James Holmes Schoëdde was born in 1786 and was a 'child of the regiment'. His father, Lieutenant Colonel C Lewis Theodore Schoëdde, had entered the 60th in the year 1780, and left it as lieutenant-colonel in 1805.
He served in Gibraltar from 1816 to 1818, in Canada from 1818 to 1824, and then, having returned home, and having been promoted major in January 1825, he went with the 1st battalion 60th Regiment to revisit some of the scenes of his former services in Portugal, with the force known as ‘Canning’s expedition’. They remained in Portugal 1826 and 1827. Schoëdde returned home in the latter year, and served with the 60th until March 1829, when he was promoted to an unattached lieutenant-colonelcy. In June 1830 he became lieutenant-colonel of the 48th regiment and in March 1833 went to command the 55th regiment, in which he continued in command for twelve years. The greater part of his time in the 48th and 55th was actively employed, for from 30 October to 6 November 1841, he was in the East Indies, and from 7 November 1841 to February 1844 in China. In 1841-42 there was war in China, and Schoëdde commanded the left column at the affair of Chapoo; and as major-general in 1842 under Lieutenant GeneralSir Hugh Gough he commanded the 2nd brigade at the escalade and storming of Tching-Kiang-Foo. Gough thanked him in his dispatch from Chapoo dated 20 May 1841. And again, in his dispatch from Tching-Kiang-Foo dated 25 July 1842, he used the following words: ‘I cannot too strongly express my approval of the spirited and judicious way in which Major-General Schoëdde fulfilled my orders’. His name was included in the vote of thanks from both Houses of Parliament for the ‘energy, ability, and gallantry with which the various services had been performed’; and having been made ADC to the Queen on 25 November 1841, and colonel in the army, he was, on the 23 December 1842, made major-general in India, Knight Commander of the Bath, and received the medal for the China campaign. In November 1845, Schoëdde exchanged to half-pay, having been forty-five years on active service and being sixty years of age. He became a major-general on 20 June 1854. He went on to be colonel of the 2nd Regiment of Foot on 9 November 1856 and colonel of the 55th Regiment of Foot on 28 May 1857. On 14 November 1861 he died at 'Elcombe', his home at Lyndhurst in the New Forest, and was buried in Saint Michael and All Angels churchyard; in the church his old friend and adjutant, General Sir Henry Charles Barnston Daubeny, placed a very large and handsome brass plate to the memory of ‘Lieut.-General Sir James Holmes Schoëdde, KCB, aged seventy-five years’.