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Hugh Wheeler (East India Company officer)

Sir Hugh Massy Wheeler KCB (30 June 1789 – 27 June 1857) was an Irish-born officer in the army of the East India Company. He commanded troops in the First Anglo-Afghan War, and the First and Second Anglo-Sikh Wars, and in 1856 was appointed commander of the garrison at Cawnpore (now Kanpur). He is chiefly remembered for the disastrous end to a long and successful military career, when his defence of Wheeler's entrenchment and surrender to Nana Sahib during the Indian Rebellion of 1857 led to the annihilation of almost all the European, Eurasian and Christian Indian population of Cawnpore, himself and several members of his family included.

Hugh Massy Wheeler
Hugh Massy Wheeler by Charles D'Oyly
Born30 June 1789
County Tipperary, Ireland
Died27 June 1857 (aged 67)
Cawnpore, India
Allegiance United Kingdom
East India Company
Service/branchBengal Army
Years of service1803–1857
RankMajor General
Battles/warsFirst Anglo-Afghan War
First Anglo-Sikh War
Second Anglo-Sikh War
Indian Rebellion of 1857
AwardsOrder of the Durrani Empire
KCB

Background and early life edit

Wheeler came from an Anglo-Irish background. His father Hugh Wheeler was a captain in the East India Company Service; his mother Margaret was the daughter of Hugh Massy, 1st Baron Massy. Wheeler was born 30 June 1789 in Clonbeg, County Tipperary. He attended Bath Grammar School and was commissioned a cadet in the Bengal Army in 1803. Arriving in India in 1805, he joined the forces of Lord Lake.[1]

First Anglo-Afghan War edit

In April 1805, aged just fifteen, Wheeler was posted as a lieutenant to the 24th Native Infantry.[2] He was promoted to captain in 1819, transferred to the 48th Native Infantry in 1824, and was further promoted to major in 1829 and lieutenant-colonel in 1835.[3] He formed a relationship with Frances Oliver (née Marsden), an Anglo-Indian woman who was married to another officer. The couple had a number of children together and eventually married when Frances was widowed.

Wheeler led the 48th Native Infantry during the Afghan War in 1838–9, taking part in the capture of Ghazni and Kabul. In December 1840 he returned to India, as part of the escort of the captive ruler of Afghanistan Dost Mohammad Khan who had been replaced by Shah Shujah Durrani. For his part in the campaign Wheeler was twice mentioned in despatches, made a companion of the Order of the Bath, and awarded the order of the Durani Empire.[4]

Amongst the British and Indian forces who remained in Kabul was Thomas Oliver, lieutenant-colonel of the 5th Native Infantry and the husband of Wheeler's partner Frances. He was killed in November 1841 while defending the city from attack by the supporters of Akbar Khan, the son of deposed Dost Mohammad Khan.[5] Also killed in November 1841 was Wheeler's son Frank, who was fighting in Shah Shujah Durrani's Army. A few months later, 6 March 1842, Frances Oliver and Wheeler were married in Agra.[6] On the same day their three youngest children, Patrick, Margaret and Robert, were baptised. Another son, Francis, was born three months later.

Anglo-Sikh Wars edit

 
Indian cavalryman or Sowar c. 1845

During the First Anglo-Sikh War Wheeler commanded an infantry brigade composed of the 50th Foot and the 48th Native Infantry. At the Battle of Mudki in December 1845 he was wounded, but was able to take part in the Battle of Aliwal the following month as second in command to Sir Harry Smith. For his services he was made aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria (an honorary appointment) and was posted colonel to the 48th Native Infantry. He stayed in the Punjab, commanding the forces in Jullunder Doab, the region surrendered by the Sikhs at the Treaty of Lahore.[7]

The Second Anglo-Sikh War in 1848-9 saw Wheeler leading forces involved in the capture of Rangar Nangal Fort, of Kalawala and of the heights of Dallah. He was twice mentioned in despatches and earned the praise of the governor-general: "Brigadier-General Wheeler, C. B., has executed the several duties which have been committed to him with great skill and success, and the Governor-General has been happy in being able to convey to him his thanks thus publicly."[8] Wheeler was amongst those named in a vote of thanks in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords in April 1849,[9] and the following year he was made a KCB.[10]

