| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 16/04/2025 | ||||||
| Names of baronets shown in blue | ||||||
| have not yet proved succession and, as a | ||||||
| result, their name has not yet been placed on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage. | ||||||
| Date | Type | Order | Name | Born | Died | Age |
| Dates in italics in the "Born" column indicate that the baronet was | ||||||
| baptised on that date; dates in italics in the "Died" column indicate | ||||||
| that the baronet was buried on that date | ||||||
| OAKELEY of Shrewsbury,Salop | ||||||
| 5 Jun 1790 | GB | 1 | Charles Oakeley | 26 Feb 1751 | 7 Sep 1826 | 75 |
| 7 Sep 1826 | 2 | Charles Oakeley | 25 Sep 1778 | 30 Jun 1829 | 50 | |
| 30 Jun 1829 | 3 | Herbert Oakeley | 10 Feb 1791 | 27 Mar 1845 | 54 | |
| 27 Mar 1845 | 4 | Charles William Atholl Oakeley | 25 Oct 1828 | 2 Nov 1915 | 87 | |
| 2 Nov 1915 | 5 | Charles John Oakeley | 6 May 1862 | 20 Jul 1938 | 76 | |
| 20 Jul 1938 | 6 | Charles Richard Andrew Oakeley | 14 Aug 1900 | 22 Nov 1959 | 59 | |
| 22 Nov 1959 | 7 | Edward Atholl Oakeley | 31 May 1900 | 7 Jan 1987 | 86 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| 7 Jan 1987 | 8 | John Digby Atholl Oakeley | 27 Nov 1932 | 19 Dec 2016 | 84 | |
| 19 Dec 2016 | 9 | Robert John Atholl Oakeley | 13 Aug 1963 | |||
| OAKES of the Army | ||||||
| 2 Nov 1813 | UK | 1 | Hildebrand Oakes | 19 Jan 1754 | 9 Sep 1822 | 68 |
| to | He obtained a new patent in 1815 - see below | |||||
| 9 Sep 1822 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| OAKES of Hereford | ||||||
| 1 Jun 1815 | UK | 1 | Hildebrand Oakes | 19 Jan 1754 | 9 Sep 1822 | 68 |
| 9 Sep 1822 | 2 | Henry Oakes | 11 Jul 1756 | 1 Nov 1827 | 71 | |
| 1 Nov 1827 | 3 | Henry Thomas Oakes | 4 Jul 1795 | 30 Sep 1850 | 55 | |
| 30 Sep 1850 | 4 | Reginald Louis Oakes | 29 Sep 1847 | 11 Oct 1927 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 11 Oct 1927 | ||||||
| OAKES of Nassau,the Bahamas | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1939 | UK | 1 | Harry Oakes | 23 Dec 1874 | 8 Jul 1943 | 68 |
| 8 Jul 1943 | 2 | Sydney Oakes | 9 Jun 1927 | 8 Aug 1966 | 39 | |
| 8 Aug 1966 | 3 | Christopher Oakes | 10 Jul 1949 | |||
| OAKSHOTT of Bebington,Cheshire | ||||||
| 10 Jul 1959 | UK | 1 | Hendrie Dudley Oakshott,later [1964] | |||
| Baron Oakshott [L] | 8 Nov 1904 | 1 Feb 1975 | 70 | |||
| 1 Feb 1975 | 2 | Anthony Hendrie Oakshott | 10 Oct 1929 | 11 Dec 2002 | 73 | |
| 11 Dec 2002 | 3 | Michael Arthur John Oakshott | 12 Apr 1932 | 20 Jun 2014 | 82 | |
| 20 Jun 2014 | 4 | Thomas Hendrie Oakshott | 12 Jun 1959 | |||
| O'BRIEN of Leaghmenagh,Clare | ||||||
| 9 Nov 1686 | I | 1 | Donough O'Brien | 1642 | 17 Nov 1717 | 75 |
| 17 Nov 1717 | 2 | Edward O'Brien | 7 Apr 1705 | 26 Nov 1765 | 60 | |
| MP for Peterborough 1727-1728 | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1765 | 3 | Lucius Henry O'Brien | 2 Sep 1731 | 15 Jan 1795 | 63 | |
| PC [I] 1786 | ||||||
| 15 Jan 1795 | 4 | Edward O'Brien | 17 Apr 1773 | 13 Mar 1837 | 63 | |
| MP for co.Clare 1802-1826 | ||||||
| 13 Mar 1837 | 5 | Lucius O'Brien | 5 Dec 1800 | 22 Mar 1872 | 71 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Barony | ||||||
| of Inchiquin (qv) in 1855 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged,although,as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014,the baronetcy does not appear on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| O'BRIEN of Borris-in-Ossory,Queen's Co. | ||||||
| and Merrion Square,Dublin | ||||||
| 25 Sep 1849 | UK | 1 | Timothy O'Brien | 1787 | 3 Dec 1862 | 75 |
| MP for Cashel 1846-1859 | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1862 | 2 | Patrick O'Brien | 1823 | 25 Apr 1895 | 71 | |
| MP for Kings County 1852-1885 | ||||||
| 25 Apr 1895 | 3 | Timothy Carew O'Brien | 5 Nov 1861 | 9 Dec 1948 | 87 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1948 | 4 | Robert Rollo Gillespie O'Brien | 9 Jun 1901 | 18 Apr 1952 | 50 | |
| 18 Apr 1952 | 5 | John Edmond Noel O'Brien | 23 Dec 1899 | 28 Sep 1969 | 69 | |
| 28 Sep 1969 | 6 | David Edmond O'Brien | 19 Feb 1902 | 26 Nov 1982 | 80 | |
| 26 Nov 1982 | 7 | Timothy John O'Brien | 6 Jul 1958 | |||
| O'BRIEN of Merrion Square,Dublin | ||||||
| 28 Sep 1891 | UK | 1 | Peter O'Brien | 29 Jun 1842 | 7 Sep 1914 | 72 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| O'Brien (qv) in 1900 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1914 | ||||||
| O'BRIEN of Artona | ||||||
| 15 Jan 1916 | UK | 1 | Ignatius John O'Brien | 30 Jul 1857 | 10 Sep 1930 | 73 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Shandon (qv) in 1918 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1930 | ||||||
| O'CARROLL of Denton,Yorks | ||||||
| 1712 | GB | 1 | Daniel O'Carroll | 4 Nov 1750 | ||
| 4 Nov 1750 | 2 | Daniel O'Carroll | c 1717 | 30 Jan 1758 | ||
| 30 Jan 1758 | 3 | John O'Carroll | 14 Feb 1722 | c 1780 | ||
| c 1780 | 4 | John Whitley O'Carroll | 13 Jan 1818 | |||
| 13 Jan 1818 | 5 | Jervoise O'Carroll | 1831 | |||
| 1831 | 6 | John Whitley Christopher O'Carroll | 2 Jun 1835 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| 2 Jun 1835 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| OCHTERLONY of Pitforthy,Angus | ||||||
| 7 Mar 1816 | UK | 1 | David Ochterlony | 12 Feb 1758 | 15 Jul 1825 | 67 |
| to | He obtained a new patent in 1823-see below | |||||
| 15 Jul 1825 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| OCHTERLONY of Ochterlony,Forfar | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1823 | UK | 1 | David Ochterlony | 12 Feb 1758 | 15 Jul 1825 | 67 |
| 15 Jul 1825 | 2 | Charles Metcalfe Ochterlony | 21 Dec 1817 | 11 Aug 1891 | 73 | |
| 11 Aug 1891 | 3 | David Ferguson Ochterlony | 27 Oct 1848 | 25 Dec 1931 | 83 | |
| 25 Dec 1931 | 4 | Matthew Montgomerie Ochterlony | 28 Feb 1880 | 4 Oct 1946 | 66 | |
| 4 Oct 1946 | 5 | Charles Francis Ochterlony | 27 Jun 1891 | 2 Nov 1964 | 73 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Nov 1964 | ||||||
| O'CONNELL of Lakeview,Killarney | ||||||
| and Ballybeggan,co.Kerry | ||||||
| 29 Oct 1869 | UK | 1 | James O'Connell | 10 Jan 1786 | 28 Jul 1872 | 86 |
| 28 Jul 1872 | 2 | Maurice James O'Connell | 31 Oct 1821 | 15 Jan 1896 | 74 | |
| 15 Jan 1896 | 3 | Daniel Ross O'Connell | 18 Jan 1861 | 14 May 1905 | 44 | |
| 14 May 1905 | 4 | Morgan Ross O'Connell | 20 Jul 1862 | 27 Apr 1919 | 56 | |
| 27 Apr 1919 | 5 | Maurice James Arthur O'Connell | 24 Dec 1889 | 15 Sep 1949 | 59 | |
| 15 Sep 1949 | 6 | Morgan Donal Conail O'Connell | 29 Jan 1923 | 25 Jul 1989 | 66 | |
| 25 Jul 1989 | 7 | Maurice James Donagh MacCarthy | ||||
| O'Connell | 10 Jun 1958 | |||||
| O'CONNOR of Sligo | ||||||
| 11 May 1622 | I | 1 | Charles O'Connor | 21 Jul 1625 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Jul 1625 | ||||||
| O'DONNELL of Newport House,Mayo | ||||||
| 22 Dec 1780 | I | 1 | Neale O'Donnell | Jan 1811 | ||
| Jan 1811 | 2 | Neale O'Donnell | 1 Mar 1827 | |||
| 1 Mar 1827 | 3 | Hugh James Moore O'Donnell | 1806 | 29 Jul 1828 | 22 | |
| 29 Jul 1828 | 4 | Richard Annesley O'Donnell | 28 May 1808 | 9 Nov 1878 | 70 | |
| 9 Nov 1878 | 5 | George Clendining O'Donnell | 15 Jun 1832 | 22 Jan 1889 | 56 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Jan 1889 | ||||||
| OGILVIE of Carnoustie,Banff | ||||||
| 24 Apr 1626 | NS | 1 | George Ogilvie | |||
| After his death the succession is unknown | ||||||
| until about 1800 | ||||||
| *********************** | ||||||
| c 1800 | 8 | William Ogilvie | 8 Jun 1825 | |||
| 8 Jun 1825 | 9 | William Ogilvie | 1810 | 20 Feb 1861 | 50 | |
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| 20 Feb 1861 | ||||||
| OGILVIE of Barras,Kincardine | ||||||
| 5 Mar 1662 | NS | 1 | George Ogilvie | c 1680 | ||
| c 1680 | 2 | William Ogilvie | 25 Jul 1707 | |||
| Jul 1707 | 3 | David Ogilvie | c 1740 | |||
| c 1740 | 4 | William Ogilvie | Nov 1791 | |||
| Nov 1791 | 5 | David Ogilvie | 1729 | 5 Dec 1799 | 70 | |
| 5 Dec 1799 | 6 | George Mulgrave Ogilvie | 10 Aug 1779 | 9 Mar 1837 | 57 | |
| 9 Mar 1837 | 7 | William Ogilvie | c 1785 | c 1840 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| c 1840 | ||||||
| OGILVY of Inverquharity,Forfar | ||||||
| 29 Sep 1626 | NS | 1 | John Ogilvy | c 1660 | ||
| c 1660 | 2 | David Ogilvy | c 1630 | c 1679 | ||
