Auction Catalogue

16 & 17 September 2010

Starting at 1:00 PM

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Orders, Decorations and Medals

Washington Mayfair Hotel  London  W1J 5HE

Lot

№ 797

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17 September 2010

Hammer Price:
£1,000

Military General Service 1793-1814, 2 clasps, Busaco, Fuentes D’Onor (A. McQueen, 74th Foot) very fine £1000-1200

Alexander McQueen was born in the Parish of Newdeer, Aberdeenshire. A Labourer by occupation, he enlisted into the 74th Foot on 6 June 1808, aged 18 years.

Posted to the 1st Battalion, he arrived in Portugal in January 1810, and first went into action at Busaco that September, when the 74th helped to repel the French attack on the British centre, suffering two officers and 25 men killed or wounded. In his next action at Fuentes D’Onor, 5 May 1811, the 74th were more heavily engaged in the fierce fighting in and around that village, this time suffering casualties of four officers and 69 men killed or wounded, McQueen being wounded in the leg.

‘Presently the Irishmen of the 88th Foot came down the road in column of sections at the double ... instantly they closed with the French 9th Light Infantry. For a brief space the 9th stood firm, but presently gave way, the 88th following hard at their heels with the bayonet; while the 74th, also of Mackinnon’s Brigade, dashed in upon the French at another point. The former defenders of the village swarmed after them, and the 74th took revenge for their dead Colonel. The fighting was savage. One party of over a hundred French Grenadiers ran down into a barricaded street from which there was no escape; and everyone of them was bayonetted by the Irish. The rest were driven headlong over the water; and more than one of the British followed them in the heat of the chase, to fall dead on the French side of the stream. D’Erlon ... made no further attempt to capture the village, though his batteries still played furiously upon it. Undaunted by crumbling walls and quaking rafters, the 74th and 88th fortified themselves among the ruins and at length the fire ceased: for the battle of Fuentes D’Onor was over’ (Sir John Fortescue’s
History of the British Army (Vol. VIII), refers).

Due to his wound, McQueen was transferred to the 9th Veterans’ Battalion in March 1812. When the unit was disbanded, he took his final discharge on 15 July 1814.

With copied discharge papers and other research.