- Thomas Wildman
Colonel Thomas Wildman (1787 - 1859) was an officer in the
Napoleonic Wars , a draftsman, andlandowner . He was a nephew of the political reformerJohn Horne Tooke and friend ofLord Byron at Harrow. In 1816 he married LouisaPreisig . They had no children.Wildman purchased a Cornetcy in the
7th Light Dragoons in 1808 and later the same year he was promotedLieutenant without purchase. At theBattle of Waterloo he was an extraaide-de-camp to Lord Uxbridge. His letter after the battle described Uxbridge's wounding at the end of the battle (grapeshot to the knee) and the subsequent amputation. Wildman himself was slightly wounded in the battle. In 1816 he purchased aMajor ity in the2nd West India Regiment , and later transferred to the9th Light Dragoons . In 1828 he becameCaptain of theMansfield Troop of theNottinghamshire Yeomanry and a few months later became Major-Commandant of theSherwood Rangers . He was promotedColonel in the Army in 1837. In 1840 he transferred to be Lieutenant-Colonel of the5th Dragoon Guards .The Wildman family had obtained Quebec Estate, a large sugar plantation in Jamaica, from
William Beckford , who was having financial problems. The wealth generated from this plantation provided Wildman with the means to purchaseNewstead Abbey in December, 1817 for £94,000. The Abbey was owned by his friend and old schoolmate Lord Byron who, like Beckford, was having financial difficulties. Byron had been trying to sell the Abbey since 1812. Of the sale, Byron's half-sister Augusta said Wildman had "soul enough to value the dear Abbey..."Although Wildman's purchase ended almost four centuries of Byron family ownership of the Abbey, he was considered to be the man who saved Byron's home. He spent £100,000 restoring it, hiring the architect John Shaw to make improvements. He also amassed a large collection of Byron memorabilia there.
The Wildmans entertained many guests who wished to visit the home of Lord Byron, including
Franz Liszt andWashington Irving . The Duke of Sussex visited annually for a six-week holiday with his chaplain. After Wildman's death, Louisa sold the Abbey toWilliam Frederick Webb .
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