| c 1679 | 3 | John Ogilvy | c 1735 | |||
| c 1735 | 4 | John Ogilvy | Feb 1748 | |||
| Feb 1748 | 5 | John Ogilvy | c 1732 | 15 Mar 1802 | ||
| 15 Mar 1802 | 6 | Walter Ogilvy | 21 Aug 1808 | |||
| 21 Aug 1808 | 7 | John Ogilvy | 1819 | |||
| 1819 | 8 | William Ogilvy | c 1765 | 1823 | ||
| 1823 | 9 | John Ogilvy | 17 Mar 1803 | 29 Mar 1890 | 87 | |
| MP for Dundee 1857-1874 | ||||||
| 29 Mar 1890 | 10 | Reginald Howard Alexander Ogilvy | 29 May 1832 | 12 Mar 1910 | 77 | |
| 12 Mar 1910 | 11 | Gilchrist Nevill Ogilvy | 6 Sep 1892 | 29 Oct 1914 | 22 | |
| 29 Oct 1914 | 12 | Herbert Kinnaird Ogilvy | 29 Jun 1865 | 1 Mar 1956 | 90 | |
| 1 Mar 1956 | 13 | David John Wilfrid Ogilvy | 3 Feb 1914 | 16 Jun 1992 | 78 | |
| 16 Jun 1992 | 14 | Francis Gilbert Arthur Ogilvy | 22 Apr 1969 | |||
| OGILVY of Forglen,Banff | ||||||
| 30 Jul 1627 | NS | 1 | George Ogilvy | 11 Aug 1663 | ||
| He was subsequently created Baron Banff | ||||||
| (qv) in 1642 with which title the baronetcy | ||||||
| then merged until it became dormant in 1803 | ||||||
| -------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1701 | NS | 1 | Alexander Ogilvy | 30 Mar 1727 | ||
| 30 Mar 1727 | 2 | Alexander Ogilvy | 1 Sep 1771 | |||
| He subsequently succeeded as 7th Lord Banff | ||||||
| in 1746 with which title the baronetcy then | ||||||
| merged until its extinction in 1803 | ||||||
| OGILVY-WEDDERBURN of Baltindean,Perth | ||||||
| 18 Aug 1803 | UK | 1 | David Wedderburn | 10 Mar 1775 | 7 Apr 1858 | 83 |
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| MP for Perth Burghs 1805-1818 | ||||||
| 7 Apr 1858 | 2 | John Wedderburn | 1 May 1789 | 2 Jul 1862 | 73 | |
| 2 Jul 1862 | 3 | David Wedderburn | 20 Dec 1835 | 18 Sep 1882 | 46 | |
| MP for Ayrshire South 1868-1874 and | ||||||
| Haddington Burghs 1879-1882 | ||||||
| 18 Sep 1882 | 4 | William Wedderburn | 25 Mar 1838 | 25 Jan 1918 | 79 | |
| MP for Banffshire 1893-1900 | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1918 | 5 | John Andrew Ogilvy-Wedderburn | 16 Sep 1866 | 10 Mar 1956 | 89 | |
| 10 Mar 1956 | 6 | John Peter Ogilvy-Wedderburn | 29 Sep 1917 | 13 Aug 1977 | 59 | |
| 13 Aug 1977 | 7 | Andrew John Alexander Ogilvy-Wedderburn | 4 Aug 1952 | 9 Apr 2025 | 72 | |
| 9 Apr 2025 | 8 | Peter Robert Alexander Ogilvy-Wedderburn | 20 Apr 1987 | |||
| OGLANDER of Nunwell,Hants | ||||||
| 12 Dec 1665 | E | 1 | William Oglander | 18 Oct 1611 | 9 Aug 1670 | 58 |
| MP for Yarmouth 1640 and Newport (IOW) | ||||||
| 1660-1670 | ||||||
| Aug 1670 | 2 | John Oglander | c 1642 | c 1683 | ||
| c 1683 | 3 | William Oglander | c 1680 | 10 Aug 1734 | ||
| 10 Aug 1734 | 4 | John Oglander | c 1704 | 11 May 1767 | ||
| 11 May 1767 | 5 | William Oglander | 8 Jul 1733 | 5 Jan 1806 | 72 | |
| 5 Jan 1806 | 6 | William Oglander | 13 Sep 1769 | 17 Jan 1852 | 82 | |
| MP for Bodmin 1807-1812 | ||||||
| 17 Jan 1852 | 7 | Henry Oglander | 24 Jun 1811 | 8 Apr 1874 | 62 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 8 Apr 1874 | ||||||
| OGLE of Worthy,Hants | ||||||
| 12 Mar 1816 | UK | 1 | Chaloner Ogle | 27 Aug 1816 | ||
| 27 Aug 1816 | 2 | Charles Ogle | 24 May 1775 | 16 Jun 1858 | 83 | |
| MP for Portarlington 1830-1831 | ||||||
| 16 Jun 1858 | 3 | Chaloner Ogle | 18 Jul 1803 | 3 Feb 1859 | 55 | |
| 3 Feb 1859 | 4 | Chaloner Roe Majendie Ogle | 2 Jun 1843 | 29 Nov 1861 | 18 | |
| 29 Nov 1861 | 5 | William Ogle | 5 May 1823 | 2 Dec 1885 | 62 | |
| 2 Dec 1885 | 6 | Edmund Ogle | 20 Sep 1816 | 14 Jun 1887 | 70 | |
| 14 Jun 1887 | 7 | Henry Asgill Ogle | 2 Sep 1850 | 5 Mar 1921 | 70 | |
| 5 Mar 1921 | 8 | Edmund Ashton Ogle | 13 Aug 1857 | 17 Jun 1940 | 82 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 17 Jun 1940 | ||||||
| OHLSON of Scarborough,Yorks | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1920 | UK | 1 | Sir Erik Ohlson | 19 Jul 1873 | 20 Mar 1934 | 60 |
| 20 Mar 1934 | 2 | Eric James Ohlson | 16 Mar 1911 | 5 Mar 1983 | 71 | |
| 5 Mar 1983 | 3 | Brian Eric Christopher Ohlson | 27 Jul 1936 | 19 Mar 2017 | 80 | |
| 19 Mar 2017 | 4 | Peter Michael Ohlson | 18 May 1939 | |||
| OKEOVER of Gateacre,Lancs | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1886 | UK | See "Walker-Okeover" | ||||
| OLDFIELD of Spalding,Lincs | ||||||
| 6 Aug 1660 | E | 1 | Anthony Oldfield | 27 Jul 1626 | 4 Sep 1668 | 42 |
| 4 Sep 1668 | 2 | John Oldfield | 29 Oct 1659 | Aug 1705 | 45 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Aug 1705 | ||||||
| OLIPHANT of Newton | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1629 | NS | 1 | James Oliphant | 1648 | ||
| 1648 | 2 | James Oliphant | 1659 | |||
| 1659 | 3 | George Oliphant | c 1691 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1691 | ||||||
| O'LOGHLEN of Drumconora,co.Clare | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1838 | UK | 1 | Michael O'Loghlen | 6 Oct 1789 | 28 Sep 1842 | 52 |
| MP for Dungarvan 1835-1837. Solicitor | ||||||
| General [I] 1834. Attorney General [I] 1835 | ||||||
| 28 Sep 1842 | 2 | Colman Michael O'Loghlen | 20 Sep 1819 | 22 Jul 1877 | 57 | |
| MP for co.Clare 1863-1877 | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1877 | 3 | Bryan O'Loghlen | 27 Jun 1828 | 31 Oct 1909 | 81 | |
| MP for Clare 1877-1879 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of the page containing details | ||||||
| of the MPs for County Clare | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1909 | 4 | Michael O'Loghlen | 16 Oct 1866 | 23 Mar 1934 | 67 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Clare 1910-1922 | ||||||
| 23 Mar 1934 | 5 | Charles Hugh Ross O'Loghlen | 6 Jul 1881 | 23 Jul 1951 | 70 | |
| 23 Jul 1951 | 6 | Colman Michael O'Loghlen | 6 Apr 1916 | 6 Mar 2014 | 97 | |
| 6 Mar 2014 | 7 | Michael O'Loghlen | 21 May 1945 | |||
| O'MALLEY of Rosehill,Mayo | ||||||
| 2 Jul 1804 | UK | 1 | Samuel O'Malley | 26 Dec 1779 | 17 Aug 1864 | 84 |
| 17 Aug 1864 | 2 | William O'Malley | 23 Sep 1816 | 21 Jan 1892 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Jan 1892 | ||||||
| O'NEILL of Upper Claneboys | ||||||
| 13 Nov 1643 | I | 1 | Brian O'Neill | late 1670 | ||
| late 1670 | 2 | Brian O'Neill | 1694 | |||
| 1694 | 3 | Henry O'Neill | c 1674 | 1 Nov 1759 | ||
| 1 Nov 1759 | 4 | Brian O'Neill | c 1765 | |||
| c 1765 | 5 | Randall O'Neill | Jun 1779 | |||
| Jun 1779 | 6 | William O'Neill | c 1754 | Mar 1784 | ||
| Mar 1784 | 7 | Francis O'Neill | c 1730 | 1799 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| 1799 | ||||||
| O'NEILL of Killelagh,Antrim | ||||||
| 23 Feb 1666 | I | 1 | Henry O'Neill | 1625 | c 1680 | |
| c 1680 | 2 | Neill O'Neill | c 1658 | 8 Jul 1690 | ||
| 8 Jul 1690 | 3 | Daniel O'Neill | ||||
| to | The baronetcy was forfeited in 1691 | |||||
| 1691 | ||||||
| O'NEILL of Cleggan,Antrim | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1929 | UK | 1 | Robert William Hugh O'Neill | 8 Jun 1883 | 28 Nov 1982 | 99 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Rathcavan (qv) in 1953 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| ONSLOW of West Clandon,Surrey | ||||||
| 8 May 1674 | E | 1 | Arthur Onslow | 23 Apr 1622 | 21 Jul 1688 | 66 |
| MP for Bramber 1640-1648, Surrey 1654- | ||||||
| 1655,1656-1658,1659 and 1679-1681 and | ||||||
| Guildford 1660-1679 | ||||||
| This baronetcy was created as a reversion of the | ||||||
| baronetcy conferred in 1660 on Sir Thomas Foote | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1688 | 2 | Richard Onslow | 23 Jun 1654 | 5 Dec 1717 | 63 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Onslow (qv) in 1716 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| ONSLOW of Althain,Lancs | ||||||
| 30 Oct 1797 | GB | 1 | Richard Onslow | 23 Jun 1741 | 27 Dec 1817 | 76 |
| 27 Dec 1817 | 2 | Henry Onslow | 23 Apr 1784 | 13 Sep 1853 | 69 | |
| 13 Sep 1853 | 3 | Henry Onslow | 5 Oct 1809 | 20 Nov 1870 | 61 | |
| 20 Nov 1870 | 4 | Matthew Richard Onslow | 12 Sep 1810 | 3 Aug 1876 | 65 | |
| 3 Aug 1876 | 5 | William Wallace Rhoderic Onslow | 13 Aug 1845 | 13 Jan 1916 | 70 | |
| 13 Jan 1916 | 6 | Roger Warin Beaconsfield Onslow | 29 Apr 1880 | 13 Oct 1931 | 51 | |
| For information on this baronet's death,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 13 Oct 1931 | 7 | Richard Wilmot Onslow | 30 Jul 1906 | 14 Jul 1963 | 56 | |
| 14 Jul 1963 | 8 | John Roger Wilmot Onslow | 21 Jul 1932 | 14 Oct 2009 | 77 | |
