published by William Brown: Edinburgh 1914
[British Library Shelf-mark 9906 P6]
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CHAPTER XIV [pp. 215-222] [This chapter headed by an engraving of ‘DELGATY CASTLE’] GENERAL THE HON. SIR ALEXANDER DUFF, G.C.H. (Grand Cross of Hanover), brother and heir-presumptive to the fourth Earl of Fife, was the second son of Alexander, third Earl, by his wife, Mary Skene of Skene. He was born in 1777, and when only five or six years old was sent to Duff House to the care of his uncle, the second Lord Fife, who, having no children, wished to take charge of his nephews. It must have been a little hard for their mother to part with them at this very early age. Two of her letters on the subject are to be found in chapter xii., and the letters of their father to his brother frequently end with a message or a line ‘to the boys.’ When they were a little older, their uncle sent them to the then well-known school kept by Dr. Chapman at Inchdrewer. Alexander Duff entered the Army as Ensign in the 65th Berkshire Regiment of Foot in May 1793, being then sixteen, and joined his regiment at Gibraltar. Having been first promoted to a lieutenancy with captain’s powers in |
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[page] 216 SIR ALEXANDER DUFF OF DELGATY AND HIS SONS
an Independent Company in January 1794, he was transferred in 1795 as Captain to the 88th (1) Regiment, and in the March following appears as Major in the same regiment. The 88th was then newly raised, and family interest procured him the majority at the age of eighteen. He served in Flanders until the return of the army in the end of the same year. In April 1798 he was promoted Lieutenant-Colonel of the 88th, and went to the East Indies, where he remained until his regiment was ordered to Egypt to take part in the expedition under Sir David Baird which landed at Kosseir in June 1801, crossed the desert, and, embarking on the Nile, descended to Cairo and thence to Alexandria, which was reached a few days before its surrender to General Hutchinson. In 1806 his regiment formed part of the expedition for the reduction of La Plata, Montevideo, and other places in South America, which started February 24, 1807, and he commanded the centre column in the attack on Buenos Ayres on July 5, 1807. Here he had the misfortune to be obliged to surrender with his detachment, and appeared as a witness at the court-martial held in the following year (2) to inquire into the conduct of Brigadier-General White locke, who was accused of ‘acting contrary to instructions, of exposing his army to fire from the houses, by causing them to march through the streets without having previously reduced the town, of not being present personally at the attack, and of neglecting to keep up communications with his main body.’ It was, moreover, proved that ‘after concluding a shameful treaty, he went back to his headquarters without making any serious attempt to learn what had become of his column on the right.'(3) General Whitelocke was cashiered, but Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Duff, who gave evidence as to the circumstances which led to his own surrender, was not included in the censure.(4) General Whitelocke had made a hopeless muddle of the whole expedition. W. F. Lord, in his Lost Possessions of Great Britain, says:, (1) The Connaught Rangers. |
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FAMILY OF GENERAL ALEXANDER DUFF [page] 217 if the remains of his splendid force chalked up on the street walls: “General Whitelocke is a fool or a traitor, or both.” Alexander Duff was promoted Colonel in the same year, and in 1810 went on the halfpay list of the 4th Foot. He became Major-General in June 1811, and Lieutenant-General in 1821. (1) Though he had, since 1811, when his father succeeded to the earldom of Fife, had a right to this courtesy title. |
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Additional information on Alexander Duff in The Book of the Duffs.
Engraved plate opposite page 218: ‘General Sir Alexander Duff. From the engraving by Zobel after portrait by Châtelain.’ |
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