Sir Charles Hastings, 1St Baronet

General Sir Charles Hastings, 1st Baronet, GCH (12 March 1752 – September 1823) was a British Army officer.

Sir Charles Hastings, 1st Baronet
AllegianceSir Charles Hastings, 1St Baronet Kingdom of Great Britain
Sir Charles Hastings, 1St Baronet United Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
RankGeneral
AwardsKnight Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order
Relations

Family

Hastings was the illegitimate son of Francis Hastings, 10th Earl of Huntingdon, and an unknown mother who was in fact a famous French courtesan, la demoiselle Lany, "danseuse de l'Opéra". He was born in Paris on 12 March 1752 and brought up in England.

He married Parnel Abney, the only daughter and heiress of Thomas Abney of Willesley Hall in Willesley, Derbyshire. Thomas Abney was the son of Sir Thomas Abney, Justice of the Common Pleas.

Hastings had two sons, Charles, born on 1 October 1792, and Frank, who was born on 6 February 1794, and a daughter, Selina, who died young.

He was created a baronet, of Willesley Hall in the County of Derby, on 18 February 1806. He was also a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order. Hastings had an ancestral seat at Willesley from his marriage and a house in Harley Street in Middlesex.

Lady Hastings passed her life in seclusion and near blindness at their ancestral home.

Military career

He purchased an ensigncy in the 12th Foot, in 1776 a Lieutenancy, and in 1780 a captaincy. In 1783, he purchased a majority in the 76th Foot, but by 1786 was a lieutenant-colonel on half-pay of the 72nd Foot. In 1786, he became Lieutenant-Colonel of the 34th Foot. In 1789, he retired on half-pay again, and during this time transferred to the 65th Foot. In 1798, he transferred to the 61st Foot as lieutenant-colonel and soon afterwards was promoted brevet colonel and major-general on the same day. In 1800, he became lieutenant-colonel of the 65th Foot. In 1806, he was promoted colonel of the 4th Foot, then transferred to the 77th Foot, and in 1811 returned to his old regiment, the 12th Foot. He was later promoted general.

Hastings took his own life and had acorns buried with him in 1823. He was succeeded by his son, Charles, who changed his name to Abney-Hastings. His son Frank Abney Hastings fought at the Battle of Trafalgar and died at Zante.

References

Colonel of the 12th Regiment of Foot
1811–1823 Succeeded by
Hon. Robert Meade
Preceded by Colonel of the 77th (East Middlesex) Regiment of Foot
1811 Succeeded by Baronetage of the United Kingdom New creation Baronet
(of Willesley Hall)
1806–1823 Succeeded by

Tags:

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Ninja (gamer)Jannik SinnerClaudia Sanders Dinner HouseIndiaJude BellinghamBeetlejuiceFrancis Scott Key Bridge collapseMadelyne PryorWill SmithCape VerdeThe Cleaning Lady (American TV series)Maya RudolphMothers' Instinct (2024 film)HoliRobert F. Kennedy Jr.Cuba Gooding Jr.2 Girls 1 CupFascismRobert Downey Jr.Joaquín El Chapo GuzmánNew ZealandJennette McCurdyJontay PorterStephen HawkingRussian invasion of UkraineKeanu ReevesJamie Lynn SpearsBody Cam (film)XXX (film series)BramayugamTikTokJim Carrey2024 Miami OpenLenny KravitzGuy RitchiePriscilla PresleyShohei OhtaniKyle SullivanSpaceman (2024 film)Larry FinkDrake BellBrian PeckFlipkartZendayaConstellation (TV series)Giancarlo EspositoMargot RobbieDual consciousnessJay-ZMoonNirmala SitharamanGareth SouthgateUnited Arab EmiratesUsher (musician)2024 FIFA SeriesRoyal Challengers Bangalore2024 Indian general election in West BengalDiana, Princess of WalesTheo JamesNarendra ModiRoman EmpireHTTP 404Candace OwensArvind KejriwalSydney SweeneyGmailKen MilesJean-Michel BasquiatRussia2024 Indian general election in Tamil NaduDan SchneiderTitanicAaliyahX (2022 film)The Beekeeper (2024 film)🡆 More