Sir Charles Roderick Hunter, 3rd Baronet (6 July 1858 – 24 June 1924) was a British army officer and Conservative Party politician.
[5][6] In 1884 he was appointed aide de camp to Lord Alexander Russell, commander in chief of troops in Canada, and seconded to the general staff.
He left Southampton on board the SS Scot in January 1900,[11] arriving in South Africa the following month.
In January 1910 he was elected as one of two members of parliament (MPs) for Bath alongside Lord Alexander Thynne.
In December 1918 Bath was reduced to a single-member constituency, and Hunter stood down in favour of Foxcroft.