fbpx
Wikipedia

John Le Marchant (British Army officer, born 1766)

Major-General John Gaspard Le Marchant (9 February 1766 – 22 July 1812) was one of the finest British cavalry commanders of his generation; he was also an intellectual soldier who had a great influence on the efficient functioning of the army he served in.[1] He was instrumental in the process which produced the first British military academy and staff college; and he saw active service in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Peninsular War until his death at the Battle of Salamanca.

John Le Marchant
Birth nameJohn Gaspard Le Marchant
Born9 February 1766
Amiens, France
Died22 July 1812 (1812-07-23) (aged 46)
Salamanca, Spain
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
Years of service1783–1812
RankMajor General
Commands held2nd Dragoon Guards
Battles/warsFrench Revolutionary Wars
Flanders Campaign
Napoleonic Wars
Villagarcia
Salamanca Campaign

Background and early life edit

Le Marchant was born in Amiens to a French mother and Guernsey father, who both came from old and prominent families. The Le Marchants were an extremely distinguished family in Guernsey, formerly part of the Duchy of Normandy, with many of his ancestors holding the positions of Bailiff or Lieutenant-Bailiff of Guernsey. His father, John Le Marchant, was a Cornet in the Royal Dragoons who attended Pembroke College, Oxford, and served with distinction under the Marquess of Granby during the last three campaigns of the Seven Years' War.[2][3][4] His mother, Marie Catherine, was the eldest daughter of Count Hirzel de Saint-Gratien and a descendant of the celebrated French Protestant leader Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, from whom Le Marchant derived his middle name.[5]

Le Marchant was born at his maternal grandfather's house in Amiens.[6] He had a younger brother, James.[2] After leaving Dr Morgan's school in Bath characterised as "one of the two greatest dunces that had ever been there" (the other being Sir Sidney Smith), Le Marchant reformed his character and was commissioned in a regiment of the Wiltshire Militia.[5] He later, in 1783, transferred to the regular army and obtained an ensigncy in the 1st Regiment of Foot (The Royal Regiment or Royal Scots). A few years of duty in Ireland and Gibraltar followed and he then made his move into the cavalry, being commissioned into the 6th Dragoons (Iniskillings). In the autumn of 1789 Le Marchant was promoted to lieutenant in the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays), and in 1791 he was promoted to captain and given the command of a troop.[7]

Campaign experience and swordsmanship manual edit

 
An officer's 1796 Pattern Light Cavalry fighting sabre designed by Le Marchant. Note the characteristic increase in blade width near to the point.

Le Marchant served as a brigade major during the disastrous Low Countries campaign of 1793–95, and for a time had command of his regiment as the most senior officer present.[8] His practical experience in the field brought to Le Marchant's attention the many deficiencies of equipment and training the British cavalry suffered from. He was impressed by the Austrian cavalry who were operating alongside the British, and was particularly struck by the disparaging remark of an Austrian officer who thought that the British swordsmanship was "most entertaining" but reminded him of "someone chopping wood".[9]

On his return to Britain he exerted himself to improve the equipment and combat training of the British cavalry. In 1795-6 he designed, in collaboration with the Birmingham sword cutler Henry Osborn, a new cavalry sabre, which was adopted for the light cavalry.[10] In 1796 his treatise of instruction in mounted swordsmanship was adopted by the army as part of its official regulations, The Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise of the Cavalry.[11] The sword exercise became quite celebrated, and the elderly king, George III, became familiar with it, and country lanes abounded with small boys practising the cuts with sticks.[12] Le Marchant toured Britain teaching cadres, drawn from both regular and yeomanry cavalry units, his system of swordsmanship; his methods were practical and painstaking and he was himself a superb mounted swordsman. Le Marchant was also to have gone to Ireland to teach his sword exercise there but was prevented from doing so, so his brother-in-law, Lt. Peter Carey (16th Light Dragoons), undertook this duty in his stead.[13] Le Marchant attained the rank of lieutenant-colonel in 1797. His promotion was at the direct behest of the King (Le Marchant lacked the family influence and wealth which was normally necessary for advances in rank), with whom Le Marchant had developed a friendly relationship. King George is reported as saying to Le Marchant "I dare say many persons will claim the merit of your promotion; now I wish you to know that whatever merit there is in it rests entirely between you and me, for no one else is concerned in it".(Le Marchant 1841, pp. 48–49).

