John Keatinge
was born in Ireland around 1827. He appears on
the 1861 census stationed with the 1st Battalion, 8th Regiment of Foot at Gosport Barracks, Alverstoke, Hampshire. He is noted as quarter master and the 33 year old head of a small family: Eliza Keatinge (wife) aged 25,
born in Sunderland, and two sons: George Keatinge aged four, born in Jullundur, East Indies (India) and A S J Keatinge aged
one, born in Fort William (Calcutta).
By the time
the 1861 census was taken, John Keatinge had been with the regiment for 15 years and spent most of that time in India. He had
enlisted as a private in the 8th Regiment of Foot (King’s Liverpool) on 7th April 1846 and shortly afterwards, 228 Private
John Keatinge sailed with his regiment for Bombay.
He was in India when the sepoys mutinied in 1857 and served with the
regiment as a colour-sergeant during the Indian Mutiny campaign of 1857-59. (It
was whilst the regiment was stationed at Jullunder in 1857 that his son George was born).
He was present at the siege, assault, and capture of Delhi and took part in the battle
of Agra and other actions of Colonel Greathed’s column. He was present at the relief of Lucknow, at the actions
near Cawnpore on 2nd and 6th December 1857; at the action of Khuda Gunj on 2nd January 1858. He took part in the operations at Oudh between 18th
October 1858 and 2nd February 1859 (and was appointed quartermaster-sergeant on 19th November 1858). He received the commission
of quartermaster on 23rd September 1859.
John Keatinge
was awarded the India Mutiny Medal with two clasps: Delhi
and Relief of Lucknow. (Note, the illustration above is taken from the website
of North East Medals and is not John Keatinge’s medal).
In 1863 a memorial
commemorating the services and deaths of the 243 officers, NCOs and men of the 8th Regiment of Foot during the Indian Mutiny
was erected at 1863. In 1877 it moved to Chelsea
and then, finally in 1911, to its present location in Whitley Gardens,
Liverpool.
John Keatinge
died of heart disease in 1883 and was buried at Hazaribagh in India. His medal is owned by Mark Sangma Nixon.