Marshal William Carr Beresford. Marcus de la Poer Beresford

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Marshal William Carr Beresford - Marcus de la Poer Beresford страница 25

Marshal William Carr Beresford - Marcus de la Poer Beresford

Скачать книгу

Lieutenant General Bernardim Freire de Andrade covering Porto and another group under Brigadier General Francisco da Silveira operating in Trás-os-Montes with headquarters in Chaves. The combined total of these two forces was calculated at only 6,444 with some cavalry. It was supplemented by a large force of militia.26

      In London, notwithstanding the successful expulsion of the French from Portugal following the battle of Vimeiro, there was recognition by government ministers that the rebuilding of the Portuguese army would require financial assistance. Indeed, even prior to Vimeiro Arthur Wellesley had suggested it would require substantial British help to rebuild the Portuguese army.27 The Government proceeded with caution, given its own requirement for troops to meet disorder at home and the possibility of French invasion. However, Portugal clearly fell into the category of an ally who could and would fight if given the materials to do so. Additionally, both Portugal and Brazil offered important military, naval and economic advantages to Great Britain, just as they would have done to France. The initial decision to give financial aid was communicated to Villiers in November 1808, when it was agreed that cloth for uniforms, leather and materials for 10,000 men would be sent to Portugal. It was to be March 1809 before arms and clothing for this number was in fact delivered to the country.28

      Credit should be given to the Regency for recognising the need to bring in outside help in order to reorganise and rebuild the army. By letter of 26 December 1808, Cipriano Ribeiro Freire on behalf of the Portuguese government requested a British officer to reform and rebuild the Portuguese army, and in what proved to be an inspired choice, Beresford was nominated for that position in February 1809.29 The request baldly stated: ‘Present circumstances rendering it extremely desirable that there should be at the head of the Portuguese army a general officer, whose experience and other qualifications may fit him to command the Military Force of this kingdom, whether for its own immediate defense [sic], or for the general cause and liberty of the Peninsula …’30 That the decision to send a British general to help build the Portuguese army was taken at all, let alone within weeks following the retreat to and evacuation from La Coruña, is perhaps remarkable but shows a determination not to allow the hard-earned fruits of the victory at Vimeiro to slip away. Indeed, the decision when first announced was ridiculed by some who expressed the view that Lisbon would be in French hands before the appointee could reach the Tagus.31

      How and why was Beresford chosen by the Duke of Portland’s administration to reform and rebuild the Portuguese army? The decision was made within a month of the request being received by the government in London, surely indicating an understanding at cabinet level of the imminent dangers facing Portugal and a wish to capitalise on the military success of the 1808 campaign in that country. Beresford’s appointment was no racing certainty. While no specific general was requested by the Portuguese, Villiers was told privately that Wellesley would be most welcome.32 It is unclear whether Wellesley indicated that he was not interested, but in any event Castlereagh felt he was too valuable to be put forward for the job and opposed his appointment.33 Lieutenant General Sir John Doyle’s name was mentioned, probably at the behest of the Duke of York. He was senior to Wellesley, so it was perhaps as well that this suggestion was not implemented, as it would have made it difficult, if not impossible, to appoint Wellesley commander of all Allied forces a month later. There were certainly more senior candidates than Beresford, a relatively junior Major General. Canning favoured Sir John Moore, but by the last week of January news of his demise had reached London. Canning then appears to have decisively supported Beresford’s nomination, explaining that his appointment was due not only on account of his military ability but because of his knowledge of Portugal and the Portuguese people and language.34 Further factors leading to his selection may have included the interest Beresford had shown in training Portuguese infantry while in Madeira, and his own recommendations for the creation of a modern Portuguese army shortly after arriving in Portugal in 1808, before leaving for Spain with Sir John Moore’s army.35

      The decision to appoint Beresford seems to have been the result of strong support from Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh, at this time Minister for War and the Colonies and an ally of the Wellesleys. Castlereagh had also been born in Ireland in the same year as Arthur Wellesley (1769), just one year after Beresford. In his seminal work on the Peninsular War, Sir Charles Oman hypothesised as to whether Wellesley had had any influence on the appointment.36 Certainly Wellesley and Beresford were on good terms and remained so throughout the war, as is ascertainable not just by their mode of familiar address but by Wellington’s frequent exchanges with Beresford, whether in person or through correspondence.37 Furthermore, the rebuilding of the Portuguese army with British assistance was the subject of a proposal which Wellesley had put forward in the summer of 1808, as part of a plan to secure Portugal from the French and give support to the various Spanish armies. Wellesley foresaw that the combined numbers of a rebuilt Portuguese army with a British army in Portugal would give this alliance a very strong say in the conduct of the war.38 While there seems to be no irrefutable evidence that Wellesley played a hand in Beresford’s nomination, Sir Charles Oman’s speculation that the appointment was part of a plan by Castlereagh and Wellesley to involve another of the Anglo-Irish Tory coterie is an attractive theory.39 A further factor which may have assisted Beresford’s appointment was the relationship by marriage of his father with the Prime Minister, the Duke of Portland.40

      Beresford was nominated less than two weeks after his return from La Coruña.41 Napier suggested that parliamentary interest was the deciding factor in Beresford’s appointment and that this caused great discontent amongst those officers of superior rank.42 If there is justification in Napier’s assertion that the appointment arose through parliamentary influence, then it would not be the first or last occasion such appointments were due to political influence. Beresford’s Strictures, written in the 1830s in response to Napier’s suggestion, make some relevant points regarding the appointment. Those fall into two categories: The first concern his previous experience in Portugal and Spain, which involved his tenure as Governor of Madeira, his nomination as a commissioner to implement the Convention of Cintra by Dalrymple, whom Beresford did not know, and his selection by Sir John Moore to cover the retreat and embarkation at La Coruña.43 The second point Beresford makes is that in 1809, after his return from La Coruña, he had hoped to visit his family in Ireland, a family which he had not seen much of since 1793; but that when summoned by Castlereagh he was told he could not decline the appointment to command the Portuguese army.44 That is born out by the contemporary correspondence. It is clear that even if parliamentary influence was at work in securing the appointment, it was not solicited by Beresford.

      Beresford’s reputation as an able administrator and a strict disciplinarian appear likely to have been factors in his appointment, combined with qualities already referred to here. While Canning was now committed to the defence of Portugal, he was under no illusions as to the challenge faced by Beresford, referring to it as an ‘arduous and difficult undertaking’. It involved placing a British army officer in a position of power in a country with different laws, a fractured government, a divided society, a different religion, and different customs and climate. The appointment was to give him command of the Portuguese army, but on the basis that Beresford was to be subject to the overall command of the commander in chief of the British forces in Portugal. As such he was thrown into a complex series of relationships where political, economic and military factors fell to be decided by a number of parties who were sometimes geographically distant, personally jealous and whose policies were not perfectly aligned. The lack of any meaningful central authority with the ability to make things happen in Portugal had to be altered, and it is a tribute to Forjaz, Wellington and Beresford that an efficient war machine was created over relatively few years. That this could be achieved in the face of French military might was doubted by many at the outset and Beresford himself expressed the view that it was not impossible, indeed not improbable that he would go to and return from Portugal given the state of affairs there.45

      The Portuguese had requested an officer of the rank of Lieutenant General to command their army. Beresford, whom we have seen had only been promoted to Major General in 1808, was made up to Lieutenant General ‘during the time in which he shall be employed the [sic] command of the Portuguese forces’.46

      Beresford

Скачать книгу