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Item #21225 The Case of the Officers of Lieutenant General Hamilton's Late Regiment of Foot (Subjects of Great-Britain) Broke in the Service of the States General of the United Provinces [caption title]. WAR OF THE SPANISH SUCCESSION.

The Case of the Officers of Lieutenant General Hamilton's Late Regiment of Foot (Subjects of Great-Britain) Broke in the Service of the States General of the United Provinces [caption title].

London? 1715.

A petition to Parliament by the officers of Lieutenant General George Hamilton's Regiment of Foot, seeking pay due for services abroad in the War of the Spanish Succession. Lord George Douglas-Hamilton (1666-1737), was a Scottish Williamite officer during the Glorious Revolution who later married William III's mistress, Elizabeth Villiers, became a confidant of William, was created Earl of Orkney in 1696, was appointed Governor of Virginia in 1714, and in 1736 was the first British general promoted to the rank of Field Marshal. In 1701, at the beginning of the War of the Spanish Succession, Hamilton led the First Regiment of Foot (the Royal Scots) to the Netherlands, where the regiment fought for the remainder of the war. Despite their long service and the high position of Hamilton, the officers suggest in the present petition that, having been so long overseas, they had been forgotten by the British government and charge that they had not received their pay, even after frequent petitions. The document is an early example of lobbying literature, which first began proliferating in the lobby of the House of Commons at the time of the accession of King George I and the British general election of 1715. ESTC records four copies, two at the British Library, one at Oxford, and one at the National Library of Scotland.

Item #21225

Price: $450.00

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