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Ferdinand Le Quesne

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Role
  
Armed force officer

Service/branch
  
British Army

Education
  
King's College London


Rank
  
Lieutenant-Colonel

Name
  
Ferdinand Quesne

Awards
  
Victoria Cross

Ferdinand Le Quesne

Buried at
  
Canford Cemetery, Bristol

Battles/wars
  
Second Boer War World War I

Died
  
April 14, 1950, Bristol, United Kingdom

Battles and wars
  
Second Boer War, World War I

Similar People
  
William Barnsley Allen, Noel Godfrey Chavasse, Edgar Inkson, George Allan Maling, Harold Ackroyd

Place of burial
  
Bristol, United Kingdom

Lieutenant-Colonel Ferdinand Simeon Le Quesne, VC (25 December 1863 – 14 April 1950) was a British army surgeon and recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

Contents

Details

Le Quesne was educated at King's College London before he joined the British Army as surgeon captain on 28 July 1886. After the Third Anglo-Burmese War, local leaders started a guerilla war against the British forces who now occupied the country. Le Quesne's action was during this period. He was 25 years old, and a surgeon in the Army Medical Service (later the Royal Army Medical Corps) serving with the Chin Field Force in Burma when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.

On 4 May 1889 during the attack on the village of Tartan (now Siallum near Voklaak Village), Burma (now Myanmar) by a column of the Chin Field Force, Surgeon Le Quesne remained for the space of about ten minutes within five yards of the loopholed stockade, from which the enemy was firing, dressing with perfect coolness and self-possession, the wounds of an officer who shortly afterwards died. Surgeon Le Quesne was himself severely wounded later while attending to the wounds of another officer.

Further information

Le Quesne served wit the Chin-Lushai expeditionary force in 1890, and with the Wuntho Field Force in 1891, and was promoted to surgeon major on 28 July 1898. He served in the Second Boer War in South Africa, from which he returned in August 1902. He later served in World War I, and retired in 1918 with the rank of lieutenant colonel.

The medal

His VC is held at the Jersey Museum in St Helier.

References

Ferdinand Le Quesne Wikipedia