Francis Skelly Tidy
Colonel Francis Skelly Tidy was a British Army officer who served in the Napoleonic Wars and the Burmese Wars. He was the also the subject of Recollections of an Old Soldier, a 1849 memoir by his daughter Harriet Ward.
Family
Francis was the youngest son of the Reverend Thomas Holmes Tidy, chaplain to HM 26th Foot, and afterwards rector of Red Marshall. He was the grandson of Lady Betty Gordon, daughter of Alexander, Duke of Gordon, nephew to Major Francis Skelly, 71st Highlanders who fought at the Siege of Seringapatam. Descendant of Charles Mordaunt, Earl of Peterborough.His children included Harriet Ward and Thomas Tidy.
Military career
West Indies Campaign
Tidy joined the 43rd Regiment in Ireland as a volunteer at the age of 16, and was soon assigned the rank of an ensign. While serving with his regiment in the West Indies he wrote:During the West Indies Campaign, Tidy was captured following the fall of Berville and confined for fifteen months aboard a prison hulk. Where he endured harsh conditions under the authority of Victor Hughs. Tidy was He was subsequently transferred to France and later permitted to return to England on parole.
India
Tidy was appointed as an adjutant of the 43rd Regiment and promoted to captain in 1st West India Regiment in 1798. In 1799, Tidy was transferred into the Royal Scots and was appointed aide-de-camp to General Sir George Beckwith during his service in the West Indies. He was promoted to major in the 8th West India Regiment and subsequently transferred to the 14th Regiment of Foot in 1807.Napoleonic Wars
He served in Spain during the Peninsular campaign of 1808 and later participated in the Walcheren Expedition in 1809. He commanded 3rd Battalion of the 14th (Buckinghamshire) RF at the Battle of Waterloo.His horse shot at Waterloo. He was award the Companion of The Bath (CB) for his service during Waterloo.