount" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 777–778.
  16. ^ "No. 22107". The London Gazette. 2 March 1858. p. 1264.
  17. ^ a b "A Victorian Army Hero". Timmonet. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  18. ^ "No. 22117". The London Gazette. 24 March 1858. p. 1571.
  19. ^ "No. 22255". The London Gazette. 26 April 1859. p. 1727.
  20. ^ Hibbert, Christopher (1978). The Great Mutiny: India 1857. Viking Press. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-670-34983-8.
  21. ^ Wolseley 1862.
  22. ^ "No. 22480". The London Gazette. 15 February 1861. p. 654.
  23. ^ United Service Magazine, London, 1892, April and May issues
  24. ^ "No. 22992". The London Gazette. 18 July 1865. p. 3579.
  25. ^ "No. 23278". The London Gazette. 19 July 1867. p. 4045.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h Heathcote 1999, p. 312.
  27. ^ Morris, Donald. Washing of the Spears. p. 239.
  28. ^ "No. 23690". The London Gazette. 23 December 1870. p. 5873.
  29. ^ "No. 23715". The London Gazette. 14 March 1871. p. 1378.
  30. ^ McElwee 1974, p. 73.
  31. ^ Ensor 1936, p. 16.
  32. ^ a b c Lehmann 1964, p. 224.
  33. ^ a b Gregory 2006, p. 103.
  34. ^ "No. 24082". The London Gazette. 31 March 1874. p. 1924.
  35. ^ "No. 24083". The London Gazette. 3 April 1874. p. 1971.
  36. ^ "Wolseley, Garnet Joseph". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
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Bibliography edit

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Primary sources edit

External links edit

Government offices
Preceded by Governor of the Gold Coast
1873–1874
Succeeded by
James Maxwell
Preceded by Governor of Natal
1875
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by Quartermaster-General to the Forces
1880–1882
Succeeded by
Preceded by Adjutant-General to the Forces
1882–1890
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, Ireland
1890–1895
Succeeded by
Preceded by Colonel of the Royal Horse Guards
1895–1907
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief of the Forces
1895–1900
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Wolseley
1885–1913
Succeeded by

garnet, wolseley, viscount, wolseley, field, marshal, garnet, joseph, wolseley, viscount, wolseley, gcmg, june, 1833, march, 1913, anglo, irish, officer, british, army, became, most, influential, admired, british, generals, after, series, successes, canada, we. Field Marshal Garnet Joseph Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley KP GCB OM GCMG VD PC 4 June 1833 25 March 1913 was an Anglo Irish officer in the British Army He became one of the most influential and admired British generals after a series of successes in Canada West Africa and Egypt followed by a central role in modernizing the British Army in promoting efficiency The Right HonourableThe Viscount WolseleyWolseley in 18958th Commander in Chief of the British ArmyIn office 1 November 1895 3 January 1901MonarchVictoriaPrime MinisterMarquess of SalisburyPreceded byPrince George Duke of CambridgeSucceeded byLord Frederick RobertsGovernor of TransvaalIn office 29 September 1879 27 April 1880Preceded byOwen LanyonSucceeded byPosition abolishedThe Viscount Milner 1901 Governor of the Gold CoastIn office 2 October 1873 4 March 1874Preceded byRobert William HarleySucceeded byJames MaxwellPersonal detailsBornGarnet Joseph Wolseley 1833 06 04 4 June 1833Golden Bridge House Inchicore Dublin Ireland 1 Died25 March 1913 1913 03 25 aged 79 Menton FranceResting placeSt Paul s Cathedral LondonAwardsKnight of the Order of St PatrickMember of the Order of MeritKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the BathKnight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St GeorgeVolunteer DecorationMentioned in DespatchesOrder of the Medjidie Ottoman Empire Order of Osmanieh Ottoman Empire Legion of Honour France Military serviceAllegianceUnited Kingdom EgyptBranch serviceBritish ArmyYears of service1852 1900RankField MarshalCommandsCommander in Chief of the ForcesCommander in Chief IrelandAdjutant General to the ForcesQuartermaster General to the ForcesBattles warsSecond Burmese WarCrimean War Siege of SevastopolIndian Rebellion of 1857 Siege of Lucknow Capture of LucknowSecond Opium War Third Battle of Taku FortsAmerican Civil War observer Fenian raidsRed River RebellionThird Anglo Ashanti WarAnglo Zulu War1879 Sekhukhune Wars1882 Anglo Egyptian War Battle of Tel el KebirMahdist War Nile ExpeditionSecond Boer WarWolseley is considered to be one of the most prominent and decorated war heroes of the British Empire during the era of New Imperialism He served in Burma the Crimean War the Indian Mutiny China Canada and widely throughout Africa including his Ashanti campaign 1873 1874 and the Nile Expedition against Mahdist Sudan in 1884 85 Wolseley served as Commander in Chief of the Forces from 1895 to 1900 His reputation for efficiency led to the late 19th century English phrase everything s all Sir Garnet meaning All is in order 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early military career 3 Crimea 4 Indian Rebellion of 1857 5 American Civil War and Canadian Service 6 Cardwell reforms 7 Ashanti 8 Service at home and in Natal