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Gerard Lake, 1st Viscount Lake

Gerard Lake, 1st Viscount Lake (27 July 1744 – 20 February 1808) was a British general. He commanded British forces during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and later served as Commander-in-Chief of the military in British India.

The Viscount Lake
Member of Parliament
for Aylesbury
In office
1790–1802
Preceded byWilliam Wrightson
Succeeded byRobert Bent
Personal details
Born27 July 1744
Harrow, Middlesex, Great Britain
Died20 February 1808(1808-02-20) (aged 63)
London
Military service
Allegiance Great Britain
United Kingdom
Branch/serviceBritish Army
Years of service1758–1808
RankGeneral
Battles/warsAmerican Revolutionary War
French Revolutionary Wars
Irish Rebellion of 1798
Second Anglo-Maratha War

Background edit

He was the son of Lancelot Charles Lake (d. 1751) of Harrow-on-the-Hill and his wife Letitia Gumley, daughter of John Gumley. He was educated at Eton College.[1]

Lake entered the foot guards in 1758, becoming lieutenant (captain in the army) in 1762, captain (lieutenant-colonel) in 1776, major in 1784, and lieutenant colonel in 1792, by which time he was a general officer in the army. He served with his regiment in Germany between 1760 and 1762, and with a composite battalion in the Battle of Yorktown of 1781. After this he was equerry to the Prince of Wales, afterwards George IV.[2] His younger brother Warwick served as a groom of the bedchamber for the Prince, and later oversaw his stables of racehorses.[citation needed]

In 1790, he became a major-general, and in 1793 was appointed to command the Guards Brigade in the Duke of York and Albany's army in Flanders during the French Revolutionary Wars. He was in command at the successful Battle of Lincelles on 18 August 1793, and served on the continent (except for a short time when seriously ill) until April 1794. He later sold his lieutenant-colonelcy in the guards, and became colonel of the 53rd Regiment of Foot and governor of Limerick in Ireland. In 1797 he was promoted to lieutenant-general.[2]

American War of Independence edit

As lieutenant-colonel Lake went out with drafts to America in the spring of 1781, made the campaign in North Carolina under Lord Cornwallis, and commanded the grenadiers of the guards and of the old 80th royal Edinburgh regiment in a sortie, under Colonel Robert Abercromby, from the British lines at York Town, which inflicted heavy loss on the French and American besiegers, on 11 October that year. After the surrender of Cornwallis's force [on 19 October 1781] Lake remained prisoner on parole until the end of the war.[3] Hugh Wodehouse Pearse reports that "Lake was one of the three field officers selected by lot to take charge of the troops in captivity, but, as he was anxious for private reasons to proceed to England, Major Gordon of the 76th [sic] [80th] Regiment generously volunteered to take his place. Major, then Lieut.-Colonel, Gordon died in captivity.[4]

1798 rebellion in Ireland edit

In December 1796 he was appointed commander in Ulster and issued a proclamation ordering the surrender of all arms by the civil population,[2] during which time he was 'untroubled by legal restraints or by his troops' violent actions'.[5] Historians have generally seen Lake's Dragooning of Ulster in 1797 as effective in disarming and crippling the Society of United Irishmen in that province, although his effectiveness has been questioned.[6] Lake succeeded Sir Ralph Abercromby as Commander-in-Chief, Ireland in April 1798 and turned his attention to Leinster, where 'public floggings and torture of suspected rebels became widespread and added to the general atmosphere of terror'.[5] Rather than cowing the province into submission, 'his crude methods probably contributed to the outbreak of insurrection' in May 1798.[5] Lake continued to deal harshly with opposition, and issued orders to take no prisoners during the rebellion.[1]

In May Lake commanded troops in County Kildare, and, after the unsuccessful rebel attack on Naas on 24 May, he assisted General Ralph Dundas in ensuring the rebel surrender after the Battle of Kilcullen, which Dundas arranged on humane terms. Another rebel force on the nearby Curragh were also persuaded to surrender, but while this was being arranged by Lake the rebels were mistakenly attacked by separate government forces coming from the opposite direction, resulting in the Gibbet Rath executions on 29 May. As a result, central Kildare remained quiet for the rest of 1798.[citation needed]

