Brigadier-General Henry Hendley Bond DSO (13 June 1873 – 10 November 1919) was an Irish first-class cricketer and British Army general.
He was commissioned as an officer in the Royal Artillery and served in India, England, Ireland and during the Second Boer War.
Bond later served with the British forces at Salonica and was promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, brevet colonel and temporary brigadier-general.
[12] Bond was seconded to the Colonial Office on 9 July 1904 and did not return to regular army service until 25 August 1907.
[19][20] In the Irish Census of 1911 he is listed as living with his mother and sisters in Castlelyons, County Cork.
He declared the winner of the King's Prize for Field Artillery to be the 7th London Battery, who beat ten other units.
[25] Bond returned to general service (from his staff/instructor position) on 5 August 1914, after the outbreak of the First World War.
[34][35] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in the 1917 New Year Honours and promoted to brevet colonel on 4 June 1917.
[5] He suffered with the disease for eighteen months, before dying at Glasnevin in Dublin on 10 November 1919, at which point he held the temporary rank of brigadier general.