Casimir Cartwright van Straubenzee


Sir Casimir Cartwright van Straubenzee was a Canadian officer in the British Army ; GOC Singapore and Malaya Command. In 1900, he played cricket for Canada.

Military career

Born at Kingston, Ontario, he was the third son of Colonel Bowen van Straubenzee, a native of Spennithorne, Yorkshire, and his wife, Anne Macaulay Cartwright, daughter of The Hon. John Solomon Cartwright, of Kingston, Ontario. He was a nephew of General Sir Charles van Straubenzee, Commander of British Troops in China and Hong Kong and Governor of Malta.
He was educated at Trinity College School, Port Hope, and the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario. He joined the Royal Artillery and served with the 4th Ashanti expedition before returning Canada as Professor with the RMC staff 1898-1903, with the local rank of major from 18 August 1898, and was promoted to the substantive rank of major on 27 February 1902. He was promoted Lt-.Colonel and served during World War One from 1914. He was Inspector-General of the Royal Artillery from 1917 to 1918. Promoted to major-general in 1919, he became General Officer Commanding Singapore and then became General Officer Commanding 46th Division in June 1923. In 1927 he went on to be General Officer Commanding the Malaya Command, a command of British Commonwealth forces formed in the 1920s for the coordination of the defences of Malaya and Singapore, before retiring in February 1929.
He played cricket for the Royal Engineers from 1892 to 1908, and one first-class game in 1899 for the MCC. He also played for Canada in 1900. He was the author of Recollections of Sportsmen and Sport in Days of Yore. In 1909, he married Ethel Purcell VanKoughnet, whose father, Mathew Robert VanKoughnet, was a first cousin of van Straubenzee's mother - sharing a common ancestor in James Macaulay. She was a niece of Philip Michael Matthew Scott VanKoughnet and the sister of Mrs Frederick Edmund Meredith. They lived between London and Bath. He died 28 March 1956, Lansdown, Bath, Somerset.

Legacy

He was the sitter for two of the portraits in the National Gallery, London.
Straubenzee, the fictional maker of Colonel Sebastian Moran's air-gun in Sherlock Holmes' 'The Adventure of the Empty House', is identified as Major-General Casimir Cartwright Van Straubenzee.