Sir Ian Hamilton, oil painting by John Singer Sargent; in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery... |
b. Jan. 16, 1853, Corfu, Ionian Islands
[Greece] d. Oct. 12, 1947, London, Eng. |
Hamilton served in various campaigns in India and Africa,
beginning in the 1870s, and was Lord Kitchener's chief of staff during the
South African War (1899-1902). He was knighted in 1902. In 1910 he became
British commander in chief in the Mediterranean.
On March 12, 1915, Hamilton was placed in charge of the
expeditionary force intended to seize control of the Dardanelles Strait
and to capture Constantinople. During the next six months, he conducted
operations against the Turks at Gallipoli but suffered heavy casualties
and made little headway. He remained unrealistically optimistic, and, when
the British cabinet had begun to favour the evacuation of his force, he
inopportunely reiterated his belief in the ultimate success of the
campaign. He was recalled on Oct. 16, 1915, and was given no further
command. He wrote Gallipoli Diary, 2 vol. (1920).