William Peyton

General Sir William Eliot Peyton, KCB, KCVO, DSO (7 May 1866 – 14 November 1931) was a British Army officer who served as Military Secretary to the British Expeditionary Force from 1916 to 1918. He was Delhi Herald of Arms Extraordinary at the time of the Delhi Durbar of 1911.[2]

Sir William Peyton
William Peyton as Delhi Herald Extraordinary in 1911
Born(1866-05-07)7 May 1866
Wellington, Tamil Nadu, Madras, British India[1]
Died14 November 1931(1931-11-14) (aged 65)
Army and Navy Club, London
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
RankGeneral
Commands heldScottish Command (1926–30)
3rd Indian Division (1920–22)
40th Infantry Division (1918–19)
X Corps (1918)
Reserve Army (1918)
Western Frontier Force in Egypt (1916)
2nd Mounted Division (1915)
Meerut Cavalry Brigade (1908–12)
15th Hussars (1903–07)
Battles/warsMahdist War
Second Boer War
First World War
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order
Distinguished Service Order
Mentioned in Despatches (6)

Early life

The third son of Colonel John Peyton, commanding officer of the 7th Dragoon Guards, Peyton was educated at Brighton College.[3][4]

Military career

In 1885, Peyton enlisted in the ranks in the 7th Dragoon Guards,[3] a regiment that his father had commanded between 1871 and 1876.[4] The explanation of this was his failure to pass the entrance examination of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst.[4] Having risen to sergeant, Peyton was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the 7th Dragoon Guards on 18 June 1887,[3][4][5] and promoted lieutenant in 1890.[6] He was appointed regimental adjutant in 1892.[7][8] In 1896 he transferred to the 15th Hussars and was promoted captain.[3][9]

He was seconded to the Egyptian Army and saw service with the Dongola Expeditionary Force in 1896,[10] and was mentioned in despatches,[11] then in the Sudan in 1897 and 1898, where he was dangerously wounded and his horse killed under him by a spear.[3][4] In the Sudan he was again mentioned in despatches,[12] and received the Distinguished Service Order.[3][13] He was also awarded the Order of the Medjidieh, Fourth Class.[14]

Peyton fought next in South Africa, 1899–1900, where he served with Alexander Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry, was promoted major and brevet lieutenant colonel,[15] again mentioned in despatches,[16] and received the Queen's South Africa Medal with three clasps, but his service was cut short by illness and he was invalided back to England.[3][4] He passed the Army's Staff College in December 1901.[4]

From 1903 until 1907 Peyton commanded the 15th Hussars,[17][18] being granted the brevet rank of colonel in 1905.[19] In 1907 he went to India to become Assistant Quartermaster-General, India,[20] and, as a temporary brigadier general, to command the Meerut Cavalry Brigade from 1908 to 1912.[3][4][21] In India, he served as Delhi Herald of Arms Extraordinary at the Coronation Durbar held on 12 December 1911,[2][3] and was made a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order,[22] and from July 1912 was Military Secretary to the Commander-in-Chief, India.[4][23][24][25]

Major-General Sir William Peyton and Vice-Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon waiting on the quayside at Calais for the arrival of King George V and Queen Mary, June 1917

Peyton returned to England in 1914 on the outbreak of the First World War and took up a new post as chief of staff of the 1st Mounted Division Territorial Force (TF).[4][26] Promoted to major general in 1914 (first as temporary promotion, from October as substantive rank),[27][28] he commanded the 2nd Mounted Division TF on the Gallipoli Peninsula, seeing action on 21 August 1915 and taking part in the final evacuation of 19 December 1915.[3] The division suffered severe casualties at Suvla.[4] Peyton then commanded the Western Frontier Force in Egypt in 1916, leading an expedition against the Senussi and re-occupying Sidi Barrani and Sollum, again being mentioned in despatches.[3][29][30][31] For rescuing the shipwrecked British prisoners of HMS Tara from Bir Hakkim (by a force of armoured cars led by Hugh Grosvenor, 2nd Duke of Westminster) he received the special thanks of the Admiralty and was again mentioned in despatches.[3][32]

In May 1916, after success as a combat commander, Peyton was transferred to become Sir Douglas Haig's Military Secretary in Flanders,[33] remaining with Haig until March 1918.[4][34] The post was at the heart of the operation of the management of appointments, promotions, removals, honours and awards of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF).[4] In December of the year he was granted the colonelcy of the 15th The King's Hussars, holding the position until their merger with the 19th Hussars in 1922 and thereafter the colonelcy of the combined 15th/19th Hussars until his death.[35]

Peyton was knighted in 1917, being made a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order when King George V visited the troops in the field.[3][36]

Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London

In April and May 1918, Peyton nominally commanded the Reserve Army. Fifth Army had been defeated on the Somme in March 1918 and taken over by the Fourth Army, and the former Fifth Army staff formed a reserve HQ at Crécy-en-Ponthieu.[4][37] On 23 May, the Fifth Army was reconstituted and given to Sir William Birdwood, and for six weeks (as a temporary lieutenant general)[38] Peyton took command of X Corps, though his corps was held back from the fighting.[4] However, from 3 July 1918 until March 1919 he returned to active service as commander of the 40th Infantry Division during operations in France and Flanders, leading it through the Hundred Days advance through Flanders.[4][39][40]

Peyton's feelings about his postings between May 1916 and July 1918 were expressed silently by his omitting any mention of them from his entry in Who's Who.[3][4]

Peyton next returned to India, to command the United Province district and the 3rd Indian Division at Meerut between 1920 and 1922.[3][41][42][43] He was promoted substantive lieutenant general in 1921.[3][44]

Peyton was next posted as Military Secretary to the Secretary of State for War, from 1922 to 1926, and as Commander-in-Chief of Scottish Command, 1926 to 1930.[3][45][46] This was his last post before retirement in 1930;[47] he had been promoted general in 1927.[3][48]

A member of the Army and Navy Club, he died there suddenly on 14 November 1931.[4] He is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London, just to the north-west of the chapel.

He was unusually tall, with a height of six feet, six inches.[4]

Family

On 27 April 1889, Peyton married Mabel Maria, daughter of late Lt-General the Hon. E. T. Gage CB, third son of Henry Gage, 4th Viscount Gage, and of Ella Henrietta Maxse, a granddaughter of the 5th Earl of Berkeley.[3][49][50] With Mabel, he had one daughter, Ela Violet Ethel.[51] After his wife's death in 1901, Peyton remarried in 1903 with Gertrude, daughter of Major-General A. R. Lempriere and the widow of Captain Stuart Robertson of the 14th Hussars. They had one son and his second wife died in 1916.[3]

In 1921, Peyton's daughter Ela married Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Edward Daymonde Stevenson KCVO (1895–1958) and she died in 1976, leaving one son.[51] Peyton's son-in-law was Gentleman Usher of the Green Rod, 1953–1958, and Purse Bearer to the Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, 1930–1958.[52]

Freemasonry

He was Initiated in Lodge Logonier, No.2436, (England) and was made an Honorary Member of Lodge Holyrood House (St. Luke's), No.44, (Edinburgh) on 24 March 1923. He was the Grand Sword-bearer of the Grand Lodge of Scotland 1927–1928.[53]

Honours

References

  1. https://www.eliotsofporteliot.com/familytree/getperson.php?personID=I00679&tree=eliot1
  2. Cox, Noel, "A New Zealand Heraldic Authority?" in John Campbell-Kease (ed), Tribute to an Armorist: Essays for John Brooke-Little to mark the Golden Jubilee of The Coat of Arms, London, The Heraldry Society, 2000, pp. 93, 101: "Two heralds, with ceremonial rather than heraldic responsibilities, were appointed for the Delhi Durbar in 1911 ... Delhi Herald (Brigadier-General William Eliot Peyton) and Assistant Delhi Herald (Captain the Honourable Malik Mohammed Umar Haiyat Khan)."
  3. PEYTON, General Sir William Eliot, in Who Was Who 1929–1940 (London, A. & C. Black, 1967 reprint: ISBN 0-7136-0171-X)
  4. William Eliot Peyton at the web site of the CENTRE FOR FIRST WORLD WAR STUDIES online at bham.ac.uk (accessed 19 January 2008)
  5. "No. 25710". The London Gazette. 17 June 1887. p. 3285.
  6. "No. 26060". The London Gazette. 10 June 1890. p. 3242.
  7. "No. 26299". The London Gazette. 21 June 1892. p. 3590.
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  10. "No. 26732". The London Gazette. 21 April 1896. p. 2388.
  11. "No. 26791". The London Gazette. 3 November 1896. p. 6005.
  12. "No. 27009". The London Gazette. 30 September 1898. pp. 5728–5729.
  13. "No. 27023". The London Gazette. 15 November 1898. p. 6689.
  14. "No. 27069". The London Gazette. 7 April 1899. p. 2272.
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  43. "No. 32631". The London Gazette. 7 March 1922. p. 1954.
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  45. "No. 33135". The London Gazette. 23 February 1926. p. 1339.
  46. "No. 33580". The London Gazette. 18 February 1930. p. 1051.
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  50. Melville Henry de Massue, Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval, The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal: The Anne of Exeter Volume, London, T.C. & E.C. Jack, 1907, p. 269
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  53. A History of the Mason Lodge of Holyrood House (St.Luke's), No.44, holding of the Grand Lodge of Scotland with Roll of Members, 1734-1934, by Robert Strathern Lindsay, W.S., Edinburgh, 1935. Vol.II, p.720.
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