After his promotion he served as second-in-command of the 7th Light Dragoons which Henry, Lord Paget commanded. Paget, as the Earl of Uxbridge, was later to command the Anglo-allied cavalry at the Battle of Waterloo. Though a good relationship existed between himself and Paget, Le Marchant found it difficult to keep company with the immensely wealthy and fashionable peer. He therefore transferred to his old regiment, the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays), becoming the regimental commander.[14]

Founder of the first British military college edit

 
Royal Military College, Great Marlow, 1810

With the exception of the specialist instruction school for artillery and engineer officers at Woolwich, no institution for the education of military officers existed in Britain. In 1801, after overcoming considerable opposition on the grounds of cost, Le Marchant's scheme for establishing the High Wycombe and Great Marlow schools for the military instruction of officers was sanctioned by Parliament, and a grant of £30,000 was voted for the foundation of a Royal Military College, the two original departments being afterwards combined and removed to a purpose-built Royal Military College at Sandhurst. The military schools had two functions; first was in the instruction of serving officers in the functions of the efficient staff-officer, and second was the schooling of youngsters before they gained an officer's commission. Le Marchant was the first lieutenant-governor of the college, and during the nine years that he held this appointment he trained many officers who served with distinction under Wellington in the Peninsular War. It is notable that a number of senior serving officers, such as General Robert Ballard Long, attended courses at the college in order to improve their military knowledge. This college was one of the forerunners of the current Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, created in 1947. In 1804 Le Marchant received the personal thanks of King George III, who said "The country is greatly indebted to you".[15]

Peninsular War cavalry general edit

 
Battle of Salamanca. In the right foreground British heavy dragoons of Le Marchant's brigade are depicted charging

Having been promoted to major-general Le Marchant was given the command of a brigade of heavy cavalry in 1811, and greatly distinguished himself in several actions. In the cavalry clash at Villagarcia, 11 April 1812, Le Marchant led the 5th Dragoon Guards in a perfectly timed flank charge, in echelon of squadrons, which defeated two strong columns of French cavalry under General Charles Lallemand. The French had been attacking British light cavalry under Sir Stapleton Cotton, who were being forced to give ground.[16]

He gained his greatest success as a cavalry commander at the Battle of Salamanca on 22 July 1812, where he was killed. During the development of the Anglo-Portuguese attack on the over-extended French left wing Wellington is reported as saying to Le Marchant that he must take the first favourable opportunity to engage the enemy's infantry, "You must then charge at all hazards" was his final instruction. Following up the attack of the 5th Infantry Division Le Marchant led the 3rd and 4th Dragoons and the 5th Dragoon Guards in what was probably the most destructive charge made by a single brigade of cavalry in the whole Napoleonic period. The left wing of the French army were on the point of being defeated by the 3rd and 5th divisions of Anglo-Portuguese infantry when Le Marchant's dragoons charged in and destroyed battalion after battalion. Many of the French infantrymen sought the protection of the British infantry to escape the sabres of the dragoons. Le Marchant, knowing he had achieved a magnificent success, was leading a squadron against the last of the formed French infantry when he was shot and his spine broken.[17]

Wellington's despatch after the battle stated: "the cavalry under Lieutenant-General Sir Stapleton Cotton made a most gallant and successful charge against a body of the enemy's infantry, which they overthrew and cut to pieces. In this charge Major-General Le Marchant was killed at the head of his brigade, and I have to lament the loss of a most able officer".[18]

Legacy edit

 
General John Le Marchant (1766-1812)

Le Marchant was responsible for a considerable improvement in the practical abilities of the British army on campaign. His sword exercise undoubtedly augmented the combat capabilities of the British cavalry. The military college produced many able staff officers, collectively known as "Wycombites," who went on to serve in important staff positions in the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign. He also introduced the idea that officers should be formally trained in their duties rather than having to pick up the rudiments of their profession on active service.

Le Marchant was liked and admired by many in his profession, soldier and officer alike. The Duke of York, the commander-in-chief of the British Army, is said to have wept when he was told of Le Marchant's death.[19]

He wrote several treatises on cavalry tactics and other military subjects, most published semi-anonymously (the ones adopted as army regulations were not officially ascribed to a single author). These included Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise and The Duties of Officers on the Outpost.[20] His treatise An Outline of the General Staff of the Army was presented to the Duke of York in 1802. Its recommendations were not taken up in their entirety, but several of his suggestions were, such as the setting up of a "Staff Corps"; such a corps played an invaluable role in the functioning of the British Army during the Peninsular War.[21]

John Le Marchant was buried on the field of battle. A monument to his memory was erected in St Paul's Cathedral, London[22][23] in 1816 to the design of James Smith. Smith died during the process and the carving was completed by his assistants.[24]

Fort Le Marchant on the north coast of Guernsey is named for him.

Family edit

He married, on 29 October 1789, Mary daughter of John Carey of Guernsey.[25] All accounts suggest that Le Marchant was a devoted husband and father. Mary Le Marchant pre-deceased her husband, dying in childbirth in 1811. Le Marchant had four sons and six daughters. His eldest son, Carey, who was prominent at the storming of San Sebastián, died of a wound at Saint-Jean-de-Luz during the latter part of the Peninsular War.[26] Two of his other sons, Sir Denis Le Marchant, 1st Baronet, and John Le Marchant, gained public distinction. The children were left orphans at the death of their father and a yearly public pension of £1200 was awarded to them. The younger children were placed in the care of an aunt.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Fletcher, pp. 3–4.
  2. ^ a b Berry, William (1815). The History of the Island of Guernsey: Part of the Ancient Duchy of Normandy, from the Remotest Period of Antiquity to the Year 1814. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. pp. 339–340.
  3. ^ Le Marchant 1841, pp. 4–5.
  4. ^ "Guernsey Book-Plates: The Le Marchant Plates". Journal of the Ex Libris Society. London: A. & C. Black: 163. 1899.
  5. ^ a b Thoumine 1968, p. 3.
  6. ^ Sweetman 2004.
  7. ^ "No. 13372". The London Gazette. 20 December 1791. p. 705.
  8. ^ Thoumine 1968, pp. 11–38.
  9. ^ Thoumine, p. 41.
  10. ^ Le Marchant 1841, pp. 50–51.
  11. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 48.
  12. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 49.
  13. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 54.
  14. ^ Thoumine 1968, pp. 39–60.
  15. ^ Thoumine 1968, pp. 61–79.
  16. ^ Fletcher 1999, pp. 159–164.
  17. ^ Fletcher 1999, pp. 185–188.
  18. ^ Cole 1870, p. 289.
  19. ^ The Duke of York may have felt a certain amount of guilt as it was he who insisted that as a major-general Le Marchant was too senior to continue as lieutenant-governor of the Military College. York was also instrumental in having Le Marchant appointed to the command of a cavalry brigade on active service. (Le Marchant 1841, p. 307)
  20. ^ Thoumine, pp. 54–55.
  21. ^ Le Marchant, Denis, pp. 123–125.
  22. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 307.
  23. ^ "Memorials of St Paul's Cathedral" Sinclair, W. pp. 457: London; Chapman & Hall, Ltd; 1909
  24. ^ Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1859 by Rupert Gunnis
  25. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 13.
  26. ^ Le Marchant 1841, p. 313.

References edit

  • Cole, J. W. (1870). Memoirs of British Generals Distinguished During the Peninsular War. Vol. II. London: R. Bentley. p. 289.
  • Fletcher, I. (1999). Galloping at Everything: The British Cavalry in the Peninsula and at Waterloo 1808-15. Spellmount, Staplehurst. ISBN 1-86227-016-3.
  • Le Marchant, D. (1841). Memoirs of the Late Major General Le Marchant. London: Printed by Samuel Bentley.
  • Sweetman, John (2004). "Le Marchant, John Gaspard (1766–1812)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16423. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Chichester, Henry Manners (1893). "Le Marchant, John Gaspard (1766-1812)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 33. pp. 23–25.
  • Thoumine, R. H. (1968). Scientific Soldier, A Life of General Le Marchant, 1766–1812. Oxford University Press.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Le Marchant, John Gaspard" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Further reading edit

  • Le Marchant, J.G. (1 December 1796). Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise of the Cavalry. Adjutant Generals Office - published anonymously, though the monogram 'JGLM' appears on the final page of some copies.
  • S&P staff. . swordsandpistols.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 October 2009. Images of the light cavalry sabre designed by Le Marchant

john, marchant, british, army, officer, born, 1766, this, article, about, british, army, cavalry, general, british, army, infantry, general, governor, newfoundland, john, marchant, british, army, officer, born, 1803, major, general, john, gaspard, marchant, fe. This article is about the British Army cavalry general For his son the British Army infantry general and Governor of Newfoundland see John Le Marchant British Army officer born 1803 Major General John Gaspard Le Marchant 9 February 1766 22 July 1812 was one of the finest British cavalry commanders of his generation he was also an intellectual soldier who had a great influence on the efficient functioning of the army he served in 1 He was instrumental in the process which produced the first British military academy and staff college and he saw active service in the French Revolutionary Wars and the Peninsular War until his death at the Battle of Salamanca John Le MarchantBirth nameJohn Gaspard Le MarchantBorn9 February 1766Amiens FranceDied22 July 1812 1812 07 23 aged 46 Salamanca SpainAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish ArmyYears of service1783 1812RankMajor GeneralCommands held2nd Dragoon GuardsBattles warsFrench Revolutionary Wars Flanders Campaign Napoleonic Wars Villagarcia Salamanca Campaign Contents 1 Background and early life 2 Campaign experience and swordsmanship manual 3 Founder of the first British military college 4 Peninsular War cavalry general 5 Legacy 6 Family 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Further readingBackground and early life editLe Marchant was born in Amiens to a French mother and Guernsey father who both came from old and prominent families The Le Marchants were an extremely distinguished family in Guernsey formerly part of the Duchy of Normandy with many of his ancestors holding the positions of Bailiff or Lieutenant Bailiff of Guernsey His father John Le Marchant was a Cornet in the Royal Dragoons who attended Pembroke College Oxford and served with distinction under the Marquess of Granby during the last three campaigns of the Seven Years War 2 3 4 His mother Marie Catherine was the eldest daughter of Count Hirzel de Saint Gratien and a descendant of the celebrated French Protestant leader Admiral Gaspard de Coligny from whom Le Marchant derived his middle name 5 Le Marchant was born at his maternal grandfather s house in Amiens 6 He had a younger brother James 2 After leaving Dr Morgan s school in Bath characterised as one of the two greatest dunces that had ever been there the other being Sir Sidney Smith Le Marchant reformed his character and was commissioned in a regiment of the Wiltshire Militia 5 He later in 1783 transferred to the regular army and obtained an ensigncy in the 1st Regiment of Foot The Royal Regiment or Royal Scots A few years of duty in Ireland and Gibraltar followed and he then made his move into the cavalry being commissioned into the 6th Dragoons Iniskillings In the autumn of 1789 Le Marchant was promoted to lieutenant in the 2nd Dragoon Guards Queen s Bays and in 1791 he was promoted to captain and given the command of a troop 7 Campaign experience and swordsmanship manual edit nbsp An officer s 1796 Pattern Light Cavalry fighting sabre designed by Le Marchant Note the characteristic increase in blade width near to the point Le Marchant served as a brigade major during the disastrous Low Countries campaign of 1793 95 and for a time had command of his regiment as the most senior officer present 8 His practical experience in the field brought to Le Marchant s attention the many deficiencies of equipment and training the British cavalry suffered from He was impressed by the Austrian cavalry who were operating alongside the British and was particularly struck by the disparaging remark of an Austrian officer who thought that the British swordsmanship was most entertaining but reminded him of someone chopping wood 9 On his return to Britain he exerted himself to improve the equipment and combat training of the British cavalry In 1795 6 he designed in collaboration with the Birmingham sword cutler Henry Osborn a new cavalry sabre which was adopted for the light cavalry 10 In 1796 his treatise of instruction in mounted swordsmanship was adopted by the army as part of its official regulations The Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise of the Cavalry 11 The sword exercise became quite celebrated and the elderly king George III became familiar with it and country lanes abounded with small boys practising the cuts with sticks 12 Le Marchant toured Britain teaching cadres drawn from both regular and yeomanry cavalry units his system of swordsmanship his methods were practical and painstaking and he