Monday, 17 June 2024

Duchess of Richmond's ball

Leaving the Duchess of Richmond's ball to fight at Quatre Bras, 1815

From the wiki

 Elizabeth Longford described it as "the most famous ball in history".[1] "The ball was certainly a brilliant affair",[2] at which "with the exception of three generals, every officer high in Wellington's army was there to be seen".[3]


David Miller's book is a detailed monograph on a famous historical event, the remarkable 'Duchess of Richmond's ball' which took place the night before Waterloo. His wish list of questions in the introduction is admirable: Why did it take place and where? Who actually attended and what happened? Indeed, who were the Duke and Duchess of Richmond? As ever with events of the Napoleonic period, there is much that is myth that surrounds this ball. Mr Miller picks with skill through the material and gives a clear account of the events. The biographical sketches of many of those present at the ball are of particular, as are the maps showing Belgium, Brussels and the Richmonds' chateau respectively. Also included are six appendices (three detailed guest lists, statistics regarding the numbers of military men invited and the percentages of them who died the following day, a discussion of Wellington's affair with Lady Frances (Wedderburn-Webster) and Major General Maitland's elopement. The book ends with a bibliography and index.
 
David Miller is author of Lady De Lancey at Waterloo: a story of duty and devotion (Spellmount 2000)


National Army Museum

 Lady Butler’s Waterloo

21 June, 12.00, FREE

In this fascinating talk, Curator Anna Lavelle will utilise the National Army Museum’s impressive collection of Lady Butler’s sketches not only to highlight how Waterloo can be viewed through an artistic medium, but also to reveal how it managed to capture the artist’s imagination.

Book now: https://www.nam.ac.uk/whats-on/lady-butlers-waterloo

📸 'Dawn of Waterloo', by Lady Elizabeth Butler, 1895



Sunday, 9 June 2024

Monday, 27 May 2024

A Private of the 1st or Kings Dragoon Guards, 1812

 

From the National Army Museum who say

Aquatint by J C Stadler after Charles Hamilton Smith, 1812.

The 1st King's Dragoon Guards remained in Britain on garrison duties throughout the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, with the sole exception of the Waterloo campaign of 1815.

From Charles Hamilton Smith's 'Costumes of the Army of the British Empire, according to the last regulations 1812', published by Colnaghi and Company, 1812-1815.