William Carr Beresford, Viscount Beresford

British general
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Quick Facts
Born:
Oct. 2, 1768
Died:
Jan. 8, 1854, Bedgebury, Kent, Eng.

William Carr Beresford, Viscount Beresford (born Oct. 2, 1768—died Jan. 8, 1854, Bedgebury, Kent, Eng.) was a British general and Portuguese marshal prominent in the (Iberian) Peninsular War of 1808–14. For his costly victory over the French at La Albuera, Spain, on May 16, 1811, he was subjected to harsh criticism in Great Britain.

An illegitimate son of the 2nd Earl of Tyrone (afterward 1st Marquess of Waterford), Beresford entered the British army in 1785. As a brigadier general he led a raid, unauthorized but informally encouraged by his superiors, on the Spanish colonial city of Buenos Aires—Spain at the time (1806) being an ally of Napoleonic France. Beresford captured the town easily, but local forces compelled him to surrender on Aug. 12, 1806. Escaping after six months’ imprisonment, he was appointed governor of Madeira, which was then held by the British on behalf of Portugal. Recalled to combat service, he fought well under General Sir John Moore at Corunna, Spain (La Coruña; Jan. 16, 1809). General Sir Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, chose him to reorganize the Portuguese army, in which Beresford was given the rank of marshal (March 7, 1809).

In command of a British corps at La Albuera, near Badajoz, Beresford lost one-fourth of his men while defeating the French marshal Nicolas-Jean de Dieu Soult, Duke de Dalmatie. Resuming command of Portuguese troops, he was wounded at Salamanca (July 22, 1812). He served Portugal until 1819, being successively created count, marquess, and duke in that country’s peerage. During Wellington’s first prime ministry he was master general of the ordnance (1828–30).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.