was himself a superb mounted swordsman Le Marchant was also to have gone to Ireland to teach his sword exercise there but was prevented from doing so so his brother in law Lt Peter Carey 16th Light Dragoons undertook this duty in his stead 13 Le Marchant attained the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1797 His promotion was at the direct behest of the King Le Marchant lacked the family influence and wealth which was normally necessary for advances in rank with whom Le Marchant had developed a friendly relationship King George is reported as saying to Le Marchant I dare say many persons will claim the merit of your promotion now I wish you to know that whatever merit there is in it rests entirely between you and me for no one else is concerned in it Le Marchant 1841 pp 48 49 After his promotion he served as second in command of the 7th Light Dragoons which Henry Lord Paget commanded Paget as the Earl of Uxbridge was later to command the Anglo allied cavalry at the Battle of Waterloo Though a good relationship existed between himself and Paget Le Marchant found it difficult to keep company with the immensely wealthy and fashionable peer He therefore transferred to his old regiment the 2nd Dragoon Guards Queen s Bays becoming the regimental commander 14 Founder of the first British military college edit nbsp Royal Military College Great Marlow 1810 With the exception of the specialist instruction school for artillery and engineer officers at Woolwich no institution for the education of military officers existed in Britain In 1801 after overcoming considerable opposition on the grounds of cost Le Marchant s scheme for establishing the High Wycombe and Great Marlow schools for the military instruction of officers was sanctioned by Parliament and a grant of 30 000 was voted for the foundation of a Royal Military College the two original departments being afterwards combined and removed to a purpose built Royal Military College at Sandhurst The military schools had two functions first was in the instruction of serving officers in the functions of the efficient staff officer and second was the schooling of youngsters before they gained an officer s commission Le Marchant was the first lieutenant governor of the college and during the nine years that he held this appointment he trained many officers who served with distinction under Wellington in the Peninsular War It is notable that a number of senior serving officers such as General Robert Ballard Long attended courses at the college in order to improve their military knowledge This college was one of the forerunners of the current Royal Military Academy Sandhurst created in 1947 In 1804 Le Marchant received the personal thanks of King George III who said The country is greatly indebted to you 15 Peninsular War cavalry general edit nbsp Battle of Salamanca In the right foreground British heavy dragoons of Le Marchant s brigade are depicted charging Having been promoted to major general Le Marchant was given the command of a brigade of heavy cavalry in 1811 and greatly distinguished himself in several actions In the cavalry clash at Villagarcia 11 April 1812 Le Marchant led the 5th Dragoon Guards in a perfectly timed flank charge in echelon of squadrons which defeated two strong columns of French cavalry under General Charles Lallemand The French had been attacking British light cavalry under Sir Stapleton Cotton who were being forced to give ground 16 He gained his greatest success as a cavalry commander at the Battle of Salamanca on 22 July 1812 where he was killed During the development of the Anglo Portuguese attack on the over extended French left wing Wellington is reported as saying to Le Marchant that he must take the first favourable opportunity to engage the enemy s infantry You must then charge at all hazards was his final instruction Following up the attack of the 5th Infantry Division Le Marchant led the 3rd and 4th Dragoons and the 5th Dragoon Guards in what was probably the most destructive charge made by a single brigade of cavalry in the whole Napoleonic period The left wing of the French army were on the point of being defeated by the 3rd and 5th divisions of Anglo Portuguese infantry when Le Marchant s dragoons charged in and destroyed battalion after battalion Many of the French infantrymen sought the protection of the British infantry to escape the sabres of the dragoons Le Marchant knowing he had achieved a magnificent success was leading a squadron against the last of the formed French infantry when he was shot and his spine broken 17 Wellington s despatch after the battle stated the cavalry under Lieutenant General Sir Stapleton Cotton made a most gallant and successful charge against a body of the enemy s infantry which they overthrew and cut to pieces In this charge Major General Le Marchant was killed at the head of his brigade and I have to lament the loss of a most able officer 18 Legacy edit nbsp General John Le Marchant 1766 1812 Le Marchant was responsible for a considerable improvement in the practical abilities of the British army on campaign His