At the end of the fighting Wheeler resumed his command in Jullunder Doab, being promoted to major-general in June 1854, and made a visit to Ireland on furlough in 1853–1855. Having returned to India, he was appointed in June 1856 to his final post as commander of the Cawnpore Division.[11]

Cawnpore edit

By the time he was posted to Cawnpore, Wheeler was 67 years old and had spent some 50 years in India. He was a small slight man, described by Captain Mowbray Thomson of the 53rd Native Infantry as: "short, of a spare habit, very grey, with a quick and intelligent eye; not imposing in appearance except by virtue of a thoroughly military gait... a first-rate equestrian".[12] He had made India his home, married the daughter of an Indian woman, spoke Hindi fluently and was popular with the sepoys.[13]

The garrison town of Cawnpore, situated on the Grand Trunk Road and the banks of the River Ganges 800 river miles from the seat of government in Calcutta, had been set up in 1770 on the site of a small village called Kanhpur when British East India Company troops had been fighting with the Nawab of Oudh against the Mahrattas. The camp quickly expanded as traders and craftsmen followed the army. In 1801, when the town became British territory, they were joined by the East India Company's civil servants. Wives and families came out from England and Cawnpore acquired all the amenities of an English Town. By the time Wheeler took up his post as commander, Cawnpore was connected to Calcutta by telegraph and steam boats, and there were plans to bring the railway to the town.[14]

North of Cawnpore was the small town of Bithoor, where, at the end of the Third Anglo-Maratha War the captured Peshwa, Baji Rao II had been installed by the British with his entourage and a large pension. After Baji Rao's death in 1851 his adopted son Nana Sahib stayed on in Bithoor. In spite of his disagreement with the British over his entitlement to inherit the pension he was on friendly terms with them and frequently entertained Company officers and civilians.[15]

Rebellion edit

When the Indian Rebellion of 1857 broke out in Meerut, near Delhi, 10 May 1857, Cawnpore was home to the 1st, 53rd and 56th Native Infantry and the 2nd Bengal Cavalry. These regiments, in common with the other regiments of the East India Company Army, consisted of British officers and Indian soldiers (called sepoys in the case of infantrymen and sowars in the case of cavalrymen). The total number of native troops in Cawnpore in 1857 was about 3,000, compared to about 300 British soldiers (the officers of the Native Regiments, a small number of men of the 84th Regiment, some invalids from the 32nd Regiment, and a few Artillerymen and Madras Fusiliers).[16]

As news spread of more disturbances, the atmosphere in Cawnpore became tense, although the hope was still that Wheeler's experience and popularity would be enough to prevent an uprising amongst his troops.[17] Wheeler sent daily telegrams to the governor-general in Calcutta. For example, on 20 May, he wrote: "All well here and excitement less..." and on 24 May "All is quiet here but it is impossible to say how long it will continue to be so". At the same time he gave orders for the entrenchment of a barracks in order, if the need arose, to provide shelter for the European, Eurasian and Indian Christian population of the town.[18]

Wheeler has sometimes been criticised for selecting a position that would prove difficult to defend, rather than the fortified magazine on the Delhi road several miles away from Native lines. Others have sought to justify his decision, suggesting that a withdrawal to the magazine might have provoked an uprising, and that he could not have foreseen the rebellious troops remaining in Cawnpore, or being joined by Nana Sahib.[19] Nana Sahib's biographer concludes:

"It is unfortunate that a General with a brilliant career such as Wheeler's should be remembered mainly for the blunder he committed towards the end of his life. But the truth is that he had taken too many things for granted. For the success of Wheeler's plan it was essential that the sepoys should march to Delhi immediately after the outbreak, and secondly, that Nana Sahib should stand by the English. Both of these were possible, but by no means certain. The military commander who imagines that the enemy will move in a way to suit his own convenience, and hopes for the best, often ends in disaster."[20]

At the beginning of June Wheeler felt confident enough to send two officers and about fifty men from his small British force to help Henry Lawrence at Lucknow.[21] But on the night of 5 June the 2nd Bengal Cavalry and the 1st Native Infantry rose up and left the barracks, although, unlike at other places such as Meerut and Delhi, they did not harm their officers. The following morning, amidst some confusion, they were joined by most of the 53rd and 56th Native Infantry Regiments, although some sepoys joined Wheeler in the entrenchment.[22]

Siege of Cawnpore edit

 
The ruins of Wheeler's entrenchment in 1858.