Lake then took overall command of a force of some 20,000 troops to crush the Wexford rebels and defeated the main rebel army at Vinegar Hill (near Enniscorthy, County Wexford) on 21 June. His harsh treatment towards Irish rebels found bearing arms brought him into conflict with Lord Cornwallis who was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in June 1798 and instituted an amnesty act to encourage rebels to lay down their arms.[7]

Cornwallis sent Lake to oppose a French expedition of 1,000 troops which had landed at Killala Bay, County Mayo on 23 August. On 29 August, Lake arrived at Castlebar with a force of 1,700 (composed of mainly of militia, fencibles and yeomanry) and witnessed the rout of his troops under General Hely-Hutchinson (afterwards 2nd Earl of Donoughmore) at the Battle of Castlebar.[8] Lake failed to rally his largely inexperienced troops and was forced to retreat to Tuam; the speed of which (and abandonment of material, artillery and Lake's personal baggage) led the rout to become known as the 'Races of Castlebar'. Hely-Hutchinson shouldered much of the blame, but it was accepted that Lake's troops were inexperienced and a head-on battle with the seasoned French force was probably to be avoided.[9] However, rumours also abounded that Lake had been drinking heavily the night before the battle and was only woken with difficulty while the French were already attacking.[5]

He defeated the French at the Battle of Ballinamuck on 8 September.[10]

Indian campaigns edit

In 1799, Lake returned to England, and soon afterwards travelled to British India where he was appointed Commander-in-Chief. He took up his duties at Calcutta in July 1801, and applied himself to the improvement of the East India Company army, especially in the direction of making all arms, infantry, cavalry and artillery, more mobile and more manageable. In 1802 he was made a full general.[2]

On the outbreak the Second Anglo-Maratha War in 1803 General Lake took the field against Daulat Scindia, and within two months defeated the Marathas at Kol (now called Aligarh), after storming Aligarh Fort during the Battle of Ally Ghur (1 September 1803). He then took Delhi (11 September) and Agra (10 October), and won a victory at the Battle of Laswari (1 November), where the power of Scindia was completely broken with the loss of 31 disciplined battalions, trained and officered by Frenchmen, and 426 pieces of ordnance. This defeat, followed a few days later by Major-General Arthur Wellesley's victory at the Battle of Argaon, compelled Scindia to come to terms, and a treaty was signed in December 1803.[2]

Operations continued against Yashwantrao Holkar, who, on 17 November 1804, defeated Lake at the Battle of Farrukhabad. Lake was now very frustrated by the Jats and Yashwantrao Holker at Bharatpur which held out against five assaults early in 1805.[11] Cornwallis succeeded Lord Wellesley as Governor-General of India in July of that year – superseding Lake at the same time as commander-in-chief – and determined to put an end to the war. Cornwallis, however, died in October of the same year and Lake pursued Holkar into the Punjab.[12] However, after seeing the stronger position of Holkar and his effort to gather all Indian princes under one flag against the British, the British East India Company signed a peace treaty with Holkar which returned to him all his territory and promised no further interference from the Company.[citation needed]

Lord Wellesley in a despatch attributed much of the success of the war to Lake's matchless energy, ability and valour. For his services, Lake received the thanks of Parliament,[13] and, in September 1804, was rewarded by being created Baron Lake of Delhi and Laswary and of Aston Clinton in the County of Buckingham. From 1801 to 1805 Lake was Commander-in-Chief, India, then again from 1805 to 1807 as his successor John Graves Simcoe had died before heading off to India. At the conclusion of the war he returned to England, and in 1807 he was created Viscount Lake of Delhi and Laswary and of Aston Clinton in the County of Buckingham.[citation needed]

One of his sons Major George Augustus Frederick Lake accompanied him in Ireland and then India, acting as his aide-de-camp and military secretary during the campaign: at one stage offering his mount when the elder Lake's horse had been shot from under him at an engagement near the village of Mohaulpoor. Minutes after seeing his father mounted Major Lake was seriously wounded in the presence of his father. Major G A F Lake recovered from his wound and went on to command the 29th Regiment of Foot during the Peninsular Campaign. He was killed in action at the Battle of Roliça, Portugal on 17 August 1808.[14]

