The Right Honourable Major-Gen. Sir Henry Ponsonby GCB |
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The Privy Purse Ponsonby as caricatured by Théobald Chartran in Vanity Fair, March 1883 |
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Private Secretary to the Sovereign | |
In office 1870–1895 |
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Monarch | Queen Victoria |
Preceded by | Gen. The Hon. Sir Charles Grey |
Succeeded by | Lt. Col. The Rt. Hon. Sir Arthur Bigge |
Personal details | |
Nationality | British |
Sir Henry Frederick Ponsonby GCB (10 December 1825 – 21 November 1895) was a British soldier and royal court official who served as Queen Victoria's Private Secretary.
He was the son of the British Army general, Sir Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby.
Ponsonby rose to the rank of Colonel in the Grenadier Guards and fought in the Crimean War. On 30 April 1861, he married Hon. Mary Elizabeth Bulteel, a daughter of John Crocker Bulteel MP and they had five children:
Ponsonby embellished letters to his children at Eton with a series of illustrations in which he concealed the school's address. It was a family quirk continued by his son, Arthur Ponsonby, and recently revived by descendant Harriet Russell. His letters bore addresses appearing as doodled signposts in snowstorms or as huge envelopes shouldered by tiny people.[1]
He served as Keeper of the Privy Purse and Private Secretary to Queen Victoria.
His son Arthur wrote a biography of him which won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1942: Henry Ponsonby, Queen Victoria's Private Secretary: His Life and Letters.
In Mrs. Brown, he was portrayed by Geoffrey Palmer whose close friend and frequent co-star, Dame Judi Dench played Queen Victoria.
Court offices | ||
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Preceded by Sir Thomas Myddleton-Biddulph |
Keeper of the Privy Purse 1878–1895 |
Succeeded by Sir Fleetwood Edwards |
Preceded by Sir Charles Grey |
Private Secretary to the Sovereign 1870–1895 |
Succeeded by Sir Arthur Bigge |