Richard Ridgeway
Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox military person Colonel Richard Kirby Ridgeway Template:Post-nominals (18 August 1848 – 11 October 1924) was an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
Biography
Ridgeway was born on 18 August 1848 in Oldcastle, County Meath, Ireland. He was commissioned into the British Army on 8 January 1868, and promoted to lieutenant on 14 February 1870.<ref name=Hart00>Hart′s Army list, 1900</ref>
Victoria Cross
On 22 November 1879, he was 31 years old, and a captain in the Bengal Staff Corps, 44th Gurkha Rifles (later 1/8th Gurkha Rifles), British Indian Army, during the Naga Hills Expedition. On that date, during the final assault on Konoma, Eastern Frontier of India, under heavy fire from the enemy, Captain Ridgeway rushed up to a barricade and attempted to tear down the planking surrounding it to enable him to effect an entrance. While doing this he was wounded severely in the right shoulder.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>
Later career
He was appointed assistant adjutant-general of the Peshawar district, part of the Punjab Command, on 29 April 1895, and was promoted to the rank of colonel on 8 January 1898.<ref name=Hart00 /> After an extended furlough back home, he resigned in early 1900, and did not return to India.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
He died at the age of 76 in Harrogate, Yorkshire on 11 October 1924.
See also
Notes and references
- The Register of the Victoria Cross (1981, 1988 and 1997)
- Template:Cite journal
- Ireland's VCs Template:ISBN (Dept of Economic Development, 1995)
- Monuments to Courage (David Harvey, 1999)
- Irish Winners of the Victoria Cross (Richard Doherty & David Truesdale, 2000)
External links
- Location of grave and VC medal (West Yorkshire)
- 1848 births
- 1924 deaths
- Irish recipients of the Victoria Cross
- 19th-century Irish people
- Irish soldiers in the British Indian Army
- Bengal Staff Corps officers
- Companions of the Order of the Bath
- British military personnel of the Tirah campaign
- Military personnel from County Meath
- Burials in West Yorkshire
- 19th-century British Army personnel
- British Army officers
- British colonels
- British Indian Army officers
- People from Oldcastle, County Meath