Cyprus and South Africa 9 Egypt the Nile Expedition and Commander in Chief 9 1 Honorific and royal appointments 10 Channel Tunnel 11 Personal life and death 12 Legacy 13 Selected publications by Viscount Wolseley 14 See also 15 References 16 Bibliography 16 1 Primary sources 17 External linksEarly life and education editLord Wolseley was born into a prominent Anglo Irish family in Dublin the eldest son of Major Garnet Joseph Wolseley of the King s Own Scottish Borderers 25th Foot and Frances Anne Wolseley nee Smith The Wolseleys were an ancient landed family in Wolseley Staffordshire whose roots can be traced back a thousand years 3 Wolseley was born at Golden Bridge House the seat of his mother s family His paternal grandfather was Rev William Wolseley Rector of Tullycorbet and the third son of Sir Richard Wolseley 1st Baronet who sat in the Irish House of Commons for Carlow 4 The family seat was Mount Wolseley in County Carlow 5 He had four younger sisters and two younger brothers Frederick Wolseley 1837 1899 and Sir George Wolseley 1839 1921 3 Wolseley s father died in 1840 at age 62 leaving his widow and seven children to struggle on his Army pension Unlike other boys in his class Wolseley was not sent to England to attend Harrow or Eton but was instead educated at a local school in Dublin The family circumstance forced Wolseley to leave school at just 14 when he found work in a surveyor s office which helped him bring in a salary and continue studying maths and geography 6 7 Early military career editWolseley first considered a career in the church but his financial situation meant that he would have needed a wealthy patron to support such an endeavor Instead he sought a commission in the Army Unable to afford Sandhurst or buying a commission Wolseley wrote to his fellow Dubliner Field Marshal The 1st Duke of Wellington for assistance Wellington then the Commander in Chief of the Forces promised to assist him when he turned 16 6 However Wellington apparently overlooked him and did not respond to another letter sent when he was 17 Wolseley unsuccessfully appealed to his secretary Lord Fitzroy Somerset The British Army was then recovering from significant casualties in the latest war in South Africa and Wolseley wrote to Somerset I shall be prepared to start at the shortest notice should your Lordship be pleased to appoint me to a regiment now at the seat of war 6 His mother then wrote to the Duke to appeal his case and on 12 March 1852 the 18 year old Wolseley was gazetted as an ensign in the 12th Foot 8 in recognition of his father s service 7 Just a month after he joined the 12th Foot Wolseley transferred to the 80th Foot on 13 April 1852 9 with whom he served in the Second Anglo Burmese War 10 He was severely wounded when he was shot in the left thigh with a jingal bullet on 19 March 1853 in the attack on Donabyu 3 10 and was mentioned in despatches Promoted to lieutenant on 16 May 1853 and invalided home Wolseley transferred to the 84th Regiment of Foot on 27 January 1854 11 and then to the 90th Light Infantry 12 at that time stationed in Dublin on 24 February 1854 10 He was promoted to captain on 29 December 1854 13 Crimea editWolseley accompanied the regiment to the Crimea and landed at Balaklava in December 1854 He was selected to be an assistant engineer and attached to the Royal Engineers during the Siege of Sevastopol Wolseley served throughout the siege where he was wounded at the Quarries on 7 June 1855 and again in the trenches on 30 August 1855 losing an eye 10 After the fall of Sevastopol Wolseley was employed on the quartermaster general s staff assisting in the embarkation of the troops and supplies and was one of the last British soldiers to leave the Crimea in July 1856 10 For his services he was twice mentioned in despatches received the war medal with clasp the 5th class of the French Legion d honneur 14 and the 5th class of the Turkish Order of the Medjidie 15 16 Six months after joining the 90th Foot at Aldershot he went with it in March 1857 to join the troops being despatched for the Second Opium War 10 Wolseley was embarked in the transport Transit which wrecked in the Strait of Banka The troops were all saved but with only their personal arms and minimal ammunition They were taken to Singapore and from there dispatched to Calcutta on account of the Indian Mutiny 15 17 Indian Rebellion of 1857 edit nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Wolseley in India by Felice Beato 1858 1859Wolseley distinguished himself at the relief of Lucknow under Sir Colin Campbell in November 1857 and in the defence of the Alambagh position under Outram 10 taking part in the actions of 22 December 1857 of 12 January 1858 and 16 January 1858 and also in the repulse of the grand attack of 21 February 1858 7 That March he served at the final siege and capture of Lucknow He was then appointed deputy assistant quartermaster general on the staff of Sir Hope Grant s Oudh division 7 and was engaged in all of the operations of the campaign including the actions of Bari Sarsi Nawabganj the capture of Faizabad the passage of the Gumti and the action of Sultanpur In the autumn and winter of 1858 59 he took part in the Baiswara