Lewis Gordon (Jacobite)
Lord Lewis Gordon | |
|---|---|
Lewis Gordon, aged 13, by John Alexander | |
| Born | 1724 Huntly, Aberdeenshire |
| Died | 15 June 1754 Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis |
| Allegiance | Great Britain (c.1744–5) Jacobites (1745–54) |
| Rank | Lieutenant (British); Colonel (Jacobite) |
| Unit | Lord Lewis Gordon's Regiment |
| Battles / wars | Jacobite Rising of 1745 |
Lord Lewis Gordon (22 December 1724 – 15 June 1754), also known as Lord Ludovick Gordon, was a Scottish nobleman, naval officer and Jacobite, remembered largely for participating in the Jacobite rising of 1745, during which Charles Edward Stuart appointed him Lord-lieutenant of Aberdeenshire and Banffshire.
During the rising Gordon and his agents raised a large number of men, often through impressment, from the estates of his brother the Duke of Gordon: the north-eastern counties ultimately provided up to a quarter of the Jacobite army's rank and file. After the failure of the campaign he escaped to France, dying at Montreuil in 1754.