Eric Neville Geijer

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eric_Neville_Geijer an entity of type: Thing

Eric Neville Geijer MC FSA (1894–1941) was a decorated Guards officer, royal herald, and genealogist. He was the second son of the Swedish diplomat Carl Emmanuel von Geijer and his English wife, Lila Lucy, née White (daughter of William Arthur White). On 19 October 1926 he was appointed to the College of Arms as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant. In 1929 he became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. He was a trustee of the Catholic Record Society. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Eric Neville Geijer
rdf:langString Eric Neville Geijer
rdf:langString Eric Neville Geijer
rdf:langString Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
xsd:date 1941-01-14
rdf:langString Germany
xsd:integer 27206068
xsd:integer 1117200596
xsd:integer 1914
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:integer 1894
rdf:langString Erik Neville von Geijer
xsd:date 1941-01-14
rdf:langString Naturalized British, 1914
xsd:integer 1941
xsd:date 1926-10-19
rdf:langString Eric Neville Geijer MC FSA (1894–1941) was a decorated Guards officer, royal herald, and genealogist. He was the second son of the Swedish diplomat Carl Emmanuel von Geijer and his English wife, Lila Lucy, née White (daughter of William Arthur White). Educated at Wellington College and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a cadet in the Wellington College Contingent of the Officer Training Corps. On 26 November 1914 he was naturalized as a subject of the United Kingdom, serving in the British Army during the First World War. Initially a second lieutenant in the Hampshire Regiment, from February 1917 he was attached to the Grenadier Guards, serving with distinction. Geijer was awarded the Military Cross in 1918, for leading a patrol that entered an enemy position under heavy machine-gun fire, and briefly attained the rank of acting captain. On 19 October 1926 he was appointed to the College of Arms as Rouge Dragon Pursuivant. In 1929 he became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. He was a trustee of the Catholic Record Society. Geijer married Ethel Trueman in 1933. He died on 14 January 1941. At the time of his death, his address was Little Bowstridge, Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire. He was described as a captain in the Intelligence Corps when he was buried at Brookwood Cemetery
rdf:langString Carl Emanuel von Geijer
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5700
rdf:langString Erik Neville von Geijer

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