2008-01-03

webofevil: (Default)
2008-01-03 11:25 am
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Cardigan

Earl Cardigan, the man who led—though was not responsible for—the charge of the Light Brigade, had a reputation as a hotheaded duellist that was eclipsed only by his reputation as a womaniser. The instant his first wife died, he rushed to the house of his mistress Adeline de Horsey, more than 40 years his junior, and cried, “My dearest, she’s dead ... let’s get married at once.” As the biography I’ve just been reading says,
His action was perhaps less callous than the words suggest. He had spent [his wife]’s last hours with her, and she had actually advised him to marry Adeline, in preference to the widowed Marchioness of Ailesbury, whom Adeline regarded as her principal rival.
Still, a second marriage to a former mistress, especially one so young, was frowned on in Victorian society. They travelled to Gibraltar two months later on Cardigan’s yacht, the Airedale, and were married there, but found themselves ostracised:
It was said that the Governor of Gibraltar invited Cardigan alone to dinner. Cardigan replied that he was accompanied by Lady Cardigan. The single invitation was repeated. Cardigan sent his second to the Governor with a duelling challenge. The Governor responded by having the Airedale, with Cardigan on board, towed out of Gibraltar harbour and left in the Mediterranean.

Donald Thomas, Charge! Hurrah! Hurrah! A Life of Cardigan of Balaclava
webofevil: (all hail)
2008-01-03 12:54 pm
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Jenny

One more thing from the Cardigan biography, though it doesn’t pertain to Cardigan himself:

Artillery bombardment became something of a sport [during the siege of Sebastopol]. A Russian officer under a flag of truce entered the British lines and proposed a contest between the best British 68-pounder, ‘Jenny’, and the champion Russian gun... General Airey accepted the challenge and, at noon, all other firing ceased along the line of battle. The sailors of the Naval Brigade and their Russian opponents climbed on to their respective parapets and saluted one another. Then the English gun, being the senior, was allowed to fire first. After a number of alternate shots, the seventh shell from the English gun knocked the Russian gun on its side, at which the English sailors cheered loudly, and the Russian survivors removed their hats to acknowledge their defeat. Then general war was resumed along the front.