William Parke

General Sir William Parke (17 May 1822 – 29 March 1897) was a British Army officer.

Career

Born in London, he was the son of Charles Parke, a land owner, formerly H.B.M Commissioner to the kingdom of Mexico and Deputy Lieutenant of Dorset and Letitia Alcock, the sister of Thomas Alcock (MP). He was commissioned in 1840 into the Duke of Albany's own Highlanders.

Parke served in the Crimean War, commanding the 72nd Highlanders from June 1855, and became Lieutenant Colonel in the same year, taking part in the expedition to Kertch and the siege of Sevastapol. Posted to India at the time of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 he was First Class Brigadier and from March 1858 commanded the second brigade of the Rajaputana Field Force and led the assault on Kotah in 1859. He also took part in the pursuit of Tantya Tope and Rao Sahib in Central India. In 1860 he transferred to the 53rd Foot. Parke held numerous staff positions with the home army and became a Major General in 1868, subsequently reaching Lieutenant General in 1877.

After his retirement Parke served as regimental Colonel with the 2nd battalion Worcester Regiment and subsequently the Seaforth Highlanders in which position he remained until 1897. Parke was decorated with the KCB in 1887, and died on 29 March 1897.

Family

Parke married Anna Maria, daughter of Major General William Nepean the second son of Sir Evan Nepean Bt in 1865 and lived at Thornhill house a Palladian style mansion built by Sir James Thornhill near Stalbridge in North Dorset. They had a son William who was born in 1866 and died unmarried, and a daughter Dorothy Eden Parke who married Somerset Arthur Sherston who was killed in action in 1915. William Parke's elder brother Charles Joseph Parke was High Sheriff of Dorset in 1868. His niece Ellen Henrietta Parke married Philip Thomas Godsal the inventor of the Godsal Gun. Parke was also great uncle to Lieutenant Wilfred Parke the first aviator to recover successfully from an accidental spin.

References