Jump to content

Prince William, Duke of Cumberland

From Niidae Wiki

Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox royalty

Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland (15 April 1721 [N.S.] – 31 October 1765) was the third and youngest son of King George II of Great Britain and Ireland and his wife, Caroline of Ansbach. He was Duke of Cumberland from 1726. He is best remembered for his role in putting down the Jacobite Rising at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, which made him popular in certain parts of Britain.<ref>For example, he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow. Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Hannah Smith, 'Georgian Monarchy', Cambridge University Press, 2006</ref> He is often referred to by the nickname given to him by his Tory opponents: 'Butcher' Cumberland.<ref name=odnb/><ref>MacDonald, Callum (27 December 2005) "Butcher Cumberland among Britain's greatest villains". Glasgow. The Herald. Retrieved 12 October 2013.</ref>

For much of the War of the Austrian Succession, with the assistance of John Ligonier, Cumberland commanded the main allied field army in Flanders acting in defence of the Austrian Netherlands and the Dutch Republic. At the head of the largest deployment of British troops on the continent since the days of Marlborough and opposed to the experienced French Marshal Maurice de Saxe, Cumberland's campaigning could not prevent the fall of the Dutch Barrier Forts. Between 1748 and 1755 he attempted to enact a series of army reforms that were resisted by the opposition and by the army itself.<ref>Davies, p. 277; Glover, p. 148; Royle, p. 25</ref> Following the Convention of Klosterzeven in 1757, he never again held active military command and switched his attentions to politics and horse racing.

Early life

[edit]
File:William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland.jpg
William Augustus, aged 10 or 11, painted by William Hogarth

William was born in Leicester House, in Leicester Fields (now Leicester Square), Westminster, London, where his parents had moved after his grandfather, George I, accepted the invitation to ascend the British throne.<ref name=odnb>Template:Harvnb</ref> On 27 July 1726, at only five years old, he was created Duke of Cumberland, Marquess of Berkhamstead in the County of Hertford, Earl of Kennington in the County of Surrey, Viscount of Trematon in the County of Cornwall, and Baron of the Isle of Alderney.<ref name=july1726>Template:London Gazette</ref>

The young prince was educated well; his mother appointed Edmond Halley as a tutor.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 46</ref> Another of his tutors (and occasional proxy for him) was his mother's favourite Andrew Fountaine.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> At Hampton Court Palace, apartments were designed specially for him by William Kent.<ref>Thurley p. 279</ref>

William's elder brother Frederick, Prince of Wales, proposed dividing the king's dominions. Frederick would get Britain, while William would get Hanover. This proposal came to nothing.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 150 (1736 plan suggested by Prince of Wales)</ref>

Early military career

[edit]

From childhood, he showed physical courage and ability, and became his parents' favourite.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 111</ref> He was enrolled in the 2nd Foot Guards and made a Knight of the Bath, when aged four.<ref name=Kiste78>Van der Kiste, p. 78</ref> He was intended, by the King and Queen, for the office of Lord High Admiral, and, in 1740, he sailed, as a volunteer, in the fleet under the command of Sir John Norris, but he quickly became dissatisfied with the Navy,Template:Sfn and, instead secured the post of colonel of the First Regiment of Foot Guards on 20 February 1741.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>

War of the Austrian Succession

[edit]

In December 1742, he became a major-general, and, the following year, he first saw active service in Germany.<ref name=odnb/> George II and the "martial boy" shared in the glory of the Battle of Dettingen (27 June 1743),<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> where Cumberland was wounded in his right leg by a musket ball.<ref name=odnb/> After the battle he was made a lieutenant general.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>

File:Battle-of-Fontenoy.jpg
The Battle of Fontenoy in 1745 was Cumberland's first battle as commander.

