- Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby
Major General Sir Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby, GCMG, KCB, KCH (July 6 1783 –January 11 1837 ) was a British military officer, the second son of the 3rd Earl of Bessborough and Henrietta Spencer.Early career
Educated at Harrow, he joined the army as a
cornet in January 1800, serving in the10th Light Dragoons . He was promotedlieutenant in June 1800 andcaptain on20 August 1803 . He exchanged to the60th Regiment of Foot in April 1806 and served on the staff of the Duke of Bedford, thenLord Lieutenant of Ireland . Promotedmajor on25 June 1807 , he went into the23rd Light Dragoons on6 August 1809 and went with them to serve in thePeninsular War .Lloyd, ¶ 1.]He fought well at Talavera. He was promoted
lieutenant colonel on15 March 1810 , and served as assistantadjutant-general at Buçaco and Barrosa, directing a successful charge by a squadron of the2nd Regiment of Hussars (KGL) against the French dragoons. He was given command of the12th Light Dragoons on11 June 1811 .Lloyd, ¶ 2.]After the fall of Badajoz, he distinguished himself in the
battle of Villagarcia (or Llerena) on11 April 1812 , temporarily commanding Anson's brigade. Ordered by Sir Stapleton Cotton to detain a superior force of French cavalry underCharles Lallemand , he successfully delayed them until reinforcements could arrive to flank the French and pursue them into Llerena.Lloyd, ¶ 2.]He led the 12th Light Dragoons to disperse some of the broken French infantry after the
Battle of Salamanca , and was wounded while covering the withdrawal fromBurgos . At Vitoria, his regiment was part of the force, under Sir Thomas Graham, that blocked the French retreat towardsBayonne . He took part in theBattle of the Pyrenees and the fighting that followed in the south of France, bringing to Wellington the news that Napoleon had abdicated.Lloyd, ¶ 3.]Hundred days period
During the
Hundred Days , the 12th Light Dragoons were attached to Vandeleur's light cavalry brigade. At theBattle of Waterloo , the 12th and16th Light Dragoons were told to charge down the slope, but no further, to support the withdrawal of theUnion Brigade of heavy cavalry. But, like the Union Brigade (led by his second cousin,William Ponsonby ), the light horse charged (as he later admitted) too far.Lloyd, ¶ 4.]Ponsonby was wounded in both arms, knocked off his horse by another saber cut, and finally stabbed in the back by a French lancer. His story of survival is almost beyond belief. First, a French skirmisher robbed him as he lay helpless on the ground. Luckily for Ponsonby, Major de Laussat of the Imperial Guard Dragoons found him and treated him kindly, giving him some brandy and promising to send help. Later, another French skirmisher used Ponsonby as a shield as he fired over him. Toward the end of the battle, he was ridden over by Prussian cavalry and roughed up by a Prussian looking for plunder. At last, Ponsonby was discovered by a soldier of the 40th Foot who stood guard over him during the night. He was carried away in a cart, to a surgeon who tended to his seven major wounds and managed to stop the bleeding. [Creasy, [http://www.standin.se/fifteen15a.htm Chapter XV. Battle of Waterloo, A.D. 1815] ] He convalesced under the supervision of his sister
Lady Caroline Lamb who nursed him back to health.Lloyd, ¶ 4.]He went on half-pay on
26 August 1820 , and was appointed "inspecting field officer" in theIonian Islands on20 January 1824 . The next year, on16 March 1825 , he married Lady Emily Charlotte Bathurst (d. 1877), daughter ofHenry Bathurst, 3rd Earl Bathurst . They had three sons and three daughters, including:Lloyd, ¶ 5.]
*Henry Frederick Ponsonby (1825–1895)
*Selina Ponsonby (d. 1919)Later career
On
27 May 1825 , he was promotedmajor-general , commanding the troops in the Ionian Islands. The next year, on22 December 1826 , he was appointedGovernor of Malta , and remained there for eight and a half years.Lloyd, ¶ 6.] He met Baron de Laussat, his saviour at Waterloo, in 1827. During his Maltese tenure, he was made GCMG in 1828, and KCB and KCH in 1831.Fact|date=May 2008 He left the governorship in May 1835, and was appointed colonel of the86th Regiment of Foot on4 December 1835 . He was transferred to the colonecly of theRoyal Dragoons on31 March 1836 . During this period, he maintained a high degree of interest in the handling of cavalry, and corresponded with Wellington. He died suddenly at an inn nearBasingstoke on11 January 1837 .Notes
References
*Creasy, Sir Edward (1877). " [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4061 The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World: from Marathon to Waterloo] ". Richard Bentley & Son. ISBN 0-30680-559-6
*Lloyd, E. M. ‘Ponsonby, Sir Frederic Cavendish (1783–1837)’, rev. James Falkner,Oxford Dictionary of National Biography , Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/22493, accessed 5 May 2008]
**Cites:
**A. Ponsonby, Henry Ponsonby, Queen Victoria's private secretary: his life from his letters (1942)
**J. Ponsonby, The Ponsonby family (1929)
**Earl of Bessborough and A. Aspinall, eds., Lady Bessborough and her family circle (1940)
**Army List
**H. T. Siborne, ed., Waterloo letters (1891)
**GM, 2nd ser., 7 (1837)
**The dispatches of … the duke of Wellington … from 1799 to 1818, ed. J. Gurwood, 13 vols. in 12 (1834–9)
**Hart's Army List · W. F. P. Napier, History of the war in the Peninsula and in the south of France, 3rd edn, 6 vols. (1834–40)
**D. Howarth, A near run thing (1967)
**R. H. Gronow, The reminiscences of Captain Gronow, 4 vols. (1861–6)
**E. A. Gray, Trumpet of glory (1985)
**GEC, Peerage
**Burke, Peerage
**DNBFurther reading
*Haythornthwaite, Philip J. "Uniforms of Waterloo." Hippocrene, 1974.
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