trans Gogra and trans Rapti campaigns ending with the complete suppression of the rebellion 17 For his services he was frequently mentioned in dispatches and having received the Mutiny medal and clasp he was promoted to brevet major on 24 March 1858 15 18 and to brevet lieutenant colonel on 26 April 1859 19 During the rebellion Wolseley displayed strong views towards native peoples referring to them as beastly niggers and remarking that the sepoys had barrels and barrels of the filth which flows in these niggers veins 20 Wolseley continued to serve on Sir Hope Grant s staff in Oudh and when Grant was nominated to the command of the British troops in the Anglo French expedition to China of 1860 10 accompanied him as the deputy assistant quartermaster general He was present at the action at Sin ho the capture of Tang ku the storming of the Taku Forts 10 the Occupation of Tientsin the Battle of Pa to cheau and the entry into Peking during which the destruction of the Chinese Imperial Old Summer Palace was begun 10 He assisted in the re embarkation of the troops before the winter set in He was Mentioned yet again in Dispatches and for his services received the medal and two clasps On his return home he published the Narrative of the War with China in 1860 15 21 He was given the substantive rank of major on 15 February 1861 22 American Civil War and Canadian Service edit nbsp Field Marshal Viscount WolseleyAfter the outbreak of the American Civil War Wolseley was one of the special service officers sent to the Province of Canada in November 1861 in connection with the Trent incident 7 In 1862 shortly after the Battle of Antietam Wolseley took leave from his military duties and went to investigate the American Civil War He befriended Southern sympathizers in Maryland who found him passage into Virginia with a blockade runner across the Potomac River There he met Generals Robert E Lee James Longstreet and Stonewall Jackson 10 He also provided an analysis on Lieutenant General Nathan Bedford Forrest The New Orleans Picayune 10 April 1892 published Wolseley s ten page portrayal of Forrest which condensed much of what was written about him by biographers of the time This work appeared in the Journal of the Southern Historical Society in the same year and is commonly cited today Wolseley addressed Forrest s role at the Battle of Fort Pillow near Memphis Tennessee in April 1864 in which black USCT troops and white officers were alleged by some to have been slaughtered after Fort Pillow had been conquered Wolseley wrote I do not think that the fact that one half of the small garrison of a place taken by assault was either killed or wounded evinced any very unusual bloodthirstiness on the part of the assailants 23 Following the end of the Civil War in the United States Wolseley returned to Canada where he became a brevet colonel on 5 June 1865 10 and Assistant Quartermaster General in Canada with effect from the same date 24 He was actively employed the following year in the defence of Canada from Fenian raids launched from the United States He was appointed Deputy Quartermaster General in Canada on 1 October 1867 25 In 1869 his Soldiers Pocket Book for Field Service was published In its pages Wolseley gave his opinion on the fitness of the officer corps of his time and other sensitive subjects For that he was put on half pay according to one source 26 27 In 1870 he successfully commanded the Red River Expedition to establish Canadian sovereignty over rebellious subjects in the North West Territories in present day Manitoba 26 Manitoba as part of the North West Territories entered Canadian Confederation in 1870 when the Hudson s Bay Company transferred its control of Rupert s Land to the government of the Dominion of Canada British and Canadian authorities ignored the pre existing Council of Assiniboia and botched negotiations with its replacement the Metis rebel provisional government headed by Louis Riel 26 The campaign to put down the rebellion was made difficult by the poor communications at the time Canada not yet having a transcontinental railway line Fort Garry now Winnipeg the capital of Manitoba was a small centre separated from eastern Canada by the rocks and forests of the Canadian Shield region of western Ontario The easiest route to Fort Garry that did not pass through the United States was through a network of rivers and lakes extending for 970 kilometres 600 mi from Lake Superior infrequently traversed by non aboriginals and where no supplies were obtainable 26 The admirable arrangements made and the careful organization of the transport reflected great credit to the commander Wolseley who upon his return home was made a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George on 22 December 1870 28 and a Companion of the Order of the Bath on 13 March 1871 29 Cardwell reforms editAppointed assistant adjutant general at the War Office in 1871 he furthered the Cardwell schemes of army reform 26 The reforms met strong opposition from senior military figures led by the Duke of Cambridge Commander in Chief of the Forces 30 At their heart was the intent to expand greatly the Army s latent strength by building reserves both through introducing