Parliamentary career edit

Like many contemporaries, Lake pursued both a parliamentary and military career. He represented Aylesbury in the British House of Commons from 1790 to 1802, and he also was brought into the Irish House of Commons by the government as member for Armagh Borough in 1799 to vote for the Act of Union.[13]

Later years edit

Viscount Lake was recorded as being an inveterate gambler who lost most of his family's fortune. He died in London on 20 February 1808 leaving his children with little or no inheritance. This was seen by many at court and the then prime minister the Duke of Portland, as a sad end for such a stalwart of Empire and his children. Portland made a special request to King George III to remedy the situation, particularly with respect to the unmarried Lake daughters.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Bennell, Anthony S. "Lake, Gerard, first Viscount Lake of Delhi (1744–1808)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15900. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 85.
  3. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, Volume 31, "Lake, Gerard" by Henry Manners Chichester
  4. ^ Pearse, Hugh Wodehouse (1908). Memoir of the life and military services of Viscount Lake: Baron Lake of Delhi and Laswaree, 1744–1808. W. Blackwood and Sons. p. 64.
  5. ^ a b c d Quinn, James (2009). "Lake, Gerard". Dictionary of Irish Biography.
  6. ^ Curtin, Nancy J. (2000). "The Magistracy and Counter-Revolution in Ulster, 1795–1798". In Smyth, Jim (ed.). Revolution, Counter-Revolution and Union: Ireland in the 1790s. Cambridge University Press. p. 39. ISBN 0521661099.
  7. ^ Quinn, James (2012). "Cornwallis, Charles Earl Cornwallis". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 26 July 2017.
  8. ^ Kleinman, Sylvie (2012). "Humbert, Jean-Joseph Amable". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 26 July 2017.
  9. ^ Bartlett, Thomas (1997). "Defence,counter-insurgency and rebellion: Ireland, 1793–1803". In Bartlett, Thomas; Jeffery, Keith (eds.). A Military History of Ireland. Cambridge University Press. p. 286. ISBN 0521629896.
  10. ^ "Battle of Ballinmuck". LibraryIreland. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  11. ^ The fourth assault was on 20 February 1805 with a fifth assault the following day. The Gentleman's magazine (1805) Vol. 75, Part 2, p. 854
  12. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 85–86.
  13. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 86.
  14. ^ Philippart, John (1826). "Containing the Services of General and Field Officers of the Indian Army". The East India Military Calendar. 3: 511.
  15. ^ (King of Great Britain), George III (1808). The Later Correspondence of George Iii (Vol Five ed.). CUP Archive. pp. 22–23.

References edit

  • See H Pearse, Memoir of the Life and Services of Viscount Lake (London, 1908); GB Malleson, Decisive Battles of India (1883); J Grant Duff, History of the Mahrattas (1873); short memoir in From Cromwell to Wellington, ed. Spenser Wilkinson.[1]
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lake, Gerard Lake, 1st Viscount". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 85–86.
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Aylesbury
17901801
With: Scrope Bernard
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Parliament of Ireland
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough
1799–1801
With: Patrick Duigenan
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Member of Parliament for Aylesbury
18011802
With: Scrope Bernard
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by Colonel of the 53rd (Shropshire) Regiment of Foot
1794–1796
Succeeded by
Preceded by Colonel of the 73rd (Highland) Regiment of Foot
1796–1800
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, Ireland
April 1798 – June 1798
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, India
1801–1805
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief, India
1805–1807
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Plymouth
1807–1808
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Lake
1807–1808
Succeeded by
Francis Lake
Baron Lake
1804–1808
  1. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 86.

