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British Officers with Indian men
1888, Photograph
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of 28
British Officers with Indian men
British Officers with Indian men
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Category
Museums & Galleries Item
Item no
36828
Title
British Officers with Indian men
Description
One black and white photograph showing a group of Indian men and children and five British officers including Douglas Haig. The photograph is mounted on white card with words written in pencil at the bottom: 'SECUNDERABAD, INDIA 1888' 'OY' 'BEREFORD' 'HOLSWORTH' 'CAREW' 'PARADISE ROW (SUB-ALTERN QUARTERS''. Douglas Haig is the left most of the four seated officers. Black wooden frame.
Date
1888
Type
Photograph
Location
Museum of Edinburgh
Accession number
HH4303/21/81
Douglas Haig was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the 7th Hussars on the 7th February, 1885 at the age of 24. Haig would stay in India until 1892 when he returned to the UK in order to prepare for the entrance exams to attend the Staff College at Camberley.
While in India Haig served as the Regimental Adjutant and was later promoted to Captain. Haig also competed as part of the 7th Hussars Polo Team in Inter-Regimental competition.
Douglas Haig was born in Charlotte Square, Edinburgh on the 9th June, 1861 to John Haig, the whisky distiller and Rachel Veitch. The young Douglas would spend the majority of his youth at the main family home of Cameron House in Fife before being educated at Clifton College, Bristol and then Brasenose College, Oxford.
Douglas Haig was commissioned into the 7th Hussars following his attendance the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, thus beginning a military career which would see several tours of India, action in both the war in the Sudan and South Africa before rising up the ranks to be posted as the head of the Aldershot Command prior to the First World War.
Douglas Haig went to war with the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in August, 1914 in command of the I Corps. In December of 1915 following Sir John French's departure Haig took up the post as Commander-in-Chief of the BEF.
After the war Douglas Haig retired from the army in 1920, was created the 1st Earl Haig and spent the rest of his life seeing to the well-being of ex-servicemen.
Exhibitions with this item
Field Marshal Earl Douglas Haig: Before the War
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Field Marshal Earl Haig
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