At first the rebellious soldiers acted as Wheeler had anticipated and set off on the road to Delhi. However the following day, 6 June, they returned to Cawnpore, with Nana Sahib at their head. The role Nana Sahib took in planning the rebellion in Cawnpore has never been established. He would, after the rebellion was over, claim that he was forced to join the rebels.[23] That morning Nana Sahib sent a note to Wheeler announcing his intention to attack the entrenchment, and his forces soon opened fire.

 
Hospital in General Wheeler's entrenchment, Cawnpore, 1858

Wheeler's entrenchment contained two large barracks buildings (one used as a hospital) and various outlying buildings. A trench had hastily been dug and the earth from it formed a wall about four-foot high. Several batteries of guns were set up. In all there were about 1,000 people in the entrenchment, but only about 300 were soldiers, the rest being civilians and, mainly, women and children. The entrenchment was ill-equipped for a long siege. Food was not plentiful, water was a particular problem as the only well was in an exposed position, guns were in short supply, and the hospital building burned down when hit by a missile. Disease and heat, as well as enemy bombardment, took their toll. Amongst the soldiers killed was General Wheeler's son Godfrey. Nevertheless, the entrenchment held out for three weeks and repelled several attempts to seize it.[24] According to Mowbray Thomson, one of the very few British survivors of Cawnpore, the original plans for defending the entrenchment had been made by Wheeler and Captain John Moore, who was in command of the invalids depot of the 32nd Foot.[25] As the siege progressed, it was Captain Moore who took the more active role in defence: "Sir Hugh Wheeler was invariably consulted, but the old General was quite incapacitated for the exposure and fatigue involved in the superintendence of all the posts of defence".[26]

Wheeler managed, via a messenger, to send a request for 200 reinforcements to Lucknow. "The whole Christian population", he wrote, "is with us in a temporary entrenchment and our defence has been noble and wonderful, our loss heavy and cruel. We want aid, aid, aid..." The reply came back from Sir Henry Lawrence that, since the rebels controlled the banks of the Ganges, any attempt to send reinforcements would be futile.[27]

Death at the Satichaura Ghat edit

 
Memorial Well in remembrance of the Cawnpore massacre during the Indian rebellion of 1857

On 25 June, nearly three weeks after the beginning of the siege, Nana Sahib sent a messenger to the entrenchment with the offer of safe passage to Allahabad in return for surrender. According to Mowbray Thomson, Wheeler was against surrender:

"Sir Hugh Wheeler, still hopeful of relief from Calcutta, and suspicious of treachery on the part of the Nana, for a long time most strenuously opposed the idea of making terms; but upon the representation that there were only three days' rations in store, and after the often-reiterated claims of the women and children, and the most deplorable destitution in which we were placed, he at last succumbed to Captain Moore's expostulations, and consented to the preparation of a treaty of capitulation."[28]

At that very moment, Henry Lawrence was penning a letter to Wheeler, urging him to hold out as Henry Havelock was marching from Allahabad to Cawnpore with four hundred British soldiers and three hundred Sikhs, and warning him not to trust Nana Sahib.[29] But Wheeler never received the letter.

During the early morning of 27 June Wheeler and the survivors of the entrenchment were led down to the River Ganges where boats were waiting at the Satichaura Ghat. The British had been allowed to keep their small arms. The banks were lined with guns and armed sepoys and sowars and, while the British were embarking on the boats, firing broke out. Wheeler, his wife and elder daughter were amongst those killed in ensuing massacre. Survivors of the massacre were captured and either killed immediately or, in the case of the women and children, on 16 July as British forces approached Cawnpore. It has not been conclusively established whether the massacre was planned, and whether Nana Sahib was responsible.[30] Four British soldiers managed to reach safety. A similar number of Anglo-Indian women survived; Wheeler's younger daughter is thought to have been among them, carried off by a sowar.

