In the First World War, which saw his brother
killed in action, Lagden served as an officer in the
Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own). He reached the substantive rank of
Captain and the temporary rank of
Major by the war's end, and was also awarded the
Military Cross. After the war, Lagden moved to
Bengal, India, setting himself up as a businessman in Calcutta. He remained involved in cricket, and in December 1926 played one final first-class match, captaining the "
Europeans of the East" against
a touring English team. Over twelve years had passed since his previous match at that level. Lagden served as one of the first presidents of the association, and was also president of the
Calcutta Cricket and Football Club (CC&FC), first elected in 1933. In 1926, Lagden sent an invitation to
Lord Harris for
M.C.C. to send a cricket team to India. This played a part in the
first tour of India by the M.C.C. that winter. In May 1937, Lagden was made an
Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE), at which time he was a partner at McLeod & Co., a Calcutta tea firm. He had also served as chairman of the Indian Tea Association. In October 1944, while returning to Calcutta from England, the RAF plane in which Lagden was travelling overshot the runway at
Karachi Airport, killing several of those on board in the subsequent explosion. He was survived by a widow and six children, After his death, the CC&FC erected a stone archway in his memory, which is known as the Lagden Gate. ==References==