Richard Hebden O'Grady Haly

      Richard O'Grady Haly
      Richard hebden lt col o'grady haly.jpg
      Richard O'Grady Haly
      Born 22 February 1841
      Frant, Sussex
      Died 8 July 1911
      Camberley, Surrey
      Buried at Frimley
      Allegiance  United Kingdom
      Canada
      Service/branch British Army
      Canadian Militia
      Rank Major-General
      Commands held General Officer Commanding the Militia of Canada
      Battles/wars Mahdist War
      Second Boer War
      World War I
      Awards Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
      Relations William O'Grady Haly (father)

      Major-General Richard Hebden O'Grady-Haly, KCB (22 February 1841 – 8 July 1911) was a British Army officer and served as General Officer Commanding the Militia of Canada from 1900 to 1902.

      Military career

      Born the son of General Sir William O'Grady Haly, O'Grady-Haly was commissioned into the British Army in 1858.[1]

      He served with the Nile Expedition in 1882 and took part in the action of El Maffar, both actions at Kassassin and the Battle of Tel el-Kebir.[1]

      He commanded the Second Column of the Hazara Field Force and was Mentioned in Despatches in 1888.[1]

      He commanded the 1st Battalion the Suffolk Regiment in India and went on to be Assistant Adjutant-General in Belfast in 1891.[1] He was appointed General Officer Commanding the Militia of Canada in 1900.[2]

      He also was a surveyor and when he was Lieutenant-Colonel, he invented a compass clinometer system which was built by Elliott Bros. Pictures of the compass can be seen in the online compass museum COMPASSIPEDIA.[3]

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      Family

      In 1865 he married Geraldine Mary Gostling and they went on to have four daughters.[1]

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      References

      Military offices
      Preceded by
      Sir Edward Hutton
      General Officer Commanding the Militia of Canada
      1900–1902
      Succeeded by
      The Earl of Dundonald


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      Last modified on 31 August 2012, at 09:29