| 14 Oct 2009 | 9 | Richard Paul Atherton Onslow | 16 Sep 1958 | |||
| OPPENHEIMER of Stoke Poges,Bucks | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1921 | UK | 1 | Bernard Oppenheimer | 13 Feb 1866 | 13 Jun 1921 | 55 |
| 13 Jun 1921 | 2 | Michael Oppenheimer | 26 Dec 1892 | 26 Sep 1933 | 40 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 26 Sep 1933 | 3 | Michael Bernard Grenville Oppenheimer | 27 May 1924 | 17 Apr 2020 | 95 | |
| to | ||||||
| 17 Apr 2020 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ORBY of Croyland,Lincs | ||||||
| 9 Oct 1658 | E | 1 | Thomas Orby | c 1691 | ||
| c 1691 | 2 | Charles Orby | c 1640 | c 1716 | ||
| c 1716 | 3 | Thomas Orby | c 1658 | 11 Feb 1725 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Feb 1725 | ||||||
| ORDE of Morpeth,Nortumberland | ||||||
| 9 Aug 1790 | GB | See "Campbell-Orde" | ||||
| ORMSBY of Cloghans,Mayo | ||||||
| 29 Dec 1812 | UK | 1 | Charles Montagu Ormsby | 23 Apr 1767 | 3 Mar 1818 | 50 |
| MP for Carlow 1801-1806 | ||||||
| 3 Mar 1818 | 2 | James Ormsby | 27 Feb 1796 | Dec 1821 | 25 | |
| Dec 1821 | 3 | Thomas Ormsby | 26 May 1797 | 9 Aug 1833 | 36 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Aug 1833 | ||||||
| ORR-EWING of Ballikinrain,Stirling | ||||||
| 8 Mar 1886 | UK | 1 | Archibald Orr-Ewing | 4 Jan 1818 | 27 Nov 1893 | 75 |
| MP for Dumbartonshire 1868-1892 | ||||||
| 27 Nov 1893 | 2 | William Orr-Ewing | 14 Feb 1848 | 20 Aug 1903 | 55 | |
| 20 Aug 1903 | 3 | Archibald Ernest Orr-Ewing | 22 Feb 1853 | 21 Apr 1919 | 66 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1919 | 4 | Norman Archibald Orr-Ewing | 23 Nov 1880 | 26 Mar 1960 | 79 | |
| 26 Mar 1960 | 5 | Ronald Archibald Orr-Ewing | 14 May 1912 | 14 Sep 2002 | 90 | |
| 14 Sep 2002 | 6 | Archibald Donald Orr-Ewing | 20 Dec 1938 | |||
| ORR-EWING of Hendon,Middlesex | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1963 | UK | 1 | Charles Ian Orr-Ewing,later [1971] | |||
| Baron Orr-Ewing [L] | 10 Feb 1912 | 19 Aug 1999 | 87 | |||
| 19 Aug 1999 | 2 | Alistair Simon Orr-Ewing | 10 Jun 1940 | 6 Aug 2024 | 84 | |
| 6 Aug 2024 | 3 | Archie Cameron Orr-Ewing | 29 Mar 1969 | |||
| ORR-LEWIS of Whitewebbs,Middlesex | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1920 | UK | 1 | Frederick Orr Orr-Lewis | 11 Feb 1866 | 18 Nov 1921 | 55 |
| 18 Nov 1921 | 2 | John Duncan Orr-Lewis | 21 Feb 1898 | 13 Nov 1980 | 82 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Nov 1980 | ||||||
| OSBALDESTON of Chadlington,Oxon | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1664 | E | 1 | Littleton Osbaldeston | 30 Dec 1691 | ||
| MP for Woodstock 1679-1687 | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1691 | 2 | Lacy Osbaldeston | c 1659 | c 1699 | ||
| c 1699 | 3 | Richard Osbaldeston | 14 Sep 1684 | c 1701 | ||
| c 1701 | 4 | William Osbaldeston | c 1687 | c 1739 | ||
| c 1739 | 5 | Charles Osbaldeston | c 1690 | 16 Apr 1749 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Apr 1749 | ||||||
| OSBORN of Chicksands,Beds | ||||||
| 11 Feb 1662 | E | 1 | John Osborn | c 1615 | 5 Feb 1699 | |
| 5 Feb 1699 | 2 | John Osborn | c 1650 | 28 Apr 1720 | ||
| 28 Apr 1720 | 3 | Danvers Osborn | 17 Nov 1715 | 27 Dec 1753 | 38 | |
| MP for Bedfordshire 1747-1753 | ||||||
| 27 Dec 1753 | 4 | George Osborn | 10 May 1742 | 29 Jun 1818 | 76 | |
| MP for Northampton 1768-1769, Bossiney | ||||||
| 1769-1774, Penrhyn 1774-1780 and | ||||||
| Horsham 1780-1784 | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1818 | 5 | John Osborn | 3 Dec 1772 | 28 Aug 1848 | 75 | |
| MP for Bedfordshire 1794-1807 and 1818- | ||||||
| 1820, Cockermouth 1807-1808, | ||||||
| Queenborough 1812-1818 and Wigton | ||||||
| Burghs 1821-1824 | ||||||
| 28 Aug 1848 | 6 | George Robert Osborn | 29 Oct 1813 | 11 Jan 1892 | 78 | |
| 11 Jan 1892 | 7 | Algernon Kerr Butler Osborn | 8 Aug 1870 | 19 Jul 1948 | 77 | |
| 19 Jul 1948 | 8 | Danvers Lionel Rouse Osborn | 31 Jan 1916 | 19 Jul 1983 | 67 | |
| 19 Jul 1983 | 9 | Richard Henry Danvers Osborn | 12 Aug 1958 | |||
| OSBORNE of Kiveton,Yorks | ||||||
| 13 Jul 1620 | E | 1 | Edward Osborne | 12 Dec 1596 | 9 Sep 1647 | 50 |
| MP for East Retford 1628-1629, York 1640 | ||||||
| and Berwick 1640 | ||||||
| 9 Sep 1647 | 2 | Thomas Osborne | 20 Feb 1632 | 26 Jul 1712 | 80 | |
| He was created Duke of Leeds (qv) in 1694 | ||||||
| with which title the baronetcy then merged | ||||||
| until its extinction in 1964 | ||||||
| OSBORNE of Ballintaylor,co.Tipperary | ||||||
| 15 Oct 1629 | I | 1 | Richard Osborne | c 1667 | ||
| c 1667 | 2 | Richard Osborne | 2 Mar 1685 | |||
| 2 Mar 1685 | 3 | John Osborne | c 1645 | 4 Apr 1713 | ||
| 4 Apr 1713 | 4 | Richard Osborne | c 1714 | |||
| c 1714 | 5 | Thomas Osborne | c 1715 | |||
| c 1715 | 6 | Nicholas Osborne | c 1685 | 13 Jan 1719 | ||
| 13 Jan 1719 | 7 | John Osborne | 1697 | 11 Apr 1743 | 45 | |
| 11 Apr 1743 | 8 | William Osborne | c 1722 | Nov 1783 | ||
| PC [I] 1770 | ||||||
| Nov 1783 | 9 | Thomas Osborne | 1757 | 3 Jun 1821 | 63 | |
| 3 Jun 1821 | 10 | William Osborne | 1817 | 23 May 1824 | 6 | |
| 23 May 1824 | 11 | Henry Osborne | c 1761 | 27 Oct 1837 | ||
| MP for Enniskillen 1800 | ||||||
| 27 Oct 1837 | 12 | Daniel Toler Osborne | 10 Dec 1783 | 25 Mar 1853 | 69 | |
| 25 Mar 1853 | 13 | William Osborne | 16 Oct 1805 | 7 Jul 1875 | 69 | |
| 7 Jul 1875 | 14 | Charles Stanley Osborne | 30 Jun 1825 | 16 Jul 1879 | 54 | |
| 16 Jul 1879 | 15 | Francis Osborne | 1 Nov 1856 | 23 Oct 1948 | 91 | |
| 23 Oct 1948 | 16 | George Francis Osborne | 27 Jul 1894 | 21 Jul 1960 | ||
| 21 Jul 1960 | 17 | Peter George Osborne | 29 Jun 1943 | |||
| OSBORNE-GIBBES of Springhead,Barbados | ||||||
| 30 May 1774 | GB | 1 | Philip Gibbes | 7 Mar 1731 | Jun 1815 | 84 |
| Jun 1815 | 2 | Samuel Osborne-Gibbes | 27 Aug 1803 | 13 Nov 1874 | 71 | |
| 13 Nov 1874 | 3 | Edward Osborne-Gibbes | Nov 1850 | 29 Sep 1931 | 80 | |
| 29 Sep 1931 | 4 | Philip Arthur Osborne-Gibbes | 17 May 1884 | 8 Feb 1940 | 55 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 8 Feb 1940 | ||||||
| OSLER of Norham Gardens,Oxford | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1911 | UK | 1 | William Osler | 12 Jul 1849 | 29 Dec 1919 | 70 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Dec 1919 | For information on this baronet,see the note | |||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| OTWAY of Brighton,Sussex | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | 1 | Robert Waller Otway | 26 Apr 1770 | 13 May 1846 | 76 |
| 13 May 1846 | 2 | George Graham Otway | 15 Jul 1816 | 22 Aug 1881 | 65 | |
| 22 Aug 1881 | 3 | Arthur John Otway | 8 Aug 1822 | 8 Jun 1912 | 89 | |
| to | MP for Stafford 1852-1857, Chatham | |||||
| 8 Jun 1912 | 1865-1874 and Rochester 1878-1885 | |||||
| PC 1885 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| OUGHTON of Tetchbrook,Warwicks | ||||||
| 27 Aug 1718 | GB | 1 | Adolphus Oughton | c 1684 | 4 Sep 1736 | |
| to | MP for Coventry 1715-1736 | |||||
| 4 Sep 1736 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| OUSELEY of Claremont,Herts | ||||||
| 3 Oct 1808 | UK | 1 | Gore Ouseley | 24 Jun 1770 | 18 Nov 1844 | 74 |
| 18 Nov 1844 | 2 | Frederick Arthur Gore Ouseley | 12 Aug 1825 | 6 Apr 1889 | 63 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Apr 1889 | ||||||
| OUTRAM of Bengal,India | ||||||
| 10 Nov 1858 | UK | 1 | James Outram | 29 Jan 1803 | 11 Mar 1863 | 60 |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 11 Mar 1863 | 2 | Francis Boyd Outram | 23 Sep 1836 | 25 Sep 1912 | 76 | |
| 25 Sep 1912 | 3 | James Outram | 13 Oct 1864 | 12 Mar 1925 | 60 | |
| 12 Mar 1925 | 4 | Francis Davidson Outram | 4 Aug 1867 | 30 Jun 1945 | 77 | |
| 30 Jun 1945 | 5 | Alan James Outram | 15 May 1937 | |||
| OWEN of Orielton,Pembroke | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1641 | E | 1 | Hugh Owen | c Oct 1670 | ||
| MP for Pembroke 1626,1628-1629 and | ||||||
| 1640-1648, Haverfordwest 1640 and | ||||||
| Pembroke 1660-1661 | ||||||
| c Oct 1670 | 2 | Hugh Owen | c 1645 | 13 Jan 1699 | ||
| MP for Pembroke 1676-1679 and | ||||||
| Pembrokeshire 1679-1681 and 1689-1695 | ||||||
| 13 Jan 1699 | 3 | Arthur Owen | c 1674 | 6 Jun 1753 | ||
| MP for Pembrokeshire 1695-1705 and 1715- | ||||||
| 1727 and Pembroke 1708-1712 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Pembrokeshire 1715-1753 | ||||||
