Neville baronets

, The Neville baronetcy, of Sloley in the English county of Norfolk, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom.

It was created on 2 July 1927 for the barrister and Conservative politician Reginald Neville.

Born Reginald White, he was the son of James Sewell White, a judge of the High Court of Calcutta, who assumed his surname to Neville in 1885.

[2] In 1950, he was succeeded by his elder son James Edmund Henderson Neville, who became the second baronet.

Sir James was the author of The War Letters of a Light Infantryman (1931), and also wrote under the pen name of 'Gaid Sakit'.