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FALKIRK 17th JANUARY 1746
Following the defeat at Prestonpans, Cope was replaced
by Lieutenant General Henry Hawley as commander in chief of the royal forces
in Scotland. During the latter part of 1745 the highland army marched south
towards London. It got no further than Derby before turning back and
marching into the North of Scotland where it joined the Jacobite forces
besieging Major General Blakeney in Stirling Castle. The weather had broken and it was raining hard. It was also nearly dark. Hawley had formed the view in the 1715 Jacobite rising that the highlanders would not stand against cavalry. The royal army formed facing the rebels on the moor with the three regiments of dragoons in the front line on the left. The artillery was stuck in the mud at the bottom of the hill. Hawley ordered his dragoons to charge. The dragoons approached the highlanders and received a volley which caused them to break and flee down the hill back to Falkirk. The highlanders then attacked the two lines of royal foot. Most of the royal regiments fled, other than three regiments that held their ground; Ligonier’s, Barrel’s and Price’s. The royal army made its way back to the camp and headed off towards Edinburgh. The steady regiments followed, Barrel’s grenadiers attaching themselves to the traces of abandoned guns and dragging them into the camp. The highlanders had become considerably dispersed and many of them were in doubt as to who had won the battle, which had lasted around 20 minutes. Following the battle Hawley led his army back to Edinburgh. There the Duke of Cumberland arrived to take over command on 30th January 1746. It is said that Cope made £10,000 in a wager that his successor would be beaten by the Highlanders as he had been.
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