John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair

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John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair
2 July 16739 May 1747
Image:John Dalrymple 2nd Earl of Stair (1673-1747) General and Diplomat.jpg
John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair
Place of birth Stair, Scotland
Place of death Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain
Service/branch British Army
Rank Field Marshal
Battles/wars War of the Spanish Succession
Jacobite rebellion
Awards KT

Field Marshal John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair KT, PC (July 2, 1673 - May 9, 1747) was a Scottish soldier and diplomat.

Despite being born in Stair in the ancient District of Kyle, Ayrshire, Scotland, Dalrymple's early life was spent mostly in the Netherlands. However, when his father died (in the early 1700s), he returned home, and in 1707, he was elected as one of sixteen Scottish representative peers in the newly formed Parliament of Great Britain. His military career flourished at the same time. He became an assistant to John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough during the War of the Spanish Succession, and in 1709, he was sent as an envoy to Augustus II of Poland. The year after, he was promoted to general for his military achievements, but he eventually fell from favour of the royal family, along with his friend, the Duke of Marlborough.

However, when King George I ascended to the throne, Dalrymple was sent as an envoy to Paris, France. For five years in the 1710s, his spies effectively thwarted various "intrigues" by the Jacobites. In 1720, he became Vice Admiral of Scotland, but lost the position in 1733, mainly because of his opposition to the 1733 Excise Bill of Prime Minister Robert Walpole. However, in 1742, when Walpole fell from office, Dalrymple was promoted to field marshal and commanded the "pragmatic" army of Flanders and Germany.

In 1739, at the foundation of the Foundling Hospital, Dalrymple served as one of that charity's original governors.

He was given the colonelcy of various units, including the Grey Dragoons (now the Royal Scots Greys), the Black Dragoons (now amalgamated into the Royal Dragoon Guards), and the Earl of Angus's Regiment (now a disbanded unit, formerly 1st Battalion,The Cameronians).

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Matthew Prior
British Ambassador to France
1714–1720
Succeeded by
Sir Robert Sutton
Military offices
Preceded by
Vacant
Commander-in-Chief of the Forces
1744
Succeeded by
George Wade
Preceded by
Charles Douglas
Vice Admiral of Scotland
1729 – 1733
Succeeded by
George Douglas
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
John Dalrymple
Earl of Stair
1707–1747
Succeeded by
James Dalrymple



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