Lieutenant-Colonel Archibald Ogilvie Lyttelton Kindersley, CMG, DL (7 April 1869 – 19 June 1955) was a British soldier and diplomat.
Entering the British Army, Kindersley was promoted to captain on 17 September 1892, and served with the Highland Light Infantry in Niger Coast Protectorate from 1893 to 1896, including the Brass River Expedition of 1895.
He was re-commissioned for active service during the Second Boer War,[3] and left Southampton in February 1900 with a battalion of the Scottish Rifles headed for South Africa,[4] where he served as a transport officer.
He was recalled to military service in 1914 for World War I, in Salonika Campaign from 1916 to 1919, where he was three times mentioned in dispatches, and awarded the Ordre de l’Etoile noire.
In 1908 Kindersley married Edith daughter of Thomas Craven, JP, of Kirklington Hall, Notts, sometime High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire.