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  1. The Hon. Colonel James Hamilton Stanhope (1788–1825), was a British Army officer who fought in the Peninsular War and at the Battle of Waterloo. He was a Member of Parliament for Buckingham , 1817–1818, Fowey , 1818–1819, and Dartmouth , 1822–1825.

  2. mere observer of his times. James Hamilton Stanhope, in contrast to his father, is a figure of the Romantic era, a soldier, artist, and poet. His love for Lady Frederica Murray, his wife of only 30 months, is immortalised in her tomb in St Botolph’s Church, Chevening (he lies in it too, but at his insistence it remains outwardly hers).

  3. By Mark Guscin. This book was most definitely a desideratum in the history of Georgian and Regency England, as there was previously no biography at all of James Hamilton Stanhope, who lived with some of the most relevant people of the times and through some of the most significant events of the early nineteenth century.

  4. James Hamilton Stanhope (1788-1825) was the youngest son of the third Earl Stanhope, half-brother to Lady Hester Stanhope and personally present at the deaths of both Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger in 1806 and General Sir John Moore in Corunna in 1809.

  5. Eyewitness to the Peninsular War is a compilation of the letters and journals of James Stanhope, a young aristocrat who served either as an aide-de-camp or on the staff of Generals Thomas Graham and Edward Paget during much of the Peninsular War and the 1814 Expedition to Holland.

  6. James Hamilton Stanhope (1788-1825), Soldier and politician; MP for Buckingham, Fowey and Dartmouth; son of Charles, 3rd Earl Stanhope. Sitter in 3 portraits

  7. 16 de abr. de 2021 · PDF | James Hamilton Stanhope (1788-1825) was the youngest son of the third Earl Stanhope, half-brother to Lady Hester Stanhope and personally present... | Find, read and cite all the research you ...