Family edit

Wheeler and his partner Frances Matilda (née Marsden) had nine children, seven of them born before their marriage in 1842 and two afterwards.

  • Godfrey Richard Wheeler (28 November 1826 – June 1857)
  • George Wheeler (31 August 1829 – 1910)
  • Eliza Matilda Wheeler (4 July 1831 – 27 June 1857)
  • Frederick Wheeler (19 January 1833 – 16 July 1906)
  • Patrick Wheeler (2 July 1835 – 17 December 1917)
  • Margaret Frances Wheeler, also known as Ulrica (born 12 August 1837)
  • Robert Wheeler (22 February 1839 – 24 October 1926)
  • Francis John Wheeler (28 May 1842 – 26 May 1888)
  • Charles Eyre Wheeler (1 February 1845 – 22 December 1881)

Wheeler also had a son Francis (or Frank) James Wheeler (1816–1841) from a previous relationship, while Frances Matilda had two children, Osman Marsden (born 1810) and Thomas Oliver (born 1811), before her relationship with Wheeler. In 1810 she had married Thomas Samuel Oliver (1784–1841), who was killed in the First Afghan War in 1841. Frances Matilda was the daughter of Frederick Marsden, who was an officer in the East India Company Army, and an Indian woman. Her uncle was the linguist William Marsden.

All the sons of Hugh and Frances Wheeler except Francis joined the Bengal Army or the British Indian Army, with four of them (George, Frederick, Patrick and Robert) attaining the rank of general. George married his cousin Margaret Alicia Massy; their son George Godfrey Massy Wheeler was awarded the Victoria Cross in 1915. Frances Wheeler, son Godfrey and two daughters were with Wheeler at Cawnpore in May 1857. Godfrey was killed in the entrenchment; Frances and the elder daughter Eliza were killed with Wheeler at the Satichaura Ghat. The memorial tablets in All Souls Church, Kanpur, includes the following inscription: "Sir H. Wheeler, K. C. B.; Lady Wheeler and daughters; Lieutenant G. R. Wheeler, 1st N. I., A.-D.-C; ". It is thought, however, that Wheeler's younger daughter Margaret, also known as Ulrica, survived after having been carried off from the Satichaura Ghat by a sowar. At the time a story circulated that she had killed the sowar and several members of his family and committed suicide, but this was later discredited and she is believed to have married the sowar and lived in Cawnpore for another 50 years.[31]

References edit

  1. ^ Hodson 1947: 437–8
  2. ^ Hodson 1947: 437–8
  3. ^ Hodson 1947: 437–8
  4. ^ Moreman 2004
  5. ^ Hodson 1945: 428–9
  6. ^ Moreman 2004
  7. ^ Moreman 2004
  8. ^ Obituary in The Annual Register or a view of the History and Politics of the year 1857, 360
  9. ^ House of Commons, 24 April 1849; House of Lords, 24 April 1849
  10. ^ Moreman 2004
  11. ^ Hodson 1947: 437–8
  12. ^ Thomson 1995: 141
  13. ^ Yalland 1987: 242; Gupta 1963: 48
  14. ^ Yalland 1987: 19–22
  15. ^ Yalland 1987: 202–9
  16. ^ Gupta 1963: 47–8
  17. ^ Gupta 1963: 49
  18. ^ Gupta 1963: 50, 55
  19. ^ Gupta 1963: 56–7
  20. ^ Gupta 1963: 59
  21. ^ Gupta 1963: 60
  22. ^ Gupta 1963: 60–3
  23. ^ Gupta 1963: 68–71
  24. ^ Gupta 1963: 71–94
  25. ^ Thomson 1995: 64
  26. ^ Thomson 1995: 140
  27. ^ Gupta 1963: 98–9
  28. ^ Thomson 1995: 150
  29. ^ Gupta 1963: 101–2
  30. ^ Gupta 1963: 116–20
  31. ^ Yalland 1987: 324–5