| 6 Jun 1753 | 4 | William Owen | c 1697 | 7 May 1781 | ||
| MP for Pembroke 1722-1747 and 1761-1774 | ||||||
| and Pembrokeshire 1747-1761 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Pembrokeshire | ||||||
| 7 May 1781 | 5 | Hugh Owen | 16 Jan 1786 | |||
| MP for Pembrokeshire 1770-1786 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Pembrokeshire | ||||||
| 16 Jan 1786 | 6 | Hugh Owen | 12 Sep 1782 | 8 Aug 1809 | 26 | |
| MP for Pembroke 1809 | ||||||
| 8 Aug 1809 | 7 | Arthur Owen | c 1740 | 4 Jan 1817 | ||
| 4 Jan 1817 | 8 | William Owen-Barlow | 11 Apr 1775 | 25 Feb 1851 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 25 Feb 1851 | ||||||
| OWEN of Orielton,Pembroke | ||||||
| 12 Jan 1813 | UK | 1 | John Lord Owen | 1776 | 6 Feb 1861 | 84 |
| MP for Pembroke 1809-1812 and 1841-1861 | ||||||
| and Pembrokeshire 1812-1841 Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Pembrokeshire 1823-1861 | ||||||
| 6 Feb 1861 | 2 | Hugh Owen Owen | 25 Dec 1803 | 5 Sep 1891 | 87 | |
| MP for Pembroke 1826-1838 and 1861-1868 | ||||||
| 5 Sep 1891 | 3 | Hugh Charles Owen | 1826 | 4 Apr 1909 | 82 | |
| 4 Apr 1909 | 4 | John Arthur Owen | 5 Feb 1892 | 20 Sep 1973 | 81 | |
| 20 Sep 1973 | 5 | Hugh Bernard Pilkington Owen | 28 Mar 1915 | 22 Feb 2002 | 86 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Feb 2002 | ||||||
| OWEN of Weir Bank,Berks | ||||||
| 2 Feb 1920 | UK | See "Cunliffe-Owen" | ||||
| OXENDEN of Dene,Kent | ||||||
| 8 May 1678 | E | 1 | Henry Oxenden | 28 Apr 1614 | Aug 1686 | 72 |
| MP for Winchilsea 1645-1648, Kent 1654- | ||||||
| 1655 and 1656-1658 and Sandwich 1660-1661 | ||||||
| Aug 1686 | 2 | James Oxenden | 4 Apr 1641 | 29 Sep 1708 | 67 | |
| MP for Sandwich 1679-1685,1689-1690 and | ||||||
| 1701-1702 and Kent 1698-1700 | ||||||
| 29 Sep 1708 | 3 | Henry Oxenden | c 1645 | Feb 1709 | ||
| Feb 1709 | 4 | Henry Oxenden | 10 Jul 1690 | 21 Apr 1720 | 29 | |
| MP for Sandwich 1713-1720 | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1720 | 5 | George Oxenden | 26 Oct 1694 | 20 Jan 1775 | 80 | |
| MP for Sandwich 1720-1754 | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1775 | 6 | Henry Oxenden | 5 Sep 1721 | 15 Jun 1803 | 81 | |
| 15 Jun 1803 | 7 | Henry Oxenden | 14 May 1756 | 22 Sep 1838 | 82 | |
| 22 Sep 1838 | 8 | Henry Chudleigh Oxenden | 24 Jun 1795 | 14 Aug 1889 | 94 | |
| 14 Aug 1889 | 9 | Henry Montagu Oxenden | 20 Jun 1826 | Sep 1895 | 69 | |
| Sep 1895 | 10 | Percy Dixwell Nowell Dixwell-Oxenden | 6 Jun 1833 | 12 Jul 1924 | 91 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 12 Jul 1924 | ||||||
| Sir Edward Atholl Oakeley, 7th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Atholl was educated at Clifton and Sandhurst, and commissioned in the Oxfordshire and | ||||||
| Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. Early in life he developed a fascination for wrestling, his interest | ||||||
| being awakened when he was beaten up by a ruffian in a bar. Although only 5ft 9in tall, he | ||||||
| built up his body by drinking eleven pints of milk a day for three years. This diet had been | ||||||
| recommended to him by the former world heavyweight wrestling champion, George | ||||||
| Hackenschmidt. It was later discovered that there had been a misprint - the correct amount | ||||||
| was one pint a day. | ||||||
| Oakeley preferred to wrestle men who were larger than himself. On one occasion his opponent | ||||||
| was a 7ft 6in Turkish wrestler; Oakeley forced him to concede using a hold which several other | ||||||
| wrestlers were required to untangle. He was the heavyweight champion of Great Britain from | ||||||
| 1930 to 1935, of Europe in 1932 and he returned undefeated from an American tour in 1933. | ||||||
| After he broke his shoulder in 1935, Oakeley turned to wrestling management. Among his stable | ||||||
| of wrestlers was Gargantua, a 50-stone German with a 90-inch chest, for whom special | ||||||
| travelling arrangements had to be made with British Rail. | ||||||
| For further reading, see Oakeley's autobiography, Blue Blood on the Mat, published by Stanley | ||||||
| Paul, London in 1971. | ||||||
| Sir Timothy Carew O'Brien, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Timothy spent much of 1908 and 1909 in court, being the defendant in a slander case | ||||||
| against him by Alexis Charles Burke Roche, son of Lord Fermoy. In July 1891, Roche had | ||||||
| allegedly sold a horse to Sir Timothy, but the horse proved to be a "broken-winded nag," | ||||||
| and when Sir Timothy attempted to return the horse, Roche refused to accept it or to | ||||||
| refund the purchase price. | ||||||
| On 17 March 1908, it was alleged that Sir Timothy, while attending a hunt meeting at | ||||||
| Duballow, rode up to Roche and, in the hearing of a number of other people, used the following | ||||||
| words - "You are a liar, a thief and a swindler. You live by swindling and, to my knowledge, | ||||||
| you have lived by swindling for 20 years." Not surprisingly, Roche sued Sir Timothy for slander, | ||||||
| while Timothy defended the matter on the grounds of justification. | ||||||
| The trial commenced in the Cork Assizes in May 1908 and continued until July, when the jury | ||||||
| was discharged after one of the jurors advised the judge that Sir Timothy had been in direct | ||||||
| communication with him regarding the case, the implication being that such contact was an | ||||||
| attempt to influence the juror. Sir Timothy was found guilty of contempt of court and fined | ||||||
| £300. He was also ordered to pay all of the costs of the aborted trial. | ||||||
| The first trial was, however, not without one moment of hilarity. One of the witnesses, a | ||||||
| Colonel Williamson, stated in evidence that he was present when Sir Timothy spoke to Roche. | ||||||
| Williamson stated that he rode up to Sir Timothy's horse and "caught hold of his bridle and | ||||||
| gave him a chuck in the mouth, and chucked him back." Sir Timothy's counsel asked whether | ||||||
| he meant the horse or Sir Timothy, to which the witness replied "The horse. Sir Timothy had | ||||||
| no bridle on that day." | ||||||
| The re-trial commenced in June 1909 and, after nine days of sitting, the jury found in favour | ||||||
| of Roche, awarding him however, derisory damages of only £5. Once again, however, Sir | ||||||
| Timothy was forced to pay costs, an amount which left him practically broke. | ||||||
| Sir Timothy was a fine cricketer who played for England in five test matches between 1884 | ||||||
| and 1896. | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Wedderburn (later Ogilvy-Wedderburn) | ||||||
| created in 1803 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 16 August 1803 (issue 15612, page 1041):- | ||||||
| 'The King has been pleased to grant the Dignity of a Baronet of the United Kingdom of Great | ||||||
| Britain and Ireland unto David Wedderburn, of Baltindean, in the County of Perth, Esq; and to | ||||||
| the Heirs Male of his Body lawfully begotten, with Remainder to the Heirs Male of the Body of | ||||||
| Sir Alexander Wdderburn, of Blackness, deceased.' | ||||||
| Sir Roger Warin Beaconsfield Onslow, 6th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Roger was found dead in October 1931 with a gunshot wound in his head at his home at | ||||||
| Hengar, St. Tudy, Cornwall. The subsequent inquest was reported in 'The Scotsman' on 15 | ||||||
| October 1931:- | ||||||
| 'A verdict of suicide while of unsound mind was returned by the Bodmin coroner at the inquest | ||||||
| yesterday on Sir Roger Onslow, Baronet, who was found shot on Tuesday morning in his | ||||||
| bedroom at his residence at Hengar, St. Tudy, Cornwall. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Richard Onslow, of Hawkstor, Bilsland, told the Coroner that his father had recently worried | ||||||
| over financial matters and over the political situation. | ||||||
| 'Gerald Henry Hodge, the butler who discovered the tragedy, said Sir Roger always kept a 22- | ||||||
| bore rifle in his room to shoot rabbits from his bedroom window. | ||||||
| 'A doctor said he had attended Sir Roger for many years for neurasthenia and neuritis, which | ||||||
| was accompanied by intense pain.' | ||||||
