- John Dyke Acland
Major John Dyke Acland (18 February 1746 —31 October 1778 cite web | title=John Dyke Acland Of Pixton | work=West Country Genealogy, Heraldry, and History | author=Batty-Smith, Nigel | url=http://web.ukonline.co.uk/nigel.battysmith/Database/D0008/I11628.html | accessdate=2006-03-22] ), son ofSir Thomas Dyke Acland, 7th Baronet , was a British officer who fought in theAmerican Revolutionary War .Acland was an officer in the
20th Foot . He served under General Burgoyne in his invasion of northern New York in 1777 cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History|title=John Dyke Acland|year=1905|publisher=Harper & Brothers|volume=Volume 1|location=New York|pages=pp. 14–15] . On October 7, 1777, he was shot through the legs and taken prisoner at theBattle of Bemis Heights , nearStillwater, New York . His wife, Lady Harriet , was allowed to attend in the American camp and was well-treated by the American forces.Acland was grateful for the treatment received when recuperating as a prisoner of war. Upon returning to England he challenged a Lieutenant Lloyd to a duel when the latter spoke poorly of Americans at a dinner party. Although he survived the duel, he caught a cold during it from which he died in 1778.
His only son was the 8th Baronet but as he died young (1778–1785), the baronetcy passed to Major John's brother,
Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 9th Baronet .References
ee also
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Dyke Acland Baronets
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