|
Arthur Wellesley
1st Duke of Wellington
1769-1852

The British soldier and statesman Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of
Wellington, was one of the pacifiers of British India, an
important architect of the downfall of Napoleon I, and a major
political figure.
The
third son of the Earl of Mornington, Arthur Wellesley was born
in Dublin, Ireland, on or about May 1, 1769. He was educated at
Eton, in Brussels, and at Angers Military Academy. In 1787 he
became a lieutenant of foot and aide-de-camp to the lord
lieutenant of Ireland. From 1790 he was for five years a member
of the Irish Parliament. In 1793, at the age of 24, he purchased
a lieutenant colonelcy in the 33d Foot, whose colonel he became
in 1806. In 1794 Wellesley participated in the Netherlands
campaign, during which he was so struck by the inefficiency of
British officers that the next year he began the serious study
of warfare.
From 1797 to 1804 Wellesley was the commanding officer of the
33d Foot in India, where from 1797 to 1805 his brother Richard,
Marquess Wellesley, was governor general. In India, Wellesley
came into his own as a soldier, aiding in the capture of Mysore
in 1799 and leading the two campaigns in 1799-1802 that crushed
Dhundia Wagh, the robber chieftain. In 1802 Wellesley was
promoted to major general, and from 1803 to 1805 he was chief
administrator as well as military commander of the Deccan, where
on Sept. 23, 1803, at Assaye he defeated the vaunted Marathas.
Wellesley resigned when his brother was recalled in 1805.
The next year Wellesley became commander of a brigade at
Hastings and was elected a member of Parliament. He married
Kitty Pakenham on April 10, 1806, but she was never his equal
and eventually became almost a recluse. In 1807 he moved to
Ireland as chief secretary for 2 years; but in the same year he
was sent on an expedition against the Danes. In 1808 he was
posted to Portugal, beginning what was to be his major campaign.
Portugal and Spain
Wellesley had conceived the idea of thwarting Napoleon on the
Iberian Peninsula, and in 1808 he led an expedition to assist
the Portuguese in their revolt against the French. He defeated
the French at Rolica and Vimeiro, but Sir Harry Burrard
prevented his pursuit of the routed French. Both Wellesley and
Burrard returned to England to stand courts-martial, but both
were acquitted. In 1809 Wellesley resumed command in Portugal.
He captured Oporto, advanced into Spain on the strength of
Spanish promises of support, won at Talavera, and then retreated
when the Spanish promises fell flat to carefully prepared lines
at Torres Vedras. He did not reach Torres Vedras, however, until
after he had been created Viscount Wellington and had bloodied
André Massena's nose at Bussaco. The French commander made no
progress at Torres Vedras in spite of the fact that Wellington
was ill-supported from England both in the quality of his
officers and in the number of reinforcements.
In 1811 Massena pulled back and Wellington pursued, but he soon
found himself facing larger forces. In 1812 he incurred heavy
casualties storming Ciudad Rodrigo and in the capture of Badajoz;
he entered Madrid on August 12. His efforts to take Burgos were
bloodily repulsed, and he then beat a hasty retreat to Ciudad
Rodrigo. He was created Marquess of Wellington.
Late in May 1813, after mending political fences in Spain and
Portugal, Wellington began his final advance into France,
beating Joseph Bonaparte at Vitoria and crossing into France
over the Pyrenees. After much hard fighting, he penned the
French into Bayonne and defeated them at Orthez. Following this
victory he went to Paris to negotiate a peace. On entering
France he had been created field marshal, to which title was now
added Duke of Wellington.
Waterloo and After
Wellington remained as ambassador in Paris only through late
1814, for he then joined other European leaders at the Congress
of Vienna. He was participating in these negotiations when
Napoleon returned from Elba. Wellington was at once sent to
command the Allied armies in the Netherlands, where he
cooperated with the Prussian general Gebhard von Blücher.
