Samuel Raymond Jarvis
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Samuel Raymond Jarvis (1790 – 1851) was an army officer who served as High Sheriff of Hampshire. Early lifeJarvis was born in 1790,[1] the son of another Samuel Jarvis, and lived at the family home of Fair Oak Park in Hampshire.[2] Military careerOn 12 April 1806 he enrolled in the Army, joining the Royal Irish Regiment, known at the time as the 18th Regiment of Foot, as an ensign.[1][2] The following year, he was promoted to lieutenant[2] and transferred to the King's Own Scottish Borderers, known as the 25th Regiment of Foot.[1] He was involved in the Invasion of Martinique (1809) and the Invasion of Guadeloupe (1810).[1] In 1816 he was placed on half-pay and in April of the following year he became a captain in a Cavalry Reserve Regiment, the 2nd Life Guards. He transferred to the 7th Light Dragoons in March 1823.[1] Jarvis was promoted again, to the rank of Major in the 3rd West India Regiment on 10 January 1837.[3] Jarvis was appointed High Sheriff of Hampshire in 1834 and received his knighthood on 17 September of that year, at St James's Palace.[1][2][4] His final promotion in the Army came on 11 November 1851, when he received the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel.[1][2] He left the Army on 6 March 1863, having been made captain of the 3rd West India Regiment on that day. Personal lifeJarvis died on 5 December 1868 at his home, Cove Cottage, in Ventnor on the Isle of Wight.[1][2] References
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