gerard, lake, viscount, lake, july, 1744, february, 1808, british, general, commanded, british, forces, during, irish, rebellion, 1798, later, served, commander, chief, military, british, india, general, right, honourablethe, viscount, lakemember, parliamentfo. Gerard Lake 1st Viscount Lake 27 July 1744 20 February 1808 was a British general He commanded British forces during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and later served as Commander in Chief of the military in British India General The Right HonourableThe Viscount LakeMember of Parliamentfor AylesburyIn office 1790 1802Preceded byWilliam WrightsonSucceeded byRobert BentPersonal detailsBorn27 July 1744Harrow Middlesex Great BritainDied20 February 1808 1808 02 20 aged 63 LondonMilitary serviceAllegianceGreat Britain United KingdomBranch serviceBritish ArmyYears of service1758 1808RankGeneralBattles warsAmerican Revolutionary WarFrench Revolutionary WarsIrish Rebellion of 1798Second Anglo Maratha War Contents 1 Background 2 American War of Independence 3 1798 rebellion in Ireland 4 Indian campaigns 5 Parliamentary career 6 Later years 7 Notes 8 ReferencesBackground editHe was the son of Lancelot Charles Lake d 1751 of Harrow on the Hill and his wife Letitia Gumley daughter of John Gumley He was educated at Eton College 1 Lake entered the foot guards in 1758 becoming lieutenant captain in the army in 1762 captain lieutenant colonel in 1776 major in 1784 and lieutenant colonel in 1792 by which time he was a general officer in the army He served with his regiment in Germany between 1760 and 1762 and with a composite battalion in the Battle of Yorktown of 1781 After this he was equerry to the Prince of Wales afterwards George IV 2 His younger brother Warwick served as a groom of the bedchamber for the Prince and later oversaw his stables of racehorses citation needed In 1790 he became a major general and in 1793 was appointed to command the Guards Brigade in the Duke of York and Albany s army in Flanders during the French Revolutionary Wars He was in command at the successful Battle of Lincelles on 18 August 1793 and served on the continent except for a short time when seriously ill until April 1794 He later sold his lieutenant colonelcy in the guards and became colonel of the 53rd Regiment of Foot and governor of Limerick in Ireland In 1797 he was promoted to lieutenant general 2 American War of Independence editAs lieutenant colonel Lake went out with drafts to America in the spring of 1781 made the campaign in North Carolina under Lord Cornwallis and commanded the grenadiers of the guards and of the old 80th royal Edinburgh regiment in a sortie under Colonel Robert Abercromby from the British lines at York Town which inflicted heavy loss on the French and American besiegers on 11 October that year After the surrender of Cornwallis s force on 19 October 1781 Lake remained prisoner on parole until the end of the war 3 Hugh Wodehouse Pearse reports that Lake was one of the three field officers selected by lot to take charge of the troops in captivity but as he was anxious for private reasons to proceed to England Major Gordon of the 76th sic 80th Regiment generously volunteered to take his place Major then Lieut Colonel Gordon died in captivity 4 1798 rebellion in Ireland editIn December 1796 he was appointed commander in Ulster and issued a proclamation ordering the surrender of all arms by the civil population 2 during which time he was untroubled by legal restraints or by his troops violent actions 5 Historians have generally seen Lake s Dragooning of Ulster in 1797 as effective in disarming and crippling the Society of United Irishmen in that province although his effectiveness has been questioned 6 Lake succeeded Sir Ralph Abercromby as Commander in Chief Ireland in April 1798 and turned his attention to Leinster where public floggings and torture of suspected rebels became widespread and added to the general atmosphere of terror 5 Rather than cowing the province into submission his crude methods probably contributed to the outbreak of insurrection in May 1798 5 Lake continued to deal harshly with opposition and issued orders to take no prisoners during the rebellion 1 In May Lake commanded troops in County Kildare and after the unsuccessful rebel attack on Naas on 24 May he assisted General Ralph Dundas in ensuring the rebel surrender after the Battle of Kilcullen which Dundas arranged on humane terms Another rebel force on the nearby Curragh were also persuaded to surrender but while this was being arranged by Lake the rebels were mistakenly attacked by separate