Wellington was surprised by Marshal Ney at Quatre Bras and fell
back on Waterloo, where on June 18 he held on until Blücher
could fulfill his promise to come to his aid after the Prussian
defeat at Ligny. Together they routed the French. At the age of
46 Wellington had fought one of the most decisive battles in
history and won. After advancing on Paris, effecting Napoleon's
abdication, and restraining Blücher from taking reprisals or
territory, Wellington was variously engaged in France until the
Allied army of occupation was withdrawn in 1818.
As a general, Wellington was respected by his troops, who
admired his sangfroid and his imperturbability under fire.
"Nosey" was a known battlefield figure who had the loyalty of
his varied forces, and he carried this over into his later
career as a political leader. His successes were due to his
study of war, to careful planning including that of supply, and
to his realism, which led him to rely heavily on his British
infantry and to choose so often defensive positions in which he
had to be attacked, usually uphill, because he flanked the
enemy's line of advance.
Man on Horseback
In the years after his great victory, Wellington reverted more
and more to the aristocratic mold from which he had been cast.
Not only was he an 18th-century nobleman, but also he was a man
whose career had been spent leading officers and men not noted
for their intellectual brilliance. Thus he was used to speaking
bluntly and to the point. At the same time he was accustomed to
giving orders and to being obeyed. That was his public image.
Yet privately he displayed a great sense of humor and was much
beloved by the ladies.
In the second half of his life, Wellington had to spend a good
deal of time dealing with politics and civilians, for neither of
which he had much tolerance. Yet these were the difficult times
of the Peterloo Massacre, the Great Reform Bill, the Chartists,
and the repeal of the Corn Laws. Moreover, in these years he was
exposed to examination by journalists and liberals who became
unsympathetic to his outlook and actions since he was no longer
leading victorious armies in popular wars. Yet he had emerged
from the Napoleonic Wars as the one great man in England, the
man on horseback.
Political Leader and Prime Minister
On his return from France, Wellington divided his time between
occasional attendance at international peace conferences and
military and political appointments at home. From 1818 to 1827
he was master general of the ordnance with a seat in the
Cabinet. In 1827 he became commander in chief. George Canning
asked him to join the government when he succeeded Lord
Liverpool, but Wellington professed himself happy as commander
in chief. Moreover, he was staunchly Tory and Irish anti
Catholic, while Canning leaned the other way. The upshot, when
coupled to personal dislike, was that Wellington resigned both
as master general of the ordnance and as commander in chief, and
for the first time since he had joined the army in 1787 he was
unemployed. Canning died within three months, and by September
1827 the duke was back as commander in chief.
But when Goderich's caretaker government faded early in 1828,
the King sent for Wellington and asked him, as leader of the
Tories, to form a new government. So at the age of 58, with
doubts about the rising tide for Catholic emancipation,
Wellington became prime minister. Suddenly he was back in public
favour as he had not been since Waterloo.
Once in office, the duke, resigning again as commander in chief,
discovered that he had to move to unite the Tories, especially
after the Canningites left him. He therefore favoured Catholic
emancipation in an attempt both to unite his Party and to
provide a sound government for Ireland. In this he was
successful. The government survived until late 1830, when a
combination of factors caused by the accession of William IV and
the Revolution of 1830 in France made Wellington's position
weak, even without his announced opposition to reform. The
government resigned. The Tories were out of office for the first
time in decades. Wellington refused to lead the opposition for
he had been a royal servant too long.
Later Years
Unpopular for a while, Wellington beat a gradual retreat on
reform in the House of Lords and was willing in 1832 to be prime
minister again if the King desired, but he could not form a
Cabinet. He then withdrew his opposition to the Reform Bill to
prevent the Whigs from packing the House of Lords. When the
Whigs went out of office in 1834, the duke acted as prime
minister and all three secretaries of state until Sir Robert
Peel could return from Italy; then Wellington briefly retained
the Foreign Office until the elections went against the Tories.
