peoplepill id: edward-john-eliot
EJE
16 views today
16 views this week
Edward John Eliot
Cavalry officer

Edward John Eliot

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Cavalry officer
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Shenstone, Staffordshire
Place of death
Peckham
Age
81 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Captain Edward John Eliot (20 September 1782 Shenstone, Staffordshire – 6 November 1863 Peckham, Surrey ) was an English soldier.
Eliot was the son of Francis Perceval Eliot and his wife Anne née Breynton (daughter of Dr John Breynton). He was born into a military family - the son of a Colonel, the grandson and great grandson of Generals, but he himself never rose above the rank of Captain. His letters and papers form an important record of military life for this period.
He enrolled at the age of 15 into his father's Staffordshire Militia as an Ensign (1797), and a Lieutenant (1799). In 1799, he transferred as Ensign of the 62nd (Wiltshire) Regiment of Foot. His unit sailed from Ireland in May 1800 to the Île-d'Houat, in Quiberon Bay, where 40 years earlier the Battle of Quiberon Bay had been fought. However, bad weather prevented a landing and he went on to Minorca where stayed until at least October 1801. By October 1802, he was commissioned as a Lieutenant and posted to Athenry in Ireland. He saw several excursions to the Mediterranean and was promoted to Captain, 4th Garrison Battalion.
During 1807, the Peninsula War was beginning and Edward was among the first of the British troops to fight in the Iberian peninsula, alongside his older brother William Granville Eliot, who was in another regiment. Edward now saw major military action over the next 5 years, including the Battle of Vimiero (following which he was promoted to Captain, 27th Inniskillen Regiment of Foot), the Battle of Talavera, Battle of Bussaco, Defence of the Lines of Torres Vedras, Battle of Badajoz. During this period, he fought in the elite Lord Hill's Flying Brigade.
Having fought in many of the major battles of the campaign, he returned home in 1812. Although he tried to rejoin his regiment, he was clearly unwell and in 1814 retired from the Army altogether aged just 32.
On 22 November 1826, he married Margaret James and had 6 children. The couple settled firstly in Greenwich, then Finsbury and eventually Peckham, Surrey, where he joined HM Customs as a landing waiter - a secure job for an ex-army officer.
The army had initially refused him the usual Peninsula campaign medals. However, following a protracted communication, these were finally awarded in the 1840s, 25 years after his return. Together with letters from the Peninsula War, this communication forms a substantial record of his military career.
He retired in the 1850s, died at Peckham in 1863 and is buried in Nunhead Cemetery.

Family

On 22 November 1826, at All Saints' Church, Huntingdon, he married Margaret James (1802–1881), the daughter of George James (1760–1811), the captain, later colonel, of the Northumberland Regiment, and they had 6 children:

  1. Edward James Eliot (1828–1905), who married Caroline Louisa Matilda Godfrey (1832–1897)
  2. Francis George (Frank) Eliot (1831–1908), who married Elizabeth Anne Grey (1844–1889)
  3. Henry Augustus Eliot (1833–1886), who married Mary Louisa Sarah Nash (1840–1928)
  4. Margaret Frances Eliot (1837–1916)
  5. John Percival Eliot (1840–1841)
  6. William Frederick Eliot (1843–1932), who married Fanny Clarke (1845–1914)

His great-nephew was Major-General John Granville Harkness (1831 – 1900).

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Edward John Eliot is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Edward John Eliot
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes