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William Dick Cunyngham

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Buried at
  
Ladysmith Cemetery

Role
  
Armed force officer

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Service/branch
  
British Army


Unit
  
The Gordon Highlanders

Rank
  
Lieutenant colonel

Name
  
William Dick-Cunyngham

Awards
  
Victoria Cross

William Dick-Cunyngham

Battles/wars
  
Second Anglo-Afghan War Second Boer War

Died
  
January 6, 1900, Ladysmith, South Africa

Battles and wars
  
Second Anglo-Afghan War, Second Boer War

Similar People
  
George Findlater, George Allan Mitchell, William Kenny, James Forbes‑Robertson, Beachcroft Towse

Lieutenant Colonel William Henry Dick-Cunyngham VC (16 June 1851 – 6 January 1900) was a Scottish 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

Background

Dick-Cunynigham was the youngest son of Sir William Hanmer Dick-Cunyngham, 8th Baronet of Prestonfield and Lambrughton

Military career and VC details

He was 28 years old, and a lieutenant in The Gordon Highlanders, British Army during the Second Anglo-Afghan War when the following deed took place on 13 December 1879 during the attack on the Sherpur Pass, Afghanistan for which he was awarded the VC.

For the conspicuous gallantry and coolness displayed by him on the 13th December, 1879, at the attack on the Sherpur Pass, in Afghanistan, in having exposed himself to the full fire of the enemy, and by his example and encouragement rallied the men who, having been beaten back, were, at the moment, wavering at the top of the hill.

In 1899 he was appointed in command of the 2nd Battalion Gordon Highlanders, which was sent to South Africa for the Second Boer War.

While in South Africa, he was killed in action at the siege of Ladysmith, on 6 January 1900.

Medal and memorials

His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Gordon Highlanders Museum, Aberdeen, Scotland.

His grave is in Ladysmith Cement in South Africa. and his name appears on the Boer War Memorial in Cheltenham England.

He is also memorialised with his siblings in Duddingston Kirkyard in Edinburgh. A memorial tablet inside the church remembers his only son, St John William Keith Dick-Cunyngham who was drowned near the family home of Philorth Castle in 1897 while trying to rescue his best friend.

References

William Dick-Cunyngham Wikipedia