[13] Eric Butler-Henderson was appointed a Commander of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem (C.St.J.)
[21] He relinquished his Territorial Army Reserve commission on 30 September 1921, retaining his rank of captain but not the right to wear the uniform.
[22] In May 1918, Butler-Henderson was elected a Director of the Great Central Railway (GCR), where his father, Lord Faringdon, was chairman of the board.
[23] Like other GCR Directors of the period, he was accorded the honour of having one of the railway's latest express passenger locomotives named after him: no.
[24] It is part of the National Collection, and as of 25 November 2009[update] is on loan to Barrow Hill Engine Shed,[27] where it is on static display.
He was a director of Catalinas Warehouses and Mole Co. Ltd., resigning upon the appointment of liquidators on 27 October 1953.