Charles Harvey-Kelly

Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Hamilton Grant Hume Harvey-Kelly DSO (1885–1982) was Military Attaché to Kabul (1924–26). He was brother to H.D. Harvey-Kelly, the first RFC pilot to land in France in the First World War.

Harvey-Kelly was educated at Bedford Modern School and Sandhurst. He was commissioned in 1905 and appointed to the Indian Army in 1906 where he served in East Africa (Somaliland) between 1908 and 1910. Harvey-Kelly served with the Indian Contingent at the Coronation of King George VI in 1911.

During World War I he fought on the North West frontier (having been ill when his unit was shipped to the Western Front). He was mentioned in despatches three times, was made a Brevet Major and was awarded the DSO in June 1919. In 1926 Harvey-Kelly was awarded the MacGregor Memorial Medal for military reconnaissances and journeys of exploration. His papers concerning the expedition to Afghan Turkestan are held in the national archive.

Military career
1905:	Commissioned a 2nd lieutenant on 18 January 1905 1906:  Posted to the 127th Baluch Light Infantry and becomes a Double Company Officer, part of the Indian Army 1907:	Promoted to Lieutenant on 19 April 1907 1911:	Company officer & adjutant 1914:	Promoted to Captain on 18 January 1914 1917:	becomes a Brevet Major on 3 June 1917 1919:	Awarded the DSO 1920:	Promoted to Major on 18 January 1920 1928:	retires the Indian Army, and promoted Lieutenant Colonel on retirement

Later life
Harvey-Kelly later retired to his native Ireland, eventually settling in Clonhugh, Co. Westmeath where he died in 1982.