Showing posts with label Napoleon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Napoleon. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

JOHN JACKSON: Waterloo - My Family

We are delighted to welcome John Jackson back to the blog today with another gem from his past.

Yet Another Ancestor – we all have them. This year it’s the two hundredth anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo and my great-great-grandfather was there.

Henry Dumaresq was then a twenty three year old Major in Wellington's Army. He joined the Army as an Ensign in Portugal in 1807 and served without a break, rising through the ranks and finishing up as Major and ADC to General Byng of the 2nd. Brigade of Guards. He fought at all the major battles in the Peninsula and in France.

Henry had no fortune behind him. His father had served in the Army for twenty years in Canada. He returned to England, married and settled down, running the militia in Worcester for some years before dying of liver cancer.

Because of his service in the Army, the War Office offered to educate Henry and his brothers and they all went into the Army as “Ensigns, without purchase”. Henry went into the 9th. Foot, now the Norfolk Regiment.



Henry was also at the Duchess of Richmond's Ball, on the eve of the battle. The news of Napoleon's advance over the border reached Wellington at the ball late at night. He borrowed a map from his host, and decided then and there that he would stop him at Waterloo.

The officers famously all left the ball and returned to their duties. Henry would have been inordinately busy as ADC to a brigade commander.

He was involved with the defence of Hougoumont, a large farmhouse which spent a long time being assaulted by the pick of Napoleon's troops. He took a musket ball through the lungs, but stayed on his horse long enough to deliver a despatch to Wellington. The musket ball was never removed and led to his premature death twenty three years later

Castle of Hougoumont

Dumaresq is a Jersey name, and Henry was the only Jerseyman recorded as being at the Battle.

Georgette Heyer wrote of both the ball and battle in her impeccable historical romances, An Infamous Army, and The Spanish Bride. (two of my personal favourites of any books)

After the battle, Henry made a remarkable recovery, all be it with the ball still in him. One of his sisters, Elizabeth, married General Ralph Darling who went out to Mauritius, and thence to New South Wales, as Governor. He took Henry with him as his Military secretary. Darling's name is perpetuated in New South Wales, with Darling Harbour in Sydney and the Murray-Darling River complex. The Dumaresq River separates Queensland from New South Wales.

Henry Dumaresq

In June 1827 Henry returned to England and married Sophia, daughter of Augustus, Earl of Lanesborough. They went back to Australia and bought land in the Hunter Valley and ran sheep. (Now, if only they had made wine!) This was never a success, and Henry's physical condition worsened. He eventually died and is buried at Muswellbrook. The local town, Armidale, is now called Armidale Dumaresq after him.

They had three sons and four daughters. There are still Dumaresqs in Australia, mostly in Victoria and Tasmania. I've met some of them over the years. One of them, Martin, still farms on the family farm in Tasmania, on one of the oldest farms there. They still have the convicts’ quarters on the farm, now unoccupied.





The Duchess of Richmond's Ball was revived some years ago and is held in Brussels under the auspices of the British Embassy. It is VERY posh and raises substantial funds for charity. This year's Ball is completely sold out, and the waiting list closed.

Thank you, John. A fascinating look into the history of your family.

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Friday, July 25, 2014

Historical Fiction - Ideas and Research

Today we welcome Rosemary Morris – and the rest is history

First of all, thank you very much for inviting me to be your guest.

I am often asked where I get my ideas from. More often than not while I am reading historical non-fiction, something sparks my imagination. For example, I was reading about James II younger brother of Charles II. In my author’s note at the beginning of Far Beyond Rubies I explained. “When the outwardly Protestant Charles II died in 1685, he left a country torn by religious controversy but no legitimate children. The throne passed to his Catholic brother James.

It was an anxious time for the people, whose fears increased when James II, became so unpopular that he was forced into exile. In 1688, James’s Protestant daughter, Mary, and her husband, William of Orange, became the new king and queen of England.

Some English Protestants, who had sworn allegiance to James II, refused to take a new oath of allegiance to William and Mary and, after their deaths, to Queen Anne, and joined him in France. How, I asked myself, did this affect the children of Jacobites, and wrote Tangled Love.

Subsequently, I set two more novels, Far Beyond Rubies and The Captain and The Countess, in the reign of Queen Anne Stuart, 1702-1714, and two novels, Sunday’s Child, and False Pretences set in Regency England.















I like choosing dramatic events as a background. If the Duke of Marlborough had not won The War of Spanish Succession and The Duke of Wellington had not defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo, it would have had far-reaching consequences for the United Kingdom and the rest of the world.

At the moment I am writing Monday’s Child the second of a series set in the period before and after the Battle of Waterloo. I am also revising a novel set in the reign of Edward II who was defeated by Robert the Bruce at The Battle of Bannockburn. This battle, in which the last large English mediaeval army took to the field, changed the history of England and Scotland.

I dislike historical fiction in which the characters act like 21st century people. I don’t think it is possible to get every single detail about the past correct, but my bookshelves and local library bear testimony to my research. Apart from reading, I visit places of historical interest and exhibitions. In recent months, I visited the Georgians Revealed exhibition at The British Library, The Vikings exhibition at The British Library and The Wedding Dress exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum, and I visited The National Army Museum. I also visit stately homes and gardens. At Hatfield House I saw Queen Anne Stuart’s coronation chair. Elsewhere I viewed palanquins, a gypsy caravan, carriages and much more. Such visits are instructive, bring me closer to the past and always give me ideas.

If you would like to know more about me, view my book trailers and read the first chapters of my novel please visit my website.


My novels are available from MuseItUp Publishing, at amazon.com, amazon.co.uk and elsewhere. Far Beyond Rubies is available as an online e book and print book.

Thank you so much for taking time to share, Rosemary

This blog is brought to you by Elaine Everest and Natalie Kleinman. We are always interested in blog interviews and craft articles. Please contact us at elaineeverest@aol.com