government forces coming from the opposite direction resulting in the Gibbet Rath executions on 29 May As a result central Kildare remained quiet for the rest of 1798 citation needed Lake then took overall command of a force of some 20 000 troops to crush the Wexford rebels and defeated the main rebel army at Vinegar Hill near Enniscorthy County Wexford on 21 June His harsh treatment towards Irish rebels found bearing arms brought him into conflict with Lord Cornwallis who was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in June 1798 and instituted an amnesty act to encourage rebels to lay down their arms 7 Cornwallis sent Lake to oppose a French expedition of 1 000 troops which had landed at Killala Bay County Mayo on 23 August On 29 August Lake arrived at Castlebar with a force of 1 700 composed of mainly of militia fencibles and yeomanry and witnessed the rout of his troops under General Hely Hutchinson afterwards 2nd Earl of Donoughmore at the Battle of Castlebar 8 Lake failed to rally his largely inexperienced troops and was forced to retreat to Tuam the speed of which and abandonment of material artillery and Lake s personal baggage led the rout to become known as the Races of Castlebar Hely Hutchinson shouldered much of the blame but it was accepted that Lake s troops were inexperienced and a head on battle with the seasoned French force was probably to be avoided 9 However rumours also abounded that Lake had been drinking heavily the night before the battle and was only woken with difficulty while the French were already attacking 5 He defeated the French at the Battle of Ballinamuck on 8 September 10 Indian campaigns editIn 1799 Lake returned to England and soon afterwards travelled to British India where he was appointed Commander in Chief He took up his duties at Calcutta in July 1801 and applied himself to the improvement of the East India Company army especially in the direction of making all arms infantry cavalry and artillery more mobile and more manageable In 1802 he was made a full general 2 On the outbreak the Second Anglo Maratha War in 1803 General Lake took the field against Daulat Scindia and within two months defeated the Marathas at Kol now called Aligarh after storming Aligarh Fort during the Battle of Ally Ghur 1 September 1803 He then took Delhi 11 September and Agra 10 October and won a victory at the Battle of Laswari 1 November where the power of Scindia was completely broken with the loss of 31 disciplined battalions trained and officered by Frenchmen and 426 pieces of ordnance This defeat followed a few days later by Major General Arthur Wellesley s victory at the Battle of Argaon compelled Scindia to come to terms and a treaty was signed in December 1803 2 Operations continued against Yashwantrao Holkar who on 17 November 1804 defeated Lake at the Battle of Farrukhabad Lake was now very frustrated by the Jats and Yashwantrao Holker at Bharatpur which held out against five assaults early in 1805 11 Cornwallis succeeded Lord Wellesley as Governor General of India in July of that year superseding Lake at the same time as commander in chief and determined to put an end to the war Cornwallis however died in October of the same year and Lake pursued Holkar into the Punjab 12 However after seeing the stronger position of Holkar and his effort to gather all Indian princes under one flag against the British the British East India Company signed a peace treaty with Holkar which returned to him all his territory and promised no further interference from the Company citation needed Lord Wellesley in a despatch attributed much of the success of the war to Lake s matchless energy ability and valour For his services Lake received the thanks of Parliament 13 and in September 1804 was rewarded by being created Baron Lake of Delhi and Laswary and of Aston Clinton in the County of Buckingham From 1801 to 1805 Lake was Commander in Chief India then again from 1805 to 1807 as his successor John Graves Simcoe had died before heading off to India At the conclusion of the war he returned to England and in 1807 he was created Viscount Lake of Delhi and Laswary and of Aston Clinton in the County of Buckingham citation needed One of his sons Major George Augustus Frederick Lake accompanied him in Ireland and then India acting as his aide de camp and military secretary during the campaign at one stage offering his mount when the elder Lake s horse had been shot from under him at an engagement near the village of Mohaulpoor Minutes after seeing his father mounted Major Lake was seriously wounded in the presence of his