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GEORGE WADE (1673-1748)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 227 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGE WADE (1673-1748)  ,
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British field marshal, was the son of Jerome Wade of Kilavally, Westmeath, and entered the British army in 169o . He was
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present at Steinkirk in 1692, and in 1695 he became captain . In 1702 he served in Marlborough's army, earning particular distinction at the assault on the citadel of Liege, and in 1703 he became successively major and
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lieutenant colonel in his regiment (later the loth
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Foot) . In 1704, with the temporary rank of colonel, he served on Lord
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Galway's staff in
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Portugal . Wade distinguished himself at the siege of
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Alcantara in 1706, in a rearguard
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action at
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Villa Nova in the same autumn (in which, according to Galway, his two battalions repulsed twenty-two allied squadrons), and at the disastrous
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battle of Almanza on the 25th of
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April 1707 . He had now risen to the command of a brigade, and on the following 1st of
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January (1707/8) he was promoted brigadier-general in the British army . His next service was as second in command to James (1st
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earl) Stanhope in the expedition to Minorca in 1708 . In 1710 he was again with the main Anglo-allied army in Spain, and took
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part in the
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great battle of Saragossa on the loth of August, after which he was promoted major-general and given a command at home . The Jacobite outbreak of 1715 brought him into prominence in the new role of military governor . He twice detected important Jacobite conspiracies, and on the second occasion procured the arrest of the
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Swedish ambassador in
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London, Count Gyllenborg . In 1719 he was second in command of the
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land forces in the successful " conjunct " military and
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naval expedition to
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Vigo . In 1724 he was sent to the Highlands to make a thorough investigation of the country and its
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people, and two years later, having meantime been appointed
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commander-in-chief to give effect to his own recommendations, he began the
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system of metalled roads which is his chief title to fame, and is commemorated in the lines " Had you seen these roads before they were made, You would lift up your hands and bless General Wade." In the course of this
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engineering
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work Wade superintended the construction of no less than 40 stone bridges .

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time, slowly and with the tact that came of long experience, he disarmed the clans . In 1742 he was made a privy councillor and lieutenant-general of the ordnance, and in 1743 field marshal . In this
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year he commanded the British contingent in Flanders, and was associated in the supreme command with the duke d'Aremberg, the leader of the
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Austrian contingent . The
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campaign, as was to be expected when the enemy was of one nation,
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superior in numbers and led by Saxe, was a failure, and Wade, who was seventy years of age and in
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bad
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health, resigned the command in March 1744 . George II. promptly made him commander-in-chief in England, and in that capacity Field Marshal Wade had to
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deal with the Jacobite insurrection of 1745, in which he was utterly baffled by the perplexing rapidity of Prince Charles
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Edward's marches . On the appointment of the duke of Cumberland as commander-in-chief of the forces, Wade retired . He died on the 14th of March 1748 .

End of Article: GEORGE WADE (1673-1748)
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SIR THOMAS FRANCIS WADE (1818-1895)

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