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Richard Lawley, 4th Baron Wenlock

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Richard 4th

Rank
  
Lieutenant-Colonel

Years of service
  
1876-1904

Service/branch
  
Army


Born
  
21 August 1856 Escrick, Yorkshire, England (
1856-08-21
)

Died
  
25 July 1918(1918-07-25) (aged 61) Hestercombe , Taunton, Devon, England

Commands held
  
7th Queen's Own Hussars

Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Thompson Lawley, 4th Baron Wenlock, CB (1856–1918) was a British Army officer and polo champion who became the 4th Baron Wenlock and the 11th Lawley Baronet of Spoonhill in 1912.

Contents

Early life

Lawley was born on 21 August 1856, the second son and sixth child of Beilby Lawley the 2nd Baron Wenlock and his wife Lady Elizabeth (née Grosvenor).

Military service

Lawley joined the British Army and was commissioned as a lieutenant in the 7th Hussars on 11 February 1876. He served in the Nile Expedition of 1884-1885, and was promoted to captain on 21 July 1885, to major on 5 May 1893, and to lieutenant-colonel on 26 June 1899. In 1902 he served in South Africa during the Second Boer War, for which he was mentioned in despatches (dated 8 April 1902) and was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB). He was later colonel commanding the 7th Hussars.

Polo

He won the International Polo Cup in 1886 for Britain alongside John Henry Watson, Captain Thomas Hone, and Brigadier-General Malcolm Orme Little.

Family life

He succeeded to the title of Baron Wenlock on the death of his brother Beilby Lawley, who had no son to whom to pass on the title. In 1909 he married Rhoda Edith Knox-Little.

Wenlock died on 25 July 1918 at his home at Hestercombe near Taunton, Devon, aged 61. He had no children so his younger brother, Algernon George Lawley, became the 5th Baron Wenlock.

References

Richard Lawley, 4th Baron Wenlock Wikipedia