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Charles Kavanagh

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Service/branch
  
British Army


Rank
  
Lieutenant General

Name
  
Charles Kavanagh

Charles Kavanagh

Born
  
25 March 1864 (
1864-03-25
)

Died
  
11 October 1950(1950-10-11) (aged 86)

Commands held
  
10th Royal Hussars 1st Cavalry Brigade 7th Cavalry Brigade 2nd Cavalry Division 5th Infantry Division Cavalry Corps

Battles/wars
  
Second Boer War First World War

003 charles kavanagh got the world on a string all of me


Lieutenant General Sir Charles Toler MacMorrough Kavanagh, (25 March 1864 - 11 October 1950) was a British Army officer who commanded the Cavalry Corps at the Battle of Amiens.

Contents

Military career

Born the son of Arthur MacMorrough Kavanagh, The MacMorrough and Mary Frances Forde-Leathley and educated at Harrow School and the Royal Military College Sandhurst, Kavanagh was commissioned into the 3rd Dragoon Guards in February 1884 and transferred to the 10th Royal Hussars two weeks later. He was promoted to captain on 29 April 1891.

On the 12 June 1895 he was appointed Adjutant to the 6th Yeomanry Brigade (Prince Albert's Own Leicestershire Yeomanry Cavalry and Derbyshire Yeomanry Cavalry); this posting ended on 16 February 1903. He served in the Second Boer War as Commanding Officer of the 10th Royal Hussars, and was promoted to major on 6 January 1900, and to brevet lieutenant-colonel on 29 November 1900. Following the end of the war in May 1902, Kavanagh returned to the United Kingdom in the SS Dunottar Castle, which arrived at Southampton in July 1902. He was mentioned in despatches by Lord Kitchener in his final despatch dated 23 June 1902.

After his return, he went on to be Commander of the 1st Cavalry Brigade at Aldershot Command in 1909. He fought in the Great War as commander of the 7th Cavalry Brigade (part of the British Expeditionary Force) from 1914, as General Officer Commanding 2nd Cavalry Division from April 1915 and as General Officer Commanding 5th Division from July 1915. After that he served as Commander of the Cavalry Corps from 1917 leading the Corps to success at the Battle of Amiens and remaining in post until the end of the War. He retired in 1920.

In retirement he became Governor of the Military Knights of Windsor.

Family

In 1895 he married Mary Perry; they had two daughters.

References

Charles Kavanagh Wikipedia