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  1. Henry Hardinge démissionna de ses fonctions de commandant-en-chef en juillet 1856, pour cause de santé, et mourut la même année à South Park, près de Tunbridge Wells. Son fils aîné, Charles Stewart , qui avait été son secrétaire en Inde, devint le second vicomte Hardinge ; et Henry, le fils aîné de ce dernier, le troisième.

  2. Henry Hardinge (30 March 1785 to 24 September 1856) was a British Army officer and politician. He became Secretary at War in Wellington's ministry after serving in the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign. After serving as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1830, he returned to Sir Robert Peel's cabinet as Secretary at War.

  3. Hardinge, Sir Henry. Hardinge, Sir Henry (1785–1856), 1st Viscount Hardinge of Lahore , chief secretary for Ireland, was born 30 March 1785 in Kent, third son of Henry Hardinge, rector of Stanhope, Durham, and his wife Frances, daughter of James Best of Kent. He began his army career at the age of 14 as an ensign before purchasing a ...

  4. Life dates. 1785-1856. Biography. 3rd Son of Rev. Henry Hardinge, Rector of Stanhope. Was born at Wrotham in Kent. Entered the British Army as an ensign and rose, through a long and brilliant career, to the very summit of his profession. He was actively engaged through the whole of the Peninsular War. He was wounded at Vittoria and lost a hand ...

  5. British politician (1785-1856) Field Marshal Henry Hardinge, 1st Viscount Hardinge of Lahore and Kings Newton

  6. Hardinge, Sir Henry. Hardinge, Sir Henry (1785–1856), 1st Viscount Hardinge of Lahore , chief secretary for Ireland, was born 30 March 1785 in Kent, third son of Henry Hardinge, rector of Stanhope, Durham, and his wife Frances, daughter of James Best of Kent. He began his army career at the age of 14 as an ensign before purchasing a ...

  7. This replica of Sir Francis Grant's 1849 portrait of the former governor-general of India, Lord Hardinge, was given to the Gallery by the artist in 1876. The frame was made by Henry Critchfield, the Gallery's framemaker, at a cost of £5.10s on 14 September 1876. In type this running pattern of intertwining scrolls and foliage on an ogee ...