Major-General Sir Thomas Reynell succeeded to the baronetcy upon the decease of his brother, Sir Richard Littleton Reynell in September 1829; and on the 30th of January 1832 was appointed by His Majesty King William IV. to be Colonel of the Ninety-ninth regiment, from which he was removed to the Eighty-seventh Royal Irish Fusiliers on the 15th of August 1834. On the 10th of January 1837 he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-General, and on the 14th of June 1839 was appointed a member of the Consolidated Board of General Officers, for the inspection and regulation of the clothing of the army. On the 15th of March 1841 he was appointed by Her Majesty to the Colonelcy of the Seventy-first regiment. Lieut.-General Sir Thomas Reynell, Bart., K.C.B., died at Avisford, near Arundel, on the 10th of February 1848.

Hugh Viscount Gough, G.C.B.,

Appointed from the Ninety-ninth regiment on the
15th of March 1841
.


APPENDIX.


Troops in South America in 1806-7.
Nos.
embarked.
Place and Date of Embarkation.Place and Date of Arrival.
Royal Artillery and
Royal Engineers.
439
47th Foot, 1st batt.803At Cork,April 91806.At Monte Video,Jan. 161807.
71st Foot, 1st batt.805 Cape Good Hope,12 Buenos Ayres,June 251806.
38th Foot, 1st batt.737do.Aug.1806.do.Jan. 161807.
20th Lt. Drags., 4 troops.204do.do. Monte Video,16
21st Lt. Drags., 2 troops.125do.do.do.16
87th Foot, 1st batt.801 Plymouth,Sep. 121806.do.16
95th (Rifles), 2nd batt. 3 comps.230do.13do.16
40th Foot, 1st batt.1000 Portsmouth,16do.16
45th Foot, 1st batt.888do.12 Buenos Ayres,June1807.
88th Foot, 1st batt.798do.20 Rio de la Plata,
36th Foot, 1st batt.825do.22 Buenos Ayres,
95th (Rifles), 1st batt. 5 comps.401 Falmouth,13 Rio de la Plata,
17th Lt. Drags., 8 troops.628 Portsmouth,27 Monte Video,Jan. 161807.
5th Foot, 1st batt.926do.Oct. 9 Buenos Ayres,June1807.
9th Lt. Drags., 8 troops.632do.1 Monte Video,March 71807.
6th Dragoon Guards, 4 trps.298do.9 Rio de la Plata,June
89th Foot, 1st batt.947do.Feb. 231807. Monte Video,do.
54th Foot, detach.15
Total 11,502

Memoir of the Services of Lieut.-General Sir Charles William Doyle, C.B., G.C.H., and K.C., formerly Lieut.-Colonel of the Eighty-seventh regiment.

This officer entered the army on the 28th of April 1783, as Ensign in the One hundred and fifth regiment, which was disbanded in the following year, and on the 12th of February 1793, was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant in the Fifty-ninth regiment, from which he was removed to the Fourteenth foot on the 7th of March following, and to the Ninety-first regiment on the 30th of October of the same year. Lieutenant Doyle served with the Fourteenth regiment until the beginning of 1794, in Holland and Brabant. In the assault of the heights of Famars in 1793 he acted as Brigade-Major to the brigade under Lieut.-General Sir Ralph Abercromby, whose thanks he received upon the field of battle for his conduct in storming the redoubts upon the heights over Valenciennes. During the siege of that city Lieutenant Doyle was employed as orderly officer in attendance upon the Austrian generals. While on service in the trenches he received a contusion in the head from the splinter of a shell. The Fourteenth regiment having suffered considerably, was left to garrison Courtray. He obtained permission to join the army, and served the remainder of the campaign as Aide-de-camp to Lieut.-General Sir Ralph Abercromby, by whom he was sent to the Duke of York with the account of the affair at Lannoi, in which he received a contusion in the hand, and was again thanked upon the field of battle by Lieut.-General Sir Ralph Abercromby. On the 21st of June 1794, Lieutenant Doyle was promoted from the Ninety-first, in which he had acted as Adjutant, to the Captain-Lieutenancy and Adjutancy of the One hundred and eighth regiment; proceeded to Gibraltar, where, upon that corps being drafted, he was appointed Aide-de-camp to the governor of that fortress. On the 3rd of September 1795, he was removed to the Eighty-seventh, as Captain-Lieutenant and Adjutant, and embarked in 1796 as Brigade-Major to the expedition against the Texel, under his uncle Brigadier-General John Doyle. In that year Captain Doyle proceeded to the West Indies in the same capacity, but finding that his regiment was destined to attack Porto Rico, he resigned his staff situation, accompanied the Eighty-seventh, and received the thanks of Sir Ralph Abercromby for his conduct in covering the retreat of the army in April 1797, and was appointed his Aide-de-camp. In 1798 he received the thanks of the Governor of Barbadoes, for having driven off the coast a large French privateer. Captain Doyle proceeded as Brigade-Major under General Sir Ralph Abercromby with the expedition for the attack of Cadiz in 1800; sailed from Minorca for the relief of Genoa, and from Malta proceeded to Egypt, where he served upon the staff of the army during the campaign. While suffering from illness at Rosetta, in consequence of a wound he had received in the battle of the 21st of March 1801, near Alexandria, he obtained precise and important information regarding the strength of the garrison and the state of the works at Cairo, which led to the operations that resulted in the surrender of the place without a shot being fired. For this service he received the warm thanks of Lieut.-General Hutchinson, who assumed the command upon the death of General Abercromby, and also the approbation of His Royal Highness the Duke of York, Commander-in-Chief.