A.O.L. Kindersley

Archibald Ogilvie Lyttelton Kindersley (7 April 1869 - June 19, 1955) was a British soldier and diplomat.

Biography
Kindersley was the eldest son of Captain H. W. S. Kindersley, of the 29th and 99th Regiments, of Tranmere, Lymington. He was educated at the Edinburgh Academy.

Entering the British Army, he served with the Highland Light Infantry in Niger Coast Protectorate from 1893-1896, including the Brass River Expedition of 1895. He served during the Second Boer War as a transport officer, after which he worked as a colonial administrator in South Africa. He was Honorary attaché to the British Embassy in Tokyo from 1911-1913. He was recalled to military service in 1914 for the First World War, at Salonika Campaign from 1916–19 (thrice mentioned in dispatches, awarded the Ordre de l’Etoile Noire). He commanded the 1st Garr. Batt. of the Seaforth Highlanders and the 11th (Service) Batt. Cameronians. He was appointed CMG in 1919.

In 1908 he married Edith daughter of Thomas Craven, JP, of Kirklington Hall, Notts, sometime High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire. They had two sons and a daughter; Claude Richard Henry Kindersley (1911-1993), and Alistair Thomas James Kindersley (died 1941 on active service aged 26). His first wife died in 1936. In 1937 he remarried to the Hon. Emily Seely, eldest daughter of J. E. B. Seely, 1st Baron Mottistone.

He was a Deputy Lieutenant of Hampshire and County President of the Isle of Wight Boy Scouts Association. He resided at Hamstead Grange, near Yarmouth, Isle of Wight.