Alexander Gordon (British cavalry officer)
- For the contemporary British Guards officer killed at the Battle of Waterloo, see Alexander Gordon (British staff officer).
Alexander Gordon (1781–1873) was a British officer during the Napoleonic Wars.[1] He was commissioned a captain in the 15th Hussars and he fought in the Peninsular War. His correspondence during the Corunna Campaign were collated and published early in the 20th century.[2]
Biography
Gordon was the son of George Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aberdeen and his mistress Penelope Dearing. His commission was purchased for him in 1803. After service in the Peninsular War he sold his commission in 1811 on his marriage to Albinia Elizabeth Cumberland. He was acknowledged by the 3rd Earl as being his son and was provided for in the Earl's will.[3] He died at Ellon in Aberdeenshire on 21 March 1873.[4]
Family
On 20 May 1811 Gordon married Albinia Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Cumberland and granddaughter of George Hobart, 3rd Earl of Buckinghamshire. They had five sons and four daughters:[5]
- George John Robert Gordon, JP, DL, of Ellon Castle, Aberdeenshire (1812-1912) - British diplomat in Sweden and Germany who married Rosa Justina Young and had two sons and one daughter:
- Cosmo Frederick Maitland Gordon (b.1843) - naval officer
- Alicia Albinia Georgiana Gordon (b.1845)
- Arthur John Lewis Gordon (b.1847) - British diplomat
- Sophia Albinia Georgiana Gordon, (b.1813)
- Bertie Edward Murray Gordon (1813-1870) - army officer who married Katherine Alicia Hacket
- Richard Louis Hobart Gordon (1815-1835) - naval officer who drowned in the wreck of HMS Challenger
- Harriet Albinia Louisa Gordon (1816-1854) who married Charles Elphinstone-Dalrymple, son of Sir Robert Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone, 1st Bart., and had one son:
- William Robert Elphinstone-Dalrymple (b.1854) - army officer
- William Everard Alphonso Gordon, CB (b.1817) - naval officer
- Catherine Louisa Caroline Gordon, (b.1819)
- Charles Alexander Boswell Gordon (b.1823) - army officer who married Eweretta Rosa Johnstone
- Eleanor Vere Gordon (1825-1916) - artist and author who married the Rev. and Hon. Richard Cavendish Boyle, son of Edmund Boyle, 8th Earl of Cork, and had three sons and one daughter:
- Isabella Albinia Boyle
- Hamilton Richard Boyle (b.1848) - army officer
- Charles John Boyle (b.1849) - army officer
- Algernon Edward Richard Boyle, JP - (b.1854
Bibliography
H.C. Wylly (ed.) (2009) [1909]. A Cavalry Officer in the Corunna Campaign, 1808-1809; The Journal of Captain Gordon of the 15th Hussars (reprint ed.). N&M Press. ISBN 978-1-84734-991-0. "This is a valuable eye-witness account of an often overlooked campaign by a perceptive and informed professional observer".[6]
Notes
- ↑ Not to be confused with Alexander Gordon (1786–1815), a son of a legitimate half brother, who was slain at the Battle of Waterloo
- ↑ "Captain Alexander Gordon had originally served in the 15th Light Dragoons but gained his captaincy by purchase in the 3rd West India Regiment, but remained books only two weeks before transferring back to the 15th Hussars on 3 March 1808. He transferred to the 60th Foot in 1811 and retired by the sale of his commission in late 1811 and died at Ellon in Aberdeenshire 21 March 1873" (Griffith, Philips & Glover 2007, p. 44)
- ↑ Godsman 1958, pp. 65,66.
- ↑ Griffith, Philips & Glover 2007, p. 44.
- ↑ The Royal Lineage of our Noble and Gentle Families, vol 2, Foster, J. (1884), (London: Hazell, Watson and Winey, Ltd.), p.6
- ↑ Staff NAM 2009.
References
- Godsman, James (1958). A history of the Burgh and Parish of Ellon, Aberdeenshire. W. & W. Lindsay.
- Griffith, Edwin; Philips, Frederick; Glover, Gareth (2007). Glover, Gareth, ed. From Corunna to Waterloo: the letters and journals of two Napoleonic Hussars : Major Edwin Griffith and Captain Frederick Philips 15th (King's) Hussars 1801-1816 (illustrated ed.). MBI Publishing Company. p. 44 (footnote). ISBN 1-85367-709-4.
- Staff NAM (2009). "A review of A Cavalry Officer in the Corunna Campaign ...". National Army Museum - Online Military Bookshop. Retrieved September 2011. External link in
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