In 1745, Cumberland was given the honorary title of Captain-General of the British land forces and in Flanders became Commander-in-Chief of the allied British, Hanoverian, Austrian and Dutch (known as the Pragmatic Army) troops despite his inexperience.Template:Sfn He initially planned to take the offensive against the French, in a move he hoped would lead to the capture of Paris, but was persuaded by his advisors that this was impossible given the vast numerical superiority of the enemy.<ref>Browning p. 206</ref>

File:Jacobite broadside - Courier.jpg
Jacobite satire of the Duke of Cumberland in the Highlands

As it became clear that the French intention was to take Tournai, Cumberland advanced to the relief of the town, which was besieged by Marshal Saxe. In the resulting Battle of Fontenoy on 11 May 1745, the Allies were defeated by the French.<ref>Browning p. 212</ref> Saxe had picked the battleground on which to confront the British, and filled the nearby woods with French marksmen. Cumberland ignored the threat of the woods when drawing up his battle plans, and instead concentrated on seizing the village of Fontenoy and attacking the main French army nearby.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Despite a concerted Anglo-Hanoverian attack on the French centre, which led many to believe the Allies had won, the failure to clear the woods and of the Dutch forces to capture Fontenoy forced Cumberland to retreat to Brussels, where he was unable to prevent the fall of Ghent, Bruges and Ostend.<ref>Browning p. 219</ref> Cumberland was frequently criticised for his tactics in the battle, particularly his failure to occupy the woods.<ref>Browning pp. 207–13</ref>

Jacobite rebellion – "The Forty-Five"

[edit]
File:William augustus duke of cumberland highlanders medley.jpg
"The Highlanders Medley", or "The Duke Triumphant"

As the leading British general of the day, he was chosen to put a decisive stop to Prince Charles Edward Stuart, a grandson of James VII of Scotland and II of England (James VII/II was the last Stuart king on the male line), in the Jacobite rising of 1745. His appointment was popular, and caused morale to soar amongst the public and troops loyal to King George.<ref>Longmate p. 155</ref>

Recalled from Flanders, Cumberland proceeded with preparations for quelling the Stuart (Jacobite) uprising. The Jacobite army had advanced southwards into England, hoping that English Jacobites would rise and join them. However, after receiving only limited support, such as the Manchester Regiment, the followers of Charles decided to withdraw to Scotland.<ref name=pollard>Pollard pp. 41–42</ref>

Cumberland joined the Midland army under Ligonier, and began pursuit of the enemy, as the Stuarts retreated northwards from Derby.Template:Sfn<ref name=odnb/> On reaching Penrith, the advanced portion of his army was repulsed on Clifton Moor in December 1745, and Cumberland became aware that an attempt to overtake the retreating Highlanders would be hopeless.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Carlisle was retaken, and he was recalled to London, where preparations were in hand to meet an expected French invasion.<ref name=odnb/> The defeat of his replacement as commander, Henry Hawley, caused great panic in England in January 1746,Template:Sfn when, under a hail of pistol fire, "eighty dragoons fell dead upon the spot" at Falkirk Muir.<ref>Tomasson, p 119</ref>

Culloden

[edit]

Template:Main

File:William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland.png
Prince William, Duke of Cumberland, by Arthur Pond, Template:Circa

Arriving in Edinburgh on 30 January 1746, Cumberland assumed command of his forces and marched them to Aberdeen. There, he ordered them to undergo training for approximately two months in preparation for engaging the Jacobite Army.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>Template:Sfn On 8 April, he set out from Aberdeen with his troops for Inverness; eight days later on 16 April, he engaged the main Jacobite army near the village of Culloden. In the ensuing battle, his army decisively defeated the Jacobites. The battle lasted only an hour, with the Jacobites suffering between 1,500 and 2,000 casualties, while approximately 300 government soldiers were killed or wounded.Template:Sfn<ref name=pollard/>

On the morning after the battle, Cumberland issued a written order reminding his men that "the public orders of the rebels yesterday was to give us no quarter" and ordering his men to treat Jacobite wounded in the same manner.<ref>Roberts (2002), p. 178.</ref> Cumberland alluded to the belief that such orders had been found upon the bodies of fallen Jacobites. However, for the two days after the battle, Cumberland's order was not followed upon; though in the following two days, government troops scoured the battlefield and put to death many wounded Jacobite soldiers they came across.<ref name=thompson>Thompson, p. 519</ref>

Government forces subsequently embarked upon the pacification of Jacobite regions in the Scottish Highlands, which took several months. They carried out searches for rebels across the Highlands, confiscating property, destroying nonjuring Episcopalian and Catholic meeting houses and summarily executing numerous suspected rebels.<ref>Plank, p. 116</ref> While he had been in Inverness, Cumberland emptied the city jails of all of those who had been imprisoned by Jacobites and replaced them with Jacobites themselves; after the battle at Culloden, Jacobite prisoners were taken south to England to stand trial for high treason.<ref>Clee, p. 42</ref><ref name=thompson/>

"Butcher Cumberland"

[edit]

Following Culloden, Cumberland was nicknamed "Sweet William" by his Whig supporters and "The Butcher" by his Tory opponents<ref>Jonathan Oates, 'Sweet William or The Butcher: The Duke of Cumberland and the '45 (2008)</ref> the latter being a taunt first recorded in the City of London<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and used for political purposes in England. Cumberland's own brother, the Prince of Wales (who had been refused permission to take a military role on his father's behalf), seems to have encouraged the virulent attacks upon the Duke. Cumberland preserved the strictest discipline in his camp. He was inflexible in the execution of what he deemed to be his duty, without favour to any man. In only a few cases he exercised his influence in favour of clemency.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn The Duke's victorious efforts were acknowledged by his being voted an income of £25,000 per annum over and above his money from the civil list.<ref name=odnb/> A thanksgiving service was held at St Paul's Cathedral, that included the first performance of Handel's oratorio Judas Maccabaeus, composed especially for Cumberland, which contains the anthem "See the Conquering Hero Comes".<ref>Speck, p. 170.</ref>

Return to the Continent

[edit]

Template:Main The Duke took no part in the Flanders campaign of 1746, during which the French made huge advances capturing Brussels and defeating the Allies at Rocoux.Template:Sfn In 1747, Cumberland returned to Continental Europe. He again opposed the still-victorious Marshal Saxe and received a heavy defeat at the Battle of Lauffeld, or Val, near Maastricht, on 2 July 1747.<ref>Stanhope, p. 334</ref> This and the fall of Bergen-op-Zoom compelled the two sides to the negotiating table and in 1748 the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle was concluded and Cumberland returned home.<ref>Sosin, pp. 516–35</ref>

Peacetime

[edit]
File:William augustus duke of cumberland solomons glory.jpg
"Solomon's Glory, or Rival Mistresses", 1749

Cumberland's unpopularity, which had steadily increased since Culloden, interfered greatly with his success in politics, and when the death of the Prince of Wales brought the latter's son, a minor, next in succession to the throne, the Duke was not able to secure for himself the contingent regency.Template:Sfn As a compromise, the regency was vested in the Dowager Princess of Wales, who considered him an enemy, but her powers were curtailed and she was to be advised by a committee of twelve men, headed by Cumberland.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 195</ref>

Attempts at army reform

[edit]

Whilst in the office of Commander-in-Chief, Cumberland attempted to reform the peacetime army with the support of his father. He wished to wrest control over promotions from the government to the army itself and to limit or curtail the practise of purchase. Cumberland further wished to create a special standing force which could be quickly deployed overseas in time of crisis.<ref name="Glover148">Glover, p. 148</ref> The Whigs, who only tolerated the army's existence in peacetime and had confidence only in the commanders' control over the militia, saw the expansion and further professionalisation of the army as absolutist. Critics such as Horace Walpole argued the institution of purchase was one of the safeguards of parliamentary sovereignty against Royalist insurrection.<ref name="Glover148"/> Cumberland's opponent in government Charles Townshend wished to instead further reduce the peacetime army and reform the militia by creating a volunteer force for home defence, a precursor to the volunteers of the 19th century which would be under the direct control of civil authorities.<ref name="Glover148"/>

Seven Years' War

[edit]

Template:Main Template:Main Template:Further

North America

[edit]
File:Cumberland-Reynolds.jpg
Portrait of the Duke of Cumberland in the robes of the Order of the Garter by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1758

In 1754, the simmering colonial rivalry between Britain and France over competing territorial claims in North America developed into war. France asserted its claim to the Ohio Valley by building a network of powerful fortifications. The government ministry led by Newcastle initially proposed a limited military response, in which a Highland regiment supported by colonial forces would drive the French from the Ohio Valley.<ref name="Tucker, p. 89">Tucker, p. 89</ref><ref name="Cusick, p. 21">Cusick, p. 21</ref> Cumberland believed the plan was not decisive enough to protect British interests in North America and expanded the plan to include a four-pronged assault against New France, with forces striking simultaneously at Duquesne, Crown Point, Niagara, and Beauséjour.<ref name="Hall, p. 66">Hall, p. 66</ref>

Cumberland proposed that only overwhelming force would defeat France in America, which was contradictory to Newcastle's own proposals and previous government strategies which advocated limited offensive operations.<ref name="Hall, p. 66"/><ref name="Cusick, p. 21"/> Further, Cumberland proposed a role of commander-in-chief for forces in America, who would have the power to levy local troops and direct local strategy.<ref name="Tucker, p. 89"/> A 3,500 strong mixed force of regulars, militia, and allied natives would be assembled. It would then cross the Virginia mountains and strike Duquesne. Two regiments drawn from Ireland were given this task.<ref>Dilisio, p. 6</ref> An officer who had impressed Cumberland on previous campaigns, Edward Braddock, was given command of all crown forces in America, to the surprise of many in the army as Braddock was relatively unknown.<ref name="Cusick, p. 21"/>

Newcastle approved the bolder plan, which met with limited success. In his role as army Commander-in-Chief, Cumberland advised on the conduct of the war in North America. He believed the war should be principally conducted by the colonies themselves and that regular troops should only play a supporting role.<ref name="Cusick, p. 21"/> He was influential in the appointment of Loudoun, another favorite and an officer who had served in Cumberland's army during the Jacobite rebellion.<ref>Gallay, p. 93</ref> Cumberland advised Loudoun to expose his officers and soldiers to scouting expeditions, so that they might "learn to beat the woods".<ref>Cusick, p. 133</ref> Cumberland approved the plan to develop light infantry in the British Army.<ref name="Cusick, p. 21"/>

Invasion of Hanover

[edit]

In 1757, the war having spread to Continental Europe, Cumberland was placed at the head of the Hanoverian Army of Observation, intended to defend Hanover (of which George II was Elector) from a French invasion.<ref>Rolt, p. 498</ref> At the Battle of Hastenbeck, near Hamelin, on 26 July 1757, Cumberland's army was defeated by the superior forces of d'Estrées.Template:Sfn Despite seemingly having the advantage towards the end of the battle, Cumberland's forces began to retreat. Within a short time discipline had collapsed, and Cumberland's army headed northwards in total disorder. Cumberland hoped that the Royal Navy might bring him reinforcements and supplies which would allow him to regroup and counterattack, but the British mounted an expedition to Rochefort instead, despite suggestions that it should be sent to aid Cumberland.<ref>Anderson p. 177</ref>

By September 1757 Cumberland and his forces had retreated to the fortified town of Stade on the North Sea coast. George II gave him discretionary powers to negotiate a separate peace.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 205</ref> Hemmed in by French forces led by the Duc de Richelieu, Cumberland agreed to the Convention of Klosterzeven, under which his army was to be disbanded and much of Hanover occupied by French forces, at the Zeven Convent on 8 September 1757.<ref>Anderson p. 211</ref>

On Cumberland's return to London, he was treated badly by his father, despite the fact that he had previously been given permission to negotiate such an agreement. When they met, George II remarked "Here is my son who has ruined me and disgraced himself".<ref>Anderson p. 212; Van der Kiste, p. 206</ref> In response, Cumberland resigned all the military and public offices he held and retired into private life.<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 207</ref>

Final years

[edit]
File:William augustus duke of cumberland tombstone.jpg
"The Tombstone", published October 1765

