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GENERAL ORDERS.
aoRaS'OUARDa,
\tt Jtmmry, 1886.
His Majesty has been pleused to command that,
with a view of doing tlie fullest justice to Regi-
ments, as well at to Individuals who have dis-
tinguished themselvei by their Bravery in Action
with the Enemy, an Account of the Services of
every Regiment in the British Army shaU be pub*
lished under the superintendence and direction of
the Adjutant-General ; and that this Account shall
contain the following particulars, viz. :—
The Period and Circumstances of the
Original Formation of the Regiment ; The Stations
at which it has been from time to time employed ;
The Battles, Sieges, and other Military Operations
in which it has been engaged, particularly specifying
any Achievement it may have performed, and the
Colours, Trophies, &c., it may have captured from
the Enemy.
The Names of the Officers and the number
of Non-Commissioned Officers and Privates Killed
or Wounded by the Enemy, specifying the Place
and Date of the Action.
a
ii
GENERAL ORDERS.
— — The Names of those Officers who, in con-
sideration of their Gallant Services and Meritorious
Conduct in Engagements with the Enemy, have
been distinguished with Titles, Medals, or other
Marks of His Majesty's gracious favour.
The Names of all such Officers, Non-Com-
missioned Officers, and Privates, as may have
specially signalized themselves in Action.
And,
The Badges and Devices which the Regi-
ment may have been permitted to bear, and the
Causes on account of which such Badges or Devices,
or any other Marks of Distinction, have been
granted.
By Command of the Right Honourable
. GENERAL LORD HILL,
;' y Commanding-inr Chief.
; - ffi^^? ti rl*fi> ■
^ •-:^ 5 v/f f{; John Macdonald,
/ri*.UK;pM^ i i jdjtaant-General
■r.its^-i«
PREFACE.
The character and credit of the British Army must
chiefly depend upon the zeal and ardour by which
all who enter into its service are animated, and
consequently it is of the highest importance that any
measure calculated to excite the spirit of emulation,
by which alone great and gallant actions are achieved,
should be adopted.
Nothing can more fully tend to the accomplishment
of this desirable object than a full display of the
noble deeds with which the Military History of our
country abounds. To hold forth these bright
examples to the imitation of the youthful soldier,
and thus to incite him to emulate the meritorious
conduct of those who have preceded him in their
honourable career, are among the motives that hae
given rise to the present publication.
The operations of the British Troops are, indeed,
announced in the ** London Gazette," from whence
they are transferred into the public prints : the
achievements of our armies are thus made known at
the time of their occurrence, and receive the tribute
a2
IV
PREFACE.
of praise and admiration to which they are entitled.
On extraordinary occasions, the Houses of Parliament
have been in the habit of conferring on the Com-
manders, and the Officers and Troops acting under
their orders, expressions of approbation and of thanks
for their skill and bravery : and these testimonials,
confirmed by the high honour of their Sovereign*s
approbation, constitute the reward which the
soldier most highly prizes.
It has not, however, until late years been the prac-
tice (which appears to have long prevailed in some of
the Continental armies) for British Regiments to keep
regular records of their services and achievements.
Hence some difficulty has been experienced in obtain-
ing, particularly from the old Regiments, an au-
thentic account of their origin and subsequent services.
This defect will now be remedied, in consequence
of His Majesty having been pleased to command
that every Regiment shall in future keep a full and
ample record of its services at home and abroad.
From the materials thus collected, the country
will henceforth derive information as to the difficulties
and privations which chequer the career of those who
embrace the inilitary profession. In Great Britain,
where so large a number of persons are devoted to
the active concerns of agriculture, manufactures,
and commerce, and where these pursuits have, for so
PREFACE. V
loog a period, be«n undisturbed by the presence of
voavy which few other countries have escaped, com-
paratively little is known of the vicissitudes of active
service, and of the casualties of climate, to which,
even during peuce, the British Troops are exposed in
every part of the globe, with little or no interval of
repose. -^
In their tranquil enjoyment of the blessings which
the country derives from the industry and the enter-
prise of the agriculturist and the trader, its happy
inhabitants may be supposed not often to reflect on
the perilous duties of the soldier and the sailor, — on
their sufferings, — and on the sacrifice of valuable
life, by which so many national benefits are obtained
and preserved.
The conduct of the British Troops, their valour,
and endurance, have shone conspicuously under great
and trying difficulties ; and their character has been
established in Continental warfare by the irresistible
spirit with which they have effected debarkations in
spite of the most formidable opposition, and by the
gallantry and steadiness with which they have main-
tained their advantages against superior numbers.
In the official Reports made by the respective Com-
manders, ample justice has generally been done to
the gallant exertions of the Corps employed ; but
the details of their services, and of acts of individual
trr>
/
PRBFACB.
brayery, can only be fully given in the Annals of the
various Regiments.
These Records are now preparing for publication,
under His Majesty's special authority, by Mr.
Richard Gannon, Principal Clerk of the Adjutant
General's Office ; and while the perusal of them can-
not fail to be useful and interesting to military men
of every rank, it is considered that they will also
afford entertainment and information to the general
reader, particularly to those who may have served in
the Army, or who have relatives in the Service.
There exists in the breasts of most of those who
have served, or are serving, in the Army, an Esprit
de Corps — an attachment to everything belonging
to their Regiment ; to such persons a narrative of
the services of their own Corps cannot fail to prove
interesting. Authentic accounts of the actions of
the great, the valiant, the loyal, have always been
of paramount interest with a brave and civilized
people. Great Britain has produced a race of heroes
who, in moments of danger and terror, have stood
** firm as the rocks of their native shore ;" and when
half the World has been arrayed against them, they
have fought the battles of their Country with un-
shaken fortitude. It is presumed that a record of
achievements in war, — victories so complete and sur-
prising, gained by our countrymen, our brothers.
PRBPACI.
▼U
our fellow-citizeni in arms, — a record which revivet
the memory of the brave, and brings their gallant
deeds before us, will certainly prove acceptable to
the public.
Biographical memoirs of the Colonels and other
distinguished Officers will be introduced in the
Records of their respective Regiments, and the
Honorary Distinctions which have, from time to
time, been conferred upon each Regiment as testify-
ing the value and importance of its services, will be
faithfully set forth.
As a convenient mode of Publication, the Record
of each Regiment will be printed in a distinct num-
ber, so that when the whole shall be completed, the
Parts may be bound up in numerical succession.
i-l
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a!-:
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INTRODUCTION
'■.:.:i
■''J-
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THE INFANTRY.
:■'-<.;,■
The natives of Britain have, at all periods, been
celebrated for innate coura^<^ and unshaken firmness,
and the national superioriiy of the British troops
over those of other countries has been evinced in
the midst of the most imminent perils. History con-
tains so many proofs of extraordinary acts of bravery,
that no doubts can be raised upon the facts which
are recorded. It must therefore be admitted, that
the distinguishing feature of the British soldier is
Intrepidity. This quality was evinced by the
inhabitants of England when their country was
invaded by Julius Csesar with a Roman army, on
which occasion the undaunted Britons rushed into
the sea to attack the Roman soldiers as they de-
scended from their ships ; and, although their dis-
cipline and arms were inferior to those of their
adversaries, yet their fierce and dauntless bearing
intimidated the flower of the Roman troops, in-
cluding Caesar's favourite tenth legion. Their arms
consisted of spears, short swords, and other weapons
of rude construction. They had chariots, to the
INTRODUCTION TO
axles of which were fastened sharp pieces of iron
resembling scythe-blades, and infantry in long
chariots resembling waggons, who alighted and
fought on foot, and for change of ground, pursuit,
or retreat, sprang into the chariot and drove off
with the speed of cavalry. These inventions were,
however, unavailing against Csesar's legions : in
the course of time a military system, with dis-
cipline and subordination, was introduced, and
British courage, being thus regulated, was exerted
to the greatest advantage ; a full development of
the national character followed, and it shone forth
in all its native brilliancy.
The military force of the Anglo-Saxons consisted
principally of infantry : Thanes, and other men of
property, however, fought on horseback. The
infantry were of two classes, heavy and light.
The former carried large shields armed with spikes,
long broad swords and spears; and the latter
were armed with swords or spears only. They had
also men armed with clubs, others with battle-axes
and javelint.
The feudal troops established by William the
Conqueror consisted (as already stated in the Intro-
duction to the Cavalry) almost entirely of horse;
but when the warlike barpns and knights, with their
trains of tenants and vassals, took the field, a pro-
portion of men appeared on foot, and, although
these were of inferior degree, they proved stout-
liearted Britons of stanch fidelity. When stipen-
diary troops were employed, infantry always con-
stituted a considerable portion of the military force ;
THE INFANTRY.
XI
and this arme ha*^ since acquired, in every quarter
of the globe, 2 elebrity never exceeded by the
armies of any na^vion at any period.
The weapons carried by the infantry, during the
several reigns succeeding the Conquest, were bows
and arrows, half-pikes, lances, halberds, various
kinds of battle-axes, swords, and daggers. Armour
was worn on the head and body, and in course of
time the practice became general for military men
to be so completely cased in steel, that it was
almost impossible to slay them. - *>*
. The introduction of the use of gunpowder in the
destructive purposes of war, in the early part of the
fourteenth century, produced a change in the arms
and equipment of the infantry-soldier. Bows and
arrows gave place to various kinds of fire-arms, but
British archers continued formidable adversaries ;
and owing to the inconvenient construction and
imperfect bore of the fire-arms when first introduced,
a body of men, well trained in the use of the bow
from their youth, was considered a valuable acqui-
sition to every army, even as late as the sixteenth
century.
During a great part of the reign of Queen Eliza-
beth each company of infantry usually consisted of
men armed five different ^vays ; in every hundred
men forty were ** men-at-arms," and sixty •* shot ;"
the " men-at-arms " were ten halberdiers, or battle-
axe men, and thirty pikemen ; and the '* shot " were
twenty archers, twenty musketeers, and twenty
harquebusiers, and each man carried, besides his
principal weapon, a sword and dagger.
Xll
INTRODUCTION TO
Companies of infantry varied at this period in
numbers from 150 to 300 men ; each company had
a colour or ensign, and the mode of formation re-
commended by an English military writer (Sir John
Smithe) in 1590 was : — the colour in the centre of
the company guarded by the halberdiers ; the pike-
men in equal proportions, on each flank of the
halberdiers ; half the musketeers on each flank of
the pikes ; half the archers on each flank of the nms-
keteers ; and the harquebusiers (whose arms were
much lighter than the muskets then in use) in equal
proportions on each flank of the company for skirmish-
ing.* It was customary to unite a number of com-
panies into one body, called a Regiment, which
frequently amounted to three thousand men ; but
each company continued to carry a colour. Numer-
ous improvements were eventually introduced in the
construction of fire-arms, and, it having been found
impossible to make armour proof against the muskets
then in use (which carried a very heavy ball) without
its being too weighty for the soldier, armour was
gradually laid aside by the infantry in the seven-
teenth century : bows and arrows also fell into dis-
use, and the infantry were reduced to two classes,
viz.: musketeers, armed with matchlock muskets,
A company of 200 men would appear Ihus : —
i
20 2020302|0302020 20
Hurqueboiei. Archers. Maiketa. Pikes. Halberds. Pikei. Muskets. Archers. Harquebuses.
The musket carried a ball which weighed ^ of a pound ; and the
harquebus a ball which weighed ^ uf a pound.
THE INFANTRY.
xiii
swords, and daggers ; and pikemen, armed with pikes
irom fourteen to eighteen feet long, and swords.
In the early part of the seventeenth century
Oustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, reduced the
strength of regiments to 1000 men ; he caused the
gunpowder, which had heretofore been carried in
flasks, or in small wooden bandoliers, each contain-
ing a charge, to be made up into cartridges, and
carried in pouches ; and he formed each regiment
into two wings of musketeers, and a centre division
of pikemen. He also adopted the practice of form-
ing four regiments into a brigade ; and the number
of colours was afterwards reduced to three in each
regiment. He formed his columns so compactly that
his infantry could resist the charge of tlie celebrated
Polish horsemen and Austrian cuirassiers; and his
armies became the admiration of other nations. His
mode of formation was copied by the English,
French, and other European states; but so great
was the prejudice in favour of ancient customs, that
all his improvements were not adopted until near a
century afterwards.
In 1664 King Charles II. raised a corps for sea>
service, styled the Admiral's regiment. In 1678
each company of 100 men usually consisted of 30
pikemen, 60 musketeers, and 10 men armed with
light firelocks. In tliis year the king added a com-
pany of men armed with hand-grenades to each of
the old British regiments, which was designated the
'* grenadier company." Daggers were so contrived
as to fit in the muzzles of the muskets, and bayonets
%\v
INTRODUCTION TO
similar to those at present in use were adopted about
twenty years afterwards.
An Ordnance regiment was raised in 1685, by
order of King James II., to guard the artillery, and
was designated the Royal Fusiliers (now 7th Foot).
This corps, and the companies of grenadiers, did
not carry pikes.
King William III. incorporated the Admiral's
regiment in the Second Foot Guards, and raised
two Marine regiments for sea-service. During the
war in this reign, each company of infantry (ex
cepting the fusiliers and grenadiers) consisted of 14
pikemen and 46 musketeers ; the captains carried
pikes ; lieutenants, partisans ; ensigns, half-pikes ;
and Serjeants, halberds. After the peace in 1697 the
Marine regiments were disbanded, but were again
formed on the breaking out of the war in 1702.*
During the reign of Queen Anne the pikes were
laid aside, and every infantry soldier was armed
with a musket, bayonet, and sword ; the grenadiers
ceased, about the same period, to carry hand-gren-
ades ; and the regiments were directed to lay aside
their third colour : the corps of Royal Artillery was
first added to the army in this reign.
About the year 1745, the men of the battalion
companies of infantry ceased to .carry swords ;
*The 30th, Slst, and 32nd Regimeuts were formed ae Marine
corps in 1 702, and were employed as such during the wars in the
reign of Queen Anne. The Marine corps were embarked in the
Fleet under Admiral Sir George Rooke, and were at the taking of
GUbraltar, and in its subsequent defence in 1704; they were after-
wards employed at the siege of Barcelona in 1705.
THE INFANTRY.
«ir
during the reign of Greorge II. light companies were
added to infantry regiments ; and in 1764 a Board
of General Officers recommended that the grenadiers
should lay aside their swords, as that weapon had
never heen used during the seven years' war. Since
that period the arms of the infantry soldier have heen
limited to the musket and hayonet.
The arms and equipment of the British troops have
seldom differed mate^rially, since the Conquest, from
those of other European states ; and in some respects
the arming has, at certain periods, been allowed to
be inferior to that of the nations with whom they
have had to contend ; yet, under this disadvantage,
the bravery and superiority of the British infantry
have been evinced on very many and most trying
occasions, and splendid victories have been gained
over very superior numbers.
Great Britain has produced a race of lion-like
champions who have dared to confront a host of
foes, and have proved themselves valiant with any
arms. At CVdpy, King Edward III., at the head of
about 30,000 men, defeated, on the 26th of August,
1346, Philip King of France, whose army is said to
have amounted to 100,000 men ; here British valour
encountered veterans of renown : — the King of Bo-
hemia, the King of Majorca, and many princes and
nobles were slain, and the French army was routed
and cut to pieces. Ten years afterwards, Edward
Prince of Wales, who was designated the Black
Prince, defeated, at Foiotiers, with 14,000 men,
a French army of 60,000 horse, besides infan-
try, and took John I., King of France, and his son
xvi
INTRODITCTION TO
Philip, prisonera. On thu 25tli of October, 141'),
King Henry V., with an army of about 13,000
men, although greatly exhausted by marches, pri-
vations, and sickness, defeated, at Agincourt, the
Constable of France, at the head of the flower of
the French nobility and an army said to amount to
60,000 men, and gained a complete victory.
During the seventy years' war between the United
Provinces of the Netherlands and the Spanish mo-
narch, which commenced in 1578 and terminated
in 1648, the British infantry in the service of the
States - General were celebrated for their uncon-
querable spirit and tirmness ;* and in the thirty
years' war between the Protestant Princes and the
Emperor of Germany, the British tr(K)ps in the ser-
vice of Sweden and other states were celebrated fpr
deeds of heroism. f In the wars of Queen Anne,
the' fame of the British army under the great
Marlborough was spread throughout the world ;
and if we glance at the achievements perlormed
within the memory of persons now living, there is
abundant proof that the Britons of the present age
are not inferior to their ancestors in the qualities
* The brave Sir Roger Wtlliami, in hii Discourse on Wer, printed
in IS^O. obserYet : — " I persuade myself ten thousand of our nation
would beat thirty thousand of theirs (the Spaniard*) out of the field,
let them be thosen where they list." Yet at this time the Spanish
infantry was allowed to be the best diseiplined in Euro|)e. For
instances of valour displayed by the British Infantry during the
Seventy Years' War, see the Historical Record of the Third Foot, or
Buffii.
t Vide the Historical Record of the First, or Royal Rej^ment of
Foot.
TO THE INFAKTBT.
XVII
which constitute good soldiers. Witness the deeds
of the brave men, of whom there are many now
surviving, who fought in Egypt in 1801, under the
brave Abercromby, and compelled the French army,
which had been vainly styled Invincible^ to eva-
cuate that country ; also the services of the gallant
Troops during the arduous campaigns in the Penin-
sula, under the immortal Wellington; and the
determined stand made by the British Army at
Waterloo, where Napoleon Bonaparte, who had
long been the inveterate enemy of Great Britain,
and had sought and planned her destruction by"
every means he could devise, was compelled to
leave his vanquished legions to their fate, and to
place himself at the disposal ot the British Govern-
ment These achievements, with others of recent
dates in the distant climes of India, prove that the
same valour and constancy which glowed in the
breasts of the heroes of Grecy, Foictiers, Agincourt,
Blenheim, and Ramilies, continue to animate the
Britons of the nineteenth century.
The British Soldier is distinguished for a robust
and muscular frame, — intrepidity which no danger
can appal, — unconquerable spirit and resolution, —
patience in fatigue and privation, and cheerful obe-
dience to his superiors. These qualities, united with
an excellent system of order and discipline to regu*
late and give a skilful direction to the energies and
adventurous spirit of the hero, and a wise selection
of officers of superior talent to command, whose
presence inspires confidence, — ^have been the leading
causes of the splendid victories gained by the British
h
XVlll
INTRODUCTION
arms.* The fame of the deeds of the pUst and
present generations in the various battle-fields where
the robust sons of Albion have fought and conquered,
surrounds the British arms with a halo of glory ;
these achievements will live in the page of history to
the end of time.
