British Army general (1850–1926)
Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Scott Gould Miles , GCB , GCMG , GBE , CVO (31 July 1850 – 6 May 1926) was a senior British Army officer. He was Quartermaster-General to the Forces from 1908 to 1912, and Governor of Gibraltar from 1913 until 1918 during the First World War .
Military career
Miles was commissioned into the 101st Regiment of Foot in 1869.[ 1]
He had a change of career and became a barrister in the Inner Temple in 1880.[ 2]
He then rejoined the army becoming Deputy Assistant Quartermaster-General at the War Office in 1889 and then Assistant Adjutant-General at Aldershot Command in 1893.[ 2] In 1898 he was appointed Commandant of the Staff College, Camberley .[ 2]
He served in the Second Boer War , from early February 1900 as Deputy Adjutant-General and Chief of Staff for the Natal Field Force .[ 2] [ 3] After the war he returned to his role at the Staff College and then, in 1903, became Commander of British Troops in the Cape Colony District.[ 2] He was appointed Director of Recruiting and Organisation at Army Headquarters in 1904 and Quartermaster-General to the Forces in 1908.[ 2]
He was Governor of Gibraltar from 1913; he retired in 1919.[ 2]
Legacy
Sir Herbert Miles Road in Gibraltar is named in his honour[ 4] as is Sir Herbert Miles Promenade .[ 5] There is a memorial to him in St Peter's Church in Yoxford , Suffolk.[ 6]
Herbert Miles memorial in St Peter's Church, Yoxford , Suffolk
References
Specific
General
Obituary of Lieut.-General Sir Herbert Miles, The Times, 21 May 1926 (pg. 11; Issue 44277; col E)