Robert Henry MacFarlane

General Sir Robert Henry MacFarlane, KCB, GCH (19 April 1771 – 12 February 1841 (or 1843?)) was a British Army officer during the Napoleonic Wars.[1]

Biography

He was born in Calcutta, the son of Captain Robert MacFarlane, 9th of Gartartan.

He joined the British Army as an Ensign on 26 May 1780 and was promoted Lieutenant on 22 May 1793, Captain on 25 September 1793, Major on 12 November 1794, Lieutenant-Colonel on 19 September 1794, Colonel on 1 January 1800, Major-General on 25 April 1808, Lieutenant-General on 4 June 1813 and General 22 July 1830.[2]

MacFarlane was "a gallant and highly distinguished officer",[3] who accompanied the expedition to Copenhagen in 1807. He served subsequently in Sicily as second-in-command under Lord William Bentinck. In 1823 he was made Colonel of the 89th Regiment of Foot, transferring in 1837 to be Colonel of the 32nd (Cornwall) Regiment of Foot, a position he held until his death.[2]

Family

Lady Maria Gertrude MacFarlane, engraving from a painting by Derby.

On 10 February 1815, at Palermo, MacFarlane married Maria Gertrude, eldest daughter of G. Henry Vankemper, (a captain in the Dutch Navy and Consul of the Netherlands at Tripoli).[3]

Notes

References

Military offices
Preceded by
Sir Samuel Venables Hinde
Colonel of the 32nd (Cornwall) Regiment of Foot
1837–?1841
Succeeded by
Sir John Buchan
Preceded by
Sir George Beckwith
Colonel of the 89th Regiment of Foot
1823–1837
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Bulkeley Egerton
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