Colonel Guy Percy Wyndham, CB, MVO (19 January 1865 – 17 April 1941) was a British Army soldier.

Background and family

Wyndham was born on 19 January 1865 as the son of Hon. Percy Wyndham and Madeline Caroline Frances Eden Campbell. He was the brother of George Wyndham and Mary Constance Wyndham.

He was married twice, first in 1892 to Edwina Johanna Fitzpatrick (who died in 1919), then in 1923 to Violet Leverson, daughter and biographer of the writer Ada Leverson. His second son with Edwina was the painter Richard Wyndham. His son with Violet Leverson was the writer and editor Francis Wyndham.

Military career

Wyndham was commissioned into the 16th (the Queen's) Lancers in October 1884.

He was promoted to captain on 10 September 1890, and became an adjutant in March 1892, a position he resigned in August 1894. He attended the Staff College, Camberley, from 1897 to 1898. On 21 September 1899 he was appinted to be a deputy assistant adjutant general in Natal.

On the outbreak of the Second Boer War just a few weeks later, Wyndham went to South Africa where he was seconded to serve on the staff, and was present at the Relief of Ladysmith. He was promoted to major on 1 April 1900. During the latter parts of the war he was in command of a mobile column. For his services, he was mentioned in dispatches (including the final dispatch by Major General Lord Kitchener dated 23 June 1902), and received the brevet rank of lieutenant colonel, dated 29 November 1900, and returned to the United Kingdom on the steamer Dunvegan Castle in April 1902. The residents of his home village of Upwey, Dorset, had decorated the village on his arrival there. Two months later, he was received in audience by King Edward VII, who personally presented him with the King's South Africa Medal.

He was promoted to substantive lieutenant colonel in September 1904 and brevet colonel in October 1905 and was made a MVO in June 1908.

As British military attaché, an appointment he received in May 1907, in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1909 he first warned his Austro-Hungarian counterpart that an Austro-Hungarian General Staff officer was supplying top secret information to the Russians. This information, however, ended up on the desk of Alfred Redl, head of counter-intelligence at the Evidenzbureau in Vienna, who unfortunately was the very spy being sought. He had been made a substantive colonel in September 1908.

Wyndham, relinquishing this assignment in May 1911 and made a CB in June 1913, was a member of The Souls. In November 1913 he became an assistant adjutant general at the War Office in London.

He served in the First World War, being made an inspector of reserve units in March 1915 and retired from the army in November 1919.

Works

Sources

  • Lundy, Darryl. . The Peerage.[unreliable source]