AMHERST, JEFFREY AMHERST, LST BARON


Meaning of AMHERST, JEFFREY AMHERST, LST BARON in English

born Jan. 29, 1717, Sevenoaks, Kent, Eng. died Aug. 3, 1797, Sevenoaks also called (176187) Sir Jeffrey Amherst army commander who captured Canada for Great Britain (175860) during the French and Indian War. Amherst, Mass., and several other American towns are named for him. Amherst received a commission in the foot guards in 1731 and was selected as aide-de-camp first by Lord Ligonier and then by the duke of Cumberland. William Pitt and Ligonier selected him for the Canadian command in 1758. With a force of 14,000 men, he besieged and captured Louisbourg (on Cape Breton Island) and was promoted to chief command in America. He then drew up a plan for a concentric advance on Montreal by three columns, one moving westward up the St. Lawrence River and capturing Quebec, the second northward from Albany by Ticonderoga and Crown Point, and the third westward from Fort Niagara. The first column, under the command of James Wolfe, captured Quebec late in 1759, and the final offensive was launched in 1760, when Montreal surrendered and Canada passed into British hands. Amherst remained in Canada as governor-general until 1763, quelling the Indian rising under Pontiac in 1761. He acted as commander in chief of the British army almost continuously from 1772 to 1795, but, though he suppressed the Gordon riots in 1780, his tenure of office was not a successful one, being marred by failure in the war with the American colonies and by the growth of serious abuses in the army. He was created a baron in 1776 and a field marshal in 1796.

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