| Sir Michael Oppenheimer, 2nd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Michael was killed in an air-crash at Baragwanath Airport, near Johannesburg, South | ||||||
| Africa, on 26 September 1933. His death was reported in 'The Times' the following day:- | ||||||
| 'Major C. K. Cochran-Patrick, D.S.O.,M.C., a distinguished War-time pilot, and Sir Michael | ||||||
| Oppenheimer, Bt., were killed this morning when their aeroplane crashed at Baragwanath | ||||||
| aerodrome. | ||||||
| 'The two men were leaving for Rhodesia in Major Cochran-Patrick's aeroplane, a six-seater | ||||||
| twin-engined De Havilland Dragon, which took off behind an aeroplane bound for Lourenço | ||||||
| Marques. Circling around the aerodrome, Major Cochran-Patrick at 250ft. attempted a | ||||||
| sharp vertical turn in order to wave goodbye to friends. His machine lost speed, and as it | ||||||
| fell the pilot tried to swing around, and crashed with the engines running at full speed. As the | ||||||
| aeroplane struck the ground it burst into flames. Among those who saw the accident was Major | ||||||
| Cochran-Patrick's wife. | ||||||
| Mr. Stanley People, ground engineer for De Havillands, was in the Lourenço Marques aeroplane, | ||||||
| and he landed a hundred yards from the wreck. Realizing he was first on the scene, Mr. People, | ||||||
| protected by goggles and a flying helmet, dashed into the flames and pulled Major Cochran- | ||||||
| Patrick's body clear. Protecting his head with a woman's jumper, he rushed back for the body | ||||||
| of Sir Michael Oppenheimer. Major Cochran-Patrick was killed outright in the crash, but Sir | ||||||
| Michael Oppenheimer tried to crawl out of the machine in a dying condition. | ||||||
| 'Major Cochran-Patrick had a distinguished War record in the Royal Flying Corps and was | ||||||
| described by Lord Trenchard as one of the finest flyers on the Western front. He had lately | ||||||
| been engaged in air survey work.' | ||||||
| Sir Archibald Ernest Orr-Ewing, 3rd baronet [UK 1886] | ||||||
| Sir Archibald committed suicide whilst on a visit to his nephew. The inquest was reported in "The | ||||||
| Times" on 24 April 1919:- | ||||||
| An inquest on the body of Sir Archibald Orr-Ewing, who was found shot in a plantation near | ||||||
| Noseley Hall, Leicestershire, where he was visiting his nephew, Sir Arthur Hazlerigg [later 1st | ||||||
| Baron Hazlerigg], was held yesterday. | ||||||
| 'The evidence has to the effect that Sir Archibald Orr-Ewing had been ordered a rest, and that | ||||||
| he went to Noseley Hall a week ago from his London residence. While at Noseley he had been | ||||||
| depressed, but there was nothing to suggest that he contemplated suicide. On Monday, after | ||||||
| breakfasting with Sir Arthur Hazlerigg, he went for a walk, and did not return. Next morning he | ||||||
| was found dead in a plantation on the estate. There was a large wound in his head, and a heavy | ||||||
| revolver, fully loaded, with one cartridge discharged was lying near his right hand. | ||||||
| Brigadier-General Norman Orr-Ewing, his eldest son, said his father had served at home during the | ||||||
| war in connection with the National Reserves and Coast Defences. Later he undertook work in | ||||||
| Vickers's munition factory at Erith and other places. He worked hard, carrying shells and coal and | ||||||
| doing other odd jobs. The work was exceptionally hard and affected his health, the result being | ||||||
| that the doctor ordered him a complete change. He was greatly attached to his younger son, | ||||||
| who was killed during the war. | ||||||
| 'The jury returned a verdict of "Suicide whilst temporarily insane owing to depression following a | ||||||
| nervous breakdown due to overwork." | ||||||
| Sir William Osler, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Osler (pronounced Oh-sler) has been described as the "Father of Modern Medicine." The | ||||||
| following biography appeared in the April 1958 issue of the Australian monthly magazine | ||||||
| "Parade":- | ||||||
| "He loved his fellow-men and they loved him" wrote one of Sir William Osler's admirers shortly | ||||||
| after "The Great Physician's" death in 1919. Unconsciously perhaps, the author of that tribute | ||||||
| pointed to the subtle quality in Osler's life that made him one of the most revered disciples of | ||||||
| Hippocrates, in this or any other age. True, Osler did contribute materially to advance mankind's | ||||||
| knowledge of several deadly maladies; and he was a masterly upholder of the noblest tenets of | ||||||
| his craft. But they were not the sole reasons why he left his memory etched so deeply in the | ||||||
| minds of his contemporaries. | ||||||
| 'The secret of Sir William Osler's fame was his warm and human personality; he knew how to | ||||||
| get on with people, and his very presence was a heartening tonic. Only those in the last throes | ||||||
| of a struggle for life with Death itself could fail to sense a warmth, of vitality, and heightened | ||||||
| well-being as he stood quietly by their bedside or wandered through his wards marking his | ||||||
| course with skilled advice, kindly words if encouragement, and a rippling wake of merriment. And | ||||||
| among his subordinates and assistants, Osler inspired a devotion akin to fanaticism. Although he | ||||||
| was free and easy with them his geniality itself commanded respect without any apparent effort | ||||||
| on his part. | ||||||
| 'Osler was a physician whose whole life work was devoted to clinical work. Not for him the | ||||||
| clientele of wealthy private patients, the quickly-made fortune and the leisure of society life. | ||||||
| He never took up private practice. He was interested in curing for curing's sake, and spent a | ||||||
| great part of his time at the bedside of non-paying patients in public hospitals. One medical | ||||||
| officer who was associated with him for several years wrote that Osler had "the greatest | ||||||
| contempt for the doctor who made financial gain the first object of his work"; and if Osler did | ||||||
| not say as much in words he said it by the code he followed in his professional life. | ||||||
| 'In lieu of princely fees he extracted respect and admiration amounting in hundreds of cases to | ||||||
| veneration from his many thousands of patients - concerning his relations with whom many | ||||||
| anecdotes are told. One, typical of many, concerns a young man afflicted with tuberculosis | ||||||
| and worried to distraction over the future of his wife and children. The patient in question wrote | ||||||
| this account of the consultation he had had with Dr. Osler:- | ||||||
| "He talked to me a few moments very ardently about a book he had been reading; then he | ||||||
| stopped abruptly, stood up and, putting his hands in his pockets, looked at me intently and | ||||||
| said 'You could, of course, dear boy, have an easier time if you went to the mountains, but you | ||||||
| get as much good here if you actually live out of doors, and your heart will be easier about your | ||||||
| wife and kiddies. It will mean a great deal of self-discipline. Try it for a month and then come | ||||||
| back and we will see if we are playing a winning game without too high stakes.' There was not | ||||||
| a week during that trial month that some little gift or note of encouragement from him failed | ||||||
| to reach me." That was written 30 years after the incident - so long endured the kindly | ||||||
| thoughts of Osler engendered by his own kindliness. | ||||||
| 'This great physician, whose art was founded in a deep understanding of human nature, was | ||||||
| almost lost to the world at an early age when, as a baby, he was nearly drowned on a pail of | ||||||
| milk on the Canadian farm where he was born. The story goes that on the day one of his | ||||||
| sisters was born, his distraught father, in order to keep him out of the way, tied him to a tree | ||||||
| next to young calf. A pail of milk was nearby, and young William was fiercely contesting it with | ||||||
| the calf when he fell head first into it. Only the prompt action of his father, who emerged from | ||||||
| the house to see what the calf was bellowing about, saved the future medico from an untimely | ||||||
