- Granville Elliott
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Granville Elliott
with permission from
The Eliot Sisters CollectionBorn 7 October 1713
Byfeld House, Barnes, Surrey, EnglandDied 10 October 1759 (aged 46)
Rodheim an der Bieber, Gießen, Hesse, GermanyAllegiance Elector Palatine of the Rhine, States-General of the Netherlands, Great Britain Service/branch Army Rank Major General Battles/wars 1759: Battle of Minden Awards Graf Eliot von Port-Eliot, Comte de Merhange Major-General Granville Elliott (7 October 1713 – 10 October 1759), (General, Graf Eliot von Port-Eliot, Comte de Morhange) was a British military officer. He served with distinction in several other European armies and subsequently in the British Army. He fought at the Battle of Minden where he was wounded, dying of his injuries several weeks later.
Contents
Early life
Elliott was born at Byfeld House, Church Road, Barnes, Surrey to Major-General Roger Elliott (c. 1665 – 15 May 1714) and his wife Charlotte (née Elliot, c. 1692 - c. 1753). He was baptised on 27 October 1713 at St Mary the Virgin's Church, Barnes. His godparents were George Granville, 1st Baron Lansdowne and Mrs Killigrew.
When Granville was less than one year old, his father died and Granville was brought up by his mother and her new husband, Captain Thomas Burroughs. Later that decade, he was made a ward of his mother's younger brother Colonel William Elliot (c. 1704 – 1764). In 1725, Granville was admitted to Dr Dunster's Academy in Little Marlborough Street, London, and in 1730 he matriculated as a Law Student at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
Continental European Military career
By 1732, Granville was in the service of the HM Karl Philipp von Pfalz-Neuburg, Elector Palatine of the Rhine. On 7 March 1735, ahead of Granville's marriage on 15 March 1735 at Mannheim to Jeanne Thérèse du Han, Comtesse de Martigny (30 October 1707 - 7 May 1748), he was created a Chambellan in the Elector's army and raised to the title of Comte de Morhange in the Moselle region. To facilitate the marriage, Granville converted to Catholicism, and took the forename Joseph, which caused him problems with his mother's Calvinist relatives. In August 1736, he and his mother swore oaths at the College of Arms in London that the Elliott family descended from a legal marriage of Richard Eliot (b. 1614 - unknown), the wayward second son of Sir John Eliot (1592–1632) to Catherine Killigrew (1617–1689), daughter of Sir Robert Killigrew (1580–1633) and Mary Woodhouse (CIR 1584 - 1655). However, the two oaths differed in some details, and no independent evidence for any marriage of Richard has ever come to light. Moreover, Catherine Killigrew was still described as spinster in 1655 when she executed her mother's will. As a result, Granville was not recognised by the College of Arms as a legitimate relative of the then Lord Eliot of Port Eliot in Cornwall, ancestors of the present Earls of St Germans. Nevertheless, Granville Elliott had a pedigree drawn up (which survives today) and formally presented to him in Paris by the British Ambassador / Plenipotentiary. As a result of this device, Granville became known at the Elector's Court as Comte Eliot de Port-Eliot, and Graf Eliot von Port-Eliot.
On 29 October 1736, Granville was promoted to the rank of Colonel, taking over the colonelcy of the Carabinier Regiment on 1 February 1737, and the Dragoons Regiment on 10 July 1738. In 1737, Granville was appointed Cavalry General of the States-General of the Netherlands, the legislature of the Dutch Republic. A few years later, he was working at Lunéville, at the court of the exiled King Stanislaus I of Poland who had become Duke of Lorraine and Bar. In 1745, he was appointed Major-General of Cavalry for the Elector Palatine. On 22 April 1745, he was promoted to Major-General; on 24 June 1746, to Lieutenant-General of Cavalry, and, on 2 November 1748, to Lieutenant-General of Cavalry for the States-General of the Netherlands.
Granville and his wife appeared regularly in the Madame de Graffigny correspondence, usually under his baptised name Joseph or his familiar name Cotoco. His wife died on 7 May 1748, and this caused a substantial change of direction for Granville. He left his first grown-up family with their French relatives, returned to the UK, forsook his Catholicism and repaired the bridges with his mother's relatives. It appears that Granville did not subsequently contact his French family, although there was no known ill-will between them.
British Military Career
Further information: Great Britain in the Seven Years WarBack in the UK, he remarried, on 3 September 1750, to Elizabeth Duckett (25 June 1724 - October 1804) at St. Mary Magdalen Old Fish Street, London. However, he soon returned to the service of the Estates-General of the Netherlands, and the first child of his second marriage was born in the Netherlands although later children would be born at their home in Kew.
On his return to the UK, he was appointed Major-General of the Scotch Brigade. On 21 April 1757, he became Colonel and Major-General of the British 61st Foot Regiment - The Glorious Glosters. That summer, he was a Staff Officer on the army expedition to St Malo, and, from 5 July 1758 to 31 August 1758, he received a short-term commission as Colonel and Lieutenant-General in the Dutch Army. The Seven Years' War was approaching, and Granville's knowledge of continental warfare was significant. In early 1759, he returned to continental Europe, as part of a massive British army deployment. At the Battle of Minden, on 1 August 1759, he commanded the Cavalry Regiment under John Manners, Marquess of Granby. Manners was himself second in command to Sir George Sackville, who was later cashiered for his inaction at the battle. Despite this chain of command, Granville Elliott saw significant action in battle, and was seriously wounded. He retired to convalesce at army headquarters in Rodheim an der Bieber, Gießen, Hesse, Germany, but died there 9 weeks later on 10 October 1759 from the wounds incurred. He is buried in the local 13th century church. A brass commemorative plaque was erected during the 20th century by his British descendants in the church.
Light Cavalry was introduced into the British Army as a direct result of advice from General Granville Elliott.
Family
Granville married twice.
Firstly, on 15 March 1735 at Mannheim, to Jeanne Thérèse du Han, Comtesse de Martigny (30 October 1707 - 7 May 1748), by whom he had at least six sons and a daughter:
- Marie Charlotte Elliott (23 May 1736 - 3 February 1785)
- Stanislaus François Xavier Elliott (6 July 1737 - after 1752)
- Amable Gaspard Antoine Elliott (4 September 1738 - 14 June 1814)
- Charles Phillippe Elliott (1 December 1740 - unknown)
- Paul Antoine Elliott (12 June 1741 - 25 July 1741)
- François Maximillian Elliott (12 June 1741 - unknown)
- Jean-Baptiste-François Elliott (25 June 1747 - unknown)
Secondly, on 3 September 1750 at St. Mary Magdalen Old Fish Street, to Elizabeth Duckett (25 June 1724 - October 1804), by whom he had at least three sons and three daughters. Elizabeth was the niece of Sir George Duckett.
- Mary Frances Elliott (28 May 1751 - 26 June 1752)
- William Roger Elliott (10 May 1753 - unknown)
- Francis Perceval Eliot (September 1755 - 23 August 1818)
- Catherine Frances Eliot (27 January 1757 - 10 March 1757)
- John Lewis Elliott (29 June 1758 - December 1819)
- Elizabeth Georgiana Elliott (21 July 1759 - 22 November 1759)
Of these Francis Perceval Eliot and his children continued the family's close connection with the Army. Francis also re-established contact with his French half-siblings.
References
- Madame de Graffigny diaries
Categories:- 1713 births
- 1759 deaths
- British Army generals
- People from Barnes, London
- University of Groningen alumni
- 61st Regiment of Foot officers
- Dutch military personnel
- British Army personnel of the Seven Years' War
- Eliot family of St Germans
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