Auction Catalogue

15 December 2000

Starting at 12:00 PM

.

Orders, Decorations and Medals

The Regus Conference Centre  12 St James Square  London  SW1Y 4RB

Lot

№ 1130

.

15 December 2000

Hammer Price:
£1,400

Pair: Major-General G. B. Tremenheere, Bengal Engineers, Senior Field Engineer in the Punjab, later Hon. Colonel of the Duke of Cornwall’s Rifle Volunteers

Punjab 1848-49, 2 clasps, Chilianwala, Goojerat (Major, Engrs.); India General Service 1854-95, 1 clasp, North West Frontier (Lt. Coll., Bengal Engrs.) both medals fitted with silver ribbon buckles and contained in an attractive contemporary fitted case by Sermon, Jeweller, Torquay, the first with light contact marks, otherwise good very fine (2) £1200-1500

See Colour Plate VI

George Borlase Tremenheere was born near Penzance on 9 November 1809, 3rd son of Major-General Walter Tremenheere, K.H., Royal Marines. He was an Addiscombe Cadet from February 1824 until December 1825, and attended Chatham during 1826. He was posted to the Sappers and Miners in July 1827 at the age of 17 and began his service in India. During the first Sikh war he joined the army then in the field, under the command of Lord Gough, and after the occupation of Lahore he was appointed Superintending Engineer of the Punjab. When war again broke out in 1848 he joined the force of Lord Gough as Senior Field Engineer, commanding the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th Companies of the Bengal Pioneers. He was actively engaged at the crossing of the Chenab, at Chilianwala, and at Goojerat. Although there was not much scope for engineering in the desperate fighting at Chilianwala, Tremenheere and his officers, with the four Companies of Bengal Pioneers were in the thick of it. Promoted from Major to brevet Lieutenant-Colonel in 1849 for services during the Punjab campaign, Tremenheere next took part in the expedition under Brigadier-General Sir Colin Campbell, in February 1850, to the Kohat Pass on the North West Frontier to punish the troublesome Afridis.

After 24 years’ service in India, Tremenheere retired in 1856 having been promoted to Major-General. For 15 years he commanded the Western Battalion of the Duke of Cornwall’s Rifle Volunteers and became their Honorary Colonel in July 1875. He was a Magistrate for the county of Middlesex from 1863 and undertook the secretaryship of the Indian Mutiny Relief Fund in 1857, becoming president of the fund in 1882. He was a Fellow of the Royal Geological Society, and a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, which conferred on him the Telford Gold Medal for a paper on public works in India. General Tremenheere died at Treneere, Torquay, on 19 December 1896. His portrait appears in the
Black and White Budget for 2 January 1897, page 4.