Name of Captain who commanded it.Names of Stations on which the Company served down to 1819.
1806 Captain A. Munro.1806 Woolwich.
1807 Chatham.
1808 Canterbury.
1809 Walcheren.
1809 Canterbury.
1812 Shorncliffe.
1814 Portsmouth.
1814 America.
1815 Brussels.
1816 Canterbury.
1816 Shorncliffe.
1816 Dover.
1819 Woolwich.

No. 9 COMPANY, 9th BATTALION.

This Company became No 7 Company on 1st March, 1819; and No. 8 Battery, 10th Brigade, on the 1st July, 1859. It was reduced on 1st February, 1871.

Names of Captains who commanded it down to 1850.Stations on which the Company served down to 1846.
1806 Captain J. P. Cockburn.1806 Woolwich.
1806 Captain J. F. Ogilvie.1808 Chatham.
1807 Captain J. S. Sinclair.1809 Portsmouth.
1808 Captain T. J. Forbes.1810 Ireland.
1823 Captain C. Mosse.1817 Barbadoes.
1831 Captain W. Greene.1827 Woolwich.
1834 Captain C. Dalton.1829 Devonport.
1834 Captain J. C. Petley.1833 Woolwich.
1837 Captain A. Wright.1834 Jamaica.
1840 Captain F. Warde.1841 Woolwich.
1842 Captain B. Cuppage.1843 Devonport.
1849 Captain T. de Winton.1845 Woolwich.
1850 Captain A. T. Phillpotts.1846 Gibraltar.

No. 10 COMPANY, 9th BATTALION.

This Company became No. 8 Company, 9th Battalion, on 1st March, 1819; and on the introduction of the Brigade system, in 1859, it became No. 5 Battery, 9th Brigade, or, as now called,

“E” BATTERY, 9th BRIGADE, R.A.

Names of Captains who commanded it down to 1842.Names of Stations on which it served down to 1842.
1806 Captain J. Chamberlayne.1806 Woolwich.
1810 Captain R. Douglas.1808 Chatham.
1814 Captain G. Turner.1809 Walcheren.
1820 Captain A. Bredin.1809 Chatham.
1823 Captain W. Clibborn.1810 Woolwich.
1834 Captain A. B. Rawnsley.1810 Exeter.
1837 Captain A. O. W. Schalch.1811 Plymouth.
1841 Captain R. R. Drew.1812 Peninsula and France.
1842 Captain W. L. Kaye.1814 Canada.
1824 Woolwich.
1827 Ireland.
1831 West Indies.
1837 Woolwich.
1842 Ireland.

CHAPTER X.
The Siege of Copenhagen.

The decree of the French Emperor, dated 20th November, 1806, forbidding all commerce and correspondence between the countries under his influence, and Great Britain, received an alarming force from his subsequent rapid successes, culminating in the Treaty of Tilsit.