Seymour Gilbart-Denham
Sir Seymour Vivian Gilbart-Denham, was a British Army officer and courtier.
Born on 10 October 1939, Gilbart-Denham's father Vivian was killed in action in 1940.
After leaving school, he joined the Household Cavalry and served as a trooper in Cyprus in 1958. He then trained at Mons Officer Cadet School and was commissioned into the Life Guards in 1960 as a 2nd Lieutenant. He was posted in Germany and then as Troop Leader in London, before returning to Cyprus to support the UN. He returned to Windsor and was appointed Adjutant in 1965 and promoted to the rank of Captain the following year. He went with the regiment to Southeast Asia; in 1967, he ceased to be Adjutant and was appointed second-in-command in Arthur Gooch's squadron stationed in Hong Kong. In 1968, he returned to Windsor and served in Northern Ireland the following year. In 1971, he was placed in command of the Household Cavalry Training Squadron. He returned to Northern Ireland for a third tour in 1973. According to an obituary, he was promoted to Major in 1971, but The London Gazette's notice dates it to 1974. He then spent periods in the United Kingdom and Germany, before becoming a staff officer in 1981. He subsequently served at Headquarters 33rd Armoured Brigade, Headquarters 4th Armoured Division and with United Kingdom Land Forces.
In 1986, he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel and took command of the Household Cavalry Regiment. The following year, he was appointed Crown Equerry, an office in which he served until retiring in 2002. Having been appointed a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in the 1994 New Year Honours, he was promoted to Knight Commander in July 2002. He continued to be an Extra Equerry in retirement and died on 19 June 2018.