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VISCOUNT HENRY HARDINGE HARDINGE (178...

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 943 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VISCOUNT HENRY HARDINGE HARDINGE (1785-1856)  ,
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British field marshal and governor-general of India, was born at
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Wrotham in Kent on the 3oth of March 1785 . After being at
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Eton, he entered the army in 1799 as an ensign in the Queen's Rangers, a corps then stationed in Upper
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Canada . His first active service was at the
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battle of Vimiera, where he was wounded; and at Corunna he was by the side of
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Sir John Moore when he received his
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death-wound . Subsequently he received an appointment as deputy-quartermaster-general in the Portuguese army from Marshal Beresford, and was
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present at nearly all the battles of the
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Peninsular War, being wounded again at
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Vittoria . At Albuera he saved the day for the British by taking the responsibility at a critical moment of strongly urging General Cole's division to advance . When peace was again broken in 1815 by
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Napoleon's escape from Elba, Hardinge hastened into active service, and was. appointed to the important
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post of
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commissioner at the Prussian headquarters . In this capacity he was present at the battle of Ligny on the 16th of
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June 1815, where he lost his
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left hand by a shot, and thus was not present at
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Waterloo, fought two days later . For the loss of his hand he received a pension of £300; he had already been made a K.C.B., and Wellington presented him with a sword that had belonged to Napoleon . In 182o and 1826 Sir Henry Hardinge was returned to parliament as member for Durham; and in 1828 he accepted the office of secretary at war in Wellington's
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ministry, a post which he also filled in Peel's
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cabinet in 1841-1844 . In 1830 and 1834-1835 he was chief secretary for Ireland . In 1844 he succeeded Lord Ellenborough as governor-general of India . During his
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term of office the first
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Sikh War broke out; and Hardinge, waiving his right to the supreme command, magnanimously offered to serve as second in command under Sir
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Hugh Gough; but disagreeing with the latter's plan of
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campaign at
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Ferozeshah, he temporarily reasserted his authority as governor-general (see SIKH
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WARS) .

After the successful termination of the campaign at

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Sobraon he was created Viscount Hardinge of
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Lahore and of King's Newton in
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Derbyshire, with a pension of £3000 for three lives; while the East India
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Company voted him an annuity of 5000, which he declined to accept . Hardinge's term of offic' in India was marked by many social and educationalreforms . He returned to England in 1848, and in 1852 succeeded the duke of Wellington as
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commander-in-chief of the British army . While in this position he had the home management of the
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Crimean War, which he endeavoured to conduct on Wellington's principles—a
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system not altogether suited to the changed mode of warfare . In 1855 he was promoted to the rank of field- marshal.' Viscount Hardinge resigned his office of commander-in-chief in
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July 1856, owing to failing
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health, and died on the 24th of September of the same
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year at South Park near Tunbridge Wells . His elder son, Charles Stewart (1822-1894), who had been his private secretary in India, was the 2nd Viscount Hardinge; and the latter's eldest son succeeded to the title . The younger son of the 2nd Viscount, Charles Hardinge (b . 1858), became a prominent diplomatist (see
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EDWARD VII.), and was appointed governor-general of India in 1910, being created Baron Hardinge of
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Penshurst . See C . Hardinge, Viscount Hardinge (Rulers of -India series, 1891) ; and R . S . Rait,
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Life and
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Campaigns of Viscount Gough (1903) .

End of Article: VISCOUNT HENRY HARDINGE HARDINGE (1785-1856)
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