James Wolf

Actor

Birthday November 30, 1973

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Westerham, Kent, England

DEATH DATE 1759-9-13, Plains of Abraham, Quebec, New France (49 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#30657 Most Popular

1727

James Wolfe (2 January 1727 – 13 September 1759) was a British Army officer known for his training reforms and, as a major general, remembered chiefly for his victory in 1759 over the French at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in Quebec.

The son of a distinguished general, Edward Wolfe, he received his first commission at a young age and saw extensive service in Europe during the War of the Austrian Succession.

His service in Flanders and in Scotland, where he took part in the suppression of the Jacobite Rebellion, brought him to the attention of his superiors.

James Wolfe was born at the local vicarage on 2 January 1727 (New Style or 22 December 1726 Old Style) at Westerham, Kent, the older of two sons of Colonel (later Lieutenant General) Edward Wolfe, a veteran soldier whose family was of Anglo-Irish origin, and the former Henrietta Thompson.

His uncle was Edward Thompson MP, a distinguished politician.

Wolfe's childhood home in Westerham, known in his lifetime as Spiers, has been preserved in his memory by the National Trust under the name Quebec House.

Wolfe's family were long settled in Ireland and he regularly corresponded with his uncle Major Walter Wolfe in Dublin.

Stephen Woulfe, the distinguished Irish politician and judge of the next century, was from the Limerick branch of the same family; his father was James Wolfe's third cousin.

The Wolfes were close to the Warde family, who lived at Squerryes Court in Westerham.

Wolfe's boyhood friend George Warde achieved fame as Commander-in-Chief in Ireland.

1738

Around 1738, the family moved to Greenwich, in north-west Kent.

From his earliest years, Wolfe was destined for a military career, entering his father's 1st Marine regiment as a volunteer at the age of thirteen.

1740

Illness prevented him from taking part in a large expedition against Spanish-held Cartagena in 1740, and his father sent him home a few months later.

He missed what proved to be a disaster for the British forces at the Siege of Cartagena during the War of Jenkins' Ear, in which most of the expedition died from disease.

In 1740 the War of the Austrian Succession broke out in Europe.

1741

James Wolfe was given his first commission as a second lieutenant in his father's regiment of Marines in 1741.

1742

Although initially Britain did not actively intervene, the presence of a sizable French army near the border of the Austrian Netherlands compelled the British to send an expedition to help defend the territory of their Austrian ally in 1742.

1743

In 1743, he was joined by his younger brother, Edward, who had received a commission in the same regiment.

That year the Wolfe brothers took part in an offensive launched by the British.

Instead of moving southwards as expected, the British and their allies instead Thrust eastwards into Southern Germany where they faced a large French army.

The army came under the personal command of George II but in June he appeared to have made a catastrophic mistake which left the Allies trapped against the river Main and surrounded by enemy forces in "a mousetrap".

Rather than contemplate surrender, George tried to rectify the situation by launching an attack on the French positions near the village of Dettingen.

Wolfe's regiment was involved in heavy fighting, as the two sides exchanged volley after volley of musket fire.

His regiment had suffered the highest casualties of any of the British infantry battalions, and Wolfe had his horse shot from underneath him.

Despite three French attacks the Allies managed to drive off the enemy, who fled through the village of Dettingen which was then occupied by the Allies.

However, George failed to adequately pursue the retreating enemy, allowing them to escape.

1748

The advancement of his career was halted by the Peace Treaty of 1748 and he spent much of the next eight years on garrison duty in the Scottish Highlands.

Already a brigade major at the age of 18, he was a lieutenant-colonel by 23.

1756

The outbreak of the Seven Years' War in 1756 offered Wolfe fresh opportunities for advancement.

1757

His part in the aborted raid on Rochefort in 1757 led William Pitt to appoint him second-in-command of an expedition to capture the Fortress of Louisbourg.

Following the success of the siege of Louisbourg he was made commander of a force which sailed up the Saint Lawrence River to capture Quebec City.

After a long siege, Wolfe defeated a French force under the Marquis de Montcalm, allowing British forces to capture the city.

Wolfe was killed at the height of the Battle of the Plains of Abraham due to injuries from three musket balls.

The next day, Montcalm died as well.

1759

Wolfe's part in the taking of Quebec in 1759 earned him lasting fame, and he became an icon of Britain's victory in the Seven Years' War and subsequent territorial expansion.

He was depicted in the painting The Death of General Wolfe, which became famous around the world.

Wolfe was posthumously dubbed "The Hero of Quebec", "The Conqueror of Quebec", and also "The Conqueror of Canada", since the capture of Quebec led directly to the capture of Montreal, ending French control of the colony.

2012

Early in the following year he transferred to the 12th Regiment of Foot, a British Army infantry regiment, and set sail for Flanders some months later where the British took up position in Ghent.

Here, Wolfe was promoted to Lieutenant and made adjutant of his battalion.

His first year on the continent was a frustrating one as, despite rumours of a British attack on Dunkirk, they remained inactive in Flanders.