|
Wellington Who? WELLINGTON WHO?
The First Duke of Wellington was not, as many people think, an English
gentleman but an Irish one! He was born Arthur Wellesley, on the 1st
May 1769 at number 24 Upper Merion Street, Dublin. His parents were
the Earls of Mornington. It was his mother, Anne Hill, Countess of
Mornington, who sent him into the British Army as an ensign in March
1787. He saw action in India at the storming of Seringapatam in May
1799 and later at the battles of Assaye & Argaum in 1803.
General Wellesley arrived in the Iberian Peninsula just after the
outbreak of war there in 1808. He won two short battles in Portugal
(Rolica & Vimeiro) before being recalled to London. He returned to
command the British forces in Portugal and captured Oporto in May,
1809. His summer campaign of that year saw him cross into Spain ending
in the successful Battle of Talavera on 27th and 28th July against King Joseph
Bonaparte's army. For this victory the British parliament made him
Viscount Wellington of Talavera. The Spanish Cortes made him a Grandee
of Spain with the title Duque de Ciudad Rodrigo in February of 1812
and in the same year became Generalissimo of the Spanish armies.
After his crowning victory over the French at the Battle of Vitoria in
the north of Spain on 21 June, 1813, Britain made him Field Marshal.
Wellington only faced Napoleon once in battle. This was on a Sunday,
on 18 June 1815, south of Brussels near a hamlet called Waterloo.
With the wars against France finally over with the downfall of
Napoleon, Wellington was given titles from all the European countries
and Commander-in-Chief of the British Army. From 15 February, 1828
until he resigned in October 1830, Wellington was British Prime
Minister. In his later life he even became Chancellor of the
University of Oxford and Master of Trinity House. The First Duke of
Wellington died at Walmer Castle, Dover, at 3.25pm on the 14
September, 1852 in his 83rd year.....97 years later to the very day
our chairman, Stephen Drake-Jones was born! |