Nevertheless, Wellington's personal popularity was high once
again, and he decided that the country would survive reform. In
1841 Peel formed a new government with Wellington as leader of
the House of Lords. The next year the incumbent commander in
chief died, and the "Iron Duke" resumed the post that he held
until his death a decade later. He constantly worried about
national defense. During the Chartist troubles in 1848 he
organized the defense of London. He died on Sept. 14, 1852.
Deaf in his last years, Wellington was the elder states man of
Great Britain, honoured and consulted by many. A gradualist and
a realist, he was one of the best-informed persons in the
kingdom, especially on foreign affairs. He carried on a
voluminous correspondence, and he was always careful of his
dignity and honour. Plain of speech, sometimes tart, he
generally cut to the heart of the matter. At the same time, his
distinctive features made him one of the few personalities well
known to the people in the days before photography. His
reputation was enhanced by the publication of his dispatches
(1834-1880) and his parliamentary speeches (1854).
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Wellesley entered the army in 1787 and, aided by his brother
Richard (later Marquess Wellesley), rose rapidly in rank. He
held a command in Flanders (1794–95) and in 1796 went with his
regiment to India. After his brother's appointment (1797) as
governor-general of India, he received command of a division in
the invasion of Mysore and became (1799) governor of
Seringapatam. In 1800 he defeated the robber chieftain, Dhundia
Wagh, and in 1802 he was made major general. In 1803 he moved
against the Marathas, breaking their force of about 40,000 with
an army of about 10,000 in a surprise attack. A valuable civil
and military adviser to his brother, he returned with him to
England in 1805 and was knighted. His election (1806) to
Parliament and appointment (1807) as Irish secretary did not
prevent him from leading (1807) an expedition against the Danes.
In 1808 he led an expedition to assist Portugal in its revolt
against the French. He defeated the French at Roliça and Vimeiro,
but was superseded in command. In 1809 he returned to the
Iberian Peninsula, where he ultimately assumed command of the
British, Portuguese, and Spanish forces in the Peninsular War.
Taking advantage of the irregular terrain, Portuguese and
Spanish nationalism, and Napoleon's preoccupation with other
campaigns and projects, he drove the French beyond the Pyrenees
by 1813, though his campaigns were rendered difficult by poor
support from the British government. Late in 1813 he invaded S
France, and he was at Toulouse when news of Napoleon's
abdication (Apr., 1814) arrived.
Returning to England, he received many honors and was created
duke of Wellington. He served for a short time as ambassador to
Paris, then succeeded Viscount Castlereagh at the peace
conference in Vienna; but when Napoleon returned from Elba, he
took command of the allied armies. There followed his most
famous victory, that in the Waterloo campaign, won in
conjunction with the Prussian general, Gebhard Leberecht von
Blücher. Wellington, again lavishly honoured, took charge of the
army of occupation in France, exerting his influence to restrain
harsh treatment of the defeated French.
Political Career
Wellington, “the iron duke,” with the soldier's taste for
discipline and order and the aristocrat's distrust of democratic
institutions, lent his great prestige to the Tory policy of
repression at home and took a cabinet post as master general of
the ordnance (1819). He represented England at the Congress of
Verona (1822), where he opposed intervention in the Spanish
revolt, and at the conference at St. Petersburg (1826) that
concerned itself with the revolt in Greece, but he was not in
sympathy with the liberal foreign policy of George Canning and
resigned (1827) when Canning became prime minister.
In 1828 Wellington himself reluctantly became prime minister. He
bowed to public clamour and allowed the repeal of the Test Act
and Corporation Act and the passage of the Catholic Emancipation
bill (reforms he had previously opposed), but he lost the
support of much of the Tory party as a consequence. When he
declared against parliamentary reform, the ministry fell (1830),
and his unpopularity subjected him to an assault by a mob. He
refused to form a government in 1834, but served under Sir
Robert Peel as foreign secretary (1834–35) and again (1841–46)
as minister without portfolio. On the repeal of the corn laws he
supported Peel, while not wholly approving his policy. In 1842
he was made commander in chief for life. He is buried in St.
