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Brodrick C. D. A. Hartwell


Sir Brodrick C. D. A. Hartwell, 4th Baronet (1876-1948), was a British Army officer who served during the Second Boer War and World War I. In the 1920s he operated a much publicised off-shore business exporting alcoholic spirits to the United States during prohibition.

Brodrick Cecil Denham Arkwright Hartwell, born near Taunton, Somerset, was the only son of Augusta Henrietta Paget and Royal Naval officer, Edward Hughes Brodrick Hartwell, who in 1878 became the inspector-general of police in Jamaica and was later the British Consul in Naples, Italy. Hartwell’s mother died in Jamaica in 1883 and his father died in 1895 having remarried in 1885 to Ella (Isabella) Miller. Hartwell became the 4th Baronet in September 1900 when his uncle, Sir Francis Houlton Hartwell, 3rd Bt., died.

At the outbreak of the Boer War, Hartwell was involved with tea planting in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). He became a non-commissioned officer with the rank of lance corporal in the Ceylon Mounted Infantry and his contingent was sent to South Africa where they joined Lord Roberts during his advance on Bloemfontein. Records indicate that Hartwell was awarded the Queen's South Africa Medal with clasp for campaign at Driefontein (10 March 1900) and the Cape Colony clasp. In August 1900 The London Gazette published the transfer of Lance - Corporal Brodrick Cecil Denham Arkwright Hartwell, from Ceylon Mounted Infantry, to The Leicestershire Regiment, Supernumerary to the establishment. He was promoted to lieutenant on 26 April 1902, shortly before the end of the war in South Africa. In 1906 Lieutenant Hartwell resigned his commission with The Leicestershire Regiment.


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