Person    | Male  Born 4/7/1836  Died 1/3/1899

James Stanley Richer

Categories: Tragedy

James Stanley Richer

Major James Stanley Richer was born on 4 July 1836 in Clerkenwell, London the son of James and Sophia Richer. He was baptised on 28 July 1836 at St James's Church, Clerkenwell and the family resided at Lloyd's Row, Clerkenwell. His father was an Office Clerk. He enlisted into the 2nd Battalion Rifle Brigade in 1854, transferring to the 3rd Battalion as Corporal on its formation 4 April 1855.

On Easter Day, 23 March 1856 he married Rosina Gray at The Parish Church of St Peter, Farnborough, Hampshire. His occupation was given as Colour-Sergeant, 3rd Battalion, Rifle Brigade and his address was shown as North Camp, Farnborough. They had nine children, all born in different locations, which would probably correspond to the places where he was posted. Their children were: Abigail Sophia Richer, born 30 June 1857, Dum Dum, West Bengal; James Henry Richer, born 23 August 1860, Naini Tel, Uttarakhand, India; Frederick Arthur Richer, born 29 August 1862, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India; Edwin Robert Richer, born 11 September 1867, Rawalpindi, Punjab; Rosina Sophia Richer, born 12 November 1870, West Bengal; Florence Maud Richer, born April 1873, Portsmouth, Hampshire; Lillian Nellie Richer, born 28 March 1876, Garrison of Chatham, Kent; Ellen Jessie Richer, born 12 June 1878, Woolwich, Kent and May Lucy Richer, born Curragh Camp, The Curragh, County Kildare, Ireland.

He served at the Siege of Lucknow in 1857, in the Oude Campaign in 1858, and at Battle of Shabkadr in 1864. Having become the Regimental Sergeant-Major in 1867, he was commissioned as Quartermaster in 1875 and as Lieutenant on 25 August 1880. He received his Long Service & Good Conduct medal in March 1873. Promoted to Captain on 16 August 1884 he retired on 1 November 1884 with the honorary rank of Major. On 7 April 1869 whilst based in Dinapore, Bengal (now called Danapur, Bihar, India) he was initiated as a Freemason in the True Brothers Lodge No.1210, but resigned from this lodge on 31 December 1870.

On leaving the army Major Richer worked first for the London Tramways Company and then for the Army & Navy Auxiliary Stores. Electoral registers from 1890 to 1895 show that he was living at 30 Crofton Road, Camberwell and the 1891 census confirms this and gives his occupation Superintendent Tramways. Electoral registers from 1897 show that he had moved to 119 Bushey Hill Road, Camberwell.

He was a passenger in a Diamler motor car being driven by Edwin Root Sewell when it crashed in Grove Hill, Harrow on 25 February 1899. He died from his injuries, aged 62 years, at the Cottage Hospital, Harrow on 1 March 1899 and was buried in Harrow on 4 March 1899. Administration of his estate was granted to his widow and effects totalled £481-15s-0d.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
James Stanley Richer

Commemorated ati

First driver killed in road accident

Take Heed The first recorded motor accident in Great Britain involving the de...

Read More

Other Subjects

Sylvia Dalais

Sylvia Dalais

Non-British, killed by the Bali bomb.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial
Robert Alan ‘Mac’ McCormick II

Robert Alan ‘Mac’ McCormick II

Non-British, killed by the Bali bomb.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial
Lisa May
1 memorial
Melanie Louise de Vere

Melanie Louise de Vere

United Kingdom citizen who died in the terrorist attacks in America on 11 September 2001. Melanie Louise de Vere was born on 15 March 1971 in Plymouth, Devon. She was the second of the three child...

Person, Tragedy, USA

1 memorial
Sherifat Adebukonla Mayaleke

Sherifat Adebukonla Mayaleke

Little information can be found about this person. The name would appear to be of Nigerian origin. Electoral registers in 1967 list four people with the surname of Mayaleke at 10 Florence Street, ...

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Hy. G. Perkins

Hy. G. Perkins

Resident of the West Ward, Hendon who served and died in WW1.

Person, Armed Forces

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Milos Crnjanski

Milos Crnjanski

Poet, and diplomat. Born in Csongrád, Hungary. His family moved to Romania in 1896, where the Serbian heritage was instilled in him. In 1912 he went to study in Rijeka (in modern day Croatia) and V...

Person, Poetry, Politics & Administration, Austria, Balkans, Hungary, Romania, Serbia

1 memorial
The George Pub, Fleet Street

The George Pub, Fleet Street

Founded in 1723 as a coffee house, became Georges Hotel in 1830 and then a public house as it is today. Current building is late Victorian.

Building, Commerce, Food & Drink

1 memorial
Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society

Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society

Retailer. Originally established as the Royal Arsenal Supply Association, by twenty workers from the Royal Arsenal. It was renamed in 1872, and expanded from just being a food retailer, into a vast...

Group, Commerce, Food & Drink

4 memorials
William Whiteley

William Whiteley

Entrepreneur and founder of Whiteley's department store on Queensway, now Whiteleys shopping centre. A bequest from his will formed Whiteley Village. Born in Yorkshire and, 1848, apprenticed to a ...

Person, Commerce, Tragedy

3 memorials