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GEORGE FRANCIS ROBERT HENDERSON (1854...

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 268 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGE FRANCIS ROBERT HENDERSON (1854-1903)  ,
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British soldier and military writer, was born in Jersey in 1854 . Educated at Leeds Grammar School, of which his
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father, after-wards Dean of Carlisle, was headmaster, he was early attracted to the study of
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history, and obtained a scholarship at St John's College, Oxford . But he soon
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left the University for
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Sandhurst," whence he obtained his first commission in 1878 . One
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year 'later, after a few months' service in India, he was promoted
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lieutenant and returned to England, and in 1882 he went ort active service with his regiment, the York and Lancaster (65th/ 84th) to
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Egypt . He was
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present at Tell-el-Mahuta andKassassin, and at Tell-el-Kebir was the first man of his regiment to enter the enemy's
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works . His conduct attracted the
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notice of
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Sir Garnet (afterwards Lord) Wolseley, and he received the 5th class of the Medjidieh order . His name was, further, noted for a brevet-majority, which he did not receive till he became captain in 1886 . During these years he had been quietly studying military
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art and history at
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Gibraltar, in Bermuda and in Nova Scotia, in spite of the difficulties of research, and in 1889 appeared (anonymously) his first
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work, The
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Campaign of Fredericksburg . In the same year he became Instructor in Tactics, Military Law and Administration at Sandhurst . From this
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post he proceeded as Professor of Military Art and History to the Staff College (1892-1899), and there exercised a profound influence on the younger generation of
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officers . His study on Spicheren had been begun some years before, and in 1898 appeared, as the result of eight years' work, his masterpiece, Stonewall Jackson and the
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American
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Civil War . In the South
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African War Lieutenant-Colonel Henderson served with distinction on the staff of Lord Roberts as Director of Intelligence .

But overwork and

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malaria broke his
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health, and he had to return home, being eventually selected to write the official history of the war . But failing health obliged him to go to Egypt, where he died at
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Assuan on the 5th of March 1903 . He had completed the portion of the history of the South African VVar dealing with the events up to the commencement of hostilities, amounting to about a
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volume, but the War Office decided to suppress this, and the work was begun de nova and carried out by Sir F . Maurice . Various lectures and papers by Henderson were collected and published in 1905 by Captain Malcolm, D.S.O., under the title The Science of War; to this collection a memoir was contributed by Lord Roberts . See also Journal of the Royal
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United Service Institution, vol. xlvii . No . 302 .

End of Article: GEORGE FRANCIS ROBERT HENDERSON (1854-1903)
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