
Sir George Prevost, 1st Baronet
'Sir George Prévost, 1st Baronet' (
19 May 1767 –
5 January 1816) was a
British soldier and
colonial administrator.
Born in
Hackensack,
New Jersey, the eldest son of
Swiss French Augustin Prévost, he joined the military as a youth and became a
British Army captain in 1784. Prevost served in the
West Indies during the
French Revolutionary Wars and the
Napoleonic Wars, and was commander of
St. Vincent from 1794 to 1796. He became
lieutenant-governor of
St. Lucia from 1798 to 1802 and
governor of
Dominica from 1802 to 1805.
His tenure in Dominica was marked by a sudden raid by French troops under General Lagrange, accompanying the fleet under Admiral
Pierre-Charles Villeneuve, and the raid was an episode in the preliminary moves which led to the
Battle of Trafalgar. Prevost's outnumbered troops withdrew from the main town of
Roseau, which was thoroughly looted, but the French left the island after three days. In 1805 he was created a 'Baronet', of Belmont in the County of Southampton.
In 1808, Prevost became governor of
Nova Scotia. In May 1811 he was advised that he would be replacing
Governor James Craig in
Lower Canada and was sent to
Quebec. On
July 4,
1811 he was officially promoted Lieutenant General, and on
October 21 he was appointed as Governor-General of British North America and Commander-in-Chief of the British forces there. War with the neighbouring
United States of America appeared probable. With few British forces to defend a long frontier, Prevost raised several regular and local units from among the Canadians. When the
War of 1812 broke out the following year, these Canadian units proved themselves to be valuable additions to the British forces.
For most of the War, Prevost's strategy was defensive and cautious. Learning in August 1812 that the British government had repealed some of the
orders in council which the United States regarded as a cause of war, he negotiated an armistice, but peace did not result and the war resumed. During the early months of 1813, Prevost visited
Upper Canada where the military and civil situation was unsatisfactory after the Governor and Commander there (Major General
Isaac Brock) had been killed in action. As a result, he was present in
Kingston in May, and took charge of an attack on the main American naval base on
Lake Ontario. A victory here could have been decisive but the attack was hastily planned and at the
Battle of Sackett's Harbor, both Prevost and the naval commander,
James Lucas Yeo, attacked hesitantly. After meeting stiff resistance, they withdrew.
In 1814, large reinforcements became available after the defeat of
Napoleon Bonaparte. Prevost planned an attack along
Lake Champlain and the
Hudson River, but the army which he led personally was driven back at the
Battle of Plattsburgh after the British naval squadron on Lake Champlain was defeated. Commodore Yeo considered that the British ships under Captain George Downie (who was killed in the action) had been ordered into action prematurely by Prevost, and became his most bitter critic. Prevost had also made himself unpopular among some of the Army officers under his command by his perceived over-caution, his niggling insistence on correct dress and uniform and his apparent failure to reward properly several successful officers. He was relieved and temporarily replaced by Lieutenant General
George Murray, by coincidence only a day or so after he learned that the War had ended. As he returned to
England he was given a hasty vote of thanks by the Assembly in Quebec.
On his return to England, the Government and Army authorities at first accepted Prevost's explanations for his conduct at Plattsburgh and during the War generally. Soon afterwards, the official naval despatch on the Battle of Plattsburgh was published, together with Yeo's complaints. Both these accounts blamed Prevost. Prevost requested a
court martial to clear his name. The trial was set for January 1816 (the delay being necessary to allow witnesses to travel from Canada), but Prevost was already in ill health and died a week before it was due to convene. His widow Lady Prevost declined the offer of a peerage in honour of her husband, as she did not consider herself and her family to have sufficient means to support the dignity.
Later historians judge Prevost's preparations for defending the Canadas with limited means to be energetic, well conceived, and comprehensive, and against the odds he had achieved the primary objective of preventing an American conquest.
Prevost is buried in
East Barnet, near
London, England.
External link
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
References
★ Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). ''Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage'' (1990 edition). New York: St Martin's Press, 1990.
★
Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page