The records of the several regiments will be found
to contain a detail of facts of an interesting character,
connected with the hardships, suflferings, and gallant
exploits of British soldiers in the various parts of the
world, where the calls of their Country and the com-
mands of their Sovereign have required them to
proceed in the execution of their duty, whether in
* ** Under the blessing of Divine Providence, His Majesty ascribes
the successes which have attended the exertions of his troops in Egypt to
that determined bravery which is inherent in Britons ; but His Majesty
desires it may be most solemnly and forcibly imprteedonthe consideration
of every part of the army, that it has been a strict observance of order, dis-
cipline, and military system, which has given the full energy to the
native valour of the troops, and has enabled them proudly to assert the
superiority of the national military character, in situa:dons uncommonly
arduous, and under circumstances of peculiar difficulty." — Oeneral
Orders m ISOl.
•. In the General Orders issued by Lieut-General Sir John Hope (after-
wards Lord Hopetoun), congratulating the army upon the successful result
of the Battle of Corunna, on the 16th of January, 1809, it is stated : — " On
no occasion has the undaunted valour of British troops ever been more
manifest. At the termination of a severe and harassing march, ren-
dered necessary by the superiority which the enemy bad acquired, and
which had materially impaired the efficiency of the troops, many disad-
vantages were to be encountered. These have all been surmounted by
the conduct of the troops themselves ; and the encimy has been taught,
that wjiatever advantages of position or of numbers he may possess, there
is inherent in the British officers and soldiers a bravery that knows not
how to yield, — that no circumstances can appal,-^«nd that will ensure
victory, when it is to be obtwned by ^e exertion of anv human meaM."
TO THE INFANTRY.
xii
active continental operations, or in maintaining colo-
nial territories in distant and unfavourable climes.
The superiority of the British infantry has been
pre-eminently set forth in the wars of six centuries,
and admitted by the greatest commanders which
Europe has produced. The formations and move-
ments of this arme, as at present practised, while
they are adapted to every species of warfare, and to
all probable situations and circumstances of service,
are calculated to show forth the brilliancy of military
tactics calculated upon mathematical and scientific
principles. Although the movements and evolutions
have been copied from the continental armies, yet
various improvements have from time to time been
introduced, to insure that simplicity and celerity by
which the superiority of the national military cha-
racter is maintained. The rank and influence which
Great Britain has attained among the nations of the
world, have in a great measure been purchased by
the valour of the Army, and to persons who have the
welfare of their country at heart, the records of the
several regiments cannot fail to prove interesting.
' . V!' •
/m^m
# ••
l3^t^-.
B
■ ■ m
HISTORICAL RECORD
or
THE TENTH, OR THE NORTH LINCOLNSHIBE,
-m
^
REGIMENT OF FOOT,
COMTAIHIWa
m ACCOUNT OF THE FORMATION OF THE REGIMENT
IN 1685,
AND OF ITS SUBSEQUENT SERVICES ,
i'i
'>
TO 1847.
COMPILED Br
RICHARD CANNON, Esq.
ADJCTANT-OENERAL'S OFnCl^ HORSE OCARDS.
■s^
ILLUSTRATED WITH PLATES.
■ ,/ lu .^^'^^
^^1" ■
LONDON :
PARKER, FURNIVALL, & PARKER,
30 CHARING CROSS.
M DCOC XLVn.
/
\-
\
LoRDOK ' Prwtid bt W. Clowis & 80HI| Btamfor STmiT,
POB UlB MtJIITT'lSlATIOMBai Orpirii.
THE TENTH,
OR
THE NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE,
REGIMENT OF FOOT,
BXAKS ON IT8 BIOIMEKTAL OOLOtTB
THE SPHINX, WITH THE WORD EGYPT;
AND TBI WOKDS
"PENINSULA" AMD "SOBBAON;"
IN COMMEMORATION OV ITS DISmrOUISHID 8SRVICB8
IN SOYPT IN T1I3 YEAR 1801 ;
IN THE PBNIKSVLA FROM 1812 to 1814;
AND
AT THE BATTLE OF SOBBAON IN 1846.
CONTENTS.
YlAI
1680 Formation of the Regiment .
— - Arms and Uniform
— — • Station and Establishment
— — Earl of Bath, and other Officers appointed to
Commissions ....
1688 Declaration of the Regiment, and of the garrison
of PljrmoHth, in favour of King William III
and the Protestant cause .
1689 Six companies detached to Jersey and Guernsey
1690 Embarked for Flanders .
1691 Encamped at Anderlecht .
1692 Encamped at Halle
— — Battle of Steenkirk
— — Engaged at Fumes and Dixmude .
1698 The French lines at D' Otignies forced
— — Battle of Landen ....
1694 Encamped at Ghent
1696 Attack on Fort Kenoque
— Siege of Namur ....
1696 Returned to England and occupied quarters in
London ; afterwards in Suffolk and Essex
1697 Re*embarked for the Netherlands, and joined the
army at Brussels
—— Treaty of Ryswick .
Returned to England
1698 Proceeded to Ireland
Paoi
1
2
3
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
13
d
XXVI ^^ CONTENTS.
YlAB . . C' I*AO»
1701 War renewed 13
Embarked for Holland, and reviewed at Breda by
King William III ~
Encamped at Rosendael —
1*702 Decease of Kfiig William III., and accession of -
Queen Anne —
March to Duchy of Cleves .... —
Arrival at Nimeguen . 14
War declared against France .... —
— — Siege of Venloo —
— Ruremonde ..... —
Stevenswart —
the Citadel of Liege .... —
1703 Proceeded to Maestricht 15
■ ■ Tongres ...... —
Siege of Huy —
Limburg 16
Spanish Guelderland wrested from France . —
Marched back to Holland .... —
1704 Proceeded from Holland to the Danube . . —
Joined the Imperial Army . . . — -
Battle of Schellenberg —
Crossed the Danube 17
- - Joined the Imperial Army underPrince Eugene
of Savoy 18
Battle of Blenheim —
Marshal Tallard and many ofBcers and soldiers
made prisoners 19
Marched to Holland with prisoners ... —
1705 Attacks on Helixem, Neer-Winden, and Neer -
Hespen 20
1706 Encamped at Tongres 22
Battle of Ramilies —
Surrender of Brussels, Ghent, and principal towns
of Brabant —
UUMiKNTtf.
YlAB.
1706 Surrender of Oateiid ....
— Siege of Munin, on tho liivtr Lja .
Capture of Dendermoitd and Aeth .
1707 Encampment near tlie village of Waterloo
1708 Be-embarked for Kngland to repel invasion by
the Pretender
Returned to Flandera, landed at Ostend, and
proceeded to Ghent ....
Re-taking of Ghent and Briigea by the French
Battle of Oudenarde ....
Siege of Lisle , , . . .
«— ^ Town of Ghent re-captured
1709 Siege and capture of Tournay
Battle of Malplaquet ....
Siege and surrender of l^Conn ,
Marched into winter-quatteiM ut Ghent
1710 Forcing the French line» at ront-it-Vendin
Siege and surrender of Douay
Attack and surrender of Bethune
— of Air© and 8^ Venant
Proceeded to Courtnty ....
Winter-quarters at Courtray
171 1 Encamped at Warde and on the plains uf Lens
Forcing the lines at Arleux
Siege of Bouchain
1712 Negociations for peace ....
Duke of Ormond assumed the command of the
army
Surrender of Quesnoy ....
British troops withdrawn to Ghent, and thence
to Dunkirk . ...
1713 Removed to Ghent
1714 Nieuport
1715 Returned to England ....
XXVll
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
3U
31
32
33
xxvlii
CONTENTS.
Vim
1722
1723
1724
1730
1749
1751
1767
1768
1775
War
1776
Encamped on Salisbury Plain ....
Reviewed by King George I. and the Prince of
Wales
Proceeded to Scotland
Returned to England
Embarlied for Gibraltar .
Returned to Ireland ...
Colours and costume regulated by Royal
rant . . . .
Embarked for North America
Proceeded to Boston
Advanced to Concord and Lexington ; — com
mencement of American War
Returned to Boston
Victory at Bunlcers-Hill .
Evacuation of Boston
Returned to Nova Scotia
Attack and capture of Long Island
Capture of New York
White Plains
Forts Washington and Lee
-Rhode Inland
1777
Embarked for Philadelphia
Attack at Brandywine Creek
March to Germantown .
Capture of Philadelphia
Billing's-Point
1778
Fight at Germantown
Returned to Philadelphia
Attack at Whitemarsh .
Concentrated at New York
Evacuation of Philadelphia
Attack at Freehold in New Jersey
Returned to England
Fa«r
84
3&
36
36
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
. COIVTBNTS. XXIX
Yt»« ' Pam
1783 Establishment reduced on termination of the
American War 45
— — Embarlced for Ireland —
1786 Jamaica —
1795 Returned to England —
Embarked for West Indies .... 46
Disembarked on account of a storm, and casual-
ties at Sea —
1797 Proceeded to Portsmouth .... —
1798 Embarlced for Madras —
1799 Removal to Bengal —
1800 Embarked for Egypt 47
1801 Landed at Cosseir —
Crossed the Desert of Arabia .... 48
Arrived at Kenna and Girgee in Upper Egypt —
— — Proceeded down the Nile to Rosetta,and El-
Hamed 49
Surrender of Alexandria .... —
French Army evacuate Egypt ... —
Authorized to bear the Sphinx with the word
« Egypt '* 60
1802 Encamped at Alexandria —
1803 Arrived at Malta —
1804 Removed to Gibraltar . . . . , 51
Second Battalion added to the establishment, and
formed in Essex —
1806 Battle of Maida 53
1807 Embarked for Sicily —
1809 Proceeded on an expedition to Naples . . 54
Returned to Sicily 55
Second Battalion embarked for Walcheren . —
Returned to England —
1810 Embarked for Gibraltar ..... —
Proceeded to Malta 56
1 81 1 Embarked for Sicily —
XXX
CONTENTS.
Yba«
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1819
1821
1823
1826
1828
1837
1839
1841
1842
1845
1846
Firal Battalion embarked for Spain .
Second Battalion proceeded against tlie Island
of Ponzo ...'..
Returned to Sicily
First Battalion— Battle of Castalla .
Siege of Tarragona
Proceeded to Balaguer ....
Accidental and destructive Fire
Marched to Vails and thence to Yendrills.
Blockade of Barcelona ....
Cessation of hostilities ....
Arrived at Palermo ....
Second Battalion embarked from Sicily foi
Malta ......
Return of Napoleon Buonaparte to France
First Battalion embarked for Naples
Proceeded to Malta . . .
Peace restored ; the First and Second Battalions
incorporated
Authorised to bear the word " Pv:nin8DLA," on
the Colours and Appointments
Embarked for the Ionian Islands
Be -embarked for Malta
Embarked for England
Embarked for Ireland
Embarked for Portugal
Embarked for Corfu
Returned to Ireland.
Embarked for England
Proceeded to Scotland
Removed from Scotland
Embarked for India.
Proceeded to Meerut
Joined the army on the Sutlej
Battle of Sobraoii
Paok
56
57
58
Yi
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
CONTENTS.
XXXI
Ym>
1 846 Authorised to bear the word " Sobraon," on
the Coloura and Appointments
Occupation of Lahore.
IVoi
71
72
SUCCESSION OF COLONELS
1685 John Earl of Bath .
1688 Sir Charles Carney .
Earl of Bath (re-appointed)
1693 Sir Seville Granville
1703 Lord North and Grey .
1715 Henry Grove
1737 Francis Columbine .
1746 James Lord Tyrawley .
1749 Edward Pole .
1763 Edward Sandford .
1781 Sir Robert Murray Keith, K.B.
1795 Hon. Henry Edward Fox
1811 Hon. Thomas Maitland .
1824 Sir John Lambert, G.C.B.
1847 Sir Thomas McMahon, Bt. and K.C.B.
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
PLATES.
Original Costume of the Regiment
Colours of the Regiment .
to face 1
36
APPENDIX.
Battles, Sieges, &c., from 1689 to 1697
from 1702 to 1713
83
84
\
,■%
HISTORICAL RECORD
or
THE TENTH,
THE NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
n
^
s
After the Restoration, when King Charles XL had 1661
disbanded the army of the commonwealth, a small .1^ .
military force was embodied under the title of" guards
and garrisons ;" one of the independent companies of
infantry incorporated for garrison duty was commanded
by that, distinguished nobleman, John, Earl of Bath.
who had evinced fidelity and attachment to the royal
cause in the rebellion in the reign of King Charles I.,
and during the usurpations of Cromwell ; this company
was stationed in the fortress of Plymouth, of which the
Earl of Bath was governor, and it was the nucleus
of the regiment which forms the subject of this memoir.
In June, 1685, when James, Duke of Monmouth, i685
had landed in the West of England, with a band of
armed followers from the Netherlands, and erected the
standard of rebellion, commissions were issued, by King
James II., for raising eleven companies of foot, of one
B
2
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1685 hundred private soldiers each, which companies were
united to the Plymouth independent garrison company,
and constituted a regiment, of which the Earl of Bath
was appointed colonel, by commission dated the 20th
of June, 1685, and the corps thus formed now bears the
title of "The Tenth Regiment of Foot."
These eleven companies were raised in Derbyshire
and Nottinghamshire ; the town of Derby being the
general rendezvous of the corps ; and they were raised
under the authority of royal warrants, bearing date the
20th of June, by the following gentlemen, who evinced
their loyalty by coming forward to the support of the
crown at that important crisis : — viz., Colonel, John,
Earl of Bath ; Lieut.-Colonel, Sir Nicholas Stan-
NiNGs; Major, Sir Charles Carney; Captains,
Michael Bourk, Charles Powell, Sir Thomas
Windham, Edward Scott, Bernard Strode, John
Sydenham, Francis Vivian, and Sydney GoDOLPHiN.
After the suppression of this rebellion, mapy newly
raised corps were disbanded, and the Earl of
Bath's regiment was reduced to ten companies of fifty
private soldiers each.
The regiment was armed with muskets and pikes ;
the uniform was blue, coats lined with red, red waist-
coats, breeches> and stockings ; round hats with broad
brims, the brim turned up on one side and ornamented
with red ribands ; the pikemen wore red worsted sashes.
This was the only infantry regiment clothed in blue
:. coats; the other corps wore red coats; red had been
generally worn by the English soldiers from the time
of Queen Elizabeth ; but several of Cromwell's regiments
were clothed in blue, and King Charles II. clothed the
royal regiment of horse guards in blue, and a regiment
//
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
d
of marines, raised in his reign, in yellow. A few years 1685
after the revolu^on in 1688, the Tenth were clothed
in red.
In August, 1685, the Earl of Bath's regiment
marched from Derby to Hounslow, and encamped upon
the heath, where it was reviewed by the King, and
afterwards marched to Plymouth, to relieve the Queen
Dowager's regiment, now second foot.
The following statement of the numbers and rates of 1686
pay is copied from the establishment of the army, under
the sign manual, dated the 1st of January, 1686.
The Eabi. of Bath's Reoiuent.
Staff.
1 Colonel, as Colonel ........
I lAeat-Colanel, as Lieut.- Colonel • . . .
1 Mt^or, as Major
1 Chaplain
1 Chirurgeon, ivs. 1 Mate, lis. vid. ....
1 Adjutant
1 Quarter-Master and Marshal
Total for Staff ....
The Colonel's Company.
The Colonel, as Captain • .
1 Lieutenant
1 Ensign
2 Serjeants, xviiid. each .......
3 Corporals, is. each
1 Drummer
50 Private Soldiers, at viiid. each
,.; V i ; Total for one Company . .
Nine Companies more
'" ' ^ Total . • • . . • .
Per Annum, £10,922 12s. 6d.
P»y per day.
£. 8. d.
12
7
5
6 8
6 6
4
4
2 5 2
8
4
3
3
3
1
1 13 4
2 15 4
24 18
29 18 6
Leaving Plymouth in March, 1686, the regiment
occupied quarters at Guildford and Oodalming until the
b2
4 THE TENTH, OR NORTH UNCOLNSHIRE
1686 24th of May, when it pitched its tenta on Hounslow-
heath, where a numerous body of troops was assembled
for exercise and review. At this camp the regiment
had an independent company of grenadiers attached to
it, and after the reviews it marched into garrison at
Portsmouth.
1687 In 1687, the following officers were holding commis-
sions in the regiment : —
Captains. Lieutenants.
Earl of Bath, (col.) Maurice Roch.
Sir Cha. Carney, (lt.-coI.) John Prideauz.
Sir Bev. Granville, (mtyor) D. Bradshaw.
Sir Thomas Windham. Cha. Harbine.
Edward Scott.
Sydney Godolphin.
John, Lord Anlndel.
Bernard Strode.
Ranald Graham.
John Sydenham.
John Granville.
Ensigns.
James Mohun.
Richd. Nagle.
Jas. Granville.
Jacob Breams.
James Steukly.
Jno. Granville.
Edw. Chard.
Thos. Gary.
Hercules Low.
John Jacob.
> Grenadier Co.
■
Richard Scott.
Wm. Morgan.
Thos. Trevanion.
Thoe. Lamb.
John Long.
Hy. Hook.
( Roger Elliott
( Roger Evans
Chaplain, Thos. Nixon. Adjutant, R. Elliott.
Chirurgeon, James Yong. Quarter-Master, Jno. Freeman.
The regiment left Portsmouth, in April, 1687, for
Winchester and Taunton; in June, it once more
pitched its tents on Hounslow-heath, and in August
marched into quarters in London. It did not remain
long in the metropolis : and after several changes of
quarters it was placed in garrison at Plymouth. '
1688 When King James II., who was a zealous Roman
Catholic, pursued the interests of papacy so far as to
occasion much alarm among his Protestant subjects, the
Earl of Bath stood aloof from the measures of the
Court, and he was one of the noblemen who communi-
if-
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
oated privately with the Prince of Orange, to whom 1688
the nation looked for aid to oppose the arbitrary pro-
ceedings of the King. In November, 1688, when the
Prince of Orange arrived with a Dutch armament, the
Tenth and Thirteenth regiments were in garrison at
Plymouth, —the Tenth occupying the citadel, and the
two colonels were with their regiments. The Earl of
Bath was in the interest of the Prince of Orange ; but
the Earl of Huntingdon adhered to Kiag James : the
lieut.-colonel of the Tenth, Sir Charles Carney, was a
steadfast supporter of the Court, and the lieut.-colonel of
the Thirteenth, Ferdinando Hastings, was a warm ad-
vocate for the Prince of Orange ; thus the interest of the
superior officers of the two regiments was equally
divided. It appeared doubtful, for some time, to which
party the garrison of Plymouth would devote itself; but
eventually, the Earl of Bath, being the senior officer and
governor of the fortress, ordered the Earl of Huntingdon
to be arrested : he also ordered four Roman Catholic
officers of the Thirteenth, — ^viz.. Captain Owen Macarty,
Lieutenants William Rhodesby, Talbot Lascelles, and
Ensign Ambrose Jones, to be arrested ; he then declared
for the Prince of Orange, and induced the two regiments
to engage in the same interest. The garrison having
been settled in the name of the Prince of Orange, the
Earl of Huntingdon and the Roman Catholic officers of
his regiment were released. - '
The news of the loss of Plymouth, and of the two
regiments having declared for the Prince of Orange,
together with similar events taking place in other parts
of the kingdom, proved to King James that his soldiers
would not fight against the Protestant religion and the
laws of the realm. His Majesty deprived the Earl of
6
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1688 Bath of hia commissions, and appointed Lieut.- Colonel
Sir Charles Carney to the colonelcy of the Tenth foot
by commission dated the 8th of December. The regi-
ment had, however, engaged in the interest of the Prince
of Orange, and this change in the colonel produced no
alteration in the sentiments of the regiment. King
James fled to France, and on the 31st of December the
Prince restored the Earl of Bath to the colonelcy.
