Charles Chaloner Ogle


Charles Chaloner Ogle ARIBA was an English journalist, war correspondent, architect and philhellene, who was killed in uncertain circumstances while reporting on the Thessaly Revolt of 1878. Ogle was the first recorded death of a journalist and war correspondent in present-day Greece.

Early life and education

Charles Chaloner Ogle was born on 16 April 1851 in Loudoun Road, St John's Wood, Marylebone, Middlesex to John Ogle, a schoolmaster, and Sarah Dorothy Ogle. Ogle was the seventh of eleven siblings.
John Ogle ran a school called Loudoun House in St John's Wood, and later moved the school to St Clere around 1860. Ogle attended his father's school before studying architecture at University of London, graduating in June 1869. Following graduation Ogle studied architecture In London under Frederick William Roper.
In 1872, Ogle obtained a certificate for excellence in architectural construction and was admitted as an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects.

Career

In August 1875, Ogle relocated to Athens and worked in the office of Ernst Ziller. During this period Ogle began contributing to The Builder, and reported on the rebuilding of Athens. In 1876, Ogle became a war correspondent for The Times.
During the Great Eastern Crisis, Ogle reported on the Montenegrin–Ottoman War, the Herzegovina uprising and the Cretan revolt.
Before his death Ogle has been awarded the Knight Silver Cross of the Order of the Redeemer by the Greek government.

Death

In January 1878, Ogle travelled to Pelion to report on the Thessalian Revolt. During this period Ogle sent almost daily reports to The Times. Ogle's reports emphasised the plight of Thessaly's civilian population.
On the 15 March 1878, Ogle sent his final letter to his mother from Volos. On, Ogle travelled from Volos to Makrinitsa. Ogle was reportedly carrying only a walking stick, having left his revolver behind.
Ogle is believed to have died on, following the Battle of Makrinitsa. Ottoman officials sent Hobart Pasha Ogle's passport alongside a report that claimed Ogle's deceased body had been found at a house in Makrinitsa holding a rifle.
Ogle's headless body was later found in a ravine, and was identified by a scar on the wrist and a blood-stained telegram in his pocket-book addressed to The Times. Ogle's head was not found. Ogles body was taken on board H.M.S. Merlin, and transported to Piraeus. Ogle's post-mortem stated he had died following two deep wounds in the stomach, which had perforated his liver and had been inflicted by either a sharp implement or a firearm at close range, and that he had been crudelly decapitated after death. It was also concluded that Ogle had been hit in the leg, most likely with the butt-end of a gun, before his death.
Ogle was theorised to have been assassinated on the orders of the Ottoman commander Amouss Aga, whom Ogle had condemned for the massacre of Bulgareni. Pasha alleged that Ogle aided Greek revolutionaries, and had died during an insurgency.

Burial

On, Ogle's funeral took place at the First Cemetery of Athens and was followed by a pilgrimage to the Cathedral Basilica of St. Dionysius the Areopagite. Ogle's funeral was arranged by Charilaos Trikoupis.
Ogle was buried next to the grave of Konstantinos Kanaris. In the 1980s Ogle's grave plot was sold and his tombstone was removed. In 1984, Ogle's tombstone was erected as a monument with a cenotaph in Makrinitsa.

1882 enquiry

In 1882, an enquiry into Ogle's death was held by Edwin Henry Egerton, the then British Chargé d'affaires at Athens. The enquiry concluded that it was impossible to determine the exact circumstances of Ogle's death.

Legacy

A street in Volos is named after Ogle.
In 1890, the actor Vasilios Andronopoulos published the play the "Assassination of Charles Ogle in the Battle of Makrinitsa: A National Drama in Two Acts with Deification".