William Douglas of Balgillo

Sir William Douglas of Balgillo (c. 1778 – 25 August 1818) K.C.B., was a British Army officer during the Napoleonic Wars.[1][2]

Biography

He was the son of William Douglas of Brigton (died 1814), and his wife Elizabeth Graham, daughter of Robert Graham, 11th of Fintry.[3] He served at the Cape of Good Hope in 1795. He was promoted to major in 74th Foot on 4 December 1796. He joined the 91st Foot in 1798.[4] He was promoted a brevet Lieutenant-Colonel 1 January 1800.[5]

He served on the Hanover expedition in 1805 and fought in the Peninsular War from August 1808 to June 1809. While in theatre he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel of 91st Foot on 25 November 1808 and commanded the 1st Battalion from 1808 to 1818. He served in the Walcheren expedition of 1809; again in Iberia and then France under Wellington from January 1813 to April 1814. He obtained the rank of brevet Colonel on 4 June 1814.[5] He served in Waterloo Campaign of 1815, during which he led one of the columns that stormed Cambray on 24 June 1815.[6] He was awarded the Army Gold Cross (one of only 163 so honoured).[4] He died in August 1818 at Valenciennes in France.[7]

Notes

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gollark: Well, consider the etymology.
gollark: What, in general?
gollark: Okay, yes, we need to write a page on that somehow.
gollark: Æ.

References

Further reading

  • McGuigan, Ron (24 September 2008), "Lt-col William Douglas ( ? – 1818)", Napoleon Series Archive 2008, retrieved 1 March 2014 — a forum comment.


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