J 689 The accession of the Prince and Princess of Orange
tq the throne was followed by a civil war in Scotland
and Ireland ; but the Tenth \.'ere intrusted with the
charge of the citadel of Plymouth, and they were not
f -nployed in the field in 1689 or 1690 ; they, however,
detached six companies to the islands of Jersey and
Guernsey.
1690 In 1690, the powerful efforts of the French monarch
to reduce the Spanish provinces in the Netherlands
under his dominion, occasioned the regiment to be called
1691 into active service. Embarking from Jersey, Guernsey,
and Plymouth, the Tenth foot, commanded by Lieut.-
Colonel Sir Beville Granville, nephew of the Earl of
Bath, sailed to Ostend, and landing at that port marched
up the country, and joined the army commanded by
King William III. The regiment enjoyed the confi-
dence of the King to a great extent, and on joining the
army, it was ordered to pitch its tents near His Majesty's
quarters at Anderlecht. It was formed in brigade
with the seventh, sixteenth, and Fitzpatrick's (after-
wards disbanded), under Brigadier-General Churchill,
and after taking part in several movements, went into
winter-quarters.
1692 Quitting its cantonments among the Flemish pea-
santry, in May, 1692, the regiment again took the field.
M
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
and was employed in Bevoral operations. In the be- 1692
ginning of August it was encamped at Halle, and, early
on the morning of the 3rd of that month, it advanced at
the head of the main body of th:; confederate army to
attack the French in position at Stcmhirk. After passing
through some narrow defiles among trees, the Third and
Tenth foot halted at the extremity of a wood, at the
moment when the brigades forming the van of the army
were severely engaged with very supcriov numbers. A
short distance in front of the Tenth, and near the skirt
of the wood a little to the left, a regiment of Lunenbur-
gers, commanded by the Baron of Pibrack, was contending
with two French battalions, and was nearly overpowered;
it was falling back, fighting, and in some disorder; the
French were gaining ground ; and its colonel, the Baron
of Pibrack, lay dangerously wounded a few yards in
front of the muzzles of the enemy's muskets. Prince
Gasimir of Nassau galloped up to the Tenth, and re-
quested them to advance to the aid of the Lunenburgers ;
when the regiment formed line, the pikemen in the
centre, and the musketeers and grenadiers on each flank,
and Lieut.-Colonel Sir Seville Granville led it forward
with great gallantry. At that moment the Lunenburgers
were overpowered, and the French were hurrying for-
ward with shouts., and a heavy fire of musketry, when
suddenly the Tenth, conipicuous by their blue coats,
scarlet breeches and stockings, and three stand of scarlet
colours floating in the breeze, were seen issuing from
among the trees in firm array. So noble a line of com-
batants, separating itself from the broken sections of the
retreating Lunenburgers, startled the enemy ; the French
artillery thundered against its flanks, — their musketry
smote it in front, — yet the regiment bore sternly forward
t) THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1692 to close on its numerous enemies, when the Fench fell
back. Two Serjeants of the Tenth sprang forward and
rescued the Baron of Pibrack, bearing him from among
his enemies to the rear, and the regiment pressed forward,
without firing a shot, until it gained a hollow way be-
yond the skirts of the wood, where it halted, and the
musketeers, taking sure aim over the bank, soon cleared
the ground in their front of opponents. Numerous
narrow defiles and other obstructions prevented the
main body of the British infantry from arriving in time
to support the brigades in advance; King William
ordered a retreat, and Prince Casimir of Nassau arrived
with orders for the Tenth to withdraw from their post.
The Prince highly commended the conduct of the
regiment on that, the first occasion of its being engaged,
and its bearing proved a presage of future renown.
The regiment had a number of private soldiers killed
and wounded; also Captain Elliott, Lieutenants Thomas
Granville and John Granville, wounded.
Towards the end of August, the Tenth were detached
from the main army, and having joined a number of
troops which had arrived from England under Lieut.-
General the Duke of Leinster, they were employed in
seizing and fortifying the towns of Fumes and Dixmude.
On the 22nd of September, as working parties of the
seventh and Tenth foot were enlarging the ditch of a
bastion, they found a quantity of hidden treasure, con-
sisting of old French coins, amounting to nearly five
hundred pounds sterling, supposed (according to D'Au-
vergne's history of the campaign of 1692) to have been
concealed there during the civil war in Flanders towards
the close of the preceding century.
In the middle of October, the regiment marched to
REGIMENT OF FOOT. W
Damme, a little strong town, situated between Bruges 1692
and Sluys, where it passed the winter.
The Tenth regiment of foot appears in the list of 1693
troops under King William III. 't Parck camp near
Louvain, in June, 1693, and they were ordered to pitch
their tents in the fields adjoining the defiles of Berbeck,
to guard that avenue to the camp. While the army
was at this place, several skirmishes occurred ; but the
only loss sustained by the Tenth was on the 25th of
June, when an outpost of a Serjeant's party, covering a
number of horses at grass, was attacked, and three men
were severely wounded.
On the 1st of July, the regiment was detached from
the main army, with other forces under the Duke of
Wirtemberg, to attack the enemy's fortified lines be-
tween the rivers Scheldt and Lys. After a march of
eight days, the troops arrived in front of the lines near
D'Otignies, and on the following day the works were
attacked at three points. The grenadiers formed the
van of each attack ; the right column was composed
of Danes ; the Argyle highlanders headed the centre
column, and the Tenth foot took the lead of the column
on the left. When the signal for the assault was given,
the Tenth raised a loud shout and ran forward. The
pikemen arrived at the little river Espiers, which ran in
front of the lines, and cast a number of fascines into the
water, but the stream carried them away. The grena-
diers of the Tenth and other regiments, being anxious
to signalize themselves, dashed into the current, at the
same time the musketeers advanced to the bank and
fired upon their opponents on the works. The river was
so deep that many of the soldiers were up to the chin in
water ; but they gained the shore without serious loss.
10
THE TENTH, OR NOBTH LINCOLNHHIRE
■'il
1698 — sprang forward with astonishing rapidity, — forded
the ditch, — pulled down the palisadoes, — and ascended
the lines, sword in hand ; the officers and grenadiers of
the Tenth being the first that entered the works. As
the soldiers climbed the entrenchments, shouting and
flourishing their swords, the French fled, and the lines
were carried with little loss. D'Auvergne states that
the grenadiers of the Earl of Bath's regiment (Tenth)
found a cask of brandy in one of the abandoned redoubts,
which proved very welcome, as the soldiers had been
exposed to a heavy rain for several days.
After forcing the lines, contributions were levied on
the territory subject to France, as far as Lisle : and the
Duke of Wi:'temberg was so well pleased with the
conduct of the Tenth, that he made a donation of a
ducat to each man, and the same to the men of the
other regiments engaged in forcing the lines.
While the Tenth were levying contributions, the
main army under King William was defeated at
Landen ; after this disaster .he regiment was ordered
to join the army, but it was not engaged in any service
of importance, and in October it marched into winter-
quarters at Bruges.
On the 29th of October, the Earl of Bath was suc-
ceeded in the colonelcy by his nephew, Lieut. -Colonel
Sir Beville Granville.
1694 Leaving Bruges in May, 1694, the regiment pitched
its tents near Ghent. It served the campaign of that
year in Brigadier- General Stewart's brigade, in the
division commanded by Major-General Sir Henry
Bellasis ; and after taking part in several operations, and
performing many long and toilsome marches, it proceeded
into quarters at the pleasant town of Malines.
M
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
11
Early in tho spring of 1695, the French commenced 1695
some new works between the Lys and the Scheldt, when
five hundred men of the Tenth were withdrawn from
Malines in the expectation of taking part in an attempt
to interrupt the enemy's proceedings ; but this enter-
prise was laid aside, and the regiment encamped at
Marykirk until the army took the field, when it was
joined by the men left in quarters.
The Tenth were subsequently detached to Dixmudc,
in West Flanders ; and they were one of the corps
which pitched their tents before the Kenoque, a fortress
at the junction of the Loo and Dixmude canals, where
the French had a garrison.
On the 9th of June, the grenadiers of the Tenth were
engaged in driving the French from the entrenchments
and houses near the Loo canal. A redoubt was after-
wards taken, and a lodgment effected on the works at
the bridge ; in which service the regiment had several
men killed and wounded.
This enterprise was only designed as a diversion to
favour the operations of the main army, and when King
William had besieged the strong fortress of Namur, the
regiment traversed the country to the banks of the Lys,
and joined the covering army under the Prince of
Vaudemont.
When Marshal Villeroy advanced, with a force of
very superior numbers, to attack the covering army, the
Prince of Vaudemont retreated to Ghent, and during
this retrograde movement, the commanding officer of
the Tenth, Lieut.- Colonel Sydney Godolphin, and a
Serjeant and twelve men, resting at a house on the road
too long, were made prisoners.
The regiment was subsequently employed in several
If
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1695 movements to protect the maritime and other towns of
Flanders, and to cover the army carrying on the siege
of Namur. In August it was encamped between Ge-
nappe and Waterloo, and after the surrender of the
castle of Namur, it marched into quarters in the villages
between Nieuport and Ostend.
1696 In the spring of 1696, Louis XIV. endeavoured to
weaken the power of the confederate army in Flanders,
by causing England to become the seat of civil war.
The partisans of King James were excited to rise in
arms ; a plot was formed for the assassination of King
William, and a French army approached the coast to
embark with King James for England. The Tenth
foot was one of the corps selected to return to England
on this occasion, and the regiment, having embarked at
Ostend, arrived at Gravesend in March. In the mean-
time the conspirators had been discovered; a British
fleet was sent to blockade the French ports, and the
designs of Louis XIV were frustrated.
Several corps returned to Flanders ; but the Tenth
were selected to remain on home service.
The regiment landed at Gravesend, occupied quarters
a short period in London, and afterwards marched into
extensive cantonments in the counties of Suffolk and
Essex.
1697 In May, 1697, the regiment was ordered to embark
for the Netherlands, and it joined the army at the camp
in front of Brussels in July ; but in a few weeks after-
wards the treaty of Ryswick gave peace to Europe.
During the winter, the regiment returned to England ;
it landed at Gravesend and Tilbury in December, and
marched into quarters in Essex.
Considerable reductions wore made in thi trcngth
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
18
of the army, after tho peace of Ryswick, and the Tenth 1698
regiment was one of the corps selected to proceed to
Ireland; it embarked at Highlake in July, 1698, and 1699
was stationed in Ireland during the following two 1700
years.
Pursuing his schemes for the aggrandizement of his 1701
family with unceasing assiduity, the King of France
procured tho accession of his grandson, Philip, Duke of
Anjou, to the throne of Spain, and this open violation
of existing treaties involved Europe in another war.
Among the corps first ordered to proceed on foreign
service to aid the continental powers in arresting the
progress of French usurpations, was the Tenth regi-
ment of foot. It embarked at Cork on the 15th of June,
1701, sailed to Holland, and was placed in one of the
frontier garrisons of that country. In September it
was encamped on Breda-heath, where it was reviewed,
with the remainder of the British troops in Holland,
by King William III., and afterwards returned to its
former station in garrison.
In the spring of 1702, the regiment took the field to 1702
serve as auxiliaries to the army of the Emperor of Ger-
many, England not havin < declared war against France ;
and at the camp at Ros*. ndael, news was received of tho
death of King William III. and of the accession of
Queen Anne on the 8th of March. From Rosendael
the Tenth man:hed to the Duchy of Cleves, and
encamped at Cranenburg on the Lower Rhine, forming
part of the covering army during the siege of Kaysers-
toerth. In June a French force of superior numbers
marched through the forest of Cleves and plains of
Goch to cut oflf the allied army from Grave and Nime-
guen; in consequence of this movement the British,
14
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1702 Dutch, and Germans at Cranenburg, struck their tents
a little before sunset on the 10th of June, and, by a
forced march, arrived within a few miles of Nimeguen,
about eight o'clock on the following morning, at which
time the French columns appeared on both flanks and
in the rear. Some sharp fighting occurred ; the British
corps forming the rear-guard evinced signal gallantry,
and the Tenth regiment distinguished itself: the
enemy was held in check until the army effected its
■ retreat under the works of Nimeguen.
England declared war against France: additional
troops arrived in Holland, and the Earl of Marl-
borough assumed the command. The Tenth were
engaged in the movements by which the French were
driven from their menacing position near the confines
of Holland. The regiment also formed part of the
covering army during the siege of Venloo, — a fortress
on the east side of the river Maese, which surrendered
on the 25th of September. The regiment was next
engaged in covering the sieges of Ruremonde and
Stevenswart, both of which places were captured in the
early part of October. The army afterwards advanced
to the city of Liege, which immediately opened its gates,
but the citadel, and a detached fortress called the
Chartreuse, held out. The Tenth regiment was em-
ployed in the siege of the citadel, and the grenadier
company behaved with great gallantry at the capture
of that fortress by storm on the 23rd of October. The
citadel being carried by assault, the garrison was nearly
annihilated ; the garrison of the Chartreuse were eye-
witnesses of this event, and surrendered immediately
afterwards, from apprehension of a similar fate.
The city of Liege being rescued from the power of
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
15
the enemy, the regiment marched back to Holland, and 1702
passed the winter in garrison at Breda.
Sir Beville Granville having been appointed governor 1703
of Barbadoes, the colonelcy of the Tenth foot was con-
ferred on William, Lord North and Grey, by commission
dated the 15th of January, 1703.
Colonel Lord North and Grey proved a very gallant
aspirant for military fame ; serving at the head o£ his
regiment, and distinguishing himself on numerous oc-
casions. The Tenth left their winter-quarters towards
the end of April, 1703; on the 6th of May, they arrived
at Maeswyck, where they halted on the following day ;
but, information having been received of the approach
of a powerful French army to cut oflf the detachments
of the confederate forces, the regiment struck its tents
at sunset, with several other corps, and, by a forced
march, arrived at the city of Maestricht about noon on
the following day. When the French army approached
that city, the regiment was in position, being one of the
corps stationed at Lonakin; some skirmishing and
cannonading occurred, and the French withdrew with-
out venturing a general engagement.
When the Duke of Marlborough advanced against
the French at Tongres, the Tenth were formed in
brigade with the second battalion of the royals, and the
sixteenth, twenty-first, and twenty-sixth regiments,
under Brigadier-General the Earl of Derby. The
enemy took refuge behind an extensive line of works,
and the English General besieged the strong fortress of
Huj/f situate on the Maese above Liege. The Tenth
foot were employed at the siege ; and, on the 18th of
August, when the enemy had vacated that portion of
the town which lay beyond the river, Colonel Lord
16
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1703 North and Grey took possession of it with the Tenth :
another corps was afterwards placed under his lordship's
command, and the regiment held this post during the
remainder of the siege.
Huy having been captured, the siege of the city of
Limburg was next undertaken, and this fortress was
surrendered before the end of September. Thus
Spanish Guelderland was wrested from the power of
France, and in October the regiment marched back to
, Holland, where it passed the winter. *
1704 While the Duke of Marlborough was capturing for-
tress after fortress in the Netherlands, the French and
Bavarians had great success in Germany ; their united
efforts threatened to overturn the imperial throne, and,
in 1704, the British commander led his army from
Holland to the Danube, to the succour of the Emperor
Leopold. The Tenth foot, commanded by Colonel
Lord North and Grey, had the honour of being employed
in this splendid enterprise, which elevated the reputa-
tion of the British arms, and immortalized the name of
Marlborough for the conception of the movement, and
the secrecy and rapidity with which it was executed.
To engage in this undertaking, the regiment left its
winter-quarters early in May, 1704, and directing its
march to the Rhine, proceeded along the banks of that
river to Coblentz, where it passed the Rhine and the
Moselle on the 25th and 26th of that month. From
Coblentz the army marched towards the Maine, and
traversing the several states of Germany, arrived at the
seat of war to co-operate with the forces of the empire.
On the 2nd of July, after a long march through a
difficult country, the British approached the fortified
post of Schellenherg, a commanding height on the left
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
17
bank of the Danube, where a body of French and 1704
Bavarians were stationed under the Count d'Arco, and
about six in the evening, a detachment from each
British regiment, with the foot guards, royals, and
twenty-third, under Brigadier- General Fergusson, and
a Dutch force under General Goor, advanced to attack
the entrenchments. A very spirited resistance was
made by the enemy, and, eventually, the Tenth
were led up the contested height to join in the attack.
Firmly and steadily the soldiers of the Tenth moved
up the steep ascent, which was strewed with killed and
wounded ; arriving within range of the enemy's fire, an
iron tempest smote the ranks, and the firm order of the
regiment was shaken : a short pause ensued. At that
moment the British cavalry approached to support the
infantry, and the Germans under the Margrave of Baden
arrived to prolong the attack and assail the enemy in
the reu" -1 icouraged by these circumstances, the
British -, .^- Dutch infantry raised a loud shout, and,
breaking with terrific violence into the entrenchments,
overpowered all resistance. The Duke of Marlborough
led the British cavalry forward, and completed the over-
throw of the enemy.
The Tenth had Captain Crow and fifteen rank and
file killed ; three Serjeants, and thirty-six rank and file
wounded.
Crossing the Danube, and advancing into Bavaria,
the regiment was engaged in various operations; it
proceeded to the vicinity of the enemy's fortified camp
at Augsburg, and afterwards returned to the Danube at
Donawerth : in the meantime a numerous body of
French troops had traversed the Black Forest and joined
the enemy.
18
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1704 About ten o'clock on the night of the 1 1th of August,
the army under the Duke of Marlborough joined the
imperialists commanded by Priuce Eugene of Savoy, at
the village of Mur ster, near the bank of the Danube.
On the following day the regiment vas ordered forward
to ^ >port the piquets, which were attacked by the
unemy's hussars.
At daybreak, on the morning of the memorable 13th
of August, the regiment was under arms, to engage in
a battle wtich appeared to involve the fate of the
Christian world : it formed, on this occasion, part of the
brigade under Brigadier General Row.
