hile Sir John Johnson left his imprint on the county of Argenteuil in the
western corner of the Laurentians, another British hero of the American War
of Independence, Sir Francis Rawdon, was honoured in the creation of a
Loyalist settlement on the eastern flank.
In 1771, the year Francis Rawdon enlisted as an ensign in the 15th Foot
Regiment of the British Army, a famine devastated Bengal (present-day
Bangladesh and West Bengal) killing one sixth of the population and
seriously draining the British administration's resources. As a corrective
measure, the British government introduced the Tea Act, effectively
subsidising the East India Company, an action that lead to the Boston Tea
Party, contributing to the colonists' alienation and the American War of
Independence.
Rawdon, a 17-year-old recruit, and his regiment were shipped out to fight
in the American colonies. There, he distinguished himself in the Battle of
Bunker Hill, and fought in the Battle of Brooklyn and Whitehall. By 1778,
at 24 years old, he had risen through the ranks to become a lieutenant
colonel and was assigned the post of Adjutant-General to the British Forces
in America. The role of Adjutant-General could be described as the
executive officer to the commander-in-chief. He raised a corps called the
"Volunteers of Ireland" and his conduct in the battle of Monmouth earned
him command of the left wing in the battle of Camden in 1780. He was the
commander of the British garrison in the Battle of Hobkirk's Hill in 1781
in which he defeated the superior forces of General Greene.
Whether it was because of poor judgement in his ordering the execution of
the American Colonel Isaac Hayne or because of failing health from
exhaustion, he left for England. Before his departure, he helped establish
many loyal British subjects, including perhaps many of his "Volunteers of
Ireland," in both Nova Scotia and Quebec.
Captured by the French on his return trip and subsequently released from
detention in Brest, Rawdon arrived home to be honoured with a peerage in
1783. In 1789 his mother succeeded to the Barony of Hastings, and in 1793,
upon the death of his father, he became the Earl of Moira, County Down,
Northern Ireland.
In 1794, Rawdon was again in the service of the Crown, leading 7,000 troops
in Flanders in the war against the French, serving with distinction under
the Duke of York. As he proved in America, he was always concerned for his
men, and despite his heavy responsibilities, he is on record as having
objected to the eviction of Catholic tenants from one of the districts of
Moira in 1796, and is credited as a champion of the Catholics in Northern
Ireland for his efforts to publicize their plight. It is intriguing to
imagine that some of the evicted Irish tenants of Moira may have made their
way to Canada and been among the mysterious Irish immigrants who are
reported to have illegally homesteaded in Rawdon, Quebec. There would be
continuity in this, connecting the Irish estate of the Rawdon family with
the Quebec town that bears his name. Perhaps some link exists, but the
lists examined so far have not been able to establish a connection.
In the meantime, Rawdon was named Commander-in-Chief in Scotland in 1804,
where he married Flora Mure Campbell, Countess of Loudoun and the following
year he was named Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. In 1806 as a member of the
governing side in the House of Lords, he introduced the Debtor and Creditor
Bill for relief of poor debtors.
Sir Francis and Lady Flora had three daughters and one son, but as per
custom, she did not travel on assignment with him. In 1813, the next phase
of Lord Rawdon's life began with his appointment as Governor-General of
Bengal and commander-in-chief of the forces in India. His first challenge
in this new posting was to secure the border with the Gurkhas and establish
a treaty with the government of Nepal. In 1814, he declared war against the
Gurkhas, who had been rebuffed by the Chinese and had chosen instead to
expand into territory controlled by the East India Company. Rawdon boldly
opened up a six-hundred-mile long battlefront. This was a crucial period in
British India, because, had he failed, many of the other peoples of the
regions would have joined forces against the British. Initially, the
British experienced setbacks, but by 1816, with the help of General David
Ochterlony, they obtained a peace with the Gurkhas and the following year
with the government of Nepal. In recognition, General Ochterlony was named
to the peerage and Lord Rawdon, Earl of Moira, was made Marquis of
Hastings. Even so, during the next two years, Rawdon had to contend with
two large foes, numbering 200,000 fighting men, before he established a
peaceful administration in India. Subsequently, in the process of securing
the Eastern trading route, he encouraged and approved the acquisition of
the port of Singapore in the South China Sea.
Rawdon proved to be less well suited to peacetime. Perhaps because of his
introduction of native education and freedom of the press, Rawdon fell
victim to accusations of appropriation of public funds and, embittered, he
resigned and returned to England. He was completely exonerated, but his
reputation and position had suffered in the process and he had not the
means to retire. As a result, he accepted a lesser posting as Governor of
Malta in 1824 where he finished his career, dying on board a ship bound for
Naples in 1826.
Although he had promised his wife that they should lie in the same grave,
Rawdon was buried in Malta. Since at that time it was impossible to
transport a body that distance, he had instructed that his right hand be
amputated at his death and sent home, that it might eventually be buried
with her. His wish was respected.
Special thanks to Beverly Prud'homme and Glenn
F. Cartwright of the Rawdon Historical Society.
Joseph Graham has written a book that features a select number of stories of
Laurentian places and how they got their names. To learn more, click here.
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© Joseph Graham
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