- William Waller
Infobox Military Person
name=William Waller
lived=c. 1597- September 19, 1668
placeofbirth=Dover
placeofdeath=
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=Parliament
serviceyears=
rank=Major-General
commands=
unit=
battles=
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laterwork=Sir William Waller (c.
1597 -September 19 1668 ), was an English soldier during theEnglish Civil War . He received his education at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, and served in the Venetian army and in theThirty Years' War . He received a knighthood in 1622 after taking part in Vere's expedition to the Palatinate.Election to Parliament and early military career
William Waller was born to an influential Kentish family in
Knole , Kent, about 1598. He was a cousin of the Parliamentarian and regicideHardress Waller . Waller's father was Sir Thomas Waller, constable ofDover Castle andmember of parliament forDover , a descendant of the Waller family ofGroombridge Place , Kent, and his mother was Margaret, the daughter of Lord and Lady Dacre. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=8TUvAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA136&lpg=PA136&dq=%22sir+tho The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England, Thomas Christopher Banks, London, 1808] ] William Waller attended Magdalen College, Oxford, but did not graduate. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=oWUBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PR1&lpg=PR1&dq=%22sir+william+waller%22+%22sir+thomas+waller%22+kent&source=web&ots=ZMOa_rANcV&sig=tZWWtWQ0pEz3Lgj555RcfvkOwck&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result Vindication of the Character and Conduct of Sir William Waller, Knight, William Waller, Great Britain, 1793] ]In 1640 Waller became
Member of Parliament for Andover. [ [http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/waller.htm Sir William Waller, British Civil Wars, Commonwealth and Protectorate, www.british-civil-wars.co.uk] ]As a strict
Presbyterian by religion, and a member of the opposition in politics, he became a prominent supporter of the cause of Parliament when the Civil War broke out in 1642. He immediately received an appointment as a colonel, and successfully concluded the siege ofPortsmouth in September 1642; later in the year he commanded the forces that captured Farnham, Winchester and other key locations in the south-west of England. At the beginning of 1643 Waller was promoted to major-general and placed in charge of operations in the region ofGloucester andBristol . ['February 1643: Ordinance to appoint Sir William Waller Serjeant Major General of the Forces in Gloucester and other adjacent Counties, and for paying his Army.', Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642-1660 (1911), pp. 79-80. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=55779. Date accessed: 13 April 2007.] He concluded his first campaign in this theatre with a victory atHighnam and the capture ofHereford .He was then called upon to oppose the advance of Sir
Ralph Hopton and the Royalist western army, and though more or less defeated in the hard-foughtbattle of Lansdowne (near Bath) he was able to encircle Hopton inDevizes . However, Hopton and a relieving force fromOxford inflicted a crushing defeat upon Waller's army at theBattle of Roundway Down (13 July 1643 ). Hopton was Waller's intimate personal friend, and some correspondence passed between the opposing generals, a quotation from which (Gardiner, "Civil War", i. 168) is given as illustrative of "the temper in which the nobler spirits on either side had entered on the war". Waller wrote::That great God who is the searcher of my heart knows with what a sad sense I go upon this service, and with what a perfect hatred I detest this war without an enemy; but I look upon it as sent from God . . . God in his good time send us the blessing of peace and in the meantime assist us to receive it! We are both upon the stage and must act such parts as are assigned us in this tragedy, let us do it in a way of
honour and without personal animosities.The destruction of his army at Roundway scarcely affected Waller's military reputation, many reproaching Essex, the commander-in-chief, for allowing the Oxford royalists to turn against Waller. The
London ers, who had called him "William the Conqueror", recognized his skill and energy so far as willingly to raise a new army for him in London and the south-eastern counties. But from this point Waller's career is one of gradual disillusionment. His new forces were distinctively local, and, like other local troops on both sides, resented long marches and hard work far from their own counties. Only at moments of imminent danger could they be trusted to do their duty. At ordinary times, such as at the first siege of Basing House, they mutinied in face of the enemy, deserted and even marched home in formed bodies under their own officers, and their gallantry at critical moments, such as the surprise of Alton in December 1643 and the recapture ofArundel in January 1644, only partially redeemed their general bad conduct.Waller himself, a general of the highest skill — "the best shifter and chooser of ground" on either side - was, like Turenne, at his best at the head of a small and highly-disciplined regular army. Only a Condé or a Cromwell could have enforced discipline and soldierly spirit in such men, ill-clad and unpaid as they were, and the only military quality lacking to Waller was precisely this supreme personal magnetism.
In these circumstances affairs went from bad to worse. Though successful in stopping Hopton's second advance at Cheriton in March 1644, he was defeated by Charles I in the war of manoeuvre which ended with the action of
Cropredy Bridge (June 1644), and at theSecond Battle of Newbury in October his tactical success at the village of Speen led to nothing. His last expeditions were made into the west for the relief ofTaunton , and in these he had Cromwell as his lieutenant-general.The New Model Army and later career
By this time the confusion in all the armed forces of the parliament had reached such a height that reforms were at last taken in hand. The original suggestion of the celebrated "
New Model Army " came from Waller, who wrote to theCommittee of Both Kingdoms (2 July 1644 ) to the effect that "an army compounded of these men will never go through with your service, and till you have an army merely your own that you may command, it is in a manner impossible to do anything of importance."Simultaneously with the New Model came the
Self-denying Ordinance , which required all members of parliament to lay down their military commands. Waller did so gladly - the more as he had already requested to be relieved - and his active military career came to an end. But the events of 1643 - 1644 had done more than embitter him. They had combined with his Presbyterianism to make him intolerant of all that he conceived to be licence in church, state or army, and after he ceased to exercise command himself he was constantly engaged, in and out of parliament, in opposing the Independents and the army politicians, and supporting the cause of his own religious system, and later that of the Presbyterian-Royalist opposition to the Commonwealth and Protectorate régime. He was several times imprisoned between 1648 and 1659.Postwar career and death
In the latter year Waller worked actively in promoting the final negotiations for the restoration of Charles II and reappeared in the House of Commons. He sat in the
Convention Parliament , but soon retired from political life. He died on19 September 1668 .ee also
*Wood's "Athenae Oxonienses", ed. Bliss, iii. 812; and two partial autobiographies,
*"Recollections by General Sir William Waller" (printed in The Poetry of Anna Matilda, 1788), and
*"Vindication of the Character, &c." (1797).Also published (book by Waller):
* "Divine Meditations upon Several Occasions: with a Daily Directory ... To which is prefixed, a short account of Sir William Waller and his times, chiefly extracted from a MS. written by himself" (1839 reprint of items published in 1680 and 1793)For a modern work, see:
*"Roundhead General: the Campaigns of Sir William Waller" by John Adair ISBN 0-7509-1312-6References
*1911
External links
* [http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/waller.htm Biography of Sir William Waller] British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
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