Advancing from the camp-ground, the soldiers arrived
in front of the enemy's position, and the Tenth,
commanded by their gallant jroung colonel. Lord North
AND Grey, were destined to attack the village of Blen-
heim, where the enemy had posted a numerous body of
troops, thrown up entrenchments, and constructed pali-
sades. Against this village, Brigadier-General Row's
brigade advanced with great gallantry : the Tenth and
Royal Scots Fusiliers led the attack, and were dis-
tinguished for their intrepid bearing; but all efforts to
force the village against an enemy of so very superior
numbers, and advantageously posted, proved ineffectual.
As the brigade withdrew, it was charged by some
French cavalry, who were repulsed by the fire of a
Hessian brigade. Brigadier-General Fergusson led a
brigade against the other side of the village ; but with-
out success. A sliarp fire was afterwards kept up at
this point, and the army deployed to ngage the main
body of the French and Bavarians. In the conflict
which followed, British valour was conspicuous, and
after a contest of several hours' duration, the French
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
19
akid Bavarian armies were overthrown and nearly anni- 1704
hilated ; Marshal Tallard, and many officers and soldiers
being made prisoners.
When the main body of their army was overthrown,
the French troops in Blenheim were insulated ; thrice
they attempted to escape, but they were forced back.
They took shelter behind the houses and enclosures ;
but thty were soon surrounded, and twelve squadrons of
cavalry, with twenty-four battalions of infantry, surren-
dered prisoners of war. Thus ended the miglity struggle
of this eventful day, so glorious to the British arms !
The honours acquired by the regiment had been
attended with the loss of many valuable lives. Captains
Dawes, Sir John Sands, Cavendish, and Burton ; Lieu-
tenants Frazer and Wycks; En''.gns Breams and
Dawson, were killed : Colonel Lord North and Grey lost
his right hand ; Major Granville ; Captains Cunningham
and Spotswood; Lieutenants Bulwer, Boylblanc, and
Hornby ; Ensigns Crow and Rossington, were wounded.
The number of non-commissoned officers and private
soldiers of the regiment, killed and wounded, has not
been ascertained.
After paasing the night on the field of battle, sur-
rounded with the ensanguined trophies of victory, the
Tenth were selected to guard the prisoners from Ger-
many to Holland, in which service five British battalions
were employed. The prisoners were marched to Mentz,
where they were put on board of small vessels, and
sailed to Holland. The regiment arrived at the Hague
in October, and, having delivered up the prisoners, it
was placed in garrison for the winter : its services are
not, therefore, connected with the operations of the
army in Germany after the victory at Blenheim.
c 2
20
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
no6 A numerous body of fine recruits arrived from
England, in the spring of 1705, to replace the losses of
the preceding campaign, and in May, 1705, when the
regiment took the field, its appearance was admired. It
was reviewed by the Duke of Marlborough, at the camp
on the left bank of the Maese, and afterwards marched to
Juliers. From Juliers the regiment marched through
a mountainous country to the valley of the Moselle, and
pitched its tents near the ancient city of Treves. The
army being united, it passed the rivers Moselle and
Saar on the 3rd of June, traversed the difficult defile of
Tavemen, and encamped within seven miles of Syrk.
At this place the army halted, waiting for the impe-
rialists, whose tardy movements and inefficient state
disappointed the expectations of the English commander,
and rendered it necessary for him to hurry back to the
Netherlands to arrest the progress of the French ou
the Maese.
In the forced march from Syrk to the Maese, the
regiment lost many men from fatigue ; and soon after
its arrival, it was selected to take part in storming the
enemy's fortified lines, which were protected by a
numerous army. To render this great undertaking as
certain as possible, these formidable barriers were
menaced on the south of the Mehaigne, and the French
troops being drawn in that direction, the point selected
for the attack was thus weakened. On the evening of
the 17th of July, the corps selected to commence the
attack marched in the direction of Helixem and Neer-
Hespen, the Tenth forming part of the leading
brigade of infantry ; and they were ToUowed by the
remainder of the army. About four o'clock on the
following morning, they approached the lines and sur-
BBOIMBNT OP FOOT.
31
prised the enemy'i guardi. Inipired with emulation, 1705
the soldiers soon cleared the villagei of Neer-Winden
and Neer-Hespen, seized the village and bridge of
Helixem, and carried the castle of Wange with little
loss ; the enemy being surprised and confounded by the
suddenness of the attack. Encouraged by this success,
and stimulated by the noble example of several officers,
the troops rushed through the snclosures and marshy
grounds, forded the river Ghoct, and crowded across
the fortifications; the French retreating in a panic.
Thus the lines were forced, and the soldiers of the
Tenth stood triumphant on the captured works, where
the cross of St. George, iftoating in the air, served as a
beacon to impart a knowledge of this splendid success
to the main body of the army, still at some distance. A
numerous body of the enemy's cavalry and infantry
hurried to the spot to drive back the troops which had
passed the lines, when some «harp fighting occurred,
which ended in the overthrow of the enemy, who made
a precipitate retreat behind the river Dyle. This
daring enterprise was thus achieved ; and the talents of
the Duke of Marlborough, with the intrepidity and
valour of the British soldiers, were admired by all
nations. The English commander stated in his despatch,
that the troops acquitted themtelvei with a bravery sur-
passing all that could have been hoped of them.
The Tenth shared in the operations of the main
army during the remainder of the campaign, but had
no opportunity of distinguishing themselves in action :
they passed the winter in garrison in Holland.
Each successive victory had inspired the troops with 1706
additional confidence in their commander, and in their
own prowess : to besiege a town, or fight a battle, and
22
THE TENTH, OH NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1105 not conquer, when the Duke of Marlborough com-
manded, appeared impossible. With a bold assurance
that fresh triumphs awaited them, the soldiers took the
1706 field in May, 1706, and the Tenth foot joined the
camp near Tongres on the 19th of that month. On the
23rd of May, as the army was advancing in eight
columns, information was received that the French,
Spaniards, and Bavarians, commanded by Marshal Vil-
leroy and the Elector of Bavaria, were taking up a
position at Mont St. Andre, with their centre at the
village of Ramilies, and the allies prepared for battle.
Diverging into the open plain, the allied army formed
line and advanced against the enemy. T he T e n T h foot,
being on the right of the line, proceeded, with a number
of other corps, in the direction of the village of Autreglise,
and made a demonstration of attacking the enemy^s left.
The French weakened thejr centre to support their left,
and the British commander instantly seized the oppor-
tunity and attacked the weakened point. The Tenth
foot were among the corps which, occupying some high
ground on the right, were not engaged during the early
part of the battle ; but they had a full view of the con-
flict on the plain. At length a crisis arrived : the bri-
gades on the right were ordered into action, when the
Tenth evinced that intrepidity and firmness for which
the regiment had been distinguished on former occasions,
and another decisive victory exalted the fame of the
British arms. The broken remains of the French,
Spanish, and Bavarian legions were pursued for many
miles, and an immense number of prisoners, cannon,
standards, and colours was captured.
The effect of this surprising victory was the immediate
surrender of Brussels, Ghent, and the prbicipal towns
RBOIMEMT OF FOOT.
23
of Brabant, and the intelligence of these events produced 1*706
such an electric sensation throughout England, that the
gallant exploits of the heroes of Ramilies became a
general theme of conversation, and the subject of
numerous addresses to the throne. Rewards were con-
ferred on officers who had distinguished themselves, and
the commanding officer of the Tenth, the gallant Lord
North and Grey, was promoted to the rank of brigadier-
general, and placet! at the head of three battalions of
infantry.
Several towns in Flanders held out ; and in June the
Tenth marched to Arseele, and afterwards to Rouselaer,
and formed part of the covering army during the siege
of Ostend, which fortress was delivered up on the 8th
of July.
After the surrender of Ostend, the regiment was
selected to take part in the siege of Menin, a strong
town pleasantly situated on the little river Lys. This
fortress was accounted the key to the French conquests
in the Netherlands, and one of the masterpieces of the
celebrated Vauban: the siege therefore excited an
unusual degree of interest. The town was invested on
the 23rd of July ; and the conduct of the Tenth during
the progress of the siege, corresponded with the high
character of the regiment. Considerable loss was sus-
tained in carrying on the attacks, but the soldiers had the
gratification of witnessing this place added to the nume-
rous conquests made during this memorable campaign.
Dendermond and Aeth were afterwards captured;
and in November the regiment took up its winter-
quarters at Ghent.
During the campaign of 1707, the regiment formed 1707
part of the brigade commanded by its colonel^ Brigadier-
24
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1707 General Lord North and Orey, and it was some time
encamped near the village of Waterloo. The English
^ commander was unable, this year, to bring his cautious
opponents to a general engagement. In October, the
regiment returned to Ghent.
1708 While the regiment was reposing in quarters at this
city, the king of France fitted out a fleet, and embarked
troops at Dunkirk, for the invasion of Great Britain,
with a view of placing the Pretender on the throne.
To repel the invaders, the Tenth regiment embarked
for England in the middle of March, 1708, and arrived
at Tynemouth on the 21st ; but the French squadron,
with the Pretender on board, was chased from the
British coast by the English fleet, and the Tenth were
ordered to Flanders : they landed at Ostend, and pro-
ceeded in boats to Ghent, where they arrived towards
the end of April.
In May the regiment quitted Ghent, and was engaged
in the operations of the main army j and soon afterwards
the French, by treachery and stratagem, obtained pos-
session of the two towns of Ghent and Bruges. They
also invested Oudenarde^ and this circumstance led to a
general engagement, in which the Tenth gained new
honours.
Passing the Scheldt on pontoon bridges near Ouden-
arde, on the 11th of July, the allied army encountered
the legions of the enemy, commanded by his Royal
Highness the Duke of Burgundy and the Duke of
Vendome, in the fields beyond the river, and the battle
immediately commenced. The Tenth, commanded by
Lieut.-Colonel Grove, passed the Scheldt by the bridge
between Oudenarde and the abbey of Eename, and as-
cended the heights of Bevere. At this place they halted
It
RBOIMENT OF FOOT.
9S
a short time, then descended into the plain, and engaged 1108
the French battalions in the grounds beyond the rivulet,
near the village of Eyne. About five o'clock in the after-
noon the regiment opened its fire, and it continued to
gain ground upon its opponents, until the shades of even-
ing gathered over the field of battle. The wings of the
allied army gained upon the enemy, and the circling blaze
of musketry enveloped the French troops, whose destruc-
tion appeared inevitable, but the darkness of the night
soon rendered it impossible to distinguish friends from
foes, and the Duke of Marlborough ordered his soldiers
to cease firing, and to halt. The darkness favoured the
escape of the enemy, and the wreck of the French army
retreated in disorder towards Ghent.
This victory prepared the way for an undertaking of
great magnitude, — viz., the siege of Lisle, the capital of
French Flanders, — a fortress deemed almost impreg-
nable, and garrisoned by fifteen thousand men, com-
manded by the veteran Marshal Boufflers. This enter-
prise put the abilities of the generals, and the courage and
endurance of the troops, to a severe trial. The Tenth
formed part of the covering army under the Duke of
Marlborough, while the siege was carried on by the
brigades under Prince Eugene of Savoy. The services
of the Tenth were of a varied character, — escorting sup-
plies, — furnishing out-posts, — confronting the French
army which advanced to raise the siege ; and eventually
the grenadier company joined the besieging army, and
took part in the attacks on the town.
When the Elector of Bavaria besieged Brussels, the
Tenth formed part of the force which advanced to
raise the siege. The enemy's strong positions on the
Scheldt were forced on the 27th of November; and
26
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1708 the Elector made a precipitate retreat from before
Brussels.
The citadel of Lisle surrendered on the 9th of Decem-
ber, and, notwithstanding the lateness of the season, the
soldiers of the Tenth were called upon to engage in
another enterprise. They appeared before Ghent,
— drove back the enemy's out-guards, and took part in
opening the trenches between the Scheldt and the Lys,
on the night of the 24th of December, on which occasion
their colonel. Lord North and Grey, evinced signal gal-
lantry, and he was rewarded, a few days afterwards,
with the rank of major-general. On the 26th of Decem-
ber, ten companies of French grenadiers issued from the
town to attack the besieging troops, and they put the
first regiment they came in contact with in some confusion.
The Tenth were immediately led to the spot, and
they engaged the French grenadiers with spirit. The
commanding officer of the regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel
Grove, was made prisoner, and Brigadier-General
Evans, who commanded the troops at that point, was
also captured ; but the enemy was soon driven back
into the town. On the 2nd of January, 1709, the
governor surrendered j and the Tenth took up their
quarters for the winter in the captured town.
1709 From Ghent, the regiment marched, in the spring of
1709, to the plain of Lisle; and was afterwards en-
camped on the Upper Dyle. After menacing the enemy's
lines, and causing Marshal Villars to draw all the
troops out of the fortified towns, which could possibly
be spared, to strengthen his army in the field, the allies
suddenly invested Toumay. During the siege of the
town the Tenth regiment formed part of the covering
army, but when the citadel was attacked, this, with
RSOIMKMT OP FOOT.
27
several other regiments, left the covering army, and 1709
marched to Tournay to take part in the siege.
The citadel of Tournay was situated on some high
ground, with a gentle ascent from the town, and the
siege proved a service of the most difficult character.
The peculiarities arose not so much from the strength
of the fortifications, as from tlicmultiplicity of the sub-
terraneous works, which were more numerous than
those aboveground. The approaches were carried on
by sinking pits several fathoms deep, and working from
thence underground, until the troops arrived at the
casements and mines. The soldiers engaged in thesv
services frequently encountered parties of the enemy,
and numerous combats occurred in these gloomy laby-
rinths. On some occasions the men at work underground
were inundated with water ; on another occasion three
hundred men were suffocated with smoke, and a hun-
dred men were buried by the explosion of a mine. A
detachment of the eighteenth foot was blown into the
air, and their limbs scattered to a distance ; and a bat-
talion of Germans was destroyed by another mine ; the
Tenth foot also lost a number of men in the mines. At
length it became difficult to induce the soldiers to enter
these dark caverns, and engage in so appalling a service ;
they were, however, persuaded to persevere, and the
citadel surrendered in the beginning of September.
After the capture of Tournay, the allied armv tra-
versed the country with a view of besieging thr <• .y
of Mens, the capital of the province of Hainault ; but
when on the march, the allies found the French army,
under Marshals Villars and Boufflers, in position near
Malplaquet, and resolved to hazard an engagement.
At three o'clock on the morning of the 11th of Sep-
28
THE TENTH, OK NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1709tember, the Tenth were on parade in the meadow
where they had passed the night, and the chaplain per-
formed divine service. A thick mist concealed the
opposing armies from each other, but the din of hostile
preparation was heard, and the soldiers, having confi-
dence in their leaders, were anxious to acquire new
laurels under their favourite chiefs. They waited till
the sun broke forth, and then the battle commenced.
- 'i'? Entrenchments, abatis de bois, and other defensive
works, covered the front and flanks of the French, and
the storming of these formidable works occasioned a
greater loss of life, than occurred at the battles of Blen-
heim, Ramilies, and Oudenarde put together.
The Tenth were formed in brigade, on this occasion,
with the foot guards, royals, and thirty-seventh, and
were in the column commanded by General Count
Lottum. To this column was allotted the task of
storming the enemy's entrenchments ii^ the wood of
Taisniere, which proved a difficult service. The foot
guards led the attack, and behaved with great gallantry,
but they encountered such formidable opposition that
they were repulsed. The royals seconded the foot
guards, and the buffs, being at the head of the next
brigade, prolonged the attack to the left. The Tenth
penetrated between the royals and the buffs, and the
whole rushing forward with determined resolution,
forced the entrenchments, when the French fell back
fighting, but halted and renewed the contest in the
wood. The Tenth, and other corps at this point, pene-
trated among the trees, and a sharp fire of musketry
was kept up. The foliage was thick, every tree was
disputed, and the wood re-echoed the din of battle. In
the meantime a severe contest was taking place at other
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
29
parts of the field, and obstacles deemed insuTmountable 1709
were overcome ; but the carnage was dreadful. The
enemy's centre was forced j the cavalry of the allied
army triumphed over the French horsemen, and the
Tenth, and other British regiments in the woods of
Taisniere, gained ground on their opponents. Even-
tually the French legions were driven from the field,
with the loss of many prisoners, colours, standards, and
cannon. When the soldiers of the allied army gazed
at the formidable entrenchments, and other difficulties
they had overcome, they were astonished at their own
success.
On this occasion the regiment did not sustain a very
severe loss in killed and wounded: the only officers
mentioned in the list are Lieutenants Fellowes and
Elstead wounded.
After the victory of Malplaquet, the siege of Mms
was undertaken, and the Tenth formed part of the
covering army : the garrison surrendered on the 20th
of October, and shortly afterwards the regiment marched
into winter-quarters at Ghent.
Leaving its winter-quarters in the middle of April, 1710
1710, the regiment directed its march to the vicinity of
Toumay, where the allied army assembled. The cap-
ture of the small post of Mortagne proved a prelude to
another campaign in which several fortresses were
wrested from the French monarch. By a forced march
the enemy's lines were passed at Pont- a- Vendin, and
the aiege of Douay, a considerable fortress in the second
line of defence which covered the frontiers of Artois,
was undertaken. Douay is a town of antiquity, hav-
ing been a place of note in the time of the first
Counts of Flanders j the river Scarpe running through
30
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1710 the town, the river Haine being near it, the works
being also strong, numerous, and well garrisoned, the
siege of this place was an important undertaking. The
Tenth foot, commanded by Lieut.-Colonel Henry
Grove, had their post in the lines of circumvallation,
but did not take part in the attacks upon the works.
When the French army, under Marshal Villars, ad-
vanced to raise the siege, the regiment was in position
to oppose the enemy, and it had several men killed and
wounded by a heavy cannonade which occurred on that
occasion. Marshal Villars did not hazard an engage-
ment, and the governor of Don ay, after ? very gallant
defence, surrendered on the 27th of June.
After this conquest the English general resolved to
attack Bethime, a strong town formerly belonging to
the Counts of Flanders; but having been taken by
CSraston, Duke of Orleans, it was annexed to the French
monarchy at the peace of the Pyrenees in 1659.
During the siege of Bethune, the Tenth had their
post in the covering army encamped at Villars-Bruim,
where the regiment was stationed until the garri:^on
surrendered on the 29th of August.
The next undertaking in which the army wa^ engaged
was the siege of Aire and St. Tenant, which towns were
so situated as to admit of a simultaneous investment,
and as the capture of these fortresses would secure the
navigation of the Lys, and open a water communica-
tion with Tournay, Lisle, and Ghent, the skill of the
generals and the valour of the troops were called forth
to insure the r reduction. The Tenth were among
the corps engaged in the siege of Aire, and as the
governor of that place made a very vigorous defence, a
severe loss was sustained in killed and wounded. The
if
KEGIMBNT OF FOOT.