| end. | ||||||
| 'Osler was the eighth child and youngest son of Featherstone Lake Osler, a British naval officer | ||||||
| who had given up the sea to spread the Gospel in the hinterland of Canada. At the little | ||||||
| settlement of Tecumseh on July 12, 1849, the future Sir William was born. In 1857, when William | ||||||
| was eight, Canon Featherstone Osler left Tecumseh, where he had lived on the edge of the | ||||||
| wilderness for nearly 20 years, to settle at Dundas, a little town with a grammar school, to | ||||||
| which young William was sent to be taught "the three R's." [Tecumseh is today a small town | ||||||
| to the east of Windsor, Ontario] Its master patiently endured the boy's exuberant high spirits | ||||||
| for some years, but one evening William arrive home to tell his mother he had been expelled. | ||||||
| 'The boarding-school at the little town of Barrie was the next step up the scholastic ladder. | ||||||
| There he made himself extremely unpopular with the teaching-staff by forming a gang of enter- | ||||||
| prising youths who were known far and wide as "Barrie's Bad Boys." Later on he was sent to | ||||||
| Weston, described by one of his biographers as a "provincial Eton," where countless canings | ||||||
| by an apparently humourless headmaster failed to curb his natural high spirits. | ||||||
| 'While at Weston Osler achieved the doubtful distinction of being arrested and put in gaol for | ||||||
| "assault and battery." There was no love lost between him and the dour school matron, a | ||||||
| jaundiced female who considered all boys to be spawned of the devil. One day she upset a | ||||||
| bucket of slops over one of the students on the staircase, and Osler and his pals determined | ||||||
| upon revenge. That evening after the matron had retired to her sitting-room, Osler and nine | ||||||
| companions prepared a mixture of molasses, pepper and mustard and put it on a stove in a room | ||||||
| beneath her sitting-room. When the mixture boiled, foul-smelling fumes poured up through the | ||||||
| ceiling into the matron's lounge. Half-suffocated and "all of a dither," the woman stuffed the | ||||||
| hole through which the evil fumes were pouring with bits of cloth. The boys underneath | ||||||
| promptly pushed them out with sticks. The matron began to scream wildly for help, and before | ||||||
| the boys could get away the headmaster was upon them. He whisked them off to his room and | ||||||
| gave them all a good hiding. But the story did not end there. The outraged matron complained | ||||||
| to the police with such vehemence that they issued a warrant against the ten culprits and | ||||||
| arrested them. They spent the next three days in gaol, and when they appeared before the | ||||||
| magistrate in Toronto, William's older brother, Featherstone Osler, a rising young barrister, | ||||||
| undertook their defence. They were finally all let off with a fine of one dollar and a reprimand | ||||||
| from the Bench. | ||||||
| 'While at Weston, Osler made the acquaintance of two men who were to have a profound | ||||||
| influence on his life. They were his class teacher, "Father" Johnston, a Protestant clergyman | ||||||
| who was warden of the college, and Dr. James Lovell, a medical practitioner from nearby | ||||||
| Toronto. The two men were both ardent naturalists and young Osler came to accompany them | ||||||
| on their explorations through the woodlands of Weston in search of unusual biological specimens | ||||||
| buried prehistoric remains. | ||||||
| 'Under the influence of these two men his mind turned towards medicine, and after studying in a | ||||||
| desultory fashion for an arts degree, he began his medical studies at Toronto in 1868. Dr, Lovell | ||||||
| was Osler's early instructor, and teacher and pupil became one in their passionate interest in | ||||||
| research. Dr. Lovell's granddaughter wrote that "Osler literally lived in our house. He adored | ||||||
| grandfather, and the latter loved him like a son. Mother says her life was a perfect burden to | ||||||
| her with parcels arriving which might contain a rattlesnake, a few frogs, toads, or dormice. She | ||||||
| found quite a large snake meandering through the study one afternoon, and when she | ||||||
| protested violently the two told her she should not have been there!" | ||||||
| 'Osler was a tireless research worker, probing and experimenting all the time, and the main | ||||||
| recollection of his fellow-workers is "that he was always dissecting." He spent every spare hour | ||||||
| in the dissecting-room, cutting up and examining cadavers. | ||||||
| 'In 1870, shortly after Dr. Lovell's departure to the West Indies, Osler left Toronto to study at | ||||||
| McGill University, Montreal, the leading medical school in Canada. He remained there two years, | ||||||
| getting practical experience in medicine, working at various times as clerk, dresser, and nurse at | ||||||
| Montreal Hospital, then "an old coccus [a form of bacteria] and rat ridden building." In 1872 he | ||||||
| left for Europe to spend the next two years studying at foreign universities and in widening his | ||||||
| experience in all spheres of medicine and surgery. During his two years in Europe he studied in | ||||||
| Britain, France, Germany and Austria. | ||||||
| 'Shortly after his return to Canada he was appointed lecturer at McGill University. He also | ||||||
| worked for a small salary in the smallpox ward of the Montreal General Hospital, and when a | ||||||
| special hospital was built in 1876 for smallpox cases, Dr. Osler, now enjoying a growing fame as | ||||||
| a research worker, was immediately appointed pathologist. It was now that he laid the | ||||||
| foundation of his career as a great clinician. His clear vision, his quick grasp of a situation, his | ||||||
| simple and unaffected manner, his obvious sincerity, and his professional honesty won him | ||||||
| considerable fame in medical circles not only in Canada but also in the United States, and in | ||||||
| 1884 he was offered. and accepted the Professorship of Clinical Medicine at the University of | ||||||
| Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. | ||||||
| 'He was also given an appointment at the local hospital, and soon became one of the most | ||||||
| popular, as well as one of the professionally most respected doctors in the city. His patience | ||||||
| with the really ailing was inexhaustible, but he had very little patience with people suffering | ||||||
| from imaginary diseases who wasted his time. One woman who visited him he immediately | ||||||
| summed up as a fraud. "I just can't sleep," she complained. "I keep twitching and jerking my | ||||||
| feet and my hands fly out of the covers and all the fingers go like spiders and my toes curl up. | ||||||
| "I hope your husband sleeps in another bed," said Osler, with a twinkle in his eyes. "I shall not | ||||||
| discuss that with you. My husband loves me," the woman indignantly replied. "Poor devil," the | ||||||
| doctor sighed, just loud enough for the angry woman to hear. | ||||||
| In 1889 Dr. Osler left Philadelphia to take up an appointment at the then recently founded Johns | ||||||
| Hopkins University and its adjoining hospital in Baltimore. His term there was marked by two | ||||||
| two events of outstanding importance in his life. One was the publication of his "Practice of | ||||||
| Medicine," the most important book on medical practice that had been written up to that time; | ||||||
| and the other was his marriage to the widow of one of his professional colleagues, Mrs. Grace | ||||||
| Linze Gross. Before her marriage she had been a Miss Revere, and she was a great grand- | ||||||
| daughter of Paul Revere, hero of the American Revolution. In 1893 their first son was born, but | ||||||
| to his parents' great sorrow the little fellow lived only a week. The next child - also a boy- was | ||||||
| born some two years later, and in honour of his patriot ancestor he was christened Revere - | ||||||
| although his father, who was British to the core, took him promptly to the British Consulate to | ||||||
| have him registered as a British subject. | ||||||
| In spite of his honoured and exalted position in the medical world Dr. Osler retained throughout | ||||||
