Robert Bull Explained

Robert Alexander Bull
Birth Date:3 March 1778.
Death Date:17 April 1835 (aged 56)
Birth Place:Stafford, Staffordshire
Death Place:Bath, Somerset
Allegiance: Great Britain
United Kingdom
Branch:British Army
Branch Label:Service
Serviceyears:1794–1834
Commands:I Troop (Bull's) RHA
Battles:
Battles Label:Battles

Lieutenant colonel Robert Alexander Bull, (1778–1835), of the Royal Horse Artillery, was an officer in the British Army who fought in many battles of the Napoleonic Wars.[1]

Life

Robert Alexander Bull was born at Stafford, Staffordshire, on 3 March 1778.[2] He entered the Royal Artillery in 1794, and saw service in the West Indies in 1796–1798. He commanded I Troop (Bull's) Royal Horse Artillery in the Peninsular. At Waterloo "his troop effected the greatest possible service throughout the early part of the battle; but owing to the loss sustained both in men and horses, together with the disabled condition of the guns (through incessant firing) it was obliged to retire before the close."[3] He was brevetted lieutenant colonel for Waterloo.

He retired on full pay in 1834. In retirement, he lived in Queen Square, Bath.[4] He died at Bath on 17 April 1835, aged 56, and was buried in Queen Square Chapel on 23 April.

His son, John Edward Bull (1806–1901) followed his father into the land service and later became a prominent settler in the Colony of New South Wales.[5]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Bromley 1812, p. 1820.
  2. Dalton 1904, p. 212.
  3. qtd. in Dalton 1904, p. 212.
  4. Bath Record Office.
  5. Grant 1969.