Reid was born in London on 19 March 1818.[2][3][4] His father George Reid (c.1778 – 25 January 1827) owned the Bunker's Hill and Friendship sugar plantations in Jamaica and rented Watlington Hall, Norfolk (destroyed by fire in 1940 and rebuilt).[5] His mother Louisa (1786–1879) was the daughter of Sir Charles Oakeley (1751–1826), a former governor of Madras.[6][7][8] He had five sisters including Louisa Elizabeth (the eldest daughter), Helena Catherine (born 1814 or 1815), Amelia Maria (1821–1896, the sixth child) and Georgina Ann, and three brothers.[6][8] Reid was educated at Repton School, and joined the East India Company as a cadet in 1835, aged 16.[9]
In Mussoorie, Bengal, India, on 24 September 1846 Reid married Lavinia Lucy Fisher (Deyrah Dhoon, India 1829 – London 24 August 1888),[10][11][12][13] daughter of Captain John Fisher (d.1890).[4] They had two children, Lavinia Adelaide (Loodiana, India 15 November 1848 – Portsmouth 1930),[14][15] who married Lieut. Arthur Warry, RA,[16] and Charles Oakeley Reid (India 1852 – India 9 June 1854).[17] Reid's London address was 97 Earl's Court Road, Chelsea.[11][18]
General Sir Charles Reid died at Southsea,[19][nb 1] on 23 August 1901, aged 83.[1] His will included a legacy of £100 to his sister Amelia Maria, although she had predeceased him by five years.[6] He was buried in Kensington and Chelsea Cemetery.[21]
^Jamaica Who's Who gives place of death as "Southsea, Wales",[7] and Southsea, Wrexham, Wales, exists. The Times of London states "Southsea", unqualified,[19] implying the better-known Southsea near Portsmouth, England, but so does the Cardiff Times,[20] which might suggest the place in Wales. A death was recorded of a Charles Reid aged 83 in Jul–Sept 1901 at Portsmouth,[1] which appears to confirm Southsea, England.
^According to the source, the end loading system was not about loading guns with ammunition; it was about loading and unloading the full battery of guns, limbers and horses on and off trains in a speedy and efficient manner
References
^ abc"Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 17 June 2021. Includes link to scan of printed register
^"Obituary: General Sir Charles Reid". Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 26 August 1901. p. 5 col.e. Retrieved 18 June 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^ ab"Death of General Sir Charles Reid". Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette. 26 August 1901. p. 2 col.f. Retrieved 18 June 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive. He married in 1840 Lavinia daughter of Captain John Fisher.
^"Obituaries". Illustrated London News. 8 September 1888. p. 298/26 col.b. Retrieved 18 June 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive. Deaths ... Lady Reid (Lavinia Lucy), wife of General Sir Charles Reid ... on August 24 (1888) aged fifty-nine.
^"Marriages". The Munster express, or, weekly commercial & agricultural gazette. 20 May 1871. p. 4 col.a. Retrieved 18 June 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^Tuker, Francis (1957). Gorkha: The Story of the Gurkhas of Nepal. London: Constable and Co. p. 92.
^Sterndale, Robert Armitage (1884). Natural history of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon. Calcutta: Thacker, Spink and Co. p. 593.
^Anonymous (1862). "Forty-third report of the Council of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society". Reports of the Council of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. 43: 9.
^"The larger carnivora of India". Madras Weekly Mail. British Newspaper Archive. 31 July 1886. p. 9 col 4, 10 col a. Retrieved 22 June 2021.
"Campaign Medals of the 2nd Goorkhas". Sirmoor Rifles Association. Retrieved 17 June 2021. (contains an account of Reid's military exploits with the Goorkhas)