Henry Ponsonby

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Major General The Right Honourable
Sir Henry Ponsonby
GCB
File:Henry Ponsonby Vanity Fair 1883-03-17.jpg
The Privy Purse
Ponsonby as caricatured by Théobald Chartran in Vanity Fair, March 1883
Private Secretary to the Sovereign
In office
1870–1895
Monarch Queen Victoria
Preceded by Sir Charles Grey
Succeeded by Sir Arthur Bigge
Personal details
Nationality British

Major General Sir Henry Frederick Ponsonby GCB (10 December 1825 – 21 November 1895) was a British soldier and royal court official who served as Queen Victoria's Private Secretary.

Biography

Born in Corfu, he was the son of the British Army general, Sir Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby.

He entered the army on 27 December 1842 as an ensign in the 49th Regiment of Foot. Transferred to the Grenadier Guards, he became a lieutenant on 16 February 1844, captain on 18 July 1848, and major on 19 October 1849. From 1847 to 1858 he was aide-de-camp to Lord Clarendon and Lord St. Germans, successively lord-lieutenants of Ireland. He served through the Crimean campaigns of 1855–6, becoming lieutenant-colonel on 31 Aug. 1855; for the action before Sebastopol he received a medal with clasp, the Turkish medal, and the Order of the Medjidie, 3rd Class.. After the peace he was appointed equerry to Albert, Prince Consort, who greatly valued his services. On 2 August 1860 he became colonel, and in 1862, after the death of the prince, he was sent to Canada in command of a battalion of the Grenadier Guards which was stationed in the colony during the American Civil War. On 6 March 1868 he became a major-general.

Ponsonby embellished letters to his children at Eton with a series of illustrations in which he concealed the school's address. It was a family quirk continued by his son, Arthur Ponsonby, and recently revived by descendant Harriet Russell. His letters bore addresses appearing as doodled signposts in snowstorms or as huge envelopes shouldered by tiny people.[1]

He served as Keeper of the Privy Purse and Private Secretary to Queen Victoria. His appointment occurred on 8 April 1870, after the death of prior Private Secretary General Charles Grey, who was "a son of Earl Grey, the Prime Minister" at the time and who was wife Mary Ponsonby's "Uncle Charles."[2] Both Arthur and Mary Ponsonby contributed pseudonymously to magazines and newspapers of the day.[3]

On 6 January 1895 he was attacked by paralysis; in May he retired from his offices, and on 21 November he died at East Cowes on the Isle of Wight. He was buried at Whippingham.

Family

On 30 April 1861, he married Hon. Mary Elizabeth Bulteel, Maid of Honour to Queen Victoria and a daughter of John Crocker Bulteel (1793-1843) MP. The couple had five children:[4]

Legacy

His son Arthur wrote a biography of him which won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1942: Henry Ponsonby, Queen Victoria's Private Secretary: His Life from His Letters.

In Mrs. Brown, he was portrayed by Geoffrey Palmer whose close friend and frequent co-star, Dame Judi Dench played Queen Victoria.

References

  1. The Independent
  2. Arthur Ponsonby. Henry Ponsonby, Queen Victoria's Private Secretary: His Life from His Letters (London: Macmillan, 1943), pp. 35-36.
  3. Ponsonby, p. 37.
  4. Lodge 1867, p. 62.
Bibiography
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Court offices
Preceded by Keeper of the Privy Purse
1878–1895
Succeeded by
Sir Fleetwood Edwards
Preceded by Private Secretary to the Sovereign
1870–1895
Succeeded by
Sir Arthur Bigge