- Hugh Gough, 1st Viscount Gough
Field Marshal Hugh Gough, 1st Viscount Gough, KP, GCSI, KCB, PC (November 3 ,1779 -March 2 ,1869 ), was a BritishField Marshal . Born inWoodstown ,Limerick , he was a descendant ofFrancis Gough who was madebishop of Limerick in 1626.Early military service
Having obtained a commission in the army in August 1794, he served with the 78th Highlanders at the
Cape of Good Hope , taking part in the capture ofCape Town and of the Dutch fleet inSaldanha Bay in 1796. His next service was in theWest Indies , where, with the 87th (Royal Irish Fusiliers ), he shared in the attack onPuerto Rico , the capture ofSurinam , and the brigand war inSt Lucia .The Peninsular War
In 1809 he was called to take part in the
Peninsular War , and, joining the army under Wellington, commanded his regiment as major in the operations before Oporto, by which the town was taken from the French.At the
Battle of Talavera he was severely wounded, and had his horse shot under him. For his conduct on this occasion he was afterwards promoted lieutenant-colonel, his commission, on the recommendation of Wellington, being antedated from the day of the duke's despatch. He was thus the first officer who ever received brevet rank for services performed in the field at the head of a regiment. He was next engaged at thebattle of Barrosa , at which his regiment captured a French eagle. At the defence ofTarifa the post of danger was assigned to him, and he compelled the enemy to raise the siege. At Vitoria, where Gough again distinguished himself, his regiment captured the baton of Marshal Jourdan. He was again severely wounded at Nivelle, and was soon after created a knight of St Charles by theking of Spain .At the close of the war he returned home and enjoyed a respite of some years from active service. He next took command of a regiment stationed in the south of Ireland, discharging at the same time the duties of a magistrate during a period of agitation. Gough was promoted to major-general in 1830.
ervice in the east
Seven years later he was sent to
India to take command of theMysore division of the army. But not long after his arrival, the difficulties which led to thefirst Opium War made the presence of an energetic general on the scene indispensable, and Gough was appointed commander-in-chief of the British forces inChina . This post he held during all the operations of the war; and by his great achievements and numerous victories in the face of immense difficulties, he at length enabled the British plenipotentiary, Sir Henry Pottinger, to dictate peace on his own terms.After the conclusion of the
treaty of Nanking in August 1842 the British forces were withdrawn; and before the close of the year Gough, who had been made a GCB in the previous year for his services in the capture of the Canton forts, was created abaronet on23 December 1842 . In August 1843 he was appointed commander-in-chief of the British forces in India, and in December he took the command in person against theMahratta s, and defeated them atMaharajpur , capturing more than fifty guns. In 1845 occurred the rupture with theSikh s, who crossed theSutlej in large numbers, and Sir Hugh Gough conducted the operations against them, being well supported by Lord Hardinge, the governor-general, who volunteered to serve under him. Successes in the hard-fought battles of Mudki and Ferozeshah were succeeded by the victory of Sobraon, and shortly afterwards the Sikhs sued for peace atLahore .Hugh Gough was well known for his singular habit of wearing a white coat into battle. The coat was a rallying point for his troops and its appearance on the field promoted both fear and respect in opposition forcesFact|date=February 2007.
The services of Sir Hugh Gough were rewarded by his elevation to the
peerage of the United Kingdom as Baron Gough of ChingKangFoo in China and of Maharajpore and the Sutlej in the East Indies in April 1846. War in India broke out again in 1848, and again Lord Gough took the field; but the result of the battle of Chillianwalla being equivocal, he was superseded by the home authorities in favor of Sir Charles Napier. Before the news of the supersession arrived Lord Gough had finally defeated theSikh s in thebattle of Gujarat (February 1849). His tactics during the Sikh wars were the subject of an embittered controversy. Lord Gough now returned to England, was raised to theviscount cy of Viscount Gough, of Goojerat in the Punjab and of the City of Limerick, and for the third time received the thanks of both Houses of Parliament. A pension of £2000 per annum was granted to him by parliament, and an equal pension by the East India Company. He did not again see active service. In 1854 he was appointed colonel of theRoyal Horse Guards , and two years later he was sent to theCrimea to invest Marshal Pléssier and other officers with the insignia of the Bath.Honours were multiplied upon him during his latter years. He was made a knight of St Patrick, being the first knight of the order who did not hold an Irish peerage, was sworn a privy councillor, was named a G.C.S.I., and in November 1862 was made field-marshal.
He was twice married, and left children by both his wives. In 1844, his daughter, Frances Maria, married Field Marshal Sir
Patrick Grant .References
*RS Rait, "Lord Gough" (1903)
*Sir W Lee Warner, "Lord Dalhousie" (1904).
*1911
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