View text source at Wikipedia
Brigadier General Thomas Walter Brand, 3rd Viscount Hampden GCVO KCB CMG KStJ JP (29 January 1869 – 4 September 1958) was a British peer and soldier, the son of the 2nd Viscount Hampden.
He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge.[2][3]
On 29 April 1899, he married Lady Katharine Mary Montagu-Douglas-Scott (a daughter of the 6th Duke of Buccleuch),[3] and they had eight children. He was succeeded first by his eldest son Thomas (two surviving daughters, the eldest inherited the Barony of Dacre in 1970 from her father) and then by his second son in the viscountcy, David.
Brand was commissioned a second lieutenant on 20 November 1889, promoted to a lieutenant on 10 June 1891, and to captain on 16 February 1898. He served as an officer in the Hertfordshire Regiment, then transferred to the 10th Royal Hussars. He saw active service in Southern Africa during the Second Boer War from 1899 to 1902, during which he received a brevet promotion to major on 29 November 1900. From July 1901 he was adjutant of the Sussex Imperial Yeomanry.[4] He received the substantive rank of major on 14 January 1903,[5] and was later the same year appointed 2nd in command of the 2nd Provisional Regiment of Hussars. From 1905 he was private secretary to Earl Cawdor; then a brigadier-major in the British Armed Forces from 1908 to 1910.[3] Later he served as commanding officer of the 1st Battalion from February 1913. Following the outbreak of the First World War, the Hertfordshires were deployed to the Western Front and Brand remained in command until January 1915. Subsequently, he was promoted to brigadier general and appointed to command the 126th (East Lancashire) Brigade at Gallipoli, the 6th Mounted Brigade with the Western Frontier Force and later the 185th (2/1st West Riding) Brigade at the Battle of Cambrai and the battles of 1918.[6][7][8] Between 1935 and 1939, he was Colonel of the 10th Royal Hussars.
In 1899, he played in the first international polo match between England and Australia in Melbourne alongside George Bellew-Bryan, 4th Baron Bellew.[9]
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link)