31
regiment was several times warmly engaged in carrying 1710
on the attacks and storming the out- works ; on which
occasions its gallant bearing called forth the commenda-
tions of the Prince of Anhalt^ who commanded the
troops employed in the siege. On the 9th of November,
the garrison surrendered ; but the possession of Aire
was purchased at a serious loss of brave soldiers. *
Thus, fortress after fortress fell before the superior
skill of the commanders and the prowess of the troops
composing the allied army. After the surrender of Aire,
the Tenth marched to Courtray, a town of Hainault,
situate on the river Lys, and defended by towers and a
strong castle erected by Philip, Duke of Burgundy, in
1385: at this place the regiment passed the winter, and
its losses were replaced by recruits from England.
Towards the end of April, 1711, the regiment was 1711
again in the field; it was reviewed at the camp at
Warde by the Duke of Marlborough, on the 8th of
June, and commended for its appearance and discipline \
it afterwards encamped on the plains of Lens. A new
line of formidable entrenchments, defended by a power-
ful French army under the command of Marshal Vil-
lars, appeared as a barrier to arrest the victorious
career of the allied army ; but the British General, by
menacing the enemy's left, and making ostentatious pre-
parations for storming the works at that point, occasioned
the French troops to be drawn to that quarter ; in the
meantime he Aad privately assembled a number of corps
at Douay, and by a forced march these formidable
works were passed at the unguarded post of Arhux.
The TeiiTH regiment of foot had the honor to take part
in forcing these lines, on which occasion the British
General developed that sublimity of military talent
32
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
m
1711 which has justly stamped this campaign as peculiarly
scientific and glorious. The regiment was afterwards
engaged in the siege of Bouchain, a well-fortified town,
situate on both sides of the river Scheldt : and in carry-
ing on the attacks, and performing its turn of duty in
the trenches, the regfment had several men killed and
wounded. The garrison surrendered in September,
and after the damaged 'vorks were repaired, the Tenth
went into winter-quarters.
The French monarch saw his generals overmatched,
his soldiers beaten and dispirited, the barriers of his
kingdom trampled down, and the great Duke of Marl-
borough ready to lead his victorious legions into the
heart of France. Under these circumstances the ambi-
tious Louis XIV, solicited peace. Negociations com-
menced before the Tenth foot took the field in April,
17121712: the British troops were, however, assembled
near Toumay, and the Duke of Ormond assumed the
conimand in succession to the Duke of Marlborough.
According to the returns of this period, the regiment
brought six hundred and twenty-three rank and file
into the field.
From Toumay the regiment advanced to the vicinity
of Bouchain; it subsequently formed part of the covering
army, encamped at Cateau-Cambresis, during the siege
of Quesnoy, which fortress surrendered on the 4th of
July. Soon afterwards a suspension of arms was pro-
claimed between the British and French, preparatory to
a treaty of peace, and the Duke of Ormond withdrew,
with the troops under his orders, to Ghent, from whence
several corps were detached to Dunkirk, to take posses
The Tenth regiment of foot was subsequently
./■ "
'' ' - J
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
33
quarter -d at Ghent ; it remained in Flanders while 1713
the ne/^ociations were being carried on at Utrecht, and,
in April, 1714, it was in garrison at the strong maritime 1714
town of Nieuport.
While the regiment was in garrison at Nieuport,
Queen Anne died (1st August), and was succeeded by
King George I. ; several corps were ordered home on
this occasion, but the Tenth were selected to garrison
one of the fortresses in Flanders during the negociations
for the barrier treaty.
Tn the summer of 1715, the adherents of the Stuar.; 1715
dynasty, who were numerous, particulariy in Scotland,
made active preparations for the elevation of the Pre-
tender to the throne, and Lieut.-General Lord North
and Grey, being known to entertain sentiments favour-
able to the Stuart family, was removed from the colonelcy
of the Tenth foot, which was conferred on the Lieut.-
Colonel, Brigadier-General Henry Grove (who had
often signalized himself at the head of the regiment),
by commission dated the 23rd of June, 1715.
King George I., supported by his parliament, adopted
very energetic measures to oppose the designs of the
Jacobites, and His Majesty, having great confidence in
the zeal of Brigadier-Geueral Grove, and in the attach-
ment of the Tenth foot to the Protestant succession,
gave direc<:ions for the regiment to return to England :
it landed at the Tower-stairs, London, about the middle
of Augtist, and «»fterwards marched to Colchester.
The rebellion broke out ui Scotland in September,
and the Earl of Mar headed the insurgent bands; but
it was found necessary to detain a number of corps in
England, to overawe the disaffected ; and the T^hnth
werR ordered to maich, in the beginning of October, to
34
THE TEN'A-U[, VU. NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1*715 Hammersmith, Kensington, and Chelsea, to be near the
court. After the victories gained by the King's troops
at Dumblain and Preston; the regiment marched to
Lichfield and Newcastle, in Staffordshire, where it
remained during the winter and the following tpring
ni6 In the summer of 1/16, the regiment was statioiitd
nn in Warwickshire, and in 1717, in Lancashire. * '
1122 The regiment continued to occupy various quarters
in England, until the summer of J 722, wberx it was
encamped on Salisbury Plain, where it was reviewed
with a number of other corps, on tho 30tl; of i't.ugust,
by King George I. and his royal highnesj the Prince
ofWa]e'= After the review, the rcgimeiit px'oceed(;d
to Wol ;»:hainDton and Birmingham.
1*723 During ;ke summor of 1723, the regiment marched
1724 to Sootland; torn whence it returned in 1724, and was
• stationed at Nottingham.
1127 On the prospect of hostilities taking place on the
Continent, in the spring of 1727, between the Elmperor
of Germany and the Dutch, the regiment was held in
readiness to proceed on foreign service ; at the same
time its colonel was promoted to the rank of major-
general, but no embarkation took place.
On the 11th June, 1727, King George I. died, and
King George IL was proclaimed Sovereign of Great
Biitain and Ireland on the following day.
1730 In June, 1730, the regiment marched to Portsmouth,
where it embarked for Gibraltar, and formed part of the
garrison of that important fortress during the following
nineteen years.
1736 The decease of Lieut.-General Grove occurred on
the 20th of November, 1736, and the colonel'?y of the
regiment remained vacant until June of th^ following
REGIMBNT OF FOOT.
35
year, when it was conferred on Major- General Francis 1731
Columbine, who commanded the regiment nine years,
and was succeeded in December, 1746, by Lieut.- 1746
General James Lord Tyrawley, from the third troop of
life guards, which King George IL had resolved to
reduce, in order to diminiih the public expenditure.
On the conclusion of the peace of Aix'la^Chapelle, in 1749
1749, the regiment was relieved from garrison duty at
Gibraltar, and proceeded to Ireland.
General Lord Tyrawley was removed to the fourteenth
dragoons, in July, 1 749 ; and in August King George IL
conferred the colonelcy of the Tenth foot on Colonel
Edward Pole, from the lieut.'Colonelcy of the twelfth
dragoons.
A royal warrant was issued on the 1st of July, 1751, 1751
in which the King's or first colour of the regiment was
directed to be the great Union : the second colour to
be of bright yellow silk, with the Union in the upper
canton, and in the centre of the colour the rank of the
regiment, in gold Roman characters, within a wreath of
roses and thistles on the same stalk.
The costume of the regiment at this period was, —
Three-cornered cooked hats bound with white lace ;
scarlet coats faced and turned up with bright yellow,
and ornamented with white lace ; scarlet waistcoats and
breeches; white linen gaiters reaching above the knee ;
white cravatfi ; buff belts.
Colonel I'ole was promoted to the rank of major-
general in 1757, and to that of lieut.-general in 1759. 1757
He commanded the regiment thirteen years, and died in 1759
the winter of 1762; when King George III. conferred 1762
the colonelcy on Major-General Eldward Sandford, from
^^
36
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1 762 the twenty-sixth regiment, by commission dated the
4th of January, 1763 .
1763 The regiment was stationed in Ireland during the
whole of the seven years' war, but when the disputes
between Great Britain and her North American colonies
1767 began to assume a serious aspect, the Tenth was one of
the first corps ordered to proceed across the Atlantic.
The regiment embarked from Ireland in the spring of
1767, and after a short stay in Nova Scotia, it was
1768 ordered to Boston, where, in 1768, the conduct of the
populace assumed so violent a character as to render
the presence of a military force necessary.
1769 The policy pursued by the British government towards
the North American provinces alienated the affections
of the people from the r ;nei country, and the idea of
these extensive colonief uerm ':;.:■ . great and indepen-
dent empire, having gaiix;^'! Do'i^crjion of many minds,
the Americans became impatient of their condition. The
events of each succeeding year appeared to mature the
revolutionary designs of the colonists, and the determi-
nation to assert their independence became prevalent.
1776 In the spring of 1775, General Gage, who commanded
the British troops at Boston, ascertained that the Ame-
ricans were collecting military stores at Concord, about
eighteen miles from Boston, and the flank compaiii^es of
the Tenth, and of several other corps, embarked in
boats, at ten o'clock on the night of the 18th of April,
under Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Smith of the Tenth,
for the purpose of destroying the stores. Proceeding to
the entrance of the Cambridge-river, the troops landed
at Phipps's farm, and advanced upon Concord, while the
Americans, by the ringing of bells and the firing of guns.
TENTH RF,i.aMENT OF FOOT,
( V'> ftfc pngc I
^•'
RBOIMKNT OF FOOT.
sr
spread an alarm over the country. Abo ic four o'elock 1776
on the morning of the 19th of April, the light company
of the Tenth, being in advance, approached the village
of Lexington, where a body of American militia was
forming ; they were called upon to lay down their arms,
but instead of obeying the order, they attempted to take
shelter behind a stone wall, and several of them fired at
the King's troops, wounding a soldier of the Tenth,
which was the first blood shed in this unhappy contest.
The light infantry responded to thid act of hostility with
an irregular volley, which killed and wounded several
Americans, and dispersed the remainder : the commence-
ment of the American war thus took place.
After this rencounter, the flank companies continued
their route to Concord, and Captain Parsons of the
Tenth was detached with several companies to secure
the bridge beyond the town, while the remainder of the
detachment searched for and destroyed the military
stores. The light companies of the fourth and Tenth
re 'iments wer^ posted on some heights near the bridge ;
crc ds of armed men assembled on the high grounds
near the town, and a party of Americans fired upon the
soldiers at the bridge, killing three men and wounding
several other , when the fire was returned, and the
detached companies joined the main body in the town.
The military stores having been destroyed, the troops
commenced their march back to Boston, when the country
was found swarming with armed men, who commenced
a sharp fire from behind walls, fences, trees, &c., and
skirmish succeeded skirmish until the soldiers were ex-
hausted, and had expended nearly all their ammunition.
Arriving at Lexington, they were met by a brigade of
infantry and two guns, under Colonel Earl Percy, who
38
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRK
1776 formed his men into a square, with the exhausted flaji. k
companies in the centre, and, after a short halt, con linued
the retreat to Charlostown, from whence he crossed the
river by the ferry to Boston, having lost several men
from the incessant fire which the Americans kept up
from behind walls, trees, and other coverts on both sides
of the road.
The regiment had two men killed ; Lieut.-Colonel
Francis Smith, Captain Lawrence Parsons, Lieutenant
Waldron Kelly, Ensign Jeremiah Lester, and thirteen
rank and file wounded.
Hostilities having thus commenced, the whole province
of Massachusetts-bay was speedily in arms, and an im-
mense number of men invested Boston, where the King's
troops were stationed on the land side. The Americans
commenced constructing works on Bunkers-hill, a high
ground beyond the river, from which it was determined
to dislodge them, and the flank companies of the Tenth
formed part of the force selected for this service.
Embarking from Boston in boats, about noon on the
17th of June, the soldiers crossed the river, and landed
on the opposite shore. The ships of war opened their
fire upon the enemy's works, and the troops ascended the
steep hill, which was covered with grass reaching to the
knees, and intersected with walls and fences of various
enclosures, and advanced to storm the works in the face
of a well-directed fire. The difficulty of the ascent, the
heat of the weather, and the enemy's superior numbers
and incessant fire, combined to render this enterprise
particularly arduous; t^vice the King's troops appeared
to stagger ; but recovering, they rushed forward with
renewed ardour, and drove the Americans out of the
works at the point of the bayonet ; thus proving their
EBOIMIMT OF FOOT. 89
superior bravery and diicipline, by gaining a complete I77fi
victory over an enemy three times as numerous as them*
selves and protected by entrenchments.
The flank companies of the Tenth were among the
troops which distinguished themselves, and every oflicer
was wounded. Their loss was two Serjeants and five
rank and file killed ; Captains Parsons, Fitzgerald, Lieu-
tenants Pittigrew, Verner, Hamilton, Kelly, one drum-
mer, and thirty-nine rank and file wounded.
The valour of the British soldiers in North America
excited the admiration of their sovereign and country ;
yet, the circumstances in which they were placed
rendered it impossible for their prowess to be exercised
with the prospect of ultimate success. The great supe-
riority of the numbers of the enemy more than counter-
balanced the advantages of superior skill and discipline,
and the troops in Boston remained in a state of block-
ade ; live cattle, vegetables, and even fuel, were sent for
their use from England ; many of the vessels were, how-
ever, wrecked, and others captured by the Americans,
and great distress, sickness, and loss of life occurred.
No advantage being likely to result from the pos- 1776
session of Boston under the circumstances in which the
troops were placed, it was evacuated in the middle of
March, 1776, and the Tenth were moved to Nova
Scotia. They were stationed at Halifax until June,
when they sailed with the expedition to Staten Island,
to take part in an extensive plan of operations.
The regiment landed on Staten Island in the early
part of July ; reinforcements arrived from England,
also a body of Hessians, and the Tenth, thirty-seventh,
thirty-eighth, and fifty-second regiments, formed the
third brigade of the army, under Major-General Jones,
40
THE TEMTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1776 in the division commanded by Lieut.-General Earl
Percy. ■ - ^ ' ^ •' -t-,-.-'"
On the 22nd of August, a descent was made on the
south-west end of Long Island, and on the night of the
26th, the Tenth advanced, in support of the leading
division, to seize on a pass in the mountains. This pass
was occupied without opposition ; the troops crossed the
hills, and directed their march towards the enemy's lines
at Brooklyn. Arriving- at Bedford, an attack was com-
menced on the American battalions which were quitting
the woody heights to return to their lines, and the en-
thusiastic ardour of the royal forces overcan^e all oppo-
sition. Encouraged by their success, and inspired with
lively anticipations of victory, the soldiers urged their
way towards the lines to storm the works ; but they were
ordered to desist, to spare the unnecessary effusion of
blood which an attack by storm would have occasioned.
The conduct of the British troops on this occasion
was highly commended in General Sir William Howe's
despatch.
The Americans abandoned their lines, and retreated
acrosc; the East River to New York. The Tenth
having thus had the honour of taking part in the re-
duction of Long Island, crossed the river to New York
Island, and were engaged in the movements by which
the American army was driven from the city of New
York.
In the second week of October, the regiment again
embarked in boats, and proceeded up the river to the
vicinity of West Chester, where it went ashore; but
afterwards re-embarked and sailed to Pell's Point, where
a sharp skirmish occurred. The regiment was also en-
gaged in ihs movements by which the passage of the
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
41
Brunx river was effected, and the American army 1776
forced to abandon its fortified lines on White Plains.
In the action on the 28th of October, the Tenth lost
two men.
From White Plains the army withdrew to engage in
the siege of Forts Washington and Lee, which obstructed
the navigation of the North River. Fort Washington
was invested, and on the 16th of November, the Tenth
were engaged, under Lieut. -General Earl Percy, in
assaulting the right flank of the enemy's entrenchments ;
they took part in carrying an advanced work, and after-
wards passed the lines, which were carried in a most
gallant manner, and upwards of two thousand provin-
cials surrendered prisoners of war. The loss of the
regiment was limited to Captain Mackintosh and three
rank and file killed ; five rank and file .vounded.
In the early part of December, the regiment was de-
tached, with other troops, under Lieut.-Generals Clin-
ton and Earl Percy, against Rhode Island, which was
the principal station of the enemy's naval force, and
from whence the Americans sent out privateers which
interrupted the British commerce. The regiment
sailed on this enterprise in the early part of December ;
a landing was effected on the morning of the 9th of
that month, and the island was speedily reduced to
submission to the British government.
After passing several months on Rhode Island, the 1777
Tenth embarked for New Jersey, and formed part of
the army which took the field, under General Sir
William Howe, in the early part of June, 1777.
General Washington kept the American army in the
mountain fastnesses, where he could not be attacked.
iISi THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1777 except under great disadvantages, and the English gene-
ral resolved on an expedition against Philadelphia.
Embarking on board the fleet, the regiment sailed
for Chesi ^)eak-bay, and from thence up the Elk River,
to Elk Ferry, where it landed about the end of August :
the fifth. Tenth, twenty-seventh, fortieth, and fifty-
fifth regiments, formed the second brigade under Major-
General Grant.
The American army took up a position at Brandy-
vrine Creek, to oppose the advance of the British on
Philadelphia, and on the 1 1th of September the enemy's
posts were attacked ; the Tenth forming part of the
force selected to attack the American troops posted at
Chad's Ford. After a sharp cannonade, the troops
rushed through the stream with fixed bayonets, the
fourth foot taking the lead, and, overpowering all resist-
ance, captured three brass field-pieces and a howitzer.
The Americans were routed at all points, and they
made a precipitate retreat. The Tenth had two rank
and file killed, and six wounded, on this occasion.
The regiment passed the night on the field of battle,
and marched on the following day to Concord ; on the
13th of September it arrived at Ash town, and on the
25th the troops pitched their tents at Germantown,
about six miles from Philadelphia, which city was
taken possession of by the grenadiers.
On the 29th of September, the Tenth and forty-
second regiments were detached from the camp at Ger-
mantown, under the orders of Lieut.-Colonel Stirling,
of the forty-second, to attack a strong redoubt erected
by the Americans on the Jersey shore, at a place called
, Billing' 8-point, to prevent the removal of a sunken
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
48
barrier across the river Delaware. The two regiments 1777
crossed the river from Chester on the 1st of October,
and on approaching the redoubt, three hundred Ame-
ricans in garrison fled; having first set fire to their
barracks and spiked their cannon. The Tenth and
forty second pursued the Americans about two miles,
but were unable to overtake them.
Billing's-point redoubt being thus captured, the ob-
structions to the navigation of the Delaware at that point
were removed, and the Tenth and forty-second crossed
the river to Chester, where they were joined by the
twenty- third, and the three regiments escorted a large
convoy of provisions to the camp at Germantown.
The British general having sent ofi* several detach-
ments, the Americans resolved to hazard another battle,
and they attacked the position at Germantow.i at day-
break on the morning of the 4th of October ; but were
repulsed. The light company of the Tenth signalized
itself on this occasion and had several men killed and
wounded : the battalion companies of the regiment had
their post on the right of the village, but they were not
engaged.