sword exercise undoubtedly augmented the combat capabilities of the British cavalry The military college produced many able staff officers collectively known as Wycombites who went on to serve in important staff positions in the Peninsular War and the Waterloo Campaign He also introduced the idea that officers should be formally trained in their duties rather than having to pick up the rudiments of their profession on active service Le Marchant was liked and admired by many in his profession soldier and officer alike The Duke of York the commander in chief of the British Army is said to have wept when he was told of Le Marchant s death 19 He wrote several treatises on cavalry tactics and other military subjects most published semi anonymously the ones adopted as army regulations were not officially ascribed to a single author These included Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise and The Duties of Officers on the Outpost 20 His treatise An Outline of the General Staff of the Army was presented to the Duke of York in 1802 Its recommendations were not taken up in their entirety but several of his suggestions were such as the setting up of a Staff Corps such a corps played an invaluable role in the functioning of the British Army during the Peninsular War 21 John Le Marchant was buried on the field of battle A monument to his memory was erected in St Paul s Cathedral London 22 23 in 1816 to the design of James Smith Smith died during the process and the carving was completed by his assistants 24 Fort Le Marchant on the north coast of Guernsey is named for him Family editHe married on 29 October 1789 Mary daughter of John Carey of Guernsey 25 All accounts suggest that Le Marchant was a devoted husband and father Mary Le Marchant pre deceased her husband dying in childbirth in 1811 Le Marchant had four sons and six daughters His eldest son Carey who was prominent at the storming of San Sebastian died of a wound at Saint Jean de Luz during the latter part of the Peninsular War 26 Two of his other sons Sir Denis Le Marchant 1st Baronet and John Le Marchant gained public distinction The children were left orphans at the death of their father and a yearly public pension of 1200 was awarded to them The younger children were placed in the care of an aunt See also editLe Marchant BaronetsFootnotes edit Fletcher pp 3 4 a b Berry William 1815 The History of the Island of Guernsey Part of the Ancient Duchy of Normandy from the Remotest Period of Antiquity to the Year 1814 Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown pp 339 340 Le Marchant 1841 pp 4 5 Guernsey Book Plates The Le Marchant Plates Journal of the Ex Libris Society London A amp C Black 163 1899 a b Thoumine 1968 p 3 Sweetman 2004 No 13372 The London Gazette 20 December 1791 p 705 Thoumine 1968 pp 11 38 Thoumine p 41 Le Marchant 1841 pp 50 51 Le Marchant 1841 p 48 Le Marchant 1841 p 49 Le Marchant 1841 p 54 Thoumine 1968 pp 39 60 Thoumine 1968 pp 61 79 Fletcher 1999 pp 159 164 Fletcher 1999 pp 185 188 Cole 1870 p 289 The Duke of York may have felt a certain amount of guilt as it was he who insisted that as a major general Le Marchant was too senior to continue as lieutenant governor of the Military College York was also instrumental in having Le Marchant appointed to the command of a cavalry brigade on active service Le Marchant 1841 p 307 Thoumine pp 54 55 Le Marchant Denis pp 123 125 Le Marchant 1841 p 307 Memorials of St Paul s Cathedral Sinclair W pp 457 London Chapman amp Hall Ltd 1909 Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660 1859 by Rupert Gunnis Le Marchant 1841 p 13 Le Marchant 1841 p 313 References editCole J W 1870 Memoirs of British Generals Distinguished During the Peninsular War Vol II London R Bentley p 289 Fletcher I 1999 Galloping at Everything The British Cavalry in the Peninsula and at Waterloo 1808 15 Spellmount Staplehurst ISBN 1 86227 016 3 Le Marchant D 1841 Memoirs of the Late Major General Le Marchant London Printed by Samuel Bentley Sweetman John 2004 Le Marchant John Gaspard 1766 1812 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16423 Subscription or UK public library membership required Chichester Henry Manners 1893 Le Marchant John Gaspard 1766 1812 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 33 pp 23 25 Thoumine R H 1968 Scientific Soldier A Life of General Le Marchant 1766 1812 Oxford University Press Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Le Marchant John Gaspard Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press Further reading editLe Marchant J G 1 December 1796 Rules and Regulations of the Sword Exercise of the Cavalry Adjutant Generals Office published anonymously though the monogram JGLM appears on the final page of some copies S amp P staff British 1796 LC swords to 14th Light Dragoons swordsandpistols co uk Archived from the original on 20 October 2009 Images of the light cavalry sabre designed by Le Marchant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Le Marchant British Army officer born 1766 amp oldid 1220690609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.