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Charles à Court Repington

Charles à Court Repington
Birth name Charles à Court
Born (1858-01-29)29 January 1858
Heytesbury, Wiltshire, England
Died 25 May 1925(1925-05-25) (aged 67)
Hove, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service 1878–1902
Rank Lieutenant-Colonel
Unit Rifle Brigade
Battles/wars Second Boer War
Other work War correspondent and author

Lieutenant Colonel Charles à Court Repington, CMG, (29 January 1858 – 25 May 1925) known until 1903 as Charles à Court, was a British Army officer and later a war correspondent.

Charles à Court was born at Heytesbury, Wiltshire in 1858, where his father was a Conservative Party Member of Parliament. His family name at birth was à Court; in his memoirs, he later wrote: "The à Courts are Wiltshire folk, and in old days represented Heytesbury in Parliament... The name of Repington, under the terms of an old will, was assumed by all the à Courts in turn as they succeeded to the Amington Hall Estate, and I followed the rule when my father died in 1903." His rich upper-class background may well have contributed to the confidence with which he later criticised senior generals and politicians.

Educated at Eton and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, he began his military career with service in the Rifle Brigade of the British Army in 1878. After serving in Afghanistan, Burma, and Sudan, he entered the Staff College at Camberley, where he was a brilliant student and where his classmates included Herbert Plumer and Horace Smith-Dorrien. On graduation, he served as a military attaché in Brussels and the Hague, following which he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel. He served as a staff officer during the Second Boer War in South Africa 1899-1901, and was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) for his services during the operations. After returning from the war, he resigned the post of military attaché in December 1901, and he retired from the army 15 January 1902. What appeared to be a promising career was cut short during a posting to Egypt in 1902.


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