Charles Belson

Colonel Sir Charles Philip Belson KCB (1773  5 November 1830) was a British Army officer who served during the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign.[1]

Career

Belson joined the army in 1794 as an ensign in the 13th Regiment of Foot and thereafter graduated to the 6th West India Regiment, 9th Regiment of Foot and the 7th Light Dragoons.[2] He joined the 28th (North Gloucestershire) Regiment of Foot in the Peninsular War and for his service received the Gold Medal[3] and two clasps.[4] After the Battle of Quatre Bras he succeeded to the command of the 8th Brigade[4] and at Waterloo he commanded the 28th when he had two horses killed under him and two wounded. The 28th maintained their square for over an hour in the face of repeated charges by French cuirassiers and lancers.[2]

He became lieutenant-colonel of the 56th Regiment of Foot on 9 May 1816 and died at Blackheath, London on 5 November 1830, aged 57.[4]

gollark: Perhaps we should do a randomized controlled trial to test this - randomly split the server into groups, and then expose them each to either *real* constant questioning about whether he's annoying, or *placebo* constant questioning.
gollark: We need to figure out how exactly to phrase the question first.
gollark: I mean, annoyingness is subjective, but I believe if we were to run a poll or something it would generally be considered annoying.
gollark: What?
gollark: Er, some offense (I'm *pretty* sure I got the right person, although the many gianniseses around make it hard to tell), <@!665664987578236961>, but you asking people "are you annoyed by me" and stuff all the time is annoying.

References

  1. "Deaths". The Gentleman's Magazine. London, England: F. Jefferies: 564. December 1830. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  2. "The Army". Freeman's Journal. 10 December 1830. Retrieved 29 October 2015 via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. Cobbett, William (1810). Cobbett's Weekly Political Register. R. Bagshaw. p. 725.
  4. Dalton 1904, p. 137.
Bibliography


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