Sir Robert Porter
Quick Facts
Biography
Major-General Sir Robert Porter KCB CMG (31 January 1858 – 27 February 1928) was a British Army officer and physician.
Porter was born in County Donegal, Ireland, the son of Andrew Porter. He was educated at Foyle College, Derry, and the University of Glasgow, from which he graduated Bachelor of Medicine (MB). He was commissioned a surgeon in the Army Medical Department (later the Royal Army Medical Corps) on 5 February 1881. He was promoted surgeon-major on 5 February 1893. He served in the Fourth Anglo-Ashanti War of 1895–1896 and the Boer War. He was promoted lieutenant-colonel on 4 February 1901 and colonel on 14 January 1910. He was placed on half-pay on 14 January 1914, but was restored to the establishment on 5 August 1914, the day after the outbreak of the First World War.
During the war, he was mentioned in despatches six times. He was promoted to the temporary rank of surgeon-general on 2 November 1914, and from 1915 to 1917 he served as director of medical services of the Second Army. He was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1916 Birthday Honours. Belgium also appointed him Commandeur of the Ordre de la Couronne in 1916 and awarded him the Croix de Guerre in 1918, as he had spent much of his wartime service in Belgium and had been responsible for dealing with the 1914–1915 civilian typhoid epidemic in the Second Army area. He retired on 31 January 1918. The rank of surgeon-general was redesignated major-general later in 1918. He was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 1919 Birthday Honours and Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in the 1921 New Year Honours.
Porter married Mary Phillipa Johnstone in 1903; they had three sons. From August to December 1926, he led a party of schoolboys on a tour of Australia. He died from pneumonia and pleurisy at his home at 27 The Avenue, Beckenham, Kent, at the age of 70.