Guy Carleton, first Baron Dorchester,
was born at Strabane, County Tyrone, on the 3rd of
September 1724, the anniversary of Cromwell’s
two great victories and death. He came of a very
old family of English country gentlemen which had
migrated to Ireland in the seventeenth century and
intermarried with other Anglo-Irish families equally
devoted to the service of the British Crown. Guy’s
father was Christopher Carleton of Newry in County
Down. His mother was Catherine Ball of County
Donegal. His father died comparatively young;
and, when he was himself fifteen, his mother married
the rector of Newry, the Reverend Thomas Skelton,
whose influence over the six step-children of the
household worked wholly for their good.
At eighteen Guy received his first
commission as ensign in the 25th Foot, then known
as Lord Rothes’ regiment and now as the King’s
Own Scottish Borderers. At twenty-three he fought
gallantly at the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom. Four
years later (1751) he was a lieutenant in the Grenadier
Guards. He was one of those quiet men whose sterling
value is appreciated only by the few till some crisis
makes it stand forth before the world at large.
Pitt, Wolfe, and George II all recognized his solid
virtues. At thirty he was still some way down
the list of lieutenants in the Grenadiers, while Wolfe,
two years his junior in age, had been four years in
command of a battalion with the rank of lieutenant-colonel.
Yet he had long been ‘my friend Carleton’
to Wolfe, he was soon to become one of ‘Pitt’s
Young Men,’ and he was enough of a ‘coming
man’ to incur the king’s displeasure.
He had criticized the Hanoverians; and the king never
forgave him. The third George ’gloried in
the name of Englishman.’ But the first
two were Hanoverian all through. And for an English
guardsman to disparage the Hanoverian army was considered
next door to lèse-majesté.
Lady Dorchester burnt all her husband’s
private papers after his death in 1808; so we have
lost some of the most intimate records concerning
him. But ‘grave Carleton’ appears
so frequently in the letters of his friend Wolfe that
we can see his character as a young man in almost
any aspect short of self-revelation. The first
reference has nothing to do with affairs of state.
In 1747 Wolfe, aged twenty, writing to Miss Lacey,
an English girl in Brussels, and signing himself ’most
sincerely your friend and admirer,’ says:
’I was doing the greatest injustice to the dear
girls to admit the least doubt of their constancy.
Perhaps with respect to ourselves there may be cause
of complaint. Carleton, I’m afraid, is a
recent example of it.’ From this we may
infer that Carleton was less ‘grave’ as
a young man than Wolfe found him later on. Six
years afterwards Wolfe strongly recommended him for
a position which he had himself been asked to fill,
that of military tutor to the young Duke of Richmond,
who was to get a company in Wolfe’s own regiment.
Writing home from Paris in 1753 Wolfe tells his mother
that the duke ’wants some skilful man to travel
with him through the Low Countries and into Lorraine.
I have proposed my friend Carleton, whom Lord Albemarle
approves of.’ Lord Albemarle was the British
ambassador to France; so Carleton got the post and
travelled under the happiest auspices, while learning
the frontier on which the Belgian, French, and British
allies were to fight the Germans in the Great World
War of 1914. It was during this military tour
of fortified places that Carleton acquired the engineering
skill which a few years later proved of such service
to the British cause in Canada.
In 1754 George Washington, at that
time a young Virginian officer of only twenty-two,
fired the first shot in what presently became the
world-wide Seven Years’ War. The immediate
result was disastrous to the British arms; and Washington
had to give up the command of the Ohio by surrendering
Fort Necessity to the French on of all
dates the 4th of July! In 1755 came
Braddock’s defeat. In 1756 Montcalm arrived
in Canada and won his first victory at Oswego.
In 1757 Wolfe distinguished himself by formulating
the plan which, if properly executed, would have prevented
the British fiasco at Rochefort on the coast of France.
But Carleton remained as undistinguished as before.
He simply became lieutenant-colonel commanding the
72nd Foot, now the Seaforth Highlanders. In 1758
his chance appeared to have come at last. Amherst
had asked for his services at Louisbourg. But
the king had neither forgotten nor forgiven the remarks
about the Hanoverians, and so refused point-blank,
to Wolfe’s ’very great grief and disappointment...
It is a public loss Carleton’s not going.’
Wolfe’s confidence in Carleton, either as a friend
or as an officer, was stronger than ever. Writing
to George Warde, afterwards the famous cavalry leader,
he said: ’Accidents may happen in the family
that may throw my little affairs into disorder.
