Alexander Fraser, 16th Lord Saltoun

Alexander Fraser

Portrait by William Salter, c. 1837
Born 22 April 1785
London, England
Died 18 August 1853
Rothes, Scotland
Buried at Fraserburgh, Scotland
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Rank Lieutenant-General
Battles/wars Napoleonic Wars,
First Opium War
Drawing of statue by Edward Bowring Stephens (1815-1882) of Lt-Gen. Alexander Fraser, 17th Lord Saltoun (1785-1853) at Fraserburgh

Lieutenant-General Alexander George Fraser, 16th Lord Saltoun KT KCB GCH[1]KStG KMT[2] (22 April 1785 – 18 August 1853), was a Scottish representative peer and a British Army general who fought in the Napoleonic Wars and the First Opium War.

Biography

He served with the grenadiers in Sicily (1806), at Coruna (1808), on Walcheren (1809), and in Spain and France from 1812 to 1814. In 1815, Lord Saltoun fought as a captain in the First Regiment of Guards (later the Grenadier Guards) in the Orchard at Hougomont on the morning of the Battle of Waterloo; and it was Saltoun who, later in the day, first noticed the Imperial Guard emerge from the hollow where they had been hiding all day, and drew the Duke of Wellington's attention to them. During the battle he had four horses shot from underneath him.[2]

"Towards the close of Waterloo day he returned to his place in the line with about but one-third of the men with whom he had gone into action. He then took a prominent part in the last celebrated charge of the Guards."[2]

After Waterloo he became a Knight of St. George of Russia (KStG) and a knight of the Austrian Military Order of Maria Theresa (KMT).[2]

Fraser was described by Wellington as a "pattern to the army both as man and soldier."[2]

He was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order (GCH) in 1821 and a Knight of the Thistle in 1852. He was a Scottish representative peer from 1807 until his death and a Lord of the Bedchamber from 1821.

He was appointed a major-general in 1837 and commanded the first brigade in the Battle of Chinkiang (1842) during the First Opium War and afterwards the whole force until 1843. He was further promoted to lieutenant-general in 1849.

Family

He was the son of Alexander Fraser, 16th Lord Saltoun (1758–1793) and Margaret, only daughter of Simon Fraser of Ness Castle. Fraser married the daughter of Lord Chancellor Thurlow.[2] Fraser died in Rothes, Scotland on 18 August 1853.

Notes

References

Military offices
Preceded by
Sir William Henry Clinton
Colonel of the 55th (Westmorland) Regiment of Foot
1846
Succeeded by
John Wardlaw
Preceded by
Sir James Kempt
Colonel of the 2nd (The Queen's Royal) Regiment of Foot
1846–1853
Succeeded by
Sir John Rolt
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
Alexander Fraser
Lord Saltoun
1793–1853
Succeeded by
Alexander Fraser
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