father Major G A F Lake recovered from his wound and went on to command the 29th Regiment of Foot during the Peninsular Campaign He was killed in action at the Battle of Rolica Portugal on 17 August 1808 14 Parliamentary career editLike many contemporaries Lake pursued both a parliamentary and military career He represented Aylesbury in the British House of Commons from 1790 to 1802 and he also was brought into the Irish House of Commons by the government as member for Armagh Borough in 1799 to vote for the Act of Union 13 Later years editViscount Lake was recorded as being an inveterate gambler who lost most of his family s fortune He died in London on 20 February 1808 leaving his children with little or no inheritance This was seen by many at court and the then prime minister the Duke of Portland as a sad end for such a stalwart of Empire and his children Portland made a special request to King George III to remedy the situation particularly with respect to the unmarried Lake daughters 15 Notes edit a b Bennell Anthony S Lake Gerard first Viscount Lake of Delhi 1744 1808 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 15900 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e Chisholm 1911 p 85 Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Volume 31 Lake Gerard by Henry Manners Chichester Pearse Hugh Wodehouse 1908 Memoir of the life and military services of Viscount Lake Baron Lake of Delhi and Laswaree 1744 1808 W Blackwood and Sons p 64 a b c d Quinn James 2009 Lake Gerard Dictionary of Irish Biography Curtin Nancy J 2000 The Magistracy and Counter Revolution in Ulster 1795 1798 In Smyth Jim ed Revolution Counter Revolution and Union Ireland in the 1790s Cambridge University Press p 39 ISBN 0521661099 Quinn James 2012 Cornwallis Charles Earl Cornwallis Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 26 July 2017 Kleinman Sylvie 2012 Humbert Jean Joseph Amable Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 26 July 2017 Bartlett Thomas 1997 Defence counter insurgency and rebellion Ireland 1793 1803 In Bartlett Thomas Jeffery Keith eds A Military History of Ireland Cambridge University Press p 286 ISBN 0521629896 Battle of Ballinmuck LibraryIreland Retrieved 24 February 2017 The fourth assault was on 20 February 1805 with a fifth assault the following day The Gentleman s magazine 1805 Vol 75 Part 2 p 854 Chisholm 1911 pp 85 86 a b Chisholm 1911 p 86 Philippart John 1826 Containing the Services of General and Field Officers of the Indian Army The East India Military Calendar 3 511 King of Great Britain George III 1808 The Later Correspondence of George Iii Vol Five ed CUP Archive pp 22 23 References editSee H Pearse Memoir of the Life and Services of Viscount Lake London 1908 GB Malleson Decisive Battles of India 1883 J Grant Duff History of the Mahrattas 1873 short memoir in From Cromwell to Wellington ed Spenser Wilkinson 1 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lake Gerard Lake 1st Viscount Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 85 86 Parliament of Great Britain Preceded byWilliam Wrightson Scrope Bernard Member of Parliament for Aylesbury1790 1801 With Scrope Bernard Succeeded byParliament of the United Kingdom Parliament of Ireland Preceded byHon Thomas Pelham Patrick Duigenan Member of Parliament for Armagh Borough1799 1801 With Patrick Duigenan Succeeded byParliament of the United Kingdom Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded byParliament of Great Britain Member of Parliament for Aylesbury1801 1802 With Scrope Bernard Succeeded byJames Du Pre Robert Bent Military offices Preceded byRobert Dalrymple Horn Elphinstone Colonel of the 53rd Shropshire Regiment of Foot1794 1796 Succeeded byWelbore Ellis Doyle Preceded byWilliam Medows Colonel of the 73rd Highland Regiment of Foot1796 1800 Succeeded byGeorge Harris 1st Baron Harris Preceded bySir Ralph Abercromby Commander in Chief IrelandApril 1798 June 1798 Succeeded byThe Marquess Cornwallis Preceded bySir James Craig Commander in Chief India1801 1805 Succeeded byThe Marquess Cornwallis Preceded byThe Marquess Cornwallis Commander in Chief India1805 1807 Succeeded bySir George Hewett Preceded byThe Earl of Chatham Governor of Plymouth1807 1808 Succeeded byThe Viscount Howe Peerage of the United Kingdom New creation Viscount Lake1807 1808 Succeeded byFrancis Lake Baron Lake1804 1808 Chisholm 1911 p 86 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gerard Lake 1st Viscount Lake amp oldid 1216736278, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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