Percy Sanderson
(1842-1919)
5 March 1862
Volume 6, page 76, sitting number 7172.
Born on 7 July 1842, Percy Sanderson was the son of Richard Sanderson and the Honourable Charlotte Matilda née Manners-Sutton.
According to his obituary in The Times (15 July 1919): 'Sir Percy Sanderson, K.C.M.G., of Caversham, Reading, whose death has just occurred, at the age of 77, was born in London, and was the son of the late Richard Sanderson and Charlotte Matilda, daughter of the first Viscount Canterbury. Educated at Eton and Addiscombe, he took a commission in the Royal Madras Artillery in 1859, and five years later was appointed to the Royal Horse Artillery. In 1865 he acted as A.D.C. to Sir William Denison, who was then Governor of Madras, and a year later was made a third-class Commissary of Ordnance. In 1868 he became acting A.D.C. to Lord Napier, and in the same year he was appointed first-class Commissary of Ordnance at Fort St. George.
'Sir Percy retired on half-pay in 1870, and since then has been Consul at Galatz (1876), Consul-General for Rumania, and Commissioner for the Navigation of the Danube (1882), Acting Chargé d'Affaires at Bukarest from 1881 to 1886, and Consul-General in New York from 1894-1907. He was made a C.M.G. in 1886 and a K.C.M.G. in 1899. Sir Percy was the younger brother of Lord Sanderson, late Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office.'
He never married. He appears on the 1911 census, a 'retired consul-general (pensioner)' living at Grove Hill, Caversham (near Reading) with his sister Lucy Fanny Mary Sanderson. He died there on 11 July 1919, leaving an estate valued at £10,624.