legislation for short service 31 which allowed soldiers to serve the second part of their term on the reserve and by bringing militia i e non regular battalions into the new localised regimental structure Resistance in the Army continued and in a series of subsequent military posts Wolseley fought publicly as well as inside the Army s structure to implement them long after the legislation had passed and Cardwell had gone 32 33 Ashanti edit nbsp Wolseley in 1874 from the Illustrated London NewsOn 2 October 1873 Wolseley became Governor of Sierra Leone British West African Settlements and the Governor of the Gold Coast As Governor of both British Territories in West Africa he had charge over the Colonies of Gambia Gold Coast and Western Eastern and Northern Nigeria and in this role commanded an expedition against the Ashanti Empire Wolseley made all his arrangements at Gold Coast before the arrival of the troops in January 1874 At the Battle of Amoaful on 31 January Wolseley s expedition defeated the numerically superior Chief Amankwatia s army in a four hour battle advancing through thick bush in loose squares After five days fighting ending with the Battle of Ordashu the British entered the capital Kumasi which they burned Wolseley completed the campaign in two months 26 and re embarked his troops for home before the unhealthy season began This campaign made him a household name in Britain He received the thanks of both houses of Parliament and a grant of 25 000 was promoted to brevet major general for distinguished service in the field on 1 April 1874 34 received the medal and clasp and was made Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George on 31 March 1874 35 and a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath The freedom of the city of London was conferred upon him with a sword of honour and he was made honorary DCL of Oxford and LL D of Cambridge universities 36 Service at home and in Natal Cyprus and South Africa editOn his return home he was appointed inspector general of Auxiliary Forces with effect from 1 April 1874 37 In his role with the Auxiliary Forces he directed his efforts to building up adequate volunteer reserve forces Finding himself opposed by the senior military he wrote a strong memorandum and spoke of resigning when they tried to persuade him to withdraw it 32 He became a lifelong advocate of the volunteer reserves later commenting that all military reforms since 1860 in the British Army had first been introduced by the volunteers 33 Shortly after in consequence of the indigenous unrest in Natal he was sent to that colony as governor and general commanding on 24 February 1875 15 38 Wolseley accepted a seat on the Council of India in November 1876 and was promoted to the substantive rank of major general on 1 October 1877 39 He was promoted to brevet lieutenant general on 25 March 1878 40 On 12 July 1878 he was appointed the first High Commissioner to Cyprus a newly acquired possession 41 In the following year he was sent to South Africa to supersede Lord Chelmsford in command of the forces in the Zulu War 26 and as governor of Natal and the Transvaal and the High Commissioner of Southern Africa Wolseley with his Ashanti Ring of adherents was sent to Durban But on arrival in July he found that the Zulu War was practically over 26 After effecting a temporary settlement he went on to the Transvaal While serving in South Africa he was promoted to brevet general on 4 June 1879 42 Having reorganized the administration there and reduced King Sekhukhune of the Bapedi to submission he returned to London in May 1880 For his services in South Africa he was awarded the South Africa Medal with clasp and was advanced to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on 19 June 1880 43 Finally as if to signify a meteoric rise in Imperial esteem he was appointed Quartermaster General to the Forces on 1 July 1880 15 44 He found that there was still great resistance to the short service system and used his growing public persona to fight for the Cardwell reforms especially on building up reserves including making a speech at a banquet in Mansion house in which he commented how an Army raised under the long service system totally disappeared in a few months under the walls of Sevastopol 32 Egypt the Nile Expedition and Commander in Chief edit nbsp 1882 caricature from Punch nbsp Queen Victoria s funeral procession nbsp Edward VIIs coronation procession London 9 August 1902On 1 April 1882 Wolseley was appointed Adjutant General to the Forces 45 and in August of that year given command of the British forces in Egypt under Khedive Tewfik to suppress the Urabi Revolt 46 Having seized the Suez Canal he then disembarked his troops at Ismailia and after a very short campaign completely defeated Urabi Pasha at the Battle of Tel el Kebir thereby suppressing yet another rebellion 46 For his services he was promoted to the substantive rank of general on 18 November 47 and raised to the peerage as Baron Wolseley of Cairo and of Wolseley in the County of Stafford 15 He also received the thanks of Parliament and the Egypt Medal with clasp 48 the Order of Osmanieh First Class as bestowed by the Khedive 49 and the more