Carleton is so good as to say he will give what help
is in his power. May I ask the same favour of
you, my oldest friend?’ Writing to Lord George
Sackville, of whom we shall hear more than enough
at the crisis of Carleton’s career Wolfe said:
’Amherst will tell you his opinion of Carleton,
by which you will probably be better convinced of
our loss.’ Again, ‘We want grave
Carleton for every purpose of the war.’
And yet again, after the fall of Louisbourg: ’If
His Majesty had thought proper to let Carleton come
with us as engineer it would have cut the matter much
shorter and we might now be ruining the walls of Quebec
and completing the conquest of New France.’
A little later on Wolfe blazes out with indignation
over Carleton’s supersession by a junior.
’Can Sir John Ligonier (the commander-in-chief)
allow His Majesty to remain unacquainted with the
merit of that officer, and can he see such a mark
of displeasure without endeavouring to soften or clear
the matter up a little? A man of honour has the
right to expect the protection of his Colonel and
of the Commander of the troops, and he can’t
serve without it. If I was in Carleton’s
place I wouldn’t stay an hour in the Army after
being aimed at and distinguished in so remarkable
a manner.’ But Carleton bided his time.
At the beginning of 1759 Wolfe was
appointed to command the army destined to besiege
Quebec. He immediately submitted Carleton’s
name for appointment as quartermaster-general.
Pitt and Ligonier heartily approved. But the
king again refused. Ligonier went back a second
time to no purpose. Pitt then sent him in for
the third time, saying, in a tone meant for the king
to overhear: ’Tell His Majesty that in
order to render the General [Wolfe] completely responsible
for his conduct he should be made, as far as possible,
inexcusable if he should fail; and that whatever an
officer entrusted with such a service of confidence
requests ought therefore to be granted.’
The king then consented. Thus began Carleton’s
long, devoted, and successful service for Canada, the
Empire, and the Crown.
Early in this memorable Empire Year
of 1759 he sailed with Wolfe and Saunders from Spithead.
On the 30th of April the fleet rendezvoused at Halifax,
where Admiral Durell, second-in-command to Saunders,
had spent the winter with a squadron intended to block
the St Lawrence directly navigation opened in the
spring. Durell was a good commonplace officer,
but very slow. He had lost many hands from sickness
during a particularly cold season, and he was not
enterprising enough to start cruising round Cabot
Strait before the month of May. Saunders, greatly
annoyed by this delay, sent him off with eight men-of-war
on the 5th of May. Wolfe gave him seven hundred
soldiers under Carleton. These forces were sufficient
to turn back, capture, or destroy the twenty-three
French merchantmen which were then bound for Quebec
with supplies and soldiers as reinforcements for Montcalm.
But the French ships were a week ahead of Durell;
and, when he landed Carleton at Isle-aux-Coudres on
the 28th of May, the last of the enemy’s transports
had already discharged her cargo at Quebec, sixty
miles above.
Isle-aux-Coudres, so named by Jacques
Cartier in 1535, was a point of great strategic importance;
for it commanded the only channel then used.
It was the place Wolfe had chosen for his winter quarters,
that is, in case of failure before Quebec and supposing
he was not recalled. None but a particularly
good officer would have been appointed as its first
commandant. Carleton spent many busy days here
preparing an advanced base for the coming siege, while
the subsequently famous Captain Cook was equally busy
‘a-sounding of the channell of the Traverse’
which the fleet would have to pass on its way to Quebec.
Some of Durell’s ships destroyed the French ’long-shore
batteries near this Traverse, at the lower end of the
island of Orleans, while the rest kept ceaseless watch
to seaward, anxiously scanning the offing, day after
day, to make out the colours of the first fleet up.
No one knew what the French West India fleet would
do; and there was a very disconcerting chance that
it might run north and slip into the St Lawrence,
ahead of Saunders, in the same way as the French reinforcements
had just slipped in ahead of Durell. Presently,
at the first streak of dawn on the 23rd of June, a
strong squadron was seen advancing rapidly under a
press of sail. Instantly the officers of the
watch called all hands up from below. The boatswains’
whistles shrilled across the water as the seamen ran
to quarters and cleared the decks for action.
Carleton’s camp was equally astir. The guards
turned out. The bugles sounded. The men fell
in and waited. Then the flag-ship signalled ashore
that the strangers had just answered correctly in
private code that all was well and that Wolfe and
Saunders were aboard.