Bibliography edit

  • P.C. Gupta 1963 Nana Sahib and the rising at Cawnpore. Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • V.C.P. Hodson 1945 List of the Officers of the Bengal Army 1758–1834, vol. 3. London: Constable and Co Ltd
  • V.C.P. Hodson 1947 List of the Officers of the Bengal Army 1758–1834, vol. 4. London: Constable and Co Ltd
  • T. R. Moreman 2004 (online edition 2008) Wheeler, Sir Hugh Massy (1789–1857). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • M. Thomson 1995 [1859] The Story of Cawnpore: the Indian Mutiny 1857. Brighton: Tom Donovan
  • Z. Yalland 1987 Traders and Nabobs: the British in Cawnpore 1765–1857. Salisbury: Michael Russell (Publishing) Ltd

hugh, wheeler, east, india, company, officer, hugh, massy, wheeler, june, 1789, june, 1857, irish, born, officer, army, east, india, company, commanded, troops, first, anglo, afghan, first, second, anglo, sikh, wars, 1856, appointed, commander, garrison, cawnp. Sir Hugh Massy Wheeler KCB 30 June 1789 27 June 1857 was an Irish born officer in the army of the East India Company He commanded troops in the First Anglo Afghan War and the First and Second Anglo Sikh Wars and in 1856 was appointed commander of the garrison at Cawnpore now Kanpur He is chiefly remembered for the disastrous end to a long and successful military career when his defence of Wheeler s entrenchment and surrender to Nana Sahib during the Indian Rebellion of 1857 led to the annihilation of almost all the European Eurasian and Christian Indian population of Cawnpore himself and several members of his family included Hugh Massy WheelerHugh Massy Wheeler by Charles D OylyBorn30 June 1789County Tipperary IrelandDied27 June 1857 aged 67 Cawnpore IndiaAllegianceUnited Kingdom East India CompanyService wbr branchBengal ArmyYears of service1803 1857RankMajor GeneralBattles warsFirst Anglo Afghan WarFirst Anglo Sikh WarSecond Anglo Sikh WarIndian Rebellion of 1857AwardsOrder of the Durrani EmpireKCB Contents 1 Background and early life 2 First Anglo Afghan War 3 Anglo Sikh Wars 4 Cawnpore 5 Rebellion 6 Siege of Cawnpore 7 Death at the Satichaura Ghat 8 Family 9 References 10 BibliographyBackground and early life editWheeler came from an Anglo Irish background His father Hugh Wheeler was a captain in the East India Company Service his mother Margaret was the daughter of Hugh Massy 1st Baron Massy Wheeler was born 30 June 1789 in Clonbeg County Tipperary He attended Bath Grammar School and was commissioned a cadet in the Bengal Army in 1803 Arriving in India in 1805 he joined the forces of Lord Lake 1 First Anglo Afghan War editIn April 1805 aged just fifteen Wheeler was posted as a lieutenant to the 24th Native Infantry 2 He was promoted to captain in 1819 transferred to the 48th Native Infantry in 1824 and was further promoted to major in 1829 and lieutenant colonel in 1835 3 He formed a relationship with Frances Oliver nee Marsden an Anglo Indian woman who was married to another officer The couple had a number of children together and eventually married when Frances was widowed Wheeler led the 48th Native Infantry during the Afghan War in 1838 9 taking part in the capture of Ghazni and Kabul In December 1840 he returned to India as part of the escort of the captive ruler of Afghanistan Dost Mohammad Khan who had been replaced by Shah Shujah Durrani For his part in the campaign Wheeler was twice mentioned in despatches made a companion of the Order of the Bath and awarded the order of the Durani Empire 4 Amongst the British and Indian forces who remained in Kabul was Thomas Oliver lieutenant colonel of the 5th Native Infantry and the husband of Wheeler s partner Frances He was killed in November 1841 while defending the city from attack by the supporters of Akbar Khan the son of deposed Dost Mohammad Khan 5 Also killed in November 1841 was Wheeler s son Frank who was fighting in Shah Shujah Durrani s Army A few months later 6 March 1842 Frances Oliver and Wheeler were married in Agra 6 On the same day their three youngest children Patrick Margaret and Robert were baptised Another son Francis was born three months later Anglo Sikh Wars edit nbsp Indian cavalryman or Sowar c 1845During the First Anglo Sikh War Wheeler commanded an infantry brigade composed of the 50th Foot and the 48th Native Infantry At the Battle of Mudki in December 1845 he was wounded but was able to take part in the Battle of Aliwal the following month as second in command to Sir Harry Smith For his services he was made aide de camp to Queen Victoria an honorary appointment and was posted colonel