George Campbell of Inverneill
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George Campbell | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1803 East Indies |
| Died | 25 April 1882 (aged 78–79) No. 1, Byng Place, Gordon Square, London |
| Allegiance | United Kingdom |
| Branch | British Army |
| Service years | 1823–1874 |
| Rank | General |
| Commands | Royal Artillery I Brigade, Royal Horse Artillery 7th (Meerut) Division Army Group Royal Artillery 3rd (Lahore) Division Artillery Division Cawnpore |
| Conflicts | Mutiny at Banares First Anglo-Burmese War First Anglo-Sikh War Punjab campaign of 1848–49 Battle of Mudki Siege of Cawnpore Gwalior campaign Battle of Sobraon Battle of Ferozeshah |
| Awards | Companion of the Order of the Bath |
| Relations | Major-General Sir Archibald Campbell (great-uncle) Major-General George Carter-Campbell (grandson) Colonel Duncan Carter-Campbell of Possil (great-gandson) |
General George Campbell of Inverneill, CB (1803–1882) was commandant of the Royal Artillery and served in the East India Company.
George Campbell was born in 1803, the third son of Duncan Campbell of Inverneill B.C.S. and his wife, Elizabeth Cooper.[1] He was a grandson of James Campbell, 3rd of Tuerechan (8th Chief of Tearlach, descended from Clan Campbell of Craignish) and great-nephew of Major-General Sir Archibald Campbell, father-in-law to Colonel Thomas Tupper Carter-Campbell of Possil and grandfather to General George Tupper Campbell Carter-Campbell. He had a son and two daughters with his wife Susan "Black Beauty" Campbell of Possil (daughter of Colonel Alexander Campbell of Possil).[2]
There have been few more distinguished and adventurous Anglo-Indian officers in our Presidential armies than the late General Campbell C.B, K.A. and few smarter officers ever wore the "jacket 3". He passed all his regimental service in the Bengal Horse Artillery; and, as soldier or sportsman, none was better known in India than he.