George Keppel, 3rd Earl of Albemarle
General George Keppel, 3rd Earl of Albemarle KG PC (London, 8 April 1724 – 13 October 1772), styled Viscount Bury until 1754, becoming 3rd Earl of Albermale, (title of 1697), in 1757 on the death of his father, the 2nd Earl was a British soldier nobleman best known for his capture of Havana in 1762 during the Seven Years' War.
He came from a wealthy and powerful Flemish family from Gueldres, close to the Princes of Orange, who had moved to England in the Seventeenth Century. He had started his military career in the Netherlands fighting against the French and had been in 1745 in the Battle of Fontenay as an aid to the Duke of Cumberland, the brother of King George II of England, becoming later a Field Marshal after the Battle of Culloden, April 1746.
The European-American conflict known as the Seven years war brought his course to participate in July 1762, with two of his cadet brothers, Augustus Keppel and William Keppel, in the attempts by the British Crown to conquest , through a naval expedition headed by Sir George Pocock, (1706 - 1792), promoted to Admiral in 1761, the Caribbean Island of Cuba, i.e. the invasion and occupation of Havana and west Cuba:
George Keppel had been previously in his military life commissioned an ensign in the Coldstream Guards in 1738, bercoming a captain-lieutenant of the 1st Regiment of Dragoons in 1741,aged 17, and a captain-lieutenant of the Coldstreams on 7 April 1743. Appointed aide-de-camp to the Duke of Cumberland in February 1745, was promoted to captain and lieutenant-colonel on 27 May 1745. The next year, he was promoted colonel and made Aid de Champ to the King on 24 April 1746. He had fought at the battle of Culloden with his father and carried the dispatch of Cumberland's success to London.
Bury, later 3rd Earl of Albermale, was returned as Member of Parliament for Chichester in 1746. He was appointed a Lord of the Bedchamber to the Duke of Cumberland in 1748, a post he held until the Duke's death in 1765. On 1 November 1749, he was given the colonelcy of the 20th Regiment of Foot. He succeeded to the earldom on the death of his father in 1754; his younger brother Augustus replaced him as MP for Chichester.
On 8 April 1755, he became colonel of the 3rd (The King's Own) Regiment of Dragoons. He was promoted major-general on 1 February 1756 and lieutenant-general on 1 April 1759. He was appointed Governor of Jersey on 26 January 1761 and sworn a Privy Counsellor on 28 January.
Keppel was the commander-in-Chief of the invasion and occupation of Havana and west Cuba in 1762. His younger brothers, Capt. Augustus and Col. William Keppel, both took part in the expedition as well. After a difficult siege, wherein the troops suffered heavily from yellow fever, Havana Morro Castle was taken and Havana fell into British hands.
Keppel was made a Knight of the Garter in 1765 was appointed Keeper of Bagshot Park in 1766. In 1770, he married Anne Miller, daughter of Sir John Miller, 4th Baronet by whom he had a son, William Charles (1772–1849). He was made a general on 26 May 1772, and died in October of that year.
See also
External links
References
- Doyle, James William Edmund (1885). The Official Baronage of England. London: Longmans, Green. p. 35. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
- 1724 births
- 1772 deaths
- 1st The Royal Dragoons officers
- 3rd The King's Own Hussars officers
- British Army generals
- British MPs 1741-1747
- British MPs 1747-1754
- Coldstream Guards officers
- Colonial heads of Cuba
- Earls in the Peerage of England
- Governors of Jersey
- Keppel family
- Knights of the Garter
- Lancashire Fusiliers officers
- Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituencies
- Members of the Privy Council of Great Britain
- British Army personnel of the Jacobite Rising of 1745
- British Army personnel of the Seven Years' War