- Alfred Gaselee
Sir Alfred Gaselee,
GCB ,GCIE , (3 June 1844 -29 March 1918 ) Sir Gaselee was born atLittle Yeldham ,Essex , the eldest son of the Reverend John Gaselee,rector of Little Yeldham, and his wife, Sarah Anne Mant. He enteredFelsted School in 1853 andSandhurst in 1861.In 1882, Gaselee married Alice Jane, daughter of the
Rt. Hon. William Edward Baxter , from whom he obtained a divorce in 1893. He married Alice Margaret, daughter of Gartside Gartside-Tipping of Rossferry, County Fermanagh, Ireland, on20 August 1895 , who outlived him. There were no children from either marriage.Career
Gaselee was commissioned as an
ensign in the 93rd regiment of theSutherland Highlanders on9 January 1863 . He was involved in the campaign on theNorth-West Frontier ofIndia in that year. He was promoted lieutenant on11 October 1866 , transferred to theBengal staff corps, and joined the 4th Punjab infantry on27 September 1867 . He went with the Indian force to Abyssinia, where he acted as assistant to the director-general of transport and was present at the capture ofMagdala (13 April 1868 ). He was promoted captain on9 January 1875 , and served with the Jowaki expedition of 1877–8. In theSecond Anglo-Afghan War , he was a deputy assistant quartermaster-general, and accompaniedLord Roberts on the march fromKabul to the relief ofKandahar . He was made abrevetted major on2 March 1881 .Gaselee was promoted to major on
9 January 1883 , andlieutenant-colonel on9 January 1889 , and was made aCompanion of the Order of the Bath (CB) on19 November 1891 . On27 September 1892 , he was promoted to the command of the 1stbattalion , 5thGurkha rifles. On1 February 1893 , he was promoted tocolonel and appointedaide-de-camp toQueen Victoria . He served in the Isazai expedition (1892), theWaziristan field force (1894–5), and theTirah campaign (1897–8). For his services in Tirah, Gaselee was created aKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) on20 May 1898 . From25 July 1898 to3 June 1901 , he served simultaneously as quartermaster-general atSimla andbrigadier-general commandingBundelkhand district. He was promoted tomajor-general on3 July 1900 .In the summer of 1900, when the
Boxer uprising inChina was at its height, Gaselee was chosen to command the British element in theinternational expeditionary force . A large force was to have been assembled under the German commander,Count Von Waldersee , consisting, in addition to British, of Japanese, Russian, Italian, French, American, and German troops. Before Von Waldersee's arrival news broke that the foreign legations in Peking were still holding out. Gaselee was therefore put in command of a smaller force of 20,000 men, mostly Japanese and Russian, but including 3000 British and Indian troops, which set out for Peking immediately. The 7th Rajputs, under Gaselee himself, were the first troops to enterPeking , reaching the legations on the afternoon of 14 August 1900. The international rivalries between the component parts of the relieving forces might have given rise to the most serious complications. Gaselee showed tact and firmness in his handling of a very delicate situation. As a reward for his services, he was createdKnight Grand Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (GCIE) on24 July 1901 .Gaselee was promoted
lieutenant-general on30 June 1903 and fullgeneral on30 June 1906 . From30 June 1903 to29 June 1908 , he was commander of the forces in Bengal. He then retired toGuildford . He was created aKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB) on25 June 1909 and was colonel of the 54thSikhs from13 May 1904 until his death, which took place at Grove End House, 12 Pit Farm Road, Guildford, GU1 2JH, on29 March 1918 .
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