dubious accolade of a composition in his honour by poetaster William Topaz McGonagall 50 On 1 September 1884 Wolseley was again called away from his duties as adjutant general to command the Nile Expedition for the relief of General Gordon and the besieged garrison at Khartoum Wolseley s unusual strategy was to take an expedition by boat up the Nile and then to cross the desert to Khartoum while the naval boats went on to Khartoum 51 The expedition arrived too late Khartoum had been taken and Gordon was dead 46 In the spring of 1885 complications with Imperial Russia over the Panjdeh Incident occurred and the withdrawal of that particular expedition followed For his services there he received two clasps to his Egyptian medal the thanks of Parliament 15 and on 28 September 1885 was created Viscount Wolseley of Wolseley in the County of Stafford 52 53 and a Knight of the Order of St Patrick 7 At the invitation of the Queen the Wolseley family moved from their former home at 6 Hill Street London to the much grander Ranger s House in Greenwich in autumn 1888 54 Wolseley continued at the War Office as Adjutant General to the Forces until 1890 when he became Commander in Chief Ireland 46 He was promoted to be a field marshal on 26 May 1894 55 and appointed by the Conservative government to succeed the Duke of Cambridge as Commander in Chief of the Forces on 1 November 1895 56 This was the position to which his great experience in the field and his previous signal success at the War Office itself had fully entitled him but it was increasingly irrelevant Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley s powers in that office were however limited by a new Order in Council and after holding the appointment for over five years he handed over the command in chief to his fellow field marshal Earl Roberts on 3 January 1901 15 57 He had also suffered from a serious illness in 1897 from which he never fully recovered 46 The unexpectedly large force required for the initial phase of the Second Boer War was mainly furnished by means of the system of reserves Wolseley had originated By drawing on regular reservists and volunteer reserves Britain was able to assemble the largest army it had ever deployed abroad 58 Nevertheless the new conditions at the War Office were not to his liking The fiasco now called Black Week culminated in his dismissal over Christmastide 1900 Upon being released from responsibilities he brought the whole subject before the House of Lords in a speech 15 59 Lord Wolseley was Gold Stick in Waiting to Queen Victoria and took part in the funeral procession following the death of Queen Victoria in February 1901 60 He also served as Gold Stick in Waiting to King Edward during his coronation in August 1902 61 Honorific and royal appointments edit nbsp Arms of Viscount Wolseley Argent a talbot passant gules a mullet for differenceIn early 1901 Lord Wolseley was appointed by King Edward to lead a special diplomatic mission to announce the King s accession to the governments of Austria Hungary Romania Serbia the Ottoman Empire and Greece 62 During his visit to Constantinople the Sultan presented him with the Order of Osmanieh set in brilliants 63 He was among the original recipients of the Order of Merit in the 1902 Coronation Honours list published on 26 June 1902 64 and received the order from King Edward VII at Buckingham Palace on 8 August 1902 65 66 For his service with the Volunteer Force he was awarded the Volunteer Officers Decoration on 11 August 1903 67 He was also honorary colonel of the 23rd Middlesex Regiment from 12 May 1883 68 honorary colonel of the Queen s Rifle Volunteer Brigade the Royal Scots Lothian Regiment from 24 April 1889 69 colonel of the Royal Horse Guards from 29 March 1895 70 and colonel in chief of the Royal Irish Regiment from 20 July 1898 71 In retirement he was a member of the council of the Union Castle Steamship Company 72 Channel Tunnel edit nbsp General Wolseley riding on the fleeing lion Published in the American Humor Magazine Puck approx 1885 Wolseley was deeply opposed to Sir Edward Watkin s attempt to build a Channel Tunnel He gave evidence to a parliamentary commission that the construction might be calamitous for England he added that No matter what fortifications and defences were built there would always be the peril of some continental army seizing the tunnel exit by surprise Various contrivances to satisfy his objections were put forward including looping the line on a viaduct from the Cliffs of Dover and back into them so that the connection could be bombarded at will by the Royal Navy For a combination of reasons over 100 years were to pass before a permanent link was made 73 Personal life and death edit nbsp Ex libris with his coat of armsWolseley was married in 1867 to Louisa 1843 1920 the daughter of Mr A Erskine 10 His only child Frances 1872 1936 was an author and founded the College for Lady Gardeners at Glynde She was heiress to the viscountcy under special remainder but it became extinct after her death 74 In his later years Lord and Lady Wolseley lived in a grace and favour apartment at Hampton Court Palace He and his wife were wintering at Villa Tourrette Menton on the French