[31] A list of the British and Hanoverian army at Waterloo, as formed in divisions and brigades, is inserted in the Appendix, [page 166].
[32] Colonel the Honorable Henry Cadogan, who was mortally wounded at Vittoria on the 21st of June 1813.—Vide [page 94].
[33] During the period the Seventy-first were stationed at York, they had the satisfaction of removing to consecrated ground the mortal remains of the brave grenadiers of the eighth regiment, who fell upon the 27th of April, 1813, in action with the Americans. These gallant soldiers had fallen, and were buried at a considerable distance from the shores of Lake Ontario; but as its waters had since encroached upon the land in this direction, they at length succeeded in breaking open their honorable grave, and the beach became strewed with their remains. This coming to the knowledge of the Seventy-first, they had them removed to the military burying ground in the vicinity of the garrison.
SUCCESSION OF COLONELS
OF THE
SEVENTY-FIRST REGIMENT,
HIGHLAND LIGHT INFANTRY.