to the 48th Native Infantry He stayed in the Punjab commanding the forces in Jullunder Doab the region surrendered by the Sikhs at the Treaty of Lahore 7 The Second Anglo Sikh War in 1848 9 saw Wheeler leading forces involved in the capture of Rangar Nangal Fort of Kalawala and of the heights of Dallah He was twice mentioned in despatches and earned the praise of the governor general Brigadier General Wheeler C B has executed the several duties which have been committed to him with great skill and success and the Governor General has been happy in being able to convey to him his thanks thus publicly 8 Wheeler was amongst those named in a vote of thanks in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords in April 1849 9 and the following year he was made a KCB 10 At the end of the fighting Wheeler resumed his command in Jullunder Doab being promoted to major general in June 1854 and made a visit to Ireland on furlough in 1853 1855 Having returned to India he was appointed in June 1856 to his final post as commander of the Cawnpore Division 11 Cawnpore editBy the time he was posted to Cawnpore Wheeler was 67 years old and had spent some 50 years in India He was a small slight man described by Captain Mowbray Thomson of the 53rd Native Infantry as short of a spare habit very grey with a quick and intelligent eye not imposing in appearance except by virtue of a thoroughly military gait a first rate equestrian 12 He had made India his home married the daughter of an Indian woman spoke Hindi fluently and was popular with the sepoys 13 The garrison town of Cawnpore situated on the Grand Trunk Road and the banks of the River Ganges 800 river miles from the seat of government in Calcutta had been set up in 1770 on the site of a small village called Kanhpur when British East India Company troops had been fighting with the Nawab of Oudh against the Mahrattas The camp quickly expanded as traders and craftsmen followed the army In 1801 when the town became British territory they were joined by the East India Company s civil servants Wives and families came out from England and Cawnpore acquired all the amenities of an English Town By the time Wheeler took up his post as commander Cawnpore was connected to Calcutta by telegraph and steam boats and there were plans to bring the railway to the town 14 North of Cawnpore was the small town of Bithoor where at the end of the Third Anglo Maratha War the captured Peshwa Baji Rao II had been installed by the British with his entourage and a large pension After Baji Rao s death in 1851 his adopted son Nana Sahib stayed on in Bithoor In spite of his disagreement with the British over his entitlement to inherit the pension he was on friendly terms with them and frequently entertained Company officers and civilians 15 Rebellion editWhen the Indian Rebellion of 1857 broke out in Meerut near Delhi 10 May 1857 Cawnpore was home to the 1st 53rd and 56th Native Infantry and the 2nd Bengal Cavalry These regiments in common with the other regiments of the East India Company Army consisted of British officers and Indian soldiers called sepoys in the case of infantrymen and sowars in the case of cavalrymen The total number of native troops in Cawnpore in 1857 was about 3 000 compared to about 300 British soldiers the officers of the Native Regiments a small number of men of the 84th Regiment some invalids from the 32nd Regiment and a few Artillerymen and Madras Fusiliers 16 As news spread of more disturbances the atmosphere in Cawnpore became tense although the hope was still that Wheeler s experience and popularity would be enough to prevent an uprising amongst his troops 17 Wheeler sent daily telegrams to the governor general in Calcutta For example on 20 May he wrote All well here and excitement less and on 24 May All is quiet here but it is impossible to say how long it will continue to be so At the same time he gave orders for the entrenchment of a barracks in order if the need arose to provide shelter for the European Eurasian and Indian Christian population of the town 18 Wheeler has sometimes been criticised for selecting a position that would prove difficult to defend rather than the fortified magazine on the Delhi road several miles away from Native lines Others have sought to justify his decision suggesting that a withdrawal to the magazine might have provoked an uprising and that he could not have foreseen the rebellious troops remaining in Cawnpore or being joined by Nana Sahib 19 Nana Sahib s biographer concludes It is unfortunate that a General with a brilliant career