Riviera where he fell ill with influenza and died on 26 March 1913 3 He was buried on 31 March 1913 in the crypt of St Paul s Cathedral to music played by the band of the 2nd Battalion Royal Irish Regiment of which he was the first Colonel in Chief 74 75 Legacy edit nbsp Equestrian statue of Field Marshal Lord Wolseley by Goscombe John Horse Guards Parade 2008 There is an equestrian statue of Wolseley in Horse Guards Parade in London This was sculpted by Sir William Goscombe John R A 76 and erected in 1920 77 Wolseley Barracks at London Ontario is a Canadian military base now officially known as ASU London established in 1886 It is on the site of Wolseley Hall the first building constructed by a Canadian Government specifically to house an element of the newly created Permanent Force Wolseley Barracks has been continuously occupied by the Canadian Army since its creation and has always housed some element of The Royal Canadian Regiment At present Wolseley Hall is occupied by the Royal Canadian Regiment Museum and the regiment s 4th Battalion among other tenants 78 The white pith helmet worn as part of the full dress uniform of the RCR and many other Canadian regiments is known as a Wolseley helmet 79 Wolseley is also a senior boys house at the Duke of York s Royal Military School 80 nbsp Lord Wolseley memorial at St Michael and All Angels Church in Colwich StaffordshireField Marshal Lord Wolseley is commemorated by a tablet at St Michael and All Angels Church in Colwich Staffordshire a short distance from Shugborough Hall and Wolseley Park at Colwich near Rugeley The church was the burial place of the Wolseley baronets of Wolseley Park the ancestral home of the Wolseley family 81 W S Gilbert of the musical partnership Gilbert and Sullivan may have modelled the character of Major General Stanley in the operetta The Pirates of Penzance on Wolseley and George Grossmith the actor who first created the role in the opening theatrical run imitated Wolseley s appearance 82 In another of Gilbert and Sullivan s operettas Patience Colonel Calverley praises Wolseley in the phrase Skill of Sir Garnet in thrashing a cannibal 83 nbsp The Sir Garnet pub in 1883The residential areas of Wolseley in Winnipeg Manitoba Canada located in the west central part of the city 84 and of Wolseley Saskatchewan Canada are named after him 85 The town of Wolseley Western Cape South Africa is named after Sir Garnet Joseph Wolseley It was established on the farm Goedgevonden in 1875 and attained municipal status in 1955 prior to this it was known as Ceres Road 86 The Sir Garnet pub in the centre of Norwich overlooking the historic market place and city hall is named after Field Marshal Lord Wolseley The pub opened in about 1861 and adopted the name Sir Garnet Wolseley in 1874 changed after a brief closing 2011 2012 to Sir Garnet 87 88 89 90 In Ghana Wolseley is known by the name of Sargrenti 91 He is portrayed as a villain in the 2014 novel The Boy Who Spat in Sargrenti s Eye by South African author Manu Herbstein The story is a fictitious account of the Anglo Ashanti war told from the perspective of an Ashanti boy named Kofi Gyan 92 Wolseley s uniforms field marshal s baton and souvenirs from his various campaigns are held in the collections of the Glenbow Museum in Calgary Alberta Canada Wolseley maintained a deep interest in notable individuals in early modern European history and collected items related to many of them for example a box from Sir Francis Drake a watch related to Oliver Cromwell a funerary badge for Admiral Horatio Nelson and General James Wolfe s snuff box These are also held in the collection 93 In recognition of his success an expression arose all Sir Garnet meaning that everything is in good order 94 95 Selected publications by Viscount Wolseley editThe Story of a Soldier s Life Vol I New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1903 The Story of a Soldier s Life Vol II New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1904 General Lee Macmillan s Magazine 55 329 321 331 March 1887 Narrative of the war with China in 1860 Longman Green 1862 The soldier s pocket book of field service Macmillan and Co 1874 The life of John Churchill Duke of Marlborough to the accession of Queen Anne R Bentley and Son 1894 The decline and fall of Napoleon Pall Mall magazine library Roberts Bros 1895 96 The story of a soldier s life A Constable amp Co 1903 General Lee Press of C Mann printing company 1906 Letters of Lord and Lady Wolseley 1870 1911 ed by Sir George Arthur 1922 American Civil War an English view writings of Viscount Wolseley selected amp ed by James A Rawley 1964 Preston Adrian W ed 1967 In relief of Gordon Lord Wolseley s campaign journal of the Khartoum Relief Expedition 1884 1885 Preston Adrian W ed 1973 South African journal of Sir Garnet Wolseley 1879 1880 See also editRoyal Horse Guards British Cavalry British Army Essex RegimentReferences edit Montgomery Bob 23 July 2003 Past Imperfect The Irish Times Retrieved 28 June 2017 Farmer amp Henley 1903 p 215 a b c d Death of Lord Wolseley The Times London 26 March 1913 p 7 Burke s Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage Baronetage and Knightage Burke s Peerage Limited 1885 