British Army officer (1859–1939)
Lieutenant-General Sir Alexander Hamilton-Gordon, KCB (6 July 1859 – 13 February 1939) was a British Army officer who served in World War I.
Early life
Hamilton-Gordon was one of ten children of General Sir Alexander Hamilton-Gordon and Caroline Herschel. His paternal grandfather was George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1852 until 1855. His maternal grandfather was John Herschel.
Military career
Educated at Winchester College followed by the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Hamilton-Gordon was commissioned into the British Army's Royal Artillery in February 1880.[1][2] His first military service was in the Second Anglo-Afghan War in 1880.[1] Hamilton-Gordon later served in the Second Boer War, taking part in actions at Ladysmith, Spion Kop, Vaal Kranz and Tugela Heights.[1] He became Deputy Assistant Adjutant General for Intelligence in South Africa in early 1901.[1] Arriving back in the United Kingdom, he briefly became an instructor at the School of Gunnery before he was appointed a Deputy Assistant Quarter-Master-General at Aldershot in October 1901.[3][4]
In 1910, Hamilton-Gordon took a posting as director of military operations in India, where he served until 1914, when, now a major general,[5] he became General Officer Commanding-in-Chief for Aldershot Command.[1] In June 1916, he was promoted to temporary lieutenant-general[6] and given command of IX Corps,[1] serving at the Battle of Messines and the Third Battle of the Aisne. He was relieved in 1918 and retired from the army in 1920.[1]
Family
In 1888, Hamilton-Gordon married Isabel Newmarch, with whom he had three children.[7]
Hamilton-Gordon died on 13 February 1939.
References