James John McLeod Innes
Lieutenant General James John McLeod Innes VC CB (5 February 1830 – 13 December 1907) was a Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Born in British India to Scottish parents, Innes was educated privately, then at Edinburgh University and at Addiscombe Military Seminary, military academy of the East India Company where he was awarded the Pollock Medal. He was commissioned into the Bengal Engineers in 1848 and, after further training, he arrived in India in November 1850. When the Indian Mutiny began in May 1857 he was at Lucknow, where he helped to defend the city throughout its siege.[1] After the evacuation of Lucknow in November 1897, he served in military operations in Oudh State.[1] Innes was a 28 year old lieutenant in the Bengal Engineers, Bengal Army during the Indian Mutiny on 23 February 1858 at Sultanpore, India, where he was awarded Victoria Cross for the following deed:
For his work in the Mutiny, he was also mentioned in dispatches three times and received the brevet rank of major.[1] After the Mutiny campaign Innes continued to serve in India, with the Royal Engineers (Bengal). After holding a number of military and civil engineering posts, he was finally promoted to major-general in 1885.[1] In March 1886 he retired with the honorary rank of lieutenant-general,[3] after which he wrote a number of books, mostly relating to the history of the Indian Mutiny.[1] In June 1907, on the fiftieth anniversary of the Mutiny, Innes became a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB), military division.[4] He died on 13 December 1907 aged 77 at his home in Cambridge.[1] His Victoria Cross is displayed in the Royal Engineers Museum at Chatham, England.[5] Works
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