such as Wheeler s should be remembered mainly for the blunder he committed towards the end of his life But the truth is that he had taken too many things for granted For the success of Wheeler s plan it was essential that the sepoys should march to Delhi immediately after the outbreak and secondly that Nana Sahib should stand by the English Both of these were possible but by no means certain The military commander who imagines that the enemy will move in a way to suit his own convenience and hopes for the best often ends in disaster 20 At the beginning of June Wheeler felt confident enough to send two officers and about fifty men from his small British force to help Henry Lawrence at Lucknow 21 But on the night of 5 June the 2nd Bengal Cavalry and the 1st Native Infantry rose up and left the barracks although unlike at other places such as Meerut and Delhi they did not harm their officers The following morning amidst some confusion they were joined by most of the 53rd and 56th Native Infantry Regiments although some sepoys joined Wheeler in the entrenchment 22 Siege of Cawnpore editMain article Siege of Cawnpore nbsp The ruins of Wheeler s entrenchment in 1858 At first the rebellious soldiers acted as Wheeler had anticipated and set off on the road to Delhi However the following day 6 June they returned to Cawnpore with Nana Sahib at their head The role Nana Sahib took in planning the rebellion in Cawnpore has never been established He would after the rebellion was over claim that he was forced to join the rebels 23 That morning Nana Sahib sent a note to Wheeler announcing his intention to attack the entrenchment and his forces soon opened fire nbsp Hospital in General Wheeler s entrenchment Cawnpore 1858Wheeler s entrenchment contained two large barracks buildings one used as a hospital and various outlying buildings A trench had hastily been dug and the earth from it formed a wall about four foot high Several batteries of guns were set up In all there were about 1 000 people in the entrenchment but only about 300 were soldiers the rest being civilians and mainly women and children The entrenchment was ill equipped for a long siege Food was not plentiful water was a particular problem as the only well was in an exposed position guns were in short supply and the hospital building burned down when hit by a missile Disease and heat as well as enemy bombardment took their toll Amongst the soldiers killed was General Wheeler s son Godfrey Nevertheless the entrenchment held out for three weeks and repelled several attempts to seize it 24 According to Mowbray Thomson one of the very few British survivors of Cawnpore the original plans for defending the entrenchment had been made by Wheeler and Captain John Moore who was in command of the invalids depot of the 32nd Foot 25 As the siege progressed it was Captain Moore who took the more active role in defence Sir Hugh Wheeler was invariably consulted but the old General was quite incapacitated for the exposure and fatigue involved in the superintendence of all the posts of defence 26 Wheeler managed via a messenger to send a request for 200 reinforcements to Lucknow The whole Christian population he wrote is with us in a temporary entrenchment and our defence has been noble and wonderful our loss heavy and cruel We want aid aid aid The reply came back from Sir Henry Lawrence that since the rebels controlled the banks of the Ganges any attempt to send reinforcements would be futile 27 Death at the Satichaura Ghat edit nbsp Memorial Well in remembrance of the Cawnpore massacre during the Indian rebellion of 1857On 25 June nearly three weeks after the beginning of the siege Nana Sahib sent a messenger to the entrenchment with the offer of safe passage to Allahabad in return for surrender According to Mowbray Thomson Wheeler was against surrender Sir Hugh Wheeler still hopeful of relief from Calcutta and suspicious of treachery on the part of the Nana for a long time most strenuously opposed the idea of making terms but upon the representation that there were only three days rations in store and after the often reiterated claims of the women and children and the most deplorable destitution in which we were placed he at last succumbed to Captain Moore s expostulations and consented to the preparation of a treaty of capitulation 28 At that very moment Henry Lawrence was penning a letter to Wheeler urging him to hold out as Henry Havelock was marching from Allahabad to Cawnpore with four hundred British soldiers and three hundred Sikhs and warning him not to trust Nana