| his life the spirit of rollicking jollity which had marked his boyhood and youth. Even his wife was | ||||||
| not spared from his passion for "pulling legs" and cracking jokes. One day he burst excitedly into | ||||||
| the house and announced to his wife that a mutual friend of theirs was expecting a child. | ||||||
| "That's terrible. Why, she's over 50," replied Mrs. Osler worriedly; and in a flurry of bonnets and | ||||||
| coats she rushed to Mrs. X's house to find her friend "all joy and unconfined." The story was a | ||||||
| complete fabrication, one of the whimsical Osler jokes. On another occasion he invited a well- | ||||||
| known physician to lunch. Throughout the whole meal this physician and Mrs. Osler shouted to | ||||||
| one another at the top of their voices. Dr. Osler had told his wife that the visiting medico was | ||||||
| as deaf as a post and could not hear a word unless she shouted loudly, and to the physician he | ||||||
| had said that his wife was very deaf and could not hear unless she was shouted at. | ||||||
| 'But these humorous interludes were only occasional diversions from the seriousness with which | ||||||
| he pursued his medical activities. He published several volumes on chorea, on cancer, on angina | ||||||
| pectoris, and made notes on a great variety of pathological conditions that he had observed in | ||||||
| his clinical work. He travelled extensively in Europe and North America, lecturing and studying, | ||||||
| and became as famous on one side of the Atlantic as he was on the other. He gave himself and | ||||||
| everything that was his to his work. When in 1904 the Hospital at Baltimore lost about $400,000 | ||||||
| through a fire, he wrote to the President of the Hospital Board offering to place his salary for 10 | ||||||
| years at the disposal of the trustees. His offer was not made use of, as the American millionaire | ||||||
| oil baron and philanthropist, John D. Rockefeller, came to the rescue with a cheque. | ||||||
| 'That same year Osler received a letter from the authorities at Oxford University offering him the | ||||||
| position of Regius Professor of Medicine. The pressure of work in Baltimore was breaking down | ||||||
| his health, for his consultations at the hospital were greater than any private practice, and he | ||||||
| gladly accepted the offer. A few months later he took up his residence in the dignified old | ||||||
| English University town, in the country which was to be his home until his death. He visited | ||||||
| America and Canada frequently, but although he received many offers from universities of | ||||||
| appointments there, he chose to remain at Oxford. In 1911 he was created a baronet, and | ||||||
| thereafter he sometimes jokingly signed himself in his letters to friends as "Sir Billy." | ||||||
| 'In 1913 he paid a visit to America to lecture at various universities and hospitals. This was to | ||||||
| be his last, for the following year the Great War broke out. Though aging now, he gave his | ||||||
| services without stint throughout the great conflict. He saw the most terrible examples of man's | ||||||
| inhumanity to man, but there was no room in his own heart for hatred, and when, after the | ||||||
| Germans first used gas in Flanders, and the British public angrily demanded reprisals, he wrote | ||||||
| the following characteristic letter to the Press:- | ||||||
| "The cry for reprisals illustrates the exquisitely hellish state of mind into which war plunges | ||||||
| sensible men. I refuse to believe that as a nation, howsoever bitter the provocation, we shall | ||||||
| stain our hands in the blood of the innocents. In this matter let us be free from blood-guiltiness, | ||||||
| and let not the undying reproach of humanity rest on us as on the Germans." | ||||||
| 'The death of his only child, Revere, in action in 1917 crushed him completely. In 1919 he fell ill | ||||||
| with pneumonia, at his age a particularly dangerous ailment. He knew it was the end, but with | ||||||
| scientific detachment he recorded and charted every progression of the disease, as though he | ||||||
| were his own patient. On December 29 he died peacefully in his bed, leaving behind him the | ||||||
| record of a life selflessly devoted to humanity.' | ||||||
| Sir James Outram, 1st baronet | ||||||
| The following biography of Sir James Outram appeared in the January 1956 edition of the | ||||||
| monthly Australian magazine "Parade":- | ||||||
| 'In the early 1820s a reign of terror enveloped the central lands of India to the south of the | ||||||
| Aravalli Hills of Rajputana. Night was turned into day by the glare of burning villages, and the | ||||||
| roads were littered with corpses. Over an area of several thousand square miles the country | ||||||
| was being rapidly depopulated by a hit-and-run campaign of robbery and murder conducted by | ||||||
| a numerically small but particularly vicious tribe of hill people known as the Bhils, or Bowmen. | ||||||
| Small, but powerful and active with astonishing powers of endurance, the Bhils were masters of | ||||||
| all the crafts of guerrilla warfare, hunting having been their main means of subsistence for | ||||||
| centuries. Knowing every contour of the wild country they raided like the palms of their hands, | ||||||
| they came down from their hills by night, armed with axes and bows, and with the stealthiness | ||||||
| of panthers, struck where least expected against their enemies the Marathas, vanishing back | ||||||
| into the hills before dawn, leaving a trail of carnage and destruction behind. | ||||||
| 'For years the British administration in Bombay had sought in vain to halt their depredations. In | ||||||
| 1825, admitting at last the futility of trying to check the Bhils by force, it was decided to try | ||||||
| different methods - to enlist their martial spirit in the service of the Raj. It was a difficult | ||||||
| project, for no Britisher had as yet penetrated the innermost fastness of their mountain | ||||||
| jungles. Accordingly, no one envied a young, 22-years-old adjutant, James Outram, when he | ||||||
| was chosen to lead a small force into the heart of the Bhil country, to enjoin an end to their | ||||||
| raids of plunder, rape and slaughter, and to recruit, if he could, a regiment of them into the | ||||||
| service of the Crown. | ||||||
| 'Outram, a native of Derbyshire, had come out to India five years before as a cadet and had | ||||||
| been posted to service in Poona. His main claim to distinction up to this time was that he had | ||||||
| contracted practically every ailment to which Britishers in India were prone. But in spite of his | ||||||
| frequent bouts of sickness, he had shown enterprise and energy that had gained his elevation | ||||||
| to adjutant's rank before he was 18; and though he was to have to continue the fight against | ||||||
| ill-health for the rest of his life, his assignment against the Bhils was to be the beginning of a | ||||||
| remarkable military career that was to gain him the title of "The Bayard of India." "A fox is a | ||||||
| fool, and a lion a coward by the side of Sir James Outram," it was later said of him midway | ||||||
| through his career when a series of outstanding feats of courage and military craft had gained | ||||||
| him a knighthood. | ||||||
| 'Before tackling the Bhils Outram, characteristically, made a thorough study of their history. He | ||||||
| found that although the tribesmen had been branded as outlaws, they had once been a | ||||||
| comparatively peaceful nation. Persecution by the Marathas and the arrogant attitude of | ||||||
| certain government officials, he decided, had stung them into their present hostility. Outram's | ||||||
| first attempt to establish peaceful contact with the Bhil tribal chiefs failed completely. The | ||||||
| savages withdrew to their jungle hideouts at his approach, and the only answer his messengers | ||||||
| received were volleys of arrows. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile, their raidings continued. Finally, he decided there was no hope of getting them to | ||||||
| talk peace until they had been given a taste of their own medicine, so he resolved to turn the | ||||||