Cumberland's final years were lived out during the first five years of the reign of his nephew, George III, who acceded to the throne on the death of William's father on 25 October 1760. Cumberland became a very influential advisor to the King and was instrumental in establishing the First Rockingham Ministry.<ref name=odnb/> Cabinet meetings were held either at Cumberland Lodge, his home in Windsor, or at Upper Grosvenor Street, his house in London.<ref name=odnb/> Cumberland never fully recovered from his wound at Dettingen, and was obese.<ref name=odnb/> In August 1760, he suffered a stroke<ref>Van der Kiste, p. 212</ref> and, on 31 October 1765, he died at his home on Upper Grosvenor Street in London at age 44.<ref name=odnb/> He was buried beneath the floor of the nave of the Henry VII Lady Chapel in Westminster Abbey.<ref>Stanley, p. 200</ref> He died unmarried.<ref name=odnb/>

Honours and arms

[edit]
File:Blanc Coursier Tabard.jpg
The tabard of Blanc Coursier Herald, Cumberland's private officer of arms

Honours

[edit]
File:Jacobite broadside - Francois-Morellon La Cave, Effigies sculpt..jpg
Jacobite broadside - François Morellon la Cave, Effigies sculpt.

British Honours

Academic

Arms

[edit]

On 20 July 1725, as a grandchild of the sovereign, William was granted use of the arms of the realm, differenced by a label argent of five points, the centre point bearing a cross gules, the first, second, fourth and fifth each bearing a canton gules. On 30 August 1727, as a child of the sovereign, William's difference changed to a label argent of three points, the centre point bearing a cross gules.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Legacy

[edit]
File:Jacobite broadside - Elegy on the much lamented death of His Royal Highness William, Duke of Cumberland, who died suddenly on Thursday, October 31, 1765, at his house in Grosvenor-Square, in the 46th year of his age..jpg
Elegy on the much lamented death of His Royal Highness William, Duke of Cumberland..

Prince William County, Virginia is named for him,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as well as Cumberland County, Maine,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Cumberland County, New Jersey,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Cumberland County, North Carolina,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Cumberland County, Virginia.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Various other places in the American colonies were named after him, including the Cumberland River,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the Cumberland Gap<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Cumberland Mountains.Template:Sfn In Britain, Cumberland Road in Kew and the Grade II listed Cumberland Gate into Kew Gardens are named after him.<ref>Blomfield, p. 95.</ref>

In 2005 he was selected by the BBC History Magazine as the 18th century's worst Briton.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

File:The Obelisk, Windsor Great Park - geograph.org.uk - 1801427.jpg
Cumberland Obelisk, Windsor Great Park

A memorial obelisk was erected to the Duke's military services in Windsor Great Park. It is inscribed "THIS OBELISK RAISED BY COMMAND OF KING GEORGE THE SECOND COMMEMORATES THE SERVICES OF HIS SON WILLIAM DUKE OF CUMBERLAND THE SUCCESS OF HIS ARMS AND THE GRATITUDE OF HIS FATHER THIS TABLET WAS INSCRIBED BY HIS MAJESTY KING WILLIAM THE FOURTH". According to a local park guide and Scottish historian Murray Pittock, the obelisk was originally inscribed "Culloden" but Queen Victoria had "Culloden" removed.<ref>East Berks Ramblers Map, Template:ISBN</ref><ref name=times-20231031>Template:Cite news</ref>

An equestrian statue of the Duke was erected in London's Cavendish Square in 1770, but was removed in 1868 since by that time the 'butcher of Culloden' was generally reviled. The original plinth remained.<ref name=times-20231031/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2019, plans by developers to name a street close to the battlefield after the Duke were rejected by The Highland Council.<ref name=times-20231031/>

Notes

[edit]

Template:Reflist

References

[edit]

Template:Reflist

Sources

[edit]

Attribution:

Further reading

[edit]

Template:DNB poster

[edit]

Template:S-start Template:S-hou Template:S-mil Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-break Template:S-vac Template:S-ttl Template:S-vac Template:S-break Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-aca Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-end

Template:British princes Template:Dukes of Cumberland Template:Chief of the General Staff Template:Jacobitism

Template:Authority control