In 1897 and 1898 Ravenshaw was again active, conducting operations against Malakand and then participating in the Tirah campaign where he was with the army which forced the Khyber Pass against the Afridis. He was appointed adjutant of the 1st battalion of his regiment in December 1898, serving until December 1902.[5] In these years he was transferred with his regiment to South Africa to fight against the Boers at the outbreak of the Second Boer War in late 1899. He fought in the relief of Ladysmith and numerous smaller actions for three years. After his return home in 1902, Ravenshaw was in early 1903 given the position of Adjutant at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst,[6] a post he held until 1907.[4]
First World War
In 1914, Ravenshaw was brought out of semi-retirement to command the 1st battalion of the Connaught Rangers, an Irish regiment in India which he brought to France for service on the Western Front in late September.[1] Ravenshaw remained in command of the Connaught Rangers until April 1915, when he was made a staff officer at 1st Division headquarters before being promoted and given command of the 83rd Brigade. This unit saw action in France during 1915 before being sent to Salonica in Greece as part of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force.[4]There he served against the Bulgarian Army, rising to command the 27th Division in October 1916.[4]
In December 1916, Ravenshaw sailed on the troop shipCaledonia to meet his superiors in England. On 4 December, U-65 sank Caledonia in the Mediterranean, and captured both Ravenshaw and his adjutant Captain FHD Vickerman.[7] They were taken to Austria-Hungary, where they were prisoners of war for the next two years.[4]
Released after the armistice, Ravenshaw was appointed commander of the troops in South Africa.[8] In 1920 he travelled to Port Elizabeth in South Africa and on 6 June was seen entering Addo Bush near the city but failed to return. A search party discovered his body two days later.[9]