| tables by making a raiding foray into Bhil country. He had only 30 men at his command, to | ||||||
| match against that many hundreds; but at the head of this ridiculous force he led a night | ||||||
| assault on the mountain men's strongholds. He knew he had no chance of penetrating their | ||||||
| outposts by stealth, so he ordered his men, as they wound their way through the dense jungle, | ||||||
| to create as much din as they could, by firing off their muskets, banging drums and blowing | ||||||
| bugles. | ||||||
| 'The ruse succeeded as Outram had planned. Convinced that an entire British corps was upon | ||||||
| them, the Bhils abandoned their caves and fled into the hills in total disorder. Casualties among | ||||||
| Outram's troops numbered less than a dozen. In a series of sorties that dealt the hill robbers a | ||||||
| salutary lesson, Outram then renewed his overtures of peace. Slowly and hesitatingly, a few of | ||||||
| the tribal chiefs came down from the hills to meet their "conqueror." They found a handsome, | ||||||
| unassuming young Englishman, who treated them with a charm and courtesy they had never | ||||||
| before experienced. The chiefs were even more impressed when they discovered that Outram | ||||||
| was well informed of, and sympathised with, their numerous grievances, and asked to be | ||||||
| allowed to live among them as a guest to learn more of their problems. On receiving some vague | ||||||
| assurances, he dismissed his entire force; and when the chiefs returned to the hills, Outram | ||||||
| went with them - alone. | ||||||
| 'Courage was the one quality the Bhils admired above all others, even in their enemies, and the | ||||||
| way Outram came to live among them marked him in their eyes as a man of singular courage. | ||||||
| For almost a year young Outram lived among them, on the same food, under the same primitive | ||||||
| conditions, studying their ways and wants, their mode of life, religious beliefs, and customs. | ||||||
| Next to courage, skill in hunting was the quality in a man they admired most, and he drove his | ||||||
| none too robust constitution to breaking point in hiking over miles of rugged terrain until he was | ||||||
| as skilled in hunting and bush craft as the best of them - a fact that they acknowledged by | ||||||
| dubbing him the "Tigerkiller." | ||||||
| 'By his qualities as a man and his scrupulous regard for their customs and appreciation of their | ||||||
| grievances, Outram won the complete confidence of the Bhil chieftains. His triumph cost him the | ||||||
| permanent ruin of his health through jungle fevers and skin diseases, but he won them over to | ||||||
| keeping the peace, and began to recruit among them one of the few native forces destined to | ||||||
| remain loyal to the British Raj in the later mutiny in India. He set out to build up his Bhil force by | ||||||
| drilling and equipping about 150 prisoners he had captured in his campaign of bluff in the jungle | ||||||
| and bringing them into the Bhil country. The smart bearing and attractive appearance of the | ||||||
| uniformed tribesmen impressed the young tribal warriors, and many flocked to join the new unit. | ||||||
| 'By early 1827 Outram had raised and trained a complete light infantry corps of Bhils. The unit | ||||||
| received its baptism of fire the same year on a punitive campaign against some of its fellow | ||||||
| tribesmen who had returned to the old ways of robbery and plunder. The corps fought with | ||||||
| such courage and faultless discipline that it attracted the attention of the Bombay Government, | ||||||
| and from then on, Outram and his Bhil troops were used against any of the hill people breaking | ||||||
| the peace. Though he could never get his tongue around the native dialects, Outram gained | ||||||
| a personal influence over the wild hill people that his colleagues in Bombay described as | ||||||
| "marvellous." This was but the beginning, however, of a career that went from triumph to | ||||||
| triumph. | ||||||
| 'Into the remainder of his life Outram crammed enough glory and danger to satisfy half a dozen | ||||||
| soldiers of fortune. He fought in the first and second Afghan wars, and was engaged in | ||||||
| innumerable exploits around India's north-west frontier. His part in the capture of Kabul, capital | ||||||
| of Afghanistan, alone was a military epic crammed with courageous adventure. Outram did a | ||||||
| good deal of his reconnaissance work alone, disguised as an Afghan "pir" or friar. On one of | ||||||
| these lone patrols he met an escorted group of ladies from the Afghan Khan's harem who were | ||||||
| fleeing from the advancing British troops. "Seeing my religious get-up," he relates, "the ladies | ||||||
| began to unburden their troubles on me. At least I think they did, for though I listened | ||||||
| sympathetically and nodded my head at intervals I could not understand a single word of what | ||||||
| they were saying." | ||||||
| 'Outram found time in the intervals between his almost ceaseless campaigning to write a number | ||||||
| of newspaper articles demanding better conditions and more considerate treatment for the | ||||||
| Indian native soldiers, or sepoys. These articles brought him into conflict with the army | ||||||
| command. The "brass hats" in Bombay looked upon any sort of reform measures in the army as | ||||||
| "mollycoddling" and opposed Outram at every turn. As a consequence his promotion was | ||||||
| retarded, and he was still only a major in 1839 when he was attached to the command of Sir | ||||||
| Charles Napier in Sind. | ||||||
| Nevertheless, when he had anything to say, he said it, without fear or favour, even to the point | ||||||
| of criticising Sir Charles' policy that led to war in Sind. Yet, during the fighting he heroically and | ||||||
| brilliantly defended the residency at Hyderabad with a small force against attack by some 8,000 | ||||||
| Baluchis; and afterwards it was Sir Charles who dubbed him the Bayard of India. Subsequently, | ||||||
| Outram's outspoken exposure of corruption in Government administration in Baroda again | ||||||
| brought him into disfavour with the Bombay authorities, and strings were pulled to secure his | ||||||
| dismissal. But his military prowess had to be admitted even by his enemies, and he went on to | ||||||
| become resident at Lucknow, and to annex the province of Oudh to the British crown. | ||||||
| 'At 54 he added to his triumphs in India by leading a victorious expedition against Persia. It was | ||||||
| a lightning war, and within six months he was back in India in answer to the call, "We want all | ||||||
| our best men here." What he long feared and warned against had happened. The sepoys had | ||||||
| revolted at last against continual bad treatment; the great Indian Mutiny was on. His first task | ||||||
| to relieve General Havelock, penned in at Cawnpore by an overwhelming force of mutineers. | ||||||
| 'At the head of two divisions of Bengalis, Outram battered his way through the besiegers and | ||||||
| relieved Havelock in the nick of time. In admiration of the brilliant deeds of General Havelock, he | ||||||
| placed himself under his command, and as leader of a force of cavalry performed miracles of | ||||||
| valour in the subsequent advance to the relief of Lucknow. During the campaign his men united | ||||||
| in recommending that he be awarded the Victoria Cross; but he refused it on the ground that | ||||||
| those who recommended it were under his command. The mutiny subdued, however, the Home | ||||||
| Government bestowed on him the special thanks of both houses of Parliament, the dignity of a | ||||||
| baronetcy, and a pension of £1000 a year. | ||||||
| 'Two years later, in 1860, his shattered health finally broke altogether, and he was forced to | ||||||
| relinquish his command and return home. Before he died three years later public testimonials | ||||||
| had erected statues to his honour in London and Calcutta, and he had the satisfaction of | ||||||
| seeing repaired most of the evils and injustices under which native troops in the Indian Army | ||||||
| had long suffered, and against which he had ceaselessly campaigned.' | ||||||
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