Thomas Brereton

[1]

For other people named Thomas Brereton, see Thomas Brereton (disambiguation).
Thomas Brereton
Born 1782
Kings County, Ireland
Died January 1832 (aged 4950)
Bristol, England
Allegiance Great Britain
United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service 1798–1832
Rank Lieutenant-Colonel
Battles/wars Napoleonic Wars

Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Brereton (1782–1832) was an officer of the British Army.

He was descended from Sir William Brereton, Chief Justice and Lord High Marshall of Ireland, from the ancient and noble family of Brereton, Cheshire, England. He was born in Kings County (now Offaly), Ireland, in 1782. In 1798 he received his commission as an ensign in the 8th West India Regiment. In 1809 he was promoted to Major and served at the capture of Martinique from the French and Guadelope the following year. He was appointed Brigade Major in 1813 for his relative Major General Robert Brereton, Lieutenant-Governor of St. Lucia. In 1814 he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Senegal and Gorée and was present during the Méduse tragedy. In 1815 he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel of the Royal African Corps. He was appointed in 1819 to command of the Cape Town garrison until 1823 when he retired to England to become Inspecting Field Officer for the Bristol recruiting district.

At the time of the 1831 Reform riots in Bristol he was in charge of the troops. Though Colonel Brereton managed to put down the rioting after three days upon arrival of the reinforcements he had requested, he was court-martialled in January 1832, during which he committed suicide. Twice a widower he died leaving four children.[2]

Depictions in film

The 1978 children's paranormal TV drama The Clifton House Mystery was a ghost story based on the circumstances of Brereton's death. The plot revolved around a family moving into an old house in Bristol that finds a long-dead skeleton in a hidden room. After some unexplained incidents, they become convinced that a ghost connected in some way with the Bristol Riots of 1831 is haunting the house. After checking local records, they realize that it is the ghost of a dragoon commander who was court-martialled for his handling of the riots, and who later disappeared without a trace. The ghost is named "George Bretherton" in the TV series. One of his descendants, named "Mrs Betterton", had sold the house to the family, but was allegedly unaware of the hidden room and its contents, referring only to a vague family scandal that happened generations ago.[3]

Depictions in fiction

The 1906 historical novel Chippinge (sometimes Chippinge Borough) by Stanley J. Weyman is based on the background to the 1831 Bristol Riots and culminates in a detailed description of those riots and Colonel Brereton's part in them. The main fiction in that description is that the important role played by Major Digby Mackworth is ascribed to the hero, Arthur Vaughan.

References

  1. Brereton, J. A. The Readeption of Colonel Brereton.
  2. Brereton, J. A. The Redemption of Colonel Brereton.
  3. "The Clifton House Mystery". IMDb. 2014. Retrieved 6 September 2014.

[1]

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Hunt, William (1886). "Brereton, Thomas (1782-1832)". In Stephen, Leslie. Dictionary of National Biography 6. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 269.

External links

  1. J.A. Brereton,The Readeption of Colonel Brereton