[Index]
George ANSON (1797 - 1857)
Major General, Commander in Chief India
Children Self + Spouses Parents Grandparents Greatgrandparents
Isabella Maria Katherine ANSON (1832 - 1922)
Emily Cecil ANSON (1834 - 1846)
Alice Louisa ANSON (1837 - 1879)
Geraldine Georgina Mary ANSON (1843 - 1927)
George ANSON (1797 - 1857)

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Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER (1805 - 1858)
Thomas ANSON (1767 - 1818) George ANSON ADAMS (1731 - 1789) Sambrooke ADAMS
Janette ANSON
Mary VERNON George VENABLES-VERNON (1710 - 1780)
Mary HOWARD
Anne Margaret COKE











George ANSON Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER

George ANSON George ANSON
George ANSON Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER George ANSON George ANSON
Pic P1. General Sir George Anson 1769-1849
1815

National Trust, Shugborough Hall, Milford, near Stafford, Staffordshire, England

Painting by Thomas Barber Photo credit: National Trust

Pic S1. Hon. Isabella Elizabeth Annabella Anson (née Forester)

by Richard James Lane, published by John Mitchell, after Alfred, Count D'Orsay
lithograph with some hand-colouring, (January 1840)

Pic 1. General Sir George Anson 1769-1849
1815

National Trust, Shugborough Hall, Milford, near Stafford, Staffordshire, England

Painting by Thomas Barber Photo credit: National Trust

b. 13 Oct 1797 at Staffordshire, England
m. 30 Nov 1830 Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER (1805 - 1858) at Willey, Shropshire, England
d. 27 May 1857 at Karnal, India aged 59
Cause of Death:
cholera
Near Relatives of George ANSON (1797 - 1857)
Relationship Person Born Birth Place Died Death Place Age
Grandfather George ANSON ADAMS bef 25 Jul 1731 27 Oct 1789 58
Grandmother Mary VERNON

Father in Law Cecil WELD-FORESTER 1767 1828 61
Mother in Law Katherine Mary MANNERS 1779 1829 50

Father Thomas ANSON 14 Feb 1767 31 Jul 1818 51
Mother Anne Margaret COKE

Self George ANSON 13 Oct 1797 Staffordshire, England 27 May 1857 Karnal, India 59

Wife Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER 03 Apr 1805 29 Dec 1858 Northamptonshire, England 53

Daughter Isabella Maria Katherine ANSON 07 Jul 1832 Middlesex, England 29 Mar 1922 London, Middlesex, England 89
Daughter Emily Cecil ANSON abt 1834 Middlesex, England abt 26 Sep 1846 Broadstairs, Kent, England 12
Daughter Alice Louisa ANSON 26 Aug 1837 Middlesex, England 14 Jan 1879 41
Daughter Geraldine Georgina Mary ANSON abt Mar 1843 Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, England 25 Jan 1927 London, Middlesex, England 83

Brother Charles Littleton ANSON abt 1812
Sister Frances Elizabeth ANSON 25 Dec 1899

Son in Law Richard William Penn CURZON-HOWE 14 Feb 1822 25 Sep 1900 78
Son in Law George Wentworth FITZWILLIAM
Son in Law Frederick HERVEY 1905

Grandson Richard George Penn Curzon HOWE 28 Apr 1861 10 Jan 1929 67
Granddaughter Evelyn Alice CURZON-HOWE 10 Apr 1862 04 Oct 1913 51
Granddaughter Edith Cecilia CURZON-HOWE 1864 20 Mar 1936 72
Granddaughter Frederck Graham CURZON-HOWE 05 Mar 1868 04 Nov 1920 52

Aunt Mary ADAMS 20 Jan 1837
Uncle George ADAMS 1769 04 Nov 1849 80
Uncle William ADAMS 13 Aug 1772 14 Jan 1847 74
Uncle Edward ADAMS 1775 1837 62
Uncle Sambrooke ADAMS 18 Feb 1778 10 Oct 1846 68
Uncle Frederick ADAMS 23 Mar 1779 08 May 1867 88

