WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Recollections of a Peninsular Veteran cover

Recollections of a Peninsular Veteran

Chapter 2: INTRODUCTION
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The memoir traces the author's military career from youthful commission through campaigns across the Mediterranean, Egypt, and the Iberian Peninsula, giving eyewitness accounts of battles, sieges, marches, and retreats. It interleaves descriptions of service in the Caribbean and later actions in India with personal anecdotes about comrades, injuries, awards, and daily regimental life. Chapters alternate chronological campaign narratives, administrative and legal duties, and travel episodes, while reflecting on soldierly character, hardships of campaigning, and the practicalities of nineteenth-century military service.

INTRODUCTION

THE following pages have been selected from the autobiography of my grandfather, the late Colonel Joseph Anderson, who was born in Sutherlandshire, Scotland, on June 1, 1790, and died on July 18, 1877. It should be stated that this narrative was written only for his own family. He had never kept a diary—nor even any notes of his adventures and travels—and only began to write his reminiscences of the long-past years when he was seventy-four, in the quiet of his beautiful home near Melbourne, Australia. His memory was perfectly amazing; but if any slight inaccuracies should be discovered, the reader is asked to excuse them, on account of his age. He was a “grand old man” in every sense, and lived in excellent health of mind and body until his eighty-eighth year. To the very last he was always keenly interested in military matters, and never failed to attend, in uniform, all the important volunteer reviews held in Melbourne, where his upright, soldierly figure attracted universal admiration. His son, the late Colonel Acland Anderson, C.M.G., was for many years the Colonel-Commandant of the Military Forces of H.M. Government in Victoria, which appointment he held till his death in January, 1882. He was the founder of the Volunteer Organization, as in 1855 he raised a Rifle Corps in Melbourne, which was not only the first in Victoria but probably the first in Australia.

ACLAND ANDERSON,
Captain, late 3rd Dragoon Guards.

September, 1913.