Alfred Lucas (Indian Army officer)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Alfred Lucas | |
|---|---|
| Born | Alfred William Lucas 5 July 1822[1] |
| Died | 19 February 1896 (aged 73) Newton Abbot, Devon |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Rank | General |
| Conflicts | Anglo-Persian War Indian Mutiny Abyssinia Expedition. |
| Awards | KCB |
| Relations | Meriel Lucas (daughter) |
General Sir Alfred William Lucas KCB (5 July 1822 – 19 February 1896) was a senior British staff officer in the British Indian Army.
He was born 5 July 1822 and baptised on 3 August 1822 in St Alfege Church, Greenwich, London, the son of Charles and Elizabeth Lucas.
He joined the Bombay Army as an ensign in 1838 and was promoted Lieutenant in 1840, Captain in 1852, Major in 1858, Lieutenant Colonel in 1864 and Colonel in 1868.[3]
He took part in the Southern Mahratta Campaign of 1844-45, the Anglo-Persian War of 1856–59 and the Indian Mutiny of 1857–59. He was a staff officer in the Rajputana Field Force which pursued Tantia Topes forces through Rajputana in 1857. In 1867–68 he was appointed head of the Commissariat in the punitive Abyssinia Expedition of 1868 after which he served as Deputy Commissary General in Bombay until 1877.[4]
He retired on half-pay in 1880, was promoted to Lieutenant-General in 1882[5] and made full general on 22 January 1889.