In the middle of October, the army removed to the
immediate vicinity of Philadelphia, and two ^rts on
the river were reduced. In the early part of December,
the British advanced towards the enemy's fortified
camp at Whitemarsh; the Tenth took part in several
movements and skirmishes, designed to Lring on a
general engag*" nent, but the Americans kept close
behind their entrenchments and abatis-de-bois, and the
British returned to Philadelphia.
The Tenth regiment passed the winter in comfort- 1178
able quarters in the city of Philadelphia ; but before
44
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1778 the reason for opening the campaign of 1778 arrived,
the King of France concluded a treaty with, and agreed
to aid, the Americans, which so completely changed
the nature of the war, that it was deemed necessary to
concentrate the army at New York.
Philadelphia was evacuated in the middle of June,
and the Tenth took part in the difficult service of re-
treating through a wild . ^d woody country, intersected
by rivulets, the bridges over which had been destroyed.
On the 28 '' " June, the regiment was in advance
under .ouc. -General Knyphauseu, and as the last di-
vision of the army descended from the heights above
Freehold, in New Jersey, the American troops appeared
in the rear and on both flanks, and s' ae sharp fighting
took place, which terminated in the repulse of the
enemy. The grenadier company of the Tenth had an
opportunity of distinguishing itself on this occasion ; it
had Major Gardiner wounded, and several private
soldiers killed and wounded.
Having repulsed the enemy, the army continued its
march, crossed the channel to Sandy Hook, and em-
barked from thence for New York.
The '^'enth had lost many men, during the period
they had been in America, from fatigue, privation, dis-
ease, and other casualties, besides those killed and dis-
abled in action with the enemy, and soon after the
regiment arrived at New York, it was selected to return
to England. The men fit for service, who volunteered
to remain in the country, were transferred to other corps,
and the remainder embarked from Nev York towards
the end of October; they arrived in England in De-
cember, and immediately commenced recruiting their
numbers.
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
45
After the decease of Lieut. -General Sandford, King 1781
George III. conferred the colonelcy of the regiment on
Major-Genoral Sir R. Murray Keith, K.B., from the
late eighty-seventh foot (which was disbanded at the
peace in 1763), by commission dated the 10th of
October, 1781.
The American War having ceased in 1783, reductions n83
took place in the military establishments, and the num-
bers of the Tenth Regiment were consequently dimi-
nished; in the autumn of 1783 the regiment embarked
for Ireland, and it was stationed in that part of the 1'84
United Kingdom during the years 1784 and 1785. 1*^85
On the 2nd of March, 1786, the regiment embarked 1786
from Ireland for Jamaica, to relieve the first battalion
of the sixtieth foot, which was ordered to proceed to
Nova Scotia.
The regiment Y-as stationed at Jamaica when the 1793
French Revolution occurred, which involved Europe in
war and occasioned the West India islands to become
the theatre of anarchy and devastation; the mulattoes 1794
and blacks imbibing the doctrine of equality, breaking
the ties of subordination, and committing every descrip-
tion of crime. Active measures were adopted to rescue
the French West India islands from republican domi-
nation; but the Tenth had sustained so serious a
loss of men from disease during the nine years they
had been at Jamaica, that they were ordered home to
recruit : they arrived in England in August, 1795, and 1795
were stationed at Lincoln, from whence recruiting
parties were sent out.
AftCi.' the decease of Lieut.-General Sir R. Murray
Keith, Major -General the Honorable Henry Edward
46
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
"if •■
1795 Fox, was appointed colonel of the Tenth foot, from
the 131st regiment, by commission dated the 23rd of
June, 1795.
The establishment was completed by drafts from
other corps, and, in three months from the date of its
arrival from Jamaica, the regiment was ordered to fur-
nish seven companies to take part in completing the
deliverance of the French West India Islands from the
power of the republicans. The force designed for this
service, under Major- General Sir Ralph Abercromby,
sailed from Spithead in December, and the departure
of the fleet, accompanied by a division of the roval navy
under Admiral Christian, presented a most splendid
spectacle ; but this armament was overtaken by a storra,
the fleet was dispersed, many vessels were wrecked, and
others returned to Spithead. The ship containing the
1796 grenadier company of the Tenth, and several other
corps, withstood the storm ; but it had not been long at
sea before the yellow fever broke out on board, when it
returned to England, and the soldiers went into hospital
at Plymouth, from whence the grenadiers of the Tenth
marched to Chatham, where the regiment was assembled
in 1796.
1797 From Chatham the regiment embarked on an expe-
dition to the Continent, but was ordered to land at
Lymington, from whence it proceeded to the Isle of
Wight, and was stationed on that island and at Ports-
mouth ui il the winter of 1798.
1798 The Tenth, having been appointed to transfer their
services from Europe to the British possessions in Hin-
doostan, embarked from Portsmouth during the winter,
and arriving in the south of India, landed at the cele-
RKOIMINT OF FOOT.
47
om
of
A94
brated city and fortrois of Madrai, tho capital of the 1198
British possessions in that quarter of tho globe, on the
13thof April, 1799.
At Madras the regimei^t romainod nearly four months, 1799
and on the 6th of August, it ombarkod for the rich and
extensive province of Bengal, where it arrived on the
26th of the same month.
For fifteen months the Tbnth were itationed in the 1800
Presidency of Bengal, in a country abounding in all
that is essential to tho comfort and oven the luxury of
man, under the command of Lieut.- Colonel Richard
Quarrell, and in November, 1800, they were sent down
the river Ganges to bo embarked lor Egypt, which
country was overrun by an army of French veterans,
vauntingly designated the " Army of the East," and
commanded by the celebrated General Buonaparte.
To effect the expulsion of the French " Army of the
East" from Egypt, a British force sailed from Europe
under General Sir Ralph Abercroraby, and about six
thousand men from India and the Cape of Good Hope,
under Major-General Baird, were appointed to co-ope-
rate. To engage in this lervico, the Tenth sailed from
Kidgaree on the 5th of December, joined the expedition, 1801
under Major-General Baird, at Bombay, and sailed from
thence for the Red Sea. Tho original design was to
proceed to the port of Suez, at the head of the Red Sea,
on the borders of Arabia ; but the monsoon had com-
menced before the fleet entered the Red Sea in April,
1801, and Major-General Baird resolved to land at
Cosseir, and brave the difficulties of the desert, in the
hope of affording important aid to the troops which had
landed in Egypt from Europe.
Eight companies of tho Tenth arrived at Cosseir on
48
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
I
U
1801 the 15th of June, and the remainder of the regiment,
having been separated by the monsoon gales, was some
days later.* On landing, the country presented a fright-
fully desolate prospect, but the soldiers commenced
their march through the desert with cheerful alacrity ;f
although suffering from excessive heat and dysentery,
occasioned by bad water.
The march was made during the night. A little way
! from Cosseir the soldier^i < ntered a ravine, which ap-
peared to be the old bed of a river, along which they
travelled three days, when it terminated at Moilah.
From Moilah the desert had a hard gravelly soil, gene-
rally, until the troops arrived at Baromba, where the
first habitable spot was met with after leaving Cosseir ;
not a single hut having previously been seen. The troops
suffered greatly from thirst and oppressive heat, with
an almost irresistible inclination to sleep ; some soldiers
* Disembarkation Return, Tenth Foot, June, 1801 — Landed at
Cosseir, 2 lieut.-colonels, 2 majors, 6 captains, 16 lieutenants, 5
ensigns, 5 staff, 46 Serjeants, 18 drummers, and 854 rank and file.
Lieut.- Colonel Samuel Auchmuty of the Tenth performed the
duty of adjutant-general to the expedition.
f Route from Cosseir on the Red Sea to Kenna on the Nile.
Miles.
From Cosseir to the New Wells . 11 Wafer,
Half way to Moilah . . . .17 No water.
Moilah 17 Water and provisions.
Advanced Wells 9 Water.
Half way to Legaitte .... 19 No water.
Legaitte 19 Water and provisions.
Baromba 18 Water.
Kenna 10 The Nile.
120 ^
The distances were thus computed at the time, but it was believed
that they were greatly underrated.
I
RGOIMENT OF FOOT.
49
straggling from the lino of march, that thoy might lie 1801
down and sloep, lost their lives. The lutle town of
Baromba lay on the borders of the descrii, and the Arabs
offered milk, eggs, and poultry for sale, in greut abun-
dance, and very cheap.
On arriving at Kenna, the regiment was ordered to
proceed to Girgee a lar^e town of Upper Egypt, situate
about a quarter of a mile from the river Nile. The
regimental baggage was sent to Suez, but the " Cavera "
transport foundered at sea, and all the baggage, books,
&c. of the Tenth were lost.
In the meantime, the British army from Europe had
triumphed over the French before Alexandria, where
General Sir Ralj^h Abercromby was mortally wounded ;
the French Toops at Cairo had also surr mdered, and
the siege of Alexandria was the next undertaking. The
Tenth emb-irked from Girgee in dgerms, and proceeded
down the Nile to the Island of Rhoda, where they en-
camped. On the 2nd of August they again embarked,
and proceeded to Rosetta, a town celebrated for the
beauty of its environs ; beyond the Nile lay the richest
parts of the Delta, the garden of Egypt. From Rosetta
the regiment proceeded to El-Hamed, and joined the
forces encamped at that place.
Alexandria surrendered in the beginning <> I September,
and Egypt was thus delivered ; the Frejcu " Army of
the East " being forced to evacuate a country from whence
Buonaparte had vainly imagined he should extend his
conquests throughout Asia.
Lieut. -General (afterwards Lord) Hul.;hinson stated
in his despatch : — " This arduous and im^ j^tant service
" has at length been brought to a conclusion. The ex-
" ertions of individuals have been splendid and meri-
E
ao
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1801 " torioua. The conduct ofthe troops of eveiy description
** has been exemplary in the highest degree ; there has
" been much to applaud, and nothing to reprehend }
" their ardour and regularity in camp having hr a !,g
" conspicuous as their courage in the field."
In this service, although the Tenth had not been
brought into contact with the enemy, their conduct had
been exemplary, and they had sustained a loss of thirty
men from the climate, and other casualties incident to
the service in which they were employed. They re-
ceived, in common with the other regiments, the ex-
pression of the high approbation of their Sovereign, the
thanks of Parliament, and the royal authority to bear on
their colours the " Sph ynx," with the word " Egypt," to
commemorate this splendid event. The officers were
also rewarded with gold medals, presented to them by
the Grand Seignior, in commemoration of the important
service rendered to the Ottoman empire.
The Tenth were selected to remain a short period in
Egypt; thjy ;narched from El-Hamed on the 4th of
DecernVsj ?*, arrived at Alexandria on the 5th, and en-
camped '\mies: the walls until the 18th, when they were
removed into Fort Triangular.
1802 In the city of Alexandria, formerly celebrated as the
seat of learning and commerce, the regiment was stationed
for several months. On the 29th of April, 1802, an explo-
sion took place in the fort which the Tenth occupied,
by which they had four men killed and ten wounded ;
also two Indian followers killed and ten wounded.
The regiment was afterwards encamped near Alexan-
dria ; it was struck off the Indian establishment, and
commenced receiving pay on the British on the 1st of
May.
I
REOliilENT OP FOOT.
01
While the Tenth were encamped near Alexandria, 1808
the plague broke out among the natives. The army
suddenly embarked on the 5th of March, 1803, leaving
its camp equipage standing, and on the 7th the regiment
sailed out of the Western Harbour.
Arriving at Malta on the 27th of April, the regiment
performed a quarantine of forty-two days, and afterwards
sailed to Gibraltar, where it arrived on the 20th of June.
A treaty of peace was concluded with the 'rtuch. re- 1804
public while the Tenth were in Egypt; ! Uties
ha 1 recommenced before the regiment ai b-
raltar, and in 1804 a second battalion was le
establishment. The head-quarters of the secouui. a lon
were fixed at Maldon in Essex ; it was formed of men
raised in Essex, for limited service, under the Additional
Force Act, passed 20th July, 1804, and was placed upon
the establishment from the 25th of December, 1804.
The first battalion was stationed at Gibraltar during 1805
the years 1804, 1805, and 1806. 1806
In the meantime numerous changes occurred among
the states of Europe, and the great success which at this
period attended the French arms, enabled Napoleon
Buonaparte, who, in 1804, had been invested with the
title of Emperor of the French, King of Italy, &c., to
assume the position of a dictator: his conduct towards
the royal family of Naples occasioned the history of that
court to become connected with the services of the
Tenth regiment of foot.
When war recommenced between Great Britain and
France in 1803, Buonaparte occupied a portion of the
Neapolitan territory with his troops. In 1805 a treaty
of neutrality was concluded between the French Emperor
and the King of Naples, by which the former engaged to
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52
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1806 withdraw his troops from the Neapolitan territory, and
the latter was bound not to admit the fleets or armies of
any of the states at war with France into his ports or
territory. The conditions of this treaty were, however,
violated by Ferdinand IV., who admitted an English
and Russian armament into the Bay of Naples in Novem-
ber, 1805, and a body of British and Russian troops
was landed at that city.
The conduct of the King of Naples excited the indig-
nation of the French Emperor, who concluded that this
little kingdom was united with his enemies, and on the
morning after the signatures were affixed to the treaty
of Presburg, Napoleon issued a proclamation declaring
that " the Neapolitan dynasty had ceased to reign," and
denouncing vengeance against the family he had thus
resolved to dethrone, in terms which left no hope of
accommodation. The Russians withdrew from Naples,
leaving the court to its fate. The British, under General
Sir James Craig, were too few in number to defend the
Neapolitan state, but they took possession of the island
of Sicily, which they preserved in the interest of King
Ferdinand IV. -
The armies of France, under Joseph Buonaparte,
invaded the kingdom of Naples in the early part of 1806 ;
the King and Queen fled to Sicily, which the British
preserved as an asylum for their Majesties ; they were
accompanied and followed by part of the Neapolitan
army, also by a number of persons connected with the
court, and they took up their residence at the city of
Palermo, situate in a bay on the northern coast of the
island, where they received pecuniary aid from England.
When their country was invaded, the Neapolitans
exhibited neither public spirit nor the love of freedom.
it
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
53
but abandoned their sovereign to his fate, and submitted 1806
to the invaders. Persons of all ranks attached them-
selves to the French interest, and Napoleon issued a de*
cree conferring the crown of Naples on his brother
Joseph and his legitimate heirs male, without prejudice
to the eventual claim of the throne of France, but with
the proviso that the crown of France and that of Naples
should never be united on the same head. The city of
Naples was illuminated, and the nobles were eager to
manifest their attachment to their new king. Insurrec-
tions occurred in several places, but the French arms
were successful, and the provinces became tranquil
under the Buonaparte dynasty.
It was important to England that Sicily should not fall
under the dominion of France, and when the enemy
made preparations for the invasion of the island, they
were met in Calabria ; the battle of Maida, on the 4th of
July, 1806, proved the superiority of the British troops,
and the provinces of Upper and Lower Calabria were
restored to their legal sovereign.
The services of the Tenth regiment of foot became 1807
connected with the interests of the exiled royal family of
Naples in the autumn of 1807, when the regiment em-
barked from Gibraltar, and arrived on the 28th of Sep-
tember at Messina, a city on the north-east side of the
island of Sicily. The Tenth did not land at Messina, but
were ordered round to Augusta, where they disembarked
on the 2nd of October, and occupied quarters in the
citadel.
On the 5th of April, 1808, Major J. Otto Beyer, five 1808
lieutenants, one ensign, six Serjeants, and three hundred
and sixty-two rank and file.joined from England.
54
THB TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
:/
1808 About this period the two flank companies were
ordered to be completed to one Hundred rank and filie
each, and to join the flank battalion formed on the
island.
In June four companies were sent to reinforce the
garrison of Syracuse, a fortified town situated on the
south-east of the island, and celebrated in ancient times
for its great population. These companies returned in
August ; but were again detached on the same services
in October.
1809 On the 20th of March, 1809, the head-quarters
marched from Augusta, and the detachment from Syra-
cuse, for Catania. At this celebrated city, which is
beautifully situated in the Val di Demona, on the east
coast of the island, and on the borders of Val di Nota,
the regiment remained ten days, and afterwards marched
to the port of Melazzo, and joined the army encamped
on the plains of that town. Meanwhile Joseph Buona-
parte had been removed to the throne of Spain, and the
French Emperor had placed Marshal Murat, his brother-
in-law, on the throne of Naples. >
In the beginning of June, Ger.eral Sir John Stuar'
Count of Maida, commanding the British troops in Sic;
embarked fifteen thousand men for the south of Italy,
and for the capture of Naples, as a diversion in favour
of the Austrians, who were once more at war with
France. The Tenth regiment embarked on this enter-
prise, leaving two companies in garrison at Melazzo.
The first attack made by the main body of the expedi-
tion was on Ischia, a small island in the gulf of Naples,
situate about six miles from the coast. The batteries
for the defence of the shores of the island being turned
//
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
55
by the British troops, were successively deserted by the 1809
enemy, and after a short resistance, the garrison of Ischia
surrendered. The garrison of Procida, another island
on the same coast, was also forced to surrender ; and
forty gun-boats were captured.
An attack was likewise made on the castle of Scylla,
situate in a promontory in the straits of Messina, which
separate Sicily from the Neapolitan territory. The
Tenth regiment was selected to take part in this enter-
prise : having landed on the coast, it crossed the heights
of Jovanni on the 14th of June, and proceeding through
the mountains to the heights of Mela^mmediately above
the castle, bivouacked on the high grounds ; at the same
time the works were commenced for the attack. On the
29th of June a strong reinforcement of the enemy
appeared, and the British troops were concentrated i but
the French had so great an excess of numbers, that it
w»8 deemed necessary to withdraw. The stores were
destroyed, the retreat effected, and the Tenth regiment
was conveyed across the straits to the Messina side ;
having only sustained a loss of t«\ro men.
The diversion so far succeeded as to prevent Murat
taking part in the war with Austria, and the troops
returned to Sicily : the Tenth were stationed in the
citadel of Messina until the 8th of July, when they were
encamped along the coast near the Faro.
During the summer of this year an expedition sailed
from England against the coast of Holland, and Flushing,
on the island of Walclieren, was captured. The second
battalion of the Tenth embarked from Portsmouth on
the 9th of November, and landed on the island of
Walcheren on the 22nd of that month j but the climate
proved very injurious to the health of the British
56
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1810 soldiers, and the island was evacuated. The second
battalion of the Tenth embarked from Flushing on the
10th of December, and on arriving in England it was
ordered to Jersey, where it landed on the 17th of Janu-
ary, 1810.
From Jersey the second battalion embarked on the
10th of April, 1810, for Gibraltar, and arrived at that
important fortress in eighteen days. The battalion
remained at Gibraltar three months, then embarked
for the island of Malta, and landed there on the 12th of
August.
The first battalion remained on the coast of Sicily
until November, when it marched into the citadel of
Messina.
