- Sir Paul Pechell, 1st Baronet
Sir Paul Pechell, 1st Baronet (
12 November 1724 –13 January 1800 ), army officer, was a descendant of minorHuguenot nobility ofLanguedoc (originally de Péchels). His grandfather had been ejected fromFrance following theRevocation of the Edict of Nantes and ultimately settled inIreland , where Pechell was born.Pechell entered the army as
cornet -en-seconde in the Royal Regiment of Dragoons in 1744, and was promotedcaptain in Fleming's Regiment of Foot in 1746. Wounded at Laffeld in 1747 during theWar of the Austrian Succession , he received ‘the greatest commendation’ from the Duke of Cumberland.In 1751, Pechell was gazetted captain in the
3rd Dragoon Guards , and in the following spring his regiment escorted George II toHarwich to embark for Hanover. For the next three years the regiment was on coast duty suppressing smuggling inSuffolk ,Essex , andDevon and patrolling against highway robbers. Pechell was gazettedguidon in the Second Troop of Horse Grenadier Guards in 1754, and was promoted tocaptain in 1755,major in 1759, andlieutenant-colonel in 1762. He retired from the army in 1768, receiving a lump sum for his commission.He married in 1752 Mary, only daughter and heir of Thomas Brooke, of
Paglesham ,Essex ; they had two sons and five daughters. Pechell was created a baronet on1 March 1797 , and died in 1800. His eldest son,Major-General Sir Thomas Brooke-Pechell, 2nd Baronet (1753–1826), was father ofRear-Admiral Sir Samuel John Brooke-Pechell, 3rd Baronet (1785–1849), and ofAdmiral Sir George Richard Brooke-Pechell, 4th Baronet (1789–1860).
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