p 1425 Retrieved 28 June 2017 Complete Baronetage Great Britain and Ireland 1707 1800 and Jacobite 1688 1788 W Pollard amp Company Limited 1906 pp 356 357 a b c Field Marshal Garnet Joseph Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley KP GCB OM GCMG VD PC Irish Masonic History and the Jewels of Irish Freemasonry Retrieved 28 June 2017 a b c d e f Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36995 Subscription or UK public library membership required No 21300 The London Gazette 12 March 1852 p 768 No 21309 The London Gazette 13 April 1852 p 1058 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Heathcote 1999 p 311 No 21515 The London Gazette 27 January 1854 p 232 No 21526 The London Gazette 24 February 1854 p 642 No 21645 The London Gazette 29 December 1854 p 4259 No 21909 The London Gazette 4 August 1856 p 2699 a b c d e f g h i j Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Wolseley Garnet Joseph Wolseley Viscount Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 777 778 No 22107 The London Gazette 2 March 1858 p 1264 a b A Victorian Army Hero Timmonet Retrieved 26 February 2012 No 22117 The London Gazette 24 March 1858 p 1571 No 22255 The London Gazette 26 April 1859 p 1727 Hibbert Christopher 1978 The Great Mutiny India 1857 Viking Press p 254 ISBN 978 0 670 34983 8 Wolseley 1862 No 22480 The London Gazette 15 February 1861 p 654 United Service Magazine London 1892 April and May issues No 22992 The London Gazette 18 July 1865 p 3579 No 23278 The London Gazette 19 July 1867 p 4045 a b c d e f g h Heathcote 1999 p 312 Morris Donald Washing of the Spears p 239 No 23690 The London Gazette 23 December 1870 p 5873 No 23715 The London Gazette 14 March 1871 p 1378 McElwee 1974 p 73 Ensor 1936 p 16 a b c Lehmann 1964 p 224 a b Gregory 2006 p 103 No 24082 The London Gazette 31 March 1874 p 1924 No 24083 The London Gazette 3 April 1874 p 1971 Wolseley Garnet Joseph Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 15 January 2021 No 24085 The London Gazette 10 April 1874 p 2061 No 24184 The London Gazette 26 February 1875 p 810 No 24508 The London Gazette 2 October 1877 p 5460 No 24574 The London Gazette 19 April 1878 p 2638 No 24605 The London Gazette 16 July 1878 p 4154 No 24730 The London Gazette 3 June 1879 p 3731 No 24857 The London Gazette 22 June 1880 p 3587 No 24838 The London Gazette 27 April 1880 p 2727 No 25084 The London Gazette 14 March 1882 p 1131 a b c d e Heathcote 1999 p 313 No 25169 The London Gazette 17 November 1882 p 5173 No 25170 The London Gazette 21 November 1882 p 5195 No 25168 The London Gazette 17 November 1882 p 5106 The Battle of Tel el Kebir Mcgonagall 23 August 2011 Retrieved 16 September 2015 No 25394 The London Gazette 9 September 1884 p 4040 No 25514 The London Gazette 25 September 1885 p 4515 Cokayne 1898 p 195 James 2012 p 229 No 26516 The London Gazette 26 May 1894 p 3117 No 26676 The London Gazette 1 November 1895 p 5923 No 27263 The London Gazette 4 January 1901 p 83 The Boer War Family History Retrieved 15 January 2021 War Office Administration Duties of Commander in Chief Parliamentary Debates Hansard 4 March 1901 Archived from the original on 23 December 2012 Retrieved 26 February 2012 No 27316 The London Gazette 1st supplement 22 May 1901 p 3552 The Coronation The Times No 36834 London 31 July 1902 p 8 The King the special Embassies The Times No 36410 London 23 March 1901 p 12 The King s accession The Times No 36427 London 12 April 1901 p 3 The Coronation Honours The Times No 36804 London 26 June 1902 p 5 Court Circular The Times No 36842 London 9 August 1902 p 6 No 27470 The London Gazette 2 September 1902 p 5679 No 27586 The London Gazette 11 August 1903 p 5078 No 25229 The London Gazette 11 May 1883 p 2500 No 25926 The London Gazette 23 April 1889 p 2294 No 26624 The London Gazette 14 May 1895 p 2774 No 26988 The London Gazette 19 July 1898 p 4354 New Castle liner Walmer Castle The Times No 36716 London 15 March 1902 p 11 Proposed Channel Tunnel Parliamentary Debates Hansard 24 January 1929 Archived from the original on 18 October 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2012 a b Heathcote 1999 p 314 Geoghegan 1911 Baker 2008 p 18 Horse Guards Parade Secret London Retrieved 29 March 2013 Wolseley Barracks Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 29 July 2011 Bates amp Suciu 2009 Structure Duke of York s Royal Military School Archived from the original on 19 August 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Parish Church of St Michael and All Angels Colwich British Listed Buildings Retrieved 1 October 2012 Bradley 2005 p 220 Patience Web Opera diamond boisestate edu Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 17 April 2015 An Historical Walking Tour of Wolseley Winnipeg The Manitoba Historical Society Retrieved 25 February 2012 Wolseley My Kind of Town Harrowsmith Country Life April 2000 Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Raper 1989 p 479 Gemma 30 May 2012 A New Life for Sir Garnet Vintage Norwich Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 Retrieved 2 May 2014 Sir Garnet Wolseley Norwich Market Norwich Heritage Projects Retrieved 2 May 2014 About the Sir Garnet The Sir Garnet Archived from the original