Paul's Cathedral.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley, 1st duke of (1769-1852). Soldier
and prime minister. Arthur Wellesley was the third surviving son
of the earl of Mornington, an impoverished Irish peer. After a
year at a French military academy at Angers, he entered the army
by purchasing a commission. Early experience in the campaigns in
the Low Countries during the first years of the Revolutionary
War showed how things should not be done. His great chance came
in India, where his elder brother was governor-general. Arthur
established his military reputation by winning the spectacular
victories of Assaye and Argaum over the Mahrattas in 1803. In
1808 he was sent as commander of the first detachment of British
troops to Portugal. Winning the battle of Vimeiro he was
recalled to face a court of inquiry after the armistice of
Cintra, which was seen in England as craven. Wellesley had
signed the agreement under orders, but was bitterly attacked by
opposition politicians. Cleared by the inquiry he resumed
command of the British army in Portugal after the death of
Moore. Shrewdly exploiting natural features and the engineering
skills of the British army to construct the lines of Torres
Vedras he ensured that the British army would not be pushed into
the sea. But he was more than a defensive general. He was bold
when necessary, as the assaults on the fortresses of Badajoz and
Ciudad Rodrigo showed, and in the battles of Salamanca, Vitoria,
and the Pyrenees he was as resourceful in attack as he had been
in defence. The end of the Peninsular War saw him as the most
famous British general since the duke of Marlborough. The battle
of Waterloo in 1815 confirmed his stature and his fame. He cared
for his men and husbanded their lives, scorned extravagant
gestures, and despised popularity.
After 1815 Wellington was prominent as a diplomat and
politician. He had owed much to Castlereagh; now he became one
of his trusted lieutenants in the complex diplomacy of the
post-war era. He also became a member of Liverpool's government,
believing that it was his duty to serve the state in whatever
capacity might be required of him. After the death of Canning
and the failure of the Goderich ministry, Wellington became
prime minister in January 1828. When in 1828 a crisis erupted in
Ireland he chose to grant catholic emancipation rather than risk
civil war. This earned him the hatred of the ultra-Tories and he
fought a duel with Lord Winchilsea. In 1830 Wellington attempted
to rally conservative opinion by affirming his resolute
opposition to parliamentary reform. The tactic failed to restore
confidence in his administration. In November 1830 he was
defeated on the civil list in the Commons and resigned. Although
Wellington opposed the Reform Bill he realized that opposition
had to be attuned to the realities of politics. He therefore led
100 Tory peers from their seats in the Lords to allow the Reform
Bill to pass in June 1832, preferring reform to the prospect of
the Upper House being swamped by newly created peers. In 1834,
during the crisis provoked by Melbourne's resignation,
Wellington became a caretaker prime minister for some three
weeks and after 1835 he played an important role as an elder
statesman.
JACANA HOME PAGE
|
CLASSIC VIDEO CLIPS
|
JACANA ASTRONOMY SITE
JACANA PHOTO LIBRARY |
OLD MAUN PHOTO GALLERY |
MAUN PHONE DIRECTORY
FREE FONTS |
PIC OF THE DAY
|
GENERAL LIBRARY |
MAP LIBRARY |
TECHNICAL LIBRARY
HOUSE PLANS LIBRARY
|
MAUN E-MAIL, WEBSITE & SKYPE LIST
|
BOTSWANA GPS CO-ORDINATES
MAUN SAFARI WEB LINKS |
FREE SOFTWARE |
JACANA WEATHER PAGE
JACANA CROSSWORD LIBRARY |
JACANA CARTOON PAGE |
DEMOTIVATIONAL POSTERS
This web page was last updated on:
31 December, 2008
              |