Talk:Joseph Brome (British Army officer, died 1825)
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Initial source
editThe source I used was in snippet form and is therefore hard to follow. I have included in a collapsed for the information from which the first draft of this article was extracted.
Murdoch, Robert Hamilton (1894). "Memoirs, Historical and Biographical. The Brome-Walton Family.". Journal of the Royal Artillery |
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Joseph Broome (2nd). The last artillery Brome emerged from the royal Military academy as Second Lieutenant, on 14th August, 1894—the date of the creation of the 5th battalion R.A. to which he was posted at Woolwich—and combined in his services the varied experiences of his distinguished ancestors.[1] With him expired the family torch which, in the hands of Charles Brome, Joseph Brome (1st), and Joseph Walton, had lighted us through the dark jungle of artillery history in XVII. and XVIII. centuries, when every gunner was a hero with but a handful of such corn in the earth. To write a Memoir of the war services, by sea and land, of Joseph Brome (2nd) would involve a review of artillery history from the Expedition to the Helder in 1797, under H.R.H. the Duke of York, to the crowning episode of Waterloo, under the under the Immortal Duke, including the navel actions under Admiral Nelson, in which Brome fought in command of Bomb-ships until 1802; and would require a "just proportion " to be devoted to the abundant crop of his brilliant contemporary gunners of the Macleod, Cuppaye, Congrcve, Shrapnel, Robe, Adge, Dickson, Gardiner, May, Lloyd Wood and Whinyates families. Lurid is the light thrown over this period by the historians of the Royal Artillery: yet is there need for all the side lights of personal memoirs if these illustrious families, in their respective orbits, which can alone help us to disperse the shadows of general regimental history. The author of the present Memoirs had originally intended—form such meagre and imperfect sources as muster-rolls, ordnance records monthly returns &c. (in R.A. record office), and gazettes and despatches (in the national record office)—to devote two or three chapters to the last of teh artillery Bromes, in order to review artillery operations under the above-named triumvirate, to whom were committed the destinies of our nation, from the breaking out of the great French Revolution up to the withdrawal from France of the Armies of Occupation; but it has since come to his knowledge (owing to an act of munificent generosity) the Committee of the R.A. Institution has become possessed of vast collections of original MSS., official and semi-official, collected and preserved by an eminent Peninsular and Waterloo officer, which will throw a flood of light authoritatively upon the whole period covered by the life of the last of the artillery Bromes, whose individual importance was relatively that of the proverbial "fly upon the wheel." It must therefore suffice to close these Memoirs by briefly summarising the service of Joseph Brome (2nd) It must therefore suffice to close these Memoirs by briefly summarising the services of JOSEPH BROJIE (2ND).
14th May to 25th") Expedition to Holland, to destroy the Bruges June, 1798 j Canal, &c. Actions on the coast of France.1 18th Nov., 1798 Expedition against Minorca. - August, 1799 Expedition to the Helder, Walcheren. 18th April, 1801 Capt.-Lieutenant of the Thunder Bomb- ship. August, „ Expedition to Boulogne, and destruction of the French invasion flotilla. Defence of Toulon; and covering the vacuation. Particularly distinguished himself. Mentioned in despatches of Admiral Viscount Nelson : — " Captain Brome did all that was possible to annoy the enemy."" January, 1802 Expedition to West Indies. Command of the Bombs off Port Royal, Jamaica. July, „ Returned to England. Rejoined at Woolwich for land service in R.A., and posted to 3rd battalion as acting Adjutant. Appointed Adjutant of 3rd battalion, vice A. Tulloh, from 1st Jan., until promotion of 13th Aug. „ 1 804 Rank of " Captain-Lieutenant " converted into " Second Captain " (Captain in the Army) by Royal Warrant of 19th July. „ Promoted Captain R.A. In command of No. 3 company 3rd battalion (6-pr. field brigade) at Canterbury (now No. 5 Company, Western Division, R.A.) Exeter in December. November, 1805 Returned to Woolwich. r» u i Q[\K. t. C Expedition for defence of Hanover, under Sir uoccniuer, , louo to i , -m- ni T i r T i , ^ -i i February, 1806 j £'. Wellesley. In command of a light field •" (. brigade (6-pr.), as" above. 1807 Expedition to Copenhagen, under Sir A. Wellesley (Major-Genl. Thos. Blomefield in command of R.A.). Commanded 6-pr. light brigade. Investment and siege of Copenhagen ("History of the Royal Artillery," Vol. II., p. 162). 1809 4th June 1813 1815 8th August, 1816 1819 1821 24th July, 1823 4th January, 1825 Expedition to Walcheren, in command of light brigade. Engaged in both first and second operations of the Scheldt Expedition, including actions of Walcheren aud South Bevcland, under command of Brigadier-General John Macleod, R.A. ("General Macleod's Journal"). Brevet of Major in the Army. Waterloo. In command of 9-pr. brigade l at Hal, defending Brussels. Medal, Siege of Cam- bray, and operations of the Allied Army en •mite to Paris. Returned to Woolwich. Gibraltar. Promoted Regimental Major, R.A., , and Commandant of R.A. in West Indies. Promoted Regimental Lieutenant-Colonel. Died at Jamaica. |
--PBS (talk) 20:28, 23 March 2014 (UTC)
- ^ a b Murdoch 1894, p. 258.