Henry Kitchener, 2nd Earl Kitchener

{{Short description|British soldier and peer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}

{{Infobox military person

| honorific_prefix = Colonel The Right Honourable

| name = The Earl Kitchener

| image = Col. Kitchener LCCN2014697016.jpg

| caption =

| birth_date = 5 October 1846

| death_date = 27 March 1937 (aged 90)

| birth_place =

| death_place = Nairobi, Kenya Colony

| nickname =

| allegiance = United Kingdom

| branch = British Army

| serviceyears = 1866–1903, 1916–1918

| rank = Colonel

| unit = 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot
Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry

| commands =

| battles = * Franco-Prussian War

| awards =

| relations = Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener (brother)
Frederick Walter Kitchener (brother)

| laterwork =

}}

Colonel Henry Elliott Chevallier Kitchener, 2nd Earl Kitchener (5 October 1846 – 27 March 1937) was a British soldier and peer.

Early life and career

He was the eldest of five children born to Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Horatio Kitchener (1805–1894) and his first wife Anne Frances Chevallier (1826–1864). Among his siblings was the military commander Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener.

He spent his early life in Tralee in Ireland, where he and his siblings received their education from governesses and tutors.{{Citation| title =Recent death of Lord Kitchener| newspaper =The Gleaner| page =17| date =12 April 1937}} Kitchener joined the British Army in 1866 and was commissioned into the 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot, before joining the newly created Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry when it was founded in 1881. During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71, he served alongside his brother in France. He served as garrison instructor at the Curragh Camp in Ireland from July 1876 until July 1878 and was appointed the instructor in military topography at the Royal Military College in 1879, a post he held until August 1886.

He saw his first action in Burma with the British Army, where he was chief transport officer of the Field Force's during the Manipur Expedition in 1891.{{cite news | title =Earl Kitchener, Soldier's Brother| work =The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1937/03/30/archives/earl-kitchener-soldiers-brother-successor-to-field-marshals-peerage.html| date =30 March 1937 | first=Wireless | last=To}} He was posted to Jamaica in December 1898, where he was appointed deputy assistant adjutant general for the British colony before receiving his final posting in the army when he was appointed commander of the Depot for the West India Regiment. He retired from the army in 1903 with the rank of colonel.{{Citation| title =Gone to East Africa| newspaper =The Gleaner| page =6| date =27 January 1915}}

Post-retirement

After retiring he remained in Jamaica where he was a property owner. He became involved in local politics and contested the St Andrew Parish in the legislative council elections but was not elected.{{Citation| title =Earl Kitchener 90, dies in Kenya colony | newspaper =The Gleaner| page =13| date =30 March 1937}}

With the outbreak of the First World War, he was recalled to the army and was posted to take up a command post in South West Africa; he was also put in command of a British Expeditionary Force sent to fight the Germans in East Africa.{{Citation| title=Earl Kitchener| newspaper =The Gleaner| page =1| date =5 July 1916}}{{Citation| newspaper =The Gleaner|title=Earl Kitchener |page =8| date =10 June 1916}} In accordance with a special remainder in the letters patent, he succeeded his younger brother as second Earl Kitchener on 5 June 1916. He left Jamaica to return to Britain in 1918.{{cite news | title =Kitchener Arrives Here| work =The New York Times|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E02E2DD1F3FE433A25753C2A9629C946996D6CF| date =20 April 1918}} After the war he moved to Kenya where he was active in encouraging the settlement of war veterans in the British colony; he also developed a number of flax-producing estates there.

Kitchener was married in 1877 to Eleanor Fanny Lushington (died 1897), with whom he had a son and a daughter:{{cite web| title =Genealogy of Henry Kitchener, 2nd Earl Kitchener| publisher =geneall.net | url =http://www.geneall.net/U/per_page.php?id=593069| access-date =15 December 2007}}

  • Henry Franklin Chevallier Kitchener, Viscount Broome (17 Oct 1878 – 13 Jun 1928), commanded British naval forces at the Battle of Imbros during the First World War
  • Lady Nora Fanny Kitchener (1882 – 10 May 1919)

His son and heir Henry Franklin Kitchener, Viscount Broome (1878–1928) predeceased him, so on his own death in 1937 in Nairobi, Kenya, his titles passed to his grandson Henry Herbert Kitchener.

His great-granddaughter Emma Joy Kitchener (born 1962) is the wife of actor Julian Fellowes, Baron Fellowes of West Stafford, and is a lady-in-waiting to Princess Michael of Kent.

References

{{Reflist|refs={{harv|Hesilrige|1921|page=}}}}

=Book cited=

  • {{cite book | last=Hesilrige | first=Arthur G. M. | year=1921 | title=Debrett's Peerage and Titles of courtesy | url=https://archive.org/details/debrettspeeraget00unse/page/532 | location=160A, Fleet street, London, UK | publisher=Dean & Son | page=532 }}

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{{s-reg|uk}}

{{s-bef|before=Herbert Kitchener}}

{{s-ttl|title=Earl Kitchener|years=1916–1937}}

{{s-aft|after=Henry Kitchener}}

{{s-end}}

{{Chevallier family tree}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kitchener, Henry Kitchener, 2nd Earl}}

Category:1846 births

Category:1937 deaths

Category:Earls Kitchener

Category:British Army colonels

Category:46th Regiment of Foot officers

Category:Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry officers

Category:Military personnel from County Kerry

Category:People of the Franco-Prussian War

Category:British Army personnel of World War I

Category:Immigrants to the British West Indies

Category:British emigrants to British Kenya

Category:19th-century British Army personnel