Charles Frederick Henningsen (1815 — June 14, 1877) was an Anglo-American writer, mercenary, filibuster, and munitions expert. He participated in civil wars and independence movements in Spain, Nicaragua, Hungary, and the United States. His parents were Swedish, but he was born in England.[1]
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He fought in the First Carlist War, after entering as a volunteer in the service of Don Carlos in 1834. Henningsen rose to be captain of bodyguard to the Carlist general Tomás de Zumalacárregui. After the signing of the Lord Eliot Convention in April 1835, at which he was present,[2] Henningsen returned to England.[3]
However, Henningsen soon returned to Spain with the rank of lieutenant-colonel and joined the Carlist expedition that threatened Madrid from Aragon.[3]
He fought at the Battle of Villar de los Navarros (August 24, 1837), a Carlist victory, earning the rank of colonel. He headed the Carlist lancers and was attacked outside of Madrid by Liberal (Isabeline) forces. He led a column against these forces, capturing the outer fortifications of Madrid. He held them for several hours, until notified that Don Carlos could send him no reinforcements.[4]
However, he was subsequently taken prisoner, and released on parole. He did not to serve again in this war.[3] He later recorded his experiences in Spain in the book The Most Striking Events of a Twelvemonth's Campaign with Zumalacarregui, which he dedicated to Lord Eliot. The work created controversy in Britain because it glorified Zumalacárregui and supported the Carlist position.[2]
Henningsen subsequently fought against the Russian army in Circassia during the Russian-Circassian War, and wrote up a military report on Russia, also later writing the book Revelations of Russia. This was translated into French by Cyprien Robert and published in Paris (3 vols. 1845).[3]
He then became involved in the revolution in Hungary led by Lajos Kossuth, and was also involved in the planning of the military campaign against enemy Austrian forces.[3]
He proposed a military plan of campaign that was well-received by Richard Debaufre Guyon and other leaders; as a result, Henningsen was to be appointed military and civil commander of the fortress of Komárom (Komorn).[3] However, the Hungarian Revolution was suppressed, and Henningsen later visited Kossuth at Kütahya in 1850, where the Hungarian leader had been detained.[3]
Henningsen then traveled from Constantinople to Albania, and then crossed the Adriatic Sea to Italy.[3]
In 1851, Henningsen traveled to the United States shortly after Kossuth arrived in that country. He remained in the United States as a representative of Hungarian interests.[3] Henningsen served under William Walker in Nicaragua from October 1856, and was appointed major-general, commanding Walker's artillery.[3]
He directed the defense of Rivas on March 23, 1856 and during the Second Battle of Rivas (April 11, 1856).
He was second in command at the Battle of the Transit (November 11, 1856) and at the Battle of Masaya.
He commanded the Battle of Obraje and was second in command at the 3rd and 4th battles of San Jorge.
Henningsen was responsible for burning Granada, Nicaragua, at the time the capital of Nicaragua, on December 14, 1856. During this incident, he had taken refuge at Granada with 416 persons, 140 of whom were women, children, and wounded. Henningsen was surrounded by some 4,000 Salvadoran and Guatemalan troops, so he decided to burn the city, fighting his way to Lake Nicaragua with a loss of 230 killed, wounded, and those killed by cholera. Nothing of the city was left but a smoking ruin; when Henningsen withdrew, he left an inscription on a lance reading, in Spanish, Aquí fue Granada ("Here was Granada").[5]
At the lake, he was joined by a reinforcement of 130 men, and routed the Salvadoran and Guatemalan forces.[3]
On May 1, 1857 Henningsen, along with Walker, surrendered to Commander Charles Henry Davis of the United States Navy and was repatriated.[3]
He became a citizen of the United States and was married to a niece of John M. Berrien, U.S. Senator from Georgia. Henningsen continued to pursue filibuster schemes and fought in the American Civil War for the Confederacy for a year, being made brigadier-general, and frequently had command of the defenses of Richmond.[4] He was involved in the Battle of Elizabeth City.[6]
After the war he took up his residence in Washington, D.C., and was involved in the movement to liberate Cuba from Spanish rule.[4] During his declining years, he lived in straitened circumstances, but was supported by friends such as Colonel Albert Pike.[4]
His 1877 obituary in The Evening Star described him as a “man of striking appearance, being tall, erect, and soldier-like in his bearing. He was gentleman of scholarly attainments, and spoke the French, Spanish, Russian, German, and Italian languages with the fluency of a native.”[4] Another source states that "he died in 1877 without ever winning any of the causes for which he fought."[2]
He is mentioned in Ernesto Cardenal's poem Con Walker en Nicaragua ("With Walker in Nicaragua"):
Henningsen's specialty was artillery, but also wrote about the improvement of small arms, and superintended the development of the first Minié rifles in the United States.
His works include: