Vere Bonamy Fane


Sir Vere Bonamy Fane was an officer in the British Army and British Indian Army. He served in the Boxer Rebellion and First World War.

Career

Vere Fane was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Manchester Regiment on 12 November 1884 and in March 1888 transferred to the Bengal Staff Corps of the British Indian Army. Promoted to captain on 12 November 1895, he was on 1 April 1900 appointed deputy assistant adjutant-general in Derajat, attached to the Punjab Command. Only months later, he was in August 1900 appointed to serve on the staff of the Indian Cavalry Brigade that formed part of the China Field Force during the Boxer Rebellion. and from October that year acted as Provost marshal to the British Forces in China. Mentioned in Despatches during the campaign by Lieutenant-General Sir Alfred Gaselee, Fane had returned home by October 1902. He was promoted to major and became a brevet lieutenant colonel in 1903. He was further brevetted to Colonel in 1909 when he was appointed Commandant of the 21st Punjabis. Substantive promotions to Lieutenant Colonel and Colonel followed and on the outbreak of the First World War he was appointed as temporary Brigadier General commanding the Jhelum Brigade. Fane was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath in January 1914.
In 1915 Fane was commanding officer of the Bannu Brigade on the North West Frontier and in recognition for his actions during the attack on Miranshah in March he was made a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire. Fane was promoted to Major General on 3 September 1916, and served in the campaigns in Palestine and Mesopotamia. His service in these campaigns earned him promotion to Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire, and two awards from foreign governments; the Croix de Guerre and the Order of the Nile. He was also Mentioned in Despatches twice more, on 15 August 1917, and on 27 August 1918.
On 5 July 1918 Fane became Colonel of the 21st Punjabis, and in 1920 also Colonel of the Manchester Regiment. He continued to serve with the Indian Army, being a district commander in Burma. Two further honours followed, promotion to Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in January 1921 and appointment as Knight of Grace of Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem. At his own request he relinquished his appointment with the army in Burma in April 1924 but died shortly after and was buried in Fulbeck, Lincolnshire.