Brigadier Sir Arthur Brian Sherlock Heywood Gooch, 14th Baronet, DL (born 1 June 1937) is an English baronet and retired regular officer of the British Army. He was also an aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II.

Gooch is descended from Sir William Gooch, 1st Baronet, Royal Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from 1727 to 1749, for whom Goochland County, Virginia is named.[1]

The son of Colonel Brian Sherlock Gooch DSO TD and of Monica Mary (née Heywood), Gooch was educated at Eton and Sandhurst, before serving in the Life Guards, the senior regiment of the British Army, which he commanded from 1978 to 1981.[2]

In 1963, he married Sarah Diana Rowena Perceval JP and they have two daughters.[1][2] Lady Gooch has served as High Sheriff of Wiltshire.[3]

On 14 March 1989, Gooch was appointed as aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II, replacing Brigadier Robert Baddeley.[4] He was Honorary Colonel of the Kent and County of London Yeomanry from 1992 to 1999 and was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant for Wiltshire in 1999.[2][5]

When his cousin Major Sir Timothy Robert Sherlock Gooch MBE, 13th Baronet, late the Life Guards, died on 9 April 2008, Gooch inherited the baronetcy. His heir presumptive is a nephew Robert Brian Sherlock Gooch, born 1976 the son of his brother, Thomas Sherlock Heywood Gooch, who died on 11 August 2020 at age 76[2]

He is a member of the Army and Navy Club and lives at Chitterne, Wiltshire.[2]

Coat of arms of Sir Arthur Gooch, 14th Baronet
Crest
A talbot statant per pale Argent and Sable.
Escutcheon
Per pale Argent and Sable a chevron between three talbots statant all counterchanged, on a chief Gules three leopards' faces Or.
Motto
Fide Et Virtute[6]

References

  1. 1 2 Kidd, Charles, & Williamson, David, (eds) Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (New York: St Martin's Press, 1990 edition)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 'Gooch, Brig. Sir Arthur (Brian Sherlock Heywood)' in Who's Who (UK) for 2008 (online edition)
  3. "High Sheriff - Wiltshire". High Sheriffs Association.
  4. London Gazette, Issue 51713 of 24 April 1989 (Supplement), p. 4916
  5. London Gazette, Friday, 19 November 1999, Deputy Lieutenant Commissions at gazettes-online.co.uk
  6. Burke's Peerage. 1949.
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