on 3 May 2014 Retrieved 2 May 2014 Bale David 29 June 2012 Norwich market place to get the Sir Garnet Wolseley pub back but with a different name Norwich Evening News Archived from the original on 1 July 2012 Retrieved 29 March 2013 admin 21 June 2016 The Boy who Spat in Sargrenti s Eye Retrieved 11 April 2023 Herbstein Manu 2014 The Boy who Spat in Sargrenti s Eye Techmate Publishers ISBN 978 9988 1 9184 9 Famous People amp Battles Glenbow n d Retrieved 22 May 2017 Partridge 2006 p 14 Army cuts Not All Sir Garnet The Guardian 18 July 2011 Retrieved 18 February 2013 The Victorian byword for a smart operation of any kind was All Sir Garnet Review The Decline and Fall of Napoleon by Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley The Saturday Review of Politics Literature Science and Art 79 2061 552 27 April 1895 Bibliography editBailes Howard 1980 Technology and imperialism A case study of the Victorian army in Africa Victorian Studies 24 1 83 104 JSTOR 826880 Baker Margaret 2008 Discovering London Statues and Monuments Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 7478 0495 6 Bates Stuart Jeffery Suciu Peter 2009 The Wolseley Helmet in Pictures From Omdurman to El Alamein PSB Publishing ISBN 978 0 9806567 0 1 Black Jeremy ed 2008 Great Military Leaders and Their Campaigns Thames amp Hudson pp 232 233 ISBN 978 0 500 25145 4 Bond Brian 1961 The Retirement of the Duke of Cambridge Journal of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies 106 62 544 553 doi 10 1080 03071846109420729 Bradley Ian C 2005 The Complete Annotated Gilbert amp Sullivan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816710 5 Cokayne George Edward 1898 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct Or Dormant G Bell amp sons p 195 Ensor R C K 1936 England 1870 1914 Farmer John Stephen Henley W E 1903 Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present A Dictionary with Synonyms in English French Etc Harrison amp Sons Geoghegan Brigadier General Stannus 1911 The Campaigns and History of the Royal Irish Regiment updated 1927 ed Edinburgh and London Blackwood Hamer William Spencer The British Army civil military relations 1885 1905 1970 Gregory Barry 2006 The History of the Artists Rifles 1859 1947 Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 503 3 Heathcote Tony 1999 The British Field Marshals 1736 1997 Pen amp Sword Books Ltd ISBN 0 85052 696 5 Holt Edgar Garnet Wolseley Soldier of Empire History Today Oct 1958 8 10 pp 706 713 James Henry 2012 The Master the Modern Major General and His Clever Wife Henry James s Letters to Field Marshal Lord Wolseley and Lady Wolseley 1878 1913 University of Virginia Press ISBN 978 0 8139 3235 4 Kochanski H M 1997 Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley as commander in chief 1895 1900 A reassessment Journal of Strategic Studies 20 2 119 139 doi 10 1080 01402399708437681 ISSN 0140 2390 Kochanski Halik 1999 Sir Garnet Wolseley Victorian Hero London Hambledon Press ISBN 1 85285 188 0 Lehmann Joseph 1964 All Sir Garnet a life of Field Marshal Lord Wolseley London J Cape ASIN B0014BQSRS McElwee W L 1974 The art of war Waterloo to Mons London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0 297 76865 4 Partridge Eric 2006 A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 96365 2 Raper P E 1989 Dictionary of Southern African Place Names J Ball ISBN 978 0 947464 04 2 Spiers Edward M 1992 The Late Victorian Army 1868 1902 Manchester History of the British Army Tabor Paddy 2010 The Household Cavalry Museum Ajanta Book Publishing ISBN 978 1 84820 882 7 Wessels Andre 2003 The British Army in 1899 problems that hampered preparations for war in South Africa Journal for Contemporary History University of the Free State 28 2 hdl 10520 EJC28277 ISSN 0258 2422 White Spunner Barney 2008 Horse Guards Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4050 5574 1 Primary sources edit Wolseley 1903 Wolseley 1904External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Works by Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley at Internet Archive Portraits of Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Government officesPreceded byRobert William Harley Governor of the Gold Coast1873 1874 Succeeded byJames MaxwellPreceded bySir Benjamin Pine Governor of Natal1875 Succeeded bySir Henry BulwerMilitary officesPreceded bySir Daniel Lysons Quartermaster General to the Forces1880 1882 Succeeded bySir Arthur HerbertPreceded bySir Charles Ellice Adjutant General to the Forces1882 1890 Succeeded bySir Redvers BullerPreceded byPrince Edward of Saxe Weimar Commander in Chief Ireland1890 1895 Succeeded byThe Lord Roberts of KandaharPreceded bySir Patrick Grant Colonel of the Royal Horse Guards1895 1907 Succeeded bySir Evelyn WoodPreceded byThe Duke of Cambridge Commander in Chief of the Forces1895 1900 Succeeded byThe Lord Roberts of KandaharPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Viscount Wolseley1885 1913 Succeeded byFrances Garnet Wolseley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Garnet Wolseley 1st Viscount Wolseley amp oldid 1200088946, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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