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Le general Francois Jarry au service l ’Angleterre, http://ahrf.revues.org/10581 (via www.napoleon—series.org). Le Marchant, D, Memoirs of t …
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Appendix 6 Staff who joined the Junior Department of the Royal Military College in chronological order from 4th May 1802 to 18th June 1815 N …
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Another veteran of the Flanders campaign, John Gaspard Le Marchant also sought to reform the British Army, particularly in the field of educa …
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commissions came about in this way.3 Serving in the ranks was of course a risky business and many Gentleman Volunteers never survived to obt …
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companies34) attached to the college to provide a free education to the sons of non-commissioned officers and soldiers had to be dropped. As …
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‘Upper School’ that taught classes four to six (see appendix 2). Other reforms included fixing the summer vacation at two months, commencing …
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School meant that it could not be self-funding and had to be subsidised by the tax payer.27 The additional staff employed at the Staff Schoo …
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From Flanders to Waterloo: The Origins of the Royal Military College Dr Anthony Morton Sandhurst Occasional Papers No 28 Central Library Roy …
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praise of Le Marchant’s work. At Windsor Castle that summer he told Le Marchant that: ‘I consider the Military College an object of the deep …
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language class (only open to those who had reached the 5th Class of Instruction and had reached an adequate standard in the French language) …
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the Waterloo campaign,57 as well as others who were past graduates of either the Senior or Junior Departments. In all, twenty-two officers w …