Nephew Charles Archibald MURRAY 10 Oct 1836 23 Aug 1924 87

Brother in Law John George WELD-FORESTER 09 Aug 1801 10 Oct 1874 73
Brother in Law Charles John MURRAY
Brother in Law Ambrose ISTED
Events in George ANSON (1797 - 1857)'s life
Date Age Event Place Notes Src
13 Oct 1797 George ANSON was born Staffordshire, England 15
31 Jul 1818 20 Death of father Thomas ANSON (aged 51) 15
30 Nov 1830 33 Married Isabella Elizabeth Annabella FORESTER (aged 25) Willey, Shropshire, England 15
07 Jul 1832 34 Birth of daughter Isabella Maria Katherine ANSON Middlesex, England
abt 1834 37 Birth of daughter Emily Cecil ANSON Middlesex, England
26 Aug 1837 39 Birth of daughter Alice Louisa ANSON Middlesex, England
1841 44 Census Cavendish Sq, St Marylebone, Middlesex, England
abt Mar 1843 45 Birth of daughter Geraldine Georgina Mary ANSON Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, England FreeBMD Mar 1843 15 208 15
abt 26 Sep 1846 48 Death of daughter Emily Cecil ANSON (aged 12) Broadstairs, Kent, England Note 1
27 May 1857 59 George ANSON died Karnal, India 15
Note 1: FreeBMD Sep 1846 I Of Thanet 5 429
Personal Notes:
Maj.-Gen. Hon. George Anson was born on 13 October 1797. He was the son of Thomas Anson, 1st Viscount Anson and Anne Margaret Coke.2 He married Hon. Isabella Elizabeth Annabella Forester, daughter of Cecil Weld-Forester, 1st Baron Forester of Willey Park and Lady Katherine Mary Manners, on 30 November 1830. He died on 27 May 1857 at age 59 at Karnál, India, from cholera.
Maj.-Gen. Hon. George Anson gained the rank of officer in the service of the 3rd (Scots Fusilier) Guards. He fought in the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for South Staffordshire in 1818. He gained the rank of Major-General in 1853. He was Commander-in-Chief of the forces in India in 1856. He has an extensive biographical entry in the Dictionary of National Dictionary.

Anson, George 1797-1857, general, born 13 Oct. 1797, was second son of the first Viscount Anson, and brother of the first Earl of Lichfield. He entered the army at an early age, in the 3rd (or Scots Fusilier) Guards, with which regiment he served at Waterloo. In 1818, while still an officer in the guards, he was elected M.P. for South Staffordshire, and sat for many years, holding in succession the political offices of principal storekeeper of the ordnance and clerk of the ordnance. In 1853, having meanwhile attained the rank of major-general in the army, he was appointed to command a division in Bengal, and in the following year succeeded to the command of the Madras army, from which post he was advanced to that of commander-in-chief in India early in 1856. General Anson was holding this important command when the mutiny of the Bengal army took place. Hastening down from Simla, whither he had gone only a few weeks previously to recruit his health, he collected a force at Amballa, and marched with it against Delhi, but being attacked by cholera at Karnál died at that place on 27 May 1857. General Anson was a man of unquestionable talent, and although he had never seen war except at Waterloo, where he served as a mere youth, those who knew him best had very high expectations that he would distinguish himself in his profession if an opportunity offered. It has been alleged that he showed vacillation and want of promptitude when preparing for the march upon Delhi; but the allegation has been amply refuted by a distinguished officer (Sir Henry Norman) who held an important position on the staff of the army at the time, and had the best means of forming a judgment. Sir Henry says that, suddenly placed in a more difficult position than has probably ever fallen to the lot of a British commander, General Anson met the crisis with fortitude and with a calm endeavour to restore our rule where it had disappeared, and to maintain it where it still existed. General Anson married in 1830 Isabella, daughter of the first Lord Forester, who survived him less than two years.

http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/member/anson-hon-george-1797-1857
Anson came in for Great Yarmouth at the general election of 1832, but was defeated in 1835 and did not stand there again. Lord Melbourne as prime minister appointed him principal storekeeper of the ordnance in April 1835 and, following his defeat at the Staffordshire South by-election the following month, he was brought in for Stoke in January 1836. He transferred to Staffordshire South at the 1837 general election. He became an army colonel in June 1838 and a major-general in November 1851, when he was clerk to the ordnance in the Russell administration. Better known for his social skills and as a steward of the Jockey Club and chairman of the London and North Western Railway Company, he retired from Parliament in August 1853 to become commander-in-chief at Madras. Despite criticism of his inexperience, he was transferred to the higher command of Bengal during the mutiny in 1856, for which, following his death of cholera at Kurnaul in May 1857, he became a convenient scapegoat. Probate of his will, dated 10 Sept. 1853, was granted to his wife as the sole legatee. It remained unadministered when she died accidentally of laudanum poisoning, 29 Dec. 1858. On 31 May 1860 probate was granted to the eldest of their three daughters, Isabella Katherine, the wife of Richard William Penn Curzon.
Source References:
15. Type: Web Page, Abbr: The Peerage, Title: The Peerage, Locn: http://www.thepeerage.com/
- Reference = p1327 (Marriage)
- Reference = p1327 (Birth)
- Reference = p1327 (Death)
- Reference = p1327 (Name, Notes)

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