Battle_of_New_Orleans_British_Order_of_Battle

New Orleans British order of battle

New Orleans British order of battle

Military unit


The following units of the British Armed Forces participated in the Battle of New Orleans on 8 January 1815. The American order of battle is shown separately.

Quick Facts British Forces, North America, Active ...




The Death of Pakenham at the Battle of New Orleans by F. O. C. Darley shows the death of British Maj. Gen. Sir Edward Pakenham on 8 January 1815. This romanticised portrayal, dating from 1860, has British soldiers wearing Bearskin caps, a headdress not worn since the American Revolutionary War

British order of battle

British Army

Source:[lower-alpha 1]

General Staff

  • Commander-in-Chief: Major General the honourable Sir Edward Pakenham - killed 8 January 1815[4]
  • Deputy Commander-in-Chief: Major General Samuel Gibbs - died of wounds[4]
  • Military Secretary: Major Harry Smith[5]
  • Deputy Adjutant General: Lieutenant Colonel Frederick Stovin - wounded 24 December 1814[4]
  • Deputy Assistant Adjutant General: Brevet Major Henry Hooper - wounded 24 December 1814[4]
  • Acting Deputy Adjutant General: Captain Sir John Maxwell Tylden[5][6]
  • Acting Deputy Assistant Adjutant General: Captain Wood[5]
  • Senior Officer, Royal Artillery: Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Dickson[5]
  • Senior Officer, Royal Engineers: Lieutenant Colonel John Fox Burgoyne[5]
  • Senior Officer, Royal Staff Corps: Major Todd.[5]
  • Major of Brigade: Captain Henry Thomas Shaw (4th Foot) - wounded 8 January 1815[4]
  • Major of Brigade: Captain Thomas Wilkinson (85th Foot)- killed 8 January 1815[4]
  • Quarter Master General: Lieutenant Colonel John Bell[lower-alpha 2]
  • Assistant Quarter Master General: Major Charles Ramus Forrest[5]
  • Deputy Assistant Quarter Master General: Lieutenant George de Lacy Evans[5] - wounded on 24 December 1814 and 8 January 1815[4]
  • Deputy Assistant Quarter Master General: Lieutenant John Peddie.[5]
  • Naval aide de camp: Lieutenant (RN) The Honourable Edward Curzon[5][8]
  • Deputy Inspector of hospitals: Dr John Robb[5]







Infantry Brigades

More information Brigade, Unit ...

Artillery and supporting elements

More information Service, Composition ...

Royal Navy

More information Composition, Comments ...

Native American allies


- Brevet Major Edward Nicolls accompanied by less than 100 Seminole, Creek, and Choctaw warriors.[36] Among them were the Hitchiti Indian chief Kinache.[37]


Notes and citations

Notes

  1. One useful document is the one page 'Journal of the movements of the Army acting in the Southern part of the North American coast.' It contains a list of units and their strengths as at 25 November 1814. This, a one page "Plan of the Position we occupied" and Major Forrest's journal were sent with a covering letter to Lieutenant General Clinton by Lieutenant John Peddie. They were discovered in the Clinton Papers held by the University of Michigan. As well as a transcription of the 'Journal of the movements of the Army' a reproduction of the image can be seen via this link.[3] This source was also quoted in Duncan's book in 1873. The same information is recorded in the monthly returns for British forces in North America, archive reference WO 17/1218.
  2. In addition to Bell's service in the Peninsular War, it documents that he 'served afterwards with the army employed against Louisiana, from Dec. 1814 to June 1815', as documented in the "War Services of the General Officers" [7]
  3. The monthly returns for British forces in North America, archive reference WO 17/1218, prepared on the 25th day of the month, provide valuable details on unit strengths. Images of the original documents can be seen on microfilm at The Historic New Orleans Collection's research center. Transcriptions of the returns can be downloaded [12]
  4. Estimate of 'British Army Corps and Strength' & 'Staff of the British Army' by Robert Morrell, M.D. formerly a prisoner of the British, letter dated 8 April 1815. These attachments were sent in a letter from Morrell to Major Latour, and are reproduced in the Report of Sesquicentennial Celebration 1815-1865[13]
  5. The 7th and the 43rd were to go to Georgia to assist, but were diverted to New Orleans, unbeknown to Read Admiral Cochrane[18]
  6. Despatch from Bathust to Pakenham dated 24 October 1814, within: Secretary of State for War and the Colonies, Out-letters, archive reference WO 6/2. 'You will be followed immediately by the 7th and 43rd Regiments with another squadron of dismounted Dragoons, which are embarked at Plymouth under Major General Lambert, and by the 40th Regiment from Cork. The 2nd West India Regiment has also been ordered to join you from Barbadoes.'[19]

Citations

  1. Within Monthly Return, December 1814 via Monthly headcount returns
  2. Within Monthly Return, January 1815 via Monthly headcount returns
  3. "Image of the 'Journal of the movements of the Army.. '" via hathitrust.org.
  4. Casualty returns within "No. 16991". The London Gazette. 9 March 1815. pp. 443–446.
  5. Despatch from Lambert to Secretary of State for War and the Colonies dated 28 January 1815 within "No. 16991". The London Gazette. 9 March 1815. pp. 442–443.
  6. Lee 1894, p. 415.
  7. Hart 1848, p. 27.
  8. Duncan 1873, p. 395-396.
  9. Gleig (1840), p. 340 quoting report from Colonel Thornton to Sir Edward Pakenham mentioning 'the force which you had allotted for the service viz., 298 of the 85th, and 200 Seamen and Marines'
  10. "Letter from Vice Admiral Cochrane to the Admiralty dated 18 January 1815". thegazette.co.uk. 9 March 1815. Retrieved 22 November 2021 via London Gazette. The 85th regiment, with a division of seaman under Captain Money, and a division of marines under Major Adair, the whole amounting to about six hundred men.
  11. Cope 2008, pp. 181–182.
  12. Surtees 2005, pp. 324–337.
  13. Grodzinski (ed) (2011), p.1
  14. Within Monthly Return, October 1814 via Monthly headcount returns
  15. Levinge, p. 220. 'On the 5th of January the 7th and 43rd landed.. mustering upwards of 1700 bayonets'
  16. Surtees (2005), p. 325 'The force that embarked at the same time with us [18th September 1814], consisted of the 93rd (Highlanders), a company of artillery, some rocketeers, a squadron of the 14th light dragoons, without horses, and our five [rifle] companies, the whole under the command of General Keane.'
  17. James 1818, p. 373.
  18. Within Monthly Return, February 1815 via Monthly headcount returns
  19. Duncan 1873, p. 395.
  20. Hill, p. 10
  21. Duncan 1873, p. 396.
  22. Within Monthly Return, November 1814 via Monthly headcount returns
  23. Despatch from Keane to Pakenham dated 26 December 1814 within "No. 16991". The London Gazette. 9 March 1815. p. 439.
  24. "Report from Colonel Thornton to Sir Edward Pakenham dated 8 January 1815". thegazette.co.uk. 9 March 1815. Retrieved 22 November 2021 via London Gazette. whilst one hundred sailors, under Captain Money, of the Royal Navy... threatened the enemy's left, supported by the division of the 85th Regiment under Captain Schaw... I deployed the column... under Major Deshon.. and about one hundred men of the royal marines under Major Adair.
  25. Duncan 1873, p. 398.
  26. Letter from Lieutenant Harrison to the Admiralty dated 3 June 1815 within reference ADM 1/3340 (Letters from Marine Lieutenants 1813-115).
  27. Sugden 1982, p. 300.

Bibliography


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