181 1 After the decease of General the Honorable Henry
Edward Fox, who held the command of the regiment
sixteen years, the colonelcy was conferred on Major-
Generalthe Honorable Thomas Maitland, from the fourth
West India regiment, by commission dated the 1 9th of
July, 1811. . H o:: r ^ :;
On the 22nd of August the second battalion embarked
from Malta for the island of Sicily, and landed at
Messina on the 27th of that month.
1812 In the meantime, the efforts made by Great Britain
to enable the Spaniards and Portuguese to deliver them-
selves from the power of Napoleon, began to assume
a favourable prospect, and sanguine hopes of final suc-
cess were anticipated. To aid the cause of Spanish
independence, a small army was sent from Sicily to the
eastern coast of Spain, and the first battalion of the
Tenth was destined to take part in this service. The
battalion left Messina in January, 1812, embarked at
Melazzo, for Palermo, and was in quarters in that part
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
57
of Sicily until June, when it joined the expedition 18] 2
which sailed for Spain.
Approaching the coast of Spain towards the end of
July, the armament appeared off Palamos, in Catalonia,
but the town was too strong to be attacked by so small
a force, and the fleet sailed for Alicant, in Murcia,
where it arrived at a critical moment, the Spanish troops
in that quarter having been defeated by the French.
The Anglo-Sicilian troops landed and advanced a few
stages to Elda, but afterwards withdrew ; the Tenth
marching to Palermo, where they passed the winter, the
soldiers being much disappointed at the state of inac-
tivity in which they were detained.
In November, the grenadier company of the second
battalion embarked from Sicily, and joined the army on
the eastern coast of Spain
On the 16th of February, 1813, the second battalion iglS
embarked from Sicily, against the island of Ponzo, on
the coast of Naples, which capitulated on the 26th of
that month, when the battalion returned to Sicily.
In the spring of this year, the distresses of the Spanish
troops near Alicant, which could only be relieved by
enlarging their cantonments, induced the British com-
mander, Lieut.-General Sir John Murray, to make a
forward movement. The Tenth formed part of the
fourth column, which advanced by Xixona upon Alcoy ;
some fighting occurred, and the cantonments were en-
larged. On the 18th of March, the regiment crossed
the mountains to Ibithe, and on the 20th went into
cantonments at Castalla. ^^
The French army under Marshal Suchet advanced in
the early part of April, and attacked the outposts on
58
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1813 the 12tli, when Lieutenant Thompion of tho Tbnth
regiment, deputy-assistant quartermastor-general, wai
killed by a cannon-shot. The Anglo-Sicilian army took
up a position three miles from the pan of Biar ; the
Tenth having left their cantonments at Caitalla, took
post in the line.
On the 13th of April, the enemy cleared tho pass of
Biar, and the battle of Ccutalla was fought, when the
French were repulsed and driven back through the
pass: the Tenth did not sustain any loss on this
occasion ; on the day after tho battle they marched to
Alcoy, and, on the 1 9th of April, to Castalla.
About this period, the grenadier companies of the first
and second battalions returned to Sicily.
The siege of Tarragona, a seaport of Catalonia, situate
on a hill near the mouth of the river Francoli, having
been resolved upon, the Tenth left Castalla on the 29th
of May, embarked at Alicant on the 31st, and landed on
the 3rd of June in the vicinity of Tarragona. Marshal
Suchet advancing with an army of superior numbers,
the siege was raised, and the troops were re-embarked,
on the 8th of June, on which day tho regiment had a
man killed by a cannon-ball. On the following day the
regiment landed at Balaguer, and remained a short time
in Catalonia ; it afterwards sailed for Alicant. During
the voyage a violent tempest drove fourteen sail of
transports on the sands off the mouth of the Ebro, and
the " Alfred" transport, having two companies of the
Tenth on board, was wrecked. After landing at Alicant^
the regiment went into cantonments at Palermo.
Lieutenant- General Lord William Bentinok assumed
the command of the army in the east of Spain, in suc-
//
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
59
cession to Lieutenant-Oeneral Sir John Murray, on the 1818
18th June, 181 3. The following General Order was issued
by His Lordship, dated Alicant, '25th June, 1813 : —
" The Commander of the Forces sees with the utmost
" gratification the military spirit, and the determination
*' to conquer, which pervades the whole army. We are
" engaged in a glorious cause, — the cause of universal
** liberty ! It is the cause of us all ; of those who are
" free, and those who are not. To-day the contest is
'* fought in Spain and Germany, to-morrow it will be
** in Italy. Brave Italians, once so great, once masters of
*' the world, but now, though brave and enlightened as
'* ever, the unwilling slaves of a French tyrant, it is for
" the interest of the whole, that the efforts should be
'* made where the enemy is the weakest. Success in
" Spain is success in Germany, in England, and in
** Italy ! We form a great brotherhood ; we must emu-
" late each other in affection, union, and courage, and
" Providence, in whose hands is victory, will bless our
** cause I"
Lieutenant- General Lord William Bentinck continued
in command of this division of the army until the 23Td
September, 1813,whenhis Lordship issued the following
General Order, dated Tarra^owa, 2Srd September, 1813 : —
" The Commander of the Forces deeply laments that
" he is compelled to leave the army. It is a pleasing
" part of his duty to express his perfect satisfaction with
" the subordination and perseverance displayed by the
" troops upon all occasions. - v ^^
" He only regrets that the part assigned to this army
" in the plan of the campaign has not permitted the
" troops to partake in those brilliant triumphs, which
" would have been the just recompense of their valour
'* and discipline."
'' > " ■'fi*^'*!*^ .: "-Tr '
60
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1818 Lieutenant- General William Clinton succeeded Lord
William Bentinck in the command of this division of
the army on the 23rd September, 1813.
The battle of Vittoria, on the 21 st June, gained by the
army under the Marquis of Wellington, changed the
aspect of afiairs in Spain, and the French troops in Murcia
made some retrograde movements. The Anglo-Sicilian
army advanced ; the Tenth left their cantonments on
the 5th of July, and, advancing into Catalonia, theyonco
more appeared before the fortress of Tarragona, which
was again invested. While before Tarragona, Assistant-
Surgeon Rolston lost a leg, and a private soldier lost both
feet from cannon-shot. The opposing armies in Catalonia
made several movements, and the regiment withdrew
from before Tarragona and proceeded to Balaguer.
On the 22nd of August, five hundred men of the
Tenth were sent into the interior to cut wood for the
use of the army ; during their absence a fire was acci-
dentally kindled to the windward of the bivouac ground
and communicating rapidly to the dry grass and shrubs,
the ground occupied by the Tenth regiment was soon
enveloped in flame. The exertions of the few men of
the regiment left in the lines were impeded by the ex-
plosions of the cartridges, and few of the arms and ap-
pointments of the corps were saved : four hundred stand
of arms, and about the same number of sets of accoutre-
ments, knapsacks, and suits of clothing were destroyed.
By this accident the regiment was rendered unfit for the
field; it embarked for Salo, and r a arriving there, all
the tailors and other mechanics were employed to refit it. .
Arms were also procured, audit was so speedily re-equip-
ped, that it returned to the seat of war in the beginning
of September : having landed at Villa Nova on the 5th
of that month, it went into cantonments at Villa Franca.
//
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
61
On the evening of the 12th of September, the ad- 1818
vanced corps of the Anglo-Sicilian army posted at Ordal
were attacked and overpowered by the superior num-
bers of the enemy. The Tenth wore suddenly ordered
out at two o'clock on the following morning, and they
formed across the road, covering the retreat of the
broken remains of the corps in advance. At daybreak
the French cavalry appeared, advancing rapidly and in
great force, when the regiment commenced retiring,
and skirmishing with the enemy during the retrograde
movement ; the army falling back towards Tarragona.
In the evening the regiment took post on a height near
Vendrilla, where it halted several hours, and afterwards
continued its retreat to the vicinity of Tarragona.
On the 24th of September, the regiment marched
into quarters at Vails, and in October it was removed
to Vendrilla.
The brilliant success of the allied army under the
Marquis of Wellington, and the disasters of Napoleon
in Germany, had a great effect upon the war in Catalonia,
and the troops under Marshal Suchet withdrew from
several posts. The Tenth marched, in February, 1814,
to the vicinity of Barcelona, and formed part of the
force employed in the blockade of that fortress.
Hostilities were terminated in April by a treaty of 1814
peace; Buonaparte was removed from the throne of
France, and the Bourbon family restored.* The Tenth
* Extract from a despatch frcm Field -Marshal the Marquis of
Wellington, dated Toulouse, I9th April, 1814 :—
" Upon the breaking up of this army, I perform a most satisfac-
<< lory duty in reporting to your Lordship my sense of the conduct
" and merit of Lieutenant-General William Clinton, and of the
*' troops under his command since they have been employed in the
0t THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1814 withdrew from before Barcelona, marched to Tarragona,
and embarked at that port on the '25th of April ; on
the 19th of May they landed at the beautiful city of
Palermo, situate in a bay on the northern coast of Sicily,
where they went into barracks.
In March, 1814, the second battalion embarked from
Sicily, and landed on the island of Malta on the 24th
of that month.
1815 The return of Napoleon Buonaparte to France from
Elba, and the declaration of war against the usurper by
the allied sovereigns, in the spring of 1815, occasioned
the Tenth to be removed from Sicily. They proceeded,
in the first instance, by sea, from Palermo to Melazzo,
and were stationed in the castle ; at the same time the
grenadier and light companies joined the flank battalion
formed at Melazzo. The battalion companies afterwards
sailed for Naples, wh^re they landed on the 25th of
May ; three days after landing they went on board of
two Neapolitan line of battle ships, " Geochinria " and
*• Carpi, " and proceeded to Malta, where they landed on
the 9th of June, and occupied Fort St. Elmo barracks.
The battle of Waterloo was succeeded by the flight
of Buonaparte from France, and his surrender to the
captain of a British man-of-war. Three hundred men
of the Tenth, commanded by Lieut.-Colonel J. O.
Beyer were detached to Fort Emanoel, in charge of
the Duke of Rovigo, Lieut.-Geueral L'AUemand, and
" Peninsula. Circumstances have not enabled those troops to have
" so brilliant a share in the operations of the war, as their brother
" officers and soldiers on this side of the Peninsula; but they have
" not been less usefully employed; their conduct, when engaged
" with the enemy, has always been meritorious ; and I have had
" every reason to be satisfied with the General Officer commanding,
" and with them."
/•/
BIOIMBJIT OF FOOT.
63
lix other French offioeri who had belonged to the luite 1815
of Buonaparte : thcco offioeri had been lent to Malta at
state prisoncrf.
Peace being reitored, the army wai reduced; the two 1816
battalions of the Tknth regiment, at Malta, were incor-
porated, and the invalids and limited-service men were
sent to England; this took place in January, 1816.
The good conduct of the regiment during the period
it was employed on the eastern coast of Spain, in 1812,
1813, and 1814, was rewarded with the royal authority
to bear the word " Peninsula " on its colours.
In August, 1816, the regiment commenced embarking
by detachments from Malta, for Corfu, where it was
stationed until the end of August, 1817, when the head- 1811
quarters and five companies, under Colonel Travers,
embarked for the islands of Cephalonia and Zante.
On the 21st of March, 1818, five companies embarked 1818
from Corfu, under the orders of Major Trickey, for Malta,
and occupied the barracks in the Cottonera district.
In March, 1819, the head-quarters embarked from 1819
Cephalonia, and the detachment from Zante, for Malta,
where the regiment was assembled, and occupied the
lower St Elmo barracks at Valetta, under the com«
mand of Lieut.-Colonel Mathew Stewart, who was ap-
pointed from half-pay in succession to Colonel Travers,
nominated an Inspecting Field'Officer of Militia in the
Ionian Islands. . < ii>
During the year 1820, the regiment occupied the 1820
barracks in the Cottonera district, with detachments
at Floriana, forts Manvol and Tigni, and the island of
Oiza.
From Malta, the regiment embarked, in April, 1821, 1821
for England, and landing at Portsmouth in June, was
64
THE TENTH^ OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1821 stationed at that fortress three months; it afterwards
sailed to Plymouth, and occupied the citadel and Stone-
house barracks. ; ,
1 822 In April, 1 822, the regiment embarked from Plymouth
for Deptford, and after several changes of quarters it
was stationed at Chatham and Sheerness.
1823 On the 28th of May, 1823, the regiment embarked
at Chatham, for Ireland; after landing at Cork, it
proceeded to Fermoy, and in October it was re-
' moved to Rathkeale, with detachments at twelve other
stations.
1824 On the decease of Lieut. -General the Honorable Sir
Thomas Maitland, G.C.B. and G.C.H., King George IV.
conferred the colonelcy of the Tenth on Major-General
Sir John Lambert, K.C.B. by commission dated the 18th
of January, 1824. On the 8th January, 1824, Colonel
Sir Robert Travers, was reappointed, in succession to
Lieut.-Colonel Stewart, who retired from the service.
1825 In April, the regiment was removed to Fermoy, and
Lieut.-Colonel James Payler was appointed on the
2nd June, 1825, from the half-pay, unattached, in suc-
cession to Sir Robert Travers, promoted to the rank of
Major-General. Lieut.-Colonel Payler assumed the
command in June, 1825, and in September following
the head-quarters were removed to Templemore.
1826 From Templemore, the regiment was i*emoved, in
February, 1826, to Castlebar, where a pair of new
colours, bearing a " Sphinx," with the words " Egypt, "
and " Peninsula," was presented to it by Lieut.-Colonel
Payler, the commanding ofl&cer, on the 19th of May.
After several changes of quarters, in the autumn of
this year the regiment was formed into six service and
four dep6t companies, at Buttevant, from whence the
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
65
rardfl
ptone-
louth
kers it
)aTked
)rk, it
fas re-
other
service companies marched to Cork, where they em- 1826
barked^ in December, for Portugal, the government of
which country had solicited British aid, in consequence
of an apprehended insurrection, uud an invasion from
Spain, which threatened to oppose the introduction of a
constitution conferring more liberty on the Portuguese
people than they had previously possessed. '
The service companies, under Lieut.-Colonel Payler, 182*7
landed at Lisbon, in January, 1827 ; they formed part
of the first brigade under Major-General Sir Edward
Blakeney , and advanced up the country to Coimbra. The
apprehension of invasion and insurrection ceasing to
exist, the regiment left Coimbra, and occupied the palace
and convent at Mafra, di^ring the winter.
In March, 1828, the service companies embarked 1828
from Lisbon, for Corfu, where they landed on the 3 1st
of that month, and were stationed at Port Raymond
barracks. In December a detachment joined from the
dep6t in Ireland.
During the summer of 1829, the regiment was re- 1829
moved from Corfu to Zante, with detachments at the
islands of Cerigo and Paxo.
The head-quarters remained at Zar.te during the 1830
years 1830 and 1831 ; in May, 1832, they were removed 1831
to Corfu, and in July to Vido; but returned to Corfu 1832
in December.
Lieut.-Colonel John Henry Belli was appointed on 1833
the 17th May, 1833, in exchange with Lieut.-Colonel
Payler; and Lieut.-Colonel William Gardner Freer
was promoted by purchase on 24th May, in succession
to Lieut.-Colonel Belli, who retired.
Lieut.-Colonel W. G. Freer died at Corfu on the 2nd 1836
August, 1836, where he was in command of the regi-
F
66
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1836 ment: he was succeeded by Brevet Lieut-Colonel
William Cochrane.* >■
1837 Lieut.-Colonel W. Cochrane was appointed Assistant
Adjutant- General at head-quarters on the 16th June,
1837, and was succeeded by Lieut.-Coloncl Holman
Custance from the half-pay.
The head-quarters continued to be stationed at Corfu
and Vido alternately, until November, 1837, when the
service companies of the Tenth were relieved from duty
in the Ionian Islands, and embarked for Ireland, T/here
1838 they arrived in December, 1837, and January, 1838,
and landed at Cork.
1839 The regiment was stationed in Ireland until May,
1839, when it embarked at Dublin for England; it
landed at Liverpool, and was afterwards quartered in
Lancashire.
1840 During the year 1840 the regiment was stationed at
Burnley and Manchester.
1841 The regiment proceeded to Newcastle-on-Tyne on
the 25th June, 1841, and marched from thence to Scot-
land; it arrived at Edinburgh on the 21st, 24th, and
27th July, and proceeded to Glasgow on the 9th August
following.
1842 On the 29th March, 1842, Colonel James Considine
was appointed from the half-pay unattached, in suc-
cession to Colonel Custance, who was nominated to
the command of the Depdt Battalion in the Isle of
Wight.
In March, 1842, the regiment left Glasgow, and
proceeded in divisions to Winchester. On the 1 st April,
it was augmented to the India establishment, preparatory
* Now Deputy Adjutant-General to the Forces in Ireland.
REGIMENT OP FOOT.
m
toitsembarkation for Bengal. roceededtoGravesend,
and embarked in freight ships ibr Calcutta in April and
May, 1842, under the command of Colonel Considine,
K.H. The regiment disembarked at Calcutta in
August and September of that year. * - - -
Lieut. -Colonel Gervas Power was promoted on the
8th April, 1842, on the augmentation of the regiment :
he died at Calcutta on the 30th December following ;
and was succeeded by Lieut.-Colonel John Luard, who
was promoted from the twenty -first Royal North British
Fusiliers on the 31st December.
The regiment remained at Fort William, Calcutta, 1843
until the 15th November, 1844, when it marched for 1844
Meerut under the command of Major Franks.
The head-quarters arrived at Meerut on the 22nd 1845
February, 1845.
Lieut.-Colonel Luard exchanged to the half-pay on
the 28th March, with Colonel Sir George Couper, Bart.,
who retired from the service, and Lieut.-Colonel Thomas
H. Franks was promoted by purchase, on the 28th
March, 1845. Colonel James Considine died at Meerut
on the 4th September, from an attack of cholera, and
was succeeded by Lieut.-Colonel C. L. Strickland on
the 5th September. >
The regiment marched from Meerut, under the com- 1846
mand of Lieut.-Colonel Franks, on the 16th December,
1845, and joined the Army of the Sutlef on the 8th
January, 1846, both officers and men animated with the
laudable desire to share the dangers, and to reap some of
the laurels already acquired by the army in this brief
but exciting campaign.
A month, however, passed without the main army
being employed in any occurrence of note, the Govemor-
f2
im^'-
■i»
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1846 General and Commander-in-Chief taking advantage of
the interval to collect the munitions of war ; while on
the other hand, the Sikhs, having been strengthened by
reinforcements, continued to hold strong positions on
the banks of the Sutlej ; and notwithstanding their
defeat in the battles of Moodkee and F'crozeshah on the
1 8th, 2 1 St, and 22nd December, 1 845, they subsequently
formed a strongly entrenched camp at Sobraon. Although
the intelligence of the victory of Aliwal on the 28th
January, 1846, and the sight of the numerous bodies
which floated from the vicinity of that battle-field to the
bridge of boats at Sobraon, apparently disheartened
the enemy, and caused many of them to return to their
homes, yet in a few days they appeared as confident as
ever of being able in their entrenched position to defy
the Anglo-Indian army, and to prevent the passage of
the Sutlej.
The heavy ordnance having arrived on the 8th Feb-
ruary, the day on which the forces under Major-General
Sir Henry Smith, who had been detached to Loodiana,
and had obtained a signal victory over the enemy at
Aliwal, rejoined the main body of the army, it was de-
termined on coming at once to a battle with the Sikhs,
to storm their entrenchments, and finally to drive them
out of Hindoostan. This was an undertaking of some
magnitude. From observations made during the time
the head-quarters of the army were stationed at the
village of Nihalkee, it was ascertained that the position
at Sobraon was covered with formidable entrenchments,
and defended by thirty thousand of the Slite of the Khalsa
troops ; besides being united by a good bridge to a re-
serve on the opposite bank of the river, on which was
stationed a considerable camp, with artillery, which
REOIMUNT OF FOOT.
of
commanded and flanked the enemy's field-works on the 1846
British side of the Sutlej. ;' i!- ;.;
About daybreak on the 10th February, the mortars,
battering guns, and field-artillery were disposed on the
alluvial land, embracing within its fire the enemy's works.
As soon as the sun's rays cleared the heavy mist which
hung over the plain, the cannonade commenced, but
notwithstanding the admirable manner in which the guns
were served, it would have been visionary to expect that
they could, within any limited time, silence the fire of
seventy pieces of artillery behind well-constructed bat-
teries, or dislodge troops so strongly entrenched. It
soon became evident to the Commander in-Chief, Gene-
ral Sir Hugh Gough, that musketry and the bayonet
must ultimately decide the contest.
Accordingly the seventh brigade, in which was the
Tenth foot, reinforced by the fifty-third regiment, and
led by Brigadier Stacy, was ordered to head the attack,
to turn the enemy's right, to encounter his fire before
his numbers were thinned, or spirit broken, and (to* use
the soldier-like expression of the Commander-in-Chief
General Sir Hugh Gough) " to take off the rough edge of
the Sikhs in the fight J"* An opportunity was now afibrded
for the Tenth to distinguish itself, and the regiment
nobly availed itself of this opportunity. At nine o'clock
the brigade moved on to the attack over the sandy fiat
in admirable order, halting to correct, when necessary,
any imperfections in its line. For some moments,
notwithstanding the regularity and coolness of the
assault, so hot was the fire of the Khalsa troops, that it
seemed almost impracticable to gain the entrenchments.
A brief halt ensued, the brigade again advanced, and
persevering gallantry triumphed. The Tenth foot.
70
THE TENTH, OR NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE
1846 under Lieutenant-Colonel Franks, now for the first
time brought into serious contact with the enemy, greatly
distinguished itself. With cool and steady courage,
the regiment marched on with the precision of a field-
day, and wver fired a ihot urUil within the vHtrkx of the
enemy* — a forbearance much to be commended, and
worthy of constant imitation, to which the success of the
first effort, and the small loss sustained by the regiment,
may be attributed. f
Other brigades, at the moment of this successful onset,
were ordered forward in support. The thunder of up-
wards of one hundred pieces of ordnance reverberated
through the valley of the Sutlej, and it was soon per-
ceived, that the weight of the whole force within the
enemy's camp was likely to be thrown upon the two
brigades (sixth and seventh) that had passed the
trenches. J The Sikhs fought with the energy of despera-
tion, and, even when some of their entrenchments were
mastered with the bayonet, endeavoured to recover with
the 8word the positions they had lost. It was not until
the weight of all three divisions of infantry, in addition
to several regiments of cavalry, with the fire of every
piece of field-artillery that could be sent to their aid,
had been felt, that the enemy gave way. The Sikh
regiments retreated at first in tolerable order, but the
* Despatch of General Sir Hugh Gough, Commander-in-Chief
in India.
t A similar proof of coolness on the part of the Tenth Regiment
of Foot was evinced at the Battle of SteenkirA, in 1692, and is narrated
at page 8.
X The sixth brigade consisted of Her Majesty's 80th regiment,
amd 33rd and 63rd regiments of native infantry.
The seventh brigade consisted of Her Majesty's 10th and 53rd
regiments, and 43rd and S9tli regiments of native infantry.
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
71
incessant volleys of the British soon caused them to 1846
take to a rapid and discomfited flight. Masses of them
precipitated themselves on to their bridge, which being
broken by the fire of the British, was incapable to sus-
tain the multitude pressing forward, and the sudden
rise of the Sutlej rendered the ford almost impassable,
adding another obstacle to the escape of the enemy. A
dreadful carnage ensued. The stream was red with the
bodies of men and horses, the bridge in many places
had given way, and it is considered, that, at least a
third of the Sikh army perished in this battle ; sixty-
seven of their guns fell into the hands of the victors,
together with two hundred small camel-swivels(zumboo-
Tucks), numerous standards, and vast munitions of war.
In this manner ended the Battle of Sobraon ; at six
in the morning it commenced ; at nine it became a hand<
to-hand conflict ; and by eleven the victory was gained.
The Tenth regiment had Lieutenant Walter Yonge
Beale, one serjeant, and twenty-eight rank and file killed.
Lieutenants Henry R. Evans and Charles J. Lindam,
two Serjeants, and ninety-eight rank and file wounded.
Her Majesty has been graciously pleased to authorise
the Tenth regiment to bear on its colours and appoint-
ments the word Sobraon, in commemoration of its gal-
lantry in that battle ; and Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas
Harte Franks was nominated a Companion of the Most
Honourable Military Order of the Bath.
The regiment left Nihalkee on the 11th February,
crossed the Sutlej on the 13th, and on the 20th of the
same month arrived before Lahore, where it was pre-
sent at the occupation of that city, and at the signing
of the treaty, which, while it convinced the world of
the moderation and justice of the paramount power of
n
THE TBNTH REOIMINT OF FOOT.
//
'I
1846 India, is calculated to add to the ftability of the Anglo-
Indian empire, and also to provide for the future
tranquillity of the Punjaub, by maintaining a Sikh
government at Lahore, capable of controlling iti army,
protecting itf subjects, and securing the British frontier
against similar acts of aggression.
On the 23rd of March, 1846, the regiment marched
from Lahore, recrossed the Sutlej on the 26th of that
month, and arrived at Meerut on the 15th of April
following. It marched again from Meerut, 9n route to
Ferozepore, on the 27th of October, 1846, and arrived
in cantonments on the 20th of November, where it
remained encamped until the 28th of December, when
it again proceeded to Lahore, under the charge of Lieu-
tenant-Colonel Strickland, with a body of troops under
the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Franki, and occu-
pied quarters in the garrison of that city on the 2nd of
January, 1847.
J 847 The Tbnth regiment continued in the occupation
of Lahore, as a part of the garrison of that city, to the
end of the year 1847, at which period this record is
concluded.
NOTEB TO Paom 46 AND A9.
Page 45.— lu 1 783, the regular regioMBti of inflmtry irer« anthoriacd
toasBume " County T^lkf," id order to promote the rMraldngMrrioe, and
the Tenth was directed to bear the title of Ifortk Lineohihirt Rei^ment
in addition to the namerical title.
Pagt 59 Lieutenant-General Lord William Bentinek ratnned to Sieily
in October, 1813, and in Febmary, 1814, he prooeeded with • body of
English and Sicilian troops, amounting to 6,500 men, fWmi timt Island
to Leghorn, fiom whence he published a Proclamation, Inylting the
Italians to shake off the French yoke t be subseqaently landed his com-
bined troops, and after a few slight actions made himself master of
Genoa, on the 18th April, 1814. On the termination of (be War in 1814
His Lordship retired for some time to Rome.
^)
TENTH FOOT.
1648.
Ftr (mmms lUumiy M4e*nlt
> (
SUCCESSION OF COLONELS
ov
THE TENTH, OR THE NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE,
REGIMENT OF FOOT.
, John Eabl or Bath.
Appointed 20tk June^ 1685.
John Granville, son of Sir Beville Granville, Knight, who
was distinguished for his devotion to the royal cause during
the rebellion in the reign of King Charles I., commanded his
father's regiment of loyal Cornishmen in His Majesty's
service, when in his fifteenth year, and was so conspicuous
for valour and discretion beyond what is usually evinced at
that age, that after taking part in several skirmishes in the
west of England, he was placed at the head of a brigade of
six regiments, with the rank of major-general, and he was
severely wounded at the second battle of Newbury. He held
the appointment of Gentleman of the Bedchamber to His
Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, afterwards King Charles
XL, whom he attended, during the exile of the royal family,
and shared in His Majesty's travels and afflictions in France,
Flanders, Holland, and the island of Jersey. The King ap-
pointed him governor of the Scilly Islands, which he defended
against the fleet of Cromwell, under Admirals Blake and
Askew. He took part in bringing to maturity the measures
which led to the restoration of the royal fiimily, frequently
consulting with General Monk, his near kinsman ; and in
April, 1661, His Majesty rewarded this faithfiil and zealous
servant of the Crown with the dignity of Baron Granville of
Kilkhampton in Cornwall, and of Bideford in Devonshire,
Viscount Granville of Lansdown, and Earl of Bath. He
was heir to the titles of Earl of Carboile, Thorigny, and
Granville, in Normandy, in as full and ample a manner as
f4
SUCCESSION OP COLONELS.
his ancestors had formerly enjoyed them, before that duke-
dom was lost to the Crown of England, and he was authorized,
by royal warrant, to use the same. The Earl or Bath was
appointed governor of Plymouth and commandant of an inde-
pendent company of foot in garrison at that fortress, and on
the breaking out of the rebellion of James Duke of Mon*
mouth, in June, 1685, his lordship was appointed colonel of
a newly-raised corps, of which his independent company was
the nucleus, — now the Tenth, or the North Lincolnshirb
Beoiment of Foot. When the destruction of the estab-
lished religion and laws of the kingdom appeared to have been
resolved upon by the court, the Earl of Bath communi-
cated with the Prince of Orange, and when Hb Highness
arrived with an armament from Holland, he arrested the Earl
of Huntingdon, and several otiier officers in garrison at
Plymouth, and declared for the Prince of Orange, for which
he was deprived of his commissions by King James, but he
was restored by the Prince in three weeks afterwards. In
1693, he resigned the colonelcy of the Tenth foot, in favour
of his nephew, Lieut. -Colonel Sir Beville Granville. He
died in 1701.
Sir Charles Carnet.
Appointed Slh Decembe. , *Cd8.
Sir Charles Carney was an officer in the reign of King
Charles II., and served on the Continent in the war between
the United Provinces, the Emperor of Germany and France ;
and on the breaking out of the rebellion in 1685, he raised a
company in the Earl of Bathes regiment, now Tenth foot,
of whrr'i corps he was appointed major, and was afterwards
promoUd to the lieut.-colonelcy, in succession to Sir Nicholas
Stannings. He adhered to King James II. at the Revolution
in 1688, and obtained the colonelcy of his regiment, but was
removed by the Prince of Orange, on the Slst of December^
1688. He was not afterwards employed in the service.
John Earl ov Bath.
/Reappointed Slat December, 1688.
'lesigitedin October, 1693.
•UOOIMION OV COLOMBLI.
75
d,
Sib Bbvilli Oranvilli,
Appointid 29th October, 1093.
Sir Bevillk Orahvillb obtained r coinmiMion In fh(>army
in June, 1685, and nervtKl In the regiment o. which his unole,
John Earl or Bath wrs colonel, now Tknth fuot, of which
corps he wai appointed liaut,>colonel Rl the Ilevo!iition in
1688. He highly dUtiiiguiahed himself Rt the battle of*
Steenkirk in ^69^^, Iruiing his regiment into action with cool
collected va' > >>, 'lioh procured for him the commendations
of thr ;^ei TAi . ? ,1 who witnessed his conduct. He also
display ^
Sir Robert Murray Keith, E.B.
Appointed \Qth October^ 1781.
When King George II. discovered the excellent qualities of
the Scots Highlanders, as soldiers of the regular anny, His
Majesty authorized several corps to be raised among the clans,
and they proved a valuable addition to the military establish-
ment of the kingdom. One of these corps was designated the
eighty-seventh, or Highland volunteers ; it was raised by
Robert Murray Keith, who was appointed lieut.-colonel com-
mandant on the 10th of May, 1760. This officer served with
his regiment in Germany, under Prince Ferdinand of Bruns-
wick, and the Highland volunteers signalized themselves on
several occasions, but they were disbanded at the peace in
1763. Lieut.-Colonel Keith was promoted to the rank of
colonel in 1772, and to that of major-general in 1777 ; in 1781
he was appointed colonel of the Tenth foot, and promoted to
the rank of lieut.-general. His services were rewarded with
the dignity of Knight of the Bath. He died in 1795.
The Honourable Henry Edward Fox.
Appointed IZrd June, 1795.
This officer was appointed cornet in the first dragoon guards
in 1770, lieutenant in 1773, and captain in the thirty-eighth
80
SUCCESSION OF COLONELS.
foot in 1774. He was serving with his regiment at Boston,
when the American war commenced, and throughout the
campaigns which followed, he was actively employed. The
thirty-eighth shared in the actions at Concord and Bunker's
Hill in 1775; the capture of Long Island; the action at
White Plains in 1776 ; and the expedition to Philadelphia in
1777. On the 12th of July, 1777, he was appointed major in
the forty -ninth foot, which corps was also serving in America,
from whence it was removed to the "West Indies. About the
period of its embarkation, he received his appointment to the
lieut.-colonelcy of the thirty-eighth foot, then occupying the
lines in front of New York. At the termination of the war
he was appointed aide-de-camp to the King with the rank of
colonel. In 1793 lie received the rank of major-general, and
the colonelcy of the 131st regiment, then newly raised, and
two years afterwards his services were rewarded with the
colonelcy of the Tenth regiment of foot ; in 1799, he was
promoted to the rank of lieut. -general. During the war which
followed the French Revolution, when the British had taken
possession of several places in the Mediterranean, the services
of lieut.-general the Honourable Henry Edward Fox were
transferred to the Mediterranean, where he held the local
rank of general, excepting at Gibraltar, in 1801, and at
Gibraltar, also, in 1804. In 1808, he was promoted to the
rank of general, and his services were also rewarded with the
government of Portsmouth. He died in 1811.
The Honourable Thomas Maitland.
Appointed I9th Juhfy 1811.
The Honourable Thomas Maitland, third son of James,
seventh Earl of Lauderdale, was appointed ensign in the
twenty-fifth foot in July 1777, and in the following year he
was promoted to captain in the seventy-eighth regiment. In
1794 he (4|tained the lieut.-colonelcy of the sixty-second foot
He served in the West Indies during the early part of the war
of the French Revolution ; took an active part in the attempt
to deliver, from the power of the republicans, the island of St.
Domingo, where he obtained :;he local rank of brigadier-general
SUOCrSBSION OF COLONELS.
81
in 1797 i when St. Domingo was evacuated, his services were
extended to the other islands, and in September, 1798, he was
appointed colonel of the tenth West India regiment. On the
14th of September, 1799, he was promoted to the local rank of
major-general on a particular service on the coast of France.
In January, 1805, he received the rank of miyor-general, and
in February of the same year he was appointed colonel of the
third garrison battalion. He was appointed to the staff of the
island of Ceylon, with the local rank of Iieut.-general, on the
31st of July 1806, an'i in 1807, he obtained the colonelcy of the
fourth West India regiment. In 1 81 1 , he was promoted to the
rank of Iieut.-general, and removed to the Tenth raiment of
foot. On the 15th of July, 1813, he was appointed governor and
commander-in-chief of the bland of Malta and its dependen-
cies; and he was subsequently nominated privy councillor
of Malta, commander of the forces in the Mediterranean, and
Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands. He per-
formed the important duties which devolved upon him in con-
sequence of these appointments, to thesatbfaction of the Crown,
and to the advantage of the inhabitants of the islands com-
mitted to his chaise, who liighly prized the order, equitable
rule, and personal safety they enjoyed under the protection of
Great Britain. He was honoured with the dignity of Knight
Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, and Enight Grand
Cross of the Royal Hanoverian Guelphic Order. He was
greatly beloved and esteemed among the natives of the Ionian
Islands, and a monument, erected by the inhabitants of
Corfu, bears an inscription, in Greek, expressive of their
estimation of his character and virtues. He died at'Malta}
on the 17th January, 1824, and was buried in the bastion
which contains the remains of the celebrated Sir Balph
Abercromby.
Sir John Lambebt, G. C. B.
Appointed ISth January^ 1824.
Genebal Sib John Lambert, G.C.B. entered the army as
an Ensign in the First Foot Guards in January, 1791 ; he
was promoted to the rank of Captain and Lieutenant-Colonel
on the 9th October 1793 ; he served in the campaign of 1793
in Flanders, was present at the siege of Valenciennes, the
o
82
8VC0BSSION OF C0L0NRL8.
action of LiDcelles, and the 8i^;e of Dunkirk. He served
also with the Foot Guards in Ireland during the rebellion in
1798. In 1799 he embarked with the expedition to Holland,
and was present in the actions of the 27th August, 10th and
19th Septea>ber, and 2nd and 6th October of that year. He
embarked for the Peninsula and served with Lieut.-General
Sir John Moore in 1808 and 1809, and was present with him
at the battle of Corunna. In 1809 he command?'^ the Light
Companies of the First and Third Brigades of Foot Guai,^
in the expedition to the Scheldt, and attained the rank 02"
Colonel on 25th July, 1810. In May 1811 he embarkod in
command of the Third Battalion of the Grenadier Guards for
Cadiz., from whence he proceeded in January 1812 with a
Brigade to Carthagena. He returned to Cadiz on the 15th
April, and assumed the command of the Reserve in the Isla
de Leon, and in October of that year he joined the main army
at Salamanca. He was promoted to the rank of Major General
on the 4th June, 1813, and was appointed to the StaiF of the
Army under Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington in the
Peninsula ; he commanded a Brigade in the Sixth Division at
the Battles of Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse, for which
he received the distinction of a Cross. He was subsequently
appointed to the Staff of the Division of the Army sent to
America in 1814, and took part in the attack on New Orleans
in January 1815, and at the siege of Fort Bowyer; he
succeeded to the command of that division of the Army on
the deaths of Major-Ge irals Pakenham and Gibbs. He re-
turned from America in the spring of 1815, and arrived in
sufficient time to take the command of a Brigade in the cam-
paign of 1815, and to participate in the victory obtained at
Waterloo. He was appointed to the colonelcy of the 10th
Regiment of Foot on the 18th January 1824 ; he attained the
rank of Lieutenant-General on 27th May 1825, and that of
General on 23rd November 1841. In addition to the order
of G.C.B., he was a Knight of the Third Class of Wladimir of
Russia, and Commander of the Bavarian order of Maximilian
Joseph. His decease took place on the 14th September 1847.
Sir Thomas M'Mahon, Bart, and K.C.B.
Appointed from 94