Next to Wolfe himself Carleton was
the busiest man in the army throughout the siege of
Quebec. In addition to his arduous and very responsible
duties as quartermaster-general, he acted as inspector
of engineers and as a special-service officer for
work of an exceptionally confidential nature.
As quartermaster-general he superintended the supply
and transport branches. Considering that the
army was operating in a devastated hostile country,
a thousand miles away from its bases at Halifax and
Louisbourg, and that the interaction of the different
services naval and military, Imperial and
Colonial required adjustment to a nicety
at every turn, it was wonderful that so much was done
so well with means which were far from being adequate.
War prices of course ruled in the British camp.
But they compared very favourably with the famine
prices in Quebec, where most ‘luxuries’
soon became unobtainable at any price. There were
no canteen or camp-follower scandals under Carleton.
Then, as now, every soldier had a regulation ration
of food and a regulation allowance for his service
kit. But ‘extras’ were always acceptable.
The price-list of these ‘extras’ reads
strangely to modern ears. But, under the circumstances,
it was not exorbitant, and it was slightly tempered
by being reckoned in Halifax currency of four dollars
to the pound instead of five. The British Tommy
Atkins of that and many a later day thought Canada
a wonderful country for making money go a long way
when he could buy a pot of beer for twopence and get
back thirteen pence Halifax currency as change for
his English shilling. Beef and ham ran from ninepence
to a shilling a pound. Mutton was a little dearer.
Salt butter was eightpence to one-and-threepence.
Cheese was tenpence; potatoes from five to ten shillings
a bushel. ’A reasonable loaf of good soft
Bread’ cost sixpence. Soap was a shilling
a pound. Tea was prohibitive for all but the
officers. ‘Plain Green Tea and very Badd’
was fifteen shillings, ‘Couchon’ twenty
shillings, ‘Hyson’ thirty. Leaf tobacco
was tenpence a pound, roll one-and-tenpence, snuff
two-and-threepence. Sugar was a shilling to eighteen
pence. Lemons were sixpence apiece. The non-intoxicating
‘Bad Sproos Beer’ was only twopence a quart
and helped to keep off scurvy. Real beer, like
wine and spirits, was more expensive. ‘Bristol
Beer’ was eighteen shillings a dozen, ‘Bad
malt Drink from Hellifax’ ninepence a quart.
Rum and claret were eight shillings a gallon each,
port and Madeira ten and twelve respectively.
The term ‘Bad’ did not then mean noxious,
but only inferior. It stood against every low-grade
article in the price-list. No goods were over-classified
while Carleton was quartermaster-general.
The engineers were under-staffed,
under-manned, and overworked. There were no Royal
Engineers as a permanent and comprehensive corps till
the time of Wellington. Wolfe complained bitterly
and often of the lack of men and materials for scientific
siege work. But he ’relied on Carleton’
to good purpose in this respect as well as in many
others. In his celebrated dispatch to Pitt he
mentions Carleton twice. It was Carleton whom
he sent to seize the west end of the island of Orleans,
so as to command the basin of Quebec, and Carleton
whom he sent to take prisoners and gather information
at Pointe-aux-Trembles, twenty miles above the city.
Whether or not he revealed the whole of his final
plan to Carleton is probably more than we shall ever
know, since Carleton’s papers were destroyed.
But we do know that he did not reveal it to any one
else, not even to his three brigadiers, Monckton,
Townshend, and Murray.
Carleton was wounded in the head during
the Battle of the Plains; but soon returned to duty.
Wolfe showed his confidence in him to the last.
Carleton’s was the only name mentioned twice
in the will which Wolfe handed over to Jervis, the
future Lord St Vincent, the night before the battle.
’I leave to Colonel Oughton, Colonel Carleton,
Colonel Howe, and Colonel Warde a thousand pounds each.’
’All my books and papers, both here and in England,
I leave to Colonel Carleton.’ Wolfe’s
mother, who died five years later, showed the same
confidence by appointing Carleton her executor.
With the fall of Quebec in 1759 Carleton
disappears from the Canadian scene till 1766.
But so many pregnant events happened in Canada during
these seven years, while so few happened in his own
career, that it is much more important for us to follow
her history than his biography.
In 1761 he was wounded at the storming
of Port Andrò during the attack on Belle Isle
off the west coast of France. In 1762 he was
wounded at Havana in the West Indies. After that
he enjoyed four years of quietness at home. Then
came the exceedingly difficult task of guiding Canada
through twelve years of turbulent politics and most
subversive war.