Sahib 29 But Wheeler never received the letter During the early morning of 27 June Wheeler and the survivors of the entrenchment were led down to the River Ganges where boats were waiting at the Satichaura Ghat The British had been allowed to keep their small arms The banks were lined with guns and armed sepoys and sowars and while the British were embarking on the boats firing broke out Wheeler his wife and elder daughter were amongst those killed in ensuing massacre Survivors of the massacre were captured and either killed immediately or in the case of the women and children on 16 July as British forces approached Cawnpore It has not been conclusively established whether the massacre was planned and whether Nana Sahib was responsible 30 Four British soldiers managed to reach safety A similar number of Anglo Indian women survived Wheeler s younger daughter is thought to have been among them carried off by a sowar Family editWheeler and his partner Frances Matilda nee Marsden had nine children seven of them born before their marriage in 1842 and two afterwards Godfrey Richard Wheeler 28 November 1826 June 1857 George Wheeler 31 August 1829 1910 Eliza Matilda Wheeler 4 July 1831 27 June 1857 Frederick Wheeler 19 January 1833 16 July 1906 Patrick Wheeler 2 July 1835 17 December 1917 Margaret Frances Wheeler also known as Ulrica born 12 August 1837 Robert Wheeler 22 February 1839 24 October 1926 Francis John Wheeler 28 May 1842 26 May 1888 Charles Eyre Wheeler 1 February 1845 22 December 1881 Wheeler also had a son Francis or Frank James Wheeler 1816 1841 from a previous relationship while Frances Matilda had two children Osman Marsden born 1810 and Thomas Oliver born 1811 before her relationship with Wheeler In 1810 she had married Thomas Samuel Oliver 1784 1841 who was killed in the First Afghan War in 1841 Frances Matilda was the daughter of Frederick Marsden who was an officer in the East India Company Army and an Indian woman Her uncle was the linguist William Marsden All the sons of Hugh and Frances Wheeler except Francis joined the Bengal Army or the British Indian Army with four of them George Frederick Patrick and Robert attaining the rank of general George married his cousin Margaret Alicia Massy their son George Godfrey Massy Wheeler was awarded the Victoria Cross in 1915 Frances Wheeler son Godfrey and two daughters were with Wheeler at Cawnpore in May 1857 Godfrey was killed in the entrenchment Frances and the elder daughter Eliza were killed with Wheeler at the Satichaura Ghat The memorial tablets in All Souls Church Kanpur includes the following inscription Sir H Wheeler K C B Lady Wheeler and daughters Lieutenant G R Wheeler 1st N I A D C It is thought however that Wheeler s younger daughter Margaret also known as Ulrica survived after having been carried off from the Satichaura Ghat by a sowar At the time a story circulated that she had killed the sowar and several members of his family and committed suicide but this was later discredited and she is believed to have married the sowar and lived in Cawnpore for another 50 years 31 References edit Hodson 1947 437 8 Hodson 1947 437 8 Hodson 1947 437 8 Moreman 2004 Hodson 1945 428 9 Moreman 2004 Moreman 2004 Obituary in The Annual Register or a view of the History and Politics of the year 1857 360 House of Commons 24 April 1849 House of Lords 24 April 1849 Moreman 2004 Hodson 1947 437 8 Thomson 1995 141 Yalland 1987 242 Gupta 1963 48 Yalland 1987 19 22 Yalland 1987 202 9 Gupta 1963 47 8 Gupta 1963 49 Gupta 1963 50 55 Gupta 1963 56 7 Gupta 1963 59 Gupta 1963 60 Gupta 1963 60 3 Gupta 1963 68 71 Gupta 1963 71 94 Thomson 1995 64 Thomson 1995 140 Gupta 1963 98 9 Thomson 1995 150 Gupta 1963 101 2 Gupta 1963 116 20 Yalland 1987 324 5Bibliography editP C Gupta 1963 Nana Sahib and the rising at Cawnpore Oxford Clarendon Press V C P Hodson 1945 List of the Officers of the Bengal Army 1758 1834 vol 3 London Constable and Co Ltd V C P Hodson 1947 List of the Officers of the Bengal Army 1758 1834 vol 4 London Constable and Co Ltd T R Moreman 2004 online edition 2008 Wheeler Sir Hugh Massy 1789 1857 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press M Thomson 1995 1859 The Story of Cawnpore the Indian Mutiny 1857 Brighton Tom Donovan Z Yalland 1987 Traders and Nabobs the British in Cawnpore 1765 1857 Salisbury Michael Russell Publishing Ltd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugh Wheeler East India Company officer amp oldid 1176777033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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