from the Aldershot Command, 1898. Stood in the back row, second from the left, is Lieutenant Colonel Plumer. Plumer was
commissioned as a
lieutenant into the
65th Regiment of Foot on 11 September 1876. He joined his regiment in
India and became
adjutant of his battalion on 29 April 1879. Promoted to
captain on 29 May 1882, he accompanied his battalion to the
Sudan in 1884 as part of the
Nile Expedition. Plumer was present at the
Battle of El Teb in February 1884 and the
Battle of Tamai in March, and was
mentioned in dispatches. He spent from 1886 to 1887 attending the
Staff College, Camberley, gaining his
psc, before being appointed deputy assistant adjutant general in
Jersey on 7 May 1890. He was promoted to
major on 22 January 1893 and posted to the 2nd Battalion the
York and Lancaster Regiment before being appointed assistant military secretary to the
General Officer Commanding Cape Colony in December 1895. He went to
Southern Rhodesia in 1896 to disarm the local police force following the
Jameson Raid and then later that year returned there to command the Matabele Relief Force during the
Second Matabele War. He became deputy assistant adjutant-general at
Aldershot with promotion to
brevet lieutenant colonel on 8 May 1897. In 1899 Plumer returned to Southern Rhodesia where he raised a force of
mounted infantry and, having been promoted to the substantive rank of lieutenant colonel on 17 October 1900, he led them at the
Relief of Mafeking during the
Second Boer War. He was promoted to
colonel on 29 November 1900 and was then given command of a mixed force which captured General
Christiaan de Wet's wagon train at Hamelfontein in February 1901. Plumer arrived back in the United Kingdom in April 1902, and two months later was received in audience by King
Edward VII on his return. In a
despatch dated 23 June 1902, Major General
Lord Kitchener, Commander-in-Chief in South Africa during the latter part of the war, wrote how Plumer had "invariable displayed military qualifications of a very high order. Few officers have rendered better service." He was promoted to
major general for distinguished service in the field on 22 August 1902, and was appointed Commander of the
4th Brigade within
1st Army Corps on 1 October 1902. The following year he became General Officer Commanding
10th Division within IV Army Corps and General Officer Commanding
Eastern District in December 1903. He became
Quartermaster-General to the Forces in February 1904, General Officer Commanding
7th Division in April 1906 and General Officer Commanding
5th Division within Irish Command in May 1907. he went on to be General Officer Commanding-in-Chief for
Northern Command in November 1911. In addition to his military duties, he served as the
Commissioner for
London Boy Scouts from 1910 to 1912. ==First World War==