from
Punch On 1 April 1882, Wolseley was appointed
Adjutant-General to the Forces, and, in August of that year, given command of the British forces in Egypt under
Khedive Tewfik to suppress the
Urabi Revolt. Having seized the
Suez Canal, he then disembarked his troops at
Ismailia and, after a very short campaign, completely defeated
Urabi Pasha at the
Battle of Tel el-Kebir, thereby suppressing yet another rebellion. For his services, he was promoted to the substantive rank of
general on 18 November and raised to the
peerage as
Baron Wolseley, of
Cairo and of
Wolseley in the County of Stafford. the
Order of Osmanieh, First Class, as bestowed by the
Khedive; and the more dubious accolade of a composition in his honour by
poetaster William Topaz McGonagall. On 1 September 1884, Wolseley was again called away from his duties as adjutant-general, to command the
Nile Expedition for the relief of
General Gordon and the besieged garrison at
Khartoum. Wolseley's unusual strategy was to take an expedition by boat up the Nile and then to cross the desert to Khartoum, while the naval boats went on to Khartoum. The expedition arrived too late; Khartoum had been taken, and Gordon was dead. In the spring of 1885, complications with
Imperial Russia over the
Panjdeh Incident occurred, and the withdrawal of that particular expedition followed. For his services there, he received two clasps to his Egyptian medal, the thanks of Parliament, and a
Knight of the Order of St Patrick. and appointed by the
Conservative government to succeed the
Duke of Cambridge as
Commander-in-Chief of the Forces on 1 November 1895. This was the position to which his great experience in the field and his previous signal success at the War Office itself had fully entitled him, but it was increasingly irrelevant. Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley's powers in that office were, however, limited by a new
Order in Council, and after holding the appointment for over five years, he handed over the command-in-chief to his fellow field marshal,
Earl Roberts, on 3 January 1901. He had also suffered from a serious illness in 1897, from which he never fully recovered. The unexpectedly large force required for the initial phase of the
Second Boer War, was mainly furnished by means of the system of reserves Wolseley had originated. By drawing on regular reservists and volunteer reserves, Britain was able to assemble the largest army it had ever deployed abroad. Nevertheless, the new conditions at the War Office were not to his liking. The fiasco now called
Black Week culminated in his dismissal over Christmastide 1900. Upon being released from responsibilities he brought the whole subject before the
House of Lords in a speech. Lord Wolseley was
Gold Stick in Waiting to Queen Victoria and took part in the funeral procession following her death in February 1901. He also served as Gold Stick in Waiting to
King Edward during his
coronation in August 1902.
Honorific, royal appointments and arms In early 1901, Lord Wolseley was appointed by King
Edward VII to lead a special diplomatic mission to announce the King's accession to the governments of
Austria-Hungary,
Romania,
Serbia, the
Ottoman Empire and
Greece. During his visit to
Constantinople, Sultan
Abdul Hamid II presented him with the
Order of Osmanieh set in brilliants. He was among the original recipients of the
Order of Merit in the
1902 Coronation Honours list published on 26 June 1902, and received the order from King Edward VII at
Buckingham Palace on 8 August 1902. For time spent as an honorary colonel in the
Volunteer Force, he was given the
Volunteer Officers' Decoration on 11 August 1903. He was also honorary colonel of the 23rd
Middlesex Regiment from 12 May 1883, honorary colonel of the Queen's Rifle Volunteer Brigade, the
Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) from 24 April 1889, colonel of the
Royal Horse Guards from 29 March 1895 and colonel-in-chief of the
Royal Irish Regiment from 20 July 1898. In retirement, he was a member of the council of the
Union-Castle Steamship Company. ==Channel Tunnel==