Reginald Hildyard

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

General

Sir Reginald Hildyard
Mentioned in Despatches (7)
Order of the White Eagle (Serbia)
RelationsHenry Hildyard (father)
Thomas Thoroton-Hildyard (grandfather)

Commander-in-Chief of Bermuda
from 1936 to 1939.

Early life

The third son of General Sir Henry Hildyard, by his marriage to Annette, the daughter of Admiral James Charles Prevost, Hildyard's brothers were Harold Charles Thoroton Hildyard (born 1872) and Gerald Moresby Thoroton Hildyard (1874–1956). He also had one sister, Edith Mary Thoroton Hildyard.[1][2]

Military career

Hildyard was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment in 1896.[3] He was promoted to lieutenant in 1899,[4] captain in 1904,[5] major in 1915, colonel in 1919, major general in 1929, lieutenant general in 1934, and general in 1938.[6]

Hildyard served in South Africa during the

Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in 1936.[6]

Governor of Bermuda

From 1936 to 1939, Hildyard was Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Bermuda. He retired the service in 1939.[6] Hildyard promoted the Bermuda Government's plans to establish birth control clinics on the island in order to "check the growth of the Negro population," because they represented "the biggest problem" of the "Colony's major difficulties" online archive. The 1939 census recorded 3,098 coloured, 124 white, and 64 Portuguese persons of illegitimate birth. Bermuda's population was undergoing rapid and accelerating growth at the time, with fears that it had already passed a sustainable level. In 1699, ninety years after settlement began, the population had been 5,862; by 1811 it had been 10,180; by 1871 it had been 12,101; by 1911 it had been 18,994; by 1931 it had been 27,789, and by 1939 was 30,799. This was partly down to high birth rates, which, as elsewhere in the world, were highest amongst the least affluent and privileged, who in Bermuda were disproportionately coloured (which, in Bermuda, designated anyone not entirely of European ancestry). There was also a long history of white fears over the changing ratio of coloured to white Bermudians, which had resulted in official barriers being placed against the immigration of free coloured people and the discouragement of the importation of enslaved coloured people (which had included Native Americans during the Seventeenth Century). Efforts had also repeatedly been made to compel the emigration of free, and to encourage the export of enslaved, coloured Bermudians. As coloured Bermudians lived cheek-by-jowl with the white, the different sub-groups of the population inevitably blended together. Although whites started with a clear majority, with every child of a coloured and a white parent added to the coloured total instead of the white, the coloured to population consequently grew faster, making up 2,247 of Bermuda's population of 5,862 in 1699, 4,919 of the 10,381 total in 1783, 5,596 of 9,930 in 1843, 12,303 of 18,994 in 1911, 16,436 of 27,789 in 1931, and 19,318 of 30,799. Since the end of slavery in 1834, the local government had encouraged white immigration through a number of methods, though the large Portuguese Bermudian demographic (2,622 in 1939) that was one of the results was treated as a third racial category, separate from whites. There had, however, also been considerable immigration since the end of the Nineteenth Century from British West Indian colonies which had added to the coloured population.

Family life

On 23 November 1911, Hildyard married Muriel Mary Bonsor (1887–1975), the daughter of Sir Cosmo Bonsor, 1st Baronet, by his second marriage to Mabel Grace Brand.[7]

Hildyard died on 29 September 1965 and at the time of his death was living at South Hartfield House,

Coleman's Hatch, Sussex
.

References

  1. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Sir Henry John Thoroton Hildyard". The Peerage.[unreliable source], Retrieved 8 February 2011
  2. The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal: The Mortimer-Percy (2001 reprint), p. 309
  3. ^ "No. 26774". The London Gazette. 4 September 1896. p. 4990.
  4. ^ "No. 27064". The London Gazette. 21 March 1899. p. 1904.
  5. ^ "No. 27645". The London Gazette. 12 February 1904. p. 942.
  6. ^ a b c d e 'HILDYARD, Gen. Sir Reginald John Thoroton', in Who Was Who (London: A. & C. Black, 1920–2008); online ed. by Oxford University Press, December 2007, Retrieved 15 February 2011
  7. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "General Sir Reginald John Thornton Hildyard". The Peerage.[unreliable source], Retrieved 15 February 2